589 lines
		
	
	
		
			15 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			589 lines
		
	
	
		
			15 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .TH CC 1
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| .SH NAME
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| cc \- MINIX 3 C compiler
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| .SH SYNOPSIS
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| .in +.5i
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| .ti -.5i
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| .BR cc |\c
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| .BR pc |\c
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| .BR m2
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| .RB [ "\-D \fIname\fR[\fB=\fIvalue" ]]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ "\-U \fIname" ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ "\-I \fIdirectory" ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-.\fIsuffix ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-c ]
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| .RB [ \-E ]
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| .RB [ \-P ]
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| .RB [ \-S ]
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| .RB [ \-c.\fIsuffix ]
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| .RB [ \-O ]
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| .RB [ \-O\fIlevel ]
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| .RB [ \-OS ]
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| .RB [ \-OT ]
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| .RB [ \-g ]
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| .RB [ \-n ]
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| .RB [ \-a ]
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| .RB [ \-R ]
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| .RB [ \-A ]
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| .RB [ \-s ]
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| .RB [ \-fsoft ]
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| .RB [ \-fnone ]
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| .RB [ \-w ]
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| .RB [ \-wo ]
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| .RB [ \-ws ]
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| .RB [ \-wa ]
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| .RB [ \-3 ]
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| .RB [ \-_ ]
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| .RB [ \-W\fIname\fB\-\fIoption ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-m\fIarch ]
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| .RB [ "\-o \fIoutfile" ]
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| .RB [ "\-L \fIdirectory" ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-i ]
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| .RB [ \-sep ]
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| .RB [ \-com ]
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| .RB [ \-r ]
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| .RB [ "\-stack \fIsize" ]
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| .I operand
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| \&...
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| .sp .4v
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| .ti -.5i
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| (Minix-86 subset:)
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| .ti -.5i
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| .BR cc |\c
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| .BR pc |\c
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| .BR m2
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| .RB [ "\-D\fIname\fR[\fB=\fIvalue" ]]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ "\-U\fIname" ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ "\-I\fIdirectory" ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-.o ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-c ]
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| .RB [ \-E ]
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| .RB [ \-P ]
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| .RB [ \-S ]
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| .RB [ \-c.\fIsuffix ]
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| .RB [ \-O ]
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| .RB [ \-O\fIlevel ]
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| .RB [ \-n ]
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| .RB [ \-a ]
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| .RB [ \-R ]
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| .RB [ \-A ]
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| .RB [ \-s ]
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| .RB [ \-f ]
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| .RB [ \-w ]
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| .RB [ \-wo ]
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| .RB [ \-ws ]
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| .RB [ \-wa ]
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| .RB [ \-3 ]
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| .RB [ \-_ ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-m ]
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| .RB [ "\-o \fIoutfile" ]
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| .RB [ "\-L\fIdirectory" ]
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| \&...
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| .RB [ \-i ]
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| .RB [ \-sep ]
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| .RB [ \-com ]
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| .I operand
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| \&...
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| .in -.5i
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| .SH DESCRIPTION
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| .BR Cc ,
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| .BR pc ,
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| and
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| .BR m2
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| are the call names of the MINIX 3 C, Pascal, and Modula-2 compilers from
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| the Amsterdam Compiler Kit (ACK).
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| .PP
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| All these call names are links to the
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| .B acd
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| driver program.
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| .B Acd
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| uses the driver description file
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| .B /usr/lib/descr
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| that describes the steps necessary to compile a source file.  The
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| .BR acd (1)
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| manual page describes a few more flags, like
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| .BR \-v ,
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| that may be useful for debugging compiler problems.
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| .PP
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| Minix-86 uses a C program as the compiler driver.  This driver is not as
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| flexible as the one implemented with the
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| .B acd
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| driver, and offers a smaller number of options.  The second line of
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| the synopsis above shows the options that the Minix-86 driver supports.  The
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| rest of this manual page is geared towards the
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| .B acd
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| driver.  People writing software for Minix-86, or that should be
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| portable to all MINIX 3 versions should stick to the options listed under
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| the Minix-86 compiler.
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| .SH OPTIONS
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| The transformations done by the compiler are modified by the following
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| options.  They are a superset of the options required by \s-2POSIX\s+2,
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| with the MINIX 3 or compiler specific ones are marked as such.  Options
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| for one specific compiler are ignored for others.  Read the OPTIONS section
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| of
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| .BR acd (1)
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| for the driver specific options.
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| .PP
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| .TP
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| .BI \-D " name\fR[\fB=\fIvalue\fR]"
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| Same as if
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| .BI #define " name value"
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| had been given.
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| .B 1
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| is assumed if
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| .I value
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| is omitted.  This argument, like all the other double arguments, may also
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| be given as a single argument.  (I.e. either as
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| .BI \-D "\0name"
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| or
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| .BI \-D name\fR.)
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| (The Minix-86 driver is not so flexible, the proper form can be seen in
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| the synopsis.)
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| .TP
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| .BI \-U " \fIname"
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| Undefine the pre-defined symbol
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| .IR name .
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| .TP
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| .BI \-I " directory"
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| Extend the include directory path with the given directory.  These
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| directories are searched for include files in the given order before the
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| standard places.  The standard place for the C compiler is
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| .BR /usr/include ,
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| and for the Modula-2 compiler it is
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| .BR /usr/lib/m2 .
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| .TP
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| .BI \-. suffix
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| Act as if a source file with the given suffix is present on the command line.
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| For each language found on the command line the appropriate libraries are
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| selected.  The first language mentioned selects the runtime startoff.
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| The call name of the driver also chooses the language, so \fBcc\fP is an
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| implicit
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| .BR \-.c .
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| The runtime startoff can be omitted by specifying
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| .B \-.o
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| for those rare cases where you want to supply your own startoff.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .B \-c
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| Transform the input files to object files and stop.  The
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| .B \-o
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| option may be used under MINIX 3 to set the name of the object file.
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| .BR Make (1)
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| likes this, because
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| .BI "cc \-c" " dir/file" .c
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| puts
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| .IB file .o
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| in the current directory, but
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| .BI "cc \-c" " dir/file" .c
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| .BI \-o " dir/file" .o
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| puts the
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| .B .o
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| file where
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| .B make
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| expects it to be by its builtin
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| .B .c.o
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| rule.
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| (Minix-86 can only use
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| .B \-o
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| to name an executable.)
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| .TP
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| .B \-E
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| Run the preprocessor over the input files and send the result to standard
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| output or the file named by
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| .BR \-o .
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| Standard input is read if an input file is named "\fB\-\fR".
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| .TP
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| .B \-P
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| Run the preprocessor over the input files and put the result to files
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| with the suffix
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| .BR .i .
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| File and line number information is omitted from the output.  Use
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| .B \-P \-E
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| under MINIX 3 to omit this info for
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| .B \-E
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| too.
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| .TP
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| .B \-S
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| Transform the input files to assembly files with suffix
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| .BR .s .
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| .TP
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| .BI \-c. suffix
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| Transform the input files to files with the given suffix.  This can only
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| succeed if there is a valid transformation from the input file to the
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| given suffix.  The same goes for
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| .B \-c
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| and other options that are just special cases of this option, except for
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| .BR \-P ,
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| .B \-c.i
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| keeps the line number info.  The option
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| .B \-c.a
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| makes the driver transform the input files to object files and add them to a
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| library.  (So you do not need to know how the archiver works.)  Note that you
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| need to give object files as arguments if you want to replace old object
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| files.  Transformed files are added under a (unique) temporary name.  With
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| .B \-o
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| you can name the library.  (MINIX 3)  (Minix-86 can't do
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| .BR \-c.a .)
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| .TP
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| .B \-O
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| Optimize code.  This option is a no-op, because all the compilers already
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| use the
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| .BR \-O1
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| optimization level to get code of reasonable quality.  Use
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| .BR \-O0
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| to turn off optimization to speed up compilation at debug time.
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| .TP
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| .BI \-O level
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| Compile with the given optimization level.  (MINIX 3)
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| .PP
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| .B \-OS
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| .br
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| .B \-OT
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| .RS
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| Optimize for space or for time.  (MINIX 3)
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| .RE
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| .TP
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| .B \-g
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| Compile the C source with debugging information.  (The way
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| .BR \-g ,
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| .B \-s
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| and
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| .B \-O
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| interact is left unspecified.)
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| .TP
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| .B \-n
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| Omit the file and line number tracking that is used for runtime error reports
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| from Pascal or Modula-2 programs.  The
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| .B \-n
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| flag is normally used to compile library modules, but may also be useful to
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| make a program smaller and faster once debugged.  (Pascal & Modula-2)
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| .TP
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| .B \-a
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| Enable assertions, i.e. statements of the form \fBassert\fI\ test\fR
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| that cause a descriptive runtime error if the boolean expression
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| .I test
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| evaluates false.  (Pascal & Modula-2)
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| .TP
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| .B \-R
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| Disable runtime checks like overflow checking.  (Pascal & Modula-2)
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| .TP
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| .B \-A
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| Enable array bound checks.  (Pascal & Modula-2)
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| .TP
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| .B \-s
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| Strip the resulting executable of its symbol table.
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| .PP
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| .B \-fsoft
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| .br
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| .B \-f
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| .RS
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| Use software floating point instead of hardware floating point.  This is
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| a loader flag, but in general it is best to specify this flag in all
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| phases of the compilation.  (MINIX 3)
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| .RE
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| .TP
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| .B \-fnone
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| Ignored.  Used under Minix-vmd to omit floating point printing/scanning
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| code.  The standard MINIX 3 compiler figures this out automatically using
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| a special loader trick.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .B \-w
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| Do not produce warnings about dubious C language constructs.  Normally
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| the compiler is configured to do the maximum amount of checking
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| without being too annoying.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .B \-wo
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| Omit warnings about old (K&R) style.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .B \-ws
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| Omit strict warnings.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .B \-wa
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| Omit all warnings.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .B \-3
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| Only accept 3rd edition Modula-2.  (Modula-2)
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| .TP
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| .B \-_
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| Allow underscores in Pascal or Modula-2 identifiers, but not at the beginning
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| of an identifier.  (Pascal & Modula-2)
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| .TP
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| .BI \-W name \- option
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| If
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| .I name
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| is the name of the compiler this driver is working for, then
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| .I option
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| is activated for that compiler.  See below for a per-compiler list.  Any other
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| .B \-W
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| option is ignored.  (\fB\-W\fP is described by \s-2POSIX\s+2 as an optional
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| flag to send options to the different compiler passes with a totally
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| different (and nicely ignored) syntax as described here.)  (Minix-86 ignores
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| any
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| .B \-W
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| flag.)
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| .TP
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| .B \-m
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| Under Minix-86 this option transforms the function declarations (prototypes)
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| to the old K&R form, i.e. the arguments declarations are removed.  This saves
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| a lot of memory in the compiler and may allow a large program to be compiled.
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| One must make sure that function arguments are properly type-cast where
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| necessary.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .BI \-m arch
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| Set the target architecture for a cross compiler.  Normally the compiler
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| produces code for the same architecture it itself is compiled for.  The
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| .B ARCH
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| environment variable may also be used to set the architecture.  Architectures
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| names are:
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| .B i86
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| (Intel 8086 and 286),
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| .B i386
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| (Intel 386, 486, ...),
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| .B m68000
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| (Motorola MC68000 & MC68010, 16-bit ints),
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| .B m68010
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| (Motorola MC68000 & MC68010, 32-bit ints),
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| .B m68020
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| (Motorola MC68020, 32-bit ints),
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| .B sparc
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| (Sun SPARC).  (MINIX 3)  (Ignored under Minix-86.)
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| .TP
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| .BI \-o " outfile"
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| Set the output file for the
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| .BR \-c ,
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| .BR \-c.a ,
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| and
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| .BR \-E
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| options, or choose the executable name instead of the default
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| .BR a.out .
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| (Minix-86 can only choose the executable name.)
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| .TP
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| .BI \-L " directory"
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| Extend the library search path with
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| .IR directory .
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| These directories are searched for libraries named by
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| .B \-l
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| in the given order before the standard places.  The standard places are
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| .B /lib/\c
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| .IR arch ,
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| and
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| .B /usr/lib/\c
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| .IR arch .
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| The search for libaries in directories added with
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| .B \-L
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| looks in
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| .IB directory /\c
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| .IR arch
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| and
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| .I directory
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| itself.
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| .RI ( Arch
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| is the machine architecture name.  This is
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| MINIX 3 dependent, compilers on other systems usually only look in
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| .IR directory .)
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| (Minix-86 only has
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| .B /lib
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| and
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| .B /usr/lib
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| as the standard places.)
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| .PP
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| .B \-sep
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| .br
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| .B \-com
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| .RS
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| Create a Separate I&D or a common I&D executable.  The text segment of a
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| separate I&D executable is read-only and shareable.  For an
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| .B i86
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| binary this also means that the text and data segment can each be 64
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| kilobytes large instead of just 64 kilobytes together.  Separate I&D is the
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| default.  Common I&D is probably only useful for the bootstraps.  The
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| .B \-i
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| option has the same meaning as
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| .BR \-sep ,
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| but should no longer be used.
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| (MINIX 3)
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| .RE
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| .TP
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| .B \-r
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| Makes the loader produce a relocatable object file, i.e. a file that
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| may be loaded again.  The runtime startoff and the default libraries are
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| omitted, only the files mentioned are combined.  (MINIX 3)
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| .TP
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| .BI \-stack " size"
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| Allow the process
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| .I size
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| bytes of heap and stack.
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| .I Size
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| is a C-style decimal, octal, or hexadecimal number, optionally followed by
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| the multipliers
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| .BR m ,
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| .BR k ,
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| .BR w ,
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| and
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| .B b
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| for mega (1024*1024), kilo (1024), "word" (2 or 4), and byte (1).  Uppercase
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| letters are accepted too.  A size of
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| .B 32kw
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| is used by default, translating to 64k for
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| .BR i86 ,
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| and 132k for other architectures.  Too large a size is rounded down to keep
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| the data segment within 64 kilobytes for the
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| .BR i86 .
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| (MINIX 3)
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| .SH OPERANDS
 | |
| All leftover operands are treated as files to be compiled, with one
 | |
| exception.  The construct
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| .BI \-l " library"
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| is used to denote a library, usually
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| .BI lib library .a\fR,
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| that is to be searched in the directories mentioned with
 | |
| .B \-L
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| or the standard places.  These libraries keep their place among the
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| (transformed) input files when presented to the loader.  (It is a common
 | |
| mistake to write
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| .BR "cc\ \-lcurses\ x.c"
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| instead of
 | |
| .BR "cc\ x.c\ \-lcurses" .)
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| .SH IMPLEMENTATION
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| The MINIX 3 compiler implementation uses the ACK compilers adapted for use
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| under MINIX 3 as described below.  Read
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| .BR ACK (7)
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| for more detailed information on the ACK compilers themselves.
 | |
| .SS "Feature test macros"
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| The preprocessors are given these arguments to define feature test macros:
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| .B \-D__ACK__
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| tells what compiler is used.
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| .B \-D__minix
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| tells that this is MINIX 3.
 | |
| .BI \-D__ arch
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| tells the architecture.
 | |
| (More macros are defined, but they are only to be used in the include files.)
 | |
| .PP
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| The symbols above are predefined by the preprocessor so that your program is
 | |
| able to "sense" the environment it is in.  It is also possible for your
 | |
| program to do the opposite, to tell what kind of environment it likes to
 | |
| have.  By default,
 | |
| .B cc
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| compiles a standard C program.  If you want the extensions described in
 | |
| POSIX.1 to become visible, then you have to set
 | |
| .BR _POSIX_SOURCE " to " 1
 | |
| at the start of your program.
 | |
| To enable \s-2UNIX\s+2 or MINIX 3 extensions you need to also set
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| .BR _MINIX " to " 1 .
 | |
| If you don't want to clutter your source files with these symbols then you
 | |
| can use
 | |
| .B cc \-D_MINIX \-D_POSIX_SOURCE
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| to get the POSIX.1 and the MINIX 3 extensions.
 | |
| .SS "Preprocessing"
 | |
| Pascal, Modula-2, EM source (see below), and Assembly source are
 | |
| preprocessed by the C preprocessor if the very first character in the file
 | |
| is a '\fB#\fP' character.
 | |
| .SS "Assembly dialects"
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| No two compilers use the same assembly language.  To be able to use the same
 | |
| assembly dialect for the low level support routines an assembly converter is
 | |
| provided.  The input of this converter can be of type
 | |
| .BR ack ,
 | |
| .BR ncc ,
 | |
| or
 | |
| .BR bas ,
 | |
| and the output can be of type
 | |
| .BR ack ,
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| .BR ncc ,
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| or
 | |
| .BR gnu .
 | |
| The suffix of the file tells the assembly dialect (see below), or one can
 | |
| use the option
 | |
| .BI \-Was\- dialect
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| to tell the driver what the dialect of a plain
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| .B .s
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| file is.  The assembly converter is not as smart as the assembler, the
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| translation is more or less a text substitution.  It leaves a lot of
 | |
| checking to the target assembler.  You have to restrict yourself to a subset
 | |
| that is understood by both assemblers.  The ACK assembler for instance
 | |
| doesn't care if you use `ax' or `eax' for a 32 bit register, it looks at the
 | |
| instruction type.  The GNU assembler doesn't like this, so you have to use
 | |
| the proper register name in ACK assembly that is to be translated to GNU
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| assembly.  Expressions are converted as is, even if the operator precedence
 | |
| rules of the two assembly languages differ.  So use parentheses.  The
 | |
| converter does promise one thing: compiler output can be properly
 | |
| translated.  (Note that under Minix-86
 | |
| .B \-W
 | |
| is ignored.  All assembly should therefore be in the "ncc" dialect.)
 | |
| .SH FILES
 | |
| .TP 10
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| .B /usr/lib/descr
 | |
| The compiler description file.
 | |
| .TP
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| .B .c
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| Suffix of a C source file.
 | |
| .TP
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| .B .mod
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| Modula-2.
 | |
| .TP
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| .B .p
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| Pascal.
 | |
| .TP
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| .B .i
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| Preprocessed C source.
 | |
| .TP
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| .B .k
 | |
| ACK machine independent compact EM code produced by the C, Pascal, or
 | |
| Modula-2 front end (or any other ACK front end.)  The ACK compilers are
 | |
| based on the UNCOL idea where several front ends compile to a common
 | |
| intermediate language, and several back ends transform the intermediate
 | |
| language to the target machine language.  The ACK intermediate language
 | |
| is named "EM".
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .m
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| Peephole optimized EM.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .gk
 | |
| Result of the (optional) EM global optimizer.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .g
 | |
| Result of the second EM peephole optimizer used after the global optimizer.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .e
 | |
| Human readable EM.  (Human created or decoded compact EM.)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .s
 | |
| Target machine assembly.  (Current compiler dialect.)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .ack.s
 | |
| ACK assembly.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .ncc.s
 | |
| ACK Xenix style assembly.  This dialect is used by the 16 bit ACK ANSI C
 | |
| compiler.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .gnu.s
 | |
| GNU assembly.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .bas.s
 | |
| BCC assembly.  (Used by the Bruce Evans' BCC compiler, for many years the
 | |
| compiler for Minix-386.)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .o
 | |
| Object code.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B .a
 | |
| Object code library.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B a.out
 | |
| Default output executable.
 | |
| .SH "SEE ALSO"
 | |
| .BR acd (1),
 | |
| .BR ACK (7).
 | |
| .SH AUTHOR
 | |
| Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl)
 | 
