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Command: gcc-local | Section: 1 | Source: OpenBSD | File: gcc-local.1
GCC-LOCAL(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual GCC-LOCAL(1)
NAME
gcc-local - local modifications to gcc
DESCRIPTION
OpenBSD uses derivatives of gcc(1) versions 3.3.6 or 4.2.1, depending on
machine architecture. In all cases, the software comes with specific
modifications for OpenBSD:
- For the C programming language, gcc defaults to the gnu99 standard,
not gnu89. The -std option can be used to select a different
language standard.
- gcc does not search under /usr/local for include files nor for
libraries: as a system compiler, it only searches the system paths by
default.
- On all architectures where the stack is non-executable, trampoline
code marks the smallest possible area around the trampoline stub
executable using mprotect(2).
- Trampoline code generation is disabled by default. Code requiring
trampolines will not compile without -ftrampolines. The warning flag
-Wtrampolines can be used to locate trampoline instances if
trampoline generation is re-enabled.
- The -O2 option does not include -fstrict-aliasing, as this option
causes issues on some legacy code. -fstrict-aliasing is very unsafe
with code that plays tricks with casts, bypassing the already weak
type system of C.
- The -O2 option does not include -fstrict-overflow, as this option
causes issues on some legacy code. -fstrict-overflow can cause
surprising optimizations to occur, possibly deleting security
critical overflow checks.
- The -O2 option does not include the -ftree-vrp optimization as it is
known to be broken in gcc 4.2.1.
- gcc recognizes the extra format attribute syslog, to better match the
definition of syslog(3), and silence erroneous warnings when used
with -pedantic.
- gcc recognizes the attribute __nonnull__, which can be used to mark
arguments that can't be NULL. The printf format attribute does not
imply __nonnull__ for the format. This allows for correct format
checking on the err(3) function family.
- gcc recognizes the extra attribute __sentinel__, which can be used to
mark varargs function that need a NULL pointer to mark argument
termination, like execl(3). This exposes latent bugs for 64-bit
architectures, where a terminating 0 will expand to a 32-bit int, and
not a full-fledged 64-bits pointer.
- On alpha, -mieee is enabled by default to enable full compliance with
the IEEE floating point standard, although the "inexact" flag is not
maintained. Additionally, rounding mode is dynamic.
- gcc comes with the "ProPolice" stack protection extension, which is
enabled by default. This extension reorders local variable
declarations and adds stack consistency checks at runtime, in order
to detect stack overflows, and will attempt to report the problem in
the system logs by calling syslog(3) with a LOG_CRIT priority
message: "stack overflow in function XXX", and abort the faulting
process. It can be turned off using the -fno-stack-protector command
line option. Note that the stack protector relies on some support
code in libc. Stand-alone programs not linked against libc must
either provide their own support bits or use the -fno-stack-protector
option.
There is a -fstack-protector-all option that turns stack protection
code on for all functions and disables any heuristic that flags some
functions as safe. This extended checking has a moderate runtime
cost though. There is a -fstack-protector-strong option, similar to
-fstack-protector, which includes additional functions to be
protected -- those that have local array definitions or have
references to local frame addresses.
- On amd64, -msave-args can be passed to the compiler to have functions
save their register arguments on the stack, while maintaining
compatibility with the System 5 AMD64 ABI. This enables tools and
debuggers that understand this semantic to trivially generate stack
traces that include function arguments.
- On the alpha, amd64, arm, hppa, i386, mips64, powerpc, sh and sparc64
architectures, gcc generates position-independent executables (PIEs)
by default, allowing the system to load the resulting binary at a
random location. This behavior can be turned off by passing -fno-pie
to the compiler and -nopie to the linker.
- gcc recognizes a new flag which is enabled by default, -Wbounded, to
perform basic checks on functions which accept buffers and sizes. An
extra attribute, __bounded__, has been added to mark functions that
can be checked this way.
- gcc recognizes a new format attribute, kprintf, to deal with the
extra format arguments `%b', `%r', and `%z' used in the OpenBSD
kernel.
- gcc does not store its version string in objects. This behavior can
be restored with -fident.
- The option -fstack-shuffle will randomize the order of stack
variables at compile time with gcc 4.2.1, which can be helpful to
find bugs. This option is silently ignored by gcc 3.3.6.
- gcc will not move variables initialized with the value zero from the
data section to the bss section. The default behaviour of gcc 3.3.6
and gcc 4.2.1 on other systems is to perform this action, which can
be restored for OpenBSD with -fzero-initialized-in-bss.
- gcc does not warn for cast expressions used as lvalues outside of
-pedantic.
- gcc 4.2.1 does not warn for passing pointer arguments or assignment
with different signedness outside of -pedantic. This can be re-
enabled with the -Wpointer-sign flag.
- gcc recognizes the preprocessor flag -CC that lets comments in macros
pass through to the output (except in -traditional mode).
- The warning option -Wsystem-headers, which makes gcc report warnings
in systems headers, is enabled by default.
- gcc supports two extra warning options:
-Wframe-larger-than=N (and its non-portable alias
-Wstack-larger-than-N) will report functions using more than N bytes
of stack space for their local variables. Stack space used for other
purposes (such as register window saving, callee-saved registers, or
outbound arguments storage) is not taken into account for this check.
-Wvariable-decl will report automatic variable declarations whose
size cannot be determined at compile-time.
- gcc 4.2.1 and gcc 3.3.6 have backported support for the GCC binary
integer constants extension, which was first introduced in gcc 4.3.
- The behavior of -Wshadow in gcc 4.2.1 has been altered to behave
similarly to gcc 4.8 and not warn about variables or parameters that
shadow a global function unless the variable or parameter is of type
pointer-to-function.
ATTRIBUTES
The __bounded__ attribute is used to type-check functions whose
parameters pass fixed-length buffers and their sizes. The syntax for
normal buffers is:
__attribute__((__bounded__(__buffer__, buffer, length)))
where buffer contains the parameter number (starting from 1) of the
pointer to the buffer, and length contains the parameter number of the
buffer length argument.
gcc will emit a warning if the length argument is a constant larger than
the actual size of the buffer. If the buffer is not a statically
declared array of fixed length, no warnings will be generated. Refer to
memcpy(3) for an example of a function with this check.
For checking strings, just use __string__ instead of __buffer__:
__attribute__((__bounded__(__string__, buffer, length)))
In addition to the checks described above, this also tests if the length
argument was wrongly derived from a sizeof(void *) operation. strlcpy(3)
is a good example of a string function with this check.
If a function needs string checking like __string__ but operates on
element counts rather than buffer sizes, use __wcstring__:
__attribute__((__bounded__(__wcstring__, buffer, count)))
An example of a string function with this check is wcslcpy(3).
Some functions specify the length as two arguments: the number of
elements and the size of each element. In this case, use the __size__
attribute:
__attribute__((__bounded__(__size__, buffer, nmemb, size)))
where buffer contains the parameter number of the pointer to the buffer,
nmemb contains the parameter number of the number of members, and size
has the parameter number of the size of each element. The type checks
performed by __size__ are the same as the __buffer__ attribute. See
fread(3) for an example of this type of function.
If a function accepts a buffer parameter and specifies that it has to be
of a minimum length, the __minbytes__ attribute can be used:
__attribute__((__bounded__(__minbytes__, buffer, minsize)))
where buffer contains the parameter number of the pointer to the buffer,
and minsize specifies the minimum number of bytes that the buffer should
be. ctime_r(3) is an example of this type of function.
If -Wbounded is specified with -Wformat, additional checks are performed
on sscanf(3) format strings. The `%s' fields are checked for incorrect
bound lengths by checking the size of the buffer associated with the
format argument.
SEE ALSO
gcc(1)
CAVEATS
The -Wbounded flag only works with statically allocated fixed-size
buffers. Since it is applied at compile-time, dynamically allocated
memory buffers and non-constant arguments are ignored.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 October 29, 2023 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8