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| <a name="Storage-Layout-1"></a> |
| <h3 class="section">17.5 Storage Layout</h3> |
| <a name="index-storage-layout"></a> |
| |
| <p>Note that the definitions of the macros in this table which are sizes or |
| alignments measured in bits do not need to be constant. They can be C |
| expressions that refer to static variables, such as the <code>target_flags</code>. |
| See <a href="Run_002dtime-Target.html#Run_002dtime-Target">Run-time Target</a>. |
| </p> |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-BITS_005fBIG_005fENDIAN"></a>Macro: <strong>BITS_BIG_ENDIAN</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro to have the value 1 if the most significant bit in a |
| byte has the lowest number; otherwise define it to have the value zero. |
| This means that bit-field instructions count from the most significant |
| bit. If the machine has no bit-field instructions, then this must still |
| be defined, but it doesn’t matter which value it is defined to. This |
| macro need not be a constant. |
| </p> |
| <p>This macro does not affect the way structure fields are packed into |
| bytes or words; that is controlled by <code>BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-BYTES_005fBIG_005fENDIAN"></a>Macro: <strong>BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro to have the value 1 if the most significant byte in a |
| word has the lowest number. This macro need not be a constant. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-WORDS_005fBIG_005fENDIAN"></a>Macro: <strong>WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro to have the value 1 if, in a multiword object, the |
| most significant word has the lowest number. This applies to both |
| memory locations and registers; see <code>REG_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN</code> if the |
| order of words in memory is not the same as the order in registers. This |
| macro need not be a constant. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-REG_005fWORDS_005fBIG_005fENDIAN"></a>Macro: <strong>REG_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>On some machines, the order of words in a multiword object differs between |
| registers in memory. In such a situation, define this macro to describe |
| the order of words in a register. The macro <code>WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN</code> controls |
| the order of words in memory. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-FLOAT_005fWORDS_005fBIG_005fENDIAN"></a>Macro: <strong>FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro to have the value 1 if <code>DFmode</code>, <code>XFmode</code> or |
| <code>TFmode</code> floating point numbers are stored in memory with the word |
| containing the sign bit at the lowest address; otherwise define it to |
| have the value 0. This macro need not be a constant. |
| </p> |
| <p>You need not define this macro if the ordering is the same as for |
| multi-word integers. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-BITS_005fPER_005fWORD"></a>Macro: <strong>BITS_PER_WORD</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Number of bits in a word. If you do not define this macro, the default |
| is <code>BITS_PER_UNIT * UNITS_PER_WORD</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MAX_005fBITS_005fPER_005fWORD"></a>Macro: <strong>MAX_BITS_PER_WORD</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Maximum number of bits in a word. If this is undefined, the default is |
| <code>BITS_PER_WORD</code>. Otherwise, it is the constant value that is the |
| largest value that <code>BITS_PER_WORD</code> can have at run-time. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-UNITS_005fPER_005fWORD"></a>Macro: <strong>UNITS_PER_WORD</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Number of storage units in a word; normally the size of a general-purpose |
| register, a power of two from 1 or 8. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MIN_005fUNITS_005fPER_005fWORD"></a>Macro: <strong>MIN_UNITS_PER_WORD</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Minimum number of units in a word. If this is undefined, the default is |
| <code>UNITS_PER_WORD</code>. Otherwise, it is the constant value that is the |
| smallest value that <code>UNITS_PER_WORD</code> can have at run-time. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-POINTER_005fSIZE"></a>Macro: <strong>POINTER_SIZE</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Width of a pointer, in bits. You must specify a value no wider than the |
| width of <code>Pmode</code>. If it is not equal to the width of <code>Pmode</code>, |
| you must define <code>POINTERS_EXTEND_UNSIGNED</code>. If you do not specify |
| a value the default is <code>BITS_PER_WORD</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-POINTERS_005fEXTEND_005fUNSIGNED"></a>Macro: <strong>POINTERS_EXTEND_UNSIGNED</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>A C expression that determines how pointers should be extended from |
| <code>ptr_mode</code> to either <code>Pmode</code> or <code>word_mode</code>. It is |
| greater than zero if pointers should be zero-extended, zero if they |
| should be sign-extended, and negative if some other sort of conversion |
| is needed. In the last case, the extension is done by the target’s |
| <code>ptr_extend</code> instruction. |
| </p> |
| <p>You need not define this macro if the <code>ptr_mode</code>, <code>Pmode</code> |
| and <code>word_mode</code> are all the same width. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-PROMOTE_005fMODE"></a>Macro: <strong>PROMOTE_MODE</strong> <em>(<var>m</var>, <var>unsignedp</var>, <var>type</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>A macro to update <var>m</var> and <var>unsignedp</var> when an object whose type |
| is <var>type</var> and which has the specified mode and signedness is to be |
| stored in a register. This macro is only called when <var>type</var> is a |
| scalar type. |
| </p> |
| <p>On most RISC machines, which only have operations that operate on a full |
| register, define this macro to set <var>m</var> to <code>word_mode</code> if |
| <var>m</var> is an integer mode narrower than <code>BITS_PER_WORD</code>. In most |
| cases, only integer modes should be widened because wider-precision |
| floating-point operations are usually more expensive than their narrower |
| counterparts. |
| </p> |
| <p>For most machines, the macro definition does not change <var>unsignedp</var>. |
| However, some machines, have instructions that preferentially handle |
| either signed or unsigned quantities of certain modes. For example, on |
| the DEC Alpha, 32-bit loads from memory and 32-bit add instructions |
| sign-extend the result to 64 bits. On such machines, set |
| <var>unsignedp</var> according to which kind of extension is more efficient. |
| </p> |
| <p>Do not define this macro if it would never modify <var>m</var>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fPROMOTE_005fFUNCTION_005fMODE"></a>Target Hook: <em>machine_mode</em> <strong>TARGET_PROMOTE_FUNCTION_MODE</strong> <em>(const_tree <var>type</var>, machine_mode <var>mode</var>, int *<var>punsignedp</var>, const_tree <var>funtype</var>, int <var>for_return</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Like <code>PROMOTE_MODE</code>, but it is applied to outgoing function arguments or |
| function return values. The target hook should return the new mode |
| and possibly change <code>*<var>punsignedp</var></code> if the promotion should |
| change signedness. This function is called only for scalar <em>or |
| pointer</em> types. |
| </p> |
| <p><var>for_return</var> allows to distinguish the promotion of arguments and |
| return values. If it is <code>1</code>, a return value is being promoted and |
| <code>TARGET_FUNCTION_VALUE</code> must perform the same promotions done here. |
| If it is <code>2</code>, the returned mode should be that of the register in |
| which an incoming parameter is copied, or the outgoing result is computed; |
| then the hook should return the same mode as <code>promote_mode</code>, though |
| the signedness may be different. |
| </p> |
| <p><var>type</var> can be NULL when promoting function arguments of libcalls. |
| </p> |
| <p>The default is to not promote arguments and return values. You can |
| also define the hook to <code>default_promote_function_mode_always_promote</code> |
| if you would like to apply the same rules given by <code>PROMOTE_MODE</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-PARM_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>PARM_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Normal alignment required for function parameters on the stack, in |
| bits. All stack parameters receive at least this much alignment |
| regardless of data type. On most machines, this is the same as the |
| size of an integer. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-STACK_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>STACK_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro to the minimum alignment enforced by hardware for the |
| stack pointer on this machine. The definition is a C expression for the |
| desired alignment (measured in bits). This value is used as a default |
| if <code>PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY</code> is not defined. On most machines, |
| this should be the same as <code>PARM_BOUNDARY</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-PREFERRED_005fSTACK_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro if you wish to preserve a certain alignment for the |
| stack pointer, greater than what the hardware enforces. The definition |
| is a C expression for the desired alignment (measured in bits). This |
| macro must evaluate to a value equal to or larger than |
| <code>STACK_BOUNDARY</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-INCOMING_005fSTACK_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>INCOMING_STACK_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro if the incoming stack boundary may be different |
| from <code>PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY</code>. This macro must evaluate |
| to a value equal to or larger than <code>STACK_BOUNDARY</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-FUNCTION_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>FUNCTION_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Alignment required for a function entry point, in bits. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-BIGGEST_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Biggest alignment that any data type can require on this machine, in |
| bits. Note that this is not the biggest alignment that is supported, |
| just the biggest alignment that, when violated, may cause a fault. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fABSOLUTE_005fBIGGEST_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Target Hook: <em>HOST_WIDE_INT</em> <strong>TARGET_ABSOLUTE_BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, this target hook specifies the absolute biggest alignment |
| that a type or variable can have on this machine, otherwise, |
| <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code> is used. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MALLOC_005fABI_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>MALLOC_ABI_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Alignment, in bits, a C conformant malloc implementation has to |
| provide. If not defined, the default value is <code>BITS_PER_WORD</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-ATTRIBUTE_005fALIGNED_005fVALUE"></a>Macro: <strong>ATTRIBUTE_ALIGNED_VALUE</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Alignment used by the <code>__attribute__ ((aligned))</code> construct. If |
| not defined, the default value is <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MINIMUM_005fATOMIC_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>MINIMUM_ATOMIC_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, the smallest alignment, in bits, that can be given to an |
| object that can be referenced in one operation, without disturbing any |
| nearby object. Normally, this is <code>BITS_PER_UNIT</code>, but may be larger |
| on machines that don’t have byte or half-word store operations. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-BIGGEST_005fFIELD_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>BIGGEST_FIELD_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Biggest alignment that any structure or union field can require on this |
| machine, in bits. If defined, this overrides <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code> for |
| structure and union fields only, unless the field alignment has been set |
| by the <code>__attribute__ ((aligned (<var>n</var>)))</code> construct. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-ADJUST_005fFIELD_005fALIGN"></a>Macro: <strong>ADJUST_FIELD_ALIGN</strong> <em>(<var>field</var>, <var>computed</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>An expression for the alignment of a structure field <var>field</var> if the |
| alignment computed in the usual way (including applying of |
| <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code> and <code>BIGGEST_FIELD_ALIGNMENT</code> to the |
| alignment) is <var>computed</var>. It overrides alignment only if the |
| field alignment has not been set by the |
| <code>__attribute__ ((aligned (<var>n</var>)))</code> construct. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MAX_005fSTACK_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Biggest stack alignment guaranteed by the backend. Use this macro |
| to specify the maximum alignment of a variable on stack. |
| </p> |
| <p>If not defined, the default value is <code>STACK_BOUNDARY</code>. |
| </p> |
| </dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MAX_005fOFILE_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>MAX_OFILE_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Biggest alignment supported by the object file format of this machine. |
| Use this macro to limit the alignment which can be specified using the |
| <code>__attribute__ ((aligned (<var>n</var>)))</code> construct. If not defined, |
| the default value is <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code>. |
| </p> |
| <p>On systems that use ELF, the default (in <samp>config/elfos.h</samp>) is |
| the largest supported 32-bit ELF section alignment representable on |
| a 32-bit host e.g. ‘<samp>(((uint64_t) 1 << 28) * 8)</samp>’. |
| On 32-bit ELF the largest supported section alignment in bits is |
| ‘<samp>(0x80000000 * 8)</samp>’, but this is not representable on 32-bit hosts. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-DATA_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>DATA_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>type</var>, <var>basic-align</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, a C expression to compute the alignment for a variable in |
| the static store. <var>type</var> is the data type, and <var>basic-align</var> is |
| the alignment that the object would ordinarily have. The value of this |
| macro is used instead of that alignment to align the object. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then <var>basic-align</var> is used. |
| </p> |
| <a name="index-strcpy"></a> |
| <p>One use of this macro is to increase alignment of medium-size data to |
| make it all fit in fewer cache lines. Another is to cause character |
| arrays to be word-aligned so that <code>strcpy</code> calls that copy |
| constants to character arrays can be done inline. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-DATA_005fABI_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>DATA_ABI_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>type</var>, <var>basic-align</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Similar to <code>DATA_ALIGNMENT</code>, but for the cases where the ABI mandates |
| some alignment increase, instead of optimization only purposes. E.g. AMD x86-64 psABI says that variables with array type larger than 15 bytes |
| must be aligned to 16 byte boundaries. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then <var>basic-align</var> is used. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-CONSTANT_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>CONSTANT_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>constant</var>, <var>basic-align</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, a C expression to compute the alignment given to a constant |
| that is being placed in memory. <var>constant</var> is the constant and |
| <var>basic-align</var> is the alignment that the object would ordinarily |
| have. The value of this macro is used instead of that alignment to |
| align the object. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then <var>basic-align</var> is used. |
| </p> |
| <p>The typical use of this macro is to increase alignment for string |
| constants to be word aligned so that <code>strcpy</code> calls that copy |
| constants can be done inline. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-LOCAL_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>LOCAL_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>type</var>, <var>basic-align</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, a C expression to compute the alignment for a variable in |
| the local store. <var>type</var> is the data type, and <var>basic-align</var> is |
| the alignment that the object would ordinarily have. The value of this |
| macro is used instead of that alignment to align the object. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then <var>basic-align</var> is used. |
| </p> |
| <p>One use of this macro is to increase alignment of medium-size data to |
| make it all fit in fewer cache lines. |
| </p> |
| <p>If the value of this macro has a type, it should be an unsigned type. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fVECTOR_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Target Hook: <em>HOST_WIDE_INT</em> <strong>TARGET_VECTOR_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(const_tree <var>type</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This hook can be used to define the alignment for a vector of type |
| <var>type</var>, in order to comply with a platform ABI. The default is to |
| require natural alignment for vector types. The alignment returned by |
| this hook must be a power-of-two multiple of the default alignment of |
| the vector element type. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-STACK_005fSLOT_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>STACK_SLOT_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>type</var>, <var>mode</var>, <var>basic-align</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, a C expression to compute the alignment for stack slot. |
| <var>type</var> is the data type, <var>mode</var> is the widest mode available, |
| and <var>basic-align</var> is the alignment that the slot would ordinarily |
| have. The value of this macro is used instead of that alignment to |
| align the slot. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then <var>basic-align</var> is used when |
| <var>type</var> is <code>NULL</code>. Otherwise, <code>LOCAL_ALIGNMENT</code> will |
| be used. |
| </p> |
| <p>This macro is to set alignment of stack slot to the maximum alignment |
| of all possible modes which the slot may have. |
| </p> |
| <p>If the value of this macro has a type, it should be an unsigned type. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-LOCAL_005fDECL_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>LOCAL_DECL_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>decl</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, a C expression to compute the alignment for a local |
| variable <var>decl</var>. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then |
| <code>LOCAL_ALIGNMENT (TREE_TYPE (<var>decl</var>), DECL_ALIGN (<var>decl</var>))</code> |
| is used. |
| </p> |
| <p>One use of this macro is to increase alignment of medium-size data to |
| make it all fit in fewer cache lines. |
| </p> |
| <p>If the value of this macro has a type, it should be an unsigned type. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MINIMUM_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>MINIMUM_ALIGNMENT</strong> <em>(<var>exp</var>, <var>mode</var>, <var>align</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, a C expression to compute the minimum required alignment |
| for dynamic stack realignment purposes for <var>exp</var> (a type or decl), |
| <var>mode</var>, assuming normal alignment <var>align</var>. |
| </p> |
| <p>If this macro is not defined, then <var>align</var> will be used. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-EMPTY_005fFIELD_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>EMPTY_FIELD_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Alignment in bits to be given to a structure bit-field that follows an |
| empty field such as <code>int : 0;</code>. |
| </p> |
| <p>If <code>PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS</code> is true, it overrides this macro. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-STRUCTURE_005fSIZE_005fBOUNDARY"></a>Macro: <strong>STRUCTURE_SIZE_BOUNDARY</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Number of bits which any structure or union’s size must be a multiple of. |
| Each structure or union’s size is rounded up to a multiple of this. |
| </p> |
| <p>If you do not define this macro, the default is the same as |
| <code>BITS_PER_UNIT</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-STRICT_005fALIGNMENT"></a>Macro: <strong>STRICT_ALIGNMENT</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro to be the value 1 if instructions will fail to work |
| if given data not on the nominal alignment. If instructions will merely |
| go slower in that case, define this macro as 0. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-PCC_005fBITFIELD_005fTYPE_005fMATTERS"></a>Macro: <strong>PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this if you wish to imitate the way many other C compilers handle |
| alignment of bit-fields and the structures that contain them. |
| </p> |
| <p>The behavior is that the type written for a named bit-field (<code>int</code>, |
| <code>short</code>, or other integer type) imposes an alignment for the entire |
| structure, as if the structure really did contain an ordinary field of |
| that type. In addition, the bit-field is placed within the structure so |
| that it would fit within such a field, not crossing a boundary for it. |
| </p> |
| <p>Thus, on most machines, a named bit-field whose type is written as |
| <code>int</code> would not cross a four-byte boundary, and would force |
| four-byte alignment for the whole structure. (The alignment used may |
| not be four bytes; it is controlled by the other alignment parameters.) |
| </p> |
| <p>An unnamed bit-field will not affect the alignment of the containing |
| structure. |
| </p> |
| <p>If the macro is defined, its definition should be a C expression; |
| a nonzero value for the expression enables this behavior. |
| </p> |
| <p>Note that if this macro is not defined, or its value is zero, some |
| bit-fields may cross more than one alignment boundary. The compiler can |
| support such references if there are ‘<samp>insv</samp>’, ‘<samp>extv</samp>’, and |
| ‘<samp>extzv</samp>’ insns that can directly reference memory. |
| </p> |
| <p>The other known way of making bit-fields work is to define |
| <code>STRUCTURE_SIZE_BOUNDARY</code> as large as <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code>. |
| Then every structure can be accessed with fullwords. |
| </p> |
| <p>Unless the machine has bit-field instructions or you define |
| <code>STRUCTURE_SIZE_BOUNDARY</code> that way, you must define |
| <code>PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS</code> to have a nonzero value. |
| </p> |
| <p>If your aim is to make GCC use the same conventions for laying out |
| bit-fields as are used by another compiler, here is how to investigate |
| what the other compiler does. Compile and run this program: |
| </p> |
| <div class="smallexample"> |
| <pre class="smallexample">struct foo1 |
| { |
| char x; |
| char :0; |
| char y; |
| }; |
| |
| struct foo2 |
| { |
| char x; |
| int :0; |
| char y; |
| }; |
| |
| main () |
| { |
| printf ("Size of foo1 is %d\n", |
| sizeof (struct foo1)); |
| printf ("Size of foo2 is %d\n", |
| sizeof (struct foo2)); |
| exit (0); |
| } |
| </pre></div> |
| |
| <p>If this prints 2 and 5, then the compiler’s behavior is what you would |
| get from <code>PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-BITFIELD_005fNBYTES_005fLIMITED"></a>Macro: <strong>BITFIELD_NBYTES_LIMITED</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>Like <code>PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS</code> except that its effect is limited |
| to aligning a bit-field within the structure. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fALIGN_005fANON_005fBITFIELD"></a>Target Hook: <em>bool</em> <strong>TARGET_ALIGN_ANON_BITFIELD</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>When <code>PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS</code> is true this hook will determine |
| whether unnamed bitfields affect the alignment of the containing |
| structure. The hook should return true if the structure should inherit |
| the alignment requirements of an unnamed bitfield’s type. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fNARROW_005fVOLATILE_005fBITFIELD"></a>Target Hook: <em>bool</em> <strong>TARGET_NARROW_VOLATILE_BITFIELD</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This target hook should return <code>true</code> if accesses to volatile bitfields |
| should use the narrowest mode possible. It should return <code>false</code> if |
| these accesses should use the bitfield container type. |
| </p> |
| <p>The default is <code>false</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fMEMBER_005fTYPE_005fFORCES_005fBLK"></a>Target Hook: <em>bool</em> <strong>TARGET_MEMBER_TYPE_FORCES_BLK</strong> <em>(const_tree <var>field</var>, machine_mode <var>mode</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Return true if a structure, union or array containing <var>field</var> should |
| be accessed using <code>BLKMODE</code>. |
| </p> |
| <p>If <var>field</var> is the only field in the structure, <var>mode</var> is its |
| mode, otherwise <var>mode</var> is VOIDmode. <var>mode</var> is provided in the |
| case where structures of one field would require the structure’s mode to |
| retain the field’s mode. |
| </p> |
| <p>Normally, this is not needed. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-ROUND_005fTYPE_005fALIGN"></a>Macro: <strong>ROUND_TYPE_ALIGN</strong> <em>(<var>type</var>, <var>computed</var>, <var>specified</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Define this macro as an expression for the alignment of a type (given |
| by <var>type</var> as a tree node) if the alignment computed in the usual |
| way is <var>computed</var> and the alignment explicitly specified was |
| <var>specified</var>. |
| </p> |
| <p>The default is to use <var>specified</var> if it is larger; otherwise, use |
| the smaller of <var>computed</var> and <code>BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT</code> |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-MAX_005fFIXED_005fMODE_005fSIZE"></a>Macro: <strong>MAX_FIXED_MODE_SIZE</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>An integer expression for the size in bits of the largest integer |
| machine mode that should actually be used. All integer machine modes of |
| this size or smaller can be used for structures and unions with the |
| appropriate sizes. If this macro is undefined, <code>GET_MODE_BITSIZE |
| (DImode)</code> is assumed. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-STACK_005fSAVEAREA_005fMODE"></a>Macro: <strong>STACK_SAVEAREA_MODE</strong> <em>(<var>save_level</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, an expression of type <code>machine_mode</code> that |
| specifies the mode of the save area operand of a |
| <code>save_stack_<var>level</var></code> named pattern (see <a href="Standard-Names.html#Standard-Names">Standard Names</a>). |
| <var>save_level</var> is one of <code>SAVE_BLOCK</code>, <code>SAVE_FUNCTION</code>, or |
| <code>SAVE_NONLOCAL</code> and selects which of the three named patterns is |
| having its mode specified. |
| </p> |
| <p>You need not define this macro if it always returns <code>Pmode</code>. You |
| would most commonly define this macro if the |
| <code>save_stack_<var>level</var></code> patterns need to support both a 32- and a |
| 64-bit mode. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-STACK_005fSIZE_005fMODE"></a>Macro: <strong>STACK_SIZE_MODE</strong></dt> |
| <dd><p>If defined, an expression of type <code>machine_mode</code> that |
| specifies the mode of the size increment operand of an |
| <code>allocate_stack</code> named pattern (see <a href="Standard-Names.html#Standard-Names">Standard Names</a>). |
| </p> |
| <p>You need not define this macro if it always returns <code>word_mode</code>. |
| You would most commonly define this macro if the <code>allocate_stack</code> |
| pattern needs to support both a 32- and a 64-bit mode. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fLIBGCC_005fCMP_005fRETURN_005fMODE"></a>Target Hook: <em>machine_mode</em> <strong>TARGET_LIBGCC_CMP_RETURN_MODE</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This target hook should return the mode to be used for the return value |
| of compare instructions expanded to libgcc calls. If not defined |
| <code>word_mode</code> is returned which is the right choice for a majority of |
| targets. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fLIBGCC_005fSHIFT_005fCOUNT_005fMODE"></a>Target Hook: <em>machine_mode</em> <strong>TARGET_LIBGCC_SHIFT_COUNT_MODE</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This target hook should return the mode to be used for the shift count operand |
| of shift instructions expanded to libgcc calls. If not defined |
| <code>word_mode</code> is returned which is the right choice for a majority of |
| targets. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fUNWIND_005fWORD_005fMODE"></a>Target Hook: <em>machine_mode</em> <strong>TARGET_UNWIND_WORD_MODE</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Return machine mode to be used for <code>_Unwind_Word</code> type. |
| The default is to use <code>word_mode</code>. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fMS_005fBITFIELD_005fLAYOUT_005fP"></a>Target Hook: <em>bool</em> <strong>TARGET_MS_BITFIELD_LAYOUT_P</strong> <em>(const_tree <var>record_type</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This target hook returns <code>true</code> if bit-fields in the given |
| <var>record_type</var> are to be laid out following the rules of Microsoft |
| Visual C/C++, namely: (i) a bit-field won’t share the same storage |
| unit with the previous bit-field if their underlying types have |
| different sizes, and the bit-field will be aligned to the highest |
| alignment of the underlying types of itself and of the previous |
| bit-field; (ii) a zero-sized bit-field will affect the alignment of |
| the whole enclosing structure, even if it is unnamed; except that |
| (iii) a zero-sized bit-field will be disregarded unless it follows |
| another bit-field of nonzero size. If this hook returns <code>true</code>, |
| other macros that control bit-field layout are ignored. |
| </p> |
| <p>When a bit-field is inserted into a packed record, the whole size |
| of the underlying type is used by one or more same-size adjacent |
| bit-fields (that is, if its long:3, 32 bits is used in the record, |
| and any additional adjacent long bit-fields are packed into the same |
| chunk of 32 bits. However, if the size changes, a new field of that |
| size is allocated). In an unpacked record, this is the same as using |
| alignment, but not equivalent when packing. |
| </p> |
| <p>If both MS bit-fields and ‘<samp>__attribute__((packed))</samp>’ are used, |
| the latter will take precedence. If ‘<samp>__attribute__((packed))</samp>’ is |
| used on a single field when MS bit-fields are in use, it will take |
| precedence for that field, but the alignment of the rest of the structure |
| may affect its placement. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fDECIMAL_005fFLOAT_005fSUPPORTED_005fP"></a>Target Hook: <em>bool</em> <strong>TARGET_DECIMAL_FLOAT_SUPPORTED_P</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Returns true if the target supports decimal floating point. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fFIXED_005fPOINT_005fSUPPORTED_005fP"></a>Target Hook: <em>bool</em> <strong>TARGET_FIXED_POINT_SUPPORTED_P</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>Returns true if the target supports fixed-point arithmetic. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fEXPAND_005fTO_005fRTL_005fHOOK"></a>Target Hook: <em>void</em> <strong>TARGET_EXPAND_TO_RTL_HOOK</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This hook is called just before expansion into rtl, allowing the target |
| to perform additional initializations or analysis before the expansion. |
| For example, the rs6000 port uses it to allocate a scratch stack slot |
| for use in copying SDmode values between memory and floating point |
| registers whenever the function being expanded has any SDmode |
| usage. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fINSTANTIATE_005fDECLS"></a>Target Hook: <em>void</em> <strong>TARGET_INSTANTIATE_DECLS</strong> <em>(void)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>This hook allows the backend to perform additional instantiations on rtl |
| that are not actually in any insns yet, but will be later. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <dl> |
| <dt><a name="index-TARGET_005fMANGLE_005fTYPE"></a>Target Hook: <em>const char *</em> <strong>TARGET_MANGLE_TYPE</strong> <em>(const_tree <var>type</var>)</em></dt> |
| <dd><p>If your target defines any fundamental types, or any types your target |
| uses should be mangled differently from the default, define this hook |
| to return the appropriate encoding for these types as part of a C++ |
| mangled name. The <var>type</var> argument is the tree structure representing |
| the type to be mangled. The hook may be applied to trees which are |
| not target-specific fundamental types; it should return <code>NULL</code> |
| for all such types, as well as arguments it does not recognize. If the |
| return value is not <code>NULL</code>, it must point to a statically-allocated |
| string constant. |
| </p> |
| <p>Target-specific fundamental types might be new fundamental types or |
| qualified versions of ordinary fundamental types. Encode new |
| fundamental types as ‘<samp>u <var>n</var> <var>name</var><!-- /@w --></samp>’, where <var>name</var> |
| is the name used for the type in source code, and <var>n</var> is the |
| length of <var>name</var> in decimal. Encode qualified versions of |
| ordinary types as ‘<samp>U <var>n</var> <var>name</var> <var>code</var><!-- /@w --></samp>’, where |
| <var>name</var> is the name used for the type qualifier in source code, |
| <var>n</var> is the length of <var>name</var> as above, and <var>code</var> is the |
| code used to represent the unqualified version of this type. (See |
| <code>write_builtin_type</code> in <samp>cp/mangle.c</samp> for the list of |
| codes.) In both cases the spaces are for clarity; do not include any |
| spaces in your string. |
| </p> |
| <p>This hook is applied to types prior to typedef resolution. If the mangled |
| name for a particular type depends only on that type’s main variant, you |
| can perform typedef resolution yourself using <code>TYPE_MAIN_VARIANT</code> |
| before mangling. |
| </p> |
| <p>The default version of this hook always returns <code>NULL</code>, which is |
| appropriate for a target that does not define any new fundamental |
| types. |
| </p></dd></dl> |
| |
| <hr> |
| <div class="header"> |
| <p> |
| Next: <a href="Type-Layout.html#Type-Layout" accesskey="n" rel="next">Type Layout</a>, Previous: <a href="Per_002dFunction-Data.html#Per_002dFunction-Data" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Per-Function Data</a>, Up: <a href="Target-Macros.html#Target-Macros" accesskey="u" rel="up">Target Macros</a> [<a href="index.html#SEC_Contents" title="Table of contents" rel="contents">Contents</a>][<a href="Option-Index.html#Option-Index" title="Index" rel="index">Index</a>]</p> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| |
| </body> |
| </html> |