1@c Copyright (C) 2002-2019 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 Source Tree 6@chapter Source Tree Structure and Build System 7 8This chapter describes the structure of the GCC source tree, and how 9GCC is built. The user documentation for building and installing GCC 10is in a separate manual (@uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/install/}), with 11which it is presumed that you are familiar. 12 13@menu 14* Configure Terms:: Configuration terminology and history. 15* Top Level:: The top level source directory. 16* gcc Directory:: The @file{gcc} subdirectory. 17@end menu 18 19@include configterms.texi 20 21@node Top Level 22@section Top Level Source Directory 23 24The top level source directory in a GCC distribution contains several 25files and directories that are shared with other software 26distributions such as that of GNU Binutils. It also contains several 27subdirectories that contain parts of GCC and its runtime libraries: 28 29@table @file 30@item boehm-gc 31The Boehm conservative garbage collector, optionally used as part of 32the ObjC runtime library when configured with @option{--enable-objc-gc}. 33 34@item config 35Autoconf macros and Makefile fragments used throughout the tree. 36 37@item contrib 38Contributed scripts that may be found useful in conjunction with GCC@. 39One of these, @file{contrib/texi2pod.pl}, is used to generate man 40pages from Texinfo manuals as part of the GCC build process. 41 42@item fixincludes 43The support for fixing system headers to work with GCC@. See 44@file{fixincludes/README} for more information. The headers fixed by 45this mechanism are installed in @file{@var{libsubdir}/include-fixed}. 46Along with those headers, @file{README-fixinc} is also installed, as 47@file{@var{libsubdir}/include-fixed/README}. 48 49@item gcc 50The main sources of GCC itself (except for runtime libraries), 51including optimizers, support for different target architectures, 52language front ends, and testsuites. @xref{gcc Directory, , The 53@file{gcc} Subdirectory}, for details. 54 55@item gnattools 56Support tools for GNAT. 57 58@item include 59Headers for the @code{libiberty} library. 60 61@item intl 62GNU @code{libintl}, from GNU @code{gettext}, for systems which do not 63include it in @code{libc}. 64 65@item libada 66The Ada runtime library. 67 68@item libatomic 69The runtime support library for atomic operations (e.g.@: for @code{__sync} 70and @code{__atomic}). 71 72@item libcpp 73The C preprocessor library. 74 75@item libdecnumber 76The Decimal Float support library. 77 78@item libffi 79The @code{libffi} library, used as part of the Go runtime library. 80 81@item libgcc 82The GCC runtime library. 83 84@item libgfortran 85The Fortran runtime library. 86 87@item libgo 88The Go runtime library. The bulk of this library is mirrored from the 89@uref{https://github.com/@/golang/go, master Go repository}. 90 91@item libgomp 92The GNU Offloading and Multi Processing Runtime Library. 93 94@item libiberty 95The @code{libiberty} library, used for portability and for some 96generally useful data structures and algorithms. @xref{Top, , 97Introduction, libiberty, @sc{gnu} libiberty}, for more information 98about this library. 99 100@item libitm 101The runtime support library for transactional memory. 102 103@item libobjc 104The Objective-C and Objective-C++ runtime library. 105 106@item libquadmath 107The runtime support library for quad-precision math operations. 108 109@item libphobos 110The D standard and runtime library. The bulk of this library is mirrored 111from the @uref{https://github.com/@/dlang, master D repositories}. 112 113@item libssp 114The Stack protector runtime library. 115 116@item libstdc++-v3 117The C++ runtime library. 118 119@item lto-plugin 120Plugin used by the linker if link-time optimizations are enabled. 121 122@item maintainer-scripts 123Scripts used by the @code{gccadmin} account on @code{gcc.gnu.org}. 124 125@item zlib 126The @code{zlib} compression library, used for compressing and 127uncompressing GCC's intermediate language in LTO object files. 128@end table 129 130The build system in the top level directory, including how recursion 131into subdirectories works and how building runtime libraries for 132multilibs is handled, is documented in a separate manual, included 133with GNU Binutils. @xref{Top, , GNU configure and build system, 134configure, The GNU configure and build system}, for details. 135 136@node gcc Directory 137@section The @file{gcc} Subdirectory 138 139The @file{gcc} directory contains many files that are part of the C 140sources of GCC, other files used as part of the configuration and 141build process, and subdirectories including documentation and a 142testsuite. The files that are sources of GCC are documented in a 143separate chapter. @xref{Passes, , Passes and Files of the Compiler}. 144 145@menu 146* Subdirectories:: Subdirectories of @file{gcc}. 147* Configuration:: The configuration process, and the files it uses. 148* Build:: The build system in the @file{gcc} directory. 149* Makefile:: Targets in @file{gcc/Makefile}. 150* Library Files:: Library source files and headers under @file{gcc/}. 151* Headers:: Headers installed by GCC. 152* Documentation:: Building documentation in GCC. 153* Front End:: Anatomy of a language front end. 154* Back End:: Anatomy of a target back end. 155@end menu 156 157@node Subdirectories 158@subsection Subdirectories of @file{gcc} 159 160The @file{gcc} directory contains the following subdirectories: 161 162@table @file 163@item @var{language} 164Subdirectories for various languages. Directories containing a file 165@file{config-lang.in} are language subdirectories. The contents of 166the subdirectories @file{c} (for C), @file{cp} (for C++), 167@file{objc} (for Objective-C), @file{objcp} (for Objective-C++), 168and @file{lto} (for LTO) are documented in this 169manual (@pxref{Passes, , Passes and Files of the Compiler}); 170those for other languages are not. @xref{Front End, , 171Anatomy of a Language Front End}, for details of the files in these 172directories. 173 174@item common 175Source files shared between the compiler drivers (such as 176@command{gcc}) and the compilers proper (such as @file{cc1}). If an 177architecture defines target hooks shared between those places, it also 178has a subdirectory in @file{common/config}. @xref{Target Structure}. 179 180@item config 181Configuration files for supported architectures and operating 182systems. @xref{Back End, , Anatomy of a Target Back End}, for 183details of the files in this directory. 184 185@item doc 186Texinfo documentation for GCC, together with automatically generated 187man pages and support for converting the installation manual to 188HTML@. @xref{Documentation}. 189 190@item ginclude 191System headers installed by GCC, mainly those required by the C 192standard of freestanding implementations. @xref{Headers, , Headers 193Installed by GCC}, for details of when these and other headers are 194installed. 195 196@item po 197Message catalogs with translations of messages produced by GCC into 198various languages, @file{@var{language}.po}. This directory also 199contains @file{gcc.pot}, the template for these message catalogues, 200@file{exgettext}, a wrapper around @command{gettext} to extract the 201messages from the GCC sources and create @file{gcc.pot}, which is run 202by @samp{make gcc.pot}, and @file{EXCLUDES}, a list of files from 203which messages should not be extracted. 204 205@item testsuite 206The GCC testsuites (except for those for runtime libraries). 207@xref{Testsuites}. 208@end table 209 210@node Configuration 211@subsection Configuration in the @file{gcc} Directory 212 213The @file{gcc} directory is configured with an Autoconf-generated 214script @file{configure}. The @file{configure} script is generated 215from @file{configure.ac} and @file{aclocal.m4}. From the files 216@file{configure.ac} and @file{acconfig.h}, Autoheader generates the 217file @file{config.in}. The file @file{cstamp-h.in} is used as a 218timestamp. 219 220@menu 221* Config Fragments:: Scripts used by @file{configure}. 222* System Config:: The @file{config.build}, @file{config.host}, and 223 @file{config.gcc} files. 224* Configuration Files:: Files created by running @file{configure}. 225@end menu 226 227@node Config Fragments 228@subsubsection Scripts Used by @file{configure} 229 230@file{configure} uses some other scripts to help in its work: 231 232@itemize @bullet 233@item The standard GNU @file{config.sub} and @file{config.guess} 234files, kept in the top level directory, are used. 235 236@item The file @file{config.gcc} is used to handle configuration 237specific to the particular target machine. The file 238@file{config.build} is used to handle configuration specific to the 239particular build machine. The file @file{config.host} is used to handle 240configuration specific to the particular host machine. (In general, 241these should only be used for features that cannot reasonably be tested in 242Autoconf feature tests.) 243@xref{System Config, , The @file{config.build}; @file{config.host}; 244and @file{config.gcc} Files}, for details of the contents of these files. 245 246@item Each language subdirectory has a file 247@file{@var{language}/config-lang.in} that is used for 248front-end-specific configuration. @xref{Front End Config, , The Front 249End @file{config-lang.in} File}, for details of this file. 250 251@item A helper script @file{configure.frag} is used as part of 252creating the output of @file{configure}. 253@end itemize 254 255@node System Config 256@subsubsection The @file{config.build}; @file{config.host}; and @file{config.gcc} Files 257 258The @file{config.build} file contains specific rules for particular systems 259which GCC is built on. This should be used as rarely as possible, as the 260behavior of the build system can always be detected by autoconf. 261 262The @file{config.host} file contains specific rules for particular systems 263which GCC will run on. This is rarely needed. 264 265The @file{config.gcc} file contains specific rules for particular systems 266which GCC will generate code for. This is usually needed. 267 268Each file has a list of the shell variables it sets, with descriptions, at the 269top of the file. 270 271FIXME: document the contents of these files, and what variables should 272be set to control build, host and target configuration. 273 274@include configfiles.texi 275 276@node Build 277@subsection Build System in the @file{gcc} Directory 278 279FIXME: describe the build system, including what is built in what 280stages. Also list the various source files that are used in the build 281process but aren't source files of GCC itself and so aren't documented 282below (@pxref{Passes}). 283 284@include makefile.texi 285 286@node Library Files 287@subsection Library Source Files and Headers under the @file{gcc} Directory 288 289FIXME: list here, with explanation, all the C source files and headers 290under the @file{gcc} directory that aren't built into the GCC 291executable but rather are part of runtime libraries and object files, 292such as @file{crtstuff.c} and @file{unwind-dw2.c}. @xref{Headers, , 293Headers Installed by GCC}, for more information about the 294@file{ginclude} directory. 295 296@node Headers 297@subsection Headers Installed by GCC 298 299In general, GCC expects the system C library to provide most of the 300headers to be used with it. However, GCC will fix those headers if 301necessary to make them work with GCC, and will install some headers 302required of freestanding implementations. These headers are installed 303in @file{@var{libsubdir}/include}. Headers for non-C runtime 304libraries are also installed by GCC; these are not documented here. 305(FIXME: document them somewhere.) 306 307Several of the headers GCC installs are in the @file{ginclude} 308directory. These headers, @file{iso646.h}, 309@file{stdarg.h}, @file{stdbool.h}, and @file{stddef.h}, 310are installed in @file{@var{libsubdir}/include}, 311unless the target Makefile fragment (@pxref{Target Fragment}) 312overrides this by setting @code{USER_H}. 313 314In addition to these headers and those generated by fixing system 315headers to work with GCC, some other headers may also be installed in 316@file{@var{libsubdir}/include}. @file{config.gcc} may set 317@code{extra_headers}; this specifies additional headers under 318@file{config} to be installed on some systems. 319 320GCC installs its own version of @code{<float.h>}, from @file{ginclude/float.h}. 321This is done to cope with command-line options that change the 322representation of floating point numbers. 323 324GCC also installs its own version of @code{<limits.h>}; this is generated 325from @file{glimits.h}, together with @file{limitx.h} and 326@file{limity.h} if the system also has its own version of 327@code{<limits.h>}. (GCC provides its own header because it is 328required of ISO C freestanding implementations, but needs to include 329the system header from its own header as well because other standards 330such as POSIX specify additional values to be defined in 331@code{<limits.h>}.) The system's @code{<limits.h>} header is used via 332@file{@var{libsubdir}/include/syslimits.h}, which is copied from 333@file{gsyslimits.h} if it does not need fixing to work with GCC; if it 334needs fixing, @file{syslimits.h} is the fixed copy. 335 336GCC can also install @code{<tgmath.h>}. It will do this when 337@file{config.gcc} sets @code{use_gcc_tgmath} to @code{yes}. 338 339@node Documentation 340@subsection Building Documentation 341 342The main GCC documentation is in the form of manuals in Texinfo 343format. These are installed in Info format; DVI versions may be 344generated by @samp{make dvi}, PDF versions by @samp{make pdf}, and 345HTML versions by @samp{make html}. In addition, some man pages are 346generated from the Texinfo manuals, there are some other text files 347with miscellaneous documentation, and runtime libraries have their own 348documentation outside the @file{gcc} directory. FIXME: document the 349documentation for runtime libraries somewhere. 350 351@menu 352* Texinfo Manuals:: GCC manuals in Texinfo format. 353* Man Page Generation:: Generating man pages from Texinfo manuals. 354* Miscellaneous Docs:: Miscellaneous text files with documentation. 355@end menu 356 357@node Texinfo Manuals 358@subsubsection Texinfo Manuals 359 360The manuals for GCC as a whole, and the C and C++ front ends, are in 361files @file{doc/*.texi}. Other front ends have their own manuals in 362files @file{@var{language}/*.texi}. Common files 363@file{doc/include/*.texi} are provided which may be included in 364multiple manuals; the following files are in @file{doc/include}: 365 366@table @file 367@item fdl.texi 368The GNU Free Documentation License. 369@item funding.texi 370The section ``Funding Free Software''. 371@item gcc-common.texi 372Common definitions for manuals. 373@item gpl_v3.texi 374The GNU General Public License. 375@item texinfo.tex 376A copy of @file{texinfo.tex} known to work with the GCC manuals. 377@end table 378 379DVI-formatted manuals are generated by @samp{make dvi}, which uses 380@command{texi2dvi} (via the Makefile macro @code{$(TEXI2DVI)}). 381PDF-formatted manuals are generated by @samp{make pdf}, which uses 382@command{texi2pdf} (via the Makefile macro @code{$(TEXI2PDF)}). HTML 383formatted manuals are generated by @samp{make html}. Info 384manuals are generated by @samp{make info} (which is run as part of 385a bootstrap); this generates the manuals in the source directory, 386using @command{makeinfo} via the Makefile macro @code{$(MAKEINFO)}, 387and they are included in release distributions. 388 389Manuals are also provided on the GCC web site, in both HTML and 390PostScript forms. This is done via the script 391@file{maintainer-scripts/update_web_docs_svn}. Each manual to be 392provided online must be listed in the definition of @code{MANUALS} in 393that file; a file @file{@var{name}.texi} must only appear once in the 394source tree, and the output manual must have the same name as the 395source file. (However, other Texinfo files, included in manuals but 396not themselves the root files of manuals, may have names that appear 397more than once in the source tree.) The manual file 398@file{@var{name}.texi} should only include other files in its own 399directory or in @file{doc/include}. HTML manuals will be generated by 400@samp{makeinfo --html}, PostScript manuals by @command{texi2dvi} 401and @command{dvips}, and PDF manuals by @command{texi2pdf}. 402All Texinfo files that are parts of manuals must 403be version-controlled, even if they are generated files, for the 404generation of online manuals to work. 405 406The installation manual, @file{doc/install.texi}, is also provided on 407the GCC web site. The HTML version is generated by the script 408@file{doc/install.texi2html}. 409 410@node Man Page Generation 411@subsubsection Man Page Generation 412 413Because of user demand, in addition to full Texinfo manuals, man pages 414are provided which contain extracts from those manuals. These man 415pages are generated from the Texinfo manuals using 416@file{contrib/texi2pod.pl} and @command{pod2man}. (The man page for 417@command{g++}, @file{cp/g++.1}, just contains a @samp{.so} reference 418to @file{gcc.1}, but all the other man pages are generated from 419Texinfo manuals.) 420 421Because many systems may not have the necessary tools installed to 422generate the man pages, they are only generated if the 423@file{configure} script detects that recent enough tools are 424installed, and the Makefiles allow generating man pages to fail 425without aborting the build. Man pages are also included in release 426distributions. They are generated in the source directory. 427 428Magic comments in Texinfo files starting @samp{@@c man} control what 429parts of a Texinfo file go into a man page. Only a subset of Texinfo 430is supported by @file{texi2pod.pl}, and it may be necessary to add 431support for more Texinfo features to this script when generating new 432man pages. To improve the man page output, some special Texinfo 433macros are provided in @file{doc/include/gcc-common.texi} which 434@file{texi2pod.pl} understands: 435 436@table @code 437@item @@gcctabopt 438Use in the form @samp{@@table @@gcctabopt} for tables of options, 439where for printed output the effect of @samp{@@code} is better than 440that of @samp{@@option} but for man page output a different effect is 441wanted. 442@item @@gccoptlist 443Use for summary lists of options in manuals. 444@item @@gol 445Use at the end of each line inside @samp{@@gccoptlist}. This is 446necessary to avoid problems with differences in how the 447@samp{@@gccoptlist} macro is handled by different Texinfo formatters. 448@end table 449 450FIXME: describe the @file{texi2pod.pl} input language and magic 451comments in more detail. 452 453@node Miscellaneous Docs 454@subsubsection Miscellaneous Documentation 455 456In addition to the formal documentation that is installed by GCC, 457there are several other text files in the @file{gcc} subdirectory 458with miscellaneous documentation: 459 460@table @file 461@item ABOUT-GCC-NLS 462Notes on GCC's Native Language Support. FIXME: this should be part of 463this manual rather than a separate file. 464@item ABOUT-NLS 465Notes on the Free Translation Project. 466@item COPYING 467@itemx COPYING3 468The GNU General Public License, Versions 2 and 3. 469@item COPYING.LIB 470@itemx COPYING3.LIB 471The GNU Lesser General Public License, Versions 2.1 and 3. 472@item *ChangeLog* 473@itemx */ChangeLog* 474Change log files for various parts of GCC@. 475@item LANGUAGES 476Details of a few changes to the GCC front-end interface. FIXME: the 477information in this file should be part of general documentation of 478the front-end interface in this manual. 479@item ONEWS 480Information about new features in old versions of GCC@. (For recent 481versions, the information is on the GCC web site.) 482@item README.Portability 483Information about portability issues when writing code in GCC@. FIXME: 484why isn't this part of this manual or of the GCC Coding Conventions? 485@end table 486 487FIXME: document such files in subdirectories, at least @file{config}, 488@file{c}, @file{cp}, @file{objc}, @file{testsuite}. 489 490@node Front End 491@subsection Anatomy of a Language Front End 492 493A front end for a language in GCC has the following parts: 494 495@itemize @bullet 496@item 497A directory @file{@var{language}} under @file{gcc} containing source 498files for that front end. @xref{Front End Directory, , The Front End 499@file{@var{language}} Directory}, for details. 500@item 501A mention of the language in the list of supported languages in 502@file{gcc/doc/install.texi}. 503@item 504A mention of the name under which the language's runtime library is 505recognized by @option{--enable-shared=@var{package}} in the 506documentation of that option in @file{gcc/doc/install.texi}. 507@item 508A mention of any special prerequisites for building the front end in 509the documentation of prerequisites in @file{gcc/doc/install.texi}. 510@item 511Details of contributors to that front end in 512@file{gcc/doc/contrib.texi}. If the details are in that front end's 513own manual then there should be a link to that manual's list in 514@file{contrib.texi}. 515@item 516Information about support for that language in 517@file{gcc/doc/frontends.texi}. 518@item 519Information about standards for that language, and the front end's 520support for them, in @file{gcc/doc/standards.texi}. This may be a 521link to such information in the front end's own manual. 522@item 523Details of source file suffixes for that language and @option{-x 524@var{lang}} options supported, in @file{gcc/doc/invoke.texi}. 525@item 526Entries in @code{default_compilers} in @file{gcc.c} for source file 527suffixes for that language. 528@item 529Preferably testsuites, which may be under @file{gcc/testsuite} or 530runtime library directories. FIXME: document somewhere how to write 531testsuite harnesses. 532@item 533Probably a runtime library for the language, outside the @file{gcc} 534directory. FIXME: document this further. 535@item 536Details of the directories of any runtime libraries in 537@file{gcc/doc/sourcebuild.texi}. 538@item 539Check targets in @file{Makefile.def} for the top-level @file{Makefile} 540to check just the compiler or the compiler and runtime library for the 541language. 542@end itemize 543 544If the front end is added to the official GCC source repository, the 545following are also necessary: 546 547@itemize @bullet 548@item 549At least one Bugzilla component for bugs in that front end and runtime 550libraries. This category needs to be added to the Bugzilla database. 551@item 552Normally, one or more maintainers of that front end listed in 553@file{MAINTAINERS}. 554@item 555Mentions on the GCC web site in @file{index.html} and 556@file{frontends.html}, with any relevant links on 557@file{readings.html}. (Front ends that are not an official part of 558GCC may also be listed on @file{frontends.html}, with relevant links.) 559@item 560A news item on @file{index.html}, and possibly an announcement on the 561@email{gcc-announce@@gcc.gnu.org} mailing list. 562@item 563The front end's manuals should be mentioned in 564@file{maintainer-scripts/update_web_docs_svn} (@pxref{Texinfo Manuals}) 565and the online manuals should be linked to from 566@file{onlinedocs/index.html}. 567@item 568Any old releases or CVS repositories of the front end, before its 569inclusion in GCC, should be made available on the GCC FTP site 570@uref{ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/old-releases/}. 571@item 572The release and snapshot script @file{maintainer-scripts/gcc_release} 573should be updated to generate appropriate tarballs for this front end. 574@item 575If this front end includes its own version files that include the 576current date, @file{maintainer-scripts/update_version} should be 577updated accordingly. 578@end itemize 579 580@menu 581* Front End Directory:: The front end @file{@var{language}} directory. 582* Front End Config:: The front end @file{config-lang.in} file. 583* Front End Makefile:: The front end @file{Make-lang.in} file. 584@end menu 585 586@node Front End Directory 587@subsubsection The Front End @file{@var{language}} Directory 588 589A front end @file{@var{language}} directory contains the source files 590of that front end (but not of any runtime libraries, which should be 591outside the @file{gcc} directory). This includes documentation, and 592possibly some subsidiary programs built alongside the front end. 593Certain files are special and other parts of the compiler depend on 594their names: 595 596@table @file 597@item config-lang.in 598This file is required in all language subdirectories. @xref{Front End 599Config, , The Front End @file{config-lang.in} File}, for details of 600its contents 601@item Make-lang.in 602This file is required in all language subdirectories. @xref{Front End 603Makefile, , The Front End @file{Make-lang.in} File}, for details of its 604contents. 605@item lang.opt 606This file registers the set of switches that the front end accepts on 607the command line, and their @option{--help} text. @xref{Options}. 608@item lang-specs.h 609This file provides entries for @code{default_compilers} in 610@file{gcc.c} which override the default of giving an error that a 611compiler for that language is not installed. 612@item @var{language}-tree.def 613This file, which need not exist, defines any language-specific tree 614codes. 615@end table 616 617@node Front End Config 618@subsubsection The Front End @file{config-lang.in} File 619 620Each language subdirectory contains a @file{config-lang.in} file. 621This file is a shell script that may define some variables describing 622the language: 623 624@table @code 625@item language 626This definition must be present, and gives the name of the language 627for some purposes such as arguments to @option{--enable-languages}. 628@item lang_requires 629If defined, this variable lists (space-separated) language front ends 630other than C that this front end requires to be enabled (with the 631names given being their @code{language} settings). For example, the 632Obj-C++ front end depends on the C++ and ObjC front ends, so sets 633@samp{lang_requires="objc c++"}. 634@item subdir_requires 635If defined, this variable lists (space-separated) front end directories 636other than C that this front end requires to be present. For example, 637the Objective-C++ front end uses source files from the C++ and 638Objective-C front ends, so sets @samp{subdir_requires="cp objc"}. 639@item target_libs 640If defined, this variable lists (space-separated) targets in the top 641level @file{Makefile} to build the runtime libraries for this 642language, such as @code{target-libobjc}. 643@item lang_dirs 644If defined, this variable lists (space-separated) top level 645directories (parallel to @file{gcc}), apart from the runtime libraries, 646that should not be configured if this front end is not built. 647@item build_by_default 648If defined to @samp{no}, this language front end is not built unless 649enabled in a @option{--enable-languages} argument. Otherwise, front 650ends are built by default, subject to any special logic in 651@file{configure.ac} (as is present to disable the Ada front end if the 652Ada compiler is not already installed). 653@item boot_language 654If defined to @samp{yes}, this front end is built in stage1 of the 655bootstrap. This is only relevant to front ends written in their own 656languages. 657@item compilers 658If defined, a space-separated list of compiler executables that will 659be run by the driver. The names here will each end 660with @samp{\$(exeext)}. 661@item outputs 662If defined, a space-separated list of files that should be generated 663by @file{configure} substituting values in them. This mechanism can 664be used to create a file @file{@var{language}/Makefile} from 665@file{@var{language}/Makefile.in}, but this is deprecated, building 666everything from the single @file{gcc/Makefile} is preferred. 667@item gtfiles 668If defined, a space-separated list of files that should be scanned by 669@file{gengtype.c} to generate the garbage collection tables and routines for 670this language. This excludes the files that are common to all front 671ends. @xref{Type Information}. 672 673@end table 674 675@node Front End Makefile 676@subsubsection The Front End @file{Make-lang.in} File 677 678Each language subdirectory contains a @file{Make-lang.in} file. It contains 679targets @code{@var{lang}.@var{hook}} (where @code{@var{lang}} is the 680setting of @code{language} in @file{config-lang.in}) for the following 681values of @code{@var{hook}}, and any other Makefile rules required to 682build those targets (which may if necessary use other Makefiles 683specified in @code{outputs} in @file{config-lang.in}, although this is 684deprecated). It also adds any testsuite targets that can use the 685standard rule in @file{gcc/Makefile.in} to the variable 686@code{lang_checks}. 687 688@table @code 689@item all.cross 690@itemx start.encap 691@itemx rest.encap 692FIXME: exactly what goes in each of these targets? 693@item tags 694Build an @command{etags} @file{TAGS} file in the language subdirectory 695in the source tree. 696@item info 697Build info documentation for the front end, in the build directory. 698This target is only called by @samp{make bootstrap} if a suitable 699version of @command{makeinfo} is available, so does not need to check 700for this, and should fail if an error occurs. 701@item dvi 702Build DVI documentation for the front end, in the build directory. 703This should be done using @code{$(TEXI2DVI)}, with appropriate 704@option{-I} arguments pointing to directories of included files. 705@item pdf 706Build PDF documentation for the front end, in the build directory. 707This should be done using @code{$(TEXI2PDF)}, with appropriate 708@option{-I} arguments pointing to directories of included files. 709@item html 710Build HTML documentation for the front end, in the build directory. 711@item man 712Build generated man pages for the front end from Texinfo manuals 713(@pxref{Man Page Generation}), in the build directory. This target 714is only called if the necessary tools are available, but should ignore 715errors so as not to stop the build if errors occur; man pages are 716optional and the tools involved may be installed in a broken way. 717@item install-common 718Install everything that is part of the front end, apart from the 719compiler executables listed in @code{compilers} in 720@file{config-lang.in}. 721@item install-info 722Install info documentation for the front end, if it is present in the 723source directory. This target should have dependencies on info files 724that should be installed. 725@item install-man 726Install man pages for the front end. This target should ignore 727errors. 728@item install-plugin 729Install headers needed for plugins. 730@item srcextra 731Copies its dependencies into the source directory. This generally should 732be used for generated files such as Bison output files which are not 733version-controlled, but should be included in any release tarballs. This 734target will be executed during a bootstrap if 735@samp{--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir} was specified as a 736@file{configure} option. 737@item srcinfo 738@itemx srcman 739Copies its dependencies into the source directory. These targets will be 740executed during a bootstrap if @samp{--enable-generated-files-in-srcdir} 741was specified as a @file{configure} option. 742@item uninstall 743Uninstall files installed by installing the compiler. This is 744currently documented not to be supported, so the hook need not do 745anything. 746@item mostlyclean 747@itemx clean 748@itemx distclean 749@itemx maintainer-clean 750The language parts of the standard GNU 751@samp{*clean} targets. @xref{Standard Targets, , Standard Targets for 752Users, standards, GNU Coding Standards}, for details of the standard 753targets. For GCC, @code{maintainer-clean} should delete 754all generated files in the source directory that are not version-controlled, 755but should not delete anything that is. 756@end table 757 758@file{Make-lang.in} must also define a variable @code{@var{lang}_OBJS} 759to a list of host object files that are used by that language. 760 761@node Back End 762@subsection Anatomy of a Target Back End 763 764A back end for a target architecture in GCC has the following parts: 765 766@itemize @bullet 767@item 768A directory @file{@var{machine}} under @file{gcc/config}, containing a 769machine description @file{@var{machine}.md} file (@pxref{Machine Desc, 770, Machine Descriptions}), header files @file{@var{machine}.h} and 771@file{@var{machine}-protos.h} and a source file @file{@var{machine}.c} 772(@pxref{Target Macros, , Target Description Macros and Functions}), 773possibly a target Makefile fragment @file{t-@var{machine}} 774(@pxref{Target Fragment, , The Target Makefile Fragment}), and maybe 775some other files. The names of these files may be changed from the 776defaults given by explicit specifications in @file{config.gcc}. 777@item 778If necessary, a file @file{@var{machine}-modes.def} in the 779@file{@var{machine}} directory, containing additional machine modes to 780represent condition codes. @xref{Condition Code}, for further details. 781@item 782An optional @file{@var{machine}.opt} file in the @file{@var{machine}} 783directory, containing a list of target-specific options. You can also 784add other option files using the @code{extra_options} variable in 785@file{config.gcc}. @xref{Options}. 786@item 787Entries in @file{config.gcc} (@pxref{System Config, , The 788@file{config.gcc} File}) for the systems with this target 789architecture. 790@item 791Documentation in @file{gcc/doc/invoke.texi} for any command-line 792options supported by this target (@pxref{Run-time Target, , Run-time 793Target Specification}). This means both entries in the summary table 794of options and details of the individual options. 795@item 796Documentation in @file{gcc/doc/extend.texi} for any target-specific 797attributes supported (@pxref{Target Attributes, , Defining 798target-specific uses of @code{__attribute__}}), including where the 799same attribute is already supported on some targets, which are 800enumerated in the manual. 801@item 802Documentation in @file{gcc/doc/extend.texi} for any target-specific 803pragmas supported. 804@item 805Documentation in @file{gcc/doc/extend.texi} of any target-specific 806built-in functions supported. 807@item 808Documentation in @file{gcc/doc/extend.texi} of any target-specific 809format checking styles supported. 810@item 811Documentation in @file{gcc/doc/md.texi} of any target-specific 812constraint letters (@pxref{Machine Constraints, , Constraints for 813Particular Machines}). 814@item 815A note in @file{gcc/doc/contrib.texi} under the person or people who 816contributed the target support. 817@item 818Entries in @file{gcc/doc/install.texi} for all target triplets 819supported with this target architecture, giving details of any special 820notes about installation for this target, or saying that there are no 821special notes if there are none. 822@item 823Possibly other support outside the @file{gcc} directory for runtime 824libraries. FIXME: reference docs for this. The @code{libstdc++} porting 825manual needs to be installed as info for this to work, or to be a 826chapter of this manual. 827@end itemize 828 829The @file{@var{machine}.h} header is included very early in GCC's 830standard sequence of header files, while @file{@var{machine}-protos.h} 831is included late in the sequence. Thus @file{@var{machine}-protos.h} 832can include declarations referencing types that are not defined when 833@file{@var{machine}.h} is included, specifically including those from 834@file{rtl.h} and @file{tree.h}. Since both RTL and tree types may not 835be available in every context where @file{@var{machine}-protos.h} is 836included, in this file you should guard declarations using these types 837inside appropriate @code{#ifdef RTX_CODE} or @code{#ifdef TREE_CODE} 838conditional code segments. 839 840If the backend uses shared data structures that require @code{GTY} markers 841for garbage collection (@pxref{Type Information}), you must declare those 842in @file{@var{machine}.h} rather than @file{@var{machine}-protos.h}. 843Any definitions required for building libgcc must also go in 844@file{@var{machine}.h}. 845 846GCC uses the macro @code{IN_TARGET_CODE} to distinguish between 847machine-specific @file{.c} and @file{.cc} files and 848machine-independent @file{.c} and @file{.cc} files. Machine-specific 849files should use the directive: 850 851@example 852#define IN_TARGET_CODE 1 853@end example 854 855before including @code{config.h}. 856 857If the back end is added to the official GCC source repository, the 858following are also necessary: 859 860@itemize @bullet 861@item 862An entry for the target architecture in @file{readings.html} on the 863GCC web site, with any relevant links. 864@item 865Details of the properties of the back end and target architecture in 866@file{backends.html} on the GCC web site. 867@item 868A news item about the contribution of support for that target 869architecture, in @file{index.html} on the GCC web site. 870@item 871Normally, one or more maintainers of that target listed in 872@file{MAINTAINERS}. Some existing architectures may be unmaintained, 873but it would be unusual to add support for a target that does not have 874a maintainer when support is added. 875@item 876Target triplets covering all @file{config.gcc} stanzas for the target, 877in the list in @file{contrib/config-list.mk}. 878@end itemize 879 880@node Testsuites 881@chapter Testsuites 882 883GCC contains several testsuites to help maintain compiler quality. 884Most of the runtime libraries and language front ends in GCC have 885testsuites. Currently only the C language testsuites are documented 886here; FIXME: document the others. 887 888@menu 889* Test Idioms:: Idioms used in testsuite code. 890* Test Directives:: Directives used within DejaGnu tests. 891* Ada Tests:: The Ada language testsuites. 892* C Tests:: The C language testsuites. 893* LTO Testing:: Support for testing link-time optimizations. 894* gcov Testing:: Support for testing gcov. 895* profopt Testing:: Support for testing profile-directed optimizations. 896* compat Testing:: Support for testing binary compatibility. 897* Torture Tests:: Support for torture testing using multiple options. 898* GIMPLE Tests:: Support for testing GIMPLE passes. 899* RTL Tests:: Support for testing RTL passes. 900@end menu 901 902@node Test Idioms 903@section Idioms Used in Testsuite Code 904 905In general, C testcases have a trailing @file{-@var{n}.c}, starting 906with @file{-1.c}, in case other testcases with similar names are added 907later. If the test is a test of some well-defined feature, it should 908have a name referring to that feature such as 909@file{@var{feature}-1.c}. If it does not test a well-defined feature 910but just happens to exercise a bug somewhere in the compiler, and a 911bug report has been filed for this bug in the GCC bug database, 912@file{pr@var{bug-number}-1.c} is the appropriate form of name. 913Otherwise (for miscellaneous bugs not filed in the GCC bug database), 914and previously more generally, test cases are named after the date on 915which they were added. This allows people to tell at a glance whether 916a test failure is because of a recently found bug that has not yet 917been fixed, or whether it may be a regression, but does not give any 918other information about the bug or where discussion of it may be 919found. Some other language testsuites follow similar conventions. 920 921In the @file{gcc.dg} testsuite, it is often necessary to test that an 922error is indeed a hard error and not just a warning---for example, 923where it is a constraint violation in the C standard, which must 924become an error with @option{-pedantic-errors}. The following idiom, 925where the first line shown is line @var{line} of the file and the line 926that generates the error, is used for this: 927 928@smallexample 929/* @{ dg-bogus "warning" "warning in place of error" @} */ 930/* @{ dg-error "@var{regexp}" "@var{message}" @{ target *-*-* @} @var{line} @} */ 931@end smallexample 932 933It may be necessary to check that an expression is an integer constant 934expression and has a certain value. To check that @code{@var{E}} has 935value @code{@var{V}}, an idiom similar to the following is used: 936 937@smallexample 938char x[((E) == (V) ? 1 : -1)]; 939@end smallexample 940 941In @file{gcc.dg} tests, @code{__typeof__} is sometimes used to make 942assertions about the types of expressions. See, for example, 943@file{gcc.dg/c99-condexpr-1.c}. The more subtle uses depend on the 944exact rules for the types of conditional expressions in the C 945standard; see, for example, @file{gcc.dg/c99-intconst-1.c}. 946 947It is useful to be able to test that optimizations are being made 948properly. This cannot be done in all cases, but it can be done where 949the optimization will lead to code being optimized away (for example, 950where flow analysis or alias analysis should show that certain code 951cannot be called) or to functions not being called because they have 952been expanded as built-in functions. Such tests go in 953@file{gcc.c-torture/execute}. Where code should be optimized away, a 954call to a nonexistent function such as @code{link_failure ()} may be 955inserted; a definition 956 957@smallexample 958#ifndef __OPTIMIZE__ 959void 960link_failure (void) 961@{ 962 abort (); 963@} 964#endif 965@end smallexample 966 967@noindent 968will also be needed so that linking still succeeds when the test is 969run without optimization. When all calls to a built-in function 970should have been optimized and no calls to the non-built-in version of 971the function should remain, that function may be defined as 972@code{static} to call @code{abort ()} (although redeclaring a function 973as static may not work on all targets). 974 975All testcases must be portable. Target-specific testcases must have 976appropriate code to avoid causing failures on unsupported systems; 977unfortunately, the mechanisms for this differ by directory. 978 979FIXME: discuss non-C testsuites here. 980 981@node Test Directives 982@section Directives used within DejaGnu tests 983 984@menu 985* Directives:: Syntax and descriptions of test directives. 986* Selectors:: Selecting targets to which a test applies. 987* Effective-Target Keywords:: Keywords describing target attributes. 988* Add Options:: Features for @code{dg-add-options} 989* Require Support:: Variants of @code{dg-require-@var{support}} 990* Final Actions:: Commands for use in @code{dg-final} 991@end menu 992 993@node Directives 994@subsection Syntax and Descriptions of test directives 995 996Test directives appear within comments in a test source file and begin 997with @code{dg-}. Some of these are defined within DejaGnu and others 998are local to the GCC testsuite. 999 1000The order in which test directives appear in a test can be important: 1001directives local to GCC sometimes override information used by the 1002DejaGnu directives, which know nothing about the GCC directives, so the 1003DejaGnu directives must precede GCC directives. 1004 1005Several test directives include selectors (@pxref{Selectors, , }) 1006which are usually preceded by the keyword @code{target} or @code{xfail}. 1007 1008@subsubsection Specify how to build the test 1009 1010@table @code 1011@item @{ dg-do @var{do-what-keyword} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] @} 1012@var{do-what-keyword} specifies how the test is compiled and whether 1013it is executed. It is one of: 1014 1015@table @code 1016@item preprocess 1017Compile with @option{-E} to run only the preprocessor. 1018@item compile 1019Compile with @option{-S} to produce an assembly code file. 1020@item assemble 1021Compile with @option{-c} to produce a relocatable object file. 1022@item link 1023Compile, assemble, and link to produce an executable file. 1024@item run 1025Produce and run an executable file, which is expected to return 1026an exit code of 0. 1027@end table 1028 1029The default is @code{compile}. That can be overridden for a set of 1030tests by redefining @code{dg-do-what-default} within the @code{.exp} 1031file for those tests. 1032 1033If the directive includes the optional @samp{@{ target @var{selector} @}} 1034then the test is skipped unless the target system matches the 1035@var{selector}. 1036 1037If @var{do-what-keyword} is @code{run} and the directive includes 1038the optional @samp{@{ xfail @var{selector} @}} and the selector is met 1039then the test is expected to fail. The @code{xfail} clause is ignored 1040for other values of @var{do-what-keyword}; those tests can use 1041directive @code{dg-xfail-if}. 1042@end table 1043 1044@subsubsection Specify additional compiler options 1045 1046@table @code 1047@item @{ dg-options @var{options} [@{ target @var{selector} @}] @} 1048This DejaGnu directive provides a list of compiler options, to be used 1049if the target system matches @var{selector}, that replace the default 1050options used for this set of tests. 1051 1052@item @{ dg-add-options @var{feature} @dots{} @} 1053Add any compiler options that are needed to access certain features. 1054This directive does nothing on targets that enable the features by 1055default, or that don't provide them at all. It must come after 1056all @code{dg-options} directives. 1057For supported values of @var{feature} see @ref{Add Options, ,}. 1058 1059@item @{ dg-additional-options @var{options} [@{ target @var{selector} @}] @} 1060This directive provides a list of compiler options, to be used 1061if the target system matches @var{selector}, that are added to the default 1062options used for this set of tests. 1063@end table 1064 1065@subsubsection Modify the test timeout value 1066 1067The normal timeout limit, in seconds, is found by searching the 1068following in order: 1069 1070@itemize @bullet 1071@item the value defined by an earlier @code{dg-timeout} directive in 1072the test 1073 1074@item variable @var{tool_timeout} defined by the set of tests 1075 1076@item @var{gcc},@var{timeout} set in the target board 1077 1078@item 300 1079@end itemize 1080 1081@table @code 1082@item @{ dg-timeout @var{n} [@{target @var{selector} @}] @} 1083Set the time limit for the compilation and for the execution of the test 1084to the specified number of seconds. 1085 1086@item @{ dg-timeout-factor @var{x} [@{ target @var{selector} @}] @} 1087Multiply the normal time limit for compilation and execution of the test 1088by the specified floating-point factor. 1089@end table 1090 1091@subsubsection Skip a test for some targets 1092 1093@table @code 1094@item @{ dg-skip-if @var{comment} @{ @var{selector} @} [@{ @var{include-opts} @} [@{ @var{exclude-opts} @}]] @} 1095Arguments @var{include-opts} and @var{exclude-opts} are lists in which 1096each element is a string of zero or more GCC options. 1097Skip the test if all of the following conditions are met: 1098@itemize @bullet 1099@item the test system is included in @var{selector} 1100 1101@item for at least one of the option strings in @var{include-opts}, 1102every option from that string is in the set of options with which 1103the test would be compiled; use @samp{"*"} for an @var{include-opts} list 1104that matches any options; that is the default if @var{include-opts} is 1105not specified 1106 1107@item for each of the option strings in @var{exclude-opts}, at least one 1108option from that string is not in the set of options with which the test 1109would be compiled; use @samp{""} for an empty @var{exclude-opts} list; 1110that is the default if @var{exclude-opts} is not specified 1111@end itemize 1112 1113For example, to skip a test if option @code{-Os} is present: 1114 1115@smallexample 1116/* @{ dg-skip-if "" @{ *-*-* @} @{ "-Os" @} @{ "" @} @} */ 1117@end smallexample 1118 1119To skip a test if both options @code{-O2} and @code{-g} are present: 1120 1121@smallexample 1122/* @{ dg-skip-if "" @{ *-*-* @} @{ "-O2 -g" @} @{ "" @} @} */ 1123@end smallexample 1124 1125To skip a test if either @code{-O2} or @code{-O3} is present: 1126 1127@smallexample 1128/* @{ dg-skip-if "" @{ *-*-* @} @{ "-O2" "-O3" @} @{ "" @} @} */ 1129@end smallexample 1130 1131To skip a test unless option @code{-Os} is present: 1132 1133@smallexample 1134/* @{ dg-skip-if "" @{ *-*-* @} @{ "*" @} @{ "-Os" @} @} */ 1135@end smallexample 1136 1137To skip a test if either @code{-O2} or @code{-O3} is used with @code{-g} 1138but not if @code{-fpic} is also present: 1139 1140@smallexample 1141/* @{ dg-skip-if "" @{ *-*-* @} @{ "-O2 -g" "-O3 -g" @} @{ "-fpic" @} @} */ 1142@end smallexample 1143 1144@item @{ dg-require-effective-target @var{keyword} [@{ @var{selector} @}] @} 1145Skip the test if the test target, including current multilib flags, 1146is not covered by the effective-target keyword. 1147If the directive includes the optional @samp{@{ @var{selector} @}} 1148then the effective-target test is only performed if the target system 1149matches the @var{selector}. 1150This directive must appear after any @code{dg-do} directive in the test 1151and before any @code{dg-additional-sources} directive. 1152@xref{Effective-Target Keywords, , }. 1153 1154@item @{ dg-require-@var{support} args @} 1155Skip the test if the target does not provide the required support. 1156These directives must appear after any @code{dg-do} directive in the test 1157and before any @code{dg-additional-sources} directive. 1158They require at least one argument, which can be an empty string if the 1159specific procedure does not examine the argument. 1160@xref{Require Support, , }, for a complete list of these directives. 1161@end table 1162 1163@subsubsection Expect a test to fail for some targets 1164 1165@table @code 1166@item @{ dg-xfail-if @var{comment} @{ @var{selector} @} [@{ @var{include-opts} @} [@{ @var{exclude-opts} @}]] @} 1167Expect the test to fail if the conditions (which are the same as for 1168@code{dg-skip-if}) are met. This does not affect the execute step. 1169 1170@item @{ dg-xfail-run-if @var{comment} @{ @var{selector} @} [@{ @var{include-opts} @} [@{ @var{exclude-opts} @}]] @} 1171Expect the execute step of a test to fail if the conditions (which are 1172the same as for @code{dg-skip-if}) are met. 1173@end table 1174 1175@subsubsection Expect the test executable to fail 1176 1177@table @code 1178@item @{ dg-shouldfail @var{comment} [@{ @var{selector} @} [@{ @var{include-opts} @} [@{ @var{exclude-opts} @}]]] @} 1179Expect the test executable to return a nonzero exit status if the 1180conditions (which are the same as for @code{dg-skip-if}) are met. 1181@end table 1182 1183@subsubsection Verify compiler messages 1184Where @var{line} is an accepted argument for these commands, a value of @samp{0} 1185can be used if there is no line associated with the message. 1186 1187@table @code 1188@item @{ dg-error @var{regexp} [@var{comment} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @} [@var{line}] ]] @} 1189This DejaGnu directive appears on a source line that is expected to get 1190an error message, or else specifies the source line associated with the 1191message. If there is no message for that line or if the text of that 1192message is not matched by @var{regexp} then the check fails and 1193@var{comment} is included in the @code{FAIL} message. The check does 1194not look for the string @samp{error} unless it is part of @var{regexp}. 1195 1196@item @{ dg-warning @var{regexp} [@var{comment} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @} [@var{line}] ]] @} 1197This DejaGnu directive appears on a source line that is expected to get 1198a warning message, or else specifies the source line associated with the 1199message. If there is no message for that line or if the text of that 1200message is not matched by @var{regexp} then the check fails and 1201@var{comment} is included in the @code{FAIL} message. The check does 1202not look for the string @samp{warning} unless it is part of @var{regexp}. 1203 1204@item @{ dg-message @var{regexp} [@var{comment} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @} [@var{line}] ]] @} 1205The line is expected to get a message other than an error or warning. 1206If there is no message for that line or if the text of that message is 1207not matched by @var{regexp} then the check fails and @var{comment} is 1208included in the @code{FAIL} message. 1209 1210@item @{ dg-bogus @var{regexp} [@var{comment} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @} [@var{line}] ]] @} 1211This DejaGnu directive appears on a source line that should not get a 1212message matching @var{regexp}, or else specifies the source line 1213associated with the bogus message. It is usually used with @samp{xfail} 1214to indicate that the message is a known problem for a particular set of 1215targets. 1216 1217@item @{ dg-line @var{linenumvar} @} 1218This DejaGnu directive sets the variable @var{linenumvar} to the line number of 1219the source line. The variable @var{linenumvar} can then be used in subsequent 1220@code{dg-error}, @code{dg-warning}, @code{dg-message} and @code{dg-bogus} 1221directives. For example: 1222 1223@smallexample 1224int a; /* @{ dg-line first_def_a @} */ 1225float a; /* @{ dg-error "conflicting types of" @} */ 1226/* @{ dg-message "previous declaration of" "" @{ target *-*-* @} first_def_a @} */ 1227@end smallexample 1228 1229@item @{ dg-excess-errors @var{comment} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] @} 1230This DejaGnu directive indicates that the test is expected to fail due 1231to compiler messages that are not handled by @samp{dg-error}, 1232@samp{dg-warning} or @samp{dg-bogus}. For this directive @samp{xfail} 1233has the same effect as @samp{target}. 1234 1235@item @{ dg-prune-output @var{regexp} @} 1236Prune messages matching @var{regexp} from the test output. 1237@end table 1238 1239@subsubsection Verify output of the test executable 1240 1241@table @code 1242@item @{ dg-output @var{regexp} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] @} 1243This DejaGnu directive compares @var{regexp} to the combined output 1244that the test executable writes to @file{stdout} and @file{stderr}. 1245@end table 1246 1247@subsubsection Specify additional files for a test 1248 1249@table @code 1250@item @{ dg-additional-files "@var{filelist}" @} 1251Specify additional files, other than source files, that must be copied 1252to the system where the compiler runs. 1253 1254@item @{ dg-additional-sources "@var{filelist}" @} 1255Specify additional source files to appear in the compile line 1256following the main test file. 1257@end table 1258 1259@subsubsection Add checks at the end of a test 1260 1261@table @code 1262@item @{ dg-final @{ @var{local-directive} @} @} 1263This DejaGnu directive is placed within a comment anywhere in the 1264source file and is processed after the test has been compiled and run. 1265Multiple @samp{dg-final} commands are processed in the order in which 1266they appear in the source file. @xref{Final Actions, , }, for a list 1267of directives that can be used within @code{dg-final}. 1268@end table 1269 1270@node Selectors 1271@subsection Selecting targets to which a test applies 1272 1273Several test directives include @var{selector}s to limit the targets 1274for which a test is run or to declare that a test is expected to fail 1275on particular targets. 1276 1277A selector is: 1278@itemize @bullet 1279@item one or more target triplets, possibly including wildcard characters; 1280use @samp{*-*-*} to match any target 1281@item a single effective-target keyword (@pxref{Effective-Target Keywords}) 1282@item a logical expression 1283@end itemize 1284 1285Depending on the context, the selector specifies whether a test is 1286skipped and reported as unsupported or is expected to fail. A context 1287that allows either @samp{target} or @samp{xfail} also allows 1288@samp{@{ target @var{selector1} xfail @var{selector2} @}} 1289to skip the test for targets that don't match @var{selector1} and the 1290test to fail for targets that match @var{selector2}. 1291 1292A selector expression appears within curly braces and uses a single 1293logical operator: one of @samp{!}, @samp{&&}, or @samp{||}. An 1294operand is another selector expression, an effective-target keyword, 1295a single target triplet, or a list of target triplets within quotes or 1296curly braces. For example: 1297 1298@smallexample 1299@{ target @{ ! "hppa*-*-* ia64*-*-*" @} @} 1300@{ target @{ powerpc*-*-* && lp64 @} @} 1301@{ xfail @{ lp64 || vect_no_align @} @} 1302@end smallexample 1303 1304@node Effective-Target Keywords 1305@subsection Keywords describing target attributes 1306 1307Effective-target keywords identify sets of targets that support 1308particular functionality. They are used to limit tests to be run only 1309for particular targets, or to specify that particular sets of targets 1310are expected to fail some tests. 1311 1312Effective-target keywords are defined in @file{lib/target-supports.exp} in 1313the GCC testsuite, with the exception of those that are documented as 1314being local to a particular test directory. 1315 1316The @samp{effective target} takes into account all of the compiler options 1317with which the test will be compiled, including the multilib options. 1318By convention, keywords ending in @code{_nocache} can also include options 1319specified for the particular test in an earlier @code{dg-options} or 1320@code{dg-add-options} directive. 1321 1322@subsubsection Endianness 1323 1324@table @code 1325@item be 1326Target uses big-endian memory order for multi-byte and multi-word data. 1327 1328@item le 1329Target uses little-endian memory order for multi-byte and multi-word data. 1330@end table 1331 1332@subsubsection Data type sizes 1333 1334@table @code 1335@item ilp32 1336Target has 32-bit @code{int}, @code{long}, and pointers. 1337 1338@item lp64 1339Target has 32-bit @code{int}, 64-bit @code{long} and pointers. 1340 1341@item llp64 1342Target has 32-bit @code{int} and @code{long}, 64-bit @code{long long} 1343and pointers. 1344 1345@item double64 1346Target has 64-bit @code{double}. 1347 1348@item double64plus 1349Target has @code{double} that is 64 bits or longer. 1350 1351@item longdouble128 1352Target has 128-bit @code{long double}. 1353 1354@item int32plus 1355Target has @code{int} that is at 32 bits or longer. 1356 1357@item int16 1358Target has @code{int} that is 16 bits or shorter. 1359 1360@item long_neq_int 1361Target has @code{int} and @code{long} with different sizes. 1362 1363@item int_eq_float 1364Target has @code{int} and @code{float} with the same size. 1365 1366@item ptr_eq_long 1367Target has pointers (@code{void *}) and @code{long} with the same size. 1368 1369@item large_double 1370Target supports @code{double} that is longer than @code{float}. 1371 1372@item large_long_double 1373Target supports @code{long double} that is longer than @code{double}. 1374 1375@item ptr32plus 1376Target has pointers that are 32 bits or longer. 1377 1378@item size20plus 1379Target has a 20-bit or larger address space, so at least supports 138016-bit array and structure sizes. 1381 1382@item size32plus 1383Target has a 32-bit or larger address space, so at least supports 138424-bit array and structure sizes. 1385 1386@item 4byte_wchar_t 1387Target has @code{wchar_t} that is at least 4 bytes. 1388 1389@item float@var{n} 1390Target has the @code{_Float@var{n}} type. 1391 1392@item float@var{n}x 1393Target has the @code{_Float@var{n}x} type. 1394 1395@item float@var{n}_runtime 1396Target has the @code{_Float@var{n}} type, including runtime support 1397for any options added with @code{dg-add-options}. 1398 1399@item float@var{n}x_runtime 1400Target has the @code{_Float@var{n}x} type, including runtime support 1401for any options added with @code{dg-add-options}. 1402 1403@item floatn_nx_runtime 1404Target has runtime support for any options added with 1405@code{dg-add-options} for any @code{_Float@var{n}} or 1406@code{_Float@var{n}x} type. 1407 1408@item inf 1409Target supports floating point infinite (@code{inf}) for type 1410@code{double}. 1411@end table 1412@subsubsection Fortran-specific attributes 1413 1414@table @code 1415@item fortran_integer_16 1416Target supports Fortran @code{integer} that is 16 bytes or longer. 1417 1418@item fortran_real_10 1419Target supports Fortran @code{real} that is 10 bytes or longer. 1420 1421@item fortran_real_16 1422Target supports Fortran @code{real} that is 16 bytes or longer. 1423 1424@item fortran_large_int 1425Target supports Fortran @code{integer} kinds larger than @code{integer(8)}. 1426 1427@item fortran_large_real 1428Target supports Fortran @code{real} kinds larger than @code{real(8)}. 1429@end table 1430 1431@subsubsection Vector-specific attributes 1432 1433@table @code 1434@item vect_align_stack_vars 1435The target's ABI allows stack variables to be aligned to the preferred 1436vector alignment. 1437 1438@item vect_avg_qi 1439Target supports both signed and unsigned averaging operations on vectors 1440of bytes. 1441 1442@item vect_condition 1443Target supports vector conditional operations. 1444 1445@item vect_cond_mixed 1446Target supports vector conditional operations where comparison operands 1447have different type from the value operands. 1448 1449@item vect_double 1450Target supports hardware vectors of @code{double}. 1451 1452@item vect_double_cond_arith 1453Target supports conditional addition, subtraction, multiplication, 1454division, minimum and maximum on vectors of @code{double}, via the 1455@code{cond_} optabs. 1456 1457@item vect_element_align_preferred 1458The target's preferred vector alignment is the same as the element 1459alignment. 1460 1461@item vect_float 1462Target supports hardware vectors of @code{float} when 1463@option{-funsafe-math-optimizations} is in effect. 1464 1465@item vect_float_strict 1466Target supports hardware vectors of @code{float} when 1467@option{-funsafe-math-optimizations} is not in effect. 1468This implies @code{vect_float}. 1469 1470@item vect_int 1471Target supports hardware vectors of @code{int}. 1472 1473@item vect_long 1474Target supports hardware vectors of @code{long}. 1475 1476@item vect_long_long 1477Target supports hardware vectors of @code{long long}. 1478 1479@item vect_fully_masked 1480Target supports fully-masked (also known as fully-predicated) loops, 1481so that vector loops can handle partial as well as full vectors. 1482 1483@item vect_masked_store 1484Target supports vector masked stores. 1485 1486@item vect_scatter_store 1487Target supports vector scatter stores. 1488 1489@item vect_aligned_arrays 1490Target aligns arrays to vector alignment boundary. 1491 1492@item vect_hw_misalign 1493Target supports a vector misalign access. 1494 1495@item vect_no_align 1496Target does not support a vector alignment mechanism. 1497 1498@item vect_peeling_profitable 1499Target might require to peel loops for alignment purposes. 1500 1501@item vect_no_int_min_max 1502Target does not support a vector min and max instruction on @code{int}. 1503 1504@item vect_no_int_add 1505Target does not support a vector add instruction on @code{int}. 1506 1507@item vect_no_bitwise 1508Target does not support vector bitwise instructions. 1509 1510@item vect_char_mult 1511Target supports @code{vector char} multiplication. 1512 1513@item vect_short_mult 1514Target supports @code{vector short} multiplication. 1515 1516@item vect_int_mult 1517Target supports @code{vector int} multiplication. 1518 1519@item vect_long_mult 1520Target supports 64 bit @code{vector long} multiplication. 1521 1522@item vect_extract_even_odd 1523Target supports vector even/odd element extraction. 1524 1525@item vect_extract_even_odd_wide 1526Target supports vector even/odd element extraction of vectors with elements 1527@code{SImode} or larger. 1528 1529@item vect_interleave 1530Target supports vector interleaving. 1531 1532@item vect_strided 1533Target supports vector interleaving and extract even/odd. 1534 1535@item vect_strided_wide 1536Target supports vector interleaving and extract even/odd for wide 1537element types. 1538 1539@item vect_perm 1540Target supports vector permutation. 1541 1542@item vect_perm_byte 1543Target supports permutation of vectors with 8-bit elements. 1544 1545@item vect_perm_short 1546Target supports permutation of vectors with 16-bit elements. 1547 1548@item vect_perm3_byte 1549Target supports permutation of vectors with 8-bit elements, and for the 1550default vector length it is possible to permute: 1551@example 1552@{ a0, a1, a2, b0, b1, b2, @dots{} @} 1553@end example 1554to: 1555@example 1556@{ a0, a0, a0, b0, b0, b0, @dots{} @} 1557@{ a1, a1, a1, b1, b1, b1, @dots{} @} 1558@{ a2, a2, a2, b2, b2, b2, @dots{} @} 1559@end example 1560using only two-vector permutes, regardless of how long the sequence is. 1561 1562@item vect_perm3_int 1563Like @code{vect_perm3_byte}, but for 32-bit elements. 1564 1565@item vect_perm3_short 1566Like @code{vect_perm3_byte}, but for 16-bit elements. 1567 1568@item vect_shift 1569Target supports a hardware vector shift operation. 1570 1571@item vect_unaligned_possible 1572Target prefers vectors to have an alignment greater than element 1573alignment, but also allows unaligned vector accesses in some 1574circumstances. 1575 1576@item vect_variable_length 1577Target has variable-length vectors. 1578 1579@item vect_widen_sum_hi_to_si 1580Target supports a vector widening summation of @code{short} operands 1581into @code{int} results, or can promote (unpack) from @code{short} 1582to @code{int}. 1583 1584@item vect_widen_sum_qi_to_hi 1585Target supports a vector widening summation of @code{char} operands 1586into @code{short} results, or can promote (unpack) from @code{char} 1587to @code{short}. 1588 1589@item vect_widen_sum_qi_to_si 1590Target supports a vector widening summation of @code{char} operands 1591into @code{int} results. 1592 1593@item vect_widen_mult_qi_to_hi 1594Target supports a vector widening multiplication of @code{char} operands 1595into @code{short} results, or can promote (unpack) from @code{char} to 1596@code{short} and perform non-widening multiplication of @code{short}. 1597 1598@item vect_widen_mult_hi_to_si 1599Target supports a vector widening multiplication of @code{short} operands 1600into @code{int} results, or can promote (unpack) from @code{short} to 1601@code{int} and perform non-widening multiplication of @code{int}. 1602 1603@item vect_widen_mult_si_to_di_pattern 1604Target supports a vector widening multiplication of @code{int} operands 1605into @code{long} results. 1606 1607@item vect_sdot_qi 1608Target supports a vector dot-product of @code{signed char}. 1609 1610@item vect_udot_qi 1611Target supports a vector dot-product of @code{unsigned char}. 1612 1613@item vect_sdot_hi 1614Target supports a vector dot-product of @code{signed short}. 1615 1616@item vect_udot_hi 1617Target supports a vector dot-product of @code{unsigned short}. 1618 1619@item vect_pack_trunc 1620Target supports a vector demotion (packing) of @code{short} to @code{char} 1621and from @code{int} to @code{short} using modulo arithmetic. 1622 1623@item vect_unpack 1624Target supports a vector promotion (unpacking) of @code{char} to @code{short} 1625and from @code{char} to @code{int}. 1626 1627@item vect_intfloat_cvt 1628Target supports conversion from @code{signed int} to @code{float}. 1629 1630@item vect_uintfloat_cvt 1631Target supports conversion from @code{unsigned int} to @code{float}. 1632 1633@item vect_floatint_cvt 1634Target supports conversion from @code{float} to @code{signed int}. 1635 1636@item vect_floatuint_cvt 1637Target supports conversion from @code{float} to @code{unsigned int}. 1638 1639@item vect_intdouble_cvt 1640Target supports conversion from @code{signed int} to @code{double}. 1641 1642@item vect_doubleint_cvt 1643Target supports conversion from @code{double} to @code{signed int}. 1644 1645@item vect_max_reduc 1646Target supports max reduction for vectors. 1647 1648@item vect_sizes_16B_8B 1649Target supports 16- and 8-bytes vectors. 1650 1651@item vect_sizes_32B_16B 1652Target supports 32- and 16-bytes vectors. 1653 1654@item vect_logical_reduc 1655Target supports AND, IOR and XOR reduction on vectors. 1656 1657@item vect_fold_extract_last 1658Target supports the @code{fold_extract_last} optab. 1659@end table 1660 1661@subsubsection Thread Local Storage attributes 1662 1663@table @code 1664@item tls 1665Target supports thread-local storage. 1666 1667@item tls_native 1668Target supports native (rather than emulated) thread-local storage. 1669 1670@item tls_runtime 1671Test system supports executing TLS executables. 1672@end table 1673 1674@subsubsection Decimal floating point attributes 1675 1676@table @code 1677@item dfp 1678Targets supports compiling decimal floating point extension to C. 1679 1680@item dfp_nocache 1681Including the options used to compile this particular test, the 1682target supports compiling decimal floating point extension to C. 1683 1684@item dfprt 1685Test system can execute decimal floating point tests. 1686 1687@item dfprt_nocache 1688Including the options used to compile this particular test, the 1689test system can execute decimal floating point tests. 1690 1691@item hard_dfp 1692Target generates decimal floating point instructions with current options. 1693@end table 1694 1695@subsubsection ARM-specific attributes 1696 1697@table @code 1698@item arm32 1699ARM target generates 32-bit code. 1700 1701@item arm_eabi 1702ARM target adheres to the ABI for the ARM Architecture. 1703 1704@item arm_fp_ok 1705@anchor{arm_fp_ok} 1706ARM target defines @code{__ARM_FP} using @code{-mfloat-abi=softfp} or 1707equivalent options. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these 1708options. 1709 1710@item arm_hf_eabi 1711ARM target adheres to the VFP and Advanced SIMD Register Arguments 1712variant of the ABI for the ARM Architecture (as selected with 1713@code{-mfloat-abi=hard}). 1714 1715@item arm_softfloat 1716ARM target uses the soft-float ABI with no floating-point instructions 1717used whatsoever (as selected with @code{-mfloat-abi=soft}). 1718 1719@item arm_hard_vfp_ok 1720ARM target supports @code{-mfpu=vfp -mfloat-abi=hard}. 1721Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1722 1723@item arm_iwmmxt_ok 1724ARM target supports @code{-mcpu=iwmmxt}. 1725Some multilibs may be incompatible with this option. 1726 1727@item arm_neon 1728ARM target supports generating NEON instructions. 1729 1730@item arm_tune_string_ops_prefer_neon 1731Test CPU tune supports inlining string operations with NEON instructions. 1732 1733@item arm_neon_hw 1734Test system supports executing NEON instructions. 1735 1736@item arm_neonv2_hw 1737Test system supports executing NEON v2 instructions. 1738 1739@item arm_neon_ok 1740@anchor{arm_neon_ok} 1741ARM Target supports @code{-mfpu=neon -mfloat-abi=softfp} or compatible 1742options. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1743 1744@item arm_neon_ok_no_float_abi 1745@anchor{arm_neon_ok_no_float_abi} 1746ARM Target supports NEON with @code{-mfpu=neon}, but without any 1747-mfloat-abi= option. Some multilibs may be incompatible with this 1748option. 1749 1750@item arm_neonv2_ok 1751@anchor{arm_neonv2_ok} 1752ARM Target supports @code{-mfpu=neon-vfpv4 -mfloat-abi=softfp} or compatible 1753options. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1754 1755@item arm_fp16_ok 1756@anchor{arm_fp16_ok} 1757Target supports options to generate VFP half-precision floating-point 1758instructions. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these 1759options. This test is valid for ARM only. 1760 1761@item arm_fp16_hw 1762Target supports executing VFP half-precision floating-point 1763instructions. This test is valid for ARM only. 1764 1765@item arm_neon_fp16_ok 1766@anchor{arm_neon_fp16_ok} 1767ARM Target supports @code{-mfpu=neon-fp16 -mfloat-abi=softfp} or compatible 1768options, including @code{-mfp16-format=ieee} if necessary to obtain the 1769@code{__fp16} type. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1770 1771@item arm_neon_fp16_hw 1772Test system supports executing Neon half-precision float instructions. 1773(Implies previous.) 1774 1775@item arm_fp16_alternative_ok 1776ARM target supports the ARM FP16 alternative format. Some multilibs 1777may be incompatible with the options needed. 1778 1779@item arm_fp16_none_ok 1780ARM target supports specifying none as the ARM FP16 format. 1781 1782@item arm_thumb1_ok 1783ARM target generates Thumb-1 code for @code{-mthumb}. 1784 1785@item arm_thumb2_ok 1786ARM target generates Thumb-2 code for @code{-mthumb}. 1787 1788@item arm_vfp_ok 1789ARM target supports @code{-mfpu=vfp -mfloat-abi=softfp}. 1790Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1791 1792@item arm_vfp3_ok 1793@anchor{arm_vfp3_ok} 1794ARM target supports @code{-mfpu=vfp3 -mfloat-abi=softfp}. 1795Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1796 1797@item arm_v8_vfp_ok 1798ARM target supports @code{-mfpu=fp-armv8 -mfloat-abi=softfp}. 1799Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1800 1801@item arm_v8_neon_ok 1802ARM target supports @code{-mfpu=neon-fp-armv8 -mfloat-abi=softfp}. 1803Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1804 1805@item arm_v8_1a_neon_ok 1806@anchor{arm_v8_1a_neon_ok} 1807ARM target supports options to generate ARMv8.1-A Adv.SIMD instructions. 1808Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1809 1810@item arm_v8_1a_neon_hw 1811ARM target supports executing ARMv8.1-A Adv.SIMD instructions. Some 1812multilibs may be incompatible with the options needed. Implies 1813arm_v8_1a_neon_ok. 1814 1815@item arm_acq_rel 1816ARM target supports acquire-release instructions. 1817 1818@item arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_ok 1819@anchor{arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_ok} 1820ARM target supports options to generate instructions for ARMv8.2-A and 1821scalar instructions from the FP16 extension. Some multilibs may be 1822incompatible with these options. 1823 1824@item arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_hw 1825ARM target supports executing instructions for ARMv8.2-A and scalar 1826instructions from the FP16 extension. Some multilibs may be 1827incompatible with these options. Implies arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_ok. 1828 1829@item arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_ok 1830@anchor{arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_ok} 1831ARM target supports options to generate instructions from ARMv8.2-A with 1832the FP16 extension. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these 1833options. Implies arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_ok. 1834 1835@item arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_hw 1836ARM target supports executing instructions from ARMv8.2-A with the FP16 1837extension. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1838Implies arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_ok and arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_hw. 1839 1840@item arm_v8_2a_dotprod_neon_ok 1841@anchor{arm_v8_2a_dotprod_neon_ok} 1842ARM target supports options to generate instructions from ARMv8.2-A with 1843the Dot Product extension. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these 1844options. 1845 1846@item arm_v8_2a_dotprod_neon_hw 1847ARM target supports executing instructions from ARMv8.2-A with the Dot 1848Product extension. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1849Implies arm_v8_2a_dotprod_neon_ok. 1850 1851@item arm_fp16fml_neon_ok 1852@anchor{arm_fp16fml_neon_ok} 1853ARM target supports extensions to generate the @code{VFMAL} and @code{VFMLS} 1854half-precision floating-point instructions available from ARMv8.2-A and 1855onwards. Some multilibs may be incompatible with these options. 1856 1857@item arm_prefer_ldrd_strd 1858ARM target prefers @code{LDRD} and @code{STRD} instructions over 1859@code{LDM} and @code{STM} instructions. 1860 1861@item arm_thumb1_movt_ok 1862ARM target generates Thumb-1 code for @code{-mthumb} with @code{MOVW} 1863and @code{MOVT} instructions available. 1864 1865@item arm_thumb1_cbz_ok 1866ARM target generates Thumb-1 code for @code{-mthumb} with 1867@code{CBZ} and @code{CBNZ} instructions available. 1868 1869@item arm_divmod_simode 1870ARM target for which divmod transform is disabled, if it supports hardware 1871div instruction. 1872 1873@item arm_cmse_ok 1874ARM target supports ARMv8-M Security Extensions, enabled by the @code{-mcmse} 1875option. 1876 1877@item arm_coproc1_ok 1878@anchor{arm_coproc1_ok} 1879ARM target supports the following coprocessor instructions: @code{CDP}, 1880@code{LDC}, @code{STC}, @code{MCR} and @code{MRC}. 1881 1882@item arm_coproc2_ok 1883@anchor{arm_coproc2_ok} 1884ARM target supports all the coprocessor instructions also listed as supported 1885in @ref{arm_coproc1_ok} in addition to the following: @code{CDP2}, @code{LDC2}, 1886@code{LDC2l}, @code{STC2}, @code{STC2l}, @code{MCR2} and @code{MRC2}. 1887 1888@item arm_coproc3_ok 1889@anchor{arm_coproc3_ok} 1890ARM target supports all the coprocessor instructions also listed as supported 1891in @ref{arm_coproc2_ok} in addition the following: @code{MCRR} and @code{MRRC}. 1892 1893@item arm_coproc4_ok 1894ARM target supports all the coprocessor instructions also listed as supported 1895in @ref{arm_coproc3_ok} in addition the following: @code{MCRR2} and @code{MRRC2}. 1896@end table 1897 1898@subsubsection AArch64-specific attributes 1899 1900@table @code 1901@item aarch64_asm_<ext>_ok 1902AArch64 assembler supports the architecture extension @code{ext} via the 1903@code{.arch_extension} pseudo-op. 1904@item aarch64_tiny 1905AArch64 target which generates instruction sequences for tiny memory model. 1906@item aarch64_small 1907AArch64 target which generates instruction sequences for small memory model. 1908@item aarch64_large 1909AArch64 target which generates instruction sequences for large memory model. 1910@item aarch64_little_endian 1911AArch64 target which generates instruction sequences for little endian. 1912@item aarch64_big_endian 1913AArch64 target which generates instruction sequences for big endian. 1914@item aarch64_small_fpic 1915Binutils installed on test system supports relocation types required by -fpic 1916for AArch64 small memory model. 1917 1918@end table 1919 1920@subsubsection MIPS-specific attributes 1921 1922@table @code 1923@item mips64 1924MIPS target supports 64-bit instructions. 1925 1926@item nomips16 1927MIPS target does not produce MIPS16 code. 1928 1929@item mips16_attribute 1930MIPS target can generate MIPS16 code. 1931 1932@item mips_loongson 1933MIPS target is a Loongson-2E or -2F target using an ABI that supports 1934the Loongson vector modes. 1935 1936@item mips_msa 1937MIPS target supports @code{-mmsa}, MIPS SIMD Architecture (MSA). 1938 1939@item mips_newabi_large_long_double 1940MIPS target supports @code{long double} larger than @code{double} 1941when using the new ABI. 1942 1943@item mpaired_single 1944MIPS target supports @code{-mpaired-single}. 1945@end table 1946 1947@subsubsection PowerPC-specific attributes 1948 1949@table @code 1950 1951@item dfp_hw 1952PowerPC target supports executing hardware DFP instructions. 1953 1954@item p8vector_hw 1955PowerPC target supports executing VSX instructions (ISA 2.07). 1956 1957@item powerpc64 1958Test system supports executing 64-bit instructions. 1959 1960@item powerpc_altivec 1961PowerPC target supports AltiVec. 1962 1963@item powerpc_altivec_ok 1964PowerPC target supports @code{-maltivec}. 1965 1966@item powerpc_eabi_ok 1967PowerPC target supports @code{-meabi}. 1968 1969@item powerpc_elfv2 1970PowerPC target supports @code{-mabi=elfv2}. 1971 1972@item powerpc_fprs 1973PowerPC target supports floating-point registers. 1974 1975@item powerpc_hard_double 1976PowerPC target supports hardware double-precision floating-point. 1977 1978@item powerpc_htm_ok 1979PowerPC target supports @code{-mhtm} 1980 1981@item powerpc_p8vector_ok 1982PowerPC target supports @code{-mpower8-vector} 1983 1984@item powerpc_popcntb_ok 1985PowerPC target supports the @code{popcntb} instruction, indicating 1986that this target supports @code{-mcpu=power5}. 1987 1988@item powerpc_ppu_ok 1989PowerPC target supports @code{-mcpu=cell}. 1990 1991@item powerpc_spe 1992PowerPC target supports PowerPC SPE. 1993 1994@item powerpc_spe_nocache 1995Including the options used to compile this particular test, the 1996PowerPC target supports PowerPC SPE. 1997 1998@item powerpc_spu 1999PowerPC target supports PowerPC SPU. 2000 2001@item powerpc_vsx_ok 2002PowerPC target supports @code{-mvsx}. 2003 2004@item powerpc_405_nocache 2005Including the options used to compile this particular test, the 2006PowerPC target supports PowerPC 405. 2007 2008@item ppc_recip_hw 2009PowerPC target supports executing reciprocal estimate instructions. 2010 2011@item spu_auto_overlay 2012SPU target has toolchain that supports automatic overlay generation. 2013 2014@item vmx_hw 2015PowerPC target supports executing AltiVec instructions. 2016 2017@item vsx_hw 2018PowerPC target supports executing VSX instructions (ISA 2.06). 2019@end table 2020 2021@subsubsection Other hardware attributes 2022 2023@c Please keep this table sorted alphabetically. 2024@table @code 2025@item autoincdec 2026Target supports autoincrement/decrement addressing. 2027 2028@item avx 2029Target supports compiling @code{avx} instructions. 2030 2031@item avx_runtime 2032Target supports the execution of @code{avx} instructions. 2033 2034@item avx2 2035Target supports compiling @code{avx2} instructions. 2036 2037@item avx2_runtime 2038Target supports the execution of @code{avx2} instructions. 2039 2040@item avx512f 2041Target supports compiling @code{avx512f} instructions. 2042 2043@item avx512f_runtime 2044Target supports the execution of @code{avx512f} instructions. 2045 2046@item cell_hw 2047Test system can execute AltiVec and Cell PPU instructions. 2048 2049@item coldfire_fpu 2050Target uses a ColdFire FPU. 2051 2052@item divmod 2053Target supporting hardware divmod insn or divmod libcall. 2054 2055@item divmod_simode 2056Target supporting hardware divmod insn or divmod libcall for SImode. 2057 2058@item hard_float 2059Target supports FPU instructions. 2060 2061@item non_strict_align 2062Target does not require strict alignment. 2063 2064@item pie_copyreloc 2065The x86-64 target linker supports PIE with copy reloc. 2066 2067@item rdrand 2068Target supports x86 @code{rdrand} instruction. 2069 2070@item sqrt_insn 2071Target has a square root instruction that the compiler can generate. 2072 2073@item sse 2074Target supports compiling @code{sse} instructions. 2075 2076@item sse_runtime 2077Target supports the execution of @code{sse} instructions. 2078 2079@item sse2 2080Target supports compiling @code{sse2} instructions. 2081 2082@item sse2_runtime 2083Target supports the execution of @code{sse2} instructions. 2084 2085@item sync_char_short 2086Target supports atomic operations on @code{char} and @code{short}. 2087 2088@item sync_int_long 2089Target supports atomic operations on @code{int} and @code{long}. 2090 2091@item ultrasparc_hw 2092Test environment appears to run executables on a simulator that 2093accepts only @code{EM_SPARC} executables and chokes on @code{EM_SPARC32PLUS} 2094or @code{EM_SPARCV9} executables. 2095 2096@item vect_cmdline_needed 2097Target requires a command line argument to enable a SIMD instruction set. 2098 2099@item xorsign 2100Target supports the xorsign optab expansion. 2101 2102@end table 2103 2104@subsubsection Environment attributes 2105 2106@table @code 2107@item c 2108The language for the compiler under test is C. 2109 2110@item c++ 2111The language for the compiler under test is C++. 2112 2113@item c99_runtime 2114Target provides a full C99 runtime. 2115 2116@item correct_iso_cpp_string_wchar_protos 2117Target @code{string.h} and @code{wchar.h} headers provide C++ required 2118overloads for @code{strchr} etc. functions. 2119 2120@item d_runtime 2121Target provides the D runtime. 2122 2123@item dummy_wcsftime 2124Target uses a dummy @code{wcsftime} function that always returns zero. 2125 2126@item fd_truncate 2127Target can truncate a file from a file descriptor, as used by 2128@file{libgfortran/io/unix.c:fd_truncate}; i.e.@: @code{ftruncate} or 2129@code{chsize}. 2130 2131@item fenv 2132Target provides @file{fenv.h} include file. 2133 2134@item fenv_exceptions 2135Target supports @file{fenv.h} with all the standard IEEE exceptions 2136and floating-point exceptions are raised by arithmetic operations. 2137 2138@item freestanding 2139Target is @samp{freestanding} as defined in section 4 of the C99 standard. 2140Effectively, it is a target which supports no extra headers or libraries 2141other than what is considered essential. 2142 2143@item gettimeofday 2144Target supports @code{gettimeofday}. 2145 2146@item init_priority 2147Target supports constructors with initialization priority arguments. 2148 2149@item inttypes_types 2150Target has the basic signed and unsigned types in @code{inttypes.h}. 2151This is for tests that GCC's notions of these types agree with those 2152in the header, as some systems have only @code{inttypes.h}. 2153 2154@item lax_strtofp 2155Target might have errors of a few ULP in string to floating-point 2156conversion functions and overflow is not always detected correctly by 2157those functions. 2158 2159@item mempcpy 2160Target provides @code{mempcpy} function. 2161 2162@item mmap 2163Target supports @code{mmap}. 2164 2165@item newlib 2166Target supports Newlib. 2167 2168@item newlib_nano_io 2169GCC was configured with @code{--enable-newlib-nano-formatted-io}, which reduces 2170the code size of Newlib formatted I/O functions. 2171 2172@item pow10 2173Target provides @code{pow10} function. 2174 2175@item pthread 2176Target can compile using @code{pthread.h} with no errors or warnings. 2177 2178@item pthread_h 2179Target has @code{pthread.h}. 2180 2181@item run_expensive_tests 2182Expensive testcases (usually those that consume excessive amounts of CPU 2183time) should be run on this target. This can be enabled by setting the 2184@env{GCC_TEST_RUN_EXPENSIVE} environment variable to a non-empty string. 2185 2186@item simulator 2187Test system runs executables on a simulator (i.e.@: slowly) rather than 2188hardware (i.e.@: fast). 2189 2190@item signal 2191Target has @code{signal.h}. 2192 2193@item stabs 2194Target supports the stabs debugging format. 2195 2196@item stdint_types 2197Target has the basic signed and unsigned C types in @code{stdint.h}. 2198This will be obsolete when GCC ensures a working @code{stdint.h} for 2199all targets. 2200 2201@item stpcpy 2202Target provides @code{stpcpy} function. 2203 2204@item trampolines 2205Target supports trampolines. 2206 2207@item uclibc 2208Target supports uClibc. 2209 2210@item unwrapped 2211Target does not use a status wrapper. 2212 2213@item vxworks_kernel 2214Target is a VxWorks kernel. 2215 2216@item vxworks_rtp 2217Target is a VxWorks RTP. 2218 2219@item wchar 2220Target supports wide characters. 2221@end table 2222 2223@subsubsection Other attributes 2224 2225@table @code 2226@item automatic_stack_alignment 2227Target supports automatic stack alignment. 2228 2229@item branch_cost 2230Target supports @option{-branch-cost=N}. 2231 2232@item cxa_atexit 2233Target uses @code{__cxa_atexit}. 2234 2235@item default_packed 2236Target has packed layout of structure members by default. 2237 2238@item exceptions 2239Target supports exceptions. 2240 2241@item fgraphite 2242Target supports Graphite optimizations. 2243 2244@item fixed_point 2245Target supports fixed-point extension to C. 2246 2247@item fopenacc 2248Target supports OpenACC via @option{-fopenacc}. 2249 2250@item fopenmp 2251Target supports OpenMP via @option{-fopenmp}. 2252 2253@item fpic 2254Target supports @option{-fpic} and @option{-fPIC}. 2255 2256@item freorder 2257Target supports @option{-freorder-blocks-and-partition}. 2258 2259@item fstack_protector 2260Target supports @option{-fstack-protector}. 2261 2262@item gas 2263Target uses GNU @command{as}. 2264 2265@item gc_sections 2266Target supports @option{--gc-sections}. 2267 2268@item gld 2269Target uses GNU @command{ld}. 2270 2271@item keeps_null_pointer_checks 2272Target keeps null pointer checks, either due to the use of 2273@option{-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks} or hardwired into the target. 2274 2275@item llvm_binutils 2276Target is using an LLVM assembler and/or linker, instead of GNU Binutils. 2277 2278@item lto 2279Compiler has been configured to support link-time optimization (LTO). 2280 2281@item lto_incremental 2282Compiler and linker support link-time optimization relocatable linking 2283with @option{-r} and @option{-flto} options. 2284 2285@item naked_functions 2286Target supports the @code{naked} function attribute. 2287 2288@item named_sections 2289Target supports named sections. 2290 2291@item natural_alignment_32 2292Target uses natural alignment (aligned to type size) for types of 229332 bits or less. 2294 2295@item target_natural_alignment_64 2296Target uses natural alignment (aligned to type size) for types of 229764 bits or less. 2298 2299@item nonpic 2300Target does not generate PIC by default. 2301 2302@item offload_gcn 2303Target has been configured for OpenACC/OpenMP offloading on AMD GCN. 2304 2305@item pie_enabled 2306Target generates PIE by default. 2307 2308@item pcc_bitfield_type_matters 2309Target defines @code{PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS}. 2310 2311@item pe_aligned_commons 2312Target supports @option{-mpe-aligned-commons}. 2313 2314@item pie 2315Target supports @option{-pie}, @option{-fpie} and @option{-fPIE}. 2316 2317@item rdynamic 2318Target supports @option{-rdynamic}. 2319 2320@item scalar_all_fma 2321Target supports all four fused multiply-add optabs for both @code{float} 2322and @code{double}. These optabs are: @code{fma_optab}, @code{fms_optab}, 2323@code{fnma_optab} and @code{fnms_optab}. 2324 2325@item section_anchors 2326Target supports section anchors. 2327 2328@item short_enums 2329Target defaults to short enums. 2330 2331@item stack_size 2332@anchor{stack_size_et} 2333Target has limited stack size. The stack size limit can be obtained using the 2334STACK_SIZE macro defined by @ref{stack_size_ao,,@code{dg-add-options} feature 2335@code{stack_size}}. 2336 2337@item static 2338Target supports @option{-static}. 2339 2340@item static_libgfortran 2341Target supports statically linking @samp{libgfortran}. 2342 2343@item string_merging 2344Target supports merging string constants at link time. 2345 2346@item ucn 2347Target supports compiling and assembling UCN. 2348 2349@item ucn_nocache 2350Including the options used to compile this particular test, the 2351target supports compiling and assembling UCN. 2352 2353@item unaligned_stack 2354Target does not guarantee that its @code{STACK_BOUNDARY} is greater than 2355or equal to the required vector alignment. 2356 2357@item vector_alignment_reachable 2358Vector alignment is reachable for types of 32 bits or less. 2359 2360@item vector_alignment_reachable_for_64bit 2361Vector alignment is reachable for types of 64 bits or less. 2362 2363@item wchar_t_char16_t_compatible 2364Target supports @code{wchar_t} that is compatible with @code{char16_t}. 2365 2366@item wchar_t_char32_t_compatible 2367Target supports @code{wchar_t} that is compatible with @code{char32_t}. 2368 2369@item comdat_group 2370Target uses comdat groups. 2371@end table 2372 2373@subsubsection Local to tests in @code{gcc.target/i386} 2374 2375@table @code 2376@item 3dnow 2377Target supports compiling @code{3dnow} instructions. 2378 2379@item aes 2380Target supports compiling @code{aes} instructions. 2381 2382@item fma4 2383Target supports compiling @code{fma4} instructions. 2384 2385@item mfentry 2386Target supports the @code{-mfentry} option that alters the 2387position of profiling calls such that they precede the prologue. 2388 2389@item ms_hook_prologue 2390Target supports attribute @code{ms_hook_prologue}. 2391 2392@item pclmul 2393Target supports compiling @code{pclmul} instructions. 2394 2395@item sse3 2396Target supports compiling @code{sse3} instructions. 2397 2398@item sse4 2399Target supports compiling @code{sse4} instructions. 2400 2401@item sse4a 2402Target supports compiling @code{sse4a} instructions. 2403 2404@item ssse3 2405Target supports compiling @code{ssse3} instructions. 2406 2407@item vaes 2408Target supports compiling @code{vaes} instructions. 2409 2410@item vpclmul 2411Target supports compiling @code{vpclmul} instructions. 2412 2413@item xop 2414Target supports compiling @code{xop} instructions. 2415@end table 2416 2417@subsubsection Local to tests in @code{gcc.target/spu/ea} 2418 2419@table @code 2420@item ealib 2421Target @code{__ea} library functions are available. 2422@end table 2423 2424@subsubsection Local to tests in @code{gcc.test-framework} 2425 2426@table @code 2427@item no 2428Always returns 0. 2429 2430@item yes 2431Always returns 1. 2432@end table 2433 2434@node Add Options 2435@subsection Features for @code{dg-add-options} 2436 2437The supported values of @var{feature} for directive @code{dg-add-options} 2438are: 2439 2440@table @code 2441@item arm_fp 2442@code{__ARM_FP} definition. Only ARM targets support this feature, and only then 2443in certain modes; see the @ref{arm_fp_ok,,arm_fp_ok effective target 2444keyword}. 2445 2446@item arm_neon 2447NEON support. Only ARM targets support this feature, and only then 2448in certain modes; see the @ref{arm_neon_ok,,arm_neon_ok effective target 2449keyword}. 2450 2451@item arm_fp16 2452VFP half-precision floating point support. This does not select the 2453FP16 format; for that, use @ref{arm_fp16_ieee,,arm_fp16_ieee} or 2454@ref{arm_fp16_alternative,,arm_fp16_alternative} instead. This 2455feature is only supported by ARM targets and then only in certain 2456modes; see the @ref{arm_fp16_ok,,arm_fp16_ok effective target 2457keyword}. 2458 2459@item arm_fp16_ieee 2460@anchor{arm_fp16_ieee} 2461ARM IEEE 754-2008 format VFP half-precision floating point support. 2462This feature is only supported by ARM targets and then only in certain 2463modes; see the @ref{arm_fp16_ok,,arm_fp16_ok effective target 2464keyword}. 2465 2466@item arm_fp16_alternative 2467@anchor{arm_fp16_alternative} 2468ARM Alternative format VFP half-precision floating point support. 2469This feature is only supported by ARM targets and then only in certain 2470modes; see the @ref{arm_fp16_ok,,arm_fp16_ok effective target 2471keyword}. 2472 2473@item arm_neon_fp16 2474NEON and half-precision floating point support. Only ARM targets 2475support this feature, and only then in certain modes; see 2476the @ref{arm_neon_fp16_ok,,arm_neon_fp16_ok effective target keyword}. 2477 2478@item arm_vfp3 2479arm vfp3 floating point support; see 2480the @ref{arm_vfp3_ok,,arm_vfp3_ok effective target keyword}. 2481 2482@item arm_v8_1a_neon 2483Add options for ARMv8.1-A with Adv.SIMD support, if this is supported 2484by the target; see the @ref{arm_v8_1a_neon_ok,,arm_v8_1a_neon_ok} 2485effective target keyword. 2486 2487@item arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar 2488Add options for ARMv8.2-A with scalar FP16 support, if this is 2489supported by the target; see the 2490@ref{arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_ok,,arm_v8_2a_fp16_scalar_ok} effective 2491target keyword. 2492 2493@item arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon 2494Add options for ARMv8.2-A with Adv.SIMD FP16 support, if this is 2495supported by the target; see the 2496@ref{arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_ok,,arm_v8_2a_fp16_neon_ok} effective target 2497keyword. 2498 2499@item arm_v8_2a_dotprod_neon 2500Add options for ARMv8.2-A with Adv.SIMD Dot Product support, if this is 2501supported by the target; see the 2502@ref{arm_v8_2a_dotprod_neon_ok} effective target keyword. 2503 2504@item arm_fp16fml_neon 2505Add options to enable generation of the @code{VFMAL} and @code{VFMSL} 2506instructions, if this is supported by the target; see the 2507@ref{arm_fp16fml_neon_ok} effective target keyword. 2508 2509@item bind_pic_locally 2510Add the target-specific flags needed to enable functions to bind 2511locally when using pic/PIC passes in the testsuite. 2512 2513@item c99_runtime 2514Add the target-specific flags needed to access the C99 runtime. 2515 2516@item float@var{n} 2517Add the target-specific flags needed to use the @code{_Float@var{n}} type. 2518 2519@item float@var{n}x 2520Add the target-specific flags needed to use the @code{_Float@var{n}x} type. 2521 2522@item ieee 2523Add the target-specific flags needed to enable full IEEE 2524compliance mode. 2525 2526@item mips16_attribute 2527@code{mips16} function attributes. 2528Only MIPS targets support this feature, and only then in certain modes. 2529 2530@item stack_size 2531@anchor{stack_size_ao} 2532Add the flags needed to define macro STACK_SIZE and set it to the stack size 2533limit associated with the @ref{stack_size_et,,@code{stack_size} effective 2534target}. 2535 2536@item sqrt_insn 2537Add the target-specific flags needed to enable hardware square root 2538instructions, if any. 2539 2540@item tls 2541Add the target-specific flags needed to use thread-local storage. 2542@end table 2543 2544@node Require Support 2545@subsection Variants of @code{dg-require-@var{support}} 2546 2547A few of the @code{dg-require} directives take arguments. 2548 2549@table @code 2550@item dg-require-iconv @var{codeset} 2551Skip the test if the target does not support iconv. @var{codeset} is 2552the codeset to convert to. 2553 2554@item dg-require-profiling @var{profopt} 2555Skip the test if the target does not support profiling with option 2556@var{profopt}. 2557 2558@item dg-require-stack-check @var{check} 2559Skip the test if the target does not support the @code{-fstack-check} 2560option. If @var{check} is @code{""}, support for @code{-fstack-check} 2561is checked, for @code{-fstack-check=("@var{check}")} otherwise. 2562 2563@item dg-require-stack-size @var{size} 2564Skip the test if the target does not support a stack size of @var{size}. 2565 2566@item dg-require-visibility @var{vis} 2567Skip the test if the target does not support the @code{visibility} attribute. 2568If @var{vis} is @code{""}, support for @code{visibility("hidden")} is 2569checked, for @code{visibility("@var{vis}")} otherwise. 2570@end table 2571 2572The original @code{dg-require} directives were defined before there 2573was support for effective-target keywords. The directives that do not 2574take arguments could be replaced with effective-target keywords. 2575 2576@table @code 2577@item dg-require-alias "" 2578Skip the test if the target does not support the @samp{alias} attribute. 2579 2580@item dg-require-ascii-locale "" 2581Skip the test if the host does not support an ASCII locale. 2582 2583@item dg-require-compat-dfp "" 2584Skip this test unless both compilers in a @file{compat} testsuite 2585support decimal floating point. 2586 2587@item dg-require-cxa-atexit "" 2588Skip the test if the target does not support @code{__cxa_atexit}. 2589This is equivalent to @code{dg-require-effective-target cxa_atexit}. 2590 2591@item dg-require-dll "" 2592Skip the test if the target does not support DLL attributes. 2593 2594@item dg-require-fork "" 2595Skip the test if the target does not support @code{fork}. 2596 2597@item dg-require-gc-sections "" 2598Skip the test if the target's linker does not support the 2599@code{--gc-sections} flags. 2600This is equivalent to @code{dg-require-effective-target gc-sections}. 2601 2602@item dg-require-host-local "" 2603Skip the test if the host is remote, rather than the same as the build 2604system. Some tests are incompatible with DejaGnu's handling of remote 2605hosts, which involves copying the source file to the host and compiling 2606it with a relative path and "@code{-o a.out}". 2607 2608@item dg-require-mkfifo "" 2609Skip the test if the target does not support @code{mkfifo}. 2610 2611@item dg-require-named-sections "" 2612Skip the test is the target does not support named sections. 2613This is equivalent to @code{dg-require-effective-target named_sections}. 2614 2615@item dg-require-weak "" 2616Skip the test if the target does not support weak symbols. 2617 2618@item dg-require-weak-override "" 2619Skip the test if the target does not support overriding weak symbols. 2620@end table 2621 2622@node Final Actions 2623@subsection Commands for use in @code{dg-final} 2624 2625The GCC testsuite defines the following directives to be used within 2626@code{dg-final}. 2627 2628@subsubsection Scan a particular file 2629 2630@table @code 2631@item scan-file @var{filename} @var{regexp} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2632Passes if @var{regexp} matches text in @var{filename}. 2633@item scan-file-not @var{filename} @var{regexp} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2634Passes if @var{regexp} does not match text in @var{filename}. 2635@item scan-module @var{module} @var{regexp} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2636Passes if @var{regexp} matches in Fortran module @var{module}. 2637@end table 2638 2639@subsubsection Scan the assembly output 2640 2641@table @code 2642@item scan-assembler @var{regex} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2643Passes if @var{regex} matches text in the test's assembler output. 2644 2645@item scan-assembler-not @var{regex} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2646Passes if @var{regex} does not match text in the test's assembler output. 2647 2648@item scan-assembler-times @var{regex} @var{num} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2649Passes if @var{regex} is matched exactly @var{num} times in the test's 2650assembler output. 2651 2652@item scan-assembler-dem @var{regex} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2653Passes if @var{regex} matches text in the test's demangled assembler output. 2654 2655@item scan-assembler-dem-not @var{regex} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2656Passes if @var{regex} does not match text in the test's demangled assembler 2657output. 2658 2659@item scan-hidden @var{symbol} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2660Passes if @var{symbol} is defined as a hidden symbol in the test's 2661assembly output. 2662 2663@item scan-not-hidden @var{symbol} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2664Passes if @var{symbol} is not defined as a hidden symbol in the test's 2665assembly output. 2666@end table 2667 2668@subsubsection Scan optimization dump files 2669 2670These commands are available for @var{kind} of @code{tree}, @code{ltrans-tree}, 2671@code{offload-tree}, @code{rtl}, @code{offload-rtl}, @code{ipa}, and 2672@code{wpa-ipa}. 2673 2674@table @code 2675@item scan-@var{kind}-dump @var{regex} @var{suffix} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2676Passes if @var{regex} matches text in the dump file with suffix @var{suffix}. 2677 2678@item scan-@var{kind}-dump-not @var{regex} @var{suffix} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2679Passes if @var{regex} does not match text in the dump file with suffix 2680@var{suffix}. 2681 2682@item scan-@var{kind}-dump-times @var{regex} @var{num} @var{suffix} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2683Passes if @var{regex} is found exactly @var{num} times in the dump file 2684with suffix @var{suffix}. 2685 2686@item scan-@var{kind}-dump-dem @var{regex} @var{suffix} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2687Passes if @var{regex} matches demangled text in the dump file with 2688suffix @var{suffix}. 2689 2690@item scan-@var{kind}-dump-dem-not @var{regex} @var{suffix} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2691Passes if @var{regex} does not match demangled text in the dump file with 2692suffix @var{suffix}. 2693@end table 2694 2695@subsubsection Check for output files 2696 2697@table @code 2698@item output-exists [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2699Passes if compiler output file exists. 2700 2701@item output-exists-not [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2702Passes if compiler output file does not exist. 2703 2704@item scan-symbol @var{regexp} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2705Passes if the pattern is present in the final executable. 2706 2707@item scan-symbol-not @var{regexp} [@{ target/xfail @var{selector} @}] 2708Passes if the pattern is absent from the final executable. 2709@end table 2710 2711@subsubsection Checks for @command{gcov} tests 2712 2713@table @code 2714@item run-gcov @var{sourcefile} 2715Check line counts in @command{gcov} tests. 2716 2717@item run-gcov [branches] [calls] @{ @var{opts} @var{sourcefile} @} 2718Check branch and/or call counts, in addition to line counts, in 2719@command{gcov} tests. 2720@end table 2721 2722@subsubsection Clean up generated test files 2723 2724Usually the test-framework removes files that were generated during 2725testing. If a testcase, for example, uses any dumping mechanism to 2726inspect a passes dump file, the testsuite recognized the dump option 2727passed to the tool and schedules a final cleanup to remove these files. 2728 2729There are, however, following additional cleanup directives that can be 2730used to annotate a testcase "manually". 2731@table @code 2732@item cleanup-coverage-files 2733Removes coverage data files generated for this test. 2734 2735@item cleanup-modules "@var{list-of-extra-modules}" 2736Removes Fortran module files generated for this test, excluding the 2737module names listed in keep-modules. 2738Cleaning up module files is usually done automatically by the testsuite 2739by looking at the source files and removing the modules after the test 2740has been executed. 2741@smallexample 2742module MoD1 2743end module MoD1 2744module Mod2 2745end module Mod2 2746module moD3 2747end module moD3 2748module mod4 2749end module mod4 2750! @{ dg-final @{ cleanup-modules "mod1 mod2" @} @} ! redundant 2751! @{ dg-final @{ keep-modules "mod3 mod4" @} @} 2752@end smallexample 2753 2754@item keep-modules "@var{list-of-modules-not-to-delete}" 2755Whitespace separated list of module names that should not be deleted by 2756cleanup-modules. 2757If the list of modules is empty, all modules defined in this file are kept. 2758@smallexample 2759module maybe_unneeded 2760end module maybe_unneeded 2761module keep1 2762end module keep1 2763module keep2 2764end module keep2 2765! @{ dg-final @{ keep-modules "keep1 keep2" @} @} ! just keep these two 2766! @{ dg-final @{ keep-modules "" @} @} ! keep all 2767@end smallexample 2768 2769@item dg-keep-saved-temps "@var{list-of-suffixes-not-to-delete}" 2770Whitespace separated list of suffixes that should not be deleted 2771automatically in a testcase that uses @option{-save-temps}. 2772@smallexample 2773// @{ dg-options "-save-temps -fpch-preprocess -I." @} 2774int main() @{ return 0; @} 2775// @{ dg-keep-saved-temps ".s" @} ! just keep assembler file 2776// @{ dg-keep-saved-temps ".s" ".i" @} ! ... and .i 2777// @{ dg-keep-saved-temps ".ii" ".o" @} ! or just .ii and .o 2778@end smallexample 2779 2780@item cleanup-profile-file 2781Removes profiling files generated for this test. 2782 2783@item cleanup-repo-files 2784Removes files generated for this test for @option{-frepo}. 2785 2786@end table 2787 2788@node Ada Tests 2789@section Ada Language Testsuites 2790 2791The Ada testsuite includes executable tests from the ACATS 2792testsuite, publicly available at 2793@uref{http://www.ada-auth.org/acats.html}. 2794 2795These tests are integrated in the GCC testsuite in the 2796@file{ada/acats} directory, and 2797enabled automatically when running @code{make check}, assuming 2798the Ada language has been enabled when configuring GCC@. 2799 2800You can also run the Ada testsuite independently, using 2801@code{make check-ada}, or run a subset of the tests by specifying which 2802chapter to run, e.g.: 2803 2804@smallexample 2805$ make check-ada CHAPTERS="c3 c9" 2806@end smallexample 2807 2808The tests are organized by directory, each directory corresponding to 2809a chapter of the Ada Reference Manual. So for example, @file{c9} corresponds 2810to chapter 9, which deals with tasking features of the language. 2811 2812The tests are run using two @command{sh} scripts: @file{run_acats} and 2813@file{run_all.sh}. To run the tests using a simulator or a cross 2814target, see the small 2815customization section at the top of @file{run_all.sh}. 2816 2817These tests are run using the build tree: they can be run without doing 2818a @code{make install}. 2819 2820@node C Tests 2821@section C Language Testsuites 2822 2823GCC contains the following C language testsuites, in the 2824@file{gcc/testsuite} directory: 2825 2826@table @file 2827@item gcc.dg 2828This contains tests of particular features of the C compiler, using the 2829more modern @samp{dg} harness. Correctness tests for various compiler 2830features should go here if possible. 2831 2832Magic comments determine whether the file 2833is preprocessed, compiled, linked or run. In these tests, error and warning 2834message texts are compared against expected texts or regular expressions 2835given in comments. These tests are run with the options @samp{-ansi -pedantic} 2836unless other options are given in the test. Except as noted below they 2837are not run with multiple optimization options. 2838@item gcc.dg/compat 2839This subdirectory contains tests for binary compatibility using 2840@file{lib/compat.exp}, which in turn uses the language-independent support 2841(@pxref{compat Testing, , Support for testing binary compatibility}). 2842@item gcc.dg/cpp 2843This subdirectory contains tests of the preprocessor. 2844@item gcc.dg/debug 2845This subdirectory contains tests for debug formats. Tests in this 2846subdirectory are run for each debug format that the compiler supports. 2847@item gcc.dg/format 2848This subdirectory contains tests of the @option{-Wformat} format 2849checking. Tests in this directory are run with and without 2850@option{-DWIDE}. 2851@item gcc.dg/noncompile 2852This subdirectory contains tests of code that should not compile and 2853does not need any special compilation options. They are run with 2854multiple optimization options, since sometimes invalid code crashes 2855the compiler with optimization. 2856@item gcc.dg/special 2857FIXME: describe this. 2858 2859@item gcc.c-torture 2860This contains particular code fragments which have historically broken easily. 2861These tests are run with multiple optimization options, so tests for features 2862which only break at some optimization levels belong here. This also contains 2863tests to check that certain optimizations occur. It might be worthwhile to 2864separate the correctness tests cleanly from the code quality tests, but 2865it hasn't been done yet. 2866 2867@item gcc.c-torture/compat 2868FIXME: describe this. 2869 2870This directory should probably not be used for new tests. 2871@item gcc.c-torture/compile 2872This testsuite contains test cases that should compile, but do not 2873need to link or run. These test cases are compiled with several 2874different combinations of optimization options. All warnings are 2875disabled for these test cases, so this directory is not suitable if 2876you wish to test for the presence or absence of compiler warnings. 2877While special options can be set, and tests disabled on specific 2878platforms, by the use of @file{.x} files, mostly these test cases 2879should not contain platform dependencies. FIXME: discuss how defines 2880such as @code{STACK_SIZE} are used. 2881@item gcc.c-torture/execute 2882This testsuite contains test cases that should compile, link and run; 2883otherwise the same comments as for @file{gcc.c-torture/compile} apply. 2884@item gcc.c-torture/execute/ieee 2885This contains tests which are specific to IEEE floating point. 2886@item gcc.c-torture/unsorted 2887FIXME: describe this. 2888 2889This directory should probably not be used for new tests. 2890@item gcc.misc-tests 2891This directory contains C tests that require special handling. Some 2892of these tests have individual expect files, and others share 2893special-purpose expect files: 2894 2895@table @file 2896@item @code{bprob*.c} 2897Test @option{-fbranch-probabilities} using 2898@file{gcc.misc-tests/bprob.exp}, which 2899in turn uses the generic, language-independent framework 2900(@pxref{profopt Testing, , Support for testing profile-directed 2901optimizations}). 2902 2903@item @code{gcov*.c} 2904Test @command{gcov} output using @file{gcov.exp}, which in turn uses the 2905language-independent support (@pxref{gcov Testing, , Support for testing gcov}). 2906 2907@item @code{i386-pf-*.c} 2908Test i386-specific support for data prefetch using @file{i386-prefetch.exp}. 2909@end table 2910 2911@item gcc.test-framework 2912@table @file 2913@item @code{dg-*.c} 2914Test the testsuite itself using @file{gcc.test-framework/test-framework.exp}. 2915@end table 2916 2917@end table 2918 2919FIXME: merge in @file{testsuite/README.gcc} and discuss the format of 2920test cases and magic comments more. 2921 2922@node LTO Testing 2923@section Support for testing link-time optimizations 2924 2925Tests for link-time optimizations usually require multiple source files 2926that are compiled separately, perhaps with different sets of options. 2927There are several special-purpose test directives used for these tests. 2928 2929@table @code 2930@item @{ dg-lto-do @var{do-what-keyword} @} 2931@var{do-what-keyword} specifies how the test is compiled and whether 2932it is executed. It is one of: 2933 2934@table @code 2935@item assemble 2936Compile with @option{-c} to produce a relocatable object file. 2937@item link 2938Compile, assemble, and link to produce an executable file. 2939@item run 2940Produce and run an executable file, which is expected to return 2941an exit code of 0. 2942@end table 2943 2944The default is @code{assemble}. That can be overridden for a set of 2945tests by redefining @code{dg-do-what-default} within the @code{.exp} 2946file for those tests. 2947 2948Unlike @code{dg-do}, @code{dg-lto-do} does not support an optional 2949@samp{target} or @samp{xfail} list. Use @code{dg-skip-if}, 2950@code{dg-xfail-if}, or @code{dg-xfail-run-if}. 2951 2952@item @{ dg-lto-options @{ @{ @var{options} @} [@{ @var{options} @}] @} [@{ target @var{selector} @}]@} 2953This directive provides a list of one or more sets of compiler options 2954to override @var{LTO_OPTIONS}. Each test will be compiled and run with 2955each of these sets of options. 2956 2957@item @{ dg-extra-ld-options @var{options} [@{ target @var{selector} @}]@} 2958This directive adds @var{options} to the linker options used. 2959 2960@item @{ dg-suppress-ld-options @var{options} [@{ target @var{selector} @}]@} 2961This directive removes @var{options} from the set of linker options used. 2962@end table 2963 2964@node gcov Testing 2965@section Support for testing @command{gcov} 2966 2967Language-independent support for testing @command{gcov}, and for checking 2968that branch profiling produces expected values, is provided by the 2969expect file @file{lib/gcov.exp}. @command{gcov} tests also rely on procedures 2970in @file{lib/gcc-dg.exp} to compile and run the test program. A typical 2971@command{gcov} test contains the following DejaGnu commands within comments: 2972 2973@smallexample 2974@{ dg-options "--coverage" @} 2975@{ dg-do run @{ target native @} @} 2976@{ dg-final @{ run-gcov sourcefile @} @} 2977@end smallexample 2978 2979Checks of @command{gcov} output can include line counts, branch percentages, 2980and call return percentages. All of these checks are requested via 2981commands that appear in comments in the test's source file. 2982Commands to check line counts are processed by default. 2983Commands to check branch percentages and call return percentages are 2984processed if the @command{run-gcov} command has arguments @code{branches} 2985or @code{calls}, respectively. For example, the following specifies 2986checking both, as well as passing @option{-b} to @command{gcov}: 2987 2988@smallexample 2989@{ dg-final @{ run-gcov branches calls @{ -b sourcefile @} @} @} 2990@end smallexample 2991 2992A line count command appears within a comment on the source line 2993that is expected to get the specified count and has the form 2994@code{count(@var{cnt})}. A test should only check line counts for 2995lines that will get the same count for any architecture. 2996 2997Commands to check branch percentages (@code{branch}) and call 2998return percentages (@code{returns}) are very similar to each other. 2999A beginning command appears on or before the first of a range of 3000lines that will report the percentage, and the ending command 3001follows that range of lines. The beginning command can include a 3002list of percentages, all of which are expected to be found within 3003the range. A range is terminated by the next command of the same 3004kind. A command @code{branch(end)} or @code{returns(end)} marks 3005the end of a range without starting a new one. For example: 3006 3007@smallexample 3008if (i > 10 && j > i && j < 20) /* @r{branch(27 50 75)} */ 3009 /* @r{branch(end)} */ 3010 foo (i, j); 3011@end smallexample 3012 3013For a call return percentage, the value specified is the 3014percentage of calls reported to return. For a branch percentage, 3015the value is either the expected percentage or 100 minus that 3016value, since the direction of a branch can differ depending on the 3017target or the optimization level. 3018 3019Not all branches and calls need to be checked. A test should not 3020check for branches that might be optimized away or replaced with 3021predicated instructions. Don't check for calls inserted by the 3022compiler or ones that might be inlined or optimized away. 3023 3024A single test can check for combinations of line counts, branch 3025percentages, and call return percentages. The command to check a 3026line count must appear on the line that will report that count, but 3027commands to check branch percentages and call return percentages can 3028bracket the lines that report them. 3029 3030@node profopt Testing 3031@section Support for testing profile-directed optimizations 3032 3033The file @file{profopt.exp} provides language-independent support for 3034checking correct execution of a test built with profile-directed 3035optimization. This testing requires that a test program be built and 3036executed twice. The first time it is compiled to generate profile 3037data, and the second time it is compiled to use the data that was 3038generated during the first execution. The second execution is to 3039verify that the test produces the expected results. 3040 3041To check that the optimization actually generated better code, a 3042test can be built and run a third time with normal optimizations to 3043verify that the performance is better with the profile-directed 3044optimizations. @file{profopt.exp} has the beginnings of this kind 3045of support. 3046 3047@file{profopt.exp} provides generic support for profile-directed 3048optimizations. Each set of tests that uses it provides information 3049about a specific optimization: 3050 3051@table @code 3052@item tool 3053tool being tested, e.g., @command{gcc} 3054 3055@item profile_option 3056options used to generate profile data 3057 3058@item feedback_option 3059options used to optimize using that profile data 3060 3061@item prof_ext 3062suffix of profile data files 3063 3064@item PROFOPT_OPTIONS 3065list of options with which to run each test, similar to the lists for 3066torture tests 3067 3068@item @{ dg-final-generate @{ @var{local-directive} @} @} 3069This directive is similar to @code{dg-final}, but the 3070@var{local-directive} is run after the generation of profile data. 3071 3072@item @{ dg-final-use @{ @var{local-directive} @} @} 3073The @var{local-directive} is run after the profile data have been 3074used. 3075@end table 3076 3077@node compat Testing 3078@section Support for testing binary compatibility 3079 3080The file @file{compat.exp} provides language-independent support for 3081binary compatibility testing. It supports testing interoperability of 3082two compilers that follow the same ABI, or of multiple sets of 3083compiler options that should not affect binary compatibility. It is 3084intended to be used for testsuites that complement ABI testsuites. 3085 3086A test supported by this framework has three parts, each in a 3087separate source file: a main program and two pieces that interact 3088with each other to split up the functionality being tested. 3089 3090@table @file 3091@item @var{testname}_main.@var{suffix} 3092Contains the main program, which calls a function in file 3093@file{@var{testname}_x.@var{suffix}}. 3094 3095@item @var{testname}_x.@var{suffix} 3096Contains at least one call to a function in 3097@file{@var{testname}_y.@var{suffix}}. 3098 3099@item @var{testname}_y.@var{suffix} 3100Shares data with, or gets arguments from, 3101@file{@var{testname}_x.@var{suffix}}. 3102@end table 3103 3104Within each test, the main program and one functional piece are 3105compiled by the GCC under test. The other piece can be compiled by 3106an alternate compiler. If no alternate compiler is specified, 3107then all three source files are all compiled by the GCC under test. 3108You can specify pairs of sets of compiler options. The first element 3109of such a pair specifies options used with the GCC under test, and the 3110second element of the pair specifies options used with the alternate 3111compiler. Each test is compiled with each pair of options. 3112 3113@file{compat.exp} defines default pairs of compiler options. 3114These can be overridden by defining the environment variable 3115@env{COMPAT_OPTIONS} as: 3116 3117@smallexample 3118COMPAT_OPTIONS="[list [list @{@var{tst1}@} @{@var{alt1}@}] 3119 @dots{}[list @{@var{tstn}@} @{@var{altn}@}]]" 3120@end smallexample 3121 3122where @var{tsti} and @var{alti} are lists of options, with @var{tsti} 3123used by the compiler under test and @var{alti} used by the alternate 3124compiler. For example, with 3125@code{[list [list @{-g -O0@} @{-O3@}] [list @{-fpic@} @{-fPIC -O2@}]]}, 3126the test is first built with @option{-g -O0} by the compiler under 3127test and with @option{-O3} by the alternate compiler. The test is 3128built a second time using @option{-fpic} by the compiler under test 3129and @option{-fPIC -O2} by the alternate compiler. 3130 3131An alternate compiler is specified by defining an environment 3132variable to be the full pathname of an installed compiler; for C 3133define @env{ALT_CC_UNDER_TEST}, and for C++ define 3134@env{ALT_CXX_UNDER_TEST}. These will be written to the 3135@file{site.exp} file used by DejaGnu. The default is to build each 3136test with the compiler under test using the first of each pair of 3137compiler options from @env{COMPAT_OPTIONS}. When 3138@env{ALT_CC_UNDER_TEST} or 3139@env{ALT_CXX_UNDER_TEST} is @code{same}, each test is built using 3140the compiler under test but with combinations of the options from 3141@env{COMPAT_OPTIONS}. 3142 3143To run only the C++ compatibility suite using the compiler under test 3144and another version of GCC using specific compiler options, do the 3145following from @file{@var{objdir}/gcc}: 3146 3147@smallexample 3148rm site.exp 3149make -k \ 3150 ALT_CXX_UNDER_TEST=$@{alt_prefix@}/bin/g++ \ 3151 COMPAT_OPTIONS="@var{lists as shown above}" \ 3152 check-c++ \ 3153 RUNTESTFLAGS="compat.exp" 3154@end smallexample 3155 3156A test that fails when the source files are compiled with different 3157compilers, but passes when the files are compiled with the same 3158compiler, demonstrates incompatibility of the generated code or 3159runtime support. A test that fails for the alternate compiler but 3160passes for the compiler under test probably tests for a bug that was 3161fixed in the compiler under test but is present in the alternate 3162compiler. 3163 3164The binary compatibility tests support a small number of test framework 3165commands that appear within comments in a test file. 3166 3167@table @code 3168@item dg-require-* 3169These commands can be used in @file{@var{testname}_main.@var{suffix}} 3170to skip the test if specific support is not available on the target. 3171 3172@item dg-options 3173The specified options are used for compiling this particular source 3174file, appended to the options from @env{COMPAT_OPTIONS}. When this 3175command appears in @file{@var{testname}_main.@var{suffix}} the options 3176are also used to link the test program. 3177 3178@item dg-xfail-if 3179This command can be used in a secondary source file to specify that 3180compilation is expected to fail for particular options on particular 3181targets. 3182@end table 3183 3184@node Torture Tests 3185@section Support for torture testing using multiple options 3186 3187Throughout the compiler testsuite there are several directories whose 3188tests are run multiple times, each with a different set of options. 3189These are known as torture tests. 3190@file{lib/torture-options.exp} defines procedures to 3191set up these lists: 3192 3193@table @code 3194@item torture-init 3195Initialize use of torture lists. 3196@item set-torture-options 3197Set lists of torture options to use for tests with and without loops. 3198Optionally combine a set of torture options with a set of other 3199options, as is done with Objective-C runtime options. 3200@item torture-finish 3201Finalize use of torture lists. 3202@end table 3203 3204The @file{.exp} file for a set of tests that use torture options must 3205include calls to these three procedures if: 3206 3207@itemize @bullet 3208@item It calls @code{gcc-dg-runtest} and overrides @var{DG_TORTURE_OPTIONS}. 3209 3210@item It calls @var{$@{tool@}}@code{-torture} or 3211@var{$@{tool@}}@code{-torture-execute}, where @var{tool} is @code{c}, 3212@code{fortran}, or @code{objc}. 3213 3214@item It calls @code{dg-pch}. 3215@end itemize 3216 3217It is not necessary for a @file{.exp} file that calls @code{gcc-dg-runtest} 3218to call the torture procedures if the tests should use the list in 3219@var{DG_TORTURE_OPTIONS} defined in @file{gcc-dg.exp}. 3220 3221Most uses of torture options can override the default lists by defining 3222@var{TORTURE_OPTIONS} or add to the default list by defining 3223@var{ADDITIONAL_TORTURE_OPTIONS}. Define these in a @file{.dejagnurc} 3224file or add them to the @file{site.exp} file; for example 3225 3226@smallexample 3227set ADDITIONAL_TORTURE_OPTIONS [list \ 3228 @{ -O2 -ftree-loop-linear @} \ 3229 @{ -O2 -fpeel-loops @} ] 3230@end smallexample 3231 3232@node GIMPLE Tests 3233@section Support for testing GIMPLE passes 3234 3235As of gcc 7, C functions can be tagged with @code{__GIMPLE} to indicate 3236that the function body will be GIMPLE, rather than C. The compiler requires 3237the option @option{-fgimple} to enable this functionality. For example: 3238 3239@smallexample 3240/* @{ dg-do compile @} */ 3241/* @{ dg-options "-O -fgimple" @} */ 3242 3243void __GIMPLE (startwith ("dse2")) foo () 3244@{ 3245 int a; 3246 3247bb_2: 3248 if (a > 4) 3249 goto bb_3; 3250 else 3251 goto bb_4; 3252 3253bb_3: 3254 a_2 = 10; 3255 goto bb_5; 3256 3257bb_4: 3258 a_3 = 20; 3259 3260bb_5: 3261 a_1 = __PHI (bb_3: a_2, bb_4: a_3); 3262 a_4 = a_1 + 4; 3263 3264 return; 3265@} 3266@end smallexample 3267 3268The @code{startwith} argument indicates at which pass to begin. 3269 3270Use the dump modifier @code{-gimple} (e.g.@: @option{-fdump-tree-all-gimple}) 3271to make tree dumps more closely follow the format accepted by the GIMPLE 3272parser. 3273 3274Example DejaGnu tests of GIMPLE can be seen in the source tree at 3275@file{gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/gimplefe-*.c}. 3276 3277The @code{__GIMPLE} parser is integrated with the C tokenizer and 3278preprocessor, so it should be possible to use macros to build out 3279test coverage. 3280 3281@node RTL Tests 3282@section Support for testing RTL passes 3283 3284As of gcc 7, C functions can be tagged with @code{__RTL} to indicate that the 3285function body will be RTL, rather than C. For example: 3286 3287@smallexample 3288double __RTL (startwith ("ira")) test (struct foo *f, const struct bar *b) 3289@{ 3290 (function "test" 3291 [...snip; various directives go in here...] 3292 ) ;; function "test" 3293@} 3294@end smallexample 3295 3296The @code{startwith} argument indicates at which pass to begin. 3297 3298The parser expects the RTL body to be in the format emitted by this 3299dumping function: 3300 3301@smallexample 3302DEBUG_FUNCTION void 3303print_rtx_function (FILE *outfile, function *fn, bool compact); 3304@end smallexample 3305 3306when "compact" is true. So you can capture RTL in the correct format 3307from the debugger using: 3308 3309@smallexample 3310(gdb) print_rtx_function (stderr, cfun, true); 3311@end smallexample 3312 3313and copy and paste the output into the body of the C function. 3314 3315Example DejaGnu tests of RTL can be seen in the source tree under 3316@file{gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/rtl}. 3317 3318The @code{__RTL} parser is not integrated with the C tokenizer or 3319preprocessor, and works simply by reading the relevant lines within 3320the braces. In particular, the RTL body must be on separate lines from 3321the enclosing braces, and the preprocessor is not usable within it. 3322