On 2022-05-28 13:44, Benito van der Zander via fpc-pascal wrote:
Hi,
I want to show how my program was compiled. Now I have string like "FPC3.2.2 i386-Linux R+C+" from compiler := 'FPC' + {$INCLUDE %FPCVERSION%} + ' ' + {$INCLUDE %FPCTargetCPU%}+'-'+{$INCLUDE %FPCTargetOS%}+ ' ' + {$IfOpt R+}+'R+'{$endif} {$IfOpt S+}+'S+'{$endif} {$IfOpt O+}+'O+'{$endif} {$IfOpt Q+}+'Q+'{$endif} {$IfOpt M+}+'M+'{$endif} {$IfOpt C+}+'C+'{$endif}; But the optimization level (-O2 or -O1 ...) is missing. Is there an IFOPT for that? Or a define with all the arguments
I don't think that there's such an option at the moment. However, you can possibly solve it by always taking the options from an environment variable to the command line and then including contents of this command line to your sources. I don't think that it makes much sense for the compiler to provide such an option, because unlike the compiler version, different options (including the optimization level) may be used for compilation of different units and there's no such a thing as a general optimization level valid for the complete compiled program from the compiler point of view. You can introduce something like that yourself by always building all your sources from scratch, but then the solution outlined above should work for you.
Tomas _______________________________________________ fpc-pascal maillist - fpc-pascal@lists.freepascal.org https://lists.freepascal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/fpc-pascal