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- <link href="Invoking-GCC.html#Invoking-GCC" rel="up" title="Invoking GCC">
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- Next: <a href="Static-Analyzer-Options.html#Static-Analyzer-Options" accesskey="n" rel="next">Static Analyzer Options</a>, Previous: <a href="Diagnostic-Message-Formatting-Options.html#Diagnostic-Message-Formatting-Options" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Diagnostic Message Formatting Options</a>, Up: <a href="Invoking-GCC.html#Invoking-GCC" accesskey="u" rel="up">Invoking GCC</a> [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
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- <a name="Options-to-Request-or-Suppress-Warnings"></a>
- <h3 class="section">3.8 Options to Request or Suppress Warnings</h3>
- <a name="index-options-to-control-warnings"></a>
- <a name="index-warning-messages"></a>
- <a name="index-messages_002c-warning"></a>
- <a name="index-suppressing-warnings"></a>
-
- <p>Warnings are diagnostic messages that report constructions that
- are not inherently erroneous but that are risky or suggest there
- may have been an error.
- </p>
- <p>The following language-independent options do not enable specific
- warnings but control the kinds of diagnostics produced by GCC.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dd><a name="index-syntax-checking"></a>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-fsyntax-only</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-fsyntax_002donly"></a>
- <p>Check the code for syntax errors, but don’t do anything beyond that.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-fmax-errors=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-fmax_002derrors"></a>
- <p>Limits the maximum number of error messages to <var>n</var>, at which point
- GCC bails out rather than attempting to continue processing the source
- code. If <var>n</var> is 0 (the default), there is no limit on the number
- of error messages produced. If <samp>-Wfatal-errors</samp> is also
- specified, then <samp>-Wfatal-errors</samp> takes precedence over this
- option.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-w</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-w"></a>
- <p>Inhibit all warning messages.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Werror</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Werror"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002derror"></a>
- <p>Make all warnings into errors.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Werror=</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Werror_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002derror_003d"></a>
- <p>Make the specified warning into an error. The specifier for a warning
- is appended; for example <samp>-Werror=switch</samp> turns the warnings
- controlled by <samp>-Wswitch</samp> into errors. This switch takes a
- negative form, to be used to negate <samp>-Werror</samp> for specific
- warnings; for example <samp>-Wno-error=switch</samp> makes
- <samp>-Wswitch</samp> warnings not be errors, even when <samp>-Werror</samp>
- is in effect.
- </p>
- <p>The warning message for each controllable warning includes the
- option that controls the warning. That option can then be used with
- <samp>-Werror=</samp> and <samp>-Wno-error=</samp> as described above.
- (Printing of the option in the warning message can be disabled using the
- <samp>-fno-diagnostics-show-option</samp> flag.)
- </p>
- <p>Note that specifying <samp>-Werror=</samp><var>foo</var> automatically implies
- <samp>-W</samp><var>foo</var>. However, <samp>-Wno-error=</samp><var>foo</var> does not
- imply anything.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wfatal-errors</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wfatal_002derrors"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dfatal_002derrors"></a>
- <p>This option causes the compiler to abort compilation on the first error
- occurred rather than trying to keep going and printing further error
- messages.
- </p>
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
- <p>You can request many specific warnings with options beginning with
- ‘<samp>-W</samp>’, for example <samp>-Wimplicit</samp> to request warnings on
- implicit declarations. Each of these specific warning options also
- has a negative form beginning ‘<samp>-Wno-</samp>’ to turn off warnings; for
- example, <samp>-Wno-implicit</samp>. This manual lists only one of the
- two forms, whichever is not the default. For further
- language-specific options also refer to <a href="C_002b_002b-Dialect-Options.html#C_002b_002b-Dialect-Options">C++ Dialect Options</a> and
- <a href="Objective_002dC-and-Objective_002dC_002b_002b-Dialect-Options.html#Objective_002dC-and-Objective_002dC_002b_002b-Dialect-Options">Objective-C and Objective-C++ Dialect Options</a>.
- Additional warnings can be produced by enabling the static analyzer;
- See <a href="Static-Analyzer-Options.html#Static-Analyzer-Options">Static Analyzer Options</a>.
- </p>
- <p>Some options, such as <samp>-Wall</samp> and <samp>-Wextra</samp>, turn on other
- options, such as <samp>-Wunused</samp>, which may turn on further options,
- such as <samp>-Wunused-value</samp>. The combined effect of positive and
- negative forms is that more specific options have priority over less
- specific ones, independently of their position in the command-line. For
- options of the same specificity, the last one takes effect. Options
- enabled or disabled via pragmas (see <a href="Diagnostic-Pragmas.html#Diagnostic-Pragmas">Diagnostic Pragmas</a>) take effect
- as if they appeared at the end of the command-line.
- </p>
- <p>When an unrecognized warning option is requested (e.g.,
- <samp>-Wunknown-warning</samp>), GCC emits a diagnostic stating
- that the option is not recognized. However, if the <samp>-Wno-</samp> form
- is used, the behavior is slightly different: no diagnostic is
- produced for <samp>-Wno-unknown-warning</samp> unless other diagnostics
- are being produced. This allows the use of new <samp>-Wno-</samp> options
- with old compilers, but if something goes wrong, the compiler
- warns that an unrecognized option is present.
- </p>
- <p>The effectiveness of some warnings depends on optimizations also being
- enabled. For example <samp>-Wsuggest-final-types</samp> is more effective
- with link-time optimization and <samp>-Wmaybe-uninitialized</samp> does not
- warn at all unless optimization is enabled.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wpedantic</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-pedantic</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-pedantic-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wpedantic"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpedantic"></a>
- <p>Issue all the warnings demanded by strict ISO C and ISO C++;
- reject all programs that use forbidden extensions, and some other
- programs that do not follow ISO C and ISO C++. For ISO C, follows the
- version of the ISO C standard specified by any <samp>-std</samp> option used.
- </p>
- <p>Valid ISO C and ISO C++ programs should compile properly with or without
- this option (though a rare few require <samp>-ansi</samp> or a
- <samp>-std</samp> option specifying the required version of ISO C). However,
- without this option, certain GNU extensions and traditional C and C++
- features are supported as well. With this option, they are rejected.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wpedantic</samp> does not cause warning messages for use of the
- alternate keywords whose names begin and end with ‘<samp>__</samp>’. This alternate
- format can also be used to disable warnings for non-ISO ‘<samp>__intN</samp>’ types,
- i.e. ‘<samp>__intN__</samp>’.
- Pedantic warnings are also disabled in the expression that follows
- <code>__extension__</code>. However, only system header files should use
- these escape routes; application programs should avoid them.
- See <a href="Alternate-Keywords.html#Alternate-Keywords">Alternate Keywords</a>.
- </p>
- <p>Some users try to use <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> to check programs for strict ISO
- C conformance. They soon find that it does not do quite what they want:
- it finds some non-ISO practices, but not all—only those for which
- ISO C <em>requires</em> a diagnostic, and some others for which
- diagnostics have been added.
- </p>
- <p>A feature to report any failure to conform to ISO C might be useful in
- some instances, but would require considerable additional work and would
- be quite different from <samp>-Wpedantic</samp>. We don’t have plans to
- support such a feature in the near future.
- </p>
- <p>Where the standard specified with <samp>-std</samp> represents a GNU
- extended dialect of C, such as ‘<samp>gnu90</samp>’ or ‘<samp>gnu99</samp>’, there is a
- corresponding <em>base standard</em>, the version of ISO C on which the GNU
- extended dialect is based. Warnings from <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> are given
- where they are required by the base standard. (It does not make sense
- for such warnings to be given only for features not in the specified GNU
- C dialect, since by definition the GNU dialects of C include all
- features the compiler supports with the given option, and there would be
- nothing to warn about.)
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-pedantic-errors</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-pedantic_002derrors-1"></a>
- <p>Give an error whenever the <em>base standard</em> (see <samp>-Wpedantic</samp>)
- requires a diagnostic, in some cases where there is undefined behavior
- at compile-time and in some other cases that do not prevent compilation
- of programs that are valid according to the standard. This is not
- equivalent to <samp>-Werror=pedantic</samp>, since there are errors enabled
- by this option and not enabled by the latter and vice versa.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wall</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wall"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dall"></a>
- <p>This enables all the warnings about constructions that some users
- consider questionable, and that are easy to avoid (or modify to
- prevent the warning), even in conjunction with macros. This also
- enables some language-specific warnings described in <a href="C_002b_002b-Dialect-Options.html#C_002b_002b-Dialect-Options">C++ Dialect Options</a> and <a href="Objective_002dC-and-Objective_002dC_002b_002b-Dialect-Options.html#Objective_002dC-and-Objective_002dC_002b_002b-Dialect-Options">Objective-C and Objective-C++ Dialect Options</a>.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wall</samp> turns on the following warning flags:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">-Waddress
- -Warray-bounds=1 <span class="roman">(only with</span> <samp>-O2</samp><span class="roman">)</span>
- -Wbool-compare
- -Wbool-operation
- -Wc++11-compat -Wc++14-compat
- -Wcatch-value <span class="roman">(C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span>
- -Wchar-subscripts
- -Wcomment
- -Wduplicate-decl-specifier <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span>
- -Wenum-compare <span class="roman">(in C/ObjC; this is on by default in C++)</span>
- -Wenum-conversion <span class="roman">in C/ObjC;</span>
- -Wformat
- -Wformat-overflow
- -Wformat-truncation
- -Wint-in-bool-context
- -Wimplicit <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span>
- -Wimplicit-int <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span>
- -Wimplicit-function-declaration <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span>
- -Winit-self <span class="roman">(only for C++)</span>
- -Wlogical-not-parentheses
- -Wmain <span class="roman">(only for C/ObjC and unless</span> <samp>-ffreestanding</samp><span class="roman">)</span>
- -Wmaybe-uninitialized
- -Wmemset-elt-size
- -Wmemset-transposed-args
- -Wmisleading-indentation <span class="roman">(only for C/C++)</span>
- -Wmissing-attributes
- -Wmissing-braces <span class="roman">(only for C/ObjC)</span>
- -Wmultistatement-macros
- -Wnarrowing <span class="roman">(only for C++)</span>
- -Wnonnull
- -Wnonnull-compare
- -Wopenmp-simd
- -Wparentheses
- -Wpessimizing-move <span class="roman">(only for C++)</span>
- -Wpointer-sign
- -Wreorder
- -Wrestrict
- -Wreturn-type
- -Wsequence-point
- -Wsign-compare <span class="roman">(only in C++)</span>
- -Wsizeof-pointer-div
- -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess
- -Wstrict-aliasing
- -Wstrict-overflow=1
- -Wswitch
- -Wtautological-compare
- -Wtrigraphs
- -Wuninitialized
- -Wunknown-pragmas
- -Wunused-function
- -Wunused-label
- -Wunused-value
- -Wunused-variable
- -Wvolatile-register-var
- -Wzero-length-bounds
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Note that some warning flags are not implied by <samp>-Wall</samp>. Some of
- them warn about constructions that users generally do not consider
- questionable, but which occasionally you might wish to check for;
- others warn about constructions that are necessary or hard to avoid in
- some cases, and there is no simple way to modify the code to suppress
- the warning. Some of them are enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp> but many of
- them must be enabled individually.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wextra</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-W"></a>
- <a name="index-Wextra"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dextra"></a>
- <p>This enables some extra warning flags that are not enabled by
- <samp>-Wall</samp>. (This option used to be called <samp>-W</samp>. The older
- name is still supported, but the newer name is more descriptive.)
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">-Wclobbered
- -Wcast-function-type
- -Wdeprecated-copy <span class="roman">(C++ only)</span>
- -Wempty-body
- -Wignored-qualifiers
- -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3
- -Wmissing-field-initializers
- -Wmissing-parameter-type <span class="roman">(C only)</span>
- -Wold-style-declaration <span class="roman">(C only)</span>
- -Woverride-init
- -Wsign-compare <span class="roman">(C only)</span>
- -Wstring-compare
- -Wredundant-move <span class="roman">(only for C++)</span>
- -Wtype-limits
- -Wuninitialized
- -Wshift-negative-value <span class="roman">(in C++03 and in C99 and newer)</span>
- -Wunused-parameter <span class="roman">(only with</span> <samp>-Wunused</samp> <span class="roman">or</span> <samp>-Wall</samp><span class="roman">)</span>
- -Wunused-but-set-parameter <span class="roman">(only with</span> <samp>-Wunused</samp> <span class="roman">or</span> <samp>-Wall</samp><span class="roman">)</span>
- </pre></div>
-
-
- <p>The option <samp>-Wextra</samp> also prints warning messages for the
- following cases:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li> A pointer is compared against integer zero with <code><</code>, <code><=</code>,
- <code>></code>, or <code>>=</code>.
-
- </li><li> (C++ only) An enumerator and a non-enumerator both appear in a
- conditional expression.
-
- </li><li> (C++ only) Ambiguous virtual bases.
-
- </li><li> (C++ only) Subscripting an array that has been declared <code>register</code>.
-
- </li><li> (C++ only) Taking the address of a variable that has been declared
- <code>register</code>.
-
- </li><li> (C++ only) A base class is not initialized in the copy constructor
- of a derived class.
-
- </li></ul>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wabi <span class="roman">(C, Objective-C, C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wabi"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dabi"></a>
-
- <p>Warn about code affected by ABI changes. This includes code that may
- not be compatible with the vendor-neutral C++ ABI as well as the psABI
- for the particular target.
- </p>
- <p>Since G++ now defaults to updating the ABI with each major release,
- normally <samp>-Wabi</samp> warns only about C++ ABI compatibility
- problems if there is a check added later in a release series for an
- ABI issue discovered since the initial release. <samp>-Wabi</samp> warns
- about more things if an older ABI version is selected (with
- <samp>-fabi-version=<var>n</var></samp>).
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wabi</samp> can also be used with an explicit version number to
- warn about C++ ABI compatibility with a particular <samp>-fabi-version</samp>
- level, e.g. <samp>-Wabi=2</samp> to warn about changes relative to
- <samp>-fabi-version=2</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>If an explicit version number is provided and
- <samp>-fabi-compat-version</samp> is not specified, the version number
- from this option is used for compatibility aliases. If no explicit
- version number is provided with this option, but
- <samp>-fabi-compat-version</samp> is specified, that version number is
- used for C++ ABI warnings.
- </p>
- <p>Although an effort has been made to warn about
- all such cases, there are probably some cases that are not warned about,
- even though G++ is generating incompatible code. There may also be
- cases where warnings are emitted even though the code that is generated
- is compatible.
- </p>
- <p>You should rewrite your code to avoid these warnings if you are
- concerned about the fact that code generated by G++ may not be binary
- compatible with code generated by other compilers.
- </p>
- <p>Known incompatibilities in <samp>-fabi-version=2</samp> (which was the
- default from GCC 3.4 to 4.9) include:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li> A template with a non-type template parameter of reference type was
- mangled incorrectly:
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">extern int N;
- template <int &> struct S {};
- void n (S<N>) {2}
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This was fixed in <samp>-fabi-version=3</samp>.
- </p>
- </li><li> SIMD vector types declared using <code>__attribute ((vector_size))</code> were
- mangled in a non-standard way that does not allow for overloading of
- functions taking vectors of different sizes.
-
- <p>The mangling was changed in <samp>-fabi-version=4</samp>.
- </p>
- </li><li> <code>__attribute ((const))</code> and <code>noreturn</code> were mangled as type
- qualifiers, and <code>decltype</code> of a plain declaration was folded away.
-
- <p>These mangling issues were fixed in <samp>-fabi-version=5</samp>.
- </p>
- </li><li> Scoped enumerators passed as arguments to a variadic function are
- promoted like unscoped enumerators, causing <code>va_arg</code> to complain.
- On most targets this does not actually affect the parameter passing
- ABI, as there is no way to pass an argument smaller than <code>int</code>.
-
- <p>Also, the ABI changed the mangling of template argument packs,
- <code>const_cast</code>, <code>static_cast</code>, prefix increment/decrement, and
- a class scope function used as a template argument.
- </p>
- <p>These issues were corrected in <samp>-fabi-version=6</samp>.
- </p>
- </li><li> Lambdas in default argument scope were mangled incorrectly, and the
- ABI changed the mangling of <code>nullptr_t</code>.
-
- <p>These issues were corrected in <samp>-fabi-version=7</samp>.
- </p>
- </li><li> When mangling a function type with function-cv-qualifiers, the
- un-qualified function type was incorrectly treated as a substitution
- candidate.
-
- <p>This was fixed in <samp>-fabi-version=8</samp>, the default for GCC 5.1.
- </p>
- </li><li> <code>decltype(nullptr)</code> incorrectly had an alignment of 1, leading to
- unaligned accesses. Note that this did not affect the ABI of a
- function with a <code>nullptr_t</code> parameter, as parameters have a
- minimum alignment.
-
- <p>This was fixed in <samp>-fabi-version=9</samp>, the default for GCC 5.2.
- </p>
- </li><li> Target-specific attributes that affect the identity of a type, such as
- ia32 calling conventions on a function type (stdcall, regparm, etc.),
- did not affect the mangled name, leading to name collisions when
- function pointers were used as template arguments.
-
- <p>This was fixed in <samp>-fabi-version=10</samp>, the default for GCC 6.1.
- </p>
- </li></ul>
-
- <p>This option also enables warnings about psABI-related changes.
- The known psABI changes at this point include:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li> For SysV/x86-64, unions with <code>long double</code> members are
- passed in memory as specified in psABI. Prior to GCC 4.4, this was not
- the case. For example:
-
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">union U {
- long double ld;
- int i;
- };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p><code>union U</code> is now always passed in memory.
- </p>
- </li></ul>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wchar-subscripts</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wchar_002dsubscripts"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dchar_002dsubscripts"></a>
- <p>Warn if an array subscript has type <code>char</code>. This is a common cause
- of error, as programmers often forget that this type is signed on some
- machines.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-coverage-mismatch</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dcoverage_002dmismatch"></a>
- <a name="index-Wcoverage_002dmismatch"></a>
- <p>Warn if feedback profiles do not match when using the
- <samp>-fprofile-use</samp> option.
- If a source file is changed between compiling with <samp>-fprofile-generate</samp>
- and with <samp>-fprofile-use</samp>, the files with the profile feedback can fail
- to match the source file and GCC cannot use the profile feedback
- information. By default, this warning is enabled and is treated as an
- error. <samp>-Wno-coverage-mismatch</samp> can be used to disable the
- warning or <samp>-Wno-error=coverage-mismatch</samp> can be used to
- disable the error. Disabling the error for this warning can result in
- poorly optimized code and is useful only in the
- case of very minor changes such as bug fixes to an existing code-base.
- Completely disabling the warning is not recommended.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-cpp</code></dt>
- <dd><p><span class="roman">(C, Objective-C, C++, Objective-C++ and Fortran only)</span>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dcpp"></a>
- <a name="index-Wcpp"></a>
- Suppress warning messages emitted by <code>#warning</code> directives.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wdouble-promotion <span class="roman">(C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wdouble_002dpromotion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002ddouble_002dpromotion"></a>
- <p>Give a warning when a value of type <code>float</code> is implicitly
- promoted to <code>double</code>. CPUs with a 32-bit “single-precision”
- floating-point unit implement <code>float</code> in hardware, but emulate
- <code>double</code> in software. On such a machine, doing computations
- using <code>double</code> values is much more expensive because of the
- overhead required for software emulation.
- </p>
- <p>It is easy to accidentally do computations with <code>double</code> because
- floating-point literals are implicitly of type <code>double</code>. For
- example, in:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">float area(float radius)
- {
- return 3.14159 * radius * radius;
- }
- </pre></div>
- <p>the compiler performs the entire computation with <code>double</code>
- because the floating-point literal is a <code>double</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wduplicate-decl-specifier <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wduplicate_002ddecl_002dspecifier"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dduplicate_002ddecl_002dspecifier"></a>
- <p>Warn if a declaration has duplicate <code>const</code>, <code>volatile</code>,
- <code>restrict</code> or <code>_Atomic</code> specifier. This warning is enabled by
- <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wformat=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat"></a>
- <a name="index-ffreestanding-2"></a>
- <a name="index-fno_002dbuiltin-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wformat_003d"></a>
- <p>Check calls to <code>printf</code> and <code>scanf</code>, etc., to make sure that
- the arguments supplied have types appropriate to the format string
- specified, and that the conversions specified in the format string make
- sense. This includes standard functions, and others specified by format
- attributes (see <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>), in the <code>printf</code>,
- <code>scanf</code>, <code>strftime</code> and <code>strfmon</code> (an X/Open extension,
- not in the C standard) families (or other target-specific families).
- Which functions are checked without format attributes having been
- specified depends on the standard version selected, and such checks of
- functions without the attribute specified are disabled by
- <samp>-ffreestanding</samp> or <samp>-fno-builtin</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>The formats are checked against the format features supported by GNU
- libc version 2.2. These include all ISO C90 and C99 features, as well
- as features from the Single Unix Specification and some BSD and GNU
- extensions. Other library implementations may not support all these
- features; GCC does not support warning about features that go beyond a
- particular library’s limitations. However, if <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> is used
- with <samp>-Wformat</samp>, warnings are given about format features not
- in the selected standard version (but not for <code>strfmon</code> formats,
- since those are not in any version of the C standard). See <a href="C-Dialect-Options.html#C-Dialect-Options">Options Controlling C Dialect</a>.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wformat=1</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wformat</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wformat_003d1"></a>
- <p>Option <samp>-Wformat</samp> is equivalent to <samp>-Wformat=1</samp>, and
- <samp>-Wno-format</samp> is equivalent to <samp>-Wformat=0</samp>. Since
- <samp>-Wformat</samp> also checks for null format arguments for several
- functions, <samp>-Wformat</samp> also implies <samp>-Wnonnull</samp>. Some
- aspects of this level of format checking can be disabled by the
- options: <samp>-Wno-format-contains-nul</samp>,
- <samp>-Wno-format-extra-args</samp>, and <samp>-Wno-format-zero-length</samp>.
- <samp>-Wformat</samp> is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat=2</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_003d2"></a>
- <p>Enable <samp>-Wformat</samp> plus additional format checks. Currently
- equivalent to <samp>-Wformat -Wformat-nonliteral -Wformat-security
- -Wformat-y2k</samp>.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-format-contains-nul</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dcontains_002dnul"></a>
- <a name="index-Wformat_002dcontains_002dnul"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, do not warn about format strings that
- contain NUL bytes.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-format-extra-args</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dextra_002dargs"></a>
- <a name="index-Wformat_002dextra_002dargs"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, do not warn about excess arguments to a
- <code>printf</code> or <code>scanf</code> format function. The C standard specifies
- that such arguments are ignored.
- </p>
- <p>Where the unused arguments lie between used arguments that are
- specified with ‘<samp>$</samp>’ operand number specifications, normally
- warnings are still given, since the implementation could not know what
- type to pass to <code>va_arg</code> to skip the unused arguments. However,
- in the case of <code>scanf</code> formats, this option suppresses the
- warning if the unused arguments are all pointers, since the Single
- Unix Specification says that such unused arguments are allowed.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-overflow</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-overflow=<var>level</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002doverflow"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002doverflow"></a>
- <p>Warn about calls to formatted input/output functions such as <code>sprintf</code>
- and <code>vsprintf</code> that might overflow the destination buffer. When the
- exact number of bytes written by a format directive cannot be determined
- at compile-time it is estimated based on heuristics that depend on the
- <var>level</var> argument and on optimization. While enabling optimization
- will in most cases improve the accuracy of the warning, it may also
- result in false positives.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wformat-overflow</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-overflow=1</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002doverflow-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002doverflow-1"></a>
- <p>Level <var>1</var> of <samp>-Wformat-overflow</samp> enabled by <samp>-Wformat</samp>
- employs a conservative approach that warns only about calls that most
- likely overflow the buffer. At this level, numeric arguments to format
- directives with unknown values are assumed to have the value of one, and
- strings of unknown length to be empty. Numeric arguments that are known
- to be bounded to a subrange of their type, or string arguments whose output
- is bounded either by their directive’s precision or by a finite set of
- string literals, are assumed to take on the value within the range that
- results in the most bytes on output. For example, the call to <code>sprintf</code>
- below is diagnosed because even with both <var>a</var> and <var>b</var> equal to zero,
- the terminating NUL character (<code>'\0'</code>) appended by the function
- to the destination buffer will be written past its end. Increasing
- the size of the buffer by a single byte is sufficient to avoid the
- warning, though it may not be sufficient to avoid the overflow.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void f (int a, int b)
- {
- char buf [13];
- sprintf (buf, "a = %i, b = %i\n", a, b);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-overflow=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Level <var>2</var> warns also about calls that might overflow the destination
- buffer given an argument of sufficient length or magnitude. At level
- <var>2</var>, unknown numeric arguments are assumed to have the minimum
- representable value for signed types with a precision greater than 1, and
- the maximum representable value otherwise. Unknown string arguments whose
- length cannot be assumed to be bounded either by the directive’s precision,
- or by a finite set of string literals they may evaluate to, or the character
- array they may point to, are assumed to be 1 character long.
- </p>
- <p>At level <var>2</var>, the call in the example above is again diagnosed, but
- this time because with <var>a</var> equal to a 32-bit <code>INT_MIN</code> the first
- <code>%i</code> directive will write some of its digits beyond the end of
- the destination buffer. To make the call safe regardless of the values
- of the two variables, the size of the destination buffer must be increased
- to at least 34 bytes. GCC includes the minimum size of the buffer in
- an informational note following the warning.
- </p>
- <p>An alternative to increasing the size of the destination buffer is to
- constrain the range of formatted values. The maximum length of string
- arguments can be bounded by specifying the precision in the format
- directive. When numeric arguments of format directives can be assumed
- to be bounded by less than the precision of their type, choosing
- an appropriate length modifier to the format specifier will reduce
- the required buffer size. For example, if <var>a</var> and <var>b</var> in the
- example above can be assumed to be within the precision of
- the <code>short int</code> type then using either the <code>%hi</code> format
- directive or casting the argument to <code>short</code> reduces the maximum
- required size of the buffer to 24 bytes.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void f (int a, int b)
- {
- char buf [23];
- sprintf (buf, "a = %hi, b = %i\n", a, (short)b);
- }
- </pre></div>
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-format-zero-length</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dzero_002dlength"></a>
- <a name="index-Wformat_002dzero_002dlength"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, do not warn about zero-length formats.
- The C standard specifies that zero-length formats are allowed.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-nonliteral</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002dnonliteral"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dnonliteral"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, also warn if the format string is not a
- string literal and so cannot be checked, unless the format function
- takes its format arguments as a <code>va_list</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-security</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002dsecurity"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dsecurity"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, also warn about uses of format
- functions that represent possible security problems. At present, this
- warns about calls to <code>printf</code> and <code>scanf</code> functions where the
- format string is not a string literal and there are no format arguments,
- as in <code>printf (foo);</code>. This may be a security hole if the format
- string came from untrusted input and contains ‘<samp>%n</samp>’. (This is
- currently a subset of what <samp>-Wformat-nonliteral</samp> warns about, but
- in future warnings may be added to <samp>-Wformat-security</samp> that are not
- included in <samp>-Wformat-nonliteral</samp>.)
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-signedness</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002dsignedness"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dsignedness"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, also warn if the format string
- requires an unsigned argument and the argument is signed and vice versa.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-truncation</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-truncation=<var>level</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002dtruncation"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dtruncation"></a>
- <p>Warn about calls to formatted input/output functions such as <code>snprintf</code>
- and <code>vsnprintf</code> that might result in output truncation. When the exact
- number of bytes written by a format directive cannot be determined at
- compile-time it is estimated based on heuristics that depend on
- the <var>level</var> argument and on optimization. While enabling optimization
- will in most cases improve the accuracy of the warning, it may also result
- in false positives. Except as noted otherwise, the option uses the same
- logic <samp>-Wformat-overflow</samp>.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wformat-truncation</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-truncation=1</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002dtruncation-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dtruncation-1"></a>
- <p>Level <var>1</var> of <samp>-Wformat-truncation</samp> enabled by <samp>-Wformat</samp>
- employs a conservative approach that warns only about calls to bounded
- functions whose return value is unused and that will most likely result
- in output truncation.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-truncation=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Level <var>2</var> warns also about calls to bounded functions whose return
- value is used and that might result in truncation given an argument of
- sufficient length or magnitude.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wformat-y2k</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wformat_002dy2k"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat_002dy2k"></a>
- <p>If <samp>-Wformat</samp> is specified, also warn about <code>strftime</code>
- formats that may yield only a two-digit year.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wnonnull</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wnonnull"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dnonnull"></a>
- <p>Warn about passing a null pointer for arguments marked as
- requiring a non-null value by the <code>nonnull</code> function attribute.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wnonnull</samp> is included in <samp>-Wall</samp> and <samp>-Wformat</samp>. It
- can be disabled with the <samp>-Wno-nonnull</samp> option.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wnonnull-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wnonnull_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dnonnull_002dcompare"></a>
- <p>Warn when comparing an argument marked with the <code>nonnull</code>
- function attribute against null inside the function.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wnonnull-compare</samp> is included in <samp>-Wall</samp>. It
- can be disabled with the <samp>-Wno-nonnull-compare</samp> option.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wnull-dereference</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wnull_002ddereference"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dnull_002ddereference"></a>
- <p>Warn if the compiler detects paths that trigger erroneous or
- undefined behavior due to dereferencing a null pointer. This option
- is only active when <samp>-fdelete-null-pointer-checks</samp> is active,
- which is enabled by optimizations in most targets. The precision of
- the warnings depends on the optimization options used.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Winit-self <span class="roman">(C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Winit_002dself"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dinit_002dself"></a>
- <p>Warn about uninitialized variables that are initialized with themselves.
- Note this option can only be used with the <samp>-Wuninitialized</samp> option.
- </p>
- <p>For example, GCC warns about <code>i</code> being uninitialized in the
- following snippet only when <samp>-Winit-self</samp> has been specified:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">int f()
- {
- int i = i;
- return i;
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp> in C++.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-implicit-int <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wimplicit_002dint"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dimplicit_002dint"></a>
- <p>This option controls warnings when a declaration does not specify a type.
- This warning is enabled by default in C99 and later dialects of C,
- and also by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-implicit-function-declaration <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wimplicit_002dfunction_002ddeclaration"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dimplicit_002dfunction_002ddeclaration"></a>
- <p>This option controls warnings when a function is used before being declared.
- This warning is enabled by default in C99 and later dialects of C,
- and also by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- The warning is made into an error by <samp>-pedantic-errors</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wimplicit <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wimplicit"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dimplicit"></a>
- <p>Same as <samp>-Wimplicit-int</samp> and <samp>-Wimplicit-function-declaration</samp>.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wimplicit-fallthrough</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wimplicit_002dfallthrough"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dimplicit_002dfallthrough"></a>
- <p><samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough</samp> is the same as <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3</samp>
- and <samp>-Wno-implicit-fallthrough</samp> is the same as
- <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=0</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wimplicit_002dfallthrough_003d"></a>
- <p>Warn when a switch case falls through. For example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch (cond)
- {
- case 1:
- a = 1;
- break;
- case 2:
- a = 2;
- case 3:
- a = 3;
- break;
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning does not warn when the last statement of a case cannot
- fall through, e.g. when there is a return statement or a call to function
- declared with the noreturn attribute. <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=</samp>
- also takes into account control flow statements, such as ifs, and only
- warns when appropriate. E.g.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch (cond)
- {
- case 1:
- if (i > 3) {
- bar (5);
- break;
- } else if (i < 1) {
- bar (0);
- } else
- return;
- default:
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Since there are occasions where a switch case fall through is desirable,
- GCC provides an attribute, <code>__attribute__ ((fallthrough))</code>, that is
- to be used along with a null statement to suppress this warning that
- would normally occur:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch (cond)
- {
- case 1:
- bar (0);
- __attribute__ ((fallthrough));
- default:
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>C++17 provides a standard way to suppress the <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough</samp>
- warning using <code>[[fallthrough]];</code> instead of the GNU attribute. In C++11
- or C++14 users can use <code>[[gnu::fallthrough]];</code>, which is a GNU extension.
- Instead of these attributes, it is also possible to add a fallthrough comment
- to silence the warning. The whole body of the C or C++ style comment should
- match the given regular expressions listed below. The option argument <var>n</var>
- specifies what kind of comments are accepted:
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li> <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=0</samp> disables the warning altogether.
-
- </li><li> <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=1</samp> matches <code>.*</code> regular
- expression, any comment is used as fallthrough comment.
-
- </li><li> <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=2</samp> case insensitively matches
- <code>.*falls?[ \t-]*thr(ough|u).*</code> regular expression.
-
- </li><li> <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3</samp> case sensitively matches one of the
- following regular expressions:
-
- <ul>
- <li> <code>-fallthrough</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>@fallthrough@</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>lint -fallthrough[ \t]*</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>[ \t.!]*(ELSE,? |INTENTIONAL(LY)? )?<br>FALL(S | |-)?THR(OUGH|U)[ \t.!]*(-[^\n\r]*)?</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>[ \t.!]*(Else,? |Intentional(ly)? )?<br>Fall((s | |-)[Tt]|t)hr(ough|u)[ \t.!]*(-[^\n\r]*)?</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>[ \t.!]*([Ee]lse,? |[Ii]ntentional(ly)? )?<br>fall(s | |-)?thr(ough|u)[ \t.!]*(-[^\n\r]*)?</code>
-
- </li></ul>
-
- </li><li> <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=4</samp> case sensitively matches one of the
- following regular expressions:
-
- <ul>
- <li> <code>-fallthrough</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>@fallthrough@</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>lint -fallthrough[ \t]*</code>
-
- </li><li> <code>[ \t]*FALLTHR(OUGH|U)[ \t]*</code>
-
- </li></ul>
-
- </li><li> <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=5</samp> doesn’t recognize any comments as
- fallthrough comments, only attributes disable the warning.
-
- </li></ul>
-
- <p>The comment needs to be followed after optional whitespace and other comments
- by <code>case</code> or <code>default</code> keywords or by a user label that precedes some
- <code>case</code> or <code>default</code> label.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch (cond)
- {
- case 1:
- bar (0);
- /* FALLTHRU */
- default:
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>The <samp>-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3</samp> warning is enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-if-not-aligned <span class="roman">(C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wif_002dnot_002daligned"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dif_002dnot_002daligned"></a>
- <p>Control if warnings triggered by the <code>warn_if_not_aligned</code> attribute
- should be issued. These warnings are enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wignored-qualifiers <span class="roman">(C and C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wignored_002dqualifiers"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dignored_002dqualifiers"></a>
- <p>Warn if the return type of a function has a type qualifier
- such as <code>const</code>. For ISO C such a type qualifier has no effect,
- since the value returned by a function is not an lvalue.
- For C++, the warning is only emitted for scalar types or <code>void</code>.
- ISO C prohibits qualified <code>void</code> return types on function
- definitions, so such return types always receive a warning
- even without this option.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-ignored-attributes <span class="roman">(C and C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wignored_002dattributes"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dignored_002dattributes"></a>
- <p>This option controls warnings when an attribute is ignored.
- This is different from the
- <samp>-Wattributes</samp> option in that it warns whenever the compiler decides
- to drop an attribute, not that the attribute is either unknown, used in a
- wrong place, etc. This warning is enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmain</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmain"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmain"></a>
- <p>Warn if the type of <code>main</code> is suspicious. <code>main</code> should be
- a function with external linkage, returning int, taking either zero
- arguments, two, or three arguments of appropriate types. This warning
- is enabled by default in C++ and is enabled by either <samp>-Wall</samp>
- or <samp>-Wpedantic</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmisleading-indentation <span class="roman">(C and C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmisleading_002dindentation"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmisleading_002dindentation"></a>
- <p>Warn when the indentation of the code does not reflect the block structure.
- Specifically, a warning is issued for <code>if</code>, <code>else</code>, <code>while</code>, and
- <code>for</code> clauses with a guarded statement that does not use braces,
- followed by an unguarded statement with the same indentation.
- </p>
- <p>In the following example, the call to “bar” is misleadingly indented as
- if it were guarded by the “if” conditional.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> if (some_condition ())
- foo ();
- bar (); /* Gotcha: this is not guarded by the "if". */
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In the case of mixed tabs and spaces, the warning uses the
- <samp>-ftabstop=</samp> option to determine if the statements line up
- (defaulting to 8).
- </p>
- <p>The warning is not issued for code involving multiline preprocessor logic
- such as the following example.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> if (flagA)
- foo (0);
- #if SOME_CONDITION_THAT_DOES_NOT_HOLD
- if (flagB)
- #endif
- foo (1);
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>The warning is not issued after a <code>#line</code> directive, since this
- typically indicates autogenerated code, and no assumptions can be made
- about the layout of the file that the directive references.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp> in C and C++.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-attributes</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dattributes"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dattributes"></a>
- <p>Warn when a declaration of a function is missing one or more attributes
- that a related function is declared with and whose absence may adversely
- affect the correctness or efficiency of generated code. For example,
- the warning is issued for declarations of aliases that use attributes
- to specify less restrictive requirements than those of their targets.
- This typically represents a potential optimization opportunity.
- By contrast, the <samp>-Wattribute-alias=2</samp> option controls warnings
- issued when the alias is more restrictive than the target, which could
- lead to incorrect code generation.
- Attributes considered include <code>alloc_align</code>, <code>alloc_size</code>,
- <code>cold</code>, <code>const</code>, <code>hot</code>, <code>leaf</code>, <code>malloc</code>,
- <code>nonnull</code>, <code>noreturn</code>, <code>nothrow</code>, <code>pure</code>,
- <code>returns_nonnull</code>, and <code>returns_twice</code>.
- </p>
- <p>In C++, the warning is issued when an explicit specialization of a primary
- template declared with attribute <code>alloc_align</code>, <code>alloc_size</code>,
- <code>assume_aligned</code>, <code>format</code>, <code>format_arg</code>, <code>malloc</code>,
- or <code>nonnull</code> is declared without it. Attributes <code>deprecated</code>,
- <code>error</code>, and <code>warning</code> suppress the warning.
- (see <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- <p>You can use the <code>copy</code> attribute to apply the same
- set of attributes to a declaration as that on another declaration without
- explicitly enumerating the attributes. This attribute can be applied
- to declarations of functions (see <a href="Common-Function-Attributes.html#Common-Function-Attributes">Common Function Attributes</a>),
- variables (see <a href="Common-Variable-Attributes.html#Common-Variable-Attributes">Common Variable Attributes</a>), or types
- (see <a href="Common-Type-Attributes.html#Common-Type-Attributes">Common Type Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wmissing-attributes</samp> is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>For example, since the declaration of the primary function template
- below makes use of both attribute <code>malloc</code> and <code>alloc_size</code>
- the declaration of the explicit specialization of the template is
- diagnosed because it is missing one of the attributes.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">template <class T>
- T* __attribute__ ((malloc, alloc_size (1)))
- allocate (size_t);
-
- template <>
- void* __attribute__ ((malloc)) // missing alloc_size
- allocate<void> (size_t);
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-braces</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dbraces"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dbraces"></a>
- <p>Warn if an aggregate or union initializer is not fully bracketed. In
- the following example, the initializer for <code>a</code> is not fully
- bracketed, but that for <code>b</code> is fully bracketed.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">int a[2][2] = { 0, 1, 2, 3 };
- int b[2][2] = { { 0, 1 }, { 2, 3 } };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-include-dirs <span class="roman">(C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dinclude_002ddirs"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dinclude_002ddirs"></a>
- <p>Warn if a user-supplied include directory does not exist.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-missing-profile</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dprofile"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dprofile"></a>
- <p>This option controls warnings if feedback profiles are missing when using the
- <samp>-fprofile-use</samp> option.
- This option diagnoses those cases where a new function or a new file is added
- between compiling with <samp>-fprofile-generate</samp> and with
- <samp>-fprofile-use</samp>, without regenerating the profiles.
- In these cases, the profile feedback data files do not contain any
- profile feedback information for
- the newly added function or file respectively. Also, in the case when profile
- count data (.gcda) files are removed, GCC cannot use any profile feedback
- information. In all these cases, warnings are issued to inform you that a
- profile generation step is due.
- Ignoring the warning can result in poorly optimized code.
- <samp>-Wno-missing-profile</samp> can be used to
- disable the warning, but this is not recommended and should be done only
- when non-existent profile data is justified.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmultistatement-macros</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmultistatement_002dmacros"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmultistatement_002dmacros"></a>
- <p>Warn about unsafe multiple statement macros that appear to be guarded
- by a clause such as <code>if</code>, <code>else</code>, <code>for</code>, <code>switch</code>, or
- <code>while</code>, in which only the first statement is actually guarded after
- the macro is expanded.
- </p>
- <p>For example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">#define DOIT x++; y++
- if (c)
- DOIT;
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>will increment <code>y</code> unconditionally, not just when <code>c</code> holds.
- The can usually be fixed by wrapping the macro in a do-while loop:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">#define DOIT do { x++; y++; } while (0)
- if (c)
- DOIT;
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp> in C and C++.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wparentheses</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wparentheses"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dparentheses"></a>
- <p>Warn if parentheses are omitted in certain contexts, such
- as when there is an assignment in a context where a truth value
- is expected, or when operators are nested whose precedence people
- often get confused about.
- </p>
- <p>Also warn if a comparison like <code>x<=y<=z</code> appears; this is
- equivalent to <code>(x<=y ? 1 : 0) <= z</code>, which is a different
- interpretation from that of ordinary mathematical notation.
- </p>
- <p>Also warn for dangerous uses of the GNU extension to
- <code>?:</code> with omitted middle operand. When the condition
- in the <code>?</code>: operator is a boolean expression, the omitted value is
- always 1. Often programmers expect it to be a value computed
- inside the conditional expression instead.
- </p>
- <p>For C++ this also warns for some cases of unnecessary parentheses in
- declarations, which can indicate an attempt at a function call instead
- of a declaration:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">{
- // Declares a local variable called mymutex.
- std::unique_lock<std::mutex> (mymutex);
- // User meant std::unique_lock<std::mutex> lock (mymutex);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsequence-point</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsequence_002dpoint"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsequence_002dpoint"></a>
- <p>Warn about code that may have undefined semantics because of violations
- of sequence point rules in the C and C++ standards.
- </p>
- <p>The C and C++ standards define the order in which expressions in a C/C++
- program are evaluated in terms of <em>sequence points</em>, which represent
- a partial ordering between the execution of parts of the program: those
- executed before the sequence point, and those executed after it. These
- occur after the evaluation of a full expression (one which is not part
- of a larger expression), after the evaluation of the first operand of a
- <code>&&</code>, <code>||</code>, <code>? :</code> or <code>,</code> (comma) operator, before a
- function is called (but after the evaluation of its arguments and the
- expression denoting the called function), and in certain other places.
- Other than as expressed by the sequence point rules, the order of
- evaluation of subexpressions of an expression is not specified. All
- these rules describe only a partial order rather than a total order,
- since, for example, if two functions are called within one expression
- with no sequence point between them, the order in which the functions
- are called is not specified. However, the standards committee have
- ruled that function calls do not overlap.
- </p>
- <p>It is not specified when between sequence points modifications to the
- values of objects take effect. Programs whose behavior depends on this
- have undefined behavior; the C and C++ standards specify that “Between
- the previous and next sequence point an object shall have its stored
- value modified at most once by the evaluation of an expression.
- Furthermore, the prior value shall be read only to determine the value
- to be stored.”. If a program breaks these rules, the results on any
- particular implementation are entirely unpredictable.
- </p>
- <p>Examples of code with undefined behavior are <code>a = a++;</code>, <code>a[n]
- = b[n++]</code> and <code>a[i++] = i;</code>. Some more complicated cases are not
- diagnosed by this option, and it may give an occasional false positive
- result, but in general it has been found fairly effective at detecting
- this sort of problem in programs.
- </p>
- <p>The C++17 standard will define the order of evaluation of operands in
- more cases: in particular it requires that the right-hand side of an
- assignment be evaluated before the left-hand side, so the above
- examples are no longer undefined. But this option will still warn
- about them, to help people avoid writing code that is undefined in C
- and earlier revisions of C++.
- </p>
- <p>The standard is worded confusingly, therefore there is some debate
- over the precise meaning of the sequence point rules in subtle cases.
- Links to discussions of the problem, including proposed formal
- definitions, may be found on the GCC readings page, at
- <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/readings.html">http://gcc.gnu.org/readings.html</a>.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp> for C and C++.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-return-local-addr</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dreturn_002dlocal_002daddr"></a>
- <a name="index-Wreturn_002dlocal_002daddr"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about returning a pointer (or in C++, a reference) to a
- variable that goes out of scope after the function returns.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wreturn-type</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wreturn_002dtype"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dreturn_002dtype"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a function is defined with a return type that defaults
- to <code>int</code>. Also warn about any <code>return</code> statement with no
- return value in a function whose return type is not <code>void</code>
- (falling off the end of the function body is considered returning
- without a value).
- </p>
- <p>For C only, warn about a <code>return</code> statement with an expression in a
- function whose return type is <code>void</code>, unless the expression type is
- also <code>void</code>. As a GNU extension, the latter case is accepted
- without a warning unless <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> is used. Attempting
- to use the return value of a non-<code>void</code> function other than <code>main</code>
- that flows off the end by reaching the closing curly brace that terminates
- the function is undefined.
- </p>
- <p>Unlike in C, in C++, flowing off the end of a non-<code>void</code> function other
- than <code>main</code> results in undefined behavior even when the value of
- the function is not used.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by default in C++ and by <samp>-Wall</samp> otherwise.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-shift-count-negative</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshift_002dcount_002dnegative"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dshift_002dcount_002dnegative"></a>
- <p>Controls warnings if a shift count is negative.
- This warning is enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-shift-count-overflow</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshift_002dcount_002doverflow"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dshift_002dcount_002doverflow"></a>
- <p>Controls warnings if a shift count is greater than or equal to the bit width
- of the type. This warning is enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wshift-negative-value</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshift_002dnegative_002dvalue"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dshift_002dnegative_002dvalue"></a>
- <p>Warn if left shifting a negative value. This warning is enabled by
- <samp>-Wextra</samp> in C99 and C++11 modes (and newer).
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-shift-overflow</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wshift-overflow=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshift_002doverflow"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dshift_002doverflow"></a>
- <p>These options control warnings about left shift overflows.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wshift-overflow=1</code></dt>
- <dd><p>This is the warning level of <samp>-Wshift-overflow</samp> and is enabled
- by default in C99 and C++11 modes (and newer). This warning level does
- not warn about left-shifting 1 into the sign bit. (However, in C, such
- an overflow is still rejected in contexts where an integer constant expression
- is required.) No warning is emitted in C++2A mode (and newer), as signed left
- shifts always wrap.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wshift-overflow=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>This warning level also warns about left-shifting 1 into the sign bit,
- unless C++14 mode (or newer) is active.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wswitch</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wswitch"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dswitch"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a <code>switch</code> statement has an index of enumerated type
- and lacks a <code>case</code> for one or more of the named codes of that
- enumeration. (The presence of a <code>default</code> label prevents this
- warning.) <code>case</code> labels outside the enumeration range also
- provoke warnings when this option is used (even if there is a
- <code>default</code> label).
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wswitch-default</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wswitch_002ddefault"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dswitch_002ddefault"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a <code>switch</code> statement does not have a <code>default</code>
- case.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wswitch-enum</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wswitch_002denum"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dswitch_002denum"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a <code>switch</code> statement has an index of enumerated type
- and lacks a <code>case</code> for one or more of the named codes of that
- enumeration. <code>case</code> labels outside the enumeration range also
- provoke warnings when this option is used. The only difference
- between <samp>-Wswitch</samp> and this option is that this option gives a
- warning about an omitted enumeration code even if there is a
- <code>default</code> label.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-switch-bool</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wswitch_002dbool"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dswitch_002dbool"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when a <code>switch</code> statement has an index of boolean type
- and the case values are outside the range of a boolean type.
- It is possible to suppress this warning by casting the controlling
- expression to a type other than <code>bool</code>. For example:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch ((int) (a == 4))
- {
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
- <p>This warning is enabled by default for C and C++ programs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-switch-outside-range</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wswitch_002doutside_002drange"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dswitch_002doutside_002drange"></a>
- <p>This option controls warnings when a <code>switch</code> case has a value
- that is outside of its
- respective type range. This warning is enabled by default for
- C and C++ programs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-switch-unreachable</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wswitch_002dunreachable"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dswitch_002dunreachable"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when a <code>switch</code> statement contains statements between the
- controlling expression and the first case label, which will never be
- executed. For example:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch (cond)
- {
- i = 15;
- …
- case 5:
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
- <p><samp>-Wswitch-unreachable</samp> does not warn if the statement between the
- controlling expression and the first case label is just a declaration:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">switch (cond)
- {
- int i;
- …
- case 5:
- i = 5;
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
- <p>This warning is enabled by default for C and C++ programs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsync-nand <span class="roman">(C and C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsync_002dnand"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsync_002dnand"></a>
- <p>Warn when <code>__sync_fetch_and_nand</code> and <code>__sync_nand_and_fetch</code>
- built-in functions are used. These functions changed semantics in GCC 4.4.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-but-set-parameter</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dbut_002dset_002dparameter"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dbut_002dset_002dparameter"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a function parameter is assigned to, but otherwise unused
- (aside from its declaration).
- </p>
- <p>To suppress this warning use the <code>unused</code> attribute
- (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- <p>This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wunused</samp> together with
- <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-but-set-variable</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dbut_002dset_002dvariable"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dbut_002dset_002dvariable"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a local variable is assigned to, but otherwise unused
- (aside from its declaration).
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>To suppress this warning use the <code>unused</code> attribute
- (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- <p>This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wunused</samp>, which is enabled
- by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-function</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dfunction"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dfunction"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a static function is declared but not defined or a
- non-inline static function is unused.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-label</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dlabel"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dlabel"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a label is declared but not used.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>To suppress this warning use the <code>unused</code> attribute
- (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-local-typedefs <span class="roman">(C, Objective-C, C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dlocal_002dtypedefs"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dlocal_002dtypedefs"></a>
- <p>Warn when a typedef locally defined in a function is not used.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-parameter</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dparameter"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dparameter"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a function parameter is unused aside from its declaration.
- </p>
- <p>To suppress this warning use the <code>unused</code> attribute
- (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-unused-result</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dresult"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dresult"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if a caller of a function marked with attribute
- <code>warn_unused_result</code> (see <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>) does not use
- its return value. The default is <samp>-Wunused-result</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-variable</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dvariable"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dvariable"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a local or static variable is unused aside from its
- declaration. This option implies <samp>-Wunused-const-variable=1</samp> for C,
- but not for C++. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>To suppress this warning use the <code>unused</code> attribute
- (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-const-variable</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-const-variable=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dconst_002dvariable"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dconst_002dvariable"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a constant static variable is unused aside from its declaration.
- <samp>-Wunused-const-variable=1</samp> is enabled by <samp>-Wunused-variable</samp>
- for C, but not for C++. In C this declares variable storage, but in C++ this
- is not an error since const variables take the place of <code>#define</code>s.
- </p>
- <p>To suppress this warning use the <code>unused</code> attribute
- (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>).
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wunused-const-variable=1</code></dt>
- <dd><p>This is the warning level that is enabled by <samp>-Wunused-variable</samp> for
- C. It warns only about unused static const variables defined in the main
- compilation unit, but not about static const variables declared in any
- header included.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-const-variable=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>This warning level also warns for unused constant static variables in
- headers (excluding system headers). This is the warning level of
- <samp>-Wunused-const-variable</samp> and must be explicitly requested since
- in C++ this isn’t an error and in C it might be harder to clean up all
- headers included.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-value</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dvalue"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused_002dvalue"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a statement computes a result that is explicitly not
- used. To suppress this warning cast the unused expression to
- <code>void</code>. This includes an expression-statement or the left-hand
- side of a comma expression that contains no side effects. For example,
- an expression such as <code>x[i,j]</code> causes a warning, while
- <code>x[(void)i,j]</code> does not.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunused"></a>
- <p>All the above <samp>-Wunused</samp> options combined.
- </p>
- <p>In order to get a warning about an unused function parameter, you must
- either specify <samp>-Wextra -Wunused</samp> (note that <samp>-Wall</samp> implies
- <samp>-Wunused</samp>), or separately specify <samp>-Wunused-parameter</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wuninitialized</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wuninitialized"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002duninitialized"></a>
- <p>Warn if an automatic variable is used without first being initialized.
- In C++, warn if a non-static reference or non-static <code>const</code>
- member appears in a class without constructors.
- </p>
- <p>If you want to warn about code that uses the uninitialized value of the
- variable in its own initializer, use the <samp>-Winit-self</samp> option.
- </p>
- <p>These warnings occur for individual uninitialized elements of
- structure, union or array variables as well as for variables that are
- uninitialized as a whole. They do not occur for variables or elements
- declared <code>volatile</code>. Because these warnings depend on
- optimization, the exact variables or elements for which there are
- warnings depend on the precise optimization options and version of GCC
- used.
- </p>
- <p>Note that there may be no warning about a variable that is used only
- to compute a value that itself is never used, because such
- computations may be deleted by data flow analysis before the warnings
- are printed.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-invalid-memory-model</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Winvalid_002dmemory_002dmodel"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dinvalid_002dmemory_002dmodel"></a>
- <p>This option controls warnings
- for invocations of <a href="_005f_005fatomic-Builtins.html#g_t_005f_005fatomic-Builtins">__atomic Builtins</a>, <a href="_005f_005fsync-Builtins.html#g_t_005f_005fsync-Builtins">__sync Builtins</a>,
- and the C11 atomic generic functions with a memory consistency argument
- that is either invalid for the operation or outside the range of values
- of the <code>memory_order</code> enumeration. For example, since the
- <code>__atomic_store</code> and <code>__atomic_store_n</code> built-ins are only
- defined for the relaxed, release, and sequentially consistent memory
- orders the following code is diagnosed:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void store (int *i)
- {
- __atomic_store_n (i, 0, memory_order_consume);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p><samp>-Winvalid-memory-model</samp> is enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmaybe-uninitialized</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmaybe_002duninitialized"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmaybe_002duninitialized"></a>
- <p>For an automatic (i.e. local) variable, if there exists a path from the
- function entry to a use of the variable that is initialized, but there exist
- some other paths for which the variable is not initialized, the compiler
- emits a warning if it cannot prove the uninitialized paths are not
- executed at run time.
- </p>
- <p>These warnings are only possible in optimizing compilation, because otherwise
- GCC does not keep track of the state of variables.
- </p>
- <p>These warnings are made optional because GCC may not be able to determine when
- the code is correct in spite of appearing to have an error. Here is one
- example of how this can happen:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">{
- int x;
- switch (y)
- {
- case 1: x = 1;
- break;
- case 2: x = 4;
- break;
- case 3: x = 5;
- }
- foo (x);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>If the value of <code>y</code> is always 1, 2 or 3, then <code>x</code> is
- always initialized, but GCC doesn’t know this. To suppress the
- warning, you need to provide a default case with assert(0) or
- similar code.
- </p>
- <a name="index-longjmp-warnings"></a>
- <p>This option also warns when a non-volatile automatic variable might be
- changed by a call to <code>longjmp</code>.
- The compiler sees only the calls to <code>setjmp</code>. It cannot know
- where <code>longjmp</code> will be called; in fact, a signal handler could
- call it at any point in the code. As a result, you may get a warning
- even when there is in fact no problem because <code>longjmp</code> cannot
- in fact be called at the place that would cause a problem.
- </p>
- <p>Some spurious warnings can be avoided if you declare all the functions
- you use that never return as <code>noreturn</code>. See <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp> or <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunknown-pragmas</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunknown_002dpragmas"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunknown_002dpragmas"></a>
- <a name="index-warning-for-unknown-pragmas"></a>
- <a name="index-unknown-pragmas_002c-warning"></a>
- <a name="index-pragmas_002c-warning-of-unknown"></a>
- <p>Warn when a <code>#pragma</code> directive is encountered that is not understood by
- GCC. If this command-line option is used, warnings are even issued
- for unknown pragmas in system header files. This is not the case if
- the warnings are only enabled by the <samp>-Wall</samp> command-line option.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-pragmas</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dpragmas"></a>
- <a name="index-Wpragmas"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about misuses of pragmas, such as incorrect parameters,
- invalid syntax, or conflicts between pragmas. See also
- <samp>-Wunknown-pragmas</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-prio-ctor-dtor</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dprio_002dctor_002ddtor"></a>
- <a name="index-Wprio_002dctor_002ddtor"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if a priority from 0 to 100 is used for constructor or destructor.
- The use of constructor and destructor attributes allow you to assign a
- priority to the constructor/destructor to control its order of execution
- before <code>main</code> is called or after it returns. The priority values must be
- greater than 100 as the compiler reserves priority values between 0–100 for
- the implementation.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-aliasing</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstrict_002daliasing"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstrict_002daliasing"></a>
- <p>This option is only active when <samp>-fstrict-aliasing</samp> is active.
- It warns about code that might break the strict aliasing rules that the
- compiler is using for optimization. The warning does not catch all
- cases, but does attempt to catch the more common pitfalls. It is
- included in <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- It is equivalent to <samp>-Wstrict-aliasing=3</samp>
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-aliasing=n</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstrict_002daliasing_003dn"></a>
- <p>This option is only active when <samp>-fstrict-aliasing</samp> is active.
- It warns about code that might break the strict aliasing rules that the
- compiler is using for optimization.
- Higher levels correspond to higher accuracy (fewer false positives).
- Higher levels also correspond to more effort, similar to the way <samp>-O</samp>
- works.
- <samp>-Wstrict-aliasing</samp> is equivalent to <samp>-Wstrict-aliasing=3</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>Level 1: Most aggressive, quick, least accurate.
- Possibly useful when higher levels
- do not warn but <samp>-fstrict-aliasing</samp> still breaks the code, as it has very few
- false negatives. However, it has many false positives.
- Warns for all pointer conversions between possibly incompatible types,
- even if never dereferenced. Runs in the front end only.
- </p>
- <p>Level 2: Aggressive, quick, not too precise.
- May still have many false positives (not as many as level 1 though),
- and few false negatives (but possibly more than level 1).
- Unlike level 1, it only warns when an address is taken. Warns about
- incomplete types. Runs in the front end only.
- </p>
- <p>Level 3 (default for <samp>-Wstrict-aliasing</samp>):
- Should have very few false positives and few false
- negatives. Slightly slower than levels 1 or 2 when optimization is enabled.
- Takes care of the common pun+dereference pattern in the front end:
- <code>*(int*)&some_float</code>.
- If optimization is enabled, it also runs in the back end, where it deals
- with multiple statement cases using flow-sensitive points-to information.
- Only warns when the converted pointer is dereferenced.
- Does not warn about incomplete types.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstrict_002doverflow"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstrict_002doverflow"></a>
- <p>This option is only active when signed overflow is undefined.
- It warns about cases where the compiler optimizes based on the
- assumption that signed overflow does not occur. Note that it does not
- warn about all cases where the code might overflow: it only warns
- about cases where the compiler implements some optimization. Thus
- this warning depends on the optimization level.
- </p>
- <p>An optimization that assumes that signed overflow does not occur is
- perfectly safe if the values of the variables involved are such that
- overflow never does, in fact, occur. Therefore this warning can
- easily give a false positive: a warning about code that is not
- actually a problem. To help focus on important issues, several
- warning levels are defined. No warnings are issued for the use of
- undefined signed overflow when estimating how many iterations a loop
- requires, in particular when determining whether a loop will be
- executed at all.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow=1</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Warn about cases that are both questionable and easy to avoid. For
- example the compiler simplifies
- <code>x + 1 > x</code> to <code>1</code>. This level of
- <samp>-Wstrict-overflow</samp> is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>; higher levels
- are not, and must be explicitly requested.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Also warn about other cases where a comparison is simplified to a
- constant. For example: <code>abs (x) >= 0</code>. This can only be
- simplified when signed integer overflow is undefined, because
- <code>abs (INT_MIN)</code> overflows to <code>INT_MIN</code>, which is less than
- zero. <samp>-Wstrict-overflow</samp> (with no level) is the same as
- <samp>-Wstrict-overflow=2</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow=3</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Also warn about other cases where a comparison is simplified. For
- example: <code>x + 1 > 1</code> is simplified to <code>x > 0</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow=4</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Also warn about other simplifications not covered by the above cases.
- For example: <code>(x * 10) / 5</code> is simplified to <code>x * 2</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-overflow=5</code></dt>
- <dd><p>Also warn about cases where the compiler reduces the magnitude of a
- constant involved in a comparison. For example: <code>x + 2 > y</code> is
- simplified to <code>x + 1 >= y</code>. This is reported only at the
- highest warning level because this simplification applies to many
- comparisons, so this warning level gives a very large number of
- false positives.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstring-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstring_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstring_002dcompare"></a>
- <p>Warn for calls to <code>strcmp</code> and <code>strncmp</code> whose result is
- determined to be either zero or non-zero in tests for such equality
- owing to the length of one argument being greater than the size of
- the array the other argument is stored in (or the bound in the case
- of <code>strncmp</code>). Such calls could be mistakes. For example,
- the call to <code>strcmp</code> below is diagnosed because its result is
- necessarily non-zero irrespective of the contents of the array <code>a</code>.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">extern char a[4];
- void f (char *d)
- {
- strcpy (d, "string");
- …
- if (0 == strcmp (a, d)) // cannot be true
- puts ("a and d are the same");
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p><samp>-Wstring-compare</samp> is enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow=<var>type</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstringop_002doverflow"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstringop_002doverflow"></a>
- <p>Warn for calls to string manipulation functions such as <code>memcpy</code> and
- <code>strcpy</code> that are determined to overflow the destination buffer. The
- optional argument is one greater than the type of Object Size Checking to
- perform to determine the size of the destination. See <a href="Object-Size-Checking.html#Object-Size-Checking">Object Size Checking</a>.
- The argument is meaningful only for functions that operate on character arrays
- but not for raw memory functions like <code>memcpy</code> which always make use
- of Object Size type-0. The option also warns for calls that specify a size
- in excess of the largest possible object or at most <code>SIZE_MAX / 2</code> bytes.
- The option produces the best results with optimization enabled but can detect
- a small subset of simple buffer overflows even without optimization in
- calls to the GCC built-in functions like <code>__builtin_memcpy</code> that
- correspond to the standard functions. In any case, the option warns about
- just a subset of buffer overflows detected by the corresponding overflow
- checking built-ins. For example, the option issues a warning for
- the <code>strcpy</code> call below because it copies at least 5 characters
- (the string <code>"blue"</code> including the terminating NUL) into the buffer
- of size 4.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">enum Color { blue, purple, yellow };
- const char* f (enum Color clr)
- {
- static char buf [4];
- const char *str;
- switch (clr)
- {
- case blue: str = "blue"; break;
- case purple: str = "purple"; break;
- case yellow: str = "yellow"; break;
- }
-
- return strcpy (buf, str); // warning here
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Option <samp>-Wstringop-overflow=2</samp> is enabled by default.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow=1</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstringop_002doverflow-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstringop_002doverflow-1"></a>
- <p>The <samp>-Wstringop-overflow=1</samp> option uses type-zero Object Size Checking
- to determine the sizes of destination objects. This is the default setting
- of the option. At this setting the option does not warn for writes past
- the end of subobjects of larger objects accessed by pointers unless the
- size of the largest surrounding object is known. When the destination may
- be one of several objects it is assumed to be the largest one of them. On
- Linux systems, when optimization is enabled at this setting the option warns
- for the same code as when the <code>_FORTIFY_SOURCE</code> macro is defined to
- a non-zero value.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>The <samp>-Wstringop-overflow=2</samp> option uses type-one Object Size Checking
- to determine the sizes of destination objects. At this setting the option
- warna about overflows when writing to members of the largest complete
- objects whose exact size is known. However, it does not warn for excessive
- writes to the same members of unknown objects referenced by pointers since
- they may point to arrays containing unknown numbers of elements.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow=3</code></dt>
- <dd><p>The <samp>-Wstringop-overflow=3</samp> option uses type-two Object Size Checking
- to determine the sizes of destination objects. At this setting the option
- warns about overflowing the smallest object or data member. This is the
- most restrictive setting of the option that may result in warnings for safe
- code.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstringop-overflow=4</code></dt>
- <dd><p>The <samp>-Wstringop-overflow=4</samp> option uses type-three Object Size Checking
- to determine the sizes of destination objects. At this setting the option
- warns about overflowing any data members, and when the destination is
- one of several objects it uses the size of the largest of them to decide
- whether to issue a warning. Similarly to <samp>-Wstringop-overflow=3</samp> this
- setting of the option may result in warnings for benign code.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-stringop-truncation</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstringop_002dtruncation"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstringop_002dtruncation"></a>
- <p>Do not warn for calls to bounded string manipulation functions
- such as <code>strncat</code>,
- <code>strncpy</code>, and <code>stpncpy</code> that may either truncate the copied string
- or leave the destination unchanged.
- </p>
- <p>In the following example, the call to <code>strncat</code> specifies a bound that
- is less than the length of the source string. As a result, the copy of
- the source will be truncated and so the call is diagnosed. To avoid the
- warning use <code>bufsize - strlen (buf) - 1)</code> as the bound.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void append (char *buf, size_t bufsize)
- {
- strncat (buf, ".txt", 3);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>As another example, the following call to <code>strncpy</code> results in copying
- to <code>d</code> just the characters preceding the terminating NUL, without
- appending the NUL to the end. Assuming the result of <code>strncpy</code> is
- necessarily a NUL-terminated string is a common mistake, and so the call
- is diagnosed. To avoid the warning when the result is not expected to be
- NUL-terminated, call <code>memcpy</code> instead.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void copy (char *d, const char *s)
- {
- strncpy (d, s, strlen (s));
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In the following example, the call to <code>strncpy</code> specifies the size
- of the destination buffer as the bound. If the length of the source
- string is equal to or greater than this size the result of the copy will
- not be NUL-terminated. Therefore, the call is also diagnosed. To avoid
- the warning, specify <code>sizeof buf - 1</code> as the bound and set the last
- element of the buffer to <code>NUL</code>.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void copy (const char *s)
- {
- char buf[80];
- strncpy (buf, s, sizeof buf);
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In situations where a character array is intended to store a sequence
- of bytes with no terminating <code>NUL</code> such an array may be annotated
- with attribute <code>nonstring</code> to avoid this warning. Such arrays,
- however, are not suitable arguments to functions that expect
- <code>NUL</code>-terminated strings. To help detect accidental misuses of
- such arrays GCC issues warnings unless it can prove that the use is
- safe. See <a href="Common-Variable-Attributes.html#Common-Variable-Attributes">Common Variable Attributes</a>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=<span class="roman">[</span>pure<span class="roman">|</span>const<span class="roman">|</span>noreturn<span class="roman">|</span>format<span class="roman">|</span>cold<span class="roman">|</span>malloc<span class="roman">]</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003d"></a>
- <p>Warn for cases where adding an attribute may be beneficial. The
- attributes currently supported are listed below.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=pure</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=const</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=noreturn</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-noreturn</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=malloc</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003dpure"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003dpure"></a>
- <a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003dconst"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003dconst"></a>
- <a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003dnoreturn"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003dnoreturn"></a>
- <a name="index-Wmissing_002dnoreturn"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dnoreturn"></a>
- <a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003dmalloc"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003dmalloc"></a>
-
- <p>Warn about functions that might be candidates for attributes
- <code>pure</code>, <code>const</code> or <code>noreturn</code> or <code>malloc</code>. The compiler
- only warns for functions visible in other compilation units or (in the case of
- <code>pure</code> and <code>const</code>) if it cannot prove that the function returns
- normally. A function returns normally if it doesn’t contain an infinite loop or
- return abnormally by throwing, calling <code>abort</code> or trapping. This analysis
- requires option <samp>-fipa-pure-const</samp>, which is enabled by default at
- <samp>-O</samp> and higher. Higher optimization levels improve the accuracy
- of the analysis.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=format</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-format-attribute</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003dformat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wmissing_002dformat_002dattribute"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003dformat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dformat_002dattribute"></a>
- <a name="index-Wformat-2"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dformat-1"></a>
-
- <p>Warn about function pointers that might be candidates for <code>format</code>
- attributes. Note these are only possible candidates, not absolute ones.
- GCC guesses that function pointers with <code>format</code> attributes that
- are used in assignment, initialization, parameter passing or return
- statements should have a corresponding <code>format</code> attribute in the
- resulting type. I.e. the left-hand side of the assignment or
- initialization, the type of the parameter variable, or the return type
- of the containing function respectively should also have a <code>format</code>
- attribute to avoid the warning.
- </p>
- <p>GCC also warns about function definitions that might be
- candidates for <code>format</code> attributes. Again, these are only
- possible candidates. GCC guesses that <code>format</code> attributes
- might be appropriate for any function that calls a function like
- <code>vprintf</code> or <code>vscanf</code>, but this might not always be the
- case, and some functions for which <code>format</code> attributes are
- appropriate may not be detected.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsuggest-attribute=cold</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsuggest_002dattribute_003dcold"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsuggest_002dattribute_003dcold"></a>
-
- <p>Warn about functions that might be candidates for <code>cold</code> attribute. This
- is based on static detection and generally only warns about functions which
- always leads to a call to another <code>cold</code> function such as wrappers of
- C++ <code>throw</code> or fatal error reporting functions leading to <code>abort</code>.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Walloc-zero</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dalloc_002dzero"></a>
- <a name="index-Walloc_002dzero"></a>
- <p>Warn about calls to allocation functions decorated with attribute
- <code>alloc_size</code> that specify zero bytes, including those to the built-in
- forms of the functions <code>aligned_alloc</code>, <code>alloca</code>, <code>calloc</code>,
- <code>malloc</code>, and <code>realloc</code>. Because the behavior of these functions
- when called with a zero size differs among implementations (and in the case
- of <code>realloc</code> has been deprecated) relying on it may result in subtle
- portability bugs and should be avoided.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Walloc-size-larger-than=<var>byte-size</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Walloc_002dsize_002dlarger_002dthan_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dalloc_002dsize_002dlarger_002dthan"></a>
- <p>Warn about calls to functions decorated with attribute <code>alloc_size</code>
- that attempt to allocate objects larger than the specified number of bytes,
- or where the result of the size computation in an integer type with infinite
- precision would exceed the value of ‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ on the target.
- <samp>-Walloc-size-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ is enabled by default.
- Warnings controlled by the option can be disabled either by specifying
- <var>byte-size</var> of ‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or more or by
- <samp>-Wno-alloc-size-larger-than</samp>.
- See <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-alloc-size-larger-than</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dalloc_002dsize_002dlarger_002dthan-1"></a>
- <p>Disable <samp>-Walloc-size-larger-than=</samp> warnings. The option is
- equivalent to <samp>-Walloc-size-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or
- larger.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Walloca</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dalloca"></a>
- <a name="index-Walloca"></a>
- <p>This option warns on all uses of <code>alloca</code> in the source.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Walloca-larger-than=<var>byte-size</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Walloca_002dlarger_002dthan_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dalloca_002dlarger_002dthan"></a>
- <p>This option warns on calls to <code>alloca</code> with an integer argument whose
- value is either zero, or that is not bounded by a controlling predicate
- that limits its value to at most <var>byte-size</var>. It also warns for calls
- to <code>alloca</code> where the bound value is unknown. Arguments of non-integer
- types are considered unbounded even if they appear to be constrained to
- the expected range.
- </p>
- <p>For example, a bounded case of <code>alloca</code> could be:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void func (size_t n)
- {
- void *p;
- if (n <= 1000)
- p = alloca (n);
- else
- p = malloc (n);
- f (p);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In the above example, passing <code>-Walloca-larger-than=1000</code> would not
- issue a warning because the call to <code>alloca</code> is known to be at most
- 1000 bytes. However, if <code>-Walloca-larger-than=500</code> were passed,
- the compiler would emit a warning.
- </p>
- <p>Unbounded uses, on the other hand, are uses of <code>alloca</code> with no
- controlling predicate constraining its integer argument. For example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void func ()
- {
- void *p = alloca (n);
- f (p);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>If <code>-Walloca-larger-than=500</code> were passed, the above would trigger
- a warning, but this time because of the lack of bounds checking.
- </p>
- <p>Note, that even seemingly correct code involving signed integers could
- cause a warning:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void func (signed int n)
- {
- if (n < 500)
- {
- p = alloca (n);
- f (p);
- }
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In the above example, <var>n</var> could be negative, causing a larger than
- expected argument to be implicitly cast into the <code>alloca</code> call.
- </p>
- <p>This option also warns when <code>alloca</code> is used in a loop.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Walloca-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ is enabled by default
- but is usually only effective when <samp>-ftree-vrp</samp> is active (default
- for <samp>-O2</samp> and above).
- </p>
- <p>See also <samp>-Wvla-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>byte-size</samp>’.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-alloca-larger-than</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dalloca_002dlarger_002dthan-1"></a>
- <p>Disable <samp>-Walloca-larger-than=</samp> warnings. The option is
- equivalent to <samp>-Walloca-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or larger.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Warith-conversion</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Warith_002dconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002darith_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Do warn about implicit conversions from arithmetic operations even
- when conversion of the operands to the same type cannot change their
- values. This affects warnings from <samp>-Wconversion</samp>,
- <samp>-Wfloat-conversion</samp>, and <samp>-Wsign-conversion</samp>.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void f (char c, int i)
- {
- c = c + i; // warns with <samp>-Wconversion</samp>
- c = c + 1; // only warns with <samp>-Warith-conversion</samp>
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Warray-bounds</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Warray-bounds=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002darray_002dbounds"></a>
- <a name="index-Warray_002dbounds"></a>
- <p>This option is only active when <samp>-ftree-vrp</samp> is active
- (default for <samp>-O2</samp> and above). It warns about subscripts to arrays
- that are always out of bounds. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Warray-bounds=1</code></dt>
- <dd><p>This is the warning level of <samp>-Warray-bounds</samp> and is enabled
- by <samp>-Wall</samp>; higher levels are not, and must be explicitly requested.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Warray-bounds=2</code></dt>
- <dd><p>This warning level also warns about out of bounds access for
- arrays at the end of a struct and for arrays accessed through
- pointers. This warning level may give a larger number of
- false positives and is deactivated by default.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wattribute-alias=<var>n</var></code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wno-attribute-alias</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wattribute_002dalias"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dattribute_002dalias"></a>
- <p>Warn about declarations using the <code>alias</code> and similar attributes whose
- target is incompatible with the type of the alias.
- See <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Declaring Attributes of Functions</a>.
- </p>
- <dl compact="compact">
- <dt><code>-Wattribute-alias=1</code></dt>
- <dd><p>The default warning level of the <samp>-Wattribute-alias</samp> option diagnoses
- incompatibilities between the type of the alias declaration and that of its
- target. Such incompatibilities are typically indicative of bugs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wattribute-alias=2</code></dt>
- <dd>
- <p>At this level <samp>-Wattribute-alias</samp> also diagnoses cases where
- the attributes of the alias declaration are more restrictive than the
- attributes applied to its target. These mismatches can potentially
- result in incorrect code generation. In other cases they may be
- benign and could be resolved simply by adding the missing attribute to
- the target. For comparison, see the <samp>-Wmissing-attributes</samp>
- option, which controls diagnostics when the alias declaration is less
- restrictive than the target, rather than more restrictive.
- </p>
- <p>Attributes considered include <code>alloc_align</code>, <code>alloc_size</code>,
- <code>cold</code>, <code>const</code>, <code>hot</code>, <code>leaf</code>, <code>malloc</code>,
- <code>nonnull</code>, <code>noreturn</code>, <code>nothrow</code>, <code>pure</code>,
- <code>returns_nonnull</code>, and <code>returns_twice</code>.
- </p></dd>
- </dl>
-
- <p><samp>-Wattribute-alias</samp> is equivalent to <samp>-Wattribute-alias=1</samp>.
- This is the default. You can disable these warnings with either
- <samp>-Wno-attribute-alias</samp> or <samp>-Wattribute-alias=0</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wbool-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dbool_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wbool_002dcompare"></a>
- <p>Warn about boolean expression compared with an integer value different from
- <code>true</code>/<code>false</code>. For instance, the following comparison is
- always false:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">int n = 5;
- …
- if ((n > 1) == 2) { … }
- </pre></div>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wbool-operation</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dbool_002doperation"></a>
- <a name="index-Wbool_002doperation"></a>
- <p>Warn about suspicious operations on expressions of a boolean type. For
- instance, bitwise negation of a boolean is very likely a bug in the program.
- For C, this warning also warns about incrementing or decrementing a boolean,
- which rarely makes sense. (In C++, decrementing a boolean is always invalid.
- Incrementing a boolean is invalid in C++17, and deprecated otherwise.)
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wduplicated-branches</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dduplicated_002dbranches"></a>
- <a name="index-Wduplicated_002dbranches"></a>
- <p>Warn when an if-else has identical branches. This warning detects cases like
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">if (p != NULL)
- return 0;
- else
- return 0;
- </pre></div>
- <p>It doesn’t warn when both branches contain just a null statement. This warning
- also warn for conditional operators:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> int i = x ? *p : *p;
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wduplicated-cond</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dduplicated_002dcond"></a>
- <a name="index-Wduplicated_002dcond"></a>
- <p>Warn about duplicated conditions in an if-else-if chain. For instance,
- warn for the following code:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">if (p->q != NULL) { … }
- else if (p->q != NULL) { … }
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wframe-address</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dframe_002daddress"></a>
- <a name="index-Wframe_002daddress"></a>
- <p>Warn when the ‘<samp>__builtin_frame_address</samp>’ or ‘<samp>__builtin_return_address</samp>’
- is called with an argument greater than 0. Such calls may return indeterminate
- values or crash the program. The warning is included in <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-discarded-qualifiers <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002ddiscarded_002dqualifiers"></a>
- <a name="index-Wdiscarded_002dqualifiers"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if type qualifiers on pointers are being discarded.
- Typically, the compiler warns if a <code>const char *</code> variable is
- passed to a function that takes a <code>char *</code> parameter. This option
- can be used to suppress such a warning.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-discarded-array-qualifiers <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002ddiscarded_002darray_002dqualifiers"></a>
- <a name="index-Wdiscarded_002darray_002dqualifiers"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if type qualifiers on arrays which are pointer targets
- are being discarded. Typically, the compiler warns if a
- <code>const int (*)[]</code> variable is passed to a function that
- takes a <code>int (*)[]</code> parameter. This option can be used to
- suppress such a warning.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-incompatible-pointer-types <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dincompatible_002dpointer_002dtypes"></a>
- <a name="index-Wincompatible_002dpointer_002dtypes"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when there is a conversion between pointers that have incompatible
- types. This warning is for cases not covered by <samp>-Wno-pointer-sign</samp>,
- which warns for pointer argument passing or assignment with different
- signedness.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-int-conversion <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dint_002dconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wint_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about incompatible integer to pointer and pointer to integer
- conversions. This warning is about implicit conversions; for explicit
- conversions the warnings <samp>-Wno-int-to-pointer-cast</samp> and
- <samp>-Wno-pointer-to-int-cast</samp> may be used.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wzero-length-bounds</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wzero_002dlength_002dbounds"></a>
- <a name="index-Wzero_002dlength_002dbounds-1"></a>
- <p>Warn about accesses to elements of zero-length array members that might
- overlap other members of the same object. Declaring interior zero-length
- arrays is discouraged because accesses to them are undefined. See
- See <a href="Zero-Length.html#Zero-Length">Zero Length</a>.
- </p>
- <p>For example, the first two stores in function <code>bad</code> are diagnosed
- because the array elements overlap the subsequent members <code>b</code> and
- <code>c</code>. The third store is diagnosed by <samp>-Warray-bounds</samp>
- because it is beyond the bounds of the enclosing object.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct X { int a[0]; int b, c; };
- struct X x;
-
- void bad (void)
- {
- x.a[0] = 0; // -Wzero-length-bounds
- x.a[1] = 1; // -Wzero-length-bounds
- x.a[2] = 2; // -Warray-bounds
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Option <samp>-Wzero-length-bounds</samp> is enabled by <samp>-Warray-bounds</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-div-by-zero</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002ddiv_002dby_002dzero"></a>
- <a name="index-Wdiv_002dby_002dzero"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about compile-time integer division by zero. Floating-point
- division by zero is not warned about, as it can be a legitimate way of
- obtaining infinities and NaNs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsystem-headers</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsystem_002dheaders"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsystem_002dheaders"></a>
- <a name="index-warnings-from-system-headers"></a>
- <a name="index-system-headers_002c-warnings-from"></a>
- <p>Print warning messages for constructs found in system header files.
- Warnings from system headers are normally suppressed, on the assumption
- that they usually do not indicate real problems and would only make the
- compiler output harder to read. Using this command-line option tells
- GCC to emit warnings from system headers as if they occurred in user
- code. However, note that using <samp>-Wall</samp> in conjunction with this
- option does <em>not</em> warn about unknown pragmas in system
- headers—for that, <samp>-Wunknown-pragmas</samp> must also be used.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wtautological-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wtautological_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dtautological_002dcompare"></a>
- <p>Warn if a self-comparison always evaluates to true or false. This
- warning detects various mistakes such as:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">int i = 1;
- …
- if (i > i) { … }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning also warns about bitwise comparisons that always evaluate
- to true or false, for instance:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">if ((a & 16) == 10) { … }
- </pre></div>
- <p>will always be false.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wtrampolines</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wtrampolines"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dtrampolines"></a>
- <p>Warn about trampolines generated for pointers to nested functions.
- A trampoline is a small piece of data or code that is created at run
- time on the stack when the address of a nested function is taken, and is
- used to call the nested function indirectly. For some targets, it is
- made up of data only and thus requires no special treatment. But, for
- most targets, it is made up of code and thus requires the stack to be
- made executable in order for the program to work properly.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wfloat-equal</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wfloat_002dequal"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dfloat_002dequal"></a>
- <p>Warn if floating-point values are used in equality comparisons.
- </p>
- <p>The idea behind this is that sometimes it is convenient (for the
- programmer) to consider floating-point values as approximations to
- infinitely precise real numbers. If you are doing this, then you need
- to compute (by analyzing the code, or in some other way) the maximum or
- likely maximum error that the computation introduces, and allow for it
- when performing comparisons (and when producing output, but that’s a
- different problem). In particular, instead of testing for equality, you
- should check to see whether the two values have ranges that overlap; and
- this is done with the relational operators, so equality comparisons are
- probably mistaken.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wtraditional <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wtraditional"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dtraditional"></a>
- <p>Warn about certain constructs that behave differently in traditional and
- ISO C. Also warn about ISO C constructs that have no traditional C
- equivalent, and/or problematic constructs that should be avoided.
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li> Macro parameters that appear within string literals in the macro body.
- In traditional C macro replacement takes place within string literals,
- but in ISO C it does not.
-
- </li><li> In traditional C, some preprocessor directives did not exist.
- Traditional preprocessors only considered a line to be a directive
- if the ‘<samp>#</samp>’ appeared in column 1 on the line. Therefore
- <samp>-Wtraditional</samp> warns about directives that traditional C
- understands but ignores because the ‘<samp>#</samp>’ does not appear as the
- first character on the line. It also suggests you hide directives like
- <code>#pragma</code> not understood by traditional C by indenting them. Some
- traditional implementations do not recognize <code>#elif</code>, so this option
- suggests avoiding it altogether.
-
- </li><li> A function-like macro that appears without arguments.
-
- </li><li> The unary plus operator.
-
- </li><li> The ‘<samp>U</samp>’ integer constant suffix, or the ‘<samp>F</samp>’ or ‘<samp>L</samp>’ floating-point
- constant suffixes. (Traditional C does support the ‘<samp>L</samp>’ suffix on integer
- constants.) Note, these suffixes appear in macros defined in the system
- headers of most modern systems, e.g. the ‘<samp>_MIN</samp>’/‘<samp>_MAX</samp>’ macros in <code><limits.h></code>.
- Use of these macros in user code might normally lead to spurious
- warnings, however GCC’s integrated preprocessor has enough context to
- avoid warning in these cases.
-
- </li><li> A function declared external in one block and then used after the end of
- the block.
-
- </li><li> A <code>switch</code> statement has an operand of type <code>long</code>.
-
- </li><li> A non-<code>static</code> function declaration follows a <code>static</code> one.
- This construct is not accepted by some traditional C compilers.
-
- </li><li> The ISO type of an integer constant has a different width or
- signedness from its traditional type. This warning is only issued if
- the base of the constant is ten. I.e. hexadecimal or octal values, which
- typically represent bit patterns, are not warned about.
-
- </li><li> Usage of ISO string concatenation is detected.
-
- </li><li> Initialization of automatic aggregates.
-
- </li><li> Identifier conflicts with labels. Traditional C lacks a separate
- namespace for labels.
-
- </li><li> Initialization of unions. If the initializer is zero, the warning is
- omitted. This is done under the assumption that the zero initializer in
- user code appears conditioned on e.g. <code>__STDC__</code> to avoid missing
- initializer warnings and relies on default initialization to zero in the
- traditional C case.
-
- </li><li> Conversions by prototypes between fixed/floating-point values and vice
- versa. The absence of these prototypes when compiling with traditional
- C causes serious problems. This is a subset of the possible
- conversion warnings; for the full set use <samp>-Wtraditional-conversion</samp>.
-
- </li><li> Use of ISO C style function definitions. This warning intentionally is
- <em>not</em> issued for prototype declarations or variadic functions
- because these ISO C features appear in your code when using
- libiberty’s traditional C compatibility macros, <code>PARAMS</code> and
- <code>VPARAMS</code>. This warning is also bypassed for nested functions
- because that feature is already a GCC extension and thus not relevant to
- traditional C compatibility.
- </li></ul>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wtraditional-conversion <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wtraditional_002dconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dtraditional_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Warn if a prototype causes a type conversion that is different from what
- would happen to the same argument in the absence of a prototype. This
- includes conversions of fixed point to floating and vice versa, and
- conversions changing the width or signedness of a fixed-point argument
- except when the same as the default promotion.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wdeclaration-after-statement <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wdeclaration_002dafter_002dstatement"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002ddeclaration_002dafter_002dstatement"></a>
- <p>Warn when a declaration is found after a statement in a block. This
- construct, known from C++, was introduced with ISO C99 and is by default
- allowed in GCC. It is not supported by ISO C90. See <a href="Mixed-Declarations.html#Mixed-Declarations">Mixed Declarations</a>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wshadow</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshadow"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dshadow"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a local variable or type declaration shadows another
- variable, parameter, type, class member (in C++), or instance variable
- (in Objective-C) or whenever a built-in function is shadowed. Note
- that in C++, the compiler warns if a local variable shadows an
- explicit typedef, but not if it shadows a struct/class/enum.
- If this warning is enabled, it includes also all instances of
- local shadowing. This means that <samp>-Wno-shadow=local</samp>
- and <samp>-Wno-shadow=compatible-local</samp> are ignored when
- <samp>-Wshadow</samp> is used.
- Same as <samp>-Wshadow=global</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-shadow-ivar <span class="roman">(Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dshadow_002divar"></a>
- <a name="index-Wshadow_002divar"></a>
- <p>Do not warn whenever a local variable shadows an instance variable in an
- Objective-C method.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wshadow=global</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshadow_003dglobal"></a>
- <p>Warn for any shadowing.
- Same as <samp>-Wshadow</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wshadow=local</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshadow_003dlocal"></a>
- <p>Warn when a local variable shadows another local variable or parameter.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wshadow=compatible-local</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wshadow_003dcompatible_002dlocal"></a>
- <p>Warn when a local variable shadows another local variable or parameter
- whose type is compatible with that of the shadowing variable. In C++,
- type compatibility here means the type of the shadowing variable can be
- converted to that of the shadowed variable. The creation of this flag
- (in addition to <samp>-Wshadow=local</samp>) is based on the idea that when
- a local variable shadows another one of incompatible type, it is most
- likely intentional, not a bug or typo, as shown in the following example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">for (SomeIterator i = SomeObj.begin(); i != SomeObj.end(); ++i)
- {
- for (int i = 0; i < N; ++i)
- {
- ...
- }
- ...
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Since the two variable <code>i</code> in the example above have incompatible types,
- enabling only <samp>-Wshadow=compatible-local</samp> does not emit a warning.
- Because their types are incompatible, if a programmer accidentally uses one
- in place of the other, type checking is expected to catch that and emit an
- error or warning. Use of this flag instead of <samp>-Wshadow=local</samp> can
- possibly reduce the number of warnings triggered by intentional shadowing.
- Note that this also means that shadowing <code>const char *i</code> by
- <code>char *i</code> does not emit a warning.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wshadow=local</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wlarger-than=<var>byte-size</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wlarger_002dthan_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wlarger_002dthan_002dbyte_002dsize"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever an object is defined whose size exceeds <var>byte-size</var>.
- <samp>-Wlarger-than=</samp>‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ is enabled by default.
- Warnings controlled by the option can be disabled either by specifying
- <var>byte-size</var> of ‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or more or by
- <samp>-Wno-larger-than</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-larger-than</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dlarger_002dthan"></a>
- <p>Disable <samp>-Wlarger-than=</samp> warnings. The option is equivalent
- to <samp>-Wlarger-than=</samp>‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or larger.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wframe-larger-than=<var>byte-size</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wframe_002dlarger_002dthan_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dframe_002dlarger_002dthan"></a>
- <p>Warn if the size of a function frame exceeds <var>byte-size</var>.
- The computation done to determine the stack frame size is approximate
- and not conservative.
- The actual requirements may be somewhat greater than <var>byte-size</var>
- even if you do not get a warning. In addition, any space allocated
- via <code>alloca</code>, variable-length arrays, or related constructs
- is not included by the compiler when determining
- whether or not to issue a warning.
- <samp>-Wframe-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ is enabled by default.
- Warnings controlled by the option can be disabled either by specifying
- <var>byte-size</var> of ‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or more or by
- <samp>-Wno-frame-larger-than</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-frame-larger-than</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dframe_002dlarger_002dthan-1"></a>
- <p>Disable <samp>-Wframe-larger-than=</samp> warnings. The option is equivalent
- to <samp>-Wframe-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or larger.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-free-nonheap-object</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dfree_002dnonheap_002dobject"></a>
- <a name="index-Wfree_002dnonheap_002dobject"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when attempting to free an object that was not allocated
- on the heap.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstack-usage=<var>byte-size</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstack_002dusage"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstack_002dusage"></a>
- <p>Warn if the stack usage of a function might exceed <var>byte-size</var>.
- The computation done to determine the stack usage is conservative.
- Any space allocated via <code>alloca</code>, variable-length arrays, or related
- constructs is included by the compiler when determining whether or not to
- issue a warning.
- </p>
- <p>The message is in keeping with the output of <samp>-fstack-usage</samp>.
- </p>
- <ul>
- <li> If the stack usage is fully static but exceeds the specified amount, it’s:
-
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> warning: stack usage is 1120 bytes
- </pre></div>
- </li><li> If the stack usage is (partly) dynamic but bounded, it’s:
-
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> warning: stack usage might be 1648 bytes
- </pre></div>
- </li><li> If the stack usage is (partly) dynamic and not bounded, it’s:
-
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> warning: stack usage might be unbounded
- </pre></div>
- </li></ul>
-
- <p><samp>-Wstack-usage=</samp>‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ is enabled by default.
- Warnings controlled by the option can be disabled either by specifying
- <var>byte-size</var> of ‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or more or by
- <samp>-Wno-stack-usage</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-stack-usage</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dstack_002dusage-1"></a>
- <p>Disable <samp>-Wstack-usage=</samp> warnings. The option is equivalent
- to <samp>-Wstack-usage=</samp>‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or larger.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunsafe-loop-optimizations</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunsafe_002dloop_002doptimizations"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunsafe_002dloop_002doptimizations"></a>
- <p>Warn if the loop cannot be optimized because the compiler cannot
- assume anything on the bounds of the loop indices. With
- <samp>-funsafe-loop-optimizations</samp> warn if the compiler makes
- such assumptions.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-pedantic-ms-format <span class="roman">(MinGW targets only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dpedantic_002dms_002dformat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wpedantic_002dms_002dformat"></a>
- <p>When used in combination with <samp>-Wformat</samp>
- and <samp>-pedantic</samp> without GNU extensions, this option
- disables the warnings about non-ISO <code>printf</code> / <code>scanf</code> format
- width specifiers <code>I32</code>, <code>I64</code>, and <code>I</code> used on Windows targets,
- which depend on the MS runtime.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wpointer-arith</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpointer_002darith"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpointer_002darith"></a>
- <p>Warn about anything that depends on the “size of” a function type or
- of <code>void</code>. GNU C assigns these types a size of 1, for
- convenience in calculations with <code>void *</code> pointers and pointers
- to functions. In C++, warn also when an arithmetic operation involves
- <code>NULL</code>. This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wpedantic</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-pointer-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpointer_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpointer_002dcompare"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if a pointer is compared with a zero character constant.
- This usually
- means that the pointer was meant to be dereferenced. For example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">const char *p = foo ();
- if (p == '\0')
- return 42;
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Note that the code above is invalid in C++11.
- </p>
- <p>This warning is enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wtype-limits</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wtype_002dlimits"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dtype_002dlimits"></a>
- <p>Warn if a comparison is always true or always false due to the limited
- range of the data type, but do not warn for constant expressions. For
- example, warn if an unsigned variable is compared against zero with
- <code><</code> or <code>>=</code>. This warning is also enabled by
- <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wabsolute-value <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wabsolute_002dvalue"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dabsolute_002dvalue"></a>
- <p>Warn for calls to standard functions that compute the absolute value
- of an argument when a more appropriate standard function is available.
- For example, calling <code>abs(3.14)</code> triggers the warning because the
- appropriate function to call to compute the absolute value of a double
- argument is <code>fabs</code>. The option also triggers warnings when the
- argument in a call to such a function has an unsigned type. This
- warning can be suppressed with an explicit type cast and it is also
- enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
-
-
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wcomment</code></dt>
- <dt><code>-Wcomments</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wcomment"></a>
- <a name="index-Wcomments"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a comment-start sequence ‘<samp>/*</samp>’ appears in a ‘<samp>/*</samp>’
- comment, or whenever a backslash-newline appears in a ‘<samp>//</samp>’ comment.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wtrigraphs</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wtrigraphs"></a>
- <a name="Wtrigraphs"></a><p>Warn if any trigraphs are encountered that might change the meaning of
- the program. Trigraphs within comments are not warned about,
- except those that would form escaped newlines.
- </p>
- <p>This option is implied by <samp>-Wall</samp>. If <samp>-Wall</samp> is not
- given, this option is still enabled unless trigraphs are enabled. To
- get trigraph conversion without warnings, but get the other
- <samp>-Wall</samp> warnings, use ‘<samp>-trigraphs -Wall -Wno-trigraphs</samp>’.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wundef</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wundef"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dundef"></a>
- <p>Warn if an undefined identifier is evaluated in an <code>#if</code> directive.
- Such identifiers are replaced with zero.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wexpansion-to-defined</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wexpansion_002dto_002ddefined"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever ‘<samp>defined</samp>’ is encountered in the expansion of a macro
- (including the case where the macro is expanded by an ‘<samp>#if</samp>’ directive).
- Such usage is not portable.
- This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> and <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunused-macros</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunused_002dmacros"></a>
- <p>Warn about macros defined in the main file that are unused. A macro
- is <em>used</em> if it is expanded or tested for existence at least once.
- The preprocessor also warns if the macro has not been used at the
- time it is redefined or undefined.
- </p>
- <p>Built-in macros, macros defined on the command line, and macros
- defined in include files are not warned about.
- </p>
- <p><em>Note:</em> If a macro is actually used, but only used in skipped
- conditional blocks, then the preprocessor reports it as unused. To avoid the
- warning in such a case, you might improve the scope of the macro’s
- definition by, for example, moving it into the first skipped block.
- Alternatively, you could provide a dummy use with something like:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">#if defined the_macro_causing_the_warning
- #endif
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-endif-labels</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dendif_002dlabels"></a>
- <a name="index-Wendif_002dlabels"></a>
- <p>Do not warn whenever an <code>#else</code> or an <code>#endif</code> are followed by text.
- This sometimes happens in older programs with code of the form
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">#if FOO
- …
- #else FOO
- …
- #endif FOO
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>The second and third <code>FOO</code> should be in comments.
- This warning is on by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wbad-function-cast <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wbad_002dfunction_002dcast"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dbad_002dfunction_002dcast"></a>
- <p>Warn when a function call is cast to a non-matching type.
- For example, warn if a call to a function returning an integer type
- is cast to a pointer type.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc90-c99-compat <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc90_002dc99_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc90_002dc99_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about features not present in ISO C90, but present in ISO C99.
- For instance, warn about use of variable length arrays, <code>long long</code>
- type, <code>bool</code> type, compound literals, designated initializers, and so
- on. This option is independent of the standards mode. Warnings are disabled
- in the expression that follows <code>__extension__</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc99-c11-compat <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc99_002dc11_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc99_002dc11_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about features not present in ISO C99, but present in ISO C11.
- For instance, warn about use of anonymous structures and unions,
- <code>_Atomic</code> type qualifier, <code>_Thread_local</code> storage-class specifier,
- <code>_Alignas</code> specifier, <code>Alignof</code> operator, <code>_Generic</code> keyword,
- and so on. This option is independent of the standards mode. Warnings are
- disabled in the expression that follows <code>__extension__</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc11-c2x-compat <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc11_002dc2x_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc11_002dc2x_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about features not present in ISO C11, but present in ISO C2X.
- For instance, warn about omitting the string in <code>_Static_assert</code>,
- use of ‘<samp>[[]]</samp>’ syntax for attributes, use of decimal
- floating-point types, and so on. This option is independent of the
- standards mode. Warnings are disabled in the expression that follows
- <code>__extension__</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc++-compat <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc_002b_002b_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc_002b_002b_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about ISO C constructs that are outside of the common subset of
- ISO C and ISO C++, e.g. request for implicit conversion from
- <code>void *</code> to a pointer to non-<code>void</code> type.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc++11-compat <span class="roman">(C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc_002b_002b11_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc_002b_002b11_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about C++ constructs whose meaning differs between ISO C++ 1998
- and ISO C++ 2011, e.g., identifiers in ISO C++ 1998 that are keywords
- in ISO C++ 2011. This warning turns on <samp>-Wnarrowing</samp> and is
- enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc++14-compat <span class="roman">(C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc_002b_002b14_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc_002b_002b14_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about C++ constructs whose meaning differs between ISO C++ 2011
- and ISO C++ 2014. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc++17-compat <span class="roman">(C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc_002b_002b17_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc_002b_002b17_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about C++ constructs whose meaning differs between ISO C++ 2014
- and ISO C++ 2017. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wc++20-compat <span class="roman">(C++ and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wc_002b_002b20_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dc_002b_002b20_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>Warn about C++ constructs whose meaning differs between ISO C++ 2017
- and ISO C++ 2020. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wcast-qual</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wcast_002dqual"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dcast_002dqual"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a pointer is cast so as to remove a type qualifier from
- the target type. For example, warn if a <code>const char *</code> is cast
- to an ordinary <code>char *</code>.
- </p>
- <p>Also warn when making a cast that introduces a type qualifier in an
- unsafe way. For example, casting <code>char **</code> to <code>const char **</code>
- is unsafe, as in this example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample"> /* p is char ** value. */
- const char **q = (const char **) p;
- /* Assignment of readonly string to const char * is OK. */
- *q = "string";
- /* Now char** pointer points to read-only memory. */
- **p = 'b';
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wcast-align</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wcast_002dalign"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dcast_002dalign"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a pointer is cast such that the required alignment of the
- target is increased. For example, warn if a <code>char *</code> is cast to
- an <code>int *</code> on machines where integers can only be accessed at
- two- or four-byte boundaries.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wcast-align=strict</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wcast_002dalign_003dstrict"></a>
- <p>Warn whenever a pointer is cast such that the required alignment of the
- target is increased. For example, warn if a <code>char *</code> is cast to
- an <code>int *</code> regardless of the target machine.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wcast-function-type</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wcast_002dfunction_002dtype"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dcast_002dfunction_002dtype"></a>
- <p>Warn when a function pointer is cast to an incompatible function pointer.
- In a cast involving function types with a variable argument list only
- the types of initial arguments that are provided are considered.
- Any parameter of pointer-type matches any other pointer-type. Any benign
- differences in integral types are ignored, like <code>int</code> vs. <code>long</code>
- on ILP32 targets. Likewise type qualifiers are ignored. The function
- type <code>void (*) (void)</code> is special and matches everything, which can
- be used to suppress this warning.
- In a cast involving pointer to member types this warning warns whenever
- the type cast is changing the pointer to member type.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wwrite-strings</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wwrite_002dstrings"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dwrite_002dstrings"></a>
- <p>When compiling C, give string constants the type <code>const
- char[<var>length</var>]</code> so that copying the address of one into a
- non-<code>const</code> <code>char *</code> pointer produces a warning. These
- warnings help you find at compile time code that can try to write
- into a string constant, but only if you have been very careful about
- using <code>const</code> in declarations and prototypes. Otherwise, it is
- just a nuisance. This is why we did not make <samp>-Wall</samp> request
- these warnings.
- </p>
- <p>When compiling C++, warn about the deprecated conversion from string
- literals to <code>char *</code>. This warning is enabled by default for C++
- programs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wclobbered</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wclobbered"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dclobbered"></a>
- <p>Warn for variables that might be changed by <code>longjmp</code> or
- <code>vfork</code>. This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wconversion</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Warn for implicit conversions that may alter a value. This includes
- conversions between real and integer, like <code>abs (x)</code> when
- <code>x</code> is <code>double</code>; conversions between signed and unsigned,
- like <code>unsigned ui = -1</code>; and conversions to smaller types, like
- <code>sqrtf (M_PI)</code>. Do not warn for explicit casts like <code>abs
- ((int) x)</code> and <code>ui = (unsigned) -1</code>, or if the value is not
- changed by the conversion like in <code>abs (2.0)</code>. Warnings about
- conversions between signed and unsigned integers can be disabled by
- using <samp>-Wno-sign-conversion</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>For C++, also warn for confusing overload resolution for user-defined
- conversions; and conversions that never use a type conversion
- operator: conversions to <code>void</code>, the same type, a base class or a
- reference to them. Warnings about conversions between signed and
- unsigned integers are disabled by default in C++ unless
- <samp>-Wsign-conversion</samp> is explicitly enabled.
- </p>
- <p>Warnings about conversion from arithmetic on a small type back to that
- type are only given with <samp>-Warith-conversion</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wdangling-else</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wdangling_002delse"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002ddangling_002delse"></a>
- <p>Warn about constructions where there may be confusion to which
- <code>if</code> statement an <code>else</code> branch belongs. Here is an example of
- such a case:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">{
- if (a)
- if (b)
- foo ();
- else
- bar ();
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In C/C++, every <code>else</code> branch belongs to the innermost possible
- <code>if</code> statement, which in this example is <code>if (b)</code>. This is
- often not what the programmer expected, as illustrated in the above
- example by indentation the programmer chose. When there is the
- potential for this confusion, GCC issues a warning when this flag
- is specified. To eliminate the warning, add explicit braces around
- the innermost <code>if</code> statement so there is no way the <code>else</code>
- can belong to the enclosing <code>if</code>. The resulting code
- looks like this:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">{
- if (a)
- {
- if (b)
- foo ();
- else
- bar ();
- }
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wparentheses</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wdate-time</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wdate_002dtime"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002ddate_002dtime"></a>
- <p>Warn when macros <code>__TIME__</code>, <code>__DATE__</code> or <code>__TIMESTAMP__</code>
- are encountered as they might prevent bit-wise-identical reproducible
- compilations.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wempty-body</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wempty_002dbody"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dempty_002dbody"></a>
- <p>Warn if an empty body occurs in an <code>if</code>, <code>else</code> or <code>do
- while</code> statement. This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-endif-labels</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wendif_002dlabels-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dendif_002dlabels-1"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about stray tokens after <code>#else</code> and <code>#endif</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wenum-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wenum_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002denum_002dcompare"></a>
- <p>Warn about a comparison between values of different enumerated types.
- In C++ enumerated type mismatches in conditional expressions are also
- diagnosed and the warning is enabled by default. In C this warning is
- enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wenum-conversion <span class="roman">(C, Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wenum_002dconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002denum_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Warn when a value of enumerated type is implicitly converted to a
- different enumerated type. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wjump-misses-init <span class="roman">(C, Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wjump_002dmisses_002dinit"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002djump_002dmisses_002dinit"></a>
- <p>Warn if a <code>goto</code> statement or a <code>switch</code> statement jumps
- forward across the initialization of a variable, or jumps backward to a
- label after the variable has been initialized. This only warns about
- variables that are initialized when they are declared. This warning is
- only supported for C and Objective-C; in C++ this sort of branch is an
- error in any case.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wjump-misses-init</samp> is included in <samp>-Wc++-compat</samp>. It
- can be disabled with the <samp>-Wno-jump-misses-init</samp> option.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsign-compare</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsign_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsign_002dcompare"></a>
- <a name="index-warning-for-comparison-of-signed-and-unsigned-values"></a>
- <a name="index-comparison-of-signed-and-unsigned-values_002c-warning"></a>
- <a name="index-signed-and-unsigned-values_002c-comparison-warning"></a>
- <p>Warn when a comparison between signed and unsigned values could produce
- an incorrect result when the signed value is converted to unsigned.
- In C++, this warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>. In C, it is
- also enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsign-conversion</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsign_002dconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsign_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Warn for implicit conversions that may change the sign of an integer
- value, like assigning a signed integer expression to an unsigned
- integer variable. An explicit cast silences the warning. In C, this
- option is enabled also by <samp>-Wconversion</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wfloat-conversion</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wfloat_002dconversion"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dfloat_002dconversion"></a>
- <p>Warn for implicit conversions that reduce the precision of a real value.
- This includes conversions from real to integer, and from higher precision
- real to lower precision real values. This option is also enabled by
- <samp>-Wconversion</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-scalar-storage-order</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dscalar_002dstorage_002dorder"></a>
- <a name="index-Wscalar_002dstorage_002dorder"></a>
- <p>Do not warn on suspicious constructs involving reverse scalar storage order.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsizeof-pointer-div</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsizeof_002dpointer_002ddiv"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsizeof_002dpointer_002ddiv"></a>
- <p>Warn for suspicious divisions of two sizeof expressions that divide
- the pointer size by the element size, which is the usual way to compute
- the array size but won’t work out correctly with pointers. This warning
- warns e.g. about <code>sizeof (ptr) / sizeof (ptr[0])</code> if <code>ptr</code> is
- not an array, but a pointer. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsizeof_002dpointer_002dmemaccess"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsizeof_002dpointer_002dmemaccess"></a>
- <p>Warn for suspicious length parameters to certain string and memory built-in
- functions if the argument uses <code>sizeof</code>. This warning triggers for
- example for <code>memset (ptr, 0, sizeof (ptr));</code> if <code>ptr</code> is not
- an array, but a pointer, and suggests a possible fix, or about
- <code>memcpy (&foo, ptr, sizeof (&foo));</code>. <samp>-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess</samp>
- also warns about calls to bounded string copy functions like <code>strncat</code>
- or <code>strncpy</code> that specify as the bound a <code>sizeof</code> expression of
- the source array. For example, in the following function the call to
- <code>strncat</code> specifies the size of the source string as the bound. That
- is almost certainly a mistake and so the call is diagnosed.
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void make_file (const char *name)
- {
- char path[PATH_MAX];
- strncpy (path, name, sizeof path - 1);
- strncat (path, ".text", sizeof ".text");
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>The <samp>-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess</samp> option is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-sizeof-array-argument</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wsizeof_002darray_002dargument"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dsizeof_002darray_002dargument"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when the <code>sizeof</code> operator is applied to a parameter that is
- declared as an array in a function definition. This warning is enabled by
- default for C and C++ programs.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmemset-elt-size</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmemset_002delt_002dsize"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmemset_002delt_002dsize"></a>
- <p>Warn for suspicious calls to the <code>memset</code> built-in function, if the
- first argument references an array, and the third argument is a number
- equal to the number of elements, but not equal to the size of the array
- in memory. This indicates that the user has omitted a multiplication by
- the element size. This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmemset-transposed-args</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmemset_002dtransposed_002dargs"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmemset_002dtransposed_002dargs"></a>
- <p>Warn for suspicious calls to the <code>memset</code> built-in function where
- the second argument is not zero and the third argument is zero. For
- example, the call <code>memset (buf, sizeof buf, 0)</code> is diagnosed because
- <code>memset (buf, 0, sizeof buf)</code> was meant instead. The diagnostic
- is only emitted if the third argument is a literal zero. Otherwise, if
- it is an expression that is folded to zero, or a cast of zero to some
- type, it is far less likely that the arguments have been mistakenly
- transposed and no warning is emitted. This warning is enabled
- by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Waddress</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Waddress"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002daddress"></a>
- <p>Warn about suspicious uses of memory addresses. These include using
- the address of a function in a conditional expression, such as
- <code>void func(void); if (func)</code>, and comparisons against the memory
- address of a string literal, such as <code>if (x == "abc")</code>. Such
- uses typically indicate a programmer error: the address of a function
- always evaluates to true, so their use in a conditional usually
- indicate that the programmer forgot the parentheses in a function
- call; and comparisons against string literals result in unspecified
- behavior and are not portable in C, so they usually indicate that the
- programmer intended to use <code>strcmp</code>. This warning is enabled by
- <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-address-of-packed-member</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Waddress_002dof_002dpacked_002dmember"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002daddress_002dof_002dpacked_002dmember"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when the address of packed member of struct or union is taken,
- which usually results in an unaligned pointer value. This is
- enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wlogical-op</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wlogical_002dop"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dlogical_002dop"></a>
- <p>Warn about suspicious uses of logical operators in expressions.
- This includes using logical operators in contexts where a
- bit-wise operator is likely to be expected. Also warns when
- the operands of a logical operator are the same:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">extern int a;
- if (a < 0 && a < 0) { … }
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wlogical-not-parentheses</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wlogical_002dnot_002dparentheses"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dlogical_002dnot_002dparentheses"></a>
- <p>Warn about logical not used on the left hand side operand of a comparison.
- This option does not warn if the right operand is considered to be a boolean
- expression. Its purpose is to detect suspicious code like the following:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">int a;
- …
- if (!a > 1) { … }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>It is possible to suppress the warning by wrapping the LHS into
- parentheses:
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">if ((!a) > 1) { … }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Waggregate-return</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Waggregate_002dreturn"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002daggregate_002dreturn"></a>
- <p>Warn if any functions that return structures or unions are defined or
- called. (In languages where you can return an array, this also elicits
- a warning.)
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-aggressive-loop-optimizations</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002daggressive_002dloop_002doptimizations"></a>
- <a name="index-Waggressive_002dloop_002doptimizations"></a>
- <p>Warn if in a loop with constant number of iterations the compiler detects
- undefined behavior in some statement during one or more of the iterations.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-attributes</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dattributes"></a>
- <a name="index-Wattributes"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if an unexpected <code>__attribute__</code> is used, such as
- unrecognized attributes, function attributes applied to variables,
- etc. This does not stop errors for incorrect use of supported
- attributes.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-builtin-declaration-mismatch</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dbuiltin_002ddeclaration_002dmismatch"></a>
- <a name="index-Wbuiltin_002ddeclaration_002dmismatch"></a>
- <p>Warn if a built-in function is declared with an incompatible signature
- or as a non-function, or when a built-in function declared with a type
- that does not include a prototype is called with arguments whose promoted
- types do not match those expected by the function. When <samp>-Wextra</samp>
- is specified, also warn when a built-in function that takes arguments is
- declared without a prototype. The <samp>-Wbuiltin-declaration-mismatch</samp>
- warning is enabled by default. To avoid the warning include the appropriate
- header to bring the prototypes of built-in functions into scope.
- </p>
- <p>For example, the call to <code>memset</code> below is diagnosed by the warning
- because the function expects a value of type <code>size_t</code> as its argument
- but the type of <code>32</code> is <code>int</code>. With <samp>-Wextra</samp>,
- the declaration of the function is diagnosed as well.
- </p><div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">extern void* memset ();
- void f (void *d)
- {
- memset (d, '\0', 32);
- }
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-builtin-macro-redefined</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dbuiltin_002dmacro_002dredefined"></a>
- <a name="index-Wbuiltin_002dmacro_002dredefined"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if certain built-in macros are redefined. This suppresses
- warnings for redefinition of <code>__TIMESTAMP__</code>, <code>__TIME__</code>,
- <code>__DATE__</code>, <code>__FILE__</code>, and <code>__BASE_FILE__</code>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstrict-prototypes <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstrict_002dprototypes"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstrict_002dprototypes"></a>
- <p>Warn if a function is declared or defined without specifying the
- argument types. (An old-style function definition is permitted without
- a warning if preceded by a declaration that specifies the argument
- types.)
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wold-style-declaration <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wold_002dstyle_002ddeclaration"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dold_002dstyle_002ddeclaration"></a>
- <p>Warn for obsolescent usages, according to the C Standard, in a
- declaration. For example, warn if storage-class specifiers like
- <code>static</code> are not the first things in a declaration. This warning
- is also enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wold-style-definition <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wold_002dstyle_002ddefinition"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dold_002dstyle_002ddefinition"></a>
- <p>Warn if an old-style function definition is used. A warning is given
- even if there is a previous prototype. A definition using ‘<samp>()</samp>’
- is not considered an old-style definition in C2X mode, because it is
- equivalent to ‘<samp>(void)</samp>’ in that case, but is considered an
- old-style definition for older standards.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-parameter-type <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dparameter_002dtype"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dparameter_002dtype"></a>
- <p>A function parameter is declared without a type specifier in K&R-style
- functions:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void foo(bar) { }
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is also enabled by <samp>-Wextra</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-prototypes <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dprototypes"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dprototypes"></a>
- <p>Warn if a global function is defined without a previous prototype
- declaration. This warning is issued even if the definition itself
- provides a prototype. Use this option to detect global functions
- that do not have a matching prototype declaration in a header file.
- This option is not valid for C++ because all function declarations
- provide prototypes and a non-matching declaration declares an
- overload rather than conflict with an earlier declaration.
- Use <samp>-Wmissing-declarations</samp> to detect missing declarations in C++.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-declarations</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002ddeclarations"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002ddeclarations"></a>
- <p>Warn if a global function is defined without a previous declaration.
- Do so even if the definition itself provides a prototype.
- Use this option to detect global functions that are not declared in
- header files. In C, no warnings are issued for functions with previous
- non-prototype declarations; use <samp>-Wmissing-prototypes</samp> to detect
- missing prototypes. In C++, no warnings are issued for function templates,
- or for inline functions, or for functions in anonymous namespaces.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wmissing-field-initializers</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wmissing_002dfield_002dinitializers"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dmissing_002dfield_002dinitializers"></a>
- <a name="index-W-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wextra-1"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dextra-1"></a>
- <p>Warn if a structure’s initializer has some fields missing. For
- example, the following code causes such a warning, because
- <code>x.h</code> is implicitly zero:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct s { int f, g, h; };
- struct s x = { 3, 4 };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This option does not warn about designated initializers, so the following
- modification does not trigger a warning:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct s { int f, g, h; };
- struct s x = { .f = 3, .g = 4 };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>In C this option does not warn about the universal zero initializer
- ‘<samp>{ 0 }</samp>’:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct s { int f, g, h; };
- struct s x = { 0 };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>Likewise, in C++ this option does not warn about the empty { }
- initializer, for example:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct s { int f, g, h; };
- s x = { };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is included in <samp>-Wextra</samp>. To get other <samp>-Wextra</samp>
- warnings without this one, use <samp>-Wextra -Wno-missing-field-initializers</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-multichar</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dmultichar"></a>
- <a name="index-Wmultichar"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if a multicharacter constant (‘<samp>'FOOF'</samp>’) is used.
- Usually they indicate a typo in the user’s code, as they have
- implementation-defined values, and should not be used in portable code.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wnormalized=<span class="roman">[</span>none<span class="roman">|</span>id<span class="roman">|</span>nfc<span class="roman">|</span>nfkc<span class="roman">]</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wnormalized_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wnormalized"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dnormalized"></a>
- <a name="index-NFC"></a>
- <a name="index-NFKC"></a>
- <a name="index-character-set_002c-input-normalization"></a>
- <p>In ISO C and ISO C++, two identifiers are different if they are
- different sequences of characters. However, sometimes when characters
- outside the basic ASCII character set are used, you can have two
- different character sequences that look the same. To avoid confusion,
- the ISO 10646 standard sets out some <em>normalization rules</em> which
- when applied ensure that two sequences that look the same are turned into
- the same sequence. GCC can warn you if you are using identifiers that
- have not been normalized; this option controls that warning.
- </p>
- <p>There are four levels of warning supported by GCC. The default is
- <samp>-Wnormalized=nfc</samp>, which warns about any identifier that is
- not in the ISO 10646 “C” normalized form, <em>NFC</em>. NFC is the
- recommended form for most uses. It is equivalent to
- <samp>-Wnormalized</samp>.
- </p>
- <p>Unfortunately, there are some characters allowed in identifiers by
- ISO C and ISO C++ that, when turned into NFC, are not allowed in
- identifiers. That is, there’s no way to use these symbols in portable
- ISO C or C++ and have all your identifiers in NFC.
- <samp>-Wnormalized=id</samp> suppresses the warning for these characters.
- It is hoped that future versions of the standards involved will correct
- this, which is why this option is not the default.
- </p>
- <p>You can switch the warning off for all characters by writing
- <samp>-Wnormalized=none</samp> or <samp>-Wno-normalized</samp>. You should
- only do this if you are using some other normalization scheme (like
- “D”), because otherwise you can easily create bugs that are
- literally impossible to see.
- </p>
- <p>Some characters in ISO 10646 have distinct meanings but look identical
- in some fonts or display methodologies, especially once formatting has
- been applied. For instance <code>\u207F</code>, “SUPERSCRIPT LATIN SMALL
- LETTER N”, displays just like a regular <code>n</code> that has been
- placed in a superscript. ISO 10646 defines the <em>NFKC</em>
- normalization scheme to convert all these into a standard form as
- well, and GCC warns if your code is not in NFKC if you use
- <samp>-Wnormalized=nfkc</samp>. This warning is comparable to warning
- about every identifier that contains the letter O because it might be
- confused with the digit 0, and so is not the default, but may be
- useful as a local coding convention if the programming environment
- cannot be fixed to display these characters distinctly.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-attribute-warning</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dattribute_002dwarning"></a>
- <a name="index-Wattribute_002dwarning"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about usage of functions (see <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>)
- declared with <code>warning</code> attribute. By default, this warning is
- enabled. <samp>-Wno-attribute-warning</samp> can be used to disable the
- warning or <samp>-Wno-error=attribute-warning</samp> can be used to
- disable the error when compiled with <samp>-Werror</samp> flag.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-deprecated</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002ddeprecated"></a>
- <a name="index-Wdeprecated"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about usage of deprecated features. See <a href="Deprecated-Features.html#Deprecated-Features">Deprecated Features</a>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-deprecated-declarations</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002ddeprecated_002ddeclarations"></a>
- <a name="index-Wdeprecated_002ddeclarations"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about uses of functions (see <a href="Function-Attributes.html#Function-Attributes">Function Attributes</a>),
- variables (see <a href="Variable-Attributes.html#Variable-Attributes">Variable Attributes</a>), and types (see <a href="Type-Attributes.html#Type-Attributes">Type Attributes</a>) marked as deprecated by using the <code>deprecated</code>
- attribute.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-overflow</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002doverflow"></a>
- <a name="index-Woverflow"></a>
- <p>Do not warn about compile-time overflow in constant expressions.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-odr</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dodr"></a>
- <a name="index-Wodr"></a>
- <p>Warn about One Definition Rule violations during link-time optimization.
- Enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wopenmp-simd</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wopenmp_002dsimd"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dopenmp_002dsimd"></a>
- <p>Warn if the vectorizer cost model overrides the OpenMP
- simd directive set by user. The <samp>-fsimd-cost-model=unlimited</samp>
- option can be used to relax the cost model.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Woverride-init <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Woverride_002dinit"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002doverride_002dinit"></a>
- <a name="index-W-2"></a>
- <a name="index-Wextra-2"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dextra-2"></a>
- <p>Warn if an initialized field without side effects is overridden when
- using designated initializers (see <a href="Designated-Inits.html#Designated-Inits">Designated
- Initializers</a>).
- </p>
- <p>This warning is included in <samp>-Wextra</samp>. To get other
- <samp>-Wextra</samp> warnings without this one, use <samp>-Wextra
- -Wno-override-init</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-override-init-side-effects <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Woverride_002dinit_002dside_002deffects"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002doverride_002dinit_002dside_002deffects"></a>
- <p>Do not warn if an initialized field with side effects is overridden when
- using designated initializers (see <a href="Designated-Inits.html#Designated-Inits">Designated
- Initializers</a>). This warning is enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wpacked</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpacked"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpacked"></a>
- <p>Warn if a structure is given the packed attribute, but the packed
- attribute has no effect on the layout or size of the structure.
- Such structures may be mis-aligned for little benefit. For
- instance, in this code, the variable <code>f.x</code> in <code>struct bar</code>
- is misaligned even though <code>struct bar</code> does not itself
- have the packed attribute:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct foo {
- int x;
- char a, b, c, d;
- } __attribute__((packed));
- struct bar {
- char z;
- struct foo f;
- };
- </pre></div>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wnopacked-bitfield-compat</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpacked_002dbitfield_002dcompat"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpacked_002dbitfield_002dcompat"></a>
- <p>The 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3 series of GCC ignore the <code>packed</code> attribute
- on bit-fields of type <code>char</code>. This was fixed in GCC 4.4 but
- the change can lead to differences in the structure layout. GCC
- informs you when the offset of such a field has changed in GCC 4.4.
- For example there is no longer a 4-bit padding between field <code>a</code>
- and <code>b</code> in this structure:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct foo
- {
- char a:4;
- char b:8;
- } __attribute__ ((packed));
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by default. Use
- <samp>-Wno-packed-bitfield-compat</samp> to disable this warning.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wpacked-not-aligned <span class="roman">(C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpacked_002dnot_002daligned"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpacked_002dnot_002daligned"></a>
- <p>Warn if a structure field with explicitly specified alignment in a
- packed struct or union is misaligned. For example, a warning will
- be issued on <code>struct S</code>, like, <code>warning: alignment 1 of
- 'struct S' is less than 8</code>, in this code:
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">struct __attribute__ ((aligned (8))) S8 { char a[8]; };
- struct __attribute__ ((packed)) S {
- struct S8 s8;
- };
- </pre></div>
-
- <p>This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wpadded</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpadded"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpadded"></a>
- <p>Warn if padding is included in a structure, either to align an element
- of the structure or to align the whole structure. Sometimes when this
- happens it is possible to rearrange the fields of the structure to
- reduce the padding and so make the structure smaller.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wredundant-decls</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wredundant_002ddecls"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dredundant_002ddecls"></a>
- <p>Warn if anything is declared more than once in the same scope, even in
- cases where multiple declaration is valid and changes nothing.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wrestrict</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wrestrict"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002drestrict"></a>
- <p>Warn when an object referenced by a <code>restrict</code>-qualified parameter
- (or, in C++, a <code>__restrict</code>-qualified parameter) is aliased by another
- argument, or when copies between such objects overlap. For example,
- the call to the <code>strcpy</code> function below attempts to truncate the string
- by replacing its initial characters with the last four. However, because
- the call writes the terminating NUL into <code>a[4]</code>, the copies overlap and
- the call is diagnosed.
- </p>
- <div class="smallexample">
- <pre class="smallexample">void foo (void)
- {
- char a[] = "abcd1234";
- strcpy (a, a + 4);
- …
- }
- </pre></div>
- <p>The <samp>-Wrestrict</samp> option detects some instances of simple overlap
- even without optimization but works best at <samp>-O2</samp> and above. It
- is included in <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wnested-externs <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wnested_002dexterns"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dnested_002dexterns"></a>
- <p>Warn if an <code>extern</code> declaration is encountered within a function.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Winline</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Winline"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dinline"></a>
- <p>Warn if a function that is declared as inline cannot be inlined.
- Even with this option, the compiler does not warn about failures to
- inline functions declared in system headers.
- </p>
- <p>The compiler uses a variety of heuristics to determine whether or not
- to inline a function. For example, the compiler takes into account
- the size of the function being inlined and the amount of inlining
- that has already been done in the current function. Therefore,
- seemingly insignificant changes in the source program can cause the
- warnings produced by <samp>-Winline</samp> to appear or disappear.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wint-in-bool-context</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wint_002din_002dbool_002dcontext"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dint_002din_002dbool_002dcontext"></a>
- <p>Warn for suspicious use of integer values where boolean values are expected,
- such as conditional expressions (?:) using non-boolean integer constants in
- boolean context, like <code>if (a <= b ? 2 : 3)</code>. Or left shifting of signed
- integers in boolean context, like <code>for (a = 0; 1 << a; a++);</code>. Likewise
- for all kinds of multiplications regardless of the data type.
- This warning is enabled by <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-int-to-pointer-cast</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dint_002dto_002dpointer_002dcast"></a>
- <a name="index-Wint_002dto_002dpointer_002dcast"></a>
- <p>Suppress warnings from casts to pointer type of an integer of a
- different size. In C++, casting to a pointer type of smaller size is
- an error. <samp>Wint-to-pointer-cast</samp> is enabled by default.
- </p>
-
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-pointer-to-int-cast <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dpointer_002dto_002dint_002dcast"></a>
- <a name="index-Wpointer_002dto_002dint_002dcast"></a>
- <p>Suppress warnings from casts from a pointer to an integer type of a
- different size.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Winvalid-pch</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Winvalid_002dpch"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dinvalid_002dpch"></a>
- <p>Warn if a precompiled header (see <a href="Precompiled-Headers.html#Precompiled-Headers">Precompiled Headers</a>) is found in
- the search path but cannot be used.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wlong-long</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wlong_002dlong"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dlong_002dlong"></a>
- <p>Warn if <code>long long</code> type is used. This is enabled by either
- <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> or <samp>-Wtraditional</samp> in ISO C90 and C++98
- modes. To inhibit the warning messages, use <samp>-Wno-long-long</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wvariadic-macros</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wvariadic_002dmacros"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dvariadic_002dmacros"></a>
- <p>Warn if variadic macros are used in ISO C90 mode, or if the GNU
- alternate syntax is used in ISO C99 mode. This is enabled by either
- <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> or <samp>-Wtraditional</samp>. To inhibit the warning
- messages, use <samp>-Wno-variadic-macros</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-varargs</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wvarargs"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dvarargs"></a>
- <p>Do not warn upon questionable usage of the macros used to handle variable
- arguments like <code>va_start</code>. These warnings are enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wvector-operation-performance</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wvector_002doperation_002dperformance"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dvector_002doperation_002dperformance"></a>
- <p>Warn if vector operation is not implemented via SIMD capabilities of the
- architecture. Mainly useful for the performance tuning.
- Vector operation can be implemented <code>piecewise</code>, which means that the
- scalar operation is performed on every vector element;
- <code>in parallel</code>, which means that the vector operation is implemented
- using scalars of wider type, which normally is more performance efficient;
- and <code>as a single scalar</code>, which means that vector fits into a
- scalar type.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wvla</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wvla"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dvla"></a>
- <p>Warn if a variable-length array is used in the code.
- <samp>-Wno-vla</samp> prevents the <samp>-Wpedantic</samp> warning of
- the variable-length array.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wvla-larger-than=<var>byte-size</var></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wvla_002dlarger_002dthan_003d"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dvla_002dlarger_002dthan"></a>
- <p>If this option is used, the compiler warns for declarations of
- variable-length arrays whose size is either unbounded, or bounded
- by an argument that allows the array size to exceed <var>byte-size</var>
- bytes. This is similar to how <samp>-Walloca-larger-than=</samp><var>byte-size</var>
- works, but with variable-length arrays.
- </p>
- <p>Note that GCC may optimize small variable-length arrays of a known
- value into plain arrays, so this warning may not get triggered for
- such arrays.
- </p>
- <p><samp>-Wvla-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>PTRDIFF_MAX</samp>’ is enabled by default but
- is typically only effective when <samp>-ftree-vrp</samp> is active (default
- for <samp>-O2</samp> and above).
- </p>
- <p>See also <samp>-Walloca-larger-than=<var>byte-size</var></samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-vla-larger-than</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wno_002dvla_002dlarger_002dthan-1"></a>
- <p>Disable <samp>-Wvla-larger-than=</samp> warnings. The option is equivalent
- to <samp>-Wvla-larger-than=</samp>‘<samp>SIZE_MAX</samp>’ or larger.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wvolatile-register-var</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wvolatile_002dregister_002dvar"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dvolatile_002dregister_002dvar"></a>
- <p>Warn if a register variable is declared volatile. The volatile
- modifier does not inhibit all optimizations that may eliminate reads
- and/or writes to register variables. This warning is enabled by
- <samp>-Wall</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wdisabled-optimization</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wdisabled_002doptimization"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002ddisabled_002doptimization"></a>
- <p>Warn if a requested optimization pass is disabled. This warning does
- not generally indicate that there is anything wrong with your code; it
- merely indicates that GCC’s optimizers are unable to handle the code
- effectively. Often, the problem is that your code is too big or too
- complex; GCC refuses to optimize programs when the optimization
- itself is likely to take inordinate amounts of time.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wpointer-sign <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wpointer_002dsign"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dpointer_002dsign"></a>
- <p>Warn for pointer argument passing or assignment with different signedness.
- This option is only supported for C and Objective-C. It is implied by
- <samp>-Wall</samp> and by <samp>-Wpedantic</samp>, which can be disabled with
- <samp>-Wno-pointer-sign</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wstack-protector</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wstack_002dprotector"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dstack_002dprotector"></a>
- <p>This option is only active when <samp>-fstack-protector</samp> is active. It
- warns about functions that are not protected against stack smashing.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Woverlength-strings</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Woverlength_002dstrings"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002doverlength_002dstrings"></a>
- <p>Warn about string constants that are longer than the “minimum
- maximum” length specified in the C standard. Modern compilers
- generally allow string constants that are much longer than the
- standard’s minimum limit, but very portable programs should avoid
- using longer strings.
- </p>
- <p>The limit applies <em>after</em> string constant concatenation, and does
- not count the trailing NUL. In C90, the limit was 509 characters; in
- C99, it was raised to 4095. C++98 does not specify a normative
- minimum maximum, so we do not diagnose overlength strings in C++.
- </p>
- <p>This option is implied by <samp>-Wpedantic</samp>, and can be disabled with
- <samp>-Wno-overlength-strings</samp>.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wunsuffixed-float-constants <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wunsuffixed_002dfloat_002dconstants"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dunsuffixed_002dfloat_002dconstants"></a>
-
- <p>Issue a warning for any floating constant that does not have
- a suffix. When used together with <samp>-Wsystem-headers</samp> it
- warns about such constants in system header files. This can be useful
- when preparing code to use with the <code>FLOAT_CONST_DECIMAL64</code> pragma
- from the decimal floating-point extension to C99.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-lto-type-mismatch</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wlto_002dtype_002dmismatch"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dlto_002dtype_002dmismatch"></a>
-
- <p>During the link-time optimization, do not warn about type mismatches in
- global declarations from different compilation units.
- Requires <samp>-flto</samp> to be enabled. Enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-designated-init <span class="roman">(C and Objective-C only)</span></code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Wdesignated_002dinit"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002ddesignated_002dinit"></a>
- <p>Suppress warnings when a positional initializer is used to initialize
- a structure that has been marked with the <code>designated_init</code>
- attribute.
- </p>
- </dd>
- <dt><code>-Wno-hsa</code></dt>
- <dd><a name="index-Whsa"></a>
- <a name="index-Wno_002dhsa"></a>
- <p>Do not warn when HSAIL cannot be emitted for the compiled function or
- OpenMP construct. These warnings are enabled by default.
- </p>
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
- <hr>
- <div class="header">
- <p>
- Next: <a href="Static-Analyzer-Options.html#Static-Analyzer-Options" accesskey="n" rel="next">Static Analyzer Options</a>, Previous: <a href="Diagnostic-Message-Formatting-Options.html#Diagnostic-Message-Formatting-Options" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Diagnostic Message Formatting Options</a>, Up: <a href="Invoking-GCC.html#Invoking-GCC" accesskey="u" rel="up">Invoking GCC</a> [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p>
- </div>
-
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- </body>
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