gcc 4.9 build warnings (was: Re: arm-soc build: 2917 warnings 0 failures (arm-soc/v3.18-rc1-20-g06c0773))
Arnd Bergmann
arnd at arndb.de
Fri Oct 24 04:37:19 PDT 2014
On Friday 24 October 2014 12:59:40 Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
> On 24 October 2014 12:52, Russell King - ARM Linux
> <linux at arm.linux.org.uk> wrote:
> > On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 12:49:50PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> >> > 1 drivers/video/fbdev/sm501fb.c:245:2: warning: format '%zd' expects argument of type 'signed size_t', but argument 8 has type 'size_t' [-Wformat=]
> >> > 1 mm/percpu.c:895:3: warning: format '%zu' expects argument of type 'size_t', but argument 2 has type 'unsigned int' [-Wformat=]
> >> > 1 mm/percpu.c:895:3: warning: format '%zu' expects argument of type 'size_t', but argument 3 has type 'unsigned int' [-Wformat=]
> >>
> >> The warnings are completely unchanged, still 249 unique warnings involving size_t,
> >> using this patch:
> >
> > That's probably because the compiler is expecting size_t to be typedef'd
> > to __SIZE_TYPE__ and isn't expecting anyone to change it.
> >
>
> Indeed, I wouldn't expect the printf format validation code inside GCC
> to care about the actual values of macros and typedefs.
> Could someone dump the builtin #define's of that compiler? For
> instance, my bare metal 4.9 BE GCC gives me
>
> $ /usr/local/gcc-linaro-armeb-none-eabi-4.9-2014.06_linux/bin/armeb-none-eabi-gcc
> -E -dM - <<<"" |grep _TYPE__
> #define __UINT_LEAST8_TYPE__ unsigned char
> #define __SIG_ATOMIC_TYPE__ int
> #define __UINTMAX_TYPE__ long long unsigned int
> #define __INT_FAST16_TYPE__ int
> #define __INT_FAST64_TYPE__ long long int
> #define __UINT8_TYPE__ unsigned char
> #define __INT_FAST32_TYPE__ int
> #define __UINT_LEAST16_TYPE__ short unsigned int
> #define __SIZE_TYPE__ unsigned int
> #define __INT8_TYPE__ signed char
> #define __INT_LEAST16_TYPE__ short int
> #define __UINT_LEAST64_TYPE__ long long unsigned int
> #define __UINT_FAST16_TYPE__ unsigned int
> #define __CHAR16_TYPE__ short unsigned int
> #define __INT_LEAST64_TYPE__ long long int
> #define __INT16_TYPE__ short int
> #define __INT_LEAST8_TYPE__ signed char
> #define __INTPTR_TYPE__ int
> #define __UINT16_TYPE__ short unsigned int
> #define __WCHAR_TYPE__ unsigned int
> #define __UINT_FAST64_TYPE__ long long unsigned int
> #define __INT64_TYPE__ long long int
> #define __WINT_TYPE__ unsigned int
> #define __UINT_LEAST32_TYPE__ long unsigned int
> #define __INT_LEAST32_TYPE__ long int
> #define __UINT64_TYPE__ long long unsigned int
> #define __INT_FAST8_TYPE__ int
> #define __UINT_FAST32_TYPE__ unsigned int
> #define __CHAR32_TYPE__ long unsigned int
> #define __INT32_TYPE__ long int
> #define __INTMAX_TYPE__ long long int
> #define __PTRDIFF_TYPE__ int
> #define __UINT32_TYPE__ long unsigned int
> #define __UINTPTR_TYPE__ unsigned int
> #define __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__ unsigned int
>
> What is surprising here is that __SIZE_TYPE__ is int not long. Could
> we in fact be dealing with a 4.9 bare metal GCC bug here?
This is what I get on every arm gcc version on my system,
all glibc or uClibc targetted, compared to yours:
#define __UINT_FAST64_TYPE__ long long unsigned int
#define __INT64_TYPE__ long long int
#define __WINT_TYPE__ unsigned int
-#define __UINT_LEAST32_TYPE__ long unsigned int
-#define __INT_LEAST32_TYPE__ long int
+#define __UINT_LEAST32_TYPE__ unsigned int
+#define __INT_LEAST32_TYPE__ int
#define __UINT64_TYPE__ long long unsigned int
-#define __INT_FAST8_TYPE__ int
+#define __INT_FAST8_TYPE__ signed char
#define __UINT_FAST32_TYPE__ unsigned int
-#define __CHAR32_TYPE__ long unsigned int
-#define __INT32_TYPE__ long int
+#define __CHAR32_TYPE__ unsigned int
+#define __INT32_TYPE__ int
#define __INTMAX_TYPE__ long long int
#define __PTRDIFF_TYPE__ int
-#define __UINT32_TYPE__ long unsigned int
+#define __UINT32_TYPE__ unsigned int
#define __UINTPTR_TYPE__ unsigned int
-#define __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__ unsigned int
+#define __UINT_FAST8_TYPE__ unsigned char
Arnd
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list