The latest version of this document is always available at http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html.
The main purpose of a bug report is to enable us to fix the bug. The most important prerequisite for this is that the report must be complete and self-contained, which we explain in detail below.
Before you report a bug, please check the list of well-known bugs and, if possible in any way, try a current development snapshot. If you want to report a bug with versions of GCC before 3.1 we strongly recommend upgrading to the current release first.
Before reporting that GCC compiles your code incorrectly, please
compile it with gcc -Wall
and see whether this shows
anything wrong with your code that could be the cause instead of a bug
in GCC.
After this summary, you'll find detailed bug reporting instructions, that explain how to obtain some of the information requested in this summary.
Please include in your bug report all of the following items, the first
three of which can be obtained from the output of gcc -v
:
*.i*
) that triggers the
bug, generated by adding -save-temps
to the complete
compilation command, or, in the case of a bug report for the GNAT front end,
a complete set of source files (see below).#include
s header files that are left
out of the bug report (see above)*.s
) produced by the compiler, or any
binary files, such as object files, executables, core files, or
precompiled header filesPlease submit your bug report directly to the
GCC bug database.
Alternatively, you can use the gccbug
script that mails your bug
report to the bug database.
Only if all this is absolutely impossible, mail all information to
[email protected].
Please refer to the next section when reporting bugs in GNAT, the Ada compiler, or to the one after that when reporting bugs that appear when using a precompiled header.
In general, all the information we need can be obtained by collecting the command line below, as well as its output and the preprocessed file it generates.
gcc -v -save-temps all-your-options source-file
Typically the preprocessed file (extension .i
for C or
.ii
for C++, and .f
if the preprocessor is used on
Fortran files) will be large, so please compress the
resulting file with one of the popular compression programs such as
bzip2, gzip, zip or compress (in
decreasing order of preference). Use maximum compression
(-9
) if available. Please include the compressed
preprocessor output in your bug report, even if the source code is
freely available elsewhere; it makes the job of our volunteer testers
much easier.
The only excuses to not send us the preprocessed sources are (i) if you've found a bug in the preprocessor, (ii) if you've reduced the testcase to a small file that doesn't include any other file or (iii) if the bug appears only when using precompiled headers. If you can't post the preprocessed sources because they're proprietary code, then try to create a small file that triggers the same problem.
Since we're supposed to be able to re-create the assembly output
(extension .s
), you usually should not include
it in the bug report, although you may want to post parts of it to
point out assembly code you consider to be wrong.
Whether to use MIME attachments or uuencode
is up to
you. In any case, make sure the compiler command line, version and
error output are in plain text, so that we don't have to decode the
bug report in order to tell who should take care of it. A meaningful
subject indicating language and platform also helps.
Please avoid posting an archive (.tar, .shar or .zip); we generally
need just a single file to reproduce the bug (the .i/.ii/.f preprocessed
file), and, by storing it in an archive, you're just making our
volunteers' jobs harder. Only when your bug report requires multiple
source files to be reproduced should you use an archive. This is, for example,
the case if you are using INCLUDE
directives in Fortran code,
which are not processed by the preprocessor, but the compiler. In that case,
we need the main file and all INCLUDE
d files. In any case,
make sure the compiler version, error message, etc, are included in
the body of your bug report as plain text, even if needlessly
duplicated as part of an archive.
If you fail to supply enough information for a bug report to be reproduced, someone will probably ask you to post additional information (or just ignore your bug report, if they're in a bad day, so try to get it right on the first posting :-). In this case, please post the additional information to the bug reporting mailing list, not just to the person who requested it, unless explicitly told so. If possible, please include in this follow-up all the information you had supplied in the incomplete bug report (including the preprocessor output), so that the new bug report is self-contained.
See the previous section for bug reporting instructions for GCC language implementations other than Ada.
Bug reports have to contain at least the following information in order to be useful:
gcc -v
";gcc
program
triggering the bug
(not just the flags passed to gnatmake
, but
gnatmake
prints the parameters it passed to gcc
)If your code depends on additional source files (usually package
specifications), submit the source code for these compilation units in
a single file that is acceptable input to gnatchop
,
i.e. contains no non-Ada text. If the compilation terminated
normally, you can usually obtain a list of dependencies using the
"gnatls -d main_unit
" command, where
main_unit
is the file name of the main compilation
unit (which is also passed to gcc
).
If you report a bug which causes the compiler to print a bug box, include that bug box in your report, and do not forget to send all the source files listed after the bug box along with your report.
If you use gnatprep
, be sure to send in preprocessed
sources (unless you have to report a bug in gnatprep
).
When you have checked that your report meets these criteria, please
submit it according to our generic instructions.
(If you use a mailing list for reporting, please include an
"[Ada]
" tag in the subject.)
If you're encountering a bug when using a precompiled header, the first thing to do is to delete the precompiled header, and try running the same GCC command again. If the bug happens again, the bug doesn't really involve precompiled headers, please report it without using them by following the instructions above.
If you've found a bug while building a precompiled header (for instance, the compiler crashes), follow the usual instructions above.
If you've found a real precompiled header bug, what we'll need to
reproduce it is the sources to build the precompiled header (as a
single .i
file), the source file that uses the
precompiled header, any other headers that source file includes, and
the command lines that you used to build the precompiled header and to
use it.
Please don't send us the actual precompiled header. It is likely to be very large and we can't use it to reproduce the problem.
This is a list of bugs in GCC that are reported very often, but not yet fixed. While it is certainly better to fix bugs instead of documenting them, this document might save people the effort of writing a bug report when the bug is already well-known.
There are many reasons why a reported bug doesn't get fixed. It might be difficult to fix, or fixing it might break compatibility. Often, reports get a low priority when there is a simple work-around. In particular, bugs caused by invalid code have a simple work-around: fix the code.
export
keyword is not implemented.Most C++ compilers (G++ included) do not yet implement
export
, which is necessary for separate compilation of
template declarations and definitions. Without export
, a
template definition must be in scope to be used. The obvious
workaround is simply to place all definitions in the header
itself. Alternatively, the compilation unit containing template
definitions may be included from the header.
The following bugs are present up to (and including) GCC 3.3.x. They have been fixed in 3.4.0.
GCC did not implement two-stage name-lookup (also see below).
GCC did not implement non-trivial covariant returns.
GCC gave parse errors for seemingly simple code, such as
struct A { A(); A(int); }; struct B { B(A); B(A,A); void foo(); }; A bar() { B b(A(),A(1)); // Variable b, initialized with two temporaries B(A(2)).foo(); // B temporary, initialized with A temporary return (A()); // return A temporary }
Although being valid code, each of the three lines with a comment was rejected by GCC. The work-arounds for older compiler versions proposed below do not change the semantics of the programs at all.
The problem in the first case was that GCC started to parse the
declaration of b
as a function called b
returning
B
, taking a function returning A
as an argument.
When it encountered the 1
, it was too late. To show the
compiler that this should be really an expression, a comma operator with
a dummy argument could be used:
B b((0,A()),A(1));
The work-around for simpler cases like the second one was to add additional parentheses around the expressions that were mistaken as declarations:
(B(A(2))).foo();
In the third case, however, additional parentheses were causing
the problems: The compiler interpreted A()
as a function
(taking no arguments, returning A
), and (A())
as a cast lacking an expression to be casted, hence the parse error.
The work-around was to omit the parentheses:
return A();
This problem occurred in a number of variants; in throw
statements, people also frequently put the object in parentheses.
Fortran bugs are documented in the G77 manual rather than explicitly listed here. Please see Known Causes of Trouble with GNU Fortran in the G77 manual.
The following are not actually bugs, but are reported often enough to warrant a mention here.
It is not always a bug in the compiler, if code which "worked" in a previous version, is now rejected. Earlier versions of GCC sometimes were less picky about standard conformance and accepted invalid source code. In addition, programming languages themselves change, rendering code invalid that used to be conforming (this holds especially for C++). In either case, you should update your code to match recent language standards.
In a number of cases, GCC appears to perform floating point computations incorrectly. For example, the C++ program
#include <iostream> int main() { double a = 0.5; double b = 0.01; std::cout << (int)(a / b) << std::endl; return 0; }
might print 50 on some systems and optimization levels, and 49 on others.
This is the result of rounding: The computer cannot represent all real numbers exactly, so it has to use approximations. When computing with approximation, the computer needs to round to the nearest representable number.
This is not a bug in the compiler, but an inherent limitation of the floating point types. Please study this paper for more information.
++
/--
) not
working as expected - a problem with
many variations.The following expressions have unpredictable results:
x[i]=++i foo(i,++i) i*(++i) /* special case with foo=="operator*" */ std::cout << i << ++i /* foo(foo(std::cout,i),++i) */
since the i
without increment can be evaluated before or
after ++i
.
The C and C++ standards have the notion of "sequence points". Everything that happens between two sequence points happens in an unspecified order, but it has to happen after the first and before the second sequence point. The end of a statement and a function call are examples for sequence points, whereas assignments and the comma between function arguments are not.
Modifying a value twice between two sequence points as shown in the following examples is even worse:
i=++i foo(++i,++i) (++i)*(++i) /* special case with foo=="operator*" */ std::cout << ++i << ++i /* foo(foo(std::cout,++i),++i) */
This leads to undefined behavior (i.e. the compiler can do anything).
This is often caused by a violation of aliasing rules, which are part
of the ISO C standard. These rules say that a program is invalid if you try
to access a variable through a pointer of an incompatible type. This is
happening in the following example where a short is accessed through a
pointer to integer (the code assumes 16-bit short
s and 32-bit
int
s):
#include <stdio.h> int main() { short a[2]; a[0]=0x1111; a[1]=0x1111; *(int *)a = 0x22222222; /* violation of aliasing rules */ printf("%x %x\n", a[0], a[1]); return 0; }
The aliasing rules were designed to allow compilers more aggressive optimization. Basically, a compiler can assume that all changes to variables happen through pointers or references to variables of a type compatible to the accessed variable. Dereferencing a pointer that violates the aliasing rules results in undefined behavior.
In the case above, the compiler may assume that no access through an
integer pointer can change the array a
, consisting of shorts.
Thus, printf
may be called with the original values of
a[0]
and a[1]
. What really happens is up to
the compiler and may change with architecture and optimization level.
Recent versions of GCC turn on the option -fstrict-aliasing
(which allows alias-based optimizations) by default with -O2
.
And some architectures then really print "1111 1111" as result. Without
optimization the executable will generate the "expected" output
"2222 2222".
To disable optimizations based on alias-analysis for faulty legacy code,
the option -fno-strict-aliasing
can be used as a work-around.
The option -Wstrict-aliasing
(which is included in
-Wall
) warns about some - but not all - cases of violation
of aliasing rules when -fstrict-aliasing
is active.
To fix the code above, you can use a union
instead of a
cast (note that this is a GCC extension which might not work with other
compilers):
#include <stdio.h> int main() { union { short a[2]; int i; } u; u.a[0]=0x1111; u.a[1]=0x1111; u.i = 0x22222222; printf("%x %x\n", u.a[0], u.a[1]); return 0; }
Now the result will always be "2222 2222".
For some more insight into the subject, please have a look at this article.
Let me guess... you used an older version of GCC to compile code that looks something like this:
memcpy(dest, src, #ifdef PLATFORM1 12 #else 24 #endif );
and you got a whole pile of error messages:
test.c:11: warning: preprocessing directive not recognized within macro arg test.c:11: warning: preprocessing directive not recognized within macro arg test.c:11: warning: preprocessing directive not recognized within macro arg test.c: In function `foo': test.c:6: undefined or invalid # directive test.c:8: undefined or invalid # directive test.c:9: parse error before `24' test.c:10: undefined or invalid # directive
This is because your C library's <string.h>
happens
to define memcpy
as a macro - which is perfectly legitimate.
In recent versions of glibc, for example, printf
is among those
functions which are implemented as macros.
Versions of GCC prior to 3.3 did not allow you to put #ifdef
(or any other preprocessor directive) inside the arguments of a macro. The
code therefore would not compile.
As of GCC 3.3 this kind of construct is always accepted and the preprocessor will probably do what you expect, but see the manual for detailed semantics.
However, this kind of code is not portable. It is "undefined behavior" according to the C standard; that means different compilers may do different things with it. It is always possible to rewrite code which uses conditionals inside macros so that it doesn't. You could write the above example
#ifdef PLATFORM1 memcpy(dest, src, 12); #else memcpy(dest, src, 24); #endif
This is a bit more typing, but I personally think it's better style in addition to being more portable.
stdin
.This has nothing to do with GCC, but people ask us about it a lot. Code like this:
#include <stdio.h> FILE *yyin = stdin;
will not compile with GNU libc, because stdin
is not a
constant. This was done deliberately, to make it easier to maintain
binary compatibility when the type FILE
needs to be changed.
It is surprising for people used to traditional Unix C libraries, but it
is permitted by the C standard.
This construct commonly occurs in code generated by old versions of lex or yacc. We suggest you try regenerating the parser with a current version of flex or bison, respectively. In your own code, the appropriate fix is to move the initialization to the beginning of main.
There is a common misconception that the GCC developers are responsible for GNU libc. These are in fact two entirely separate projects; please check the GNU libc web pages for details.
Defect report 45 clarifies that nested classes are members of the class they are nested in, and so are granted access to private members of that class.
In general there are three types of constructors (and destructors).
The first two are different, when virtual base classes are involved.
Global destructors should be run in the reverse order of their
constructors completing. In most cases this is the same as
the reverse order of constructors starting, but sometimes it
is different, and that is important. You need to compile and link your
programs with --use-cxa-atexit
. We have not turned this
switch on by default, as it requires a cxa
aware runtime
library (libc
, glibc
, or equivalent).
[15.4]/1 tells you that you cannot have an incomplete type, or
pointer to incomplete (other than cv void *
) in
an exception specification.
You need to rebuild g++ and libstdc++ with
--enable-threads
. Remember, C++ exceptions are not like
hardware interrupts. You cannot throw an exception in one thread and
catch it in another. You cannot throw an exception from a signal
handler and catch it in the main thread.
If you have a class in the global namespace, say named X
,
and want to give it as a template argument to some other class, say
std::vector
, then std::vector<::X>
fails with a parser error.
The reason is that the standard mandates that the sequence
<:
is treated as if it were the token [
.
(There are several such combinations of characters - they are called
digraphs.) Depending on the version, the compiler then reports
a parse error before the character :
(the colon before
X
) or a missing closing bracket ]
.
The simplest way to avoid this is to write std::vector<
::X>
, i.e. place a space between the opening angle bracket
and the scope operator.
Consider this code:
class A { public: A(); private: A(const A&); // private copy ctor }; A makeA(void); void foo(const A&); void bar(void) { foo(A()); // error, copy ctor is not accessible foo(makeA()); // error, copy ctor is not accessible A a1; foo(a1); // OK, a1 is a lvalue }
Starting with GCC 3.4.0, binding an rvalue to a const reference requires an accessible copy constructor. This might be surprising at first sight, especially since most popular compilers do not correctly implement this rule.
The C++ Standard says that a temporary object should be created in this context and its contents filled with a copy of the object we are trying to bind to the reference; it also says that the temporary copy can be elided, but the semantic constraints (eg. accessibility) of the copy constructor still have to be checked.
For further information, you can consult the following paragraphs of the C++ standard: [dcl.init.ref]/5, bullet 2, sub-bullet 1, and [class.temporary]/2.
The C++ application binary interface (ABI) consists of two components: the first defines how the elements of classes are laid out, how functions are called, how function names are mangled, etc; the second part deals with the internals of the objects in libstdc++. Although we strive for a non-changing ABI, so far we have had to modify it with each major release. If you change your compiler to a different major release you must recompile all libraries that contain C++ code. If you fail to do so you risk getting linker errors or malfunctioning programs. Some of our Java support libraries also contain C++ code, so you might want to recompile all libraries to be safe. It should not be necessary to recompile if you have changed to a bug-fix release of the same version of the compiler; bug-fix releases are careful to avoid ABI changes. See also the compatibility section of the GCC manual.
Remark: A major release is designated by a change to the first or second component of the two- or three-part version number. A minor (bug-fix) release is designated by a change to the third component only. Thus GCC 3.2 and 3.3 are major releases, while 3.3.1 and 3.3.2 are bug-fix releases for GCC 3.3. With the 3.4 series we are introducing a new naming scheme; the first release of this series is 3.4.0 instead of just 3.4.
With each release, we try to make G++ conform closer to the ISO C++ standard (available at http://www.ncits.org/cplusplus.htm). We have also implemented some of the core and library defect reports (available at http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html & http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html respectively).
Non-conforming legacy code that worked with older versions of GCC may be
rejected by more recent compilers. There is no command-line switch to ensure
compatibility in general, because trying to parse standard-conforming and
old-style code at the same time would render the C++ frontend unmaintainable.
However, some non-conforming constructs are allowed when the command-line
option -fpermissive
is used.
Two milestones in standard conformance are GCC 3.0 (including a major overhaul of the standard library) and the 3.4.0 version (with its new C++ parser).
std::
namespace (which is now a real namespace, not an
alias for ::
)..h
, but begin with c
(i.e.
<cstdlib>
rather than <stdlib.h>
).
The .h
names are still available, but are deprecated.<strstream>
is deprecated, use
<sstream>
instead.streambuf::seekoff
&
streambuf::seekpos
are private, instead use
streambuf::pubseekoff
&
streambuf::pubseekpos
respectively.std::operator << (std::ostream &, long long)
doesn't exist, you need to recompile libstdc++ with
--enable-long-long
.If you get lots of errors about things like cout
not being
found, you've most likely forgotten to tell the compiler to look in the
std::
namespace. There are several ways to do this:
std::cout
at the call. This is the most explicit
way of saying what you mean.using std::cout;
somewhere before the call. You
will need to do this for each function or type you wish to use from the
standard library.using namespace std;
somewhere before the call.
This is the quick-but-dirty fix. This brings the whole of the
std::
namespace into scope. Never do this in a
header file, as every user of your header file will be affected by this
decision.The new parser brings a lot of improvements, especially concerning name-lookup.
template <typename> struct A { typedef int X; }; template <typename T> struct B { A<T>::X x; // error typename A<T>::X y; // OK }; B<void> b;
template
keyword, see [14.2]:
template <typename> struct A { template <int> struct X {}; }; template <typename T> struct B { typename A<T>::X<0> x; // error typename A<T>::template X<0> y; // OK }; B<void> b;
template <typename T> int foo() { return i; // error }
template <typename> struct A { int i, j; }; template <typename T> struct B : A<T> { int foo1() { return i; } // error int foo2() { return this->i; } // OK int foo3() { return B<T>::i; } // OK int foo4() { return A<T>::i; } // OK using A<T>::j; int foo5() { return j; } // OK };
In addition to the problems listed above, the manual contains a section on Common Misunderstandings with GNU C++.