.. Copyright 1988-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is part of the GCC manual. For copying conditions, see the copyright.rst file. .. only:: not man .. index:: Spec Files .. _spec-files: Specifying Subprocesses and the Switches to Pass to Them ******************************************************** :command:`gcc` is a driver program. It performs its job by invoking a sequence of other programs to do the work of compiling, assembling and linking. GCC interprets its command-line parameters and uses these to deduce which programs it should invoke, and which command-line options it ought to place on their command lines. This behavior is controlled by :dfn:`spec strings`. In most cases there is one spec string for each program that GCC can invoke, but a few programs have multiple spec strings to control their behavior. The spec strings built into GCC can be overridden by using the :option:`-specs=` command-line switch to specify a spec file. :dfn:`Spec files` are plain-text files that are used to construct spec strings. They consist of a sequence of directives separated by blank lines. The type of directive is determined by the first non-whitespace character on the line, which can be one of the following: :samp:`%{command}` Issues a :samp:`{command}` to the spec file processor. The commands that can appear here are: :samp:`%include <{file}>` .. index:: %include Search for :samp:`{file}` and insert its text at the current point in the specs file. :samp:`%include_noerr <{file}>` .. index:: %include_noerr Just like :samp:`%include`, but do not generate an error message if the include file cannot be found. :samp:`%rename {old_name}{new_name}` .. index:: %rename Rename the spec string :samp:`{old_name}` to :samp:`{new_name}`. :samp:`*[{spec_name}]:` This tells the compiler to create, override or delete the named spec string. All lines after this directive up to the next directive or blank line are considered to be the text for the spec string. If this results in an empty string then the spec is deleted. (Or, if the spec did not exist, then nothing happens.) Otherwise, if the spec does not currently exist a new spec is created. If the spec does exist then its contents are overridden by the text of this directive, unless the first character of that text is the :samp:`+` character, in which case the text is appended to the spec. :samp:`[{suffix}]:` Creates a new :samp:`[{suffix}] spec` pair. All lines after this directive and up to the next directive or blank line are considered to make up the spec string for the indicated suffix. When the compiler encounters an input file with the named suffix, it processes the spec string in order to work out how to compile that file. For example: .. code-block:: .ZZ: z-compile -input %i This says that any input file whose name ends in :samp:`.ZZ` should be passed to the program :samp:`z-compile`, which should be invoked with the command-line switch :option:`-input` and with the result of performing the :samp:`%i` substitution. (See below.) As an alternative to providing a spec string, the text following a suffix directive can be one of the following: :samp:`@{language}` This says that the suffix is an alias for a known :samp:`{language}`. This is similar to using the :option:`-x` command-line switch to GCC to specify a language explicitly. For example: .. code-block:: .ZZ: @c++ Says that .ZZ files are, in fact, C++ source files. :samp:`#{name}` This causes an error messages saying: .. code-block:: name compiler not installed on this system. GCC already has an extensive list of suffixes built into it. This directive adds an entry to the end of the list of suffixes, but since the list is searched from the end backwards, it is effectively possible to override earlier entries using this technique. GCC has the following spec strings built into it. Spec files can override these strings or create their own. Note that individual targets can also add their own spec strings to this list. .. code-block:: asm Options to pass to the assembler asm_final Options to pass to the assembler post-processor cpp Options to pass to the C preprocessor cc1 Options to pass to the C compiler cc1plus Options to pass to the C++ compiler endfile Object files to include at the end of the link link Options to pass to the linker lib Libraries to include on the command line to the linker libgcc Decides which GCC support library to pass to the linker linker Sets the name of the linker predefines Defines to be passed to the C preprocessor signed_char Defines to pass to CPP to say whether char is signed by default startfile Object files to include at the start of the link Here is a small example of a spec file: .. code-block:: %rename lib old_lib *lib: --start-group -lgcc -lc -leval1 --end-group %(old_lib) This example renames the spec called :samp:`lib` to :samp:`old_lib` and then overrides the previous definition of :samp:`lib` with a new one. The new definition adds in some extra command-line options before including the text of the old definition. :dfn:`Spec strings` are a list of command-line options to be passed to their corresponding program. In addition, the spec strings can contain :samp:`%`-prefixed sequences to substitute variable text or to conditionally insert text into the command line. Using these constructs it is possible to generate quite complex command lines. Here is a table of all defined :samp:`%`-sequences for spec strings. Note that spaces are not generated automatically around the results of expanding these sequences. Therefore you can concatenate them together or combine them with constant text in a single argument. ``%%`` Substitute one :samp:`%` into the program name or argument. ``%"`` Substitute an empty argument. ``%i`` Substitute the name of the input file being processed. ``%b`` Substitute the basename for outputs related with the input file being processed. This is often the substring up to (and not including) the last period and not including the directory but, unless %w is active, it expands to the basename for auxiliary outputs, which may be influenced by an explicit output name, and by various other options that control how auxiliary outputs are named. ``%B`` This is the same as :samp:`%b`, but include the file suffix (text after the last period). Without %w, it expands to the basename for dump outputs. ``%d`` Marks the argument containing or following the :samp:`%d` as a temporary file name, so that that file is deleted if GCC exits successfully. Unlike :samp:`%g`, this contributes no text to the argument. :samp:`%g{suffix}` Substitute a file name that has suffix :samp:`{suffix}` and is chosen once per compilation, and mark the argument in the same way as :samp:`%d`. To reduce exposure to denial-of-service attacks, the file name is now chosen in a way that is hard to predict even when previously chosen file names are known. For example, :samp:`%g.s ... %g.o ... %g.s` might turn into :samp:`ccUVUUAU.s ccXYAXZ12.o ccUVUUAU.s`. :samp:`{suffix}` matches the regexp :samp:`[.A-Za-z]*` or the special string :samp:`%O`, which is treated exactly as if :samp:`%O` had been preprocessed. Previously, :samp:`%g` was simply substituted with a file name chosen once per compilation, without regard to any appended suffix (which was therefore treated just like ordinary text), making such attacks more likely to succeed. :samp:`%u{suffix}` Like :samp:`%g`, but generates a new temporary file name each time it appears instead of once per compilation. :samp:`%U{suffix}` Substitutes the last file name generated with :samp:`%u{suffix}`, generating a new one if there is no such last file name. In the absence of any :samp:`%u{suffix}`, this is just like :samp:`%g{suffix}`, except they don't share the same suffix *space*, so :samp:`%g.s ... %U.s ... %g.s ... %U.s` involves the generation of two distinct file names, one for each :samp:`%g.s` and another for each :samp:`%U.s`. Previously, :samp:`%U` was simply substituted with a file name chosen for the previous :samp:`%u`, without regard to any appended suffix. :samp:`%j{suffix}` Substitutes the name of the ``HOST_BIT_BUCKET``, if any, and if it is writable, and if :option:`-save-temps` is not used; otherwise, substitute the name of a temporary file, just like :samp:`%u`. This temporary file is not meant for communication between processes, but rather as a junk disposal mechanism. :samp:`%|{suffix}` :samp:`%m{suffix}` Like :samp:`%g`, except if :option:`-pipe` is in effect. In that case :samp:`%|` substitutes a single dash and :samp:`%m` substitutes nothing at all. These are the two most common ways to instruct a program that it should read from standard input or write to standard output. If you need something more elaborate you can use an :samp:`%{{pipe:X}}` construct: see for example :samp:`gcc/fortran/lang-specs.h`. :samp:`%.{SUFFIX}` Substitutes :samp:`{.SUFFIX}` for the suffixes of a matched switch's args when it is subsequently output with :samp:`%*`. :samp:`{SUFFIX}` is terminated by the next space or %. ``%w`` Marks the argument containing or following the :samp:`%w` as the designated output file of this compilation. This puts the argument into the sequence of arguments that :samp:`%o` substitutes. ``%V`` Indicates that this compilation produces no output file. ``%o`` Substitutes the names of all the output files, with spaces automatically placed around them. You should write spaces around the :samp:`%o` as well or the results are undefined. :samp:`%o` is for use in the specs for running the linker. Input files whose names have no recognized suffix are not compiled at all, but they are included among the output files, so they are linked. ``%O`` Substitutes the suffix for object files. Note that this is handled specially when it immediately follows :samp:`%g, %u, or %U`, because of the need for those to form complete file names. The handling is such that :samp:`%O` is treated exactly as if it had already been substituted, except that :samp:`%g, %u, and %U` do not currently support additional :samp:`{suffix}` characters following :samp:`%O` as they do following, for example, :samp:`.o`. ``%I`` Substitute any of :option:`-iprefix` (made from :envvar:`GCC_EXEC_PREFIX`), :option:`-isysroot` (made from :envvar:`TARGET_SYSTEM_ROOT`), :option:`-isystem` (made from :envvar:`COMPILER_PATH` and :option:`-B` options) and :option:`-imultilib` as necessary. ``%s`` Current argument is the name of a library or startup file of some sort. Search for that file in a standard list of directories and substitute the full name found. The current working directory is included in the list of directories scanned. ``%T`` Current argument is the name of a linker script. Search for that file in the current list of directories to scan for libraries. If the file is located insert a :option:`--script` option into the command line followed by the full path name found. If the file is not found then generate an error message. Note: the current working directory is not searched. :samp:`%e{str}` Print :samp:`{str}` as an error message. :samp:`{str}` is terminated by a newline. Use this when inconsistent options are detected. :samp:`%n{str}` Print :samp:`{str}` as a notice. :samp:`{str}` is terminated by a newline. :samp:`%({name})` Substitute the contents of spec string :samp:`{name}` at this point. :samp:`%x{{option}}` Accumulate an option for :samp:`%X`. ``%X`` Output the accumulated linker options specified by a :samp:`%x` spec string. ``%Y`` Output the accumulated assembler options specified by :option:`-Wa`. ``%Z`` Output the accumulated preprocessor options specified by :option:`-Wp`. ``%M`` Output ``multilib_os_dir``. ``%R`` Output the concatenation of ``target_system_root`` and ``target_sysroot_suffix``. ``%a`` Process the ``asm`` spec. This is used to compute the switches to be passed to the assembler. ``%A`` Process the ``asm_final`` spec. This is a spec string for passing switches to an assembler post-processor, if such a program is needed. ``%l`` Process the ``link`` spec. This is the spec for computing the command line passed to the linker. Typically it makes use of the :samp:`%L %G %S %D and %E` sequences. ``%D`` Dump out a :option:`-L` option for each directory that GCC believes might contain startup files. If the target supports multilibs then the current multilib directory is prepended to each of these paths. ``%L`` Process the ``lib`` spec. This is a spec string for deciding which libraries are included on the command line to the linker. ``%G`` Process the ``libgcc`` spec. This is a spec string for deciding which GCC support library is included on the command line to the linker. ``%S`` Process the ``startfile`` spec. This is a spec for deciding which object files are the first ones passed to the linker. Typically this might be a file named :samp:`crt0.o`. ``%E`` Process the ``endfile`` spec. This is a spec string that specifies the last object files that are passed to the linker. ``%C`` Process the ``cpp`` spec. This is used to construct the arguments to be passed to the C preprocessor. ``%1`` Process the ``cc1`` spec. This is used to construct the options to be passed to the actual C compiler (:command:`cc1`). ``%2`` Process the ``cc1plus`` spec. This is used to construct the options to be passed to the actual C++ compiler (:command:`cc1plus`). ``%*`` Substitute the variable part of a matched option. See below. Note that each comma in the substituted string is replaced by a single space. ``%S`` Similar to :samp:`% [] It returns ``result`` if the comparison evaluates to true, and NULL if it doesn't. The supported ``comparison-op`` values are: ``>=`` True if ``switch`` is a later (or same) version than ``arg1`` ``!>`` Opposite of ``>=`` ``<`` True if ``switch`` is an earlier version than ``arg1`` ``!<`` Opposite of ``<`` ``><`` True if ``switch`` is ``arg1`` or later, and earlier than ``arg2`` ``<>`` True if ``switch`` is earlier than ``arg1``, or is ``arg2`` or later If the ``switch`` is not present at all, the condition is false unless the first character of the ``comparison-op`` is ``!``. .. code-block:: %:version-compare(>= 10.3 mmacosx-version-min= -lmx) The above example would add :option:`-lmx` if :option:`-mmacosx-version-min=10.3.9` was passed. ``include`` The ``include`` spec function behaves much like ``%include``, with the advantage that it can be nested inside a spec and thus be conditionalized. It takes one argument, the filename, and looks for it in the startfile path. It always returns NULL. .. code-block:: %{static-libasan|static:%:include(libsanitizer.spec)%(link_libasan)} ``pass-through-libs`` The ``pass-through-libs`` spec function takes any number of arguments. It finds any :option:`-l` options and any non-options ending in :samp:`.a` (which it assumes are the names of linker input library archive files) and returns a result containing all the found arguments each prepended by :option:`-plugin-opt=-pass-through=` and joined by spaces. This list is intended to be passed to the LTO linker plugin. .. code-block:: %:pass-through-libs(%G %L %G) ``print-asm-header`` The ``print-asm-header`` function takes no arguments and simply prints a banner like: .. code-block:: Assembler options ================= Use "-Wa,OPTION" to pass "OPTION" to the assembler. It is used to separate compiler options from assembler options in the :option:`--target-help` output. ``gt`` The ``gt`` spec function takes two or more arguments. It returns ``""`` (the empty string) if the second-to-last argument is greater than the last argument, and NULL otherwise. The following example inserts the ``link_gomp`` spec if the last :option:`-ftree-parallelize-loops=` option given on the command line is greater than 1: .. code-block:: %{%:gt(%{ftree-parallelize-loops=*:%*} 1):%:include(libgomp.spec)%(link_gomp)} ``debug-level-gt`` The ``debug-level-gt`` spec function takes one argument and returns ``""`` (the empty string) if ``debug_info_level`` is greater than the specified number, and NULL otherwise. .. code-block:: %{%:debug-level-gt(0):%{gdwarf*:--gdwarf2}} ``%{S}`` Substitutes the ``-S`` switch, if that switch is given to GCC. If that switch is not specified, this substitutes nothing. Note that the leading dash is omitted when specifying this option, and it is automatically inserted if the substitution is performed. Thus the spec string :samp:`%{foo}` matches the command-line option :option:`-foo` and outputs the command-line option :option:`-foo`. ``%W{S}`` Like ``%{S}`` but mark last argument supplied within as a file to be deleted on failure. ``%@{S}`` Like ``%{S}`` but puts the result into a ``FILE`` and substitutes ``@FILE`` if an ``@file`` argument has been supplied. ``%{S*}`` Substitutes all the switches specified to GCC whose names start with ``-S``, but which also take an argument. This is used for switches like :option:`-o`, :option:`-D`, :option:`-I`, etc. GCC considers :option:`-o foo` as being one switch whose name starts with :samp:`o`. %{o\*} substitutes this text, including the space. Thus two arguments are generated. ``%{S*&T*}`` Like ``%{S*}``, but preserve order of ``S`` and ``T`` options (the order of ``S`` and ``T`` in the spec is not significant). There can be any number of ampersand-separated variables; for each the wild card is optional. Useful for CPP as ``%{D*&U*&A*}``. ``%{S:X}`` Substitutes ``X``, if the :option:`-S` switch is given to GCC. ``%{!S:X}`` Substitutes ``X``, if the :option:`-S` switch is *not* given to GCC. ``%{S*:X}`` Substitutes ``X`` if one or more switches whose names start with ``-S`` are specified to GCC. Normally ``X`` is substituted only once, no matter how many such switches appeared. However, if ``%*`` appears somewhere in ``X``, then ``X`` is substituted once for each matching switch, with the ``%*`` replaced by the part of that switch matching the ``*``. If ``%*`` appears as the last part of a spec sequence then a space is added after the end of the last substitution. If there is more text in the sequence, however, then a space is not generated. This allows the ``%*`` substitution to be used as part of a larger string. For example, a spec string like this: .. code-block:: %{mcu=*:--script=%*/memory.ld} when matching an option like :option:`-mcu=newchip` produces: :option:`--script=newchip/memory.ld` ``%{.S:X}`` Substitutes ``X``, if processing a file with suffix ``S``. ``%{!.S:X}`` Substitutes ``X``, if *not* processing a file with suffix ``S``. ``%{,S:X}`` Substitutes ``X``, if processing a file for language ``S``. ``%{!,S:X}`` Substitutes ``X``, if not processing a file for language ``S``. ``%{S|P:X}`` Substitutes ``X`` if either ``-S`` or ``-P`` is given to GCC. This may be combined with :samp:`!`, :samp:`.`, :samp:`,`, and ``*`` sequences as well, although they have a stronger binding than the :samp:`|`. If ``%*`` appears in ``X``, all of the alternatives must be starred, and only the first matching alternative is substituted. For example, a spec string like this: .. code-block:: %{.c:-foo} %{!.c:-bar} %{.c|d:-baz} %{!.c|d:-boggle} outputs the following command-line options from the following input command-line options: .. code-block:: fred.c -foo -baz jim.d -bar -boggle -d fred.c -foo -baz -boggle -d jim.d -bar -baz -boggle :samp:`%{%:{function}({args}):X}` Call function named :samp:`{function}` with args :samp:`{args}`. If the function returns non-NULL, then ``X`` is substituted, if it returns NULL, it isn't substituted. ``%{S:X; T:Y; :D}`` If ``S`` is given to GCC, substitutes ``X`` ; else if ``T`` is given to GCC, substitutes ``Y`` ; else substitutes ``D``. There can be as many clauses as you need. This may be combined with ``.``, ``,``, ``!``, ``|``, and ``*`` as needed. The switch matching text ``S`` in a :samp:`%{S}`, :samp:`%{S:X}` or similar construct can use a backslash to ignore the special meaning of the character following it, thus allowing literal matching of a character that is otherwise specially treated. For example, :samp:`%{std=iso9899\\:1999:X}` substitutes ``X`` if the :option:`-std=iso9899:1999` option is given. The conditional text ``X`` in a :samp:`%{S:X}` or similar construct may contain other nested :samp:`%` constructs or spaces, or even newlines. They are processed as usual, as described above. Trailing white space in ``X`` is ignored. White space may also appear anywhere on the left side of the colon in these constructs, except between ``.`` or ``*`` and the corresponding word. The :option:`-O`, :option:`-f`, :option:`-m`, and :option:`-W` switches are handled specifically in these constructs. If another value of :option:`-O` or the negated form of a :option:`-f`, :option:`-m`, or :option:`-W` switch is found later in the command line, the earlier switch value is ignored, except with ``{S*}`` where ``S`` is just one letter, which passes all matching options. The character :samp:`|` at the beginning of the predicate text is used to indicate that a command should be piped to the following command, but only if :option:`-pipe` is specified. It is built into GCC which switches take arguments and which do not. (You might think it would be useful to generalize this to allow each compiler's spec to say which switches take arguments. But this cannot be done in a consistent fashion. GCC cannot even decide which input files have been specified without knowing which switches take arguments, and it must know which input files to compile in order to tell which compilers to run). GCC also knows implicitly that arguments starting in :option:`-l` are to be treated as compiler output files, and passed to the linker in their proper position among the other output files.