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Options
to Request or Suppress Warnings
Warnings are diagnostic messages
that report constructions which are not inherently erroneous; they may
warn of risky constructions or constructions, actually, in error.
You can request many specific
warnings with options beginning with -W;
for instance, use -Wimplicit
to request warnings on implicit declarations. Each of these specific warning
options also has a negative form beginning -Wno-
to turn off warnings; for instance, -Wno-implicit.
This documentation discusses only one of the two forms, whichever is not
the default.
The following options control
the amount and kinds of warnings produced by GNU CC.
-fsyntax-only
Check the code
for syntax errors, but dont do anything beyond that.
-pedantic
Issue all the
warnings demanded by strict ANSI standard C; reject all programs that use
forbidden extensions.
Valid ANSI standard C programs
should compile properly with or without this option (though a rare few
will require -ansi).
However, without this option, certain GNU extensions and traditional C
features are supported as well. With this option, they are rejected.
-pedantic
does not cause warning messages for use of the alternate keywords whose
names begin and end with __.
Pedantic warnings are also disabled in the expression that follows __extension
However, only system header files should use these escape routes; application
programs should avoid them. See Alternate
Keywords.
This option is not intended
to be useful; it exists only to satisfy pedants who would otherwise
claim that GNU CC fails to support the ANSI standard.
Some users try to use -pedantic
to check programs for strict ANSI C conformance. They soon find that it
does not do quite what they want: it finds some non-ANSI practices, but
not allonly those for which ANSI C requires a diagnostic.
A feature to report any
failure to conform to ANSI C might be useful in some instances, but would
require considerable additional work and would be quite different from
-pedantic.
We recommend, rather, that users take advantage of the extensions of GNU
C and disregard the limitations of compilers. Aside from certain supercomputers
and obsolete small machines, there is less and less reason ever to use
any other C compiler other than for bootstrapping GNU CC.
-pedantic-errors
Like -pedantic,
except that errors are produced rather than warnings.
-w
Inhibit all warning
messages.
-Wno-import
Inhibit warning
messages about the use of #import.
-Wchar-subscripts
Warn if an array
subscript has type char.
This is a common cause of error, as programmers often forget that this
type is signed on some machines.
-Wcomment
Warn whenever
a comment-start sequence /*
appears in a /*
comment, or whenever a Backslash-Newline appears in a //
comment.
-Wformat
Check calls to
printf
and scanf,
etc., to make sure that the arguments supplied have types appropriate to
the format string specified.
-Wimplicit
Warn whenever
a function or parameter is implicitly declared, or when a type implicitly
defaults to int.
-Wmain
Warn if the type of main
is suspicious. main
should be a function with external linkage, returning int,
taking either zero arguments, two, or three arguments of appropriate types.
-Wparentheses
Warn if parentheses
are omitted in certain contexts, for instance, when there is an assignment
in a context where a truth value is expected, or when operators
are nested whose precedence may be confusing.
-Wreturn-type
Warn whenever
a function is defined with a return-type that defaults to int.
Also warn about any return
statement with no return-value in a function whose return-type is not void.
-Wswitch
Warn whenever
a switch
statement has an index of enumeral type and lacks a case
for one or more of the named codes of that enumeration. (The presence of
a default label prevents this warning.)
case
labels outside the enumeration range also provoke warnings when this option
is used.
-Wtrigraphs
Warn if any trigraphs are encountered (assuming they are enabled).
-Wunused
Warn whenever
a variable is unused aside from its declaration, whenever a function is
declared static but never defined, whenever a label is declared but not
used, and whenever a statement computes a result that is explicitly not
used.
To suppress this warning
for an expression, simply cast it to void.
For unused variables and parameters, use the unused
attribute (for explanation of specifications for this attribute, see Specifying
Attributes of Variables.
-Wuninitialized
An automatic variable
is used without first being initialized.
These warnings are possible
only in optimizing compilation, because they require data flow information
that is computed only when optimizing. If you dont specify -O,
you simply wont get these warnings.
These warnings occur only
for variables that are candidates for register allocation.
Therefore, they do not occur
for a variable that is declared volatile,
or whose address is taken, or whose size is other than 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes.
Also, they do not occur for structures, unions or arrays, even when they
are in registers.
- Note:
There may be no warning about a variable that is used only to compute a
value that itself is never used.
Such computations may be
deleted by data flow analysis before the warnings display.
These warnings are made
optional because GNU CC is not smart enough to see all the reasons why
the code might be correct despite appearing to have an error. The following
is one example of how this occurs.
{
int x;
switch (y)
{
case 1: x = 1;
break;
case 2: x = 4;
break;
case 3: x = 5;
}
foo (x);
}
If the value of y
is always 1, 2 or 3, then x
is always initialized, but GNU CC doesnt make this determination. The
following is another common case.
{
int save_y; if (change_y) save_y = y, y = new_y;
...
if (change_y) y = save_y;
}
This has no bug because
save_y
is used only if it is set. Some spurious warnings can be avoided if you
declare all the functions you use that never return as noreturn.
See Declaring Attributes
of Functions.
-Wreorder (C++ only)
Warn when the
order of member initializers given in the code does not match the order
in which they must be executed. For instance, in the following example,
the compiler will warn that the member initializers for i
and j
will be rearranged to match the declaration order of the members.
struct A {
int i;
int j;
A(): j (0), i (1) { }
};
-Wsign-compare
Warn when a comparison
between signed and unsigned values could produce an incorrect result when
the signed value is converted to unsigned.
-Wtemplate-debugging
When using templates
in a C++ program, warn if debugging is not yet fully available (C++ only).
-Wall
All of the previous
-W
options combined. These are all the options which pertain to usage that
we recommend avoiding and that we believe is easy to avoid, even in conjunction
with macros.
The remaining -W...
options are not implied by -Wall
because they warn about constructions that we consider reasonable to use,
on occasion, in clean programs.
-W
Print extra warning
messages for these events:
- A nonvolatile automatic
variable might be changed by a call to longjmp.
These warnings as well are possible only in optimizing compilation. The
compiler sees only the calls to setjmp.
It cannot know where longjmp
will be called; in fact, a signal handler could call it at any point in
the code. As a result, you may get a warning even when there is in fact
no problem because longjmp
cannot in fact be called at the place which would cause a problem.
- A function can return either
with or without a value. (Falling off the end of the function body is considered
returning without a value.) For instance, the following example shows how
a function would evoke such a warning.
foo (a)
{
if (a > 0)
return a;
}
An expression-statement
or the left-hand side of a comma expression contains no side effects. To
suppress the warning, cast the unused expression to void.
For example, an expression such as x[i,j]
will cause a warning, but one such as x[(void)i,j]
will not.
An unsigned value is compared
against zero with <
or <=.
A comparison like x<=y<=z
appears; this is equivalent to
(x<=y ? 1 : 0)
<= z, which
is a different interpretation from that of ordinary mathematical notation.
Storage-class specifiers
like static
are not the first things in a declaration. According to the C Standard,
this usage is obsolete.
If -Wall
or -Wunused
is also specified, warn about unused arguments.
An aggregate has a partly
bracketed initializer. For example, the following code would evoke such
a warning, because braces are missing around the initializer for x.h.
struct s { int f, g; };
struct t { struct s h; int i; };
struct t x = { 1, 2, 3 };
-Wtraditional
Warn about certain
constructs that behave differently in traditional and ANSI C.
- Macro arguments occurring
within string constants in the macro body. These would substitute the argument
in traditional C, but are part of the constant in ANSI C.
- A function declared external
in one block and then used after the end of the block.
- A switch
statement has an operand of type, long.
-Wshadow
Warn whenever
a local variable shadows another local variable.
-Wid-clash-len
Warn whenever
two distinct identifiers match in the first len
characters. This may help you prepare a program that will compile with
certain obsolete, brain-damaged compilers.
-Wlarger-than-len
Warn whenever
an object of larger than len
bytes is defined.
-Wpointer-arith
Warn about anything
that depends on the size of a function type or of void.
GNU C assigns these types a size of 1, for convenience in calculations
with void*
pointers and pointers to functions.
-Wbad-function-cast
Warn whenever
a function call is cast to a non-matching type. For example, warn if int
malloc() is cast
to anything*.
-Wcast-qual
Warn whenever
a pointer is cast so as to remove a type qualifier from the target type.
For example, warn if a const
char* is cast
to an ordinary char*.
-Wcast-align
Warn whenever
a pointer is cast such that the required alignment of the target is increased.
For example, warn if a char*
is cast to an int*
on machines where integers can only be accessed at two- or four-byte boundaries.
-Wwrite-strings
Give string constants
the type, const char[length],
so that copying the address of one into a non-const
char* pointer
will get a warning. These warnings will help you find code, at compile
time, that can try to write into a string constant, but only if you have
been very careful about using const
in declarations and prototypes. Otherwise, it will just be a nuisance;
this is why -Wall doesnt
request these warnings.
-Wconversion
Warn if a prototype
causes a type conversion that is different from what would happen to the
same argument in the absence of a prototype. This includes conversions
of fixed point to floating and vice versa, and conversions changing the
width or signedness of a fixed point argument except when the same as the
default promotion. Also, warn if a negative integer constant expression
is implicitly converted to an unsigned type. For example, warn about the
assignment x =-1
if x
is unsigned. But do not warn about explicit casts like (unsigned)
-1.
-Waggregate-return
Warn if any functions
that return structures or unions are defined or called. (In languages where
you can return an array, this also elicits a warning.)
-Wstrict-prototypes
Warn if a function
is declared or defined without specifying the argument types. (An old-style
function definition is permitted without a warning if preceded by a declaration
which specifies the argument types.)
-Wmissing-prototypes
Warn if a global
function is defined without a previous prototype declaration. This warning
is issued even if the definition itself provides a prototype. The aim is
to detect global functions that fail to be declared in header files.
-Wmissing-declarations
Warn if a global
function is defined without a previous declaration. Do so even if the definition
itself provides a prototype. Use this option to detect global functions
that are not declared in header files.
-Wredundant-decls
Warn if anything is declared more than once in the same scope, even in
cases where multiple declaration is valid and changes nothing.
-Wnested-externs
Warn if an extern
declaration is encountered within a function.
-Winline
Warn if a function can not be inlined, and either it was declared as inline,
or else the -finline-functions
option was given.
-Woverloaded-virtual
Warn when a derived class function declaration may be an error in defining
a virtual function (C++ only). In a derived class, the definitions of virtual
functions must match the type signature of a virtual function declared
in the base class. With this option, the compiler warns when you define
a function with the same name as a virtual function, but with a type signature
that does not match any declarations from the base class.
-Wsynth (C++ only)
Warn when the
g++
synthesis behavior does not match that of cfront.
For instance:
struct A {
operator int ();
A& operator = (int);
};
main ()
{
A a,b;
a =b;
}
In this example, g++
will synthesize a default A&
operator = (const A&);,
while cfront
will use the user-defined operator
= expression.
-Werror
Make all warnings
into errors.