Although many GCC extensions are supported, some are not. In particular,
the following extensions are known to not be supported:
- Local Labels: Labels local to a block.
- Labels as Values: Getting pointers to labels, and computed gotos.
- Nested Functions: As in Algol and Pascal, lexical scoping of functions.
- Constructing Calls: Dispatching a call to another function.
- Extended Asm: Assembler instructions with C expressions as operands.
- Constraints: Constraints for asm operands
- Asm Labels: Specifying the assembler name to use for a C symbol.
- Explicit Reg Vars: Defining variables residing in specified registers.
- Return Address: Getting the return or frame address of a function.
- Vector Extensions: Using vector instructions through built-in functions.
- Target Builtins: Built-in functions specific to particular targets.
- Thread-Local: Per-thread variables.
- Pragmas: Pragmas accepted by GCC.
The following GCC extensions are partially supported. An ignored
attribute means that the LLVM compiler ignores the presence of the attribute,
but the code should still work. An unsupported attribute is one which is
ignored by the LLVM compiler, which will cause a different interpretation of
the program.
- Variable Length:
Arrays whose length is computed at run time.
Supported, but allocated stack space is not freed until the function returns (noted above).
- Function Attributes:
Declaring that functions have no side effects, or that they can never return.
Supported: format, format_arg, non_null, constructor, destructor, unused, deprecated,
warn_unused_result, weak
Ignored: noreturn, noinline, always_inline, pure, const, nothrow, malloc
no_instrument_function, cdecl
Unsupported: used, section, alias, visibility, regparm, stdcall,
fastcall, all other target specific attributes
- Variable Attributes:
Specifying attributes of variables.
Supported: cleanup, common, nocommon,
deprecated, transparent_union,
unused, weak
Unsupported: aligned, mode, packed,
section, shared, tls_model,
vector_size, dllimport,
dllexport, all target specific attributes.
- Type Attributes: Specifying attributes of types.
Supported: transparent_union, unused,
deprecated, may_alias
Unsupported: aligned, packed
all target specific attributes.
- Other Builtins:
Other built-in functions.
We support all builtins which have a C language equivalent (e.g.,
__builtin_cos), __builtin_alloca,
__builtin_types_compatible_p, __builtin_choose_expr,
__builtin_constant_p, and __builtin_expect (ignored).
The following extensions are known to be supported:
- Statement Exprs: Putting statements and declarations inside expressions.
- Typeof:
typeof
: referring to the type of an expression.
- Lvalues: Using
?:
, ,
and casts in lvalues.
- Conditionals: Omitting the middle operand of a
?:
expression.
- Long Long: Double-word integers.
- Complex: Data types for complex numbers.
- Hex Floats:Hexadecimal floating-point constants.
- Zero Length: Zero-length arrays.
- Empty Structures: Structures with no members.
- Variadic Macros: Macros with a variable number of arguments.
- Escaped Newlines: Slightly looser rules for escaped newlines.
- Subscripting: Any array can be subscripted, even if not an lvalue.
- Pointer Arith:Arithmetic on
void
-pointers and function pointers.
- Initializers: Non-constant initializers.
- Compound Literals: Compound literals give structures, unions or arrays as values.
- Designated Inits: Labeling elements of initializers.
- Cast to Union:Casting to union type from any member of the union.
- Case Ranges: `case 1 ... 9' and such.
- Mixed Declarations: Mixing declarations and code.
- Function Prototypes: Prototype declarations and old-style definitions.
- C++ Comments: C++ comments are recognized.
- Dollar Signs: Dollar sign is allowed in identifiers.
- Character Escapes:
\e
stands for the character <ESC>.
- Alignment: Inquiring about the alignment of a type or variable.
- Inline: Defining inline functions (as fast as macros).
- Alternate Keywords:
__const__
, __asm__
, etc., for header files.
- Incomplete Enums:
enum foo;
, with details to follow.
- Function Names: Printable strings which are the name of the current function.
- Unnamed Fields: Unnamed struct/union fields within structs/unions.
- Attribute Syntax: Formal syntax for attributes.
If you run into GCC extensions which have not been included in any of these
lists, please let us know (also including whether or not they work).