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The following attributes are supported on most targets.
access
access (access-mode, ref-index)
access (access-mode, ref-index, size-index)
The access
attribute enables the detection of invalid or unsafe
accesses by functions to which they apply or their callers, as well as
write-only accesses to objects that are never read from. Such accesses
may be diagnosed by warnings such as -Wstringop-overflow,
-Wuninitialized, -Wunused, and others.
The access
attribute specifies that a function to whose by-reference
arguments the attribute applies accesses the referenced object according to
access-mode. The access-mode argument is required and must be
one of three names: read_only
, read_write
, or write_only
.
The remaining two are positional arguments.
The required ref-index positional argument denotes a function
argument of pointer (or in C++, reference) type that is subject to
the access. The same pointer argument can be referenced by at most one
distinct access
attribute.
The optional size-index positional argument denotes a function
argument of integer type that specifies the maximum size of the access.
The size is the number of elements of the type referenced by ref-index,
or the number of bytes when the pointer type is void*
. When no
size-index argument is specified, the pointer argument must be either
null or point to a space that is suitably aligned and large for at least one
object of the referenced type (this implies that a past-the-end pointer is
not a valid argument). The actual size of the access may be less but it
must not be more.
The read_only
access mode specifies that the pointer to which it
applies is used to read the referenced object but not write to it. Unless
the argument specifying the size of the access denoted by size-index
is zero, the referenced object must be initialized. The mode implies
a stronger guarantee than the const
qualifier which, when cast away
from a pointer, does not prevent the pointed-to object from being modified.
Examples of the use of the read_only
access mode is the argument to
the puts
function, or the second and third arguments to
the memcpy
function.
__attribute__ ((access (read_only, 1))) int puts (const char*); __attribute__ ((access (read_only, 1, 2))) void* memcpy (void*, const void*, size_t);
The read_write
access mode applies to arguments of pointer types
without the const
qualifier. It specifies that the pointer to which
it applies is used to both read and write the referenced object. Unless
the argument specifying the size of the access denoted by size-index
is zero, the object referenced by the pointer must be initialized. An example
of the use of the read_write
access mode is the first argument to
the strcat
function.
__attribute__ ((access (read_write, 1), access (read_only, 2))) char* strcat (char*, const char*);
The write_only
access mode applies to arguments of pointer types
without the const
qualifier. It specifies that the pointer to which
it applies is used to write to the referenced object but not read from it.
The object referenced by the pointer need not be initialized. An example
of the use of the write_only
access mode is the first argument to
the strcpy
function, or the first two arguments to the fgets
function.
__attribute__ ((access (write_only, 1), access (read_only, 2))) char* strcpy (char*, const char*); __attribute__ ((access (write_only, 1, 2), access (read_write, 3))) int fgets (char*, int, FILE*);
alias ("target")
The alias
attribute causes the declaration to be emitted as an alias
for another symbol, which must have been previously declared with the same
type, and for variables, also the same size and alignment. Declaring an alias
with a different type than the target is undefined and may be diagnosed. As
an example, the following declarations:
void __f () { /* Do something. */; }
void f () __attribute__ ((weak, alias ("__f")));
define ‘f’ to be a weak alias for ‘__f’. In C++, the mangled name for the target must be used. It is an error if ‘__f’ is not defined in the same translation unit.
This attribute requires assembler and object file support, and may not be available on all targets.
aligned
aligned (alignment)
The aligned
attribute specifies a minimum alignment for
the first instruction of the function, measured in bytes. When specified,
alignment must be an integer constant power of 2. Specifying no
alignment argument implies the ideal alignment for the target.
The __alignof__
operator can be used to determine what that is
(see Alignment). The attribute has no effect when a definition for
the function is not provided in the same translation unit.
The attribute cannot be used to decrease the alignment of a function previously declared with a more restrictive alignment; only to increase it. Attempts to do otherwise are diagnosed. Some targets specify a minimum default alignment for functions that is greater than 1. On such targets, specifying a less restrictive alignment is silently ignored. Using the attribute overrides the effect of the -falign-functions (see Optimize Options) option for this function.
Note that the effectiveness of aligned
attributes may be
limited by inherent limitations in the system linker
and/or object file format. On some systems, the
linker is only able to arrange for functions to be aligned up to a
certain maximum alignment. (For some linkers, the maximum supported
alignment may be very very small.) See your linker documentation for
further information.
The aligned
attribute can also be used for variables and fields
(see Variable Attributes.)
alloc_align (position)
The alloc_align
attribute may be applied to a function that
returns a pointer and takes at least one argument of an integer or
enumerated type.
It indicates that the returned pointer is aligned on a boundary given
by the function argument at position. Meaningful alignments are
powers of 2 greater than one. GCC uses this information to improve
pointer alignment analysis.
The function parameter denoting the allocated alignment is specified by one constant integer argument whose number is the argument of the attribute. Argument numbering starts at one.
For instance,
void* my_memalign (size_t, size_t) __attribute__ ((alloc_align (1)));
declares that my_memalign
returns memory with minimum alignment
given by parameter 1.
alloc_size (position)
alloc_size (position-1, position-2)
The alloc_size
attribute may be applied to a function that
returns a pointer and takes at least one argument of an integer or
enumerated type.
It indicates that the returned pointer points to memory whose size is
given by the function argument at position-1, or by the product
of the arguments at position-1 and position-2. Meaningful
sizes are positive values less than PTRDIFF_MAX
. GCC uses this
information to improve the results of __builtin_object_size
.
The function parameter(s) denoting the allocated size are specified by one or two integer arguments supplied to the attribute. The allocated size is either the value of the single function argument specified or the product of the two function arguments specified. Argument numbering starts at one for ordinary functions, and at two for C++ non-static member functions.
For instance,
void* my_calloc (size_t, size_t) __attribute__ ((alloc_size (1, 2))); void* my_realloc (void*, size_t) __attribute__ ((alloc_size (2)));
declares that my_calloc
returns memory of the size given by
the product of parameter 1 and 2 and that my_realloc
returns memory
of the size given by parameter 2.
always_inline
Generally, functions are not inlined unless optimization is specified. For functions declared inline, this attribute inlines the function independent of any restrictions that otherwise apply to inlining. Failure to inline such a function is diagnosed as an error. Note that if such a function is called indirectly the compiler may or may not inline it depending on optimization level and a failure to inline an indirect call may or may not be diagnosed.
artificial
This attribute is useful for small inline wrappers that if possible should appear during debugging as a unit. Depending on the debug info format it either means marking the function as artificial or using the caller location for all instructions within the inlined body.
assume_aligned (alignment)
assume_aligned (alignment, offset)
The assume_aligned
attribute may be applied to a function that
returns a pointer. It indicates that the returned pointer is aligned
on a boundary given by alignment. If the attribute has two
arguments, the second argument is misalignment offset. Meaningful
values of alignment are powers of 2 greater than one. Meaningful
values of offset are greater than zero and less than alignment.
For instance
void* my_alloc1 (size_t) __attribute__((assume_aligned (16))); void* my_alloc2 (size_t) __attribute__((assume_aligned (32, 8)));
declares that my_alloc1
returns 16-byte aligned pointers and
that my_alloc2
returns a pointer whose value modulo 32 is equal
to 8.
cold
The cold
attribute on functions is used to inform the compiler that
the function is unlikely to be executed. The function is optimized for
size rather than speed and on many targets it is placed into a special
subsection of the text section so all cold functions appear close together,
improving code locality of non-cold parts of program. The paths leading
to calls of cold functions within code are marked as unlikely by the branch
prediction mechanism. It is thus useful to mark functions used to handle
unlikely conditions, such as perror
, as cold to improve optimization
of hot functions that do call marked functions in rare occasions.
When profile feedback is available, via -fprofile-use, cold functions are automatically detected and this attribute is ignored.
const
Calls to functions whose return value is not affected by changes to
the observable state of the program and that have no observable effects
on such state other than to return a value may lend themselves to
optimizations such as common subexpression elimination. Declaring such
functions with the const
attribute allows GCC to avoid emitting
some calls in repeated invocations of the function with the same argument
values.
For example,
int square (int) __attribute__ ((const));
tells GCC that subsequent calls to function square
with the same
argument value can be replaced by the result of the first call regardless
of the statements in between.
The const
attribute prohibits a function from reading objects
that affect its return value between successive invocations. However,
functions declared with the attribute can safely read objects that do
not change their return value, such as non-volatile constants.
The const
attribute imposes greater restrictions on a function’s
definition than the similar pure
attribute. Declaring the same
function with both the const
and the pure
attribute is
diagnosed. Because a const function cannot have any observable side
effects it does not make sense for it to return void
. Declaring
such a function is diagnosed.
Note that a function that has pointer arguments and examines the data
pointed to must not be declared const
if the pointed-to
data might change between successive invocations of the function. In
general, since a function cannot distinguish data that might change
from data that cannot, const functions should never take pointer or,
in C++, reference arguments. Likewise, a function that calls a non-const
function usually must not be const itself.
constructor
destructor
constructor (priority)
destructor (priority)
The constructor
attribute causes the function to be called
automatically before execution enters main ()
. Similarly, the
destructor
attribute causes the function to be called
automatically after main ()
completes or exit ()
is
called. Functions with these attributes are useful for
initializing data that is used implicitly during the execution of
the program.
On some targets the attributes also accept an integer argument to
specify a priority to control the order in which constructor and
destructor functions are run. A constructor
with a smaller priority number runs before a constructor with a larger
priority number; the opposite relationship holds for destructors. So,
if you have a constructor that allocates a resource and a destructor
that deallocates the same resource, both functions typically have the
same priority. The priorities for constructor and destructor
functions are the same as those specified for namespace-scope C++
objects (see C++ Attributes). However, at present, the order in which
constructors for C++ objects with static storage duration and functions
decorated with attribute constructor
are invoked is unspecified.
In mixed declarations, attribute init_priority
can be used to
impose a specific ordering.
Using the argument forms of the constructor
and destructor
attributes on targets where the feature is not supported is rejected with
an error.
copy
copy (function)
The copy
attribute applies the set of attributes with which
function has been declared to the declaration of the function
to which the attribute is applied. The attribute is designed for
libraries that define aliases or function resolvers that are expected
to specify the same set of attributes as their targets. The copy
attribute can be used with functions, variables, or types. However,
the kind of symbol to which the attribute is applied (either function
or variable) must match the kind of symbol to which the argument refers.
The copy
attribute copies only syntactic and semantic attributes
but not attributes that affect a symbol’s linkage or visibility such as
alias
, visibility
, or weak
. The deprecated
and target_clones
attribute are also not copied.
See Common Type Attributes.
See Common Variable Attributes.
For example, the StrongAlias macro below makes use of the alias
and copy
attributes to define an alias named alloc for function
allocate declared with attributes alloc_size, malloc, and
nothrow. Thanks to the __typeof__
operator the alias has
the same type as the target function. As a result of the copy
attribute the alias also shares the same attributes as the target.
#define StrongAlias(TargetFunc, AliasDecl) \ extern __typeof__ (TargetFunc) AliasDecl \ __attribute__ ((alias (#TargetFunc), copy (TargetFunc))); extern __attribute__ ((alloc_size (1), malloc, nothrow)) void* allocate (size_t); StrongAlias (allocate, alloc);
deprecated
deprecated (msg)
The deprecated
attribute results in a warning if the function
is used anywhere in the source file. This is useful when identifying
functions that are expected to be removed in a future version of a
program. The warning also includes the location of the declaration
of the deprecated function, to enable users to easily find further
information about why the function is deprecated, or what they should
do instead. Note that the warnings only occurs for uses:
int old_fn () __attribute__ ((deprecated)); int old_fn (); int (*fn_ptr)() = old_fn;
results in a warning on line 3 but not line 2. The optional msg argument, which must be a string, is printed in the warning if present.
The deprecated
attribute can also be used for variables and
types (see Variable Attributes, see Type Attributes.)
The message attached to the attribute is affected by the setting of the -fmessage-length option.
error ("message")
warning ("message")
If the error
or warning
attribute
is used on a function declaration and a call to such a function
is not eliminated through dead code elimination or other optimizations,
an error or warning (respectively) that includes message is diagnosed.
This is useful
for compile-time checking, especially together with __builtin_constant_p
and inline functions where checking the inline function arguments is not
possible through extern char [(condition) ? 1 : -1];
tricks.
While it is possible to leave the function undefined and thus invoke
a link failure (to define the function with
a message in .gnu.warning*
section),
when using these attributes the problem is diagnosed
earlier and with exact location of the call even in presence of inline
functions or when not emitting debugging information.
externally_visible
This attribute, attached to a global variable or function, nullifies the effect of the -fwhole-program command-line option, so the object remains visible outside the current compilation unit.
If -fwhole-program is used together with -flto and
gold
is used as the linker plugin,
externally_visible
attributes are automatically added to functions
(not variable yet due to a current gold
issue)
that are accessed outside of LTO objects according to resolution file
produced by gold
.
For other linkers that cannot generate resolution file,
explicit externally_visible
attributes are still necessary.
flatten
Generally, inlining into a function is limited. For a function marked with
this attribute, every call inside this function is inlined, if possible.
Functions declared with attribute noinline
and similar are not
inlined. Whether the function itself is considered for inlining depends
on its size and the current inlining parameters.
format (archetype, string-index, first-to-check)
The format
attribute specifies that a function takes printf
,
scanf
, strftime
or strfmon
style arguments that
should be type-checked against a format string. For example, the
declaration:
extern int my_printf (void *my_object, const char *my_format, ...) __attribute__ ((format (printf, 2, 3)));
causes the compiler to check the arguments in calls to my_printf
for consistency with the printf
style format string argument
my_format
.
The parameter archetype determines how the format string is
interpreted, and should be printf
, scanf
, strftime
,
gnu_printf
, gnu_scanf
, gnu_strftime
or
strfmon
. (You can also use __printf__
,
__scanf__
, __strftime__
or __strfmon__
.) On
MinGW targets, ms_printf
, ms_scanf
, and
ms_strftime
are also present.
archetype values such as printf
refer to the formats accepted
by the system’s C runtime library,
while values prefixed with ‘gnu_’ always refer
to the formats accepted by the GNU C Library. On Microsoft Windows
targets, values prefixed with ‘ms_’ refer to the formats accepted by the
msvcrt.dll library.
The parameter string-index
specifies which argument is the format string argument (starting
from 1), while first-to-check is the number of the first
argument to check against the format string. For functions
where the arguments are not available to be checked (such as
vprintf
), specify the third parameter as zero. In this case the
compiler only checks the format string for consistency. For
strftime
formats, the third parameter is required to be zero.
Since non-static C++ methods have an implicit this
argument, the
arguments of such methods should be counted from two, not one, when
giving values for string-index and first-to-check.
In the example above, the format string (my_format
) is the second
argument of the function my_print
, and the arguments to check
start with the third argument, so the correct parameters for the format
attribute are 2 and 3.
The format
attribute allows you to identify your own functions
that take format strings as arguments, so that GCC can check the
calls to these functions for errors. The compiler always (unless
-ffreestanding or -fno-builtin is used) checks formats
for the standard library functions printf
, fprintf
,
sprintf
, scanf
, fscanf
, sscanf
, strftime
,
vprintf
, vfprintf
and vsprintf
whenever such
warnings are requested (using -Wformat), so there is no need to
modify the header file stdio.h. In C99 mode, the functions
snprintf
, vsnprintf
, vscanf
, vfscanf
and
vsscanf
are also checked. Except in strictly conforming C
standard modes, the X/Open function strfmon
is also checked as
are printf_unlocked
and fprintf_unlocked
.
See Options Controlling C Dialect.
For Objective-C dialects, NSString
(or __NSString__
) is
recognized in the same context. Declarations including these format attributes
are parsed for correct syntax, however the result of checking of such format
strings is not yet defined, and is not carried out by this version of the
compiler.
The target may also provide additional types of format checks. See Format Checks Specific to Particular Target Machines.
format_arg (string-index)
The format_arg
attribute specifies that a function takes one or
more format strings for a printf
, scanf
, strftime
or
strfmon
style function and modifies it (for example, to translate
it into another language), so the result can be passed to a
printf
, scanf
, strftime
or strfmon
style
function (with the remaining arguments to the format function the same
as they would have been for the unmodified string). Multiple
format_arg
attributes may be applied to the same function, each
designating a distinct parameter as a format string. For example, the
declaration:
extern char * my_dgettext (char *my_domain, const char *my_format) __attribute__ ((format_arg (2)));
causes the compiler to check the arguments in calls to a printf
,
scanf
, strftime
or strfmon
type function, whose
format string argument is a call to the my_dgettext
function, for
consistency with the format string argument my_format
. If the
format_arg
attribute had not been specified, all the compiler
could tell in such calls to format functions would be that the format
string argument is not constant; this would generate a warning when
-Wformat-nonliteral is used, but the calls could not be checked
without the attribute.
In calls to a function declared with more than one format_arg
attribute, each with a distinct argument value, the corresponding
actual function arguments are checked against all format strings
designated by the attributes. This capability is designed to support
the GNU ngettext
family of functions.
The parameter string-index specifies which argument is the format
string argument (starting from one). Since non-static C++ methods have
an implicit this
argument, the arguments of such methods should
be counted from two.
The format_arg
attribute allows you to identify your own
functions that modify format strings, so that GCC can check the
calls to printf
, scanf
, strftime
or strfmon
type function whose operands are a call to one of your own function.
The compiler always treats gettext
, dgettext
, and
dcgettext
in this manner except when strict ISO C support is
requested by -ansi or an appropriate -std option, or
-ffreestanding or -fno-builtin
is used. See Options
Controlling C Dialect.
For Objective-C dialects, the format-arg
attribute may refer to an
NSString
reference for compatibility with the format
attribute
above.
The target may also allow additional types in format-arg
attributes.
See Format Checks Specific to Particular
Target Machines.
gnu_inline
This attribute should be used with a function that is also declared
with the inline
keyword. It directs GCC to treat the function
as if it were defined in gnu90 mode even when compiling in C99 or
gnu99 mode.
If the function is declared extern
, then this definition of the
function is used only for inlining. In no case is the function
compiled as a standalone function, not even if you take its address
explicitly. Such an address becomes an external reference, as if you
had only declared the function, and had not defined it. This has
almost the effect of a macro. The way to use this is to put a
function definition in a header file with this attribute, and put
another copy of the function, without extern
, in a library
file. The definition in the header file causes most calls to the
function to be inlined. If any uses of the function remain, they
refer to the single copy in the library. Note that the two
definitions of the functions need not be precisely the same, although
if they do not have the same effect your program may behave oddly.
In C, if the function is neither extern
nor static
, then
the function is compiled as a standalone function, as well as being
inlined where possible.
This is how GCC traditionally handled functions declared
inline
. Since ISO C99 specifies a different semantics for
inline
, this function attribute is provided as a transition
measure and as a useful feature in its own right. This attribute is
available in GCC 4.1.3 and later. It is available if either of the
preprocessor macros __GNUC_GNU_INLINE__
or
__GNUC_STDC_INLINE__
are defined. See An Inline
Function is As Fast As a Macro.
In C++, this attribute does not depend on extern
in any way,
but it still requires the inline
keyword to enable its special
behavior.
hot
The hot
attribute on a function is used to inform the compiler that
the function is a hot spot of the compiled program. The function is
optimized more aggressively and on many targets it is placed into a special
subsection of the text section so all hot functions appear close together,
improving locality.
When profile feedback is available, via -fprofile-use, hot functions are automatically detected and this attribute is ignored.
ifunc ("resolver")
The ifunc
attribute is used to mark a function as an indirect
function using the STT_GNU_IFUNC symbol type extension to the ELF
standard. This allows the resolution of the symbol value to be
determined dynamically at load time, and an optimized version of the
routine to be selected for the particular processor or other system
characteristics determined then. To use this attribute, first define
the implementation functions available, and a resolver function that
returns a pointer to the selected implementation function. The
implementation functions’ declarations must match the API of the
function being implemented. The resolver should be declared to
be a function taking no arguments and returning a pointer to
a function of the same type as the implementation. For example:
void *my_memcpy (void *dst, const void *src, size_t len) { … return dst; } static void * (*resolve_memcpy (void))(void *, const void *, size_t) { return my_memcpy; // we will just always select this routine }
The exported header file declaring the function the user calls would contain:
extern void *memcpy (void *, const void *, size_t);
allowing the user to call memcpy
as a regular function, unaware of
the actual implementation. Finally, the indirect function needs to be
defined in the same translation unit as the resolver function:
void *memcpy (void *, const void *, size_t) __attribute__ ((ifunc ("resolve_memcpy")));
In C++, the ifunc
attribute takes a string that is the mangled name
of the resolver function. A C++ resolver for a non-static member function
of class C
should be declared to return a pointer to a non-member
function taking pointer to C
as the first argument, followed by
the same arguments as of the implementation function. G++ checks
the signatures of the two functions and issues
a -Wattribute-alias warning for mismatches. To suppress a warning
for the necessary cast from a pointer to the implementation member function
to the type of the corresponding non-member function use
the -Wno-pmf-conversions option. For example:
class S { private: int debug_impl (int); int optimized_impl (int); typedef int Func (S*, int); static Func* resolver (); public: int interface (int); }; int S::debug_impl (int) { /* … */ } int S::optimized_impl (int) { /* … */ } S::Func* S::resolver () { int (S::*pimpl) (int) = getenv ("DEBUG") ? &S::debug_impl : &S::optimized_impl; // Cast triggers -Wno-pmf-conversions. return reinterpret_cast<Func*>(pimpl); } int S::interface (int) __attribute__ ((ifunc ("_ZN1S8resolverEv")));
Indirect functions cannot be weak. Binutils version 2.20.1 or higher and GNU C Library version 2.11.1 are required to use this feature.
interrupt
interrupt_handler
Many GCC back ends support attributes to indicate that a function is an interrupt handler, which tells the compiler to generate function entry and exit sequences that differ from those from regular functions. The exact syntax and behavior are target-specific; refer to the following subsections for details.
leaf
Calls to external functions with this attribute must return to the
current compilation unit only by return or by exception handling. In
particular, a leaf function is not allowed to invoke callback functions
passed to it from the current compilation unit, directly call functions
exported by the unit, or longjmp
into the unit. Leaf functions
might still call functions from other compilation units and thus they
are not necessarily leaf in the sense that they contain no function
calls at all.
The attribute is intended for library functions to improve dataflow
analysis. The compiler takes the hint that any data not escaping the
current compilation unit cannot be used or modified by the leaf
function. For example, the sin
function is a leaf function, but
qsort
is not.
Note that leaf functions might indirectly run a signal handler defined
in the current compilation unit that uses static variables. Similarly,
when lazy symbol resolution is in effect, leaf functions might invoke
indirect functions whose resolver function or implementation function is
defined in the current compilation unit and uses static variables. There
is no standard-compliant way to write such a signal handler, resolver
function, or implementation function, and the best that you can do is to
remove the leaf
attribute or mark all such static variables
volatile
. Lastly, for ELF-based systems that support symbol
interposition, care should be taken that functions defined in the
current compilation unit do not unexpectedly interpose other symbols
based on the defined standards mode and defined feature test macros;
otherwise an inadvertent callback would be added.
The attribute has no effect on functions defined within the current compilation unit. This is to allow easy merging of multiple compilation units into one, for example, by using the link-time optimization. For this reason the attribute is not allowed on types to annotate indirect calls.
malloc
This tells the compiler that a function is malloc
-like, i.e.,
that the pointer P returned by the function cannot alias any
other pointer valid when the function returns, and moreover no
pointers to valid objects occur in any storage addressed by P.
Using this attribute can improve optimization. Compiler predicts
that a function with the attribute returns non-null in most cases.
Functions like
malloc
and calloc
have this property because they return
a pointer to uninitialized or zeroed-out storage. However, functions
like realloc
do not have this property, as they can return a
pointer to storage containing pointers.
no_icf
This function attribute prevents a functions from being merged with another semantically equivalent function.
no_instrument_function
If any of -finstrument-functions, -p, or -pg are given, profiling function calls are generated at entry and exit of most user-compiled functions. Functions with this attribute are not so instrumented.
no_profile_instrument_function
The no_profile_instrument_function
attribute on functions is used
to inform the compiler that it should not process any profile feedback based
optimization code instrumentation.
no_reorder
Do not reorder functions or variables marked no_reorder
against each other or top level assembler statements the executable.
The actual order in the program will depend on the linker command
line. Static variables marked like this are also not removed.
This has a similar effect
as the -fno-toplevel-reorder option, but only applies to the
marked symbols.
no_sanitize ("sanitize_option")
The no_sanitize
attribute on functions is used
to inform the compiler that it should not do sanitization of any option
mentioned in sanitize_option. A list of values acceptable by
the -fsanitize option can be provided.
void __attribute__ ((no_sanitize ("alignment", "object-size"))) f () { /* Do something. */; } void __attribute__ ((no_sanitize ("alignment,object-size"))) g () { /* Do something. */; }
no_sanitize_address
no_address_safety_analysis
The no_sanitize_address
attribute on functions is used
to inform the compiler that it should not instrument memory accesses
in the function when compiling with the -fsanitize=address option.
The no_address_safety_analysis
is a deprecated alias of the
no_sanitize_address
attribute, new code should use
no_sanitize_address
.
no_sanitize_thread
The no_sanitize_thread
attribute on functions is used
to inform the compiler that it should not instrument memory accesses
in the function when compiling with the -fsanitize=thread option.
no_sanitize_undefined
The no_sanitize_undefined
attribute on functions is used
to inform the compiler that it should not check for undefined behavior
in the function when compiling with the -fsanitize=undefined option.
no_split_stack
If -fsplit-stack is given, functions have a small
prologue which decides whether to split the stack. Functions with the
no_split_stack
attribute do not have that prologue, and thus
may run with only a small amount of stack space available.
no_stack_limit
This attribute locally overrides the -fstack-limit-register and -fstack-limit-symbol command-line options; it has the effect of disabling stack limit checking in the function it applies to.
noclone
This function attribute prevents a function from being considered for cloning—a mechanism that produces specialized copies of functions and which is (currently) performed by interprocedural constant propagation.
noinline
This function attribute prevents a function from being considered for inlining. If the function does not have side effects, there are optimizations other than inlining that cause function calls to be optimized away, although the function call is live. To keep such calls from being optimized away, put
asm ("");
(see Extended Asm) in the called function, to serve as a special side effect.
noipa
Disable interprocedural optimizations between the function with this
attribute and its callers, as if the body of the function is not available
when optimizing callers and the callers are unavailable when optimizing
the body. This attribute implies noinline
, noclone
and
no_icf
attributes. However, this attribute is not equivalent
to a combination of other attributes, because its purpose is to suppress
existing and future optimizations employing interprocedural analysis,
including those that do not have an attribute suitable for disabling
them individually. This attribute is supported mainly for the purpose
of testing the compiler.
nonnull
nonnull (arg-index, …)
The nonnull
attribute may be applied to a function that takes at
least one argument of a pointer type. It indicates that the referenced
arguments must be non-null pointers. For instance, the declaration:
extern void * my_memcpy (void *dest, const void *src, size_t len) __attribute__((nonnull (1, 2)));
causes the compiler to check that, in calls to my_memcpy
,
arguments dest and src are non-null. If the compiler
determines that a null pointer is passed in an argument slot marked
as non-null, and the -Wnonnull option is enabled, a warning
is issued. See Warning Options. Unless disabled by
the -fno-delete-null-pointer-checks option the compiler may
also perform optimizations based on the knowledge that certain function
arguments cannot be null. In addition,
the -fisolate-erroneous-paths-attribute option can be specified
to have GCC transform calls with null arguments to non-null functions
into traps. See Optimize Options.
If no arg-index is given to the nonnull
attribute,
all pointer arguments are marked as non-null. To illustrate, the
following declaration is equivalent to the previous example:
extern void * my_memcpy (void *dest, const void *src, size_t len) __attribute__((nonnull));
noplt
The noplt
attribute is the counterpart to option -fno-plt.
Calls to functions marked with this attribute in position-independent code
do not use the PLT.
/* Externally defined function foo. */ int foo () __attribute__ ((noplt)); int main (/* … */) { /* … */ foo (); /* … */ }
The noplt
attribute on function foo
tells the compiler to assume that
the function foo
is externally defined and that the call to
foo
must avoid the PLT
in position-independent code.
In position-dependent code, a few targets also convert calls to functions that are marked to not use the PLT to use the GOT instead.
noreturn
A few standard library functions, such as abort
and exit
,
cannot return. GCC knows this automatically. Some programs define
their own functions that never return. You can declare them
noreturn
to tell the compiler this fact. For example,
void fatal () __attribute__ ((noreturn)); void fatal (/* … */) { /* … */ /* Print error message. */ /* … */ exit (1); }
The noreturn
keyword tells the compiler to assume that
fatal
cannot return. It can then optimize without regard to what
would happen if fatal
ever did return. This makes slightly
better code. More importantly, it helps avoid spurious warnings of
uninitialized variables.
The noreturn
keyword does not affect the exceptional path when that
applies: a noreturn
-marked function may still return to the caller
by throwing an exception or calling longjmp
.
In order to preserve backtraces, GCC will never turn calls to
noreturn
functions into tail calls.
Do not assume that registers saved by the calling function are
restored before calling the noreturn
function.
It does not make sense for a noreturn
function to have a return
type other than void
.
nothrow
The nothrow
attribute is used to inform the compiler that a
function cannot throw an exception. For example, most functions in
the standard C library can be guaranteed not to throw an exception
with the notable exceptions of qsort
and bsearch
that
take function pointer arguments.
optimize (level, …)
optimize (string, …)
The optimize
attribute is used to specify that a function is to
be compiled with different optimization options than specified on the
command line. Valid arguments are constant non-negative integers and
strings. Each numeric argument specifies an optimization level.
Each string argument consists of one or more comma-separated
substrings. Each substring that begins with the letter O
refers
to an optimization option such as -O0 or -Os. Other
substrings are taken as suffixes to the -f
prefix jointly
forming the name of an optimization option. See Optimize Options.
‘#pragma GCC optimize’ can be used to set optimization options for more than one function. See Function Specific Option Pragmas, for details about the pragma.
Providing multiple strings as arguments separated by commas to specify multiple options is equivalent to separating the option suffixes with a comma (‘,’) within a single string. Spaces are not permitted within the strings.
Not every optimization option that starts with the -f prefix
specified by the attribute necessarily has an effect on the function.
The optimize
attribute should be used for debugging purposes only.
It is not suitable in production code.
patchable_function_entry
In case the target’s text segment can be made writable at run time by any means, padding the function entry with a number of NOPs can be used to provide a universal tool for instrumentation.
The patchable_function_entry
function attribute can be used to
change the number of NOPs to any desired value. The two-value syntax
is the same as for the command-line switch
-fpatchable-function-entry=N,M, generating N NOPs, with
the function entry point before the Mth NOP instruction.
M defaults to 0 if omitted e.g. function entry point is before
the first NOP.
If patchable function entries are enabled globally using the command-line
option -fpatchable-function-entry=N,M, then you must disable
instrumentation on all functions that are part of the instrumentation
framework with the attribute patchable_function_entry (0)
to prevent recursion.
pure
Calls to functions that have no observable effects on the state of
the program other than to return a value may lend themselves to optimizations
such as common subexpression elimination. Declaring such functions with
the pure
attribute allows GCC to avoid emitting some calls in repeated
invocations of the function with the same argument values.
The pure
attribute prohibits a function from modifying the state
of the program that is observable by means other than inspecting
the function’s return value. However, functions declared with the pure
attribute can safely read any non-volatile objects, and modify the value of
objects in a way that does not affect their return value or the observable
state of the program.
For example,
int hash (char *) __attribute__ ((pure));
tells GCC that subsequent calls to the function hash
with the same
string can be replaced by the result of the first call provided the state
of the program observable by hash
, including the contents of the array
itself, does not change in between. Even though hash
takes a non-const
pointer argument it must not modify the array it points to, or any other object
whose value the rest of the program may depend on. However, the caller may
safely change the contents of the array between successive calls to
the function (doing so disables the optimization). The restriction also
applies to member objects referenced by the this
pointer in C++
non-static member functions.
Some common examples of pure functions are strlen
or memcmp
.
Interesting non-pure functions are functions with infinite loops or those
depending on volatile memory or other system resource, that may change between
consecutive calls (such as the standard C feof
function in
a multithreading environment).
The pure
attribute imposes similar but looser restrictions on
a function’s definition than the const
attribute: pure
allows the function to read any non-volatile memory, even if it changes
in between successive invocations of the function. Declaring the same
function with both the pure
and the const
attribute is
diagnosed. Because a pure function cannot have any observable side
effects it does not make sense for such a function to return void
.
Declaring such a function is diagnosed.
returns_nonnull
The returns_nonnull
attribute specifies that the function
return value should be a non-null pointer. For instance, the declaration:
extern void * mymalloc (size_t len) __attribute__((returns_nonnull));
lets the compiler optimize callers based on the knowledge that the return value will never be null.
returns_twice
The returns_twice
attribute tells the compiler that a function may
return more than one time. The compiler ensures that all registers
are dead before calling such a function and emits a warning about
the variables that may be clobbered after the second return from the
function. Examples of such functions are setjmp
and vfork
.
The longjmp
-like counterpart of such function, if any, might need
to be marked with the noreturn
attribute.
section ("section-name")
Normally, the compiler places the code it generates in the text
section.
Sometimes, however, you need additional sections, or you need certain
particular functions to appear in special sections. The section
attribute specifies that a function lives in a particular section.
For example, the declaration:
extern void foobar (void) __attribute__ ((section ("bar")));
puts the function foobar
in the bar
section.
Some file formats do not support arbitrary sections so the section
attribute is not available on all platforms.
If you need to map the entire contents of a module to a particular
section, consider using the facilities of the linker instead.
sentinel
sentinel (position)
This function attribute indicates that an argument in a call to the function
is expected to be an explicit NULL
. The attribute is only valid on
variadic functions. By default, the sentinel is expected to be the last
argument of the function call. If the optional position argument
is specified to the attribute, the sentinel must be located at
position counting backwards from the end of the argument list.
__attribute__ ((sentinel)) is equivalent to __attribute__ ((sentinel(0)))
The attribute is automatically set with a position of 0 for the built-in
functions execl
and execlp
. The built-in function
execle
has the attribute set with a position of 1.
A valid NULL
in this context is defined as zero with any object
pointer type. If your system defines the NULL
macro with
an integer type then you need to add an explicit cast. During
installation GCC replaces the system <stddef.h>
header with
a copy that redefines NULL appropriately.
The warnings for missing or incorrect sentinels are enabled with -Wformat.
simd
simd("mask")
This attribute enables creation of one or more function versions that can process multiple arguments using SIMD instructions from a single invocation. Specifying this attribute allows compiler to assume that such versions are available at link time (provided in the same or another translation unit). Generated versions are target-dependent and described in the corresponding Vector ABI document. For x86_64 target this document can be found here.
The optional argument mask may have the value
notinbranch
or inbranch
,
and instructs the compiler to generate non-masked or masked
clones correspondingly. By default, all clones are generated.
If the attribute is specified and #pragma omp declare simd
is
present on a declaration and the -fopenmp or -fopenmp-simd
switch is specified, then the attribute is ignored.
stack_protect
This attribute adds stack protection code to the function if flags -fstack-protector, -fstack-protector-strong or -fstack-protector-explicit are set.
target (string, …)
Multiple target back ends implement the target
attribute
to specify that a function is to
be compiled with different target options than specified on the
command line. One or more strings can be provided as arguments.
Each string consists of one or more comma-separated suffixes to
the -m
prefix jointly forming the name of a machine-dependent
option. See Machine-Dependent Options.
The target
attribute can be used for instance to have a function
compiled with a different ISA (instruction set architecture) than the
default. ‘#pragma GCC target’ can be used to specify target-specific
options for more than one function. See Function Specific Option Pragmas,
for details about the pragma.
For instance, on an x86, you could declare one function with the
target("sse4.1,arch=core2")
attribute and another with
target("sse4a,arch=amdfam10")
. This is equivalent to
compiling the first function with -msse4.1 and
-march=core2 options, and the second function with
-msse4a and -march=amdfam10 options. It is up to you
to make sure that a function is only invoked on a machine that
supports the particular ISA it is compiled for (for example by using
cpuid
on x86 to determine what feature bits and architecture
family are used).
int core2_func (void) __attribute__ ((__target__ ("arch=core2"))); int sse3_func (void) __attribute__ ((__target__ ("sse3")));
Providing multiple strings as arguments separated by commas to specify multiple options is equivalent to separating the option suffixes with a comma (‘,’) within a single string. Spaces are not permitted within the strings.
The options supported are specific to each target; refer to x86 Function Attributes, PowerPC Function Attributes, ARM Function Attributes, AArch64 Function Attributes, Nios II Function Attributes, and S/390 Function Attributes for details.
symver ("name2@nodename")
On ELF targets this attribute creates a symbol version. The name2 part
of the parameter is the actual name of the symbol by which it will be
externally referenced. The nodename
portion should be the name of a
node specified in the version script supplied to the linker when building a
shared library. Versioned symbol must be defined and must be exported with
default visibility.
__attribute__ ((__symver__ ("foo@VERS_1"))) int foo_v1 (void) { }
Will produce a .symver foo_v1, foo@VERS_1
directive in the assembler
output.
It’s an error to define multiple version of a given symbol. In such case an alias can be used.
__attribute__ ((__symver__ ("foo@VERS_2"))) __attribute__ ((alias ("foo_v1"))) int symver_foo_v1 (void);
This example creates an alias of foo_v1
with symbol name
symver_foo_v1
which will be version VERS_2
of foo
.
Finally if the parameter is "name2@@nodename"
then in
addition to creating a symbol version (as if
"name2@nodename"
was used) the version will be also used
to resolve name2 by the linker.
target_clones (options)
The target_clones
attribute is used to specify that a function
be cloned into multiple versions compiled with different target options
than specified on the command line. The supported options and restrictions
are the same as for target
attribute.
For instance, on an x86, you could compile a function with
target_clones("sse4.1,avx")
. GCC creates two function clones,
one compiled with -msse4.1 and another with -mavx.
On a PowerPC, you can compile a function with
target_clones("cpu=power9,default")
. GCC will create two
function clones, one compiled with -mcpu=power9 and another
with the default options. GCC must be configured to use GLIBC 2.23 or
newer in order to use the target_clones
attribute.
It also creates a resolver function (see
the ifunc
attribute above) that dynamically selects a clone
suitable for current architecture. The resolver is created only if there
is a usage of a function with target_clones
attribute.
Note that any subsequent call of a function without target_clone
from a target_clone
caller will not lead to copying
(target clone) of the called function.
If you want to enforce such behaviour,
we recommend declaring the calling function with the flatten
attribute?
unused
This attribute, attached to a function, means that the function is meant to be possibly unused. GCC does not produce a warning for this function.
used
This attribute, attached to a function, means that code must be emitted for the function even if it appears that the function is not referenced. This is useful, for example, when the function is referenced only in inline assembly.
When applied to a member function of a C++ class template, the attribute also means that the function is instantiated if the class itself is instantiated.
visibility ("visibility_type")
This attribute affects the linkage of the declaration to which it is attached. It can be applied to variables (see Common Variable Attributes) and types (see Common Type Attributes) as well as functions.
There are four supported visibility_type values: default, hidden, protected or internal visibility.
void __attribute__ ((visibility ("protected")))
f () { /* Do something. */; }
int i __attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden")));
The possible values of visibility_type correspond to the visibility settings in the ELF gABI.
default
Default visibility is the normal case for the object file format. This value is available for the visibility attribute to override other options that may change the assumed visibility of entities.
On ELF, default visibility means that the declaration is visible to other modules and, in shared libraries, means that the declared entity may be overridden.
On Darwin, default visibility means that the declaration is visible to other modules.
Default visibility corresponds to “external linkage” in the language.
hidden
Hidden visibility indicates that the entity declared has a new form of linkage, which we call “hidden linkage”. Two declarations of an object with hidden linkage refer to the same object if they are in the same shared object.
internal
Internal visibility is like hidden visibility, but with additional processor specific semantics. Unless otherwise specified by the psABI, GCC defines internal visibility to mean that a function is never called from another module. Compare this with hidden functions which, while they cannot be referenced directly by other modules, can be referenced indirectly via function pointers. By indicating that a function cannot be called from outside the module, GCC may for instance omit the load of a PIC register since it is known that the calling function loaded the correct value.
protected
Protected visibility is like default visibility except that it indicates that references within the defining module bind to the definition in that module. That is, the declared entity cannot be overridden by another module.
All visibilities are supported on many, but not all, ELF targets (supported when the assembler supports the ‘.visibility’ pseudo-op). Default visibility is supported everywhere. Hidden visibility is supported on Darwin targets.
The visibility attribute should be applied only to declarations that would otherwise have external linkage. The attribute should be applied consistently, so that the same entity should not be declared with different settings of the attribute.
In C++, the visibility attribute applies to types as well as functions and objects, because in C++ types have linkage. A class must not have greater visibility than its non-static data member types and bases, and class members default to the visibility of their class. Also, a declaration without explicit visibility is limited to the visibility of its type.
In C++, you can mark member functions and static member variables of a class with the visibility attribute. This is useful if you know a particular method or static member variable should only be used from one shared object; then you can mark it hidden while the rest of the class has default visibility. Care must be taken to avoid breaking the One Definition Rule; for example, it is usually not useful to mark an inline method as hidden without marking the whole class as hidden.
A C++ namespace declaration can also have the visibility attribute.
namespace nspace1 __attribute__ ((visibility ("protected")))
{ /* Do something. */; }
This attribute applies only to the particular namespace body, not to other definitions of the same namespace; it is equivalent to using ‘#pragma GCC visibility’ before and after the namespace definition (see Visibility Pragmas).
In C++, if a template argument has limited visibility, this restriction is implicitly propagated to the template instantiation. Otherwise, template instantiations and specializations default to the visibility of their template.
If both the template and enclosing class have explicit visibility, the visibility from the template is used.
warn_unused_result
The warn_unused_result
attribute causes a warning to be emitted
if a caller of the function with this attribute does not use its
return value. This is useful for functions where not checking
the result is either a security problem or always a bug, such as
realloc
.
int fn () __attribute__ ((warn_unused_result)); int foo () { if (fn () < 0) return -1; fn (); return 0; }
results in warning on line 5.
weak
The weak
attribute causes a declaration of an external symbol
to be emitted as a weak symbol rather than a global. This is primarily
useful in defining library functions that can be overridden in user code,
though it can also be used with non-function declarations. The overriding
symbol must have the same type as the weak symbol. In addition, if it
designates a variable it must also have the same size and alignment as
the weak symbol. Weak symbols are supported for ELF targets, and also
for a.out targets when using the GNU assembler and linker.
weakref
weakref ("target")
The weakref
attribute marks a declaration as a weak reference.
Without arguments, it should be accompanied by an alias
attribute
naming the target symbol. Alternatively, target may be given as
an argument to weakref
itself, naming the target definition of
the alias. The target must have the same type as the declaration.
In addition, if it designates a variable it must also have the same size
and alignment as the declaration. In either form of the declaration
weakref
implicitly marks the declared symbol as weak
. Without
a target given as an argument to weakref
or to alias
,
weakref
is equivalent to weak
(in that case the declaration
may be extern
).
/* Given the declaration: */ extern int y (void); /* the following... */ static int x (void) __attribute__ ((weakref ("y"))); /* is equivalent to... */ static int x (void) __attribute__ ((weakref, alias ("y"))); /* or, alternatively, to... */ static int x (void) __attribute__ ((weakref)); static int x (void) __attribute__ ((alias ("y")));
A weak reference is an alias that does not by itself require a
definition to be given for the target symbol. If the target symbol is
only referenced through weak references, then it becomes a weak
undefined symbol. If it is directly referenced, however, then such
strong references prevail, and a definition is required for the
symbol, not necessarily in the same translation unit.
The effect is equivalent to moving all references to the alias to a
separate translation unit, renaming the alias to the aliased symbol,
declaring it as weak, compiling the two separate translation units and
performing a link with relocatable output (i.e. ld -r
) on them.
A declaration to which weakref
is attached and that is associated
with a named target
must be static
.
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