[PATCH] newlib-stdint.h: Remove 32 bit longs
Richard Earnshaw
Richard.Earnshaw@foss.arm.com
Mon Aug 22 18:35:00 GMT 2016
On 22/08/16 17:09, Andy Ross wrote:
> The reproduction is straightforward. Just build any cross gcc with
> --enable-newlib (e.g. the one in the Zephyr SDK) and compile this
> (on any 32 or 64 bit 2's complement architecture) with newlib's
> headers.
>
> #include <stdint.h>
>
> extern void takes_fmt(const char *fmt, ...)
> __attribute__ ((format (printf, 1, 2)));
>
> void foo()
> {
> int32_t x = 42;
> takes_fmt("%d", x);
> }
>
This code isn't portable. %d means that the argument is of type 'int'
but there is no requirement that int32_t is equivalent to 'int'.
If you have an int32_t then you should use PRIi32 or PRId32 as
appropriate. Of course, if the macros that those expand to still result
in warnings you probably have got a bug somewhere!
R.
> The use of int32_t with the untyped format specifier produces the
> "expects argument of type âintâ, but argument 2 has type âlong intâ"
> warning despite the fact that this platform (it's just an i586
> compiler!) is a standard ILP32 architecture.
>
> The reason for that is this bit in newlib's headers where they trust
> gcc if __INT32_TYPE__ is set:
>
> https://sourceware.org/git/gitweb.cgi?p=newlib-cygwin.git;a=blob;f=newlib/libc/include/machine/_default_types.h;h=ffc646d9e3f5392a643f8b4ca203a3ad2a7627d8;hb=HEAD#l62
>
> And gcc, as seen by this patch, sets it to a long because it thinks
> that's what newlib *wants*.
>
> But if you look at the preprocessor code immediately following, newlib
> doesn't want that at all. If it doesn't find __INT32_TYPE__, it will
> (see line 70) clearly choose a signed int, not a long.
>
> Newlib doesn't want that at all. This just seems like some kind of
> historical mistake to me. GCC's newlib "support" causes newlib code
> to emit warnings on benign code that is unwarned in AFAIK literally
> every other platform in existence.
>
> (And I understand the point about the PRI stuff in inttypes.h, which
> we're doing internally. But that doesn't really address the bug in
> our SDK compiler.)
>
> Andy
>
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