Am 17.03.2016 um 14:42 schrieb Ismail Donmez:
On Thu, Mar 17, 2016 at 3:35 PM, Marco Atzeri <marco.atz...@gmail.com> wrote:
it seems to prefer gcc headers
# 1 "/usr/bin/../lib/clang/3.7.1/include/limits.h" 1 3 4
# 37 "/usr/bin/../lib/clang/3.7.1/include/limits.h" 3 4
# 1 "/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-cygwin/5.3.0/include/limits.h" 1 3 4
# 38 "/usr/bin/../lib/clang/3.7.1/include/limits.h" 2 3 4
# 17 "/usr/include/sys/dirent.h" 2 3 4
I am looking at clang 3.7 headers on Linux so this might be not 100%
same on Cygwin but, clang's limits.h has this on top:
/* The system's limits.h may, in turn, try to #include_next GCC's limits.h.
Avert this #include_next madness. */
#if defined __GNUC__ && !defined _GCC_LIMITS_H_
#define _GCC_LIMITS_H_
#endif
which should prevent including gcc's own limits.h but looks like it doesn't.
Actually, that would only try to prevent expanding the contents of GCC's
limits.h, by pre-setting its multiple-inclusion guard macro. Which
means that the
#include_next<limits.h>
following it now begins to look at GCC's version, bounces off the guard
macro, and finishes. The actual system <limits.h> would have been
#include_next'ed in turn (line 168 of /usr/lib/gcc/.../limits.h), but
that was disabled by the above hack.
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