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netbsd-11-0-RC1:1.1.1.3
gcc-14-3-0:1.1.1.4
perseant-exfatfs-base-20250801:1.1.1.3
netbsd-11:1.1.1.3.0.4
netbsd-11-base:1.1.1.3
gcc-12-5-0:1.1.1.3
netbsd-10-1-RELEASE:1.1.1.2
perseant-exfatfs-base-20240630:1.1.1.3
gcc-12-4-0:1.1.1.3
perseant-exfatfs:1.1.1.3.0.2
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netbsd-10-0-RELEASE:1.1.1.2
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netbsd-10-0-RC3:1.1.1.2
netbsd-10-0-RC2:1.1.1.2
netbsd-10-0-RC1:1.1.1.2
gcc-12-3-0:1.1.1.3
gcc-10-5-0:1.1.1.2
netbsd-10:1.1.1.2.0.6
netbsd-10-base:1.1.1.2
gcc-10-4-0:1.1.1.2
cjep_sun2x-base1:1.1.1.2
cjep_sun2x:1.1.1.2.0.4
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cjep_staticlib_x-base1:1.1.1.2
cjep_staticlib_x:1.1.1.2.0.2
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gcc-10-3-0:1.1.1.2
gcc-9-3-0:1.1.1.1
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comment @ * @;
1.1
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1.1
log
@Initial revision
@
text
@// -*- C++ -*- default std::terminate handler
// Copyright (C) 2002-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
//
// This file is part of GCC.
//
// GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option)
// any later version.
//
// GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU General Public License for more details.
//
// Under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted additional
// permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, version
// 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and
// a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program;
// see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see
// .
#include
/* We default to the talkative, informative handler in a normal hosted
library. This pulls in the demangler, the dyn-string utilities, and
elements of the I/O library. For a low-memory environment, you can return
to the earlier "silent death" handler by configuring GCC with
--disable-libstdcxx-verbose and rebuilding the library.
In a freestanding environment, we default to this latter approach. */
#if _GLIBCXX_HOSTED && _GLIBCXX_VERBOSE && __cpp_exceptions
# define _GLIBCXX_DEFAULT_TERM_HANDLER __gnu_cxx::__verbose_terminate_handler
#else
# include
# define _GLIBCXX_DEFAULT_TERM_HANDLER std::abort
#endif
@
1.1.1.1
log
@initial import of GCC 9.3.0. changes include:
- live patching support
- shell completion help
- generally better diagnostic output (less verbose/more useful)
- diagnostics and optimisation choices can be emitted in json
- asan memory usage reduction
- many general, and specific to switch, inter-procedure,
profile and link-time optimisations. from the release notes:
"Overall compile time of Firefox 66 and LibreOffice 6.2.3 on
an 8-core machine was reduced by about 5% compared to GCC 8.3"
- OpenMP 5.0 support
- better spell-guesser
- partial experimental support for c2x and c++2a
- c++17 is no longer experimental
- arm AAPCS GCC 6-8 structure passing bug fixed, may cause
incompatibility (restored compat with GCC 5 and earlier.)
- openrisc support
@
text
@@
1.1.1.2
log
@initial import of GCC 10.3.0. main changes include:
caveats:
- ABI issue between c++14 and c++17 fixed
- profile mode is removed from libstdc++
- -fno-common is now the default
new features:
- new flags -fallocation-dce, -fprofile-partial-training,
-fprofile-reproducible, -fprofile-prefix-path, and -fanalyzer
- many new compile and link time optimisations
- enhanced drive optimisations
- openacc 2.6 support
- openmp 5.0 features
- new warnings: -Wstring-compare and -Wzero-length-bounds
- extended warnings: -Warray-bounds, -Wformat-overflow,
-Wrestrict, -Wreturn-local-addr, -Wstringop-overflow,
-Warith-conversion, -Wmismatched-tags, and -Wredundant-tags
- some likely C2X features implemented
- more C++20 implemented
- many new arm & intel CPUs known
hundreds of reported bugs are fixed. full list of changes
can be found at:
https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-10/changes.html
@
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@d2 1
a2 1
// Copyright (C) 2002-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@
1.1.1.3
log
@initial import of GCC 12.3.0.
major changes in GCC 11 included:
- The default mode for C++ is now -std=gnu++17 instead of -std=gnu++14.
- When building GCC itself, the host compiler must now support C++11,
rather than C++98.
- Some short options of the gcov tool have been renamed: -i to -j and
-j to -H.
- ThreadSanitizer improvements.
- Introduce Hardware-assisted AddressSanitizer support.
- For targets that produce DWARF debugging information GCC now defaults
to DWARF version 5. This can produce up to 25% more compact debug
information compared to earlier versions.
- Many optimisations.
- The existing malloc attribute has been extended so that it can be
used to identify allocator/deallocator API pairs. A pair of new
-Wmismatched-dealloc and -Wmismatched-new-delete warnings are added.
- Other new warnings:
-Wsizeof-array-div, enabled by -Wall, warns about divisions of two
sizeof operators when the first one is applied to an array and the
divisor does not equal the size of the array element.
-Wstringop-overread, enabled by default, warns about calls to string
functions reading past the end of the arrays passed to them as
arguments.
-Wtsan, enabled by default, warns about unsupported features in
ThreadSanitizer (currently std::atomic_thread_fence).
- Enchanced warnings:
-Wfree-nonheap-object detects many more instances of calls to
deallocation functions with pointers not returned from a dynamic
memory allocation function.
-Wmaybe-uninitialized diagnoses passing pointers or references to
uninitialized memory to functions taking const-qualified arguments.
-Wuninitialized detects reads from uninitialized dynamically
allocated memory.
-Warray-parameter warns about functions with inconsistent array forms.
-Wvla-parameter warns about functions with inconsistent VLA forms.
- Several new features from the upcoming C2X revision of the ISO C
standard are supported with -std=c2x and -std=gnu2x.
- Several C++20 features have been implemented.
- The C++ front end has experimental support for some of the upcoming
C++23 draft.
- Several new C++ warnings.
- Enhanced Arm, AArch64, x86, and RISC-V CPU support.
- The implementation of how program state is tracked within
-fanalyzer has been completely rewritten with many enhancements.
see https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-11/changes.html for a full list.
major changes in GCC 12 include:
- An ABI incompatibility between C and C++ when passing or returning
by value certain aggregates containing zero width bit-fields has
been discovered on various targets. x86-64, ARM and AArch64
will always ignore them (so there is a C ABI incompatibility
between GCC 11 and earlier with GCC 12 or later), PowerPC64 ELFv2
always take them into account (so there is a C++ ABI
incompatibility, GCC 4.4 and earlier compatible with GCC 12 or
later, incompatible with GCC 4.5 through GCC 11). RISC-V has
changed the handling of these already starting with GCC 10. As
the ABI requires, MIPS takes them into account handling function
return values so there is a C++ ABI incompatibility with GCC 4.5
through 11.
- STABS: Support for emitting the STABS debugging format is
deprecated and will be removed in the next release. All ports now
default to emit DWARF (version 2 or later) debugging info or are
obsoleted.
- Vectorization is enabled at -O2 which is now equivalent to the
original -O2 -ftree-vectorize -fvect-cost-model=very-cheap.
- GCC now supports the ShadowCallStack sanitizer.
- Support for __builtin_shufflevector compatible with the clang
language extension was added.
- Support for attribute unavailable was added.
- Support for __builtin_dynamic_object_size compatible with the
clang language extension was added.
- New warnings:
-Wbidi-chars warns about potentially misleading UTF-8
bidirectional control characters.
-Warray-compare warns about comparisons between two operands of
array type.
- Some new features from the upcoming C2X revision of the ISO C
standard are supported with -std=c2x and -std=gnu2x.
- Several C++23 features have been implemented.
- Many C++ enhancements across warnings and -f options.
see https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-12/changes.html for a full list.
@
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// Copyright (C) 2002-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@
1.1.1.4
log
@initial import of GCC 14.3.0.
major changes in GCC 13:
- improved sanitizer
- zstd debug info compression
- LTO improvements
- SARIF based diagnostic support
- new warnings: -Wxor-used-as-pow, -Wenum-int-mismatch, -Wself-move,
-Wdangling-reference
- many new -Wanalyzer* specific warnings
- enhanced warnings: -Wpessimizing-move, -Wredundant-move
- new attributes to mark file descriptors, c++23 "assume"
- several C23 features added
- several C++23 features added
- many new features for Arm, x86, RISC-V
major changes in GCC 14:
- more strict C99 or newer support
- ia64* marked deprecated (but seemingly still in GCC 15.)
- several new hardening features
- support for "hardbool", which can have user supplied values of true/false
- explicit support for stack scrubbing upon function exit
- better auto-vectorisation support
- added clang-compatible __has_feature and __has_extension
- more C23, including -std=c23
- several C++26 features added
- better diagnostics in C++ templates
- new warnings: -Wnrvo, Welaborated-enum-base
- many new features for Arm, x86, RISC-V
- possible ABI breaking change for SPARC64 and small structures with arrays
of floats.
@
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// Copyright (C) 2002-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@