[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Can somebody explain why gcc (version 3.2 20020927) on Cygwin does > this? Type this simple C program > > void func(void){ > struct {unsigned char data[3985];}var; > } > > and compile with > > gcc -c filename.c > > Then type > > nm filename.o > > The output is > > 00000000 b .bss > 00000000 d .data > 00000000 t .text > U __alloca > 00000000 T _func > > Why on earth is the symbol __alloca doing there? > > Just change the program to > > void func(void){ > struct {unsigned char data[3984];}var; > } > > and compile it. This time, nm's output is > > 00000000 b .bss > 00000000 d .data > 00000000 t .text > 00000000 T _func > > as it should. Is there a reason why the symbol __alloca appears?
GCC's __builtin_alloca uses a helper function called _alloca to check the stack whenever allocating more that 4000 bytes in one go. Danny http://movies.yahoo.com.au - Yahoo! Movies - What's on at your local cinema? -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Bug reporting: http://cygwin.com/bugs.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/