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6.57.10 Diagnostic Pragmas

GCC allows the user to selectively enable or disable certain types of diagnostics, and change the kind of the diagnostic. For example, a project's policy might require that all sources compile with -Werror but certain files might have exceptions allowing specific types of warnings. Or, a project might selectively enable diagnostics and treat them as errors depending on which preprocessor macros are defined.

#pragma GCC diagnostic kind option
Modifies the disposition of a diagnostic. Note that not all diagnostics are modifiable; at the moment only warnings (normally controlled by `-W...') can be controlled, and not all of them. Use -fdiagnostics-show-option to determine which diagnostics are controllable and which option controls them.

kind is `error' to treat this diagnostic as an error, `warning' to treat it like a warning (even if -Werror is in effect), or `ignored' if the diagnostic is to be ignored. option is a double quoted string which matches the command-line option.

          #pragma GCC diagnostic warning "-Wformat"
          #pragma GCC diagnostic error "-Wformat"
          #pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wformat"
     

Note that these pragmas override any command-line options. GCC keeps track of the location of each pragma, and issues diagnostics according to the state as of that point in the source file. Thus, pragmas occurring after a line do not affect diagnostics caused by that line.

#pragma GCC diagnostic push
#pragma GCC diagnostic pop
Causes GCC to remember the state of the diagnostics as of each push, and restore to that point at each pop. If a pop has no matching push, the command line options are restored.
          #pragma GCC diagnostic error "-Wuninitialized"
            foo(a);			/* error is given for this one */
          #pragma GCC diagnostic push
          #pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wuninitialized"
            foo(b);			/* no diagnostic for this one */
          #pragma GCC diagnostic pop
            foo(c);			/* error is given for this one */
          #pragma GCC diagnostic pop
            foo(d);			/* depends on command line options */
     

GCC also offers a simple mechanism for printing messages during compilation.

#pragma message string
Prints string as a compiler message on compilation. The message is informational only, and is neither a compilation warning nor an error.
          #pragma message "Compiling " __FILE__ "..."
     

string may be parenthesized, and is printed with location information. For example,

          #define DO_PRAGMA(x) _Pragma (#x)
          #define TODO(x) DO_PRAGMA(message ("TODO - " #x))
          
          TODO(Remember to fix this)
     

prints `/tmp/file.c:4: note: #pragma message: TODO - Remember to fix this'.