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:GCC Hacks in the Linux Kernel: Discover GCC Extensions for the C Language
GCC Hacks in the Linux Kernel: Discover GCC Extensions for the C Language
Nov 21, 2008, 21 :03 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (2267 reads)

(Other stories by M. Tim Jones)

"GCC and Linux are a great pair. Although they are independent pieces of software, Linux is totally dependent on GCC to enable it on new architectures. Linux further exploits features in GCC, called extensions, for greater functionality and optimization. This article explores many of these important extensions and shows you how they're used within the Linux kernel.

GCC in its current stable version (version 4.3.2) supports three versions of the C standard:

"* The original International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standard of the C language (ISO C89 or C90)
* ISO C90 with amendment 1
* The current ISO C99 (the default standard that GCC uses and that this article assumes)

Note: This article assumes that you are using the ISO C99 standard. If you specify a standard older than the ISO C99 version, some of the extensions described in this article may be disabled. To specify the actual standard that GCC uses, you can use the -std option from the command line. Use the GCC manual to verify which extensions are supported in which versions of the standard (see Resources for a link)."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
What's New in the GNU Compiler Collection Release Series(Oct 30, 2008)
C++: the Ugly Useful Programming Language(Oct 14, 2008)
GNU Toolchain Update: September 2008(Oct 06, 2008)
GCC 4.3.0 Released(Mar 11, 2008)
Linux: Supporting Older GCC Releases(Aug 22, 2007)
Command Line Efficiency with GNU Perfect(Aug 02, 2007)
Thank You, GCC!(Jul 12, 2007)



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