This fixes the issue
int main() { extern char *x; }
void main1() { extern char *x; }
t2.c:5: error: incompatible types for redefinition of 'x'
(reported by Giovanni Mascellani 2019/07/16)
the uninitialized cumofs was leading to random sizes for
the memset when initializing local structures, potentially
leading to segfaults from it. Only a problem with GNU
designated initializers, which we didn't test very well.
See testcase.
A more automatic approach to code suppression (aka. nocode_wanted)
The simple rules are:
- Clear 'nocode_wanted' at (im/explicit) label IF it was used
- Set 'nocode_wanted' after unconditional jumps
Also in order to test this then I did add the "function might
return no value" warning, and then to make that work again I
did add the __attribute__((noreturn)).
Also moved the look ahead label check into the type parser
to gain a little speed.
Example:
int a = 1;
void f(void)
{
int a = 2;
{
extern int a; // = 1 !!
....
To get this (more) correctly there is a new function to copy
syms between local to global stacks.
Also, this patch changes the meaning of VT_EXTERN back
to the simpler and IMO more useful notion of
DECLARED but not (yet) DEFINED.
and that for both variables and functions. That is, VT_EXTERN
in tcc doesn't have to do with the keyword 'extern' necessarily.
Also this patch does allow
int x[];
as alias for
extern int x[];
(as do gcc and msvc)
... which IMO are:
1) files don't need a _test suffix because all files in
the directory are tests ;)
2) we test the BEHAVIOR of the program, rather than its
binary bit contents.
Ok, but nobody said a test can't use two files ;)
(where the 104+_ construct is meant to prevent the file
from being picked up by the makefile as a test on its own).
Previously test 104 used a combination of *nix tools and system() calls
to emulate a `sh` script, which required split code paths for windows
due to different shell and different absolute path representation.
Also, it used a hardcoded tcc binary path, didn't set locale for sort.
Now the tools are used from a `sh` script which the program generates
and invokes, tmp files are at CWD and no conversion is required, tcc
path is taken from Makefile (exported), and `sort` uses LC_ALL=C.
- add tests for standard conformant inline functions
- implement it
The old tinycc failed to provide a conforming implementation
of non-static inlines. It would expose external symbols where it
shouldn't and hide them where it should expose them.
This commit provides a hopefully comprehensive test suite
for how things should be done. The .expect file can be obtained
by compiling the example c file (embedded in the test)
with a conforming compiler such as gcc, clang or icc and then
printing the exported symbols (e.g., with nm+awk+sort).
(The implementation currently reserves two new VT_ flags.
If anyone can provide an implementation without reserving
two extra flags, please replace mine.)
anonymous struct members were somewhat broken as the testcase
demonstrates. The reason is the jumping through hoops to fiddle
with the offsets I once introduced to avoid having to track
a cumulative offset. That's now not necessary anymore and actively
harmful, doing the obvious thing is now better.
see testcase, when the inner array dimension of multi-dimensional
VLAs isn't given TCC was generating invalid vstack accesses.
Those are actually invalid, so just diagnose them.
see testcases. A local 'extern int i' declaration needs to
refer to the global declaration, not to a local one it might
be shadowing. Doesn't seem to happen in the wild very often as
this was broken forever.
in presence of invalid source code we can't rely on the
next token to determine if we have or haven't already parsed
an initializer element, we really have to track it in some separate
state; it's a flag, so merge it with the other two we have (size_only
and first). Also add some syntax checks for situations which
formerly lead to vstack leaks, see the added testcases.
sometimes abstract decls in parameter lists left the returned name
uninitialized potentially leading to segfaults, like in
int f(int ()) {
return 0;
}
Deal with this.
like on 'enum myenum { L = -1 } L;'. It's a bit tedious as
there are two paths (for global vs local symbols), and because
the scope and enum_val share same storage.
when parsing the type in this cast:
(int (__attribute__(X) *)(int))foo
we ignored the attribute, which matters if it's e.g. a 'stdcall'
attribute on the function pointer. Only this particular placement
was misparsed. Putting the attribute after the '*' or outside the inner
parens worked. This idiom seems to be used on SQLite, perhaps this
fixes a compilation problem on win32 with that.
like qualifier merging the array sizes are merged as well
for the operands of ?:, and they must not statically influence
the types of decls.
Also fix some style problems, spaces aren't stinky :)
char **argv;
_Generic(argv, char**: (void)0);
_Generic(0?(char const*)0:argv[0], char const*: (void)0);
_Generic(argv, char**: (void)0);
would fail because the type of argv would get modified by the
ternary. Now allocate a separate type on the value stack to
prevent this error.
tcc would reject e.g.,
void f(){ struct {_Bool x:_Generic(({0;}),default:1);} my_x; }
with `expected constant`. This patch makes it accept it.
(The patch also makes tcc's _Generic a little more "generic" than that
of gcc and clang in that that tcc now also accepts
`struct {_Bool x:_Generic(({0;}),default:1);} my_x;` in file scope
while gcc and clang don't, but I think there's no harm in that
and gcc and clang might as well accept it in filescope too, given
that they have no problem with
e.g., `/*filescope:*/int x=1, y=2, z=_Generic(x+y, int:3);`)
The type within the cast (int (__attribute__((foo)) *)(void))
was misparsed because of the presence of the attribute (parse_btype
prematurely concluded that (__attribute__() *) is a type.
Also see testcase. This construct is used in sqlite it seems.
linkers don't treat relocations using symindex 0 (undefined)
very well, it can't be misused as indicator for an absolute number.
Just don't bother with special casing this, rather emit an indirect
call/jump right away. ARM64 needs the same (and didn't handle
calls via constant absolute func pointers before).
The testcase as is doesn't fail without the patch, it actually
needs separate compilation (to -fPIC .o file, then to shared lib)
to fail.
misc fixes including:
- tcc.c: fix "tcc -vv" for libtcc1.a on win32/PE
- tccelf.c: fix a crash when GOT has no relocs (witn -nostdlib)
- tccelf.c: fix stab linkage for zero n_strx
- tccgen.c: fix stdcall decoration for array parameters
int __stdcall func(char buf[10]) is _func@4 (was _func@12)
- tccgen.c: fix static variables with nocode/nodata_wanted
see tests2/96_nodata_wanted.c
- tccrun.c: align sections using sh_addralign (for reliable function_alignment)
- tests2/Makefile sort 100 after 99
- win32/include/sys/stat.h fix _stat and _wstat
- x86_64-gen.c: win64/gfunc_call: fix a bug with xmmN register args
previously overwrote valid other xmmN registers eventually