This means that floating-point constants can now have the range and precision of the extended type (aka long double), and floating-point constant expressions evaluated within the compiler also have that same range and precision (matching expressions evaluated at run time). This new behavior is intended to match the behavior specified in the C99 and later standards for FLT_EVAL_METHOD 2.
This fixes the previous problem where long double constants and constant expressions of type long double were not represented and evaluated with the full range and precision that they should be. It also gives extra range and precision to constants and constant expressions of type double or float. This may have pluses and minuses, but at any rate it is consistent with the existing behavior for expressions evaluated at run time, and with one of the possible models of floating point evaluation specified in the C standards.
Currently, the actual values they can have are still constrained to the 32-bit range. Also, there are some bits of functionality (e.g. for initializers) that are not implemented yet.
This generalizes the heuristic approach for checking whether _Noreturn functions could execute to the end of the function, extending it to apply to any function with a non-void return type. These checks use the same #pragma lint bit but give different messages depending on the situation.
This uses a heuristic that may produce both false positives and false negatives, but any false positives should reflect extraneous code at the end of the function that is not actually reachable.
Currently, this only flags return statements, not cases where they may execute to the end of the function. (Whether the function will actually return is not decidable in general, although it may be in special cases).
This currently checks for:
*Calls to undefined functions (same as bit 0)
*Parameters not declared in K&R-style function definitions
*Declarations or type names with no type specifiers (includes but is broader than the condition checked by bit 1)
In the #pragma lint line, the integer indicating the checks to perform can now optionally be followed by a semicolon and another integer. If these are present and the second integer is 0, then the lint checks will be performed, but will be treated as warnings rather than errors, so that they do not cause compilation to fail.
_Bool, _Complex, _Imaginary, _Atomic, restrict, and _Alignas are now recognized in types, but all except restrict and _Alignas will give an error saying they are not supported.
This also introduces uniform definitions of the syntactic classes of tokens that can be used in declaration specifiers and related constructs (currently used in some places but not yet in others).
Specifically, the following six punctuator tokens are now supported:
<: :> <% %> %: %:%:
These behave the same as the existing tokens [, ], {, }, #, and ## (respectively), apart from their spelling.
This can be useful when the full ASCII character set cannot easily be displayed or input (e.g. on the IIgs text screen with certain language settings).
Specifically, the following will now be tokenized as keywords:
_Alignas
_Alignof
_Atomic
_Bool
_Complex
_Generic
_Imaginary
_Noreturn
_Static_assert
_Thread_local
restrict
('inline' was also added as a standard keyword in C99, but ORCA/C already treated it as such.)
The parser currently has no support for any of these keywords, so for now errors will still be generated if they are used, but this is a first step toward adding support for them.
Bumping the version forces regeneration of any sym files created by old ORCA/C versions with the bug that was just fixed.
A couple sanity checks are also introduced when reading sym files, including one that would have caught that bug.
This adds lint bit 5 (a value of 32), which currently enables checking for the following conditions:
*Integer overflow from arithmetic in constant expressions (currently only of type int).
*Invalid constant shift counts (negative, or >= the width of the type)
*Division by (constant) zero.
These (mainly the first two) can be indicative of code that was designed for larger type sizes and needs changes to support 16-bit int.
commit 4265329097538640e9e21202f1b141bcd42a44f3
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 21:45:32 2018 -0400
indent to match standard indent.
commit 783518fbeb01d2df43ef2083d3341004c05e4e2e
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 20:21:15 2018 -0400
clean up the typenames
commit 29b627ecf5ca9b8a143761f85a1807a6ca35ddd9
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 20:18:04 2018 -0400
enable feature_hh, warn about %n with non-int modifier.
commit fc4ac8129e3772c4eda36658e344ec475938369c
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 15:13:47 2018 -0400
warn thar %lc, %ls, etc are unsupported.
commit 7e6b433ba0552f7e52f0f034d398e9195c764326
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 13:36:25 2018 -0400
warn about hh/ll modifier (if not supported)
commit 1943c9979d0013f9f38045ec04a962fbf0269f31
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Mar 23 11:42:41 2018 -0400
use error facilities for format errors.
commit 7811168f56dca1387055574ba8d32638da2fad96
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Mar 22 15:34:21 2018 -0400
add feature flags to disable c99 enhancements until orca lib is updated.
commit c2149cc5953155cfc3c3b4d0483cd25fb946b055
Author: Kelvin Sherlock <ksherlock@gmail.com>
Date: Thu Mar 22 08:59:10 2018 -0400
Add printf/scanf format checking [WIP]
This parses out the xprintf / xscanf format string and compares it with the function arguments.
enabled via #pragma lint 16.
This is necessary to compile some very large functions, such as the main interpreter loop in Git.
This consumes about 8K of extra memory for the additional label records.
This patch should also permit the union initialization code to handle unions containing bit fields, but for the time being they are still prohibited by code elsewhere in the compiler.