"s"[i<2] and "s" + (i<2) are literally identical, but the latter triggers
a warning from clang because it looks so much like a noob is trying to
concatenate an integer and a string. The former is arguably more clear.
Do not enable musl or uclibc native support if a GNU linker is
already present. This avoids interference for example on a
Debian platform with musl-dev installed. More work is required
to select musl libc in that case, with additional configure flags.
Mark TCCState parameter as unused in tcc_undefine_symbol(), tcc_add_symbol(),
tcc_print_stats(), asm_get_local_label_name(), use_section1(), tccpp_delete(),
tcc_tool_ar(), tcc_tool_impdef(), and tcc_tool_cross().
Also mark it unused in tcc_add_bcheck() unless CONFIG_TCC_BCHECK.
Remove it entirely in ld_next().
"missing intitializer for field op_type" with gcc -Wextra. It's
zero-initialized anyway, and not that much a hassle to explicitely
initialize either, so let's be nice and make it not warn.
* tccgen: re-allow long double constants for x87 cross
sizeof (long double) may be 12 or 16 depending on host platform
(i386/x86_64 on unix/windows).
Except that it's 8 if the host is on windows and not gcc
was used to compile tcc.
* win64: fix builtin_va_start after VT_REF removal
See also a8b83ce43a
* tcctest.c: remove outdated limitation for ll-bitfield test
It always worked, there is no reason why it should not work
in future.
* libtcc1.c: exclude long double conversion on ARM
* Makefile: remove CFLAGS from link recipes
* lib/Makefile: use target DEFINES as passed from main Makefile
* lib/armflush.c lib/va_list.c: factor out from libtcc1.c
* arm-gen.c: disable "depreciated" warnings for now
'extern int i = 42;' at file scope (but not in function scope!) is
allowed and is a proper definition, even though questionable style;
some compilers warn about this.
local symbols can be resolved statically, they don't have to be
done dynamically, so this is a slight speedup at load time for
produced executables and shared libs. The musl libc also rejects
any STB_LOCAL symbols for dynamic symbol resolution, so there it
also fixes use of shared libs created by tcc.
some newer systems have debug sections compressed by default, which
includes those in the crt[1in].o startup files. These can't simply
be concatenated like all others (which leads to invalid section contents
ultimately making gdb fail) but need special handling.
Instead of that special handling (decompressing, which in turn requires
linking against zlib) let's just ignore such sections, even though that
means to also ignore all other debug sections from that particular input
file. Our own generated files of course don't have the problem.
See the added testcase. When one used designators like .a.x to initialize
sub-members of members, and didn't then initialize all of them the
required zero-initialization of the other sub-members wasn't done.
The fix also enables tiny code cleanups.
See testcase. If an enum has only positive values, fits N bits,
and is placed in a N-bit bit-field that bit-fields must be treated
as unsigned, not signed.
This invalid function definition:
int f()[] {}
was tried to be handled but there was no testcase if it actually worked.
This fixes it and adds a TCC only testcase.
ONE_SOURCE=yes cross-compilers currently only depend on tcc.c, which
itself has no further deps. So e.g. changing tccgen.c or tcctok.h
don't automatically rebuild cross compilers. Let's go over
the intermediate $(X)tcc.o file which automatically depends on
LIBTCC_INC, which are all relevant source files.
introduce common_section (SHN_COMMON), factorize some handling
in decl_initializer_alloc, add section_add and use it to factorize
some code that allocates stuff in sections (at the same time also fixing
harmless bugs re section alignment), use init_putv to emit float consts
into .data from gv() (fixing an XXX).
factor code a bit for transforming tokens into SValues. This revealed
a bug in TOK_GET (see testcase), which happened to be harmless before.
So fix that as well.
The canonical way to describe a local variable that actually holds
the address of an lvalue is VT_LLOCAL. Remove the last user of VT_REF,
and handling of it, thereby freeing a flag for SValue.r.
VT_LLOCAL is a flag on .r, not on type.t. Fixing this requires
minor surgery for compound literals which accidentally happened
to be subsumed by the bogus test.
Don't emit useless section headers and also sort them in allocated
order. Doesn't change behaviour except makes the resulting files
a tiny bit smaller (though at the expense of some very tiny compile
time and code size increase of tcc itself; not 100% it's worth it).
the second argument can be an arbitrary expression (including
side-effects), not just a constant. This removes the last user
of expr_lor_const and hence also that function (and expr_land_const).
Also the argument to __builtin_constant_p can be only a non-comma
expression (like all functions arguments).
Our code generation assumes that it can load/store with the
bit-fields base type, so bit_pos/bit_size must be in range for this.
We could change the fields type or adjust offset/bit_pos; we do the
latter.
Checked the lcc testsuite for bitfield stuff (in cq.c and fields.c),
fixed one more error in initializing unnamed members (which have
to be skipped), removed the TODO.
bug #50847: #line directive corrupts #include search path
Keep a second copy of the filename, that isn't changed by the #line directive,
and use that on the initial search path for #include files.
- configure/Makefiles: minor adjustments
- build-tcc.bat: add -static to gcc options
(avoids libgcc_s*.dll dependency with some mingw versions)
- tccpe.c/tcctools.c: eliminate MAX_PATH
(not available for cross compilers)
- tccasm.c: use uint64_t/strtoull in unary()
(unsigned long sometimes is only uint32_t, as always on windows)
- tccgen.c: Revert (f077d16c) "tccgen: gen_cast: cast FLOAT to DOUBLE"
Was a rather experimental, tentative commit, not really necessary
and somewhat ugly too.
- cleanup recent osx support:
- Makefile/libtcc.c: cleanup copy&paste code
- tccpp.c: restore deleted function
The O(xxx) stuff in i386-asm.c had me scratching my head. Extracting
the macro and trying it out in a separate program doesn't give
me any warnings, so I'm confused about what could be going on there.
Any cast will make things happy. I used a uint64_t to catch actual
cases of overflow, which will still cause a -Wconstant-conversion
warning.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Warkentin <andrey.warkentin@gmail.com>
Arg substitution leaves placeholder marker in the stream for
empty arguments. Those need to be skipped when searching for
a fnlike macro invocation in the replacement list itself. See
testcase.