GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) Internals: Target Attributes |
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__attribute__
Target-specific attributes may be defined for functions, data and types. These are described using the following target hooks; they also need to be documented in extend.texi.
If defined, this target hook points to an array of ‘struct attribute_spec’ (defined in tree-core.h) specifying the machine specific attributes for this target and some of the restrictions on the entities to which these attributes are applied and the arguments they take.
If defined, this target hook is a function which returns true if the machine-specific attribute named name expects an identifier given as its first argument to be passed on as a plain identifier, not subjected to name lookup. If this is not defined, the default is false for all machine-specific attributes.
If defined, this target hook is a function which returns zero if the attributes on type1 and type2 are incompatible, one if they are compatible, and two if they are nearly compatible (which causes a warning to be generated). If this is not defined, machine-specific attributes are supposed always to be compatible.
If defined, this target hook is a function which assigns default attributes to the newly defined type.
Define this target hook if the merging of type attributes needs special
handling. If defined, the result is a list of the combined
TYPE_ATTRIBUTES
of type1 and type2. It is assumed
that comptypes
has already been called and returned 1. This
function may call merge_attributes
to handle machine-independent
merging.
Define this target hook if the merging of decl attributes needs special
handling. If defined, the result is a list of the combined
DECL_ATTRIBUTES
of olddecl and newdecl.
newdecl is a duplicate declaration of olddecl. Examples of
when this is needed are when one attribute overrides another, or when an
attribute is nullified by a subsequent definition. This function may
call merge_attributes
to handle machine-independent merging.
If the only target-specific handling you require is ‘dllimport’
for Microsoft Windows targets, you should define the macro
TARGET_DLLIMPORT_DECL_ATTRIBUTES
to 1
. The compiler
will then define a function called
merge_dllimport_decl_attributes
which can then be defined as
the expansion of TARGET_MERGE_DECL_ATTRIBUTES
. You can also
add handle_dll_attribute
in the attribute table for your port
to perform initial processing of the ‘dllimport’ and
‘dllexport’ attributes. This is done in i386/cygwin.h and
i386/i386.c, for example.
decl is a variable or function with __attribute__((dllimport))
specified. Use this hook if the target needs to add extra validation checks to handle_dll_attribute
.
Define this macro to a nonzero value if you want to treat
__declspec(X)
as equivalent to __attribute((X))
. By
default, this behavior is enabled only for targets that define
TARGET_DLLIMPORT_DECL_ATTRIBUTES
. The current implementation
of __declspec
is via a built-in macro, but you should not rely
on this implementation detail.
Define this target hook if you want to be able to add attributes to a decl
when it is being created. This is normally useful for back ends which
wish to implement a pragma by using the attributes which correspond to
the pragma’s effect. The node argument is the decl which is being
created. The attr_ptr argument is a pointer to the attribute list
for this decl. The list itself should not be modified, since it may be
shared with other decls, but attributes may be chained on the head of
the list and *attr_ptr
modified to point to the new
attributes, or a copy of the list may be made if further changes are
needed.
This target hook returns true
if it is OK to inline fndecl
into the current function, despite its having target-specific
attributes, false
otherwise. By default, if a function has a
target specific attribute attached to it, it will not be inlined.
This hook is called to parse attribute(target("..."))
, which
allows setting target-specific options on individual functions.
These function-specific options may differ
from the options specified on the command line. The hook should return
true
if the options are valid.
The hook should set the DECL_FUNCTION_SPECIFIC_TARGET
field in
the function declaration to hold a pointer to a target-specific
struct cl_target_option
structure.
This hook is called to save any additional target-specific information
in the struct cl_target_option
structure for function-specific
options from the struct gcc_options
structure.
See Option file format.
This hook is called to restore any additional target-specific
information in the struct cl_target_option
structure for
function-specific options to the struct gcc_options
structure.
This hook is called to update target-specific information in the
struct cl_target_option
structure after it is streamed in from
LTO bytecode.
This hook is called to print any additional target-specific
information in the struct cl_target_option
structure for
function-specific options.
This target hook parses the options for #pragma GCC target
, which
sets the target-specific options for functions that occur later in the
input stream. The options accepted should be the same as those handled by the
TARGET_OPTION_VALID_ATTRIBUTE_P
hook.
Sometimes certain combinations of command options do not make sense on
a particular target machine. You can override the hook
TARGET_OPTION_OVERRIDE
to take account of this. This hooks is called
once just after all the command options have been parsed.
Don’t use this hook to turn on various extra optimizations for
-O. That is what TARGET_OPTION_OPTIMIZATION
is for.
If you need to do something whenever the optimization level is
changed via the optimize attribute or pragma, see
TARGET_OVERRIDE_OPTIONS_AFTER_CHANGE
This target hook returns true
if DECL1 and DECL2 are
versions of the same function. DECL1 and DECL2 are function
versions if and only if they have the same function signature and
different target specific attributes, that is, they are compiled for
different target machines.
This target hook returns false
if the caller function
cannot inline callee, based on target specific information. By
default, inlining is not allowed if the callee function has function
specific target options and the caller does not use the same options.
This target hook fixes function fndecl after attributes are processed. Default does nothing. On ARM, the default function’s alignment is updated with the attribute target.
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