Package: libstdc++5 Version: 1:3.2.1-0pre6 Severity: normal Tags: upstream
Underlying types are used when creating the mangled name of symbols in C++. In libstdc++, many symbols contains the type mbstate_t. As encoded in the mangled name, the underlying type, __mbstate_t is used. When unmangled, this results in a different source name than what was used in the source. Here is an example: libstdc++ contains the symbol _ZNKSt7codecvtIcc11__mbstate_tE11do_encodingEv. c++filt de-mangles this as std::codecvt<char, char, __mbstate_t>::do_encoding() const, which is not the same thing as in the ISO C++ specification, which would be std::codecvt<char, char, mbstate_t>::do_encoding() const (ref ISO C++ 22.2.1.5). The difference is __mbstate_t vs mbstate_t. It seem that an unmangling operation should produce the original source symbol. This seems like it may be an ABI issue as the C++ headers produce different mangled symbol if headers other than GNU libc headers are used. We ran into this when testing the LSB development environment in conjunction with C++. The LSB description of mbstate_t is a typedef of an anonymous structure, and doesn't have the intermediate __mbstate_t as the glibc headers do. Since __mbstate_t doesn't seem to be present in the source standards, we didn't want to include it in the LSB descriptions. -- System Information: Debian Release: testing/unstable Architecture: i386 Kernel: Linux bego 2.4.18 #25 Tue Aug 6 14:04:58 EDT 2002 i686 Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=C Versions of packages libstdc++5 depends on: ii gcc-3.2-base 1:3.2.1-0pre6 The GNU Compiler Collection (base ii libc6 2.3.1-3 GNU C Library: Shared libraries an ii libgcc1 1:3.2.1-0pre6 GCC support library. -- no debconf information