1@c Copyright (C) 2002-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 2@c This is part of the GCC manual. 3@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi. 4 5@node Type Information 6@chapter Memory Management and Type Information 7@cindex GGC 8@findex GTY 9 10GCC uses some fairly sophisticated memory management techniques, which 11involve determining information about GCC's data structures from GCC's 12source code and using this information to perform garbage collection and 13implement precompiled headers. 14 15A full C++ parser would be too complicated for this task, so a limited 16subset of C++ is interpreted and special markers are used to determine 17what parts of the source to look at. All @code{struct}, @code{union} 18and @code{template} structure declarations that define data structures 19that are allocated under control of the garbage collector must be 20marked. All global variables that hold pointers to garbage-collected 21memory must also be marked. Finally, all global variables that need 22to be saved and restored by a precompiled header must be marked. (The 23precompiled header mechanism can only save static variables if they're 24scalar. Complex data structures must be allocated in garbage-collected 25memory to be saved in a precompiled header.) 26 27The full format of a marker is 28@smallexample 29GTY (([@var{option}] [(@var{param})], [@var{option}] [(@var{param})] @dots{})) 30@end smallexample 31@noindent 32but in most cases no options are needed. The outer double parentheses 33are still necessary, though: @code{GTY(())}. Markers can appear: 34 35@itemize @bullet 36@item 37In a structure definition, before the open brace; 38@item 39In a global variable declaration, after the keyword @code{static} or 40@code{extern}; and 41@item 42In a structure field definition, before the name of the field. 43@end itemize 44 45Here are some examples of marking simple data structures and globals. 46 47@smallexample 48struct GTY(()) @var{tag} 49@{ 50 @var{fields}@dots{} 51@}; 52 53typedef struct GTY(()) @var{tag} 54@{ 55 @var{fields}@dots{} 56@} *@var{typename}; 57 58static GTY(()) struct @var{tag} *@var{list}; /* @r{points to GC memory} */ 59static GTY(()) int @var{counter}; /* @r{save counter in a PCH} */ 60@end smallexample 61 62The parser understands simple typedefs such as 63@code{typedef struct @var{tag} *@var{name};} and 64@code{typedef int @var{name};}. 65These don't need to be marked. 66 67Since @code{gengtype}'s understanding of C++ is limited, there are 68several constructs and declarations that are not supported inside 69classes/structures marked for automatic GC code generation. The 70following C++ constructs produce a @code{gengtype} error on 71structures/classes marked for automatic GC code generation: 72 73@itemize @bullet 74@item 75Type definitions inside classes/structures are not supported. 76@item 77Enumerations inside classes/structures are not supported. 78@end itemize 79 80If you have a class or structure using any of the above constructs, 81you need to mark that class as @code{GTY ((user))} and provide your 82own marking routines (see section @ref{User GC} for details). 83 84It is always valid to include function definitions inside classes. 85Those are always ignored by @code{gengtype}, as it only cares about 86data members. 87 88@menu 89* GTY Options:: What goes inside a @code{GTY(())}. 90* Inheritance and GTY:: Adding GTY to a class hierarchy. 91* User GC:: Adding user-provided GC marking routines. 92* GGC Roots:: Making global variables GGC roots. 93* Files:: How the generated files work. 94* Invoking the garbage collector:: How to invoke the garbage collector. 95* Troubleshooting:: When something does not work as expected. 96@end menu 97 98@node GTY Options 99@section The Inside of a @code{GTY(())} 100 101Sometimes the C code is not enough to fully describe the type 102structure. Extra information can be provided with @code{GTY} options 103and additional markers. Some options take a parameter, which may be 104either a string or a type name, depending on the parameter. If an 105option takes no parameter, it is acceptable either to omit the 106parameter entirely, or to provide an empty string as a parameter. For 107example, @code{@w{GTY ((skip))}} and @code{@w{GTY ((skip ("")))}} are 108equivalent. 109 110When the parameter is a string, often it is a fragment of C code. Four 111special escapes may be used in these strings, to refer to pieces of 112the data structure being marked: 113 114@cindex % in GTY option 115@table @code 116@item %h 117The current structure. 118@item %1 119The structure that immediately contains the current structure. 120@item %0 121The outermost structure that contains the current structure. 122@item %a 123A partial expression of the form @code{[i1][i2]@dots{}} that indexes 124the array item currently being marked. 125@end table 126 127For instance, suppose that you have a structure of the form 128@smallexample 129struct A @{ 130 @dots{} 131@}; 132struct B @{ 133 struct A foo[12]; 134@}; 135@end smallexample 136@noindent 137and @code{b} is a variable of type @code{struct B}. When marking 138@samp{b.foo[11]}, @code{%h} would expand to @samp{b.foo[11]}, 139@code{%0} and @code{%1} would both expand to @samp{b}, and @code{%a} 140would expand to @samp{[11]}. 141 142As in ordinary C, adjacent strings will be concatenated; this is 143helpful when you have a complicated expression. 144@smallexample 145@group 146GTY ((chain_next ("TREE_CODE (&%h.generic) == INTEGER_TYPE" 147 " ? TYPE_NEXT_VARIANT (&%h.generic)" 148 " : TREE_CHAIN (&%h.generic)"))) 149@end group 150@end smallexample 151 152The available options are: 153 154@table @code 155@findex length 156@item length ("@var{expression}") 157 158There are two places the type machinery will need to be explicitly told 159the length of an array of non-atomic objects. The first case is when a 160structure ends in a variable-length array, like this: 161@smallexample 162struct GTY(()) rtvec_def @{ 163 int num_elem; /* @r{number of elements} */ 164 rtx GTY ((length ("%h.num_elem"))) elem[1]; 165@}; 166@end smallexample 167 168In this case, the @code{length} option is used to override the specified 169array length (which should usually be @code{1}). The parameter of the 170option is a fragment of C code that calculates the length. 171 172The second case is when a structure or a global variable contains a 173pointer to an array, like this: 174@smallexample 175struct gimple_omp_for_iter * GTY((length ("%h.collapse"))) iter; 176@end smallexample 177In this case, @code{iter} has been allocated by writing something like 178@smallexample 179 x->iter = ggc_alloc_cleared_vec_gimple_omp_for_iter (collapse); 180@end smallexample 181and the @code{collapse} provides the length of the field. 182 183This second use of @code{length} also works on global variables, like: 184@verbatim 185static GTY((length("reg_known_value_size"))) rtx *reg_known_value; 186@end verbatim 187 188Note that the @code{length} option is only meant for use with arrays of 189non-atomic objects, that is, objects that contain pointers pointing to 190other GTY-managed objects. For other GC-allocated arrays and strings 191you should use @code{atomic}. 192 193@findex skip 194@item skip 195 196If @code{skip} is applied to a field, the type machinery will ignore it. 197This is somewhat dangerous; the only safe use is in a union when one 198field really isn't ever used. 199 200@findex for_user 201Use this to mark types that need to be marked by user gc routines, but are not 202refered to in a template argument. So if you have some user gc type T1 and a 203non user gc type T2 you can give T2 the for_user option so that the marking 204functions for T1 can call non mangled functions to mark T2. 205 206@findex desc 207@findex tag 208@findex default 209@item desc ("@var{expression}") 210@itemx tag ("@var{constant}") 211@itemx default 212 213The type machinery needs to be told which field of a @code{union} is 214currently active. This is done by giving each field a constant 215@code{tag} value, and then specifying a discriminator using @code{desc}. 216The value of the expression given by @code{desc} is compared against 217each @code{tag} value, each of which should be different. If no 218@code{tag} is matched, the field marked with @code{default} is used if 219there is one, otherwise no field in the union will be marked. 220 221In the @code{desc} option, the ``current structure'' is the union that 222it discriminates. Use @code{%1} to mean the structure containing it. 223There are no escapes available to the @code{tag} option, since it is a 224constant. 225 226For example, 227@smallexample 228struct GTY(()) tree_binding 229@{ 230 struct tree_common common; 231 union tree_binding_u @{ 232 tree GTY ((tag ("0"))) scope; 233 struct cp_binding_level * GTY ((tag ("1"))) level; 234 @} GTY ((desc ("BINDING_HAS_LEVEL_P ((tree)&%0)"))) xscope; 235 tree value; 236@}; 237@end smallexample 238 239In this example, the value of BINDING_HAS_LEVEL_P when applied to a 240@code{struct tree_binding *} is presumed to be 0 or 1. If 1, the type 241mechanism will treat the field @code{level} as being present and if 0, 242will treat the field @code{scope} as being present. 243 244The @code{desc} and @code{tag} options can also be used for inheritance 245to denote which subclass an instance is. See @ref{Inheritance and GTY} 246for more information. 247 248@findex cache 249@item cache 250 251When the @code{cache} option is applied to a global variable gt_clear_cache is 252called on that variable between the mark and sweep phases of garbage 253collection. The gt_clear_cache function is free to mark blocks as used, or to 254clear pointers in the variable. 255 256@findex deletable 257@item deletable 258 259@code{deletable}, when applied to a global variable, indicates that when 260garbage collection runs, there's no need to mark anything pointed to 261by this variable, it can just be set to @code{NULL} instead. This is used 262to keep a list of free structures around for re-use. 263 264@findex mark_hook 265@item mark_hook ("@var{hook-routine-name}") 266 267If provided for a structure or union type, the given 268@var{hook-routine-name} (between double-quotes) is the name of a 269routine called when the garbage collector has just marked the data as 270reachable. This routine should not change the data, or call any ggc 271routine. Its only argument is a pointer to the just marked (const) 272structure or union. 273 274@findex maybe_undef 275@item maybe_undef 276 277When applied to a field, @code{maybe_undef} indicates that it's OK if 278the structure that this fields points to is never defined, so long as 279this field is always @code{NULL}. This is used to avoid requiring 280backends to define certain optional structures. It doesn't work with 281language frontends. 282 283@findex nested_ptr 284@item nested_ptr (@var{type}, "@var{to expression}", "@var{from expression}") 285 286The type machinery expects all pointers to point to the start of an 287object. Sometimes for abstraction purposes it's convenient to have 288a pointer which points inside an object. So long as it's possible to 289convert the original object to and from the pointer, such pointers 290can still be used. @var{type} is the type of the original object, 291the @var{to expression} returns the pointer given the original object, 292and the @var{from expression} returns the original object given 293the pointer. The pointer will be available using the @code{%h} 294escape. 295 296@findex chain_next 297@findex chain_prev 298@findex chain_circular 299@item chain_next ("@var{expression}") 300@itemx chain_prev ("@var{expression}") 301@itemx chain_circular ("@var{expression}") 302 303It's helpful for the type machinery to know if objects are often 304chained together in long lists; this lets it generate code that uses 305less stack space by iterating along the list instead of recursing down 306it. @code{chain_next} is an expression for the next item in the list, 307@code{chain_prev} is an expression for the previous item. For singly 308linked lists, use only @code{chain_next}; for doubly linked lists, use 309both. The machinery requires that taking the next item of the 310previous item gives the original item. @code{chain_circular} is similar 311to @code{chain_next}, but can be used for circular single linked lists. 312 313@findex reorder 314@item reorder ("@var{function name}") 315 316Some data structures depend on the relative ordering of pointers. If 317the precompiled header machinery needs to change that ordering, it 318will call the function referenced by the @code{reorder} option, before 319changing the pointers in the object that's pointed to by the field the 320option applies to. The function must take four arguments, with the 321signature @samp{@w{void *, void *, gt_pointer_operator, void *}}. 322The first parameter is a pointer to the structure that contains the 323object being updated, or the object itself if there is no containing 324structure. The second parameter is a cookie that should be ignored. 325The third parameter is a routine that, given a pointer, will update it 326to its correct new value. The fourth parameter is a cookie that must 327be passed to the second parameter. 328 329PCH cannot handle data structures that depend on the absolute values 330of pointers. @code{reorder} functions can be expensive. When 331possible, it is better to depend on properties of the data, like an ID 332number or the hash of a string instead. 333 334@findex atomic 335@item atomic 336 337The @code{atomic} option can only be used with pointers. It informs 338the GC machinery that the memory that the pointer points to does not 339contain any pointers, and hence it should be treated by the GC and PCH 340machinery as an ``atomic'' block of memory that does not need to be 341examined when scanning memory for pointers. In particular, the 342machinery will not scan that memory for pointers to mark them as 343reachable (when marking pointers for GC) or to relocate them (when 344writing a PCH file). 345 346The @code{atomic} option differs from the @code{skip} option. 347@code{atomic} keeps the memory under Garbage Collection, but makes the 348GC ignore the contents of the memory. @code{skip} is more drastic in 349that it causes the pointer and the memory to be completely ignored by 350the Garbage Collector. So, memory marked as @code{atomic} is 351automatically freed when no longer reachable, while memory marked as 352@code{skip} is not. 353 354The @code{atomic} option must be used with great care, because all 355sorts of problem can occur if used incorrectly, that is, if the memory 356the pointer points to does actually contain a pointer. 357 358Here is an example of how to use it: 359@smallexample 360struct GTY(()) my_struct @{ 361 int number_of_elements; 362 unsigned int * GTY ((atomic)) elements; 363@}; 364@end smallexample 365In this case, @code{elements} is a pointer under GC, and the memory it 366points to needs to be allocated using the Garbage Collector, and will 367be freed automatically by the Garbage Collector when it is no longer 368referenced. But the memory that the pointer points to is an array of 369@code{unsigned int} elements, and the GC must not try to scan it to 370find pointers to mark or relocate, which is why it is marked with the 371@code{atomic} option. 372 373Note that, currently, global variables can not be marked with 374@code{atomic}; only fields of a struct can. This is a known 375limitation. It would be useful to be able to mark global pointers 376with @code{atomic} to make the PCH machinery aware of them so that 377they are saved and restored correctly to PCH files. 378 379@findex special 380@item special ("@var{name}") 381 382The @code{special} option is used to mark types that have to be dealt 383with by special case machinery. The parameter is the name of the 384special case. See @file{gengtype.c} for further details. Avoid 385adding new special cases unless there is no other alternative. 386 387@findex user 388@item user 389 390The @code{user} option indicates that the code to mark structure 391fields is completely handled by user-provided routines. See section 392@ref{User GC} for details on what functions need to be provided. 393@end table 394 395@node Inheritance and GTY 396@section Support for inheritance 397gengtype has some support for simple class hierarchies. You can use 398this to have gengtype autogenerate marking routines, provided: 399 400@itemize @bullet 401@item 402There must be a concrete base class, with a discriminator expression 403that can be used to identify which subclass an instance is. 404@item 405Only single inheritance is used. 406@item 407None of the classes within the hierarchy are templates. 408@end itemize 409 410If your class hierarchy does not fit in this pattern, you must use 411@ref{User GC} instead. 412 413The base class and its discriminator must be identified using the ``desc'' 414option. Each concrete subclass must use the ``tag'' option to identify 415which value of the discriminator it corresponds to. 416 417Every class in the hierarchy must have a @code{GTY(())} marker, as 418gengtype will only attempt to parse classes that have such a marker 419@footnote{Classes lacking such a marker will not be identified as being 420part of the hierarchy, and so the marking routines will not handle them, 421leading to a assertion failure within the marking routines due to an 422unknown tag value (assuming that assertions are enabled).}. 423 424@smallexample 425class GTY((desc("%h.kind"), tag("0"))) example_base 426@{ 427public: 428 int kind; 429 tree a; 430@}; 431 432class GTY((tag("1")) some_subclass : public example_base 433@{ 434public: 435 tree b; 436@}; 437 438class GTY((tag("2")) some_other_subclass : public example_base 439@{ 440public: 441 tree c; 442@}; 443@end smallexample 444 445The generated marking routines for the above will contain a ``switch'' 446on ``kind'', visiting all appropriate fields. For example, if kind is 4472, it will cast to ``some_other_subclass'' and visit fields a, b, and c. 448 449@node User GC 450@section Support for user-provided GC marking routines 451@cindex user gc 452The garbage collector supports types for which no automatic marking 453code is generated. For these types, the user is required to provide 454three functions: one to act as a marker for garbage collection, and 455two functions to act as marker and pointer walker for pre-compiled 456headers. 457 458Given a structure @code{struct GTY((user)) my_struct}, the following functions 459should be defined to mark @code{my_struct}: 460 461@smallexample 462void gt_ggc_mx (my_struct *p) 463@{ 464 /* This marks field 'fld'. */ 465 gt_ggc_mx (p->fld); 466@} 467 468void gt_pch_nx (my_struct *p) 469@{ 470 /* This marks field 'fld'. */ 471 gt_pch_nx (tp->fld); 472@} 473 474void gt_pch_nx (my_struct *p, gt_pointer_operator op, void *cookie) 475@{ 476 /* For every field 'fld', call the given pointer operator. */ 477 op (&(tp->fld), cookie); 478@} 479@end smallexample 480 481In general, each marker @code{M} should call @code{M} for every 482pointer field in the structure. Fields that are not allocated in GC 483or are not pointers must be ignored. 484 485For embedded lists (e.g., structures with a @code{next} or @code{prev} 486pointer), the marker must follow the chain and mark every element in 487it. 488 489Note that the rules for the pointer walker @code{gt_pch_nx (my_struct 490*, gt_pointer_operator, void *)} are slightly different. In this 491case, the operation @code{op} must be applied to the @emph{address} of 492every pointer field. 493 494@subsection User-provided marking routines for template types 495When a template type @code{TP} is marked with @code{GTY}, all 496instances of that type are considered user-provided types. This means 497that the individual instances of @code{TP} do not need to be marked 498with @code{GTY}. The user needs to provide template functions to mark 499all the fields of the type. 500 501The following code snippets represent all the functions that need to 502be provided. Note that type @code{TP} may reference to more than one 503type. In these snippets, there is only one type @code{T}, but there 504could be more. 505 506@smallexample 507template<typename T> 508void gt_ggc_mx (TP<T> *tp) 509@{ 510 extern void gt_ggc_mx (T&); 511 512 /* This marks field 'fld' of type 'T'. */ 513 gt_ggc_mx (tp->fld); 514@} 515 516template<typename T> 517void gt_pch_nx (TP<T> *tp) 518@{ 519 extern void gt_pch_nx (T&); 520 521 /* This marks field 'fld' of type 'T'. */ 522 gt_pch_nx (tp->fld); 523@} 524 525template<typename T> 526void gt_pch_nx (TP<T *> *tp, gt_pointer_operator op, void *cookie) 527@{ 528 /* For every field 'fld' of 'tp' with type 'T *', call the given 529 pointer operator. */ 530 op (&(tp->fld), cookie); 531@} 532 533template<typename T> 534void gt_pch_nx (TP<T> *tp, gt_pointer_operator, void *cookie) 535@{ 536 extern void gt_pch_nx (T *, gt_pointer_operator, void *); 537 538 /* For every field 'fld' of 'tp' with type 'T', call the pointer 539 walker for all the fields of T. */ 540 gt_pch_nx (&(tp->fld), op, cookie); 541@} 542@end smallexample 543 544Support for user-defined types is currently limited. The following 545restrictions apply: 546 547@enumerate 548@item Type @code{TP} and all the argument types @code{T} must be 549marked with @code{GTY}. 550 551@item Type @code{TP} can only have type names in its argument list. 552 553@item The pointer walker functions are different for @code{TP<T>} and 554@code{TP<T *>}. In the case of @code{TP<T>}, references to 555@code{T} must be handled by calling @code{gt_pch_nx} (which 556will, in turn, walk all the pointers inside fields of @code{T}). 557In the case of @code{TP<T *>}, references to @code{T *} must be 558handled by calling the @code{op} function on the address of the 559pointer (see the code snippets above). 560@end enumerate 561 562@node GGC Roots 563@section Marking Roots for the Garbage Collector 564@cindex roots, marking 565@cindex marking roots 566 567In addition to keeping track of types, the type machinery also locates 568the global variables (@dfn{roots}) that the garbage collector starts 569at. Roots must be declared using one of the following syntaxes: 570 571@itemize @bullet 572@item 573@code{extern GTY(([@var{options}])) @var{type} @var{name};} 574@item 575@code{static GTY(([@var{options}])) @var{type} @var{name};} 576@end itemize 577@noindent 578The syntax 579@itemize @bullet 580@item 581@code{GTY(([@var{options}])) @var{type} @var{name};} 582@end itemize 583@noindent 584is @emph{not} accepted. There should be an @code{extern} declaration 585of such a variable in a header somewhere---mark that, not the 586definition. Or, if the variable is only used in one file, make it 587@code{static}. 588 589@node Files 590@section Source Files Containing Type Information 591@cindex generated files 592@cindex files, generated 593 594Whenever you add @code{GTY} markers to a source file that previously 595had none, or create a new source file containing @code{GTY} markers, 596there are three things you need to do: 597 598@enumerate 599@item 600You need to add the file to the list of source files the type 601machinery scans. There are four cases: 602 603@enumerate a 604@item 605For a back-end file, this is usually done 606automatically; if not, you should add it to @code{target_gtfiles} in 607the appropriate port's entries in @file{config.gcc}. 608 609@item 610For files shared by all front ends, add the filename to the 611@code{GTFILES} variable in @file{Makefile.in}. 612 613@item 614For files that are part of one front end, add the filename to the 615@code{gtfiles} variable defined in the appropriate 616@file{config-lang.in}. 617Headers should appear before non-headers in this list. 618 619@item 620For files that are part of some but not all front ends, add the 621filename to the @code{gtfiles} variable of @emph{all} the front ends 622that use it. 623@end enumerate 624 625@item 626If the file was a header file, you'll need to check that it's included 627in the right place to be visible to the generated files. For a back-end 628header file, this should be done automatically. For a front-end header 629file, it needs to be included by the same file that includes 630@file{gtype-@var{lang}.h}. For other header files, it needs to be 631included in @file{gtype-desc.c}, which is a generated file, so add it to 632@code{ifiles} in @code{open_base_file} in @file{gengtype.c}. 633 634For source files that aren't header files, the machinery will generate a 635header file that should be included in the source file you just changed. 636The file will be called @file{gt-@var{path}.h} where @var{path} is the 637pathname relative to the @file{gcc} directory with slashes replaced by 638@verb{|-|}, so for example the header file to be included in 639@file{cp/parser.c} is called @file{gt-cp-parser.c}. The 640generated header file should be included after everything else in the 641source file. Don't forget to mention this file as a dependency in the 642@file{Makefile}! 643 644@end enumerate 645 646For language frontends, there is another file that needs to be included 647somewhere. It will be called @file{gtype-@var{lang}.h}, where 648@var{lang} is the name of the subdirectory the language is contained in. 649 650Plugins can add additional root tables. Run the @code{gengtype} 651utility in plugin mode as @code{gengtype -P pluginout.h @var{source-dir} 652@var{file-list} @var{plugin*.c}} with your plugin files 653@var{plugin*.c} using @code{GTY} to generate the @var{pluginout.h} file. 654The GCC build tree is needed to be present in that mode. 655 656 657@node Invoking the garbage collector 658@section How to invoke the garbage collector 659@cindex garbage collector, invocation 660@findex ggc_collect 661 662The GCC garbage collector GGC is only invoked explicitly. In contrast 663with many other garbage collectors, it is not implicitly invoked by 664allocation routines when a lot of memory has been consumed. So the 665only way to have GGC reclaim storage is to call the @code{ggc_collect} 666function explicitly. This call is an expensive operation, as it may 667have to scan the entire heap. Beware that local variables (on the GCC 668call stack) are not followed by such an invocation (as many other 669garbage collectors do): you should reference all your data from static 670or external @code{GTY}-ed variables, and it is advised to call 671@code{ggc_collect} with a shallow call stack. The GGC is an exact mark 672and sweep garbage collector (so it does not scan the call stack for 673pointers). In practice GCC passes don't often call @code{ggc_collect} 674themselves, because it is called by the pass manager between passes. 675 676At the time of the @code{ggc_collect} call all pointers in the GC-marked 677structures must be valid or @code{NULL}. In practice this means that 678there should not be uninitialized pointer fields in the structures even 679if your code never reads or writes those fields at a particular 680instance. One way to ensure this is to use cleared versions of 681allocators unless all the fields are initialized manually immediately 682after allocation. 683 684@node Troubleshooting 685@section Troubleshooting the garbage collector 686@cindex garbage collector, troubleshooting 687 688With the current garbage collector implementation, most issues should 689show up as GCC compilation errors. Some of the most commonly 690encountered issues are described below. 691 692@itemize @bullet 693@item Gengtype does not produce allocators for a @code{GTY}-marked type. 694Gengtype checks if there is at least one possible path from GC roots to 695at least one instance of each type before outputting allocators. If 696there is no such path, the @code{GTY} markers will be ignored and no 697allocators will be output. Solve this by making sure that there exists 698at least one such path. If creating it is unfeasible or raises a ``code 699smell'', consider if you really must use GC for allocating such type. 700 701@item Link-time errors about undefined @code{gt_ggc_r_foo_bar} and 702similarly-named symbols. Check if your @file{foo_bar} source file has 703@code{#include "gt-foo_bar.h"} as its very last line. 704 705@end itemize 706