Modify function parameter parser such that symbols are
put into token-table temporarily. Benefits are:
- detects redefinitions, as with
int foo(int a, int a);
- detects reserved symbols, as with
int foo(int if);
- can parse expressions like
int main(int argc, char *argv[argc + 1]);
- doesn't fix this one
int main(int argc, char *argv[++argc]);
Also: fix unexpected "function might return no value"
with statement expression
int f() { ({ return 0; }); }
Currently used only with 'tcc_compile_sem' to protect
tcc_compile(), but can be used with other semaphores
Also fix deadlock when tcc_enter_state() is called
recursively for the same state, for example with
tcc_warning() from #pragma comment(option,"...")
Also:
- libtcc.c: error1(): use cstr_[v]printf()
- tcc.h: set TCC_USING_DOUBLE_FOR_LDOUBLE for macho-arm64
(rather than for macho-X86_64)
- tcc.h: define TCC_TARGET_MACHO on __APPLE__ by default
- tcc.h: cleanup TCCState, move DEFASM token stuff to tcctok.h
- tccgen.c: more static
- Makefile/tcc.c: review githash
- tccpe/tcctools: use read() instead of fgets() in pe_load_def()
(all files opened by tcc for reading are now read via 'int fd')
- configure/win32: don't preset CONFIG_TCCDIR (to allow to override it)
- tcc.c -bench: do not include output/run-time
136 insertions(+), 226 deletions(-), less 90 lines (except tests)
only one set_flag() function required
* can now turn off specific errors: -Werror -Wno-error=option
* new interface: tcc_warning_c(warn_option)("format", args...);
* new warning: -Wdiscarded-qualifiers (on by default)
* new variable 'warn_all' for conditional warnings with -Wall
see also the tests
configure:
- re-enable apple M1-arm64
- however, with --cpu=x86_64, set -arch in CFLAGS/LDFLAGS too
(assume rosetta)
Makefile:
- re-enable osx cross-test (Please do not disable tests)
tcc.h
- set TCC_IS_NATIVE for TCC_TARGET_MACHO on __APPLE__
- apply TCC_USING_DOUBLE_FOR_LDOUBLE for x86_64-osx
libtcc.c:
- cleanup tcc_add_file_internal()
- new function char *tcc_load_text(int fd); and use it for tbd files
- remove any error messages that were just for debugging the
templates really
- don't use c99 in tcc (array designators etc.)
- remove memory model type (cannot be an own type really)
and move memory model defines from built-in to stdatomics.h
- apply normal casts to non-pointer atomic_function arguments
- tidy the library support
- add some tests for errors/warnings
Also:
- Makefile: move GIT_HASH stuff from CFLAGS to DEFINES and into
main section (away from what is included by tests for example)
- tccelf.c/tccgen.c: avoid some warnings with newer GCC
libtcc.c: add -Wwrite-strings to -Wall
tccgen.c: ro float-consts, string-consts, ro arrays if base type is
tccpe.c: merge IAT with rodata
tccrun.c: mprotect rodata accordingly. free section data after copy
x86_64.c: do not use got for static data.
tcc -bench: show data.rw/ro
Probably STB_LOCAL should never get to put_got_entry(), and currently
it doesn't seem to happen (See "Hack Alarm" there)
Other files: use more ro-data in tinycc
when used with string initialization the size of nested struct flex
array member was tested too late for < 0.
GCC accepts but discards such initializers (the flex array member will
become zero sized). TCC supports flex arrays members only in
top-level structs and gives an error in this case.
When defining an array with non-explicit size, one would get
"incompatible types for redefinition of 'array' if the array was already
declared with a different size.
For example:
extern int array[2];
int array[] = {1};
would fail to compile with tcc. Instead the above is now equivalent to:
int array[] = {1, 0};
see testcase, reduced example of a situation reported by
Kyryl Melekhin in https://github.com/kyx0r/neatvi/ .
Problem is that setting up the VLA sp-save in a scope that isn't
entered at runtime leaves traces of it in outer scopes that then
try to restore the stack pointer from uninitialized slots.
lib/tcov.c:
- can't be cross-compiled (needs stdio.h)
- can be included in libtcc1.a
Reason why bt-xxx.o/bcheck.o are linked separatly is because we
don't want then to linked into exe's and dlls at the same time.
tccgen.c: debug_modes
- don't waste debug function calls during normal execution.
libtcc.c:
- mem_debug: no C99 features in tcc please, for example
({compound expressions}): do not use.
tccgen.c: struct_layout:
- unaligned access is completely ok for most targets.
- Moreover the patch was triggering single byte mode even
for normal aligned access (as with tcc's SymAttr)
static Sym label: don't do this
arm-gen.c:
- use some #ifdefs to explain some code
tccpp.c:
- cleanup UCN chars
libtcc.c:
- replace openbsd library search
configure:
- cleanup strip fallouts
tccgen.c:
- expr_cond(): remove an exotic optimization that eventually
got fixed to do the contrary by a gv(RC_InT)
- pop_local_syms(): remove some args
- init_putv() : use write##le functions to avoid cross-compiler
unaligned access
- __bt_init(): remove unused param 'mode'
As the standard requires, take 4 hex digits after the \u opener of a
Universal Character Name, or take 8 hex digits after \U, but reject
smaller counts and don't consume more (https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c11/n1570.html#6.4.3,
https://port70.net/~nsz/c/c99/n1256.html#6.4.3).
The unicode codepoint used to get truncated to 1 byte. Now it gets expanded into UTF-8,
matching gcc & clang behavior on Linux.
TODO: Universal character names should also be supported in identifiers,
as in, e.g., char \u010dau_sv\u011bte[]="čau_světe";
Support OpenBSD/FreeBSD/NetBSD on asm.
move PAGESIZE to tcc.h and use _SC_PAGESIZE (netbsd/arm has 8192 pagesize)
arm:
- fix cmp instruction for qemu (raspberry pi works without patch?)
- increase start address/size
- use large plt size
- add return R_ARM_PREL31
- add R_ARM_TARGET1 to prepare_dynamic_rel
- add gcc_s to FreeBSD (unwind code)
- do not use __clear_cache on bsd (sometimes bad system call)
- do stack unwinding on bsd
- test/tcctest.c: use %lld %llu on bsd
The small common parts within elf_output_file() aren't
worth the many #ifdefs. Also, set section sizes and
allocate section names in 2 separate functions.