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GCC(1)				      GNU				GCC(1)

NAME
       gcc - GNU project C and C++ compiler

SYNOPSIS
       gcc [-c|-S|-E] [-std=standard]
	   [-g]	[-pg] [-Olevel]
	   [-Wwarn...] [-Wpedantic]
	   [-Idir...] [-Ldir...]
	   [-Dmacro[=defn]...] [-Umacro]
	   [-foption...] [-mmachine-option...]
	   [-o outfile]	[@file]	infile...

       Only the	most useful options are	listed here; see below for the
       remainder.  g++ accepts mostly the same options as gcc.

DESCRIPTION
       When you	invoke GCC, it normally	does preprocessing, compilation,
       assembly	and linking.  The "overall options" allow you to stop this
       process at an intermediate stage.  For example, the -c option says not
       to run the linker.  Then	the output consists of object files output by
       the assembler.

       Other options are passed	on to one or more stages of processing.	 Some
       options control the preprocessor	and others the compiler	itself.	 Yet
       other options control the assembler and linker; most of these are not
       documented here,	since you rarely need to use any of them.

       Most of the command-line	options	that you can use with GCC are useful
       for C programs; when an option is only useful with another language
       (usually	C++), the explanation says so explicitly.  If the description
       for a particular	option does not	mention	a source language, you can use
       that option with	all supported languages.

       The usual way to	run GCC	is to run the executable called	gcc, or
       machine-gcc when	cross-compiling, or machine-gcc-version	to run a
       specific	version	of GCC.	 When you compile C++ programs,	you should
       invoke GCC as g++ instead.

       The gcc program accepts options and file	names as operands.  Many
       options have multi-letter names;	therefore multiple single-letter
       options may not be grouped: -dv is very different from -d -v.

       You can mix options and other arguments.	 For the most part, the	order
       you use doesn't matter.	Order does matter when you use several options
       of the same kind; for example, if you specify -L	more than once,	the
       directories are searched	in the order specified.	 Also, the placement
       of the -l option	is significant.

       Many options have long names starting with -f or	with -W---for example,
       -fmove-loop-invariants, -Wformat	and so on.  Most of these have both
       positive	and negative forms; the	negative form of -ffoo is -fno-foo.
       This manual documents only one of these two forms, whichever one	is not
       the default.

       Some options take one or	more arguments typically separated either by a
       space or	by the equals sign (=) from the	option name.  Unless
       documented otherwise, an	argument can be	either numeric or a string.
       Numeric arguments must typically	be small unsigned decimal or
       hexadecimal integers.  Hexadecimal arguments must begin with the	0x
       prefix.	Arguments to options that specify a size threshold of some
       sort may	be arbitrarily large decimal or	hexadecimal integers followed
       by a byte size suffix designating a multiple of bytes such as "kB" and
       "KiB" for kilobyte and kibibyte,	respectively, "MB" and "MiB" for
       megabyte	and mebibyte, "GB" and "GiB" for gigabyte and gigibyte,	and so
       on.  Such arguments are designated by byte-size in the following	text.
       Refer to	the NIST, IEC, and other relevant national and international
       standards for the full listing and explanation of the binary and
       decimal byte size prefixes.

OPTIONS
   Option Summary
       Here is a summary of all	the options, grouped by	type.  Explanations
       are in the following sections.

       Overall Options
	   -c	-S   -E	  -o file -dumpbase dumpbase  -dumpbase-ext auxdropsuf
	   -dumpdir  dumppfx   -x  language  -v	  -###	  --help[=class[,...]]
	   --target-help    --version	-pass-exit-codes   -pipe   -specs=file
	   -wrapper   @file    -ffile-prefix-map=old=new    -fcanon-prefix-map
	   -fplugin=file      -fplugin-arg-name=arg	-fdump-ada-spec[-slim]
	   -fada-spec-parent=unit  -fdump-go-spec=file

       C Language Options
	   -ansi   -std=standard   -aux-info  filename	-fno-asm  -fno-builtin
	   -fno-builtin-function    -fcond-mismatch  -ffreestanding   -fgimple
	   -fgnu-tm    -fgnu89-inline	  -fhosted    -flax-vector-conversions
	   -fms-extensions   -foffload=arg    -foffload-options=arg  -fopenacc
	   -fopenacc-dim=geom		  -fopenmp		 -fopenmp-simd
	   -fopenmp-target-simd-clone[=device-type]
	   -fpermitted-flt-eval-methods=standard	    -fplan9-extensions
	   -fsigned-bitfields	     -funsigned-bitfields	 -fsigned-char
	   -funsigned-char  -fstrict-flex-arrays[=n] -fsso-struct=endianness

       C++ Language Options
	   -fabi-version=n	    -fno-access-control	       -faligned-new=n
	   -fargs-in-order=n	-fchar8_t    -fcheck-new   -fconstexpr-depth=n
	   -fconstexpr-cache-depth=n		      -fconstexpr-loop-limit=n
	   -fconstexpr-ops-limit=n		       -fno-elide-constructors
	   -fno-enforce-eh-specs  -fno-gnu-keywords  -fno-immediate-escalation
	   -fno-implicit-templates		-fno-implicit-inline-templates
	   -fno-implement-inlines     -fmodule-header[=kind]	 -fmodule-only
	   -fmodules-ts	      -fmodule-implicit-inline	      -fno-module-lazy
	   -fmodule-mapper=specification	       -fmodule-version-ignore
	   -fms-extensions	-fnew-inheriting-ctors	    -fnew-ttp-matching
	   -fno-nonansi-builtins       -fnothrow-opt	   -fno-operator-names
	   -fno-optional-diags	       -fno-pretty-templates	     -fno-rtti
	   -fsized-deallocation			  -ftemplate-backtrace-limit=n
	   -ftemplate-depth=n	 -fno-threadsafe-statics      -fuse-cxa-atexit
	   -fno-weak	       -nostdinc++	   -fvisibility-inlines-hidden
	   -fvisibility-ms-compat			-fext-numeric-literals
	   -flang-info-include-translate[=header]
	   -flang-info-include-translate-not   -flang-info-module-cmi[=module]
	   -stdlib=libstdc++,libc++ -Wabi-tag  -Wcatch-value   -Wcatch-value=n
	   -Wno-class-conversion       -Wclass-memaccess     -Wcomma-subscript
	   -Wconditionally-supported			  -Wno-conversion-null
	   -Wctad-maybe-unsupported  -Wctor-dtor-privacy  -Wdangling-reference
	   -Wno-delete-incomplete		     -Wdelete-non-virtual-dtor
	   -Wno-deprecated-array-compare		     -Wdeprecated-copy
	   -Wdeprecated-copy-dtor	  -Wno-deprecated-enum-enum-conversion
	   -Wno-deprecated-enum-float-conversion		      -Weffc++
	   -Wno-elaborated-enum-base	   -Wno-exceptions	  -Wextra-semi
	   -Wno-global-module				-Wno-inaccessible-base
	   -Wno-inherited-variadic-ctor		       -Wno-init-list-lifetime
	   -Winvalid-constexpr -Winvalid-imported-macros -Wno-invalid-offsetof
	   -Wno-literal-suffix	  -Wmismatched-new-delete    -Wmismatched-tags
	   -Wmultiple-inheritance    -Wnamespaces    -Wnarrowing    -Wnoexcept
	   -Wnoexcept-type	   -Wnon-virtual-dtor	    -Wpessimizing-move
	   -Wno-placement-new	  -Wplacement-new=n	-Wrange-loop-construct
	   -Wredundant-move	-Wredundant-tags     -Wreorder	    -Wregister
	   -Wstrict-null-sentinel      -Wno-subobject-linkage	   -Wtemplates
	   -Wno-non-template-friend    -Wold-style-cast	  -Woverloaded-virtual
	   -Wno-pmf-conversions	-Wself-move -Wsign-promo  -Wsized-deallocation
	   -Wsuggest-final-methods  -Wsuggest-final-types   -Wsuggest-override
	   -Wno-template-id-cdtor      -Wno-terminate	     -Wno-vexing-parse
	   -Wvirtual-inheritance      -Wno-virtual-move-assign	    -Wvolatile
	   -Wzero-as-null-pointer-constant

       Objective-C and Objective-C++ Language Options
	   -fconstant-string-class=class-name  -fgnu-runtime	-fnext-runtime
	   -fno-nil-receivers	 -fobjc-abi-version=n	-fobjc-call-cxx-cdtors
	   -fobjc-direct-dispatch -fobjc-exceptions -fobjc-gc  -fobjc-nilcheck
	   -fobjc-std=objc1				      -fno-local-ivars
	   -fivar-visibility=[public|protected|private|package]
	   -freplace-objc-classes  -fzero-link	-gen-decls  -Wassign-intercept
	   -Wno-property-assign-default	    -Wno-protocol    -Wobjc-root-class
	   -Wselector -Wstrict-selector-match -Wundeclared-selector

       Diagnostic Message Formatting Options
	   -fmessage-length=n			    -fdiagnostics-plain-output
	   -fdiagnostics-show-location=[once|every-line]
	   -fdiagnostics-color=[auto|never|always]
	   -fdiagnostics-urls=[auto|never|always]
	   -fdiagnostics-format=[text|sarif-stderr|sarif-file|json|json-
	   stderr|json-file]		      -fno-diagnostics-json-formatting
	   -fno-diagnostics-show-option		   -fno-diagnostics-show-caret
	   -fno-diagnostics-show-labels	    -fno-diagnostics-show-line-numbers
	   -fno-diagnostics-show-cwe		    -fno-diagnostics-show-rule
	   -fdiagnostics-minimum-margin-width=width
	   -fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits	  -fdiagnostics-generate-patch
	   -fdiagnostics-show-template-tree		       -fno-elide-type
	   -fdiagnostics-path-format=[none|separate-events|inline-events]
	   -fdiagnostics-show-path-depths		      -fno-show-column
	   -fdiagnostics-column-unit=[display|byte]
	   -fdiagnostics-column-origin=origin
	   -fdiagnostics-escape-format=[unicode|bytes]
	   -fdiagnostics-text-art-charset=[none|ascii|unicode|emoji]

       Warning Options
	   -fsyntax-only     -fmax-errors=n	-Wpedantic    -pedantic-errors
	   -fpermissive	    -w	    -Wextra	-Wall	  -Wabi=n    -Waddress
	   -Wno-address-of-packed-member    -Waggregate-return	  -Walloc-size
	   -Walloc-size-larger-than=byte-size	    -Walloc-zero      -Walloca
	   -Walloca-larger-than=byte-size   -Wno-aggressive-loop-optimizations
	   -Warith-conversion	      -Warray-bounds	      -Warray-bounds=n
	   -Warray-compare	 -Warray-parameter	   -Warray-parameter=n
	   -Wno-attributes	 -Wattribute-alias=n	  -Wno-attribute-alias
	   -Wno-attribute-warning	  -Wbidi-chars=[none|unpaired|any|ucn]
	   -Wbool-compare   -Wbool-operation -Wno-builtin-declaration-mismatch
	   -Wno-builtin-macro-redefined	  -Wc90-c99-compat    -Wc99-c11-compat
	   -Wc11-c23-compat   -Wc++-compat    -Wc++11-compat	-Wc++14-compat
	   -Wc++17-compat	  -Wc++20-compat	 -Wno-c++11-extensions
	   -Wno-c++14-extensions  -Wno-c++17-extensions	 -Wno-c++20-extensions
	   -Wno-c++23-extensions     -Wcalloc-transposed-args	  -Wcast-align
	   -Wcast-align=strict	       -Wcast-function-type	   -Wcast-qual
	   -Wchar-subscripts		  -Wclobbered		     -Wcomment
	   -Wcompare-distinct-pointer-types	      -Wno-complain-wrong-lang
	   -Wconversion	  -Wno-coverage-mismatch    -Wno-cpp   -Wdangling-else
	   -Wdangling-pointer	       -Wdangling-pointer=n	   -Wdate-time
	   -Wno-deprecated  -Wno-deprecated-declarations  -Wno-designated-init
	   -Wdisabled-optimization	       -Wno-discarded-array-qualifiers
	   -Wno-discarded-qualifiers	-Wno-div-by-zero    -Wdouble-promotion
	   -Wduplicated-branches	 -Wduplicated-cond	  -Wempty-body
	   -Wno-endif-labels	      -Wenum-compare	     -Wenum-conversion
	   -Wenum-int-mismatch	-Werror	   -Werror=*	-Wexpansion-to-defined
	   -Wfatal-errors   -Wflex-array-member-not-at-end  -Wfloat-conversion
	   -Wfloat-equal    -Wformat	-Wformat=2    -Wno-format-contains-nul
	   -Wno-format-extra-args   -Wformat-nonliteral	   -Wformat-overflow=n
	   -Wformat-security	 -Wformat-signedness	 -Wformat-truncation=n
	   -Wformat-y2k	     -Wframe-address	 -Wframe-larger-than=byte-size
	   -Wno-free-nonheap-object			   -Wno-if-not-aligned
	   -Wno-ignored-attributes			  -Wignored-qualifiers
	   -Wno-incompatible-pointer-types	  -Whardened	    -Wimplicit
	   -Wimplicit-fallthrough		      -Wimplicit-fallthrough=n
	   -Wno-implicit-function-declaration		     -Wno-implicit-int
	   -Winfinite-recursion	  -Winit-self	-Winline   -Wno-int-conversion
	   -Wint-in-bool-context		      -Wno-int-to-pointer-cast
	   -Wno-invalid-memory-model	   -Winvalid-pch	-Winvalid-utf8
	   -Wno-unicode	      -Wjump-misses-init       -Wlarger-than=byte-size
	   -Wlogical-not-parentheses	      -Wlogical-op	   -Wlong-long
	   -Wno-lto-type-mismatch	 -Wmain		 -Wmaybe-uninitialized
	   -Wmemset-elt-size			      -Wmemset-transposed-args
	   -Wmisleading-indentation   -Wmissing-attributes    -Wmissing-braces
	   -Wmissing-field-initializers		    -Wmissing-format-attribute
	   -Wmissing-include-dirs   -Wmissing-noreturn	  -Wno-missing-profile
	   -Wno-multichar	    -Wmultistatement-macros	     -Wnonnull
	   -Wnonnull-compare		       -Wnormalized=[none|id|nfc|nfkc]
	   -Wnull-dereference	  -Wno-odr    -Wopenacc-parallelism   -Wopenmp
	   -Wopenmp-simd	  -Wno-overflow		  -Woverlength-strings
	   -Wno-override-init-side-effects			      -Wpacked
	   -Wno-packed-bitfield-compat	    -Wpacked-not-aligned      -Wpadded
	   -Wparentheses	 -Wno-pedantic-ms-format       -Wpointer-arith
	   -Wno-pointer-compare	     -Wno-pointer-to-int-cast	  -Wno-pragmas
	   -Wno-prio-ctor-dtor		 -Wredundant-decls	    -Wrestrict
	   -Wno-return-local-addr    -Wreturn-type   -Wno-scalar-storage-order
	   -Wsequence-point    -Wshadow	    -Wshadow=global	-Wshadow=local
	   -Wshadow=compatible-local			      -Wno-shadow-ivar
	   -Wno-shift-count-negative		     -Wno-shift-count-overflow
	   -Wshift-negative-value   -Wno-shift-overflow	    -Wshift-overflow=n
	   -Wsign-compare      -Wsign-conversion    -Wno-sizeof-array-argument
	   -Wsizeof-array-div -Wsizeof-pointer-div  -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess
	   -Wstack-protector	 -Wstack-usage=byte-size     -Wstrict-aliasing
	   -Wstrict-aliasing=n	    -Wstrict-overflow	   -Wstrict-overflow=n
	   -Wstring-compare   -Wno-stringop-overflow	-Wno-stringop-overread
	   -Wno-stringop-truncation			  -Wstrict-flex-arrays
	   -Wsuggest-attribute=[pure|const|noreturn|format|malloc]    -Wswitch
	   -Wno-switch-bool	      -Wswitch-default		 -Wswitch-enum
	   -Wno-switch-outside-range	-Wno-switch-unreachable	   -Wsync-nand
	   -Wsystem-headers	   -Wtautological-compare	 -Wtrampolines
	   -Wtrigraphs	 -Wtrivial-auto-var-init    -Wno-tsan	 -Wtype-limits
	   -Wundef		-Wuninitialized		     -Wunknown-pragmas
	   -Wunsuffixed-float-constants	  -Wunused  -Wunused-but-set-parameter
	   -Wunused-but-set-variable		       -Wunused-const-variable
	   -Wunused-const-variable=n	 -Wunused-function	-Wunused-label
	   -Wunused-local-typedefs	-Wunused-macros	    -Wunused-parameter
	   -Wno-unused-result	     -Wunused-value	     -Wunused-variable
	   -Wuse-after-free   -Wuse-after-free=n   -Wuseless-cast -Wno-varargs
	   -Wvariadic-macros	   -Wvector-operation-performance	 -Wvla
	   -Wvla-larger-than=byte-size			  -Wno-vla-larger-than
	   -Wvolatile-register-var     -Wwrite-strings	  -Wno-xor-used-as-pow
	   -Wzero-length-bounds

       Static Analyzer Options
	   -fanalyzer	  -fanalyzer-call-summaries    -fanalyzer-checker=name
	   -fno-analyzer-feasibility		       -fanalyzer-fine-grained
	   -fanalyzer-show-events-in-system-headers  -fno-analyzer-state-merge
	   -fno-analyzer-state-purge	      -fno-analyzer-suppress-followups
	   -fanalyzer-transitivity		   -fno-analyzer-undo-inlining
	   -fanalyzer-verbose-edges	      -fanalyzer-verbose-state-changes
	   -fanalyzer-verbosity=level			       -fdump-analyzer
	   -fdump-analyzer-callgraph		-fdump-analyzer-exploded-graph
	   -fdump-analyzer-exploded-nodes     -fdump-analyzer-exploded-nodes-2
	   -fdump-analyzer-exploded-nodes-3	-fdump-analyzer-exploded-paths
	   -fdump-analyzer-feasibility		 -fdump-analyzer-infinite-loop
	   -fdump-analyzer-json			   -fdump-analyzer-state-purge
	   -fdump-analyzer-stderr		    -fdump-analyzer-supergraph
	   -fdump-analyzer-untracked		   -Wno-analyzer-double-fclose
	   -Wno-analyzer-double-free
	   -Wno-analyzer-exposure-through-output-file
	   -Wno-analyzer-exposure-through-uninit-copy
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-access-mode-mismatch -Wno-analyzer-fd-double-close
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-leak	       -Wno-analyzer-fd-phase-mismatch
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-type-mismatch     -Wno-analyzer-fd-use-after-close
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-use-without-check	       -Wno-analyzer-file-leak
	   -Wno-analyzer-free-of-non-heap
	   -Wno-analyzer-imprecise-fp-arithmetic   -Wno-analyzer-infinite-loop
	   -Wno-analyzer-infinite-recursion    -Wno-analyzer-jump-through-null
	   -Wno-analyzer-malloc-leak	-Wno-analyzer-mismatching-deallocation
	   -Wno-analyzer-null-argument		-Wno-analyzer-null-dereference
	   -Wno-analyzer-out-of-bounds	     -Wno-analyzer-overlapping-buffers
	   -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-argument
	   -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-dereference
	   -Wno-analyzer-putenv-of-auto-var -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-negative
	   -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-overflow
	   -Wno-analyzer-stale-setjmp-buffer
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-allocation-size
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-assertion   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-array-index
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-divisor	  -Wno-analyzer-tainted-offset
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-size		 -Wanalyzer-symbol-too-complex
	   -Wanalyzer-too-complex      -Wno-analyzer-undefined-behavior-strtok
	   -Wno-analyzer-unsafe-call-within-signal-handler
	   -Wno-analyzer-use-after-free
	   -Wno-analyzer-use-of-pointer-in-stale-stack-frame
	   -Wno-analyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value
	   -Wno-analyzer-va-arg-type-mismatch  -Wno-analyzer-va-list-exhausted
	   -Wno-analyzer-va-list-leak	-Wno-analyzer-va-list-use-after-va-end
	   -Wno-analyzer-write-to-const	-Wno-analyzer-write-to-string-literal

       C and Objective-C-only Warning Options
	   -Wbad-function-cast				-Wmissing-declarations
	   -Wmissing-parameter-type	  -Wdeclaration-missing-parameter-type
	   -Wmissing-prototypes		       -Wmissing-variable-declarations
	   -Wnested-externs  -Wold-style-declaration	-Wold-style-definition
	   -Wstrict-prototypes	    -Wtraditional     -Wtraditional-conversion
	   -Wdeclaration-after-statement  -Wpointer-sign

       Debugging Options
	   -g  -glevel	-gdwarf	 -gdwarf-version -gbtf -gctf  -gctflevel -ggdb
	   -grecord-gcc-switches    -gno-record-gcc-switches	-gstrict-dwarf
	   -gno-strict-dwarf	   -gas-loc-support	   -gno-as-loc-support
	   -gas-locview-support	      -gno-as-locview-support	    -gcodeview
	   -gcolumn-info       -gno-column-info	      -gdwarf32	     -gdwarf64
	   -gstatement-frontiers		      -gno-statement-frontiers
	   -gvariable-location-views		  -gno-variable-location-views
	   -ginternal-reset-location-views  -gno-internal-reset-location-views
	   -ginline-points  -gno-inline-points -gvms -gz[=type]	 -gsplit-dwarf
	   -gdescribe-dies     -gno-describe-dies   -fdebug-prefix-map=old=new
	   -fdebug-types-section	     -fno-eliminate-unused-debug-types
	   -femit-struct-debug-baseonly		   -femit-struct-debug-reduced
	   -femit-struct-debug-detailed[=spec-list]
	   -fno-eliminate-unused-debug-symbols	     -femit-class-debug-always
	   -fno-merge-debug-strings	 -fno-dwarf2-cfi-asm	-fvar-tracking
	   -fvar-tracking-assignments

       Optimization Options
	   -faggressive-loop-optimizations -falign-functions[=n[:m:[n2[:m2]]]]
	   -falign-jumps[=n[:m:[n2[:m2]]]]    -falign-labels[=n[:m:[n2[:m2]]]]
	   -falign-loops[=n[:m:[n2[:m2]]]]	  -fmin-function-alignment=[n]
	   -fno-allocation-dce	 -fallow-store-data-races   -fassociative-math
	   -fauto-profile	   -fauto-profile[=path]	-fauto-inc-dec
	   -fbranch-probabilities  -fcaller-saves  -fcombine-stack-adjustments
	   -fconserve-stack	     -ffold-mem-offsets		-fcompare-elim
	   -fcprop-registers	     -fcrossjumping	    -fcse-follow-jumps
	   -fcse-skip-blocks	    -fcx-fortran-rules	    -fcx-limited-range
	   -fdata-sections		 -fdce		      -fdelayed-branch
	   -fdelete-null-pointer-checks				-fdevirtualize
	   -fdevirtualize-speculatively	   -fdevirtualize-at-ltrans	 -fdse
	   -fearly-inlining	    -fipa-sra	     -fexpensive-optimizations
	   -ffat-lto-objects  -ffast-math   -ffinite-math-only	 -ffloat-store
	   -fexcess-precision=style	-ffinite-loops	   -fforward-propagate
	   -ffp-contract=style		  -ffunction-sections		-fgcse
	   -fgcse-after-reload	  -fgcse-las   -fgcse-lm   -fgraphite-identity
	   -fgcse-sm  -fhoist-adjacent-loads  -fif-conversion -fif-conversion2
	   -findirect-inlining	 -finline-stringops[=fn]    -finline-functions
	   -finline-functions-called-once		      -finline-limit=n
	   -finline-small-functions  -fipa-modref   -fipa-cp	-fipa-cp-clone
	   -fipa-bit-cp	 -fipa-vrp  -fipa-pta  -fipa-profile  -fipa-pure-const
	   -fipa-reference   -fipa-reference-addressable -fipa-stack-alignment
	   -fipa-icf	  -fira-algorithm=algorithm	 -flive-patching=level
	   -fira-region=region	   -fira-hoist-pressure	   -fira-loop-pressure
	   -fno-ira-share-save-slots		    -fno-ira-share-spill-slots
	   -fisolate-erroneous-paths-dereference
	   -fisolate-erroneous-paths-attribute			      -fivopts
	   -fkeep-inline-functions		       -fkeep-static-functions
	   -fkeep-static-consts			    -flimit-function-alignment
	   -flive-range-shrinkage	-floop-block	    -floop-interchange
	   -floop-strip-mine	-floop-unroll-and-jam	  -floop-nest-optimize
	   -floop-parallelize-all  -flra-remat	-flto  -flto-compression-level
	   -flto-partition=alg	   -fmerge-all-constants     -fmerge-constants
	   -fmodulo-sched			 -fmodulo-sched-allow-regmoves
	   -fmove-loop-invariants   -fmove-loop-stores	 -fno-branch-count-reg
	   -fno-defer-pop     -fno-fp-int-builtin-inexact    -fno-function-cse
	   -fno-guess-branch-probability      -fno-inline      -fno-math-errno
	   -fno-peephole	-fno-peephole2	      -fno-printf-return-value
	   -fno-sched-interblock      -fno-sched-spec	     -fno-signed-zeros
	   -fno-toplevel-reorder			    -fno-trapping-math
	   -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss			  -fomit-frame-pointer
	   -foptimize-sibling-calls	 -fpartial-inlining	  -fpeel-loops
	   -fpredictive-commoning -fprefetch-loop-arrays  -fprofile-correction
	   -fprofile-use      -fprofile-use=path    -fprofile-partial-training
	   -fprofile-values   -fprofile-reorder-functions    -freciprocal-math
	   -free	      -frename-registers	      -freorder-blocks
	   -freorder-blocks-algorithm=algorithm	-freorder-blocks-and-partition
	   -freorder-functions				-frerun-cse-after-loop
	   -freschedule-modulo-scheduled-loops		       -frounding-math
	   -fsave-optimization-record		      -fsched2-use-superblocks
	   -fsched-pressure   -fsched-spec-load	   -fsched-spec-load-dangerous
	   -fsched-stalled-insns-dep[=n]	     -fsched-stalled-insns[=n]
	   -fsched-group-heuristic	       -fsched-critical-path-heuristic
	   -fsched-spec-insn-heuristic			-fsched-rank-heuristic
	   -fsched-last-insn-heuristic		   -fsched-dep-count-heuristic
	   -fschedule-fusion	    -fschedule-insns	     -fschedule-insns2
	   -fsection-anchors  -fselective-scheduling   -fselective-scheduling2
	   -fsel-sched-pipelining	    -fsel-sched-pipelining-outer-loops
	   -fsemantic-interposition    -fshrink-wrap	-fshrink-wrap-separate
	   -fsignaling-nans			   -fsingle-precision-constant
	   -fsplit-ivs-in-unroller	    -fsplit-loops	 -fsplit-paths
	   -fsplit-wide-types	  -fsplit-wide-types-early	-fssa-backprop
	   -fssa-phiopt	  -fstdarg-opt	  -fstore-merging    -fstrict-aliasing
	   -fipa-strict-aliasing  -fthread-jumps    -ftracer	-ftree-bit-ccp
	   -ftree-builtin-call-dce  -ftree-ccp	-ftree-ch -ftree-coalesce-vars
	   -ftree-copy-prop    -ftree-dce    -ftree-dominator-opts  -ftree-dse
	   -ftree-forwprop  -ftree-fre	-fcode-hoisting	-ftree-loop-if-convert
	   -ftree-loop-im	-ftree-phiprop	      -ftree-loop-distribution
	   -ftree-loop-distribute-patterns		   -ftree-loop-ivcanon
	   -ftree-loop-linear	 -ftree-loop-optimize	 -ftree-loop-vectorize
	   -ftree-parallelize-loops=n	    -ftree-pre	    -ftree-partial-pre
	   -ftree-pta	 -ftree-reassoc	    -ftree-scev-cprop	   -ftree-sink
	   -ftree-slsr	-ftree-sra -ftree-switch-conversion  -ftree-tail-merge
	   -ftree-ter	-ftree-vectorize   -ftree-vrp  -ftrivial-auto-var-init
	   -funconstrained-commons    -funit-at-a-time	    -funroll-all-loops
	   -funroll-loops     -funsafe-math-optimizations     -funswitch-loops
	   -fipa-ra	-fvariable-expansion-in-unroller     -fvect-cost-model
	   -fvpt    -fweb     -fwhole-program	  -fwpa	   -fuse-linker-plugin
	   -fzero-call-used-regs --param name=value -O	 -O0   -O1   -O2   -O3
	   -Os	-Ofast	-Og  -Oz

       Program Instrumentation Options
	   -p	   -pg	    -fprofile-arcs	--coverage     -ftest-coverage
	   -fcondition-coverage	    -fprofile-abs-path	    -fprofile-dir=path
	   -fprofile-generate	-fprofile-generate=path	-fprofile-info-section
	   -fprofile-info-section=name			   -fprofile-note=path
	   -fprofile-prefix-path=path		       -fprofile-update=method
	   -fprofile-filter-files=regex		 -fprofile-exclude-files=regex
	   -fprofile-reproducible=[multithreaded|parallel-runs|serial]
	   -fsanitize=style	-fsanitize-recover    -fsanitize-recover=style
	   -fsanitize-trap   -fsanitize-trap=style -fasan-shadow-offset=number
	   -fsanitize-sections=s1,s2,...    -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error
	   -fbounds-check      -fcf-protection=[full|branch|return|none|check]
	   -fharden-compares	 -fharden-conditional-branches	    -fhardened
	   -fharden-control-flow-redundancy		   -fhardcfr-skip-leaf
	   -fhardcfr-check-exceptions	       -fhardcfr-check-returning-calls
	   -fhardcfr-check-noreturn-calls=[always|no-xthrow|nothrow|never]
	   -fstack-protector   -fstack-protector-all  -fstack-protector-strong
	   -fstack-protector-explicit				 -fstack-check
	   -fstack-limit-register=reg		      -fstack-limit-symbol=sym
	   -fno-stack-limit   -fsplit-stack  -fstrub=disable	-fstrub=strict
	   -fstrub=relaxed   -fstrub=all   -fstrub=at-calls   -fstrub=internal
	   -fvtable-verify=[std|preinit|none]	 -fvtv-counts	   -fvtv-debug
	   -finstrument-functions		   -finstrument-functions-once
	   -finstrument-functions-exclude-function-list=sym,sym,...
	   -finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list=file,file,...
	   -fprofile-prefix-map=old=new	-fpatchable-function-entry=N[,M]

       Preprocessor Options
	   -Aquestion=answer -A-question[=answer] -C  -CC  -Dmacro[=defn]  -dD
	   -dI	    -dM	     -dN      -dU    -fdebug-cpp     -fdirectives-only
	   -fdollars-in-identifiers			-fexec-charset=charset
	   -fextended-identifiers		       -finput-charset=charset
	   -flarge-source-files			    -fmacro-prefix-map=old=new
	   -fmax-include-depth=depth -fno-canonical-system-headers  -fpch-deps
	   -fpch-preprocess	      -fpreprocessed	       -ftabstop=width
	   -ftrack-macro-expansion		   -fwide-exec-charset=charset
	   -fworking-directory	-H   -imacros file  -include file -M  -MD  -MF
	   -MG	-MM  -MMD  -MP	-MQ  -MT -Mno-modules  -no-integrated-cpp   -P
	   -pthread  -remap -traditional  -traditional-cpp  -trigraphs -Umacro
	   -undef -Wp,option  -Xpreprocessor option

       Assembler Options
	   -Wa,option  -Xassembler option

       Linker Options
	   object-file-name	-fuse-ld=linker	    -llibrary	 -nostartfiles
	   -nodefaultlibs    -nolibc	-nostdlib    -nostdlib++   -e	 entry
	   --entry=entry   -pie	   -pthread    -r    -rdynamic	 -s    -static
	   -static-pie	 -static-libgcc	   -static-libstdc++   -static-libasan
	   -static-libtsan     -static-liblsan	   -static-libubsan    -shared
	   -shared-libgcc  -symbolic -T	script	-Wl,option  -Xlinker option -u
	   symbol  -z keyword

       Directory Options
	   -Bprefix  -Idir  -I-	-idirafter dir -imacros	file   -imultilib  dir
	   -iplugindir=dir  -iprefix file -iquote dir  -isysroot dir  -isystem
	   dir	   -iwithprefix	    dir	    -iwithprefixbefore	  dir	 -Ldir
	   -no-canonical-prefixes  --no-sysroot-suffix -nostdinc   -nostdinc++
	   --sysroot=dir

       Code Generation Options
	   -fcall-saved-reg	-fcall-used-reg	   -ffixed-reg	  -fexceptions
	   -fnon-call-exceptions   -fdelete-dead-exceptions    -funwind-tables
	   -fasynchronous-unwind-tables			       -fno-gnu-unique
	   -finhibit-size-directive  -fcommon  -fno-ident  -fpcc-struct-return
	   -fpic     -fPIC     -fpie	 -fPIE	   -fno-plt   -fno-jump-tables
	   -fno-bit-tests      -frecord-gcc-switches	   -freg-struct-return
	   -fshort-enums    -fshort-wchar   -fverbose-asm    -fpack-struct[=n]
	   -fleading-underscore	  -ftls-model=model  -fstack-reuse=reuse_level
	   -ftrampolines   -ftrampoline-impl=[stack|heap]   -ftrapv    -fwrapv
	   -fvisibility=[default|internal|hidden|protected]
	   -fstrict-volatile-bitfields	-fsync-libcalls

       Developer Options
	   -dletters  -dumpspecs  -dumpmachine	-dumpversion  -dumpfullversion
	   -fcallgraph-info[=su,da]  -fchecking	  -fchecking=n	-fdbg-cnt-list
	   -fdbg-cnt=counter-value-list		       -fdisable-ipa-pass_name
	   -fdisable-rtl-pass_name	    -fdisable-rtl-pass-name=range-list
	   -fdisable-tree-pass_name	   -fdisable-tree-pass-name=range-list
	   -fdump-debug	  -fdump-earlydebug  -fdump-noaddr   -fdump-unnumbered
	   -fdump-unnumbered-links  -fdump-final-insns[=file]	-fdump-ipa-all
	   -fdump-ipa-cgraph	      -fdump-ipa-inline	       -fdump-lang-all
	   -fdump-lang-switch			    -fdump-lang-switch-options
	   -fdump-lang-switch-options=filename	-fdump-passes  -fdump-rtl-pass
	   -fdump-rtl-pass=filename	-fdump-statistics      -fdump-tree-all
	   -fdump-tree-switch			    -fdump-tree-switch-options
	   -fdump-tree-switch-options=filename		-fcompare-debug[=opts]
	   -fcompare-debug-second -fenable-kind-pass -fenable-kind-pass=range-
	   list	      -fira-verbose=n	   -flto-report	      -flto-report-wpa
	   -fmem-report-wpa	    -fmem-report	  -fpre-ipa-mem-report
	   -fpost-ipa-mem-report     -fopt-info	     -fopt-info-options[=file]
	   -fmultiflags		 -fprofile-report	  -frandom-seed=string
	   -fsched-verbose=n	 -fsel-sched-verbose	  -fsel-sched-dump-cfg
	   -fsel-sched-pipelining-verbose	 -fstats	 -fstack-usage
	   -ftime-report				 -ftime-report-details
	   -fvar-tracking-assignments-toggle			      -gtoggle
	   -print-file-name=library		       -print-libgcc-file-name
	   -print-multi-directory  -print-multi-lib  -print-multi-os-directory
	   -print-prog-name=program   -print-search-dirs   -Q	-print-sysroot
	   -print-sysroot-headers-suffix      -save-temps      -save-temps=cwd
	   -save-temps=obj  -time[=file]

       Machine-Dependent Options
	   AArch64   Options   -mabi=name     -mbig-endian     -mlittle-endian
	   -mgeneral-regs-only	-mcmodel=tiny	-mcmodel=small	-mcmodel=large
	   -mstrict-align      -mno-strict-align     -momit-leaf-frame-pointer
	   -mtls-dialect=desc	  -mtls-dialect=traditional    -mtls-size=size
	   -mfix-cortex-a53-835769		       -mfix-cortex-a53-843419
	   -mlow-precision-recip-sqrt			  -mlow-precision-sqrt
	   -mlow-precision-div			   -mpc-relative-literal-loads
	   -msign-return-address=scope	-mbranch-protection=none|standard|pac-
	   ret[+leaf  +b-key]|bti  -mharden-sls=opts  -march=name   -mcpu=name
	   -mtune=name		-moverride=string	   -mverbose-cost-dump
	   -mstack-protector-guard=guard    -mstack-protector-guard-reg=sysreg
	   -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset	   -mtrack-speculation
	   -moutline-atomics -mearly-ldp-fusion	-mlate-ldp-fusion

	   Adapteva Epiphany Options -mhalf-reg-file  -mprefer-short-insn-regs
	   -mbranch-cost=num  -mcmove  -mnops=num   -msoft-cmpsf  -msplit-lohi
	   -mpost-inc	 -mpost-modify	  -mstack-offset=num   -mround-nearest
	   -mlong-calls	     -mshort-calls	 -msmall16	-mfp-mode=mode
	   -mvect-double	-max-vect-align=num	 -msplit-vecmove-early
	   -m1reg-reg

	   AMD GCN Options -march=gpu -mtune=gpu -mstack-size=bytes

	   ARC	Options	  -mbarrel-shifter    -mjli-always   -mcpu=cpu	  -mA6
	   -mARC600    -mA7    -mARC700	 -mdpfp	  -mdpfp-compact   -mdpfp-fast
	   -mno-dpfp-lrsr -mea	-mno-mpy  -mmul32x16  -mmul64  -matomic	-mnorm
	   -mspfp  -mspfp-compact  -mspfp-fast	-msimd	 -msoft-float	-mswap
	   -mcrc   -mdsp-packa	 -mdvbf	  -mlock   -mmac-d16  -mmac-24	-mrtsc
	   -mswape -mtelephony	-mxy   -misize	 -mannotate-align   -marclinux
	   -marclinux_prof	-mlong-calls	   -mmedium-calls      -msdata
	   -mirq-ctrl-saved  -mrgf-banked-regs	 -mlpc-width=width    -G   num
	   -mvolatile-cache   -mtp-regno=regno -malign-call  -mauto-modify-reg
	   -mbbit-peephole   -mno-brcc	-mcase-vector-pcrel   -mcompact-casesi
	   -mno-cond-exec   -mearly-cbranchsi  -mexpand-adddi  -mindexed-loads
	   -mlra	   -mlra-priority-none		-mlra-priority-compact
	   -mlra-priority-noncompact	-mmillicode   -mmixed-code   -mq-class
	   -mRcq    -mRcw    -msize-level=level	  -mtune=cpu	-mmultcost=num
	   -mcode-density-frame		  -munalign-prob-threshold=probability
	   -mmpy-option=multo  -mdiv-rem   -mcode-density   -mll64   -mfpu=fpu
	   -mrf16  -mbranch-index

	   ARM	   Options     -mapcs-frame	 -mno-apcs-frame    -mabi=name
	   -mapcs-stack-check	   -mno-apcs-stack-check      -mapcs-reentrant
	   -mno-apcs-reentrant	      -mgeneral-regs-only	-msched-prolog
	   -mno-sched-prolog  -mlittle-endian	-mbig-endian   -mbe8	-mbe32
	   -mfloat-abi=name	   -mfp16-format=name	     -mthumb-interwork
	   -mno-thumb-interwork	   -mcpu=name	   -march=name	    -mfpu=name
	   -mtune=name	     -mprint-tune-info	   -mstructure-size-boundary=n
	   -mabort-on-noreturn -mlong-calls  -mno-long-calls -msingle-pic-base
	   -mno-single-pic-base	    -mpic-register=reg	   -mnop-fun-dllimport
	   -mpoke-function-name	  -mthumb   -marm   -mflip-thumb  -mtpcs-frame
	   -mtpcs-leaf-frame			   -mcaller-super-interworking
	   -mcallee-super-interworking	   -mtp=name	 -mtls-dialect=dialect
	   -mword-relocations				  -mfix-cortex-m3-ldrd
	   -mfix-cortex-a57-aes-1742098		  -mfix-cortex-a72-aes-1655431
	   -munaligned-access	    -mneon-for-64bits	     -mslow-flash-data
	   -masm-syntax-unified	 -mrestrict-it -mverbose-cost-dump -mpure-code
	   -mcmse   -mfix-cmse-cve-2021-35465	 -mstack-protector-guard=guard
	   -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset		       -mfdpic
	   -mbranch-protection=none|standard|pac-ret[+leaf]   [+bti]|bti[+pac-
	   ret[+leaf]]

	   AVR	   Options     -mmcu=mcu      -mabsdata	     -maccumulate-args
	   -mbranch-cost=cost	      -mfuse-add=level	      -mcall-prologues
	   -mgas-isr-prologues	      -mint8	    -mflmap	 -mdouble=bits
	   -mlong-double=bits	      -mn_flash=size	       -mno-interrupts
	   -mmain-is-OS_task	-mrelax	   -mrmw    -mstrict-X	  -mtiny-stack
	   -mrodata-in-ram  -mfract-convert-truncate -mshort-calls  -mskip-bug
	   -nodevicelib	 -nodevicespecs	-Waddr-space-convert  -Wmisspelled-isr

	   Blackfin	   Options	  -mcpu=cpu[-sirevision]	 -msim
	   -momit-leaf-frame-pointer		  -mno-omit-leaf-frame-pointer
	   -mspecld-anomaly	   -mno-specld-anomaly	       -mcsync-anomaly
	   -mno-csync-anomaly	 -mlow-64k     -mno-low64k    -mstack-check-l1
	   -mid-shared-library	-mno-id-shared-library	 -mshared-library-id=n
	   -mleaf-id-shared-library    -mno-leaf-id-shared-library  -msep-data
	   -mno-sep-data      -mlong-calls	-mno-long-calls	     -mfast-fp
	   -minline-plt	 -mmulticore  -mcorea  -mcoreb	-msdram	-micplb

	   C6X	 Options   -mbig-endian	   -mlittle-endian   -march=cpu	 -msim
	   -msdata=sdata-type

	   CRIS	Options	-mcpu=cpu  -march=cpu  -mtune=cpu  -mmax-stack-frame=n
	   -metrax4    -metrax100    -mpdebug	 -mcc-init   -mno-side-effects
	   -mstack-align   -mdata-align	  -mconst-align	  -m32-bit    -m16-bit
	   -m8-bit    -mno-prologue-epilogue   -melf	-maout	  -sim	 -sim2
	   -mmul-bug-workaround	 -mno-mul-bug-workaround

	   C-SKY   Options   -march=arch     -mcpu=cpu	  -mbig-endian	   -EB
	   -mlittle-endian     -EL   -mhard-float    -msoft-float    -mfpu=fpu
	   -mdouble-float  -mfdivdu -mfloat-abi=name  -melrw   -mistack	  -mmp
	   -mcp	  -mcache   -msecurity	 -mtrust  -mdsp	  -medsp  -mvdsp -mdiv
	   -msmart   -mhigh-registers	-manchor  -mpushpop    -mmultiple-stld
	   -mconstpool	  -mstack-size	  -mccrt   -mbranch-cost=n    -mcse-cc
	   -msched-prolog -msim

	   Darwin     Options	  -all_load	 -allowable_client	 -arch
	   -arch_errors_fatal	   -arch_only	    -bind_at_load      -bundle
	   -bundle_loader	  -client_name		-compatibility_version
	   -current_version    -dead_strip    -dependency-file	   -dylib_file
	   -dylinker_install_name	     -dynamic		   -dynamiclib
	   -exported_symbols_list	   -filelist	       -flat_namespace
	   -force_cpusubtype_ALL			 -force_flat_namespace
	   -headerpad_max_install_names	   -iframework	  -image_base	 -init
	   -install_name	  -keep_private_externs		 -multi_module
	   -multiply_defined	    -multiply_defined_unused	   -noall_load
	   -no_dead_strip_inits_and_terms  -nodefaultrpaths   -nofixprebinding
	   -nomultidefs	  -noprebind   -noseglinkedit -pagezero_size  -prebind
	   -prebind_all_twolevel_modules  -private_bundle    -read_only_relocs
	   -sectalign	-sectobjectsymbols   -whyload	-seg1addr  -sectcreate
	   -sectobjectsymbols	 -sectorder   -segaddr	  -segs_read_only_addr
	   -segs_read_write_addr   -seg_addr_table    -seg_addr_table_filename
	   -seglinkedit	-segprot  -segs_read_only_addr	 -segs_read_write_addr
	   -single_module	-static	      -sub_library	 -sub_umbrella
	   -twolevel_namespace	-umbrella  -undefined -unexported_symbols_list
	   -weak_reference_mismatches	-whatsloaded	-F    -gused	-gfull
	   -mmacosx-version-min=version	-mkernel  -mone-byte-bool

	   DEC	   Alpha    Options    -mno-fp-regs	-msoft-float	-mieee
	   -mieee-with-inexact	    -mieee-conformant	   -mfp-trap-mode=mode
	   -mfp-rounding-mode=mode   -mtrap-precision=mode   -mbuild-constants
	   -mcpu=cpu-type   -mtune=cpu-type   -mbwx    -mmax	-mfix	 -mcix
	   -mfloat-vax	    -mfloat-ieee    -mexplicit-relocs	  -msmall-data
	   -mlarge-data	-msmall-text  -mlarge-text -mmemory-latency=time

	   eBPF	 Options  -mbig-endian	 -mlittle-endian   -mframe-limit=bytes
	   -mxbpf  -mco-re  -mno-co-re	-mjmpext  -mjmp32 -malu32 -mv3-atomics
	   -mbswap     -msdiv	  -msmov      -mcpu=version	 -masm=dialect
	   -minline-memops-threshold=bytes

	   FR30	Options	-msmall-model  -mno-lsim

	   FT32	Options	-msim  -mlra  -mnodiv  -mft32b	-mcompress  -mnopm

	   FRV	Options	 -mgpr-32   -mgpr-64   -mfpr-32	 -mfpr-64 -mhard-float
	   -msoft-float	-malloc-cc  -mfixed-cc	-mdword	  -mno-dword  -mdouble
	   -mno-double	-mmedia	  -mno-media   -mmuladd	  -mno-muladd  -mfdpic
	   -minline-plt	   -mgprel-ro	  -multilib-library-pic	   -mlinked-fp
	   -mlong-calls	 -malign-labels	-mlibrary-pic  -macc-4	-macc-8	-mpack
	   -mno-pack	    -mno-eflags	      -mcond-move	-mno-cond-move
	   -moptimize-membar	  -mno-optimize-membar	   -mscc      -mno-scc
	   -mcond-exec	   -mno-cond-exec    -mvliw-branch    -mno-vliw-branch
	   -mmulti-cond-exec	  -mno-multi-cond-exec	    -mnested-cond-exec
	   -mno-nested-cond-exec  -mtomcat-stats -mTLS	-mtls -mcpu=cpu

	   GNU/Linux  Options  -mglibc	 -muclibc  -mmusl  -mbionic  -mandroid
	   -tno-android-cc  -tno-android-ld

	   H8/300 Options -mrelax  -mh	-ms   -mn   -mexr   -mno-exr   -mint32
	   -malign-300

	   HPPA	    Options	-march=architecture-type     -matomic-libcalls
	   -mbig-switch	-mcaller-copies	 -mdisable-fpregs   -mdisable-indexing
	   -mordered	-mfast-indirect-calls	 -mgas	  -mgnu-ld     -mhp-ld
	   -mfixed-range=register-range	   -mcoherent-ldcw     -mjump-in-delay
	   -mlinker-opt	  -mlong-calls -mlong-load-store  -mno-atomic-libcalls
	   -mno-disable-fpregs -mno-disable-indexing  -mno-fast-indirect-calls
	   -mno-gas	     -mno-jump-in-delay		  -mno-long-load-store
	   -mno-portable-runtime	 -mno-soft-float       -mno-space-regs
	   -msoft-float	    -mpa-risc-1-0     -mpa-risc-1-1	 -mpa-risc-2-0
	   -mportable-runtime  -mschedule=cpu-type   -mspace-regs  -msoft-mult
	   -msio  -mwsio -munix=unix-std  -nolibdld  -static  -threads

	   IA-64 Options  -mbig-endian	 -mlittle-endian   -mgnu-as   -mgnu-ld
	   -mno-pic -mvolatile-asm-stop	 -mregister-names  -msdata  -mno-sdata
	   -mconstant-gp		-mauto-pic		  -mfused-madd
	   -minline-float-divide-min-latency
	   -minline-float-divide-max-throughput	      -mno-inline-float-divide
	   -minline-int-divide-min-latency  -minline-int-divide-max-throughput
	   -mno-inline-int-divide		     -minline-sqrt-min-latency
	   -minline-sqrt-max-throughput	     -mno-inline-sqrt	  -mdwarf2-asm
	   -mearly-stop-bits -mfixed-range=register-range  -mtls-size=tls-size
	   -mtune=cpu-type	-milp32	      -mlp64	  -msched-br-data-spec
	   -msched-ar-data-spec	  -msched-control-spec -msched-br-in-data-spec
	   -msched-ar-in-data-spec   -msched-in-control-spec  -msched-spec-ldc
	   -msched-spec-control-ldc	    -msched-prefer-non-data-spec-insns
	   -msched-prefer-non-control-spec-insns
	   -msched-stop-bits-after-every-cycle
	   -msched-count-spec-in-critical-path
	   -msel-sched-dont-check-control-spec	 -msched-fp-mem-deps-zero-cost
	   -msched-max-memory-insns-hard-limit	 -msched-max-memory-insns=max-
	   insns

	   LM32	    Options	 -mbarrel-shift-enabled	      -mdivide-enabled
	   -mmultiply-enabled -msign-extend-enabled  -muser-enabled

	   LoongArch  Options  -march=arch-type	  -mtune=tune-type -mabi=base-
	   abi-type	-mfpu=fpu-type	    -msimd=simd-type	  -msoft-float
	   -msingle-float   -mdouble-float  -mlsx  -mno-lsx  -mlasx  -mno-lasx
	   -mbranch-cost=n    -mcheck-zero-division   -mno-check-zero-division
	   -mcond-move-int	   -mno-cond-move-int	     -mcond-move-float
	   -mno-cond-move-float	   -memcpy	-mno-memcpy	-mstrict-align
	   -mno-strict-align			    -mmax-inline-memcpy-size=n
	   -mexplicit-relocs=style   -mexplicit-relocs	  -mno-explicit-relocs
	   -mdirect-extern-access   -mno-direct-extern-access	-mcmodel=code-
	   model -mrelax -mpass-mrelax-to-as  -mrecip	-mrecip=opt  -mfrecipe
	   -mno-frecipe	  -mdiv32  -mno-div32  -mlam-bh	 -mno-lam-bh  -mlamcas
	   -mno-lamcas -mld-seq-sa -mno-ld-seq-sa -mtls-dialect=opt

	   M32R/D  Options  -m32r2   -m32rx    -m32r   -mdebug	 -malign-loops
	   -mno-align-loops	 -missue-rate=number	  -mbranch-cost=number
	   -mmodel=code-size-model-type	  -msdata=sdata-type   -mno-flush-func
	   -mflush-func=name -mno-flush-trap  -mflush-trap=number -G num

	   M32C	Options	-mcpu=cpu  -msim  -memregs=number

	   M680x0 Options -march=arch  -mcpu=cpu  -mtune=tune -m68000  -m68020
	   -m68020-40	-m68020-60   -m68030  -m68040 -m68060  -mcpu32	-m5200
	   -m5206e  -m528x  -m5307  -m5407 -mcfv4e  -mbitfield	 -mno-bitfield
	   -mc68000   -mc68020	-mnobitfield  -mrtd  -mno-rtd  -mdiv  -mno-div
	   -mshort -mno-short  -mhard-float   -m68881	-msoft-float   -mpcrel
	   -malign-int	     -mstrict-align	 -msep-data	 -mno-sep-data
	   -mshared-library-id=n  -mid-shared-library	-mno-id-shared-library
	   -mxgot  -mno-xgot  -mlong-jump-table-offsets

	   MCore    Options    -mhardlit     -mno-hardlit    -mdiv    -mno-div
	   -mrelax-immediates	  -mno-relax-immediates	      -mwide-bitfields
	   -mno-wide-bitfields	   -m4byte-functions	  -mno-4byte-functions
	   -mcallgraph-data -mno-callgraph-data	 -mslow-bytes  -mno-slow-bytes
	   -mno-lsim	-mlittle-endian	    -mbig-endian      -m210	 -m340
	   -mstack-increment

	   MicroBlaze	Options	 -msoft-float	-mhard-float   -msmall-divides
	   -mcpu=cpu -mmemcpy  -mxl-soft-mul  -mxl-soft-div  -mxl-barrel-shift
	   -mxl-pattern-compare	 -mxl-stack-check  -mxl-gp-opt	 -mno-clearbss
	   -mxl-multiply-high	     -mxl-float-convert	       -mxl-float-sqrt
	   -mbig-endian	  -mlittle-endian   -mxl-reorder   -mxl-mode-app-model
	   -mpic-data-is-text-relative

	   MIPS	 Options  -EL	-EB   -march=arch   -mtune=arch	-mips1	-mips2
	   -mips3  -mips4  -mips32  -mips32r2  -mips32r3  -mips32r5  -mips32r6
	   -mips64    -mips64r2	   -mips64r3	-mips64r5   -mips64r6  -mips16
	   -mno-mips16		 -mflip-mips16		-minterlink-compressed
	   -mno-interlink-compressed -minterlink-mips16	 -mno-interlink-mips16
	   -mabi=abi   -mabicalls   -mno-abicalls -mshared  -mno-shared	 -mplt
	   -mno-plt  -mxgot  -mno-xgot -mgp32  -mgp64  -mfp32  -mfpxx	-mfp64
	   -mhard-float	      -msoft-float	-mno-float	-msingle-float
	   -mdouble-float     -modd-spreg	-mno-odd-spreg	    -mabs=mode
	   -mnan=encoding   -mdsp    -mno-dsp	 -mdspr2    -mno-dspr2	 -mmcu
	   -mmno-mcu -meva  -mno-eva -mvirt  -mno-virt -mxpa   -mno-xpa	 -mcrc
	   -mno-crc   -mginv	-mno-ginv  -mmicromips	 -mno-micromips	 -mmsa
	   -mno-msa    -mloongson-mmi	  -mno-loongson-mmi	-mloongson-ext
	   -mno-loongson-ext  -mloongson-ext2	-mno-loongson-ext2  -mfpu=fpu-
	   type	      -msmartmips	 -mno-smartmips	       -mpaired-single
	   -mno-paired-single	-mdmx	-mno-mdmx  -mips3d   -mno-mips3d  -mmt
	   -mno-mt  -mllsc  -mno-llsc -mlong64	-mlong32  -msym32   -mno-sym32
	   -Gnum       -mlocal-sdata	   -mno-local-sdata	-mextern-sdata
	   -mno-extern-sdata	  -mgpopt	-mno-gopt      -membedded-data
	   -mno-embedded-data			      -muninit-const-in-rodata
	   -mno-uninit-const-in-rodata		       -mcode-readable=setting
	   -msplit-addresses	   -mno-split-addresses	     -mexplicit-relocs
	   -mno-explicit-relocs			     -mexplicit-relocs=release
	   -mcheck-zero-division     -mno-check-zero-division	-mdivide-traps
	   -mdivide-breaks	-mload-store-pairs	 -mno-load-store-pairs
	   -mstrict-align	 -mno-strict-align	 -mno-unaligned-access
	   -munaligned-access	  -mmemcpy	-mno-memcpy	  -mlong-calls
	   -mno-long-calls  -mmad  -mno-mad  -mimadd  -mno-imadd  -mfused-madd
	   -mno-fused-madd    -nocpp   -mfix-24k    -mno-fix-24k   -mfix-r4000
	   -mno-fix-r4000      -mfix-r4400	-mno-fix-r4400	   -mfix-r5900
	   -mno-fix-r5900    -mfix-r10000     -mno-fix-r10000	  -mfix-rm7000
	   -mno-fix-rm7000    -mfix-vr4120     -mno-fix-vr4120	  -mfix-vr4130
	   -mno-fix-vr4130     -mfix-sb1     -mno-fix-sb1    -mflush-func=func
	   -mno-flush-func	    -mbranch-cost=num	       -mbranch-likely
	   -mno-branch-likely	 -mcompact-branches=policy     -mfp-exceptions
	   -mno-fp-exceptions	-mvr4130-align	  -mno-vr4130-align    -msynci
	   -mno-synci	-mlxc1-sxc1    -mno-lxc1-sxc1	 -mmadd4    -mno-madd4
	   -mrelax-pic-calls	  -mno-relax-pic-calls	   -mmcount-ra-address
	   -mframe-header-opt  -mno-frame-header-opt

	   MMIX	Options	 -mlibfuncs   -mno-libfuncs   -mepsilon	  -mno-epsilon
	   -mabi=gnu	   -mabi=mmixware	-mzero-extend	    -mknuthdiv
	   -mtoplevel-symbols  -melf   -mbranch-predict	   -mno-branch-predict
	   -mbase-addresses	    -mno-base-addresses		 -msingle-exit
	   -mno-single-exit

	   MN10300  Options  -mmult-bug	   -mno-mult-bug   -mno-am33	-mam33
	   -mam33-2   -mam34  -mtune=cpu-type -mreturn-pointer-on-d0 -mno-crt0
	   -mrelax  -mliw  -msetlb

	   Moxie Options -meb  -mel  -mmul.x  -mno-crt0

	   MSP430 Options -msim	 -masm-hex  -mmcu=  -mcpu=   -mlarge   -msmall
	   -mrelax -mwarn-mcu -mcode-region=  -mdata-region= -msilicon-errata=
	   -msilicon-errata-warn=     -mhwmult=	     -minrt	 -mtiny-printf
	   -mmax-inline-shift=

	   NDS32   Options   -mbig-endian    -mlittle-endian	-mreduced-regs
	   -mfull-regs -mcmov  -mno-cmov -mext-perf  -mno-ext-perf -mext-perf2
	   -mno-ext-perf2  -mext-string	 -mno-ext-string -mv3push  -mno-v3push
	   -m16bit   -mno-16bit	 -misr-vector-size=num	-mcache-block-size=num
	   -march=arch -mcmodel=code-model -mctor-dtor	-mrelax

	   Nios	  II  Options  -G  num	 -mgpopt=option	  -mgpopt   -mno-gpopt
	   -mgprel-sec=regexp  -mr0rel-sec=regexp -mel	-meb -mno-bypass-cache
	   -mbypass-cache	 -mno-cache-volatile	      -mcache-volatile
	   -mno-fast-sw-div   -mfast-sw-div  -mhw-mul	-mno-hw-mul  -mhw-mulx
	   -mno-hw-mulx	      -mno-hw-div	-mhw-div       -mcustom-insn=N
	   -mno-custom-insn	 -mcustom-fpu-cfg=name	   -mhal      -msmallc
	   -msys-crt0=name  -msys-lib=name -march=arch	-mbmx  -mno-bmx	 -mcdx
	   -mno-cdx

	   Nvidia PTX Options -m64  -mmainkernel  -moptimize

	   OpenRISC Options  -mboard=name   -mnewlib   -mhard-mul   -mhard-div
	   -msoft-mul	-msoft-div  -msoft-float  -mhard-float	-mdouble-float
	   -munordered-float -mcmov  -mror  -mrori  -msext  -msfimm  -mshftimm
	   -mcmodel=code-model

	   PDP-11 Options -mfpu	 -msoft-float	-mac0	-mno-ac0   -m40	  -m45
	   -m10	 -mint32   -mno-int16  -mint16	-mno-int32 -msplit  -munix-asm
	   -mdec-asm  -mgnu-asm	 -mlra

	   PowerPC Options See RS/6000 and PowerPC Options.

	   PRU Options -mmcu=mcu  -minrt  -mno-relax  -mloop -mabi=variant

	   RISC-V   Options   -mbranch-cost=N-instruction   -mplt     -mno-plt
	   -mabi=ABI-string  -mfdiv  -mno-fdiv -mdiv  -mno-div -misa-spec=ISA-
	   spec-string	      -march=ISA-string	       -mtune=processor-string
	   -mpreferred-stack-boundary=num	    -msmall-data-limit=N-bytes
	   -msave-restore	   -mno-save-restore	     -mshorten-memrefs
	   -mno-shorten-memrefs	       -mstrict-align	     -mno-strict-align
	   -mcmodel=medlow	    -mcmodel=medany	     -mexplicit-relocs
	   -mno-explicit-relocs	   -mrelax     -mno-relax    -mriscv-attribute
	   -mno-riscv-attribute		-malign-data=type	  -mbig-endian
	   -mlittle-endian			 -mstack-protector-guard=guard
	   -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset  -mcsr-check	-mno-csr-check
	   -mmovcc	-mno-movcc    -minline-atomics	   -mno-inline-atomics
	   -minline-strlen	    -mno-inline-strlen	       -minline-strcmp
	   -mno-inline-strcmp	    -minline-strncmp	   -mno-inline-strncmp
	   -mtls-dialect=desc  -mtls-dialect=trad

	   RL78	Options	-msim	-mmul=none   -mmul=g13	 -mmul=g14   -mallregs
	   -mcpu=g10	 -mcpu=g13     -mcpu=g14     -mg10     -mg13	 -mg14
	   -m64bit-doubles  -m32bit-doubles  -msave-mduc-in-interrupts

	   RS/6000  and	  PowerPC   Options   -mcpu=cpu-type   -mtune=cpu-type
	   -mcmodel=code-model	   -mpowerpc64	   -maltivec	  -mno-altivec
	   -mpowerpc-gpopt	   -mno-powerpc-gpopt	      -mpowerpc-gfxopt
	   -mno-powerpc-gfxopt	-mmfcrf	  -mno-mfcrf   -mpopcntb  -mno-popcntb
	   -mpopcntd   -mno-popcntd  -mfprnd   -mno-fprnd  -mcmpb    -mno-cmpb
	   -mhard-dfp	    -mno-hard-dfp      -mfull-toc	 -mminimal-toc
	   -mno-fp-in-toc     -mno-sum-in-toc	 -m64	  -m32	   -mxl-compat
	   -mno-xl-compat   -mpe  -malign-power	  -malign-natural -msoft-float
	   -mhard-float	  -mmultiple   -mno-multiple   -mupdate	   -mno-update
	   -mavoid-indexed-addresses		  -mno-avoid-indexed-addresses
	   -mfused-madd	    -mno-fused-madd	-mbit-align	-mno-bit-align
	   -mstrict-align   -mno-strict-align	-mrelocatable -mno-relocatable
	   -mrelocatable-lib  -mno-relocatable-lib -mtoc   -mno-toc   -mlittle
	   -mlittle-endian    -mbig   -mbig-endian  -mdynamic-no-pic   -mswdiv
	   -msingle-pic-base		-mprioritize-restricted-insns=priority
	   -msched-costly-dep=dependence_type	    -minsert-sched-nops=scheme
	   -mcall-aixdesc     -mcall-eabi      -mcall-freebsd	  -mcall-linux
	   -mcall-netbsd     -mcall-openbsd    -mcall-sysv    -mcall-sysv-eabi
	   -mcall-sysv-noeabi  -mtraceback=traceback_type  -maix-struct-return
	   -msvr4-struct-return	   -mabi=abi-type    -msecure-plt    -mbss-plt
	   -mlongcall	     -mno-longcall	  -mpltseq	   -mno-pltseq
	   -mblock-move-inline-limit=num      -mblock-compare-inline-limit=num
	   -mblock-compare-inline-loop-limit=num  -mno-block-ops-unaligned-vsx
	   -mstring-compare-inline-limit=num	-misel	  -mno-isel   -mvrsave
	   -mno-vrsave -mmulhw	 -mno-mulhw  -mdlmzb   -mno-dlmzb  -mprototype
	   -mno-prototype  -msim  -mmvme  -mads	 -myellowknife	-memb  -msdata
	   -msdata=opt	 -mreadonly-in-sdata   -mvxworks    -G	 num   -mrecip
	   -mrecip=opt	  -mno-recip   -mrecip-precision  -mno-recip-precision
	   -mveclibabi=type  -mfriz  -mno-friz	-mpointers-to-nested-functions
	   -mno-pointers-to-nested-functions		   -msave-toc-indirect
	   -mno-save-toc-indirect     -mpower8-fusion	   -mno-mpower8-fusion
	   -mcrypto	 -mno-crypto	  -mhtm	     -mno-htm	 -mquad-memory
	   -mno-quad-memory   -mquad-memory-atomic     -mno-quad-memory-atomic
	   -mcompat-align-parm	       -mno-compat-align-parm	    -mfloat128
	   -mno-float128      -mfloat128-hardware	-mno-float128-hardware
	   -mgnu-attribute   -mno-gnu-attribute	 -mstack-protector-guard=guard
	   -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset   -mprefixed	 -mno-prefixed
	   -mpcrel  -mno-pcrel	-mmma -mno-mmma	-mrop-protect -mno-rop-protect
	   -mprivileged	-mno-privileged

	   RX Options -m64bit-doubles  -m32bit-doubles	 -fpu	-nofpu	-mcpu=
	   -mbig-endian-data	 -mlittle-endian-data	 -msmall-data	 -msim
	   -mno-sim	 -mas100-syntax	       -mno-as100-syntax       -mrelax
	   -mmax-constant-size=	  -mint-register=  -mpid  -mallow-string-insns
	   -mno-allow-string-insns  -mjsr   -mno-warn-multiple-fast-interrupts
	   -msave-acc-in-interrupts

	   S/390   and	 zSeries   Options   -mtune=cpu-type   -march=cpu-type
	   -mhard-float	     -msoft-float	-mhard-dfp	 -mno-hard-dfp
	   -mlong-double-64    -mlong-double-128  -mbackchain	-mno-backchain
	   -mpacked-stack   -mno-packed-stack  -msmall-exec    -mno-small-exec
	   -mmvcle  -mno-mvcle -m64  -m31  -mdebug  -mno-debug	-mesa  -mzarch
	   -mhtm       -mvx	 -mzvector     -mtpf-trace	-mno-tpf-trace
	   -mtpf-trace-skip  -mno-tpf-trace-skip -mfused-madd  -mno-fused-madd
	   -mwarn-framesize  -mwarn-dynamicstack  -mstack-size	 -mstack-guard
	   -mhotpatch=halfwords,halfwords

	   SH Options -m1  -m2	-m2e -m2a-nofpu	 -m2a-single-only  -m2a-single
	   -m2a	  -m3	 -m3e	-m4-nofpu   -m4-single-only   -m4-single   -m4
	   -m4a-nofpu  -m4a-single-only	 -m4a-single   -m4a   -m4al  -mb   -ml
	   -mdalign   -mrelax  -mbigtable   -mfmovd   -mrenesas	  -mno-renesas
	   -mnomacsave	   -mieee	-mno-ieee	-mbitops       -misize
	   -minline-ic_invalidate     -mpadstruct    -mprefergot    -musermode
	   -multcost=number	   -mdiv=strategy	 -mdivsi3_libfunc=name
	   -mfixed-range=register-range		    -maccumulate-outgoing-args
	   -matomic-model=atomic-model	   -mbranch-cost=num	   -mzdcbranch
	   -mno-zdcbranch	 -mcbranch-force-delay-slot	  -mfused-madd
	   -mno-fused-madd     -mfsca	  -mno-fsca	-mfsrra	    -mno-fsrra
	   -mpretend-cmove  -mtas

	   Solaris  2  Options	-mclear-hwcap  -mno-clear-hwcap	 -mimpure-text
	   -mno-impure-text -pthreads

	   SPARC Options  -mcpu=cpu-type  -mtune=cpu-type  -mcmodel=code-model
	   -mmemory-model=mem-model   -m32   -m64   -mapp-regs	 -mno-app-regs
	   -mfaster-structs   -mno-faster-structs   -mflat   -mno-flat	 -mfpu
	   -mno-fpu	  -mhard-float	    -msoft-float     -mhard-quad-float
	   -msoft-quad-float -mstack-bias  -mno-stack-bias -mstd-struct-return
	   -mno-std-struct-return -munaligned-doubles	-mno-unaligned-doubles
	   -muser-mode	 -mno-user-mode	-mv8plus  -mno-v8plus  -mvis  -mno-vis
	   -mvis2  -mno-vis2  -mvis3   -mno-vis3  -mvis4   -mno-vis4   -mvis4b
	   -mno-vis4b	-mcbcond   -mno-cbcond	 -mfmaf	  -mno-fmaf   -mfsmuld
	   -mno-fsmuld -mpopc	-mno-popc   -msubxc   -mno-subxc  -mfix-at697f
	   -mfix-ut699	-mfix-ut700  -mfix-gr712rc -mlra  -mno-lra

	   System V Options -Qy	 -Qn  -YP,paths	 -Ym,dir

	   V850	  Options   -mlong-calls    -mno-long-calls    -mep    -mno-ep
	   -mprolog-function  -mno-prolog-function  -mspace  -mtda=n   -msda=n
	   -mzda=n	 -mapp-regs	   -mno-app-regs       -mdisable-callt
	   -mno-disable-callt -mv850e2v3  -mv850e2  -mv850e1  -mv850es -mv850e
	   -mv850   -mv850e3v5	-mloop	 -mrelax   -mlong-jumps	  -msoft-float
	   -mhard-float	-mgcc-abi -mrh850-abi -mbig-switch

	   VAX Options -mg  -mgnu  -munix  -mlra

	   Visium   Options  -mdebug   -msim   -mfpu   -mno-fpu	  -mhard-float
	   -msoft-float	    -mcpu=cpu-type	-mtune=cpu-type	     -msv-mode
	   -muser-mode

	   VMS	Options	 -mvms-return-codes   -mdebug-main=prefix   -mmalloc64
	   -mpointer-size=size

	   VxWorks Options  -mrtp   -msmp   -non-static	  -Bstatic   -Bdynamic
	   -Xbind-lazy	-Xbind-now

	   x86	Options	 -mtune=cpu-type  -march=cpu-type -mtune-ctrl=feature-
	   list	     -mdump-tune-features      -mno-default	 -mfpmath=unit
	   -masm=dialect    -mno-fancy-math-387	  -mno-fp-ret-in-387   -m80387
	   -mhard-float	      -msoft-float	-mno-wide-multiply	 -mrtd
	   -malign-double			-mpreferred-stack-boundary=num
	   -mincoming-stack-boundary=num  -mcld	   -mcx16    -msahf    -mmovbe
	   -mcrc32  -mmwait -mrecip  -mrecip=opt -mvzeroupper  -mprefer-avx128
	   -mprefer-vector-width=opt -mpartial-vector-fp-math  -mmove-max=bits
	   -mstore-max=bits  -mnoreturn-no-callee-saved-registers -mmmx	 -msse
	   -msse2  -msse3  -mssse3  -msse4.1  -msse4.2	-msse4	 -mavx	-mavx2
	   -mavx512f	 -mavx512pf	-mavx512er    -mavx512cd    -mavx512vl
	   -mavx512bw  -mavx512dq  -mavx512ifma	  -mavx512vbmi	 -msha	 -maes
	   -mpclmul  -mfsgsbase	 -mrdrnd  -mf16c  -mfma	 -mpconfig  -mwbnoinvd
	   -mptwrite   -mprefetchwt1  -mclflushopt  -mclwb  -mxsavec  -mxsaves
	   -msse4a  -m3dnow  -m3dnowa  -mpopcnt	 -mabm	-mbmi	-mtbm	-mfma4
	   -mxop  -madx	  -mlzcnt   -mbmi2  -mfxsr  -mxsave  -mxsaveopt	 -mrtm
	   -mhle  -mlwp	-mmwaitx  -mclzero  -mpku  -mthreads   -mgfni	-mvaes
	   -mwaitpkg -mshstk -mmanual-endbr -mcet-switch -mforce-indirect-call
	   -mavx512vbmi2  -mavx512bf16	-menqcmd  -mvpclmulqdq	-mavx512bitalg
	   -mmovdiri	 -mmovdir64b	  -mavx512vpopcntdq	-mavx5124fmaps
	   -mavx512vnni	  -mavx5124vnniw   -mprfchw   -mrdpid  -mrdseed	 -msgx
	   -mavx512vp2intersect	-mserialize -mtsxldtrk -mamx-tile   -mamx-int8
	   -mamx-bf16	-muintr	  -mhreset  -mavxvnni  -mavx512fp16  -mavxifma
	   -mavxvnniint8  -mavxneconvert  -mcmpccxadd  -mamx-fp16  -mprefetchi
	   -mraoint  -mamx-complex  -mavxvnniint16 -msm3 -msha512 -msm4	-mapxf
	   -musermsr   -mavx10.1   -mavx10.1-256    -mavx10.1-512    -mevex512
	   -mcldemote		 -mms-bitfields		  -mno-align-stringops
	   -minline-all-stringops		-minline-stringops-dynamically
	   -mstringop-strategy=alg  -mkl  -mwidekl  -mmemcpy-strategy=strategy
	   -mmemset-strategy=strategy -mpush-args   -maccumulate-outgoing-args
	   -m128bit-long-double	     -m96bit-long-double      -mlong-double-64
	   -mlong-double-80   -mlong-double-128	 -mregparm=num	  -msseregparm
	   -mveclibabi=type    -mvect8-ret-in-mem   -mpc32    -mpc64	-mpc80
	   -mdaz-ftz -mstackrealign  -momit-leaf-frame-pointer	 -mno-red-zone
	   -mno-tls-direct-seg-refs	  -mcmodel=code-model	    -mabi=name
	   -maddress-mode=mode	  -m32	   -m64	    -mx32     -m16     -miamcu
	   -mlarge-data-threshold=num	-msse2avx   -mfentry   -mrecord-mcount
	   -mnop-mcount		 -m8bit-idiv	      -minstrument-return=type
	   -mfentry-name=name				 -mfentry-section=name
	   -mavx256-split-unaligned-load	-mavx256-split-unaligned-store
	   -malign-data=type			 -mstack-protector-guard=guard
	   -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset
	   -mstack-protector-guard-symbol=symbol	   -mgeneral-regs-only
	   -mcall-ms2sysv-xlogues			  -mrelax-cmpxchg-loop
	   -mindirect-branch=choice		      -mfunction-return=choice
	   -mindirect-branch-register			   -mharden-sls=choice
	   -mindirect-branch-cs-prefix	 -mneeded    -mno-direct-extern-access
	   -munroll-only-small-loops -mlam=choice

	   x86	  Windows    Options	-mconsole    -mcrtdll=library	 -mdll
	   -mnop-fun-dllimport	  -mthread   -municode	  -mwin32    -mwindows
	   -fno-set-stack-executable

	   Xstormy16 Options -msim

	   Xtensa     Options	  -mconst16	 -mno-const16	  -mfused-madd
	   -mno-fused-madd	   -mforce-no-pic	  -mserialize-volatile
	   -mno-serialize-volatile		       -mtext-section-literals
	   -mno-text-section-literals	-mauto-litpools	    -mno-auto-litpools
	   -mtarget-align    -mno-target-align	 -mlongcalls	-mno-longcalls
	   -mabi=abi-type	-mextra-l32r-costs=cycles	-mstrict-align
	   -mno-strict-align

	   zSeries Options See S/390 and zSeries Options.

   Options Controlling the Kind	of Output
       Compilation  can	 involve up to four stages: preprocessing, compilation
       proper, assembly	and linking, always in that order.  GCC	is capable  of
       preprocessing and compiling several files either	into several assembler
       input  files,  or  into	one  assembler input file; then	each assembler
       input file produces an object file, and linking combines	all the	object
       files (those newly compiled, and	those  specified  as  input)  into  an
       executable file.

       For  any	given input file, the file name	suffix determines what kind of
       compilation is done:

       file.c
	   C source code that must be preprocessed.

       file.i
	   C source code that should not be preprocessed.

       file.ii
	   C++ source code that	should not be preprocessed.

       file.m
	   Objective-C source code.  Note that you must	link with the  libobjc
	   library to make an Objective-C program work.

       file.mi
	   Objective-C source code that	should not be preprocessed.

       file.mm
       file.M
	   Objective-C++  source  code.	  Note	that  you  must	 link with the
	   libobjc library to make an Objective-C++ program work.   Note  that
	   .M refers to	a literal capital M.

       file.mii
	   Objective-C++ source	code that should not be	preprocessed.

       file.h
	   C,  C++, Objective-C	or Objective-C++ header	file to	be turned into
	   a precompiled header	(default), or C, C++ header file to be	turned
	   into	an Ada spec (via the -fdump-ada-spec switch).

       file.cc
       file.cp
       file.cxx
       file.cpp
       file.CPP
       file.c++
       file.C
	   C++	source code that must be preprocessed.	Note that in .cxx, the
	   last	two letters must both be literally x.  Likewise, .C refers  to
	   a literal capital C.

       file.mm
       file.M
	   Objective-C++ source	code that must be preprocessed.

       file.mii
	   Objective-C++ source	code that should not be	preprocessed.

       file.hh
       file.H
       file.hp
       file.hxx
       file.hpp
       file.HPP
       file.h++
       file.tcc
	   C++ header file to be turned	into a precompiled header or Ada spec.

       file.f
       file.for
       file.ftn
       file.fi
	   Fixed form Fortran source code that should not be preprocessed.

       file.F
       file.FOR
       file.fpp
       file.FPP
       file.FTN
	   Fixed  form Fortran source code that	must be	preprocessed (with the
	   traditional preprocessor).

       file.f90
       file.f95
       file.f03
       file.f08
       file.fii
	   Free	form Fortran source code that should not be preprocessed.

       file.F90
       file.F95
       file.F03
       file.F08
	   Free	form Fortran source code that must be preprocessed  (with  the
	   traditional preprocessor).

       file.go
	   Go source code.

       file.d
	   D source code.

       file.di
	   D interface file.

       file.dd
	   D documentation code	(Ddoc).

       file.ads
	   Ada	source	code  file that	contains a library unit	declaration (a
	   declaration of a package, subprogram,  or  generic,	or  a  generic
	   instantiation),  or a library unit renaming declaration (a package,
	   generic, or subprogram renaming declaration).  Such files are  also
	   called specs.

       file.adb
	   Ada	source	code file containing a library unit body (a subprogram
	   or package body).  Such files are also called bodies.

       file.s
	   Assembler code.

       file.S
       file.sx
	   Assembler code that must be preprocessed.

       other
	   An object file to be	fed straight into linking.  Any	file name with
	   no recognized suffix	is treated this	way.

       You can specify the input language explicitly with the -x option:

       -x language
	   Specify explicitly the  language  for  the  following  input	 files
	   (rather  than  letting  the	compiler choose	a default based	on the
	   file	name suffix).  This option  applies  to	 all  following	 input
	   files until the next	-x option.  Possible values for	language are:

		   c  c-header	cpp-output
		   c++	c++-header  c++-system-header c++-user-header c++-cpp-output
		   objective-c	objective-c-header  objective-c-cpp-output
		   objective-c++ objective-c++-header objective-c++-cpp-output
		   assembler  assembler-with-cpp
		   ada
		   d
		   f77	f77-cpp-input f95  f95-cpp-input
		   go

       -x none
	   Turn	 off any specification of a language, so that subsequent files
	   are handled according to their file name suffixes (as they  are  if
	   -x has not been used	at all).

       If  you only want some of the stages of compilation, you	can use	-x (or
       filename	suffixes) to tell gcc where to start, and one of  the  options
       -c, -S, or -E to	say where gcc is to stop.  Note	that some combinations
       (for example, -x	cpp-output -E) instruct	gcc to do nothing at all.

       -c  Compile or assemble the source files, but do	not link.  The linking
	   stage simply	is not done.  The ultimate output is in	the form of an
	   object file for each	source file.

	   By  default,	 the  object  file  name  for a	source file is made by
	   replacing the suffix	.c, .i,	.s, etc., with .o.

	   Unrecognized	input files, not requiring  compilation	 or  assembly,
	   are ignored.

       -S  Stop	 after	the stage of compilation proper; do not	assemble.  The
	   output is in	the form of an	assembler  code	 file  for  each  non-
	   assembler input file	specified.

	   By  default,	 the  assembler	file name for a	source file is made by
	   replacing the suffix	.c, .i,	etc., with .s.

	   Input files that don't require compilation are ignored.

       -E  Stop	after the preprocessing	stage; do not run the compiler proper.
	   The output is in the	form of	preprocessed  source  code,  which  is
	   sent	to the standard	output.

	   Input files that don't require preprocessing	are ignored.

       -o file
	   Place  the  primary	output in file file.  This applies to whatever
	   sort	of output is being produced, whether it	be an executable file,
	   an object file, an assembler	file or	preprocessed C code.

	   If -o is not	specified, the default is to put an executable file in
	   a.out, the object file for source.suffix in source.o, its assembler
	   file	in source.s, a precompiled header file	in  source.suffix.gch,
	   and all preprocessed	C source on standard output.

	   Though -o names only	the primary output, it also affects the	naming
	   of  auxiliary  and  dump  outputs.  See the examples	below.	Unless
	   overridden, both auxiliary outputs and dump outputs are  placed  in
	   the	same  directory	 as the	primary	output.	 In auxiliary outputs,
	   the suffix of the input file	is replaced with that of the auxiliary
	   output file type; in	dump outputs, the suffix of the	dump  file  is
	   appended  to	 the  input file suffix.  In compilation commands, the
	   base	name of	both auxiliary and dump	outputs	is that	of the primary
	   output; in compile and link	commands,  the	primary	 output	 name,
	   minus  the executable suffix, is combined with the input file name.
	   If both share the same base	name,  disregarding  the  suffix,  the
	   result  of  the  combination	is that	base name, otherwise, they are
	   concatenated, separated by a	dash.

		   gcc -c foo.c	...

	   will	use foo.o as the primary output, and  place  aux  outputs  and
	   dumps  next	to  it,	 e.g., aux file	foo.dwo	for -gsplit-dwarf, and
	   dump	file foo.c.???r.final for -fdump-rtl-final.

	   If a	non-linker output file is explicitly specified,	aux  and  dump
	   files by default take the same base name:

		   gcc -c foo.c	-o dir/foobar.o	...

	   will	name aux outputs dir/foobar.* and dump outputs dir/foobar.c.*.

	   A linker output will	instead	prefix aux and dump outputs:

		   gcc foo.c bar.c -o dir/foobar ...

	   will	   generally	name	aux   outputs	dir/foobar-foo.*   and
	   dir/foobar-bar.*,   and   dump   outputs   dir/foobar-foo.c.*   and
	   dir/foobar-bar.c.*.

	   The	one  exception	to the above is	when the executable shares the
	   base	name with the single input:

		   gcc foo.c -o	dir/foo	...

	   in which case aux outputs are  named	 dir/foo.*  and	 dump  outputs
	   named dir/foo.c.*.

	   The	location  and  the  names of auxiliary and dump	outputs	can be
	   adjusted  by	 the  options  -dumpbase,   -dumpbase-ext,   -dumpdir,
	   -save-temps=cwd, and	-save-temps=obj.

       -dumpbase dumpbase
	   This	option sets the	base name for auxiliary	and dump output	files.
	   It	does   not  affect  the	 name  of  the	primary	 output	 file.
	   Intermediate	outputs, when preserved, are not regarded  as  primary
	   outputs, but	as auxiliary outputs:

		   gcc -save-temps -S foo.c

	   saves  the  (no  longer)  temporary preprocessed file in foo.i, and
	   then	compiles to the	(implied) output file foo.s, whereas:

		   gcc -save-temps -dumpbase save-foo -c foo.c

	   preprocesses	to in  save-foo.i,  compiles  to  save-foo.s  (now  an
	   intermediate,  thus	auxiliary  output),  and then assembles	to the
	   (implied) output file foo.o.

	   Absent this option, dump and	aux files take their  names  from  the
	   input  file,	 or  from  the	(non-linker)  output  file,  if	one is
	   explicitly specified: dump output files (e.g.  those	 requested  by
	   -fdump-*  options) with the input name suffix, and aux output files
	   (those requested by other  non-dump	options,  e.g.	"-save-temps",
	   "-gsplit-dwarf", "-fcallgraph-info")	without	it.

	   Similar  suffix  differentiation  of	 dump  and  aux	outputs	can be
	   attained  for  explicitly-given  -dumpbase  basename.suf  by	  also
	   specifying -dumpbase-ext .suf.

	   If  dumpbase	 is explicitly specified with any directory component,
	   any dumppfx	specification  (e.g.  -dumpdir	or  -save-temps=*)  is
	   ignored,  and  instead of appending to it, dumpbase fully overrides
	   it:

		   gcc foo.c -c	-o dir/foo.o -dumpbase alt/foo \
		     -dumpdir pfx- -save-temps=cwd ...

	   creates auxiliary and dump outputs  named  alt/foo.*,  disregarding
	   dir/	 in  -o, the ./	prefix implied by -save-temps=cwd, and pfx- in
	   -dumpdir.

	   When	-dumpbase is specified in a  command  that  compiles  multiple
	   inputs,  or	that  compiles and then	links, it may be combined with
	   dumppfx, as specified under -dumpdir.  Then,	 each  input  file  is
	   compiled  using  the	 combined  dumppfx,  and  default  values  for
	   dumpbase and	auxdropsuf are computed	for each input file:

		   gcc foo.c bar.c -c -dumpbase	main ...

	   creates foo.o and bar.o as primary outputs, and avoids  overwriting
	   the	auxiliary  and dump outputs by using the dumpbase as a prefix,
	   creating  auxiliary	and  dump  outputs   named   main-foo.*	   and
	   main-bar.*.

	   An  empty  string specified as dumpbase avoids the influence	of the
	   output basename in the naming of auxiliary and dump outputs	during
	   compilation,	computing default values :

		   gcc -c foo.c	-o dir/foobar.o	-dumpbase " ...

	   will	name aux outputs dir/foo.* and dump outputs dir/foo.c.*.  Note
	   how	their  basenames  are  taken  from  the	 input	name,  but the
	   directory still defaults to that of the output.

	   The empty-string dumpbase does not prevent the use  of  the	output
	   basename for	outputs	during linking:

		   gcc foo.c bar.c -o dir/foobar -dumpbase " -flto ...

	   The	compilation  of	 the  source files will	name auxiliary outputs
	   dir/foo.*  and  dir/bar.*,  and  dump   outputs   dir/foo.c.*   and
	   dir/bar.c.*.	 LTO recompilation during linking will use dir/foobar.
	   as the prefix for dumps and auxiliary files.

       -dumpbase-ext auxdropsuf
	   When	forming	the name of an auxiliary (but not a dump) output file,
	   drop	  trailing  auxdropsuf	from  dumpbase	before	appending  any
	   suffixes.  If not specified,	this option defaults to	the suffix  of
	   a  default  dumpbase,  i.e.,	 the  suffix  of  the  input file when
	   -dumpbase is	not present  in	 the  command  line,  or  dumpbase  is
	   combined with dumppfx.

		   gcc foo.c -c	-o dir/foo.o -dumpbase x-foo.c -dumpbase-ext .c	...

	   creates  dir/foo.o  as  the	main  output,  and generates auxiliary
	   outputs in dir/x-foo.*, taking the location of the primary  output,
	   and	dropping the .c	suffix from the	dumpbase.  Dump	outputs	retain
	   the suffix: dir/x-foo.c.*.

	   This	option is disregarded if it does not match  the	 suffix	 of  a
	   specified  dumpbase,	 except	 as  an	 alternative to	the executable
	   suffix when appending the linker output base	name  to  dumppfx,  as
	   specified below:

		   gcc foo.c bar.c -o main.out -dumpbase-ext .out ...

	   creates  main.out as	the primary output, and	avoids overwriting the
	   auxiliary and dump outputs  by  using  the  executable  name	 minus
	   auxdropsuf as a prefix, creating auxiliary outputs named main-foo.*
	   and	 main-bar.*   and   dump   outputs   named   main-foo.c.*  and
	   main-bar.c.*.

       -dumpdir	dumppfx
	   When	forming	the name of an auxiliary  or  dump  output  file,  use
	   dumppfx as a	prefix:

		   gcc -dumpdir	pfx- -c	foo.c ...

	   creates  foo.o  as  the primary output, and auxiliary outputs named
	   pfx-foo.*, combining	the given dumppfx with	the  default  dumpbase
	   derived  from  the default primary output, derived in turn from the
	   input  name.	  Dump	outputs	 also  take  the  input	 name  suffix:
	   pfx-foo.c.*.

	   If  dumppfx	is  to be used as a directory name, it must end	with a
	   directory separator:

		   gcc -dumpdir	dir/ -c	foo.c -o obj/bar.o ...

	   creates obj/bar.o as	the  primary  output,  and  auxiliary  outputs
	   named  dir/bar.*,  combining	 the  given  dumppfx  with the default
	   dumpbase derived from the primary output name.  Dump	 outputs  also
	   take	the input name suffix: dir/bar.c.*.

	   It  defaults	 to the	location of the	output file, unless the	output
	   file	is a special file like	"/dev/null".  Options  -save-temps=cwd
	   and	-save-temps=obj	 override  this	default, just like an explicit
	   -dumpdir option.  In	case multiple such options are given, the last
	   one prevails:

		   gcc -dumpdir	pfx- -c	foo.c -save-temps=obj ...

	   outputs  foo.o,  with  auxiliary  outputs   named   foo.*   because
	   -save-temps=*  overrides  the dumppfx given by the earlier -dumpdir
	   option.   It	 does  not  matter  that  =obj	is  the	 default   for
	   -save-temps,	 nor  that  the	 output	 directory  is	implicitly the
	   current directory.  Dump outputs are	named foo.c.*.

	   When	 compiling  from  multiple  input  files,  if	-dumpbase   is
	   specified,  dumpbase,  minus	 a  auxdropsuf	suffix,	and a dash are
	   appended to (or override, if	containing any	directory  components)
	   an  explicit	 or  defaulted	dumppfx,  so that each of the multiple
	   compilations	gets differently-named aux and dump outputs.

		   gcc foo.c bar.c -c -dumpdir dir/pfx-	-dumpbase main ...

	   outputs    auxiliary	   dumps     to	    dir/pfx-main-foo.*	   and
	   dir/pfx-main-bar.*,	appending  dumpbase- to	dumppfx.  Dump outputs
	   retain   the	  input	  file	 suffix:   dir/pfx-main-foo.c.*	   and
	   dir/pfx-main-bar.c.*, respectively.	Contrast with the single-input
	   compilation:

		   gcc foo.c -c	-dumpdir dir/pfx- -dumpbase main ...

	   that,  applying  -dumpbase to a single source, does not compute and
	   append a separate dumpbase per input	file.  Its auxiliary and  dump
	   outputs go in dir/pfx-main.*.

	   When	 compiling  and	 then  linking	from  multiple	input files, a
	   defaulted  or  explicitly  specified	 dumppfx  also	undergoes  the
	   dumpbase-  transformation  above (e.g. the compilation of foo.c and
	   bar.c above,	but without -c).  If neither  -dumpdir	nor  -dumpbase
	   are	given,	the  linker  output  base  name,  minus	auxdropsuf, if
	   specified, or the executable	 suffix	 otherwise,  plus  a  dash  is
	   appended  to	 the  default  dumppfx	instead.   Note, however, that
	   unlike earlier cases	of linking:

		   gcc foo.c bar.c -dumpdir dir/pfx- -o	main ...

	   does	not append the output name main	to dumppfx,  because  -dumpdir
	   is explicitly specified.  The goal is that the explicitly-specified
	   dumppfx  may	 contain  the  specified  output  name	as part	of the
	   prefix, if desired; only an explicitly-specified -dumpbase would be
	   combined with it, in	order to avoid simply discarding a  meaningful
	   option.

	   When	 compiling  and	 then  linking	from  a	single input file, the
	   linker output base name  will  only	be  appended  to  the  default
	   dumppfx as above if it does not share the base name with the	single
	   input  file	name.	This  has been covered in single-input linking
	   cases above,	but not	with an	explicit -dumpdir  that	 inhibits  the
	   combination,	even if	overridden by -save-temps=*:

		   gcc foo.c -dumpdir alt/pfx- -o dir/main.exe -save-temps=cwd ...

	   Auxiliary outputs are named foo.*, and dump outputs foo.c.*,	in the
	   current    working	 directory    as   ultimately	requested   by
	   -save-temps=cwd.

	   Summing it all up for an intuitive though slightly  imprecise  data
	   flow: the primary output name is broken into	a directory part and a
	   basename  part;  dumppfx is set to the former, unless overridden by
	   -dumpdir or -save-temps=*, and  dumpbase  is	 set  to  the  latter,
	   unless  overriden  by  -dumpbase.   If there	are multiple inputs or
	   linking, this dumpbase may be combined with dumppfx and taken  from
	   each	 input file.  Auxiliary	output names for each input are	formed
	   by combining	dumppfx, dumpbase  minus  suffix,  and	the  auxiliary
	   output  suffix;  dump  output  names	are only different in that the
	   suffix from dumpbase	is retained.

	   When	it comes to auxiliary and  dump	 outputs  created  during  LTO
	   recompilation,  a  combination of dumppfx and dumpbase, as given or
	   as derived from the linker output name but not from inputs, even in
	   cases in which this combination would  not  otherwise  be  used  as
	   such, is passed down	with a trailing	period replacing the compiler-
	   added  dash,	 if  any,  as  a -dumpdir option to lto-wrapper; being
	   involved in	linking,  this	program	 does  not  normally  get  any
	   -dumpbase and -dumpbase-ext,	and it ignores them.

	   When	 running sub-compilers,	lto-wrapper appends LTO	stage names to
	   the received	dumppfx, ensures it contains a directory component  so
	   that	 it  overrides	any  -dumpdir, and passes that as -dumpbase to
	   sub-compilers.

       -v  Print (on standard error output) the	commands executed to  run  the
	   stages  of  compilation.   Also  print  the	version	 number	of the
	   compiler driver program and of the preprocessor  and	 the  compiler
	   proper.

       -###
	   Like	 -v  except  the  commands  are	not executed and arguments are
	   quoted unless they contain only alphanumeric	characters or  "./-_".
	   This	 is  useful  for shell scripts to capture the driver-generated
	   command lines.

       --help
	   Print (on the standard output) a description	 of  the  command-line
	   options understood by gcc.  If the -v option	is also	specified then
	   --help  is  also passed on to the various processes invoked by gcc,
	   so that they	can display the	command-line options they accept.   If
	   the	-Wextra	 option	 has  also been	specified (prior to the	--help
	   option), then  command-line	options	 that  have  no	 documentation
	   associated with them	are also displayed.

       --target-help
	   Print  (on  the  standard  output) a	description of target-specific
	   command-line	options	for each tool.	For some targets extra target-
	   specific information	may also be printed.

       --help={class|[^]qualifier}[,...]
	   Print (on the standard output) a description	 of  the  command-line
	   options  understood	by  the	 compiler  that	fit into all specified
	   classes and qualifiers.  These are the supported classes:

	   optimizers
	       Display all  of	the  optimization  options  supported  by  the
	       compiler.

	   warnings
	       Display	 all  of  the  options	controlling  warning  messages
	       produced	by the compiler.

	   target
	       Display	target-specific	 options.   Unlike  the	 --target-help
	       option  however,	 target-specific  options  of  the  linker and
	       assembler are not displayed.  This is because  those  tools  do
	       not currently support the extended --help= syntax.

	   params
	       Display the values recognized by	the --param option.

	   language
	       Display	the  options supported for language, where language is
	       the name	of one of the languages	supported in this  version  of
	       GCC.   If an option is supported	by all languages, one needs to
	       select common class.

	   common
	       Display the options that	are common to all languages.

	   These are the supported qualifiers:

	   undocumented
	       Display only those options that are undocumented.

	   joined
	       Display options taking an argument that appears after an	 equal
	       sign   in   the	 same  continuous  piece  of  text,  such  as:
	       --help=target.

	   separate
	       Display options taking an argument that appears as  a  separate
	       word following the original option, such	as: -o output-file.

	   Thus	 for  example  to display all the undocumented target-specific
	   switches supported by the compiler, use:

		   --help=target,undocumented

	   The sense of	a qualifier can	be inverted by prefixing it with the ^
	   character, so for example to	display	 all  binary  warning  options
	   (i.e.,  ones	 that  are  either  on	or off and that	do not take an
	   argument) that have a description, use:

		   --help=warnings,^joined,^undocumented

	   The argument	to --help=  should  not	 consist  solely  of  inverted
	   qualifiers.

	   Combining  several  classes	is  possible,  although	 this  usually
	   restricts the output	so much	that there is nothing to display.  One
	   case	where it does work, however, is	when one  of  the  classes  is
	   target.    For   example,   to   display  all  the  target-specific
	   optimization	options, use:

		   --help=target,optimizers

	   The --help= option can be  repeated	on  the	 command  line.	  Each
	   successive  use  displays  its requested class of options, skipping
	   those  that	have  already  been  displayed.	  If  --help  is  also
	   specified  anywhere	on the command line then this takes precedence
	   over	any --help= option.

	   If the -Q option appears on the command  line  before  the  --help=
	   option,  then the descriptive text displayed	by --help= is changed.
	   Instead of describing the displayed options,	an indication is given
	   as to whether the option is enabled,	disabled or set	to a  specific
	   value (assuming that	the compiler knows this	at the point where the
	   --help= option is used).

	   Here	is a truncated example from the	ARM port of gcc:

		     % gcc -Q -mabi=2 --help=target -c
		     The following options are target specific:
		     -mabi=				   2
		     -mabort-on-noreturn		   [disabled]
		     -mapcs				   [disabled]

	   The	output	is  sensitive  to the effects of previous command-line
	   options,  so	 for  example  it  is  possible	 to  find  out	 which
	   optimizations are enabled at	-O2 by using:

		   -Q -O2 --help=optimizers

	   Alternatively  you  can  discover  which  binary  optimizations are
	   enabled by -O3 by using:

		   gcc -c -Q -O3 --help=optimizers > /tmp/O3-opts
		   gcc -c -Q -O2 --help=optimizers > /tmp/O2-opts
		   diff	/tmp/O2-opts /tmp/O3-opts | grep enabled

       --version
	   Display the version number and copyrights of	the invoked GCC.

       -pass-exit-codes
	   Normally the	gcc program exits with the code	of 1 if	any  phase  of
	   the	compiler  returns  a  non-success return code.	If you specify
	   -pass-exit-codes,  the  gcc	program	 instead  returns   with   the
	   numerically	highest	error produced by any phase returning an error
	   indication.	The C, C++, and	Fortran	front  ends  return  4	if  an
	   internal compiler error is encountered.

       -pipe
	   Use pipes rather than temporary files for communication between the
	   various  stages of compilation.  This fails to work on some systems
	   where the assembler is unable to read from  a  pipe;	 but  the  GNU
	   assembler has no trouble.

       -specs=file
	   Process  file  after	the compiler reads in the standard specs file,
	   in order to override	the defaults which the gcc driver program uses
	   when	determining what switches to pass to  cc1,  cc1plus,  as,  ld,
	   etc.	  More	than  one  -specs=file can be specified	on the command
	   line, and they are processed	in order, from left to right.

       -wrapper
	   Invoke all subcommands under	a wrapper program.  The	 name  of  the
	   wrapper  program and	its parameters are passed as a comma separated
	   list.

		   gcc -c t.c -wrapper gdb,--args

	   This	invokes	all subprograms	of gcc	under  gdb  --args,  thus  the
	   invocation of cc1 is	gdb --args cc1 ....

       -ffile-prefix-map=old=new
	   When	  compiling  files  residing  in  directory  old,  record  any
	   references to them in the result of the compilation as if the files
	   resided in  directory  new  instead.	  Specifying  this  option  is
	   equivalent to specifying all	the individual -f*-prefix-map options.
	   This	 can  be  used	to  make reproducible builds that are location
	   independent.	 Directories referenced	by directives are not affected
	   by these options.  See also -fmacro-prefix-map, -fdebug-prefix-map,
	   -fprofile-prefix-map	and -fcanon-prefix-map.

       -fcanon-prefix-map
	   For the -f*-prefix-map options normally comparison  of  old	prefix
	   against  the	 filename  that	 would	be  normally referenced	in the
	   result of the compilation is	done using textual comparison  of  the
	   prefixes,   or   ignoring   character  case	for  case  insensitive
	   filesystems and considering slashes and backslashes as equal	on DOS
	   based filesystems.  The -fcanon-prefix-map causes such  comparisons
	   to  be  done	 on  canonicalized  paths  of  old  and	the referenced
	   filename.

       -fplugin=name.so
	   Load	the plugin code	in file	name.so, assumed to be a shared	object
	   to be dlopen'd by the compiler.  The	base name of the shared	object
	   file	is used	to identify the	plugin for the	purposes  of  argument
	   parsing   (See  -fplugin-arg-name-key=value	below).	  Each	plugin
	   should define the callback functions	specified in the Plugins API.

       -fplugin-arg-name-key=value
	   Define an argument called key with a	value of value for the	plugin
	   called name.

       -fdump-ada-spec[-slim]
	   For	C and C++ source and include files, generate corresponding Ada
	   specs.

       -fada-spec-parent=unit
	   In conjunction  with	 -fdump-ada-spec[-slim]	 above,	 generate  Ada
	   specs as child units	of parent unit.

       -fdump-go-spec=file
	   For	 input	files  in  any	language,  generate  corresponding  Go
	   declarations	in file.  This generates Go  "const",  "type",	"var",
	   and	"func" declarations which may be a useful way to start writing
	   a Go	interface to code written in some other	language.

       @file
	   Read	command-line options from file.	 The options read are inserted
	   in place of the original @file option.  If file does	not exist,  or
	   cannot  be read, then the option will be treated literally, and not
	   removed.

	   Options  in	file  are  separated  by  whitespace.	A   whitespace
	   character  may  be  included	in an option by	surrounding the	entire
	   option in either single or double quotes.  Any character (including
	   a backslash)	may be included	 by  prefixing	the  character	to  be
	   included  with a backslash.	The file may itself contain additional
	   @file options; any such options will	be processed recursively.

   Compiling C++ Programs
       C++ source files	conventionally use one of the suffixes .C, .cc,	 .cpp,
       .CPP,  .c++, .cp, or .cxx; C++ header files often use .hh, .hpp,	.H, or
       (for shared template code) .tcc;	and preprocessed  C++  files  use  the
       suffix .ii.  GCC	recognizes files with these names and compiles them as
       C++  programs  even  if	you  call  the	compiler  the  same way	as for
       compiling C programs (usually with the name gcc).

       However,	the use	of gcc does not	add the	C++ library.  g++ is a program
       that calls GCC and automatically	 specifies  linking  against  the  C++
       library.	  It treats .c,	.h and .i files	as C++ source files instead of
       C source	files unless -x	is used.  This program	is  also  useful  when
       precompiling  a	C  header  file	 with  a  .h  extension	for use	in C++
       compilations.  On many systems, g++ is also  installed  with  the  name
       c++.

       When  you  compile  C++	programs,  you	may  specify  many of the same
       command-line options  that  you	use  for  compiling  programs  in  any
       language;   or  command-line  options  meaningful  for  C  and  related
       languages; or options that are meaningful only for C++ programs.

   Options Controlling C Dialect
       The following options control the dialect of C  (or  languages  derived
       from  C,	 such as C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++) that the compiler
       accepts:

       -ansi
	   In C	mode, this is equivalent to  -std=c90.	In  C++	 mode,	it  is
	   equivalent to -std=c++98.

	   This	 turns	off certain features of	GCC that are incompatible with
	   ISO C90 (when compiling C code), or of standard C++ (when compiling
	   C++ code), such as the "asm"	and "typeof" keywords, and  predefined
	   macros  such	 as  "unix" and	"vax" that identify the	type of	system
	   you are using.  It also enables the undesirable and rarely used ISO
	   trigraph feature.  For the C	compiler, it disables  recognition  of
	   C++ style //	comments as well as the	"inline" keyword.

	   The alternate keywords "__asm__", "__extension__", "__inline__" and
	   "__typeof__"	continue to work despite -ansi.	 You would not want to
	   use	them  in  an ISO C program, of course, but it is useful	to put
	   them	in header files	that might be included	in  compilations  done
	   with	 -ansi.	  Alternate  predefined	 macros	such as	"__unix__" and
	   "__vax__" are also available, with or without -ansi.

	   The -ansi option does not cause non-ISO  programs  to  be  rejected
	   gratuitously.   For	that,  -Wpedantic  is  required	in addition to
	   -ansi.

	   The macro "__STRICT_ANSI__" is predefined when the -ansi option  is
	   used.   Some	 header	 files	may notice this	macro and refrain from
	   declaring certain functions or defining certain macros that the ISO
	   standard doesn't call for; this is to avoid	interfering  with  any
	   programs that might use these names for other things.

	   Functions  that  are	 normally  built  in but do not	have semantics
	   defined by ISO C (such as "alloca"  and  "ffs")  are	 not  built-in
	   functions when -ansi	is used.

       -std=
	   Determine  the  language  standard.	 This option is	currently only
	   supported when compiling C or C++.

	   The compiler	can accept several base	 standards,  such  as  c90  or
	   c++98,  and	GNU  dialects  of  those  standards,  such as gnu90 or
	   gnu++98.  When a base standard is specified,	the  compiler  accepts
	   all	 programs   following  that  standard  plus  those  using  GNU
	   extensions that do not contradict it.  For example, -std=c90	 turns
	   off	certain	 features  of  GCC that	are incompatible with ISO C90,
	   such	as  the	 "asm"	and  "typeof"  keywords,  but  not  other  GNU
	   extensions  that do not have	a meaning in ISO C90, such as omitting
	   the middle term of a	"?:" expression. On the	other hand, when a GNU
	   dialect of a	standard is specified, all features supported  by  the
	   compiler  are  enabled, even	when those features change the meaning
	   of the base standard.  As a result, some strict-conforming programs
	   may be rejected.  The particular standard is	used by	-Wpedantic  to
	   identify  which  features  are GNU extensions given that version of
	   the standard. For example -std=gnu90	 -Wpedantic  warns  about  C++
	   style // comments, while -std=gnu99 -Wpedantic does not.

	   A value for this option must	be provided; possible values are

	   c90
	   c89
	   iso9899:1990
	       Support	all  ISO  C90  programs	 (certain  GNU extensions that
	       conflict	with ISO C90 are disabled). Same as -ansi for C	code.

	   iso9899:199409
	       ISO C90 as modified in amendment	1.

	   c99
	   c9x
	   iso9899:1999
	   iso9899:199x
	       ISO C99.	 This standard is substantially	completely  supported,
	       modulo  bugs and	floating-point issues (mainly but not entirely
	       relating	to optional C99	features from Annexes F	and  G).   See
	       <https://gcc.gnu.org/c99status.html> for	more information.  The
	       names c9x and iso9899:199x are deprecated.

	   c11
	   c1x
	   iso9899:2011
	       ISO  C11,  the  2011  revision  of  the	ISO  C standard.  This
	       standard	is substantially completely  supported,	 modulo	 bugs,
	       floating-point  issues  (mainly	but  not  entirely relating to
	       optional	C11 features from Annexes F and	G)  and	 the  optional
	       Annexes	K  (Bounds-checking interfaces)	and L (Analyzability).
	       The name	c1x is deprecated.

	   c17
	   c18
	   iso9899:2017
	   iso9899:2018
	       ISO C17,	the 2017 revision of the ISO C standard	(published  in
	       2018).	This standard is same as C11 except for	corrections of
	       defects (all of which are also applied with -std=c11) and a new
	       value of	"__STDC_VERSION__", and	so is supported	 to  the  same
	       extent as C11.

	   c23
	   c2x
	   iso9899:2024
	       ISO  C23,  the 2023 revision of the ISO C standard (expected to
	       be published  in	 2024).	  The  support	for  this  version  is
	       experimental and	incomplete.  The name c2x is deprecated.

	   gnu90
	   gnu89
	       GNU dialect of ISO C90 (including some C99 features).

	   gnu99
	   gnu9x
	       GNU dialect of ISO C99.	The name gnu9x is deprecated.

	   gnu11
	   gnu1x
	       GNU dialect of ISO C11.	The name gnu1x is deprecated.

	   gnu17
	   gnu18
	       GNU dialect of ISO C17.	This is	the default for	C code.

	   gnu23
	   gnu2x
	       The   next   version   of  the  ISO  C  standard,  still	 under
	       development, plus GNU extensions.  The support for this version
	       is experimental and incomplete.	The name gnu2x is deprecated.

	   c++98
	   c++03
	       The 1998	ISO C++	standard plus the 2003	technical  corrigendum
	       and some	additional defect reports. Same	as -ansi for C++ code.

	   gnu++98
	   gnu++03
	       GNU dialect of -std=c++98.

	   c++11
	   c++0x
	       The  2011  ISO C++ standard plus	amendments.  The name c++0x is
	       deprecated.

	   gnu++11
	   gnu++0x
	       GNU dialect of -std=c++11.  The name gnu++0x is deprecated.

	   c++14
	   c++1y
	       The 2014	ISO C++	standard plus amendments.  The name  c++1y  is
	       deprecated.

	   gnu++14
	   gnu++1y
	       GNU dialect of -std=c++14.  The name gnu++1y is deprecated.

	   c++17
	   c++1z
	       The  2017  ISO C++ standard plus	amendments.  The name c++1z is
	       deprecated.

	   gnu++17
	   gnu++1z
	       GNU dialect of -std=c++17.  This	is the default for  C++	 code.
	       The name	gnu++1z	is deprecated.

	   c++20
	   c++2a
	       The   2020  ISO	C++  standard  plus  amendments.   Support  is
	       experimental, and could change in incompatible ways  in	future
	       releases.  The name c++2a is deprecated.

	   gnu++20
	   gnu++2a
	       GNU  dialect of -std=c++20.  Support is experimental, and could
	       change in incompatible  ways  in	 future	 releases.   The  name
	       gnu++2a is deprecated.

	   c++2b
	   c++23
	       The  next  revision  of the ISO C++ standard, planned for 2023.
	       Support is  highly  experimental,  and  will  almost  certainly
	       change in incompatible ways in future releases.

	   gnu++2b
	   gnu++23
	       GNU dialect of -std=c++2b.  Support is highly experimental, and
	       will  almost  certainly	change	in incompatible	ways in	future
	       releases.

	   c++2c
	   c++26
	       The next	revision of the	ISO C++	standard,  planned  for	 2026.
	       Support	is  highly  experimental,  and	will  almost certainly
	       change in incompatible ways in future releases.

	   gnu++2c
	   gnu++26
	       GNU dialect of -std=c++2c.  Support is highly experimental, and
	       will almost certainly change in	incompatible  ways  in	future
	       releases.

       -aux-info filename
	   Output  to  the  given  filename  prototyped	 declarations  for all
	   functions declared and/or defined in	a translation unit,  including
	   those  in  header  files.   This  option is silently	ignored	in any
	   language other than C.

	   Besides declarations, the file indicates, in	comments,  the	origin
	   of each declaration (source file and	line), whether the declaration
	   was	implicit,  prototyped  or  unprototyped	(I, N for new or O for
	   old,	respectively, in the first character after the line number and
	   the colon), and whether it came from	a declaration or a  definition
	   (C or F, respectively, in the following character).	In the case of
	   function  definitions,  a  K&R-style	 list of arguments followed by
	   their declarations is also provided,	 inside	 comments,  after  the
	   declaration.

       -fno-asm
	   Do  not recognize "asm", "inline" or	"typeof" as a keyword, so that
	   code	can use	these words as identifiers.  You can use the  keywords
	   "__asm__",  "__inline__"  and  "__typeof__"	instead.   In C, -ansi
	   implies -fno-asm.

	   In C++, "inline" is a standard keyword and is not affected by  this
	   switch.   You  may  want to use the -fno-gnu-keywords flag instead,
	   which disables "typeof" but not "asm" and "inline".	 In  C99  mode
	   (-std=c99  or  -std=gnu99),	this switch only affects the "asm" and
	   "typeof" keywords, since "inline" is	a standard keyword in ISO C99.
	   In C23 mode (-std=c23 or -std=gnu23), this switch only affects  the
	   "asm" keyword, since	"typeof" is a standard keyword in ISO C23.

       -fno-builtin
       -fno-builtin-function
	   Don't   recognize   built-in	 functions  that  do  not  begin  with
	   __builtin_ as prefix.

	   GCC normally	generates special  code	 to  handle  certain  built-in
	   functions  more  efficiently;  for  instance, calls to "alloca" may
	   become single instructions which adjust  the	 stack	directly,  and
	   calls to "memcpy" may become	inline copy loops.  The	resulting code
	   is  often  both smaller and faster, but since the function calls no
	   longer appear as such, you cannot set a breakpoint on those	calls,
	   nor	can you	change the behavior of the functions by	linking	with a
	   different library.  In addition, when a function is recognized as a
	   built-in function, GCC may use information about that  function  to
	   warn	 about	problems  with	calls to that function,	or to generate
	   more	efficient code,	even if	 the  resulting	 code  still  contains
	   calls  to  that  function.	For  example,  warnings	are given with
	   -Wformat for	bad calls to "printf" when "printf" is	built  in  and
	   "strlen" is known not to modify global memory.

	   With	 the  -fno-builtin-function  option only the built-in function
	   function is disabled.  function must	not begin with __builtin_.  If
	   a function is named that is not built-in in this  version  of  GCC,
	   this	   option    is	   ignored.    There   is   no	 corresponding
	   -fbuiltin-function option; if you wish to enable built-in functions
	   selectively when using  -fno-builtin	 or  -ffreestanding,  you  may
	   define macros such as:

		   #define abs(n)	   __builtin_abs ((n))
		   #define strcpy(d, s)	   __builtin_strcpy ((d), (s))

       -fcond-mismatch
	   Allow  conditional  expressions with	mismatched types in the	second
	   and third arguments.	 The value of  such  an	 expression  is	 void.
	   This	option is not supported	for C++.

       -ffreestanding
	   Assert  that	 compilation targets a freestanding environment.  This
	   implies -fno-builtin.  A freestanding environment is	one  in	 which
	   the	standard  library  may	not exist, and program startup may not
	   necessarily be at "main".   The  most  obvious  example  is	an  OS
	   kernel.  This is equivalent to -fno-hosted.

       -fgimple
	   Enable  parsing  of	function  definitions  marked with "__GIMPLE".
	   This	is an experimental feature that	allows unit testing of	GIMPLE
	   passes.

       -fgnu-tm
	   When	 the option -fgnu-tm is	specified, the compiler	generates code
	   for the Linux variant of Intel's current Transactional  Memory  ABI
	   specification  document  (Revision  1.1,  May  6 2009).  This is an
	   experimental	feature	whose interface	may change in future  versions
	   of  GCC,  as	 the official specification changes.  Please note that
	   not all architectures are supported for this	feature.

	   For more information	on GCC's support for transactional memory,

	   Note	that the transactional memory feature is  not  supported  with
	   non-call exceptions (-fnon-call-exceptions).

       -fgnu89-inline
	   The	option	-fgnu89-inline	tells  GCC  to use the traditional GNU
	   semantics for "inline" functions when in C99	mode.

	   Using this option is	roughly	equivalent to adding the  "gnu_inline"
	   function attribute to all inline functions.

	   The	option	-fno-gnu89-inline  explicitly tells GCC	to use the C99
	   semantics for  "inline"  when  in  C99  or  gnu99  mode  (i.e.,  it
	   specifies  the  default behavior).  This option is not supported in
	   -std=c90 or -std=gnu90 mode.

	   The	   preprocessor	    macros	"__GNUC_GNU_INLINE__"	   and
	   "__GNUC_STDC_INLINE__"  may be used to check	which semantics	are in
	   effect for "inline" functions.

       -fhosted
	   Assert that compilation targets a hosted environment.  This implies
	   -fbuiltin.  A  hosted  environment  is  one	in  which  the	entire
	   standard  library  is  available,  and in which "main" has a	return
	   type	of "int".  Examples are	nearly	everything  except  a  kernel.
	   This	is equivalent to -fno-freestanding.

       -flax-vector-conversions
	   Allow  implicit  conversions	between	vectors	with differing numbers
	   of elements and/or incompatible element types.  This	option	should
	   not be used for new code.

       -fms-extensions
	   Accept some non-standard constructs used in Microsoft header	files.

	   In  C++  code, this allows member names in structures to be similar
	   to previous types declarations.

		   typedef int UOW;
		   struct ABC {
		     UOW UOW;
		   };

	   Some	cases of unnamed fields	in  structures	and  unions  are  only
	   accepted with this option.

	   Note	that this option is off	for all	targets	except for x86 targets
	   using ms-abi.

       -foffload=disable
       -foffload=default
       -foffload=target-list
	   Specify for which OpenMP and	OpenACC	offload	targets	code should be
	   generated.	The default behavior, equivalent to -foffload=default,
	   is to  generate  code  for  all  supported  offload	targets.   The
	   -foffload=disable  form  generates code only	for the	host fallback,
	   while -foffload=target-list generates code only for	the  specified
	   comma-separated list	of offload targets.

	   Offload  targets  are  specified  in	 GCC's internal	target-triplet
	   format. You can run the compiler  with  -v  to  show	 the  list  of
	   configured offload targets under "OFFLOAD_TARGET_NAMES".

       -foffload-options=options
       -foffload-options=target-triplet-list=options
	   With	-foffload-options=options, GCC passes the specified options to
	   the	compilers for all enabled offloading targets.  You can specify
	   options that	apply only to a	specific target	or  targets  by	 using
	   the -foffload-options=target-list=options form.  The	target-list is
	   a  comma-separated  list  in	 the same format as for	the -foffload=
	   option.

	   Typical command lines are

		   -foffload-options='-fno-math-errno -ffinite-math-only' -foffload-options=nvptx-none=-latomic
		   -foffload-options=amdgcn-amdhsa=-march=gfx906

       -fopenacc
	   Enable handling of OpenACC directives  #pragma  acc	in  C/C++  and
	   !$acc in free-form Fortran and !$acc, c$acc and *$acc in fixed-form
	   Fortran.   When  -fopenacc  is  specified,  the  compiler generates
	   accelerated code according to the OpenACC  Application  Programming
	   Interface  v2.6  <https://www.openacc.org>.	 This  option  implies
	   -pthread, and thus is only supported	on targets that	 have  support
	   for -pthread.

       -fopenacc-dim=geom
	   Specify  default  compute  dimensions  for parallel offload regions
	   that	do not explicitly specify.  The	geom  value  is	 a  triple  of
	   ':'-separated  sizes,  in  order 'gang', 'worker' and, 'vector'.  A
	   size	can be omitted,	to use a target-specific default value.

       -fopenmp
	   Enable    handling	 of    OpenMP	 directives    #pragma	  omp,
	   [[omp::directive(...)]],	    [[omp::sequence(...)]]	   and
	   [[omp::decl(...)]] in C/C++ and !$omp in Fortran.  It  additionally
	   enables  the	 conditional  compilation  sentinel !$ in Fortran.  In
	   fixed source	form Fortran, the sentinels can	also start with	 c  or
	   *.	When  -fopenmp	is  specified, the compiler generates parallel
	   code	according to the OpenMP	 Application  Program  Interface  v4.5
	   <https://www.openmp.org>.   This  option implies -pthread, and thus
	   is only supported  on  targets  that	 have  support	for  -pthread.
	   -fopenmp implies -fopenmp-simd.

       -fopenmp-simd
	   Enable  handling  of	 OpenMP's  "simd",  "declare  simd",  "declare
	   reduction", "assume", "ordered", "scan" and "loop"  directive,  and
	   of combined or composite directives with "simd" as constituent with
	   "#pragma  omp", "[[omp::directive(...)]]", "[[omp::sequence(...)]]"
	   and "[[omp::decl(...)]]" in	C/C++  and  "!$omp"  in	 Fortran.   It
	   additionally	 enables  the  conditional  compilation	sentinel !$ in
	   Fortran.  In	fixed source form  Fortran,  the  sentinels  can  also
	   start  with	c  or *.  Other	OpenMP directives are ignored.	Unless
	   -fopenmp is additionally specified, the "loop" region binds to  the
	   current task	region,	independent of the specified "bind" clause.

       -fopenmp-target-simd-clone
       -fopenmp-target-simd-clone=device-type
	   In addition to generating SIMD clones for functions marked with the
	   "declare  simd"  directive, GCC also	generates clones for functions
	   marked with the OpenMP "declare target" directive that are suitable
	   for vectorization when this option is in effect.   The  device-type
	   may be one of "none", "host", "nohost", and "any", which correspond
	   to  keywords	 for  the "device_type"	clause of the "declare target"
	   directive; clones are generated for	the  intersection  of  devices
	   specified.	  -fopenmp-target-simd-clone	is    equivalent    to
	   -fopenmp-target-simd-clone=any and -fno-openmp-target-simd-clone is
	   equivalent to -fopenmp-target-simd-clone=none.

	   At -O2 and higher (but not -Os or -Og) this	optimization  defaults
	   to  -fopenmp-target-simd-clone=nohost;  otherwise it	is disabled by
	   default.

       -fpermitted-flt-eval-methods=style
	   ISO/IEC   TS	  18661-3   defines   new   permissible	  values   for
	   "FLT_EVAL_METHOD"  that indicate that operations and	constants with
	   a semantic type that	is an interchange or extended format should be
	   evaluated to	the precision and  range  of  that  type.   These  new
	   values  are a superset of those permitted under C99/C11, which does
	   not	 specify   the	 meaning   of	other	positive   values   of
	   "FLT_EVAL_METHOD".	As  such,  code	conforming to C11 may not have
	   been	written	expecting the possibility of the new values.

	   -fpermitted-flt-eval-methods	specifies whether the compiler	should
	   allow only the values of "FLT_EVAL_METHOD" specified	in C99/C11, or
	   the extended	set of values specified	in ISO/IEC TS 18661-3.

	   style is either "c11" or "ts-18661-3" as appropriate.

	   The	default	 when  in  a  standards	 compliant  mode  (-std=c11 or
	   similar) is -fpermitted-flt-eval-methods=c11.  The default when  in
	   a	  GNU	   dialect	(-std=gnu11	or     similar)	    is
	   -fpermitted-flt-eval-methods=ts-18661-3.

	   The -fdeps-*	options	are  used  to  extract	structured  dependency
	   information for a source.  This involves determining	what resources
	   provided  by	 other	source	files  will be required	to compile the
	   source as well as what resources are	provided by the	source.	  This
	   information	can  be	 used  to  add	required  dependencies between
	   compilation rules of	dependent  sources  based  on  their  contents
	   rather  than	 requiring  such  information  be reflected within the
	   build tools as well.

       -fdeps-file=file
	   Where to write structured dependency	information.

       -fdeps-format=format
	   The format to use for structured dependency information. p1689r5 is
	   the only supported format right now.	 Note that when	this  argument
	   is  specified,  the	output	of -MF is stripped of some information
	   (namely C++ modules)	so that	it  does  not  use  extended  makefile
	   syntax not understood by most tools.

       -fdeps-target=file
	   Analogous  to  -MT but for structured dependency information.  This
	   indicates the  target  which	 will  ultimately  need	 any  required
	   resources  and provide any resources	extracted from the source that
	   may be required by other sources.

       -fplan9-extensions
	   Accept some non-standard constructs used in Plan 9 code.

	   This	 enables  -fms-extensions,   permits   passing	 pointers   to
	   structures  with anonymous fields to	functions that expect pointers
	   to elements of the type of the  field,  and	permits	 referring  to
	   anonymous   fields  declared	 using	a  typedef.	This  is  only
	   supported for C, not	C++.

       -fsigned-bitfields
       -funsigned-bitfields
       -fno-signed-bitfields
       -fno-unsigned-bitfields
	   These options control whether a bit-field is	 signed	 or  unsigned,
	   when	 the  declaration  does	not use	either "signed"	or "unsigned".
	   By default, such a bit-field	is signed, because this	is consistent:
	   the basic integer types such	as "int" are signed types.

       -fsigned-char
	   Let the type	"char" be signed, like "signed char".

	   Note	that this is equivalent	to -fno-unsigned-char,	which  is  the
	   negative   form   of	  -funsigned-char.    Likewise,	  the	option
	   -fno-signed-char is equivalent to -funsigned-char.

       -funsigned-char
	   Let the type	"char" be unsigned, like "unsigned char".

	   Each	kind of	machine	has a default for what "char" should  be.   It
	   is  either like "unsigned char" by default or like "signed char" by
	   default.

	   Ideally, a portable program should  always  use  "signed  char"  or
	   "unsigned  char"  when  it  depends on the signedness of an object.
	   But many programs have been written to use plain "char" and	expect
	   it  to  be  signed,	or  expect it to be unsigned, depending	on the
	   machines they were written for.  This option, and its inverse,  let
	   you make such a program work	with the opposite default.

	   The	type  "char"  is  always  a distinct type from each of "signed
	   char" or "unsigned char", even though its behavior is  always  just
	   like	one of those two.

       -fstrict-flex-arrays (C and C++ only)
       -fstrict-flex-arrays=level (C and C++ only)
	   Control  when  to  treat  the  trailing  array  of a	structure as a
	   flexible array member for the purpose of accessing the elements  of
	   such	  an  array.   The  value  of  level  controls	the  level  of
	   strictness.

	   -fstrict-flex-arrays	is equivalent to -fstrict-flex-arrays=3, which
	   is the strictest; all trailing arrays of structures are treated  as
	   flexible array members.

	   The	 negative   form   -fno-strict-flex-arrays  is	equivalent  to
	   -fstrict-flex-arrays=0, which is the	least strict.  In this case  a
	   trailing  array  is treated as a flexible array member only when it
	   is declared as a flexible array member per C99 standard onwards.

	   The	possible  values  of  level  are   the	 same	as   for   the
	   "strict_flex_array" attribute.

	   You	can  control this behavior for a specific trailing array field
	   of a	structure by using the variable	attribute  "strict_flex_array"
	   attribute.

	   The	   -fstrict_flex_arrays	    option    interacts	   with	   the
	   -Wstrict-flex-arrays	option.

       -fsso-struct=endianness
	   Set the default scalar storage order	of structures  and  unions  to
	   the	specified  endianness.	 The  accepted	values are big-endian,
	   little-endian and native for	the native endianness  of  the	target
	   (the	default).  This	option is not supported	for C++.

	   Warning:  the  -fsso-struct switch causes GCC to generate code that
	   is not binary compatible with code  generated  without  it  if  the
	   specified endianness	is not the native endianness of	the target.

   Options Controlling C++ Dialect
       This   section	describes  the	command-line  options  that  are  only
       meaningful for C++ programs.  You can also use most of the GNU compiler
       options regardless of what language your	program	is in.	 For  example,
       you might compile a file	firstClass.C like this:

	       g++ -g -fstrict-enums -O	-c firstClass.C

       In  this	 example,  only	-fstrict-enums is an option meant only for C++
       programs; you can use the other options with any	language supported  by
       GCC.

       Some  options for compiling C programs, such as -std, are also relevant
       for C++ programs.

       Here is a list of options that are only for compiling C++ programs:

       -fabi-version=n
	   Use version n of the	C++ ABI.  The default is version 0.

	   Version 0 refers to the version conforming most closely to the  C++
	   ABI	specification.	 Therefore,  the  ABI obtained using version 0
	   will	change in different versions of	G++ as ABI bugs	are fixed.

	   Version 1 is	the version of the C++ ABI that	first appeared in  G++
	   3.2.

	   Version  2 is the version of	the C++	ABI that first appeared	in G++
	   3.4,	and was	the default through G++	4.9.

	   Version 3 corrects an error in mangling a  constant	address	 as  a
	   template argument.

	   Version  4,	which first appeared in	G++ 4.5, implements a standard
	   mangling for	vector types.

	   Version 5, which first appeared in G++ 4.6, corrects	 the  mangling
	   of  attribute const/volatile	on function pointer types, decltype of
	   a plain decl, and use of a function parameter in the	declaration of
	   another parameter.

	   Version 6, which first appeared in G++ 4.7, corrects	the  promotion
	   behavior  of	 C++11	scoped	enums  and  the	 mangling  of template
	   argument packs, const/static_cast, prefix ++	and --,	 and  a	 class
	   scope function used as a template argument.

	   Version  7,	which first appeared in	G++ 4.8, that treats nullptr_t
	   as a	builtin	type and corrects the mangling of lambdas  in  default
	   argument scope.

	   Version   8,	  which	 first	appeared  in  G++  4.9,	 corrects  the
	   substitution	 behavior  of	function   types   with	  function-cv-
	   qualifiers.

	   Version  9, which first appeared in G++ 5.2,	corrects the alignment
	   of "nullptr_t".

	   Version 10, which first appeared  in	 G++  6.1,  adds  mangling  of
	   attributes	that  affect  type  identity,  such  as	 ia32  calling
	   convention attributes (e.g. stdcall).

	   Version 11, which first appeared in G++ 7, corrects the mangling of
	   sizeof... expressions and operator names.   For  multiple  entities
	   with	 the  same  name  within  a  function,	that  are  declared in
	   different scopes,  the  mangling  now  changes  starting  with  the
	   twelfth occurrence.	It also	implies	-fnew-inheriting-ctors.

	   Version  12,	 which	first  appeared	in G++ 8, corrects the calling
	   conventions for empty classes on the	x86_64 target and for  classes
	   with	 only deleted copy/move	constructors.  It accidentally changes
	   the calling convention for classes with a deleted copy  constructor
	   and a trivial move constructor.

	   Version  13,	 which first appeared in G++ 8.2, fixes	the accidental
	   change in version 12.

	   Version 14, which first appeared in G++ 10, corrects	 the  mangling
	   of the nullptr expression.

	   Version  15,	 which first appeared in G++ 10.3, corrects G++	10 ABI
	   tag regression.

	   Version 16, which first appeared in G++ 11, changes the mangling of
	   "__alignof__" to be distinct	from that of "alignof",	and  dependent
	   operator names.

	   Version 17, which first appeared in G++ 12, fixes layout of classes
	   that	  inherit   from   aggregate   classes	 with  default	member
	   initializers	in C++14 and up.

	   Version 18, which first appeard  in	G++  13,  fixes	 manglings  of
	   lambdas that	have additional	context.

	   Version  19,	 which	first  appeard	in  G++	14, fixes manglings of
	   structured bindings to include ABI tags.

	   See also -Wabi.

       -fabi-compat-version=n
	   On targets that support strong aliases, G++ works  around  mangling
	   changes  by	creating  an  alias with the correct mangled name when
	   defining a symbol with an  incorrect	 mangled  name.	  This	switch
	   specifies which ABI version to use for the alias.

	   With	 -fabi-version=0  (the	default), this defaults	to 13 (GCC 8.2
	   compatibility).  If another ABI  version  is	 explicitly  selected,
	   this	 defaults  to  0.   For	 compatibility	with  GCC versions 3.2
	   through 4.9,	use -fabi-compat-version=2.

	   If this option is not provided but -Wabi=n is, that version is used
	   for compatibility aliases.  If this option is provided  along  with
	   -Wabi  (without  the	version), the version from this	option is used
	   for the warning.

       -fno-access-control
	   Turn	off all	access checking.  This switch  is  mainly  useful  for
	   working around bugs in the access control code.

       -faligned-new
	   Enable support for C++17 "new" of types that	require	more alignment
	   than	 "void*	 ::operator  new(std::size_t)"	provides.   A  numeric
	   argument such as "-faligned-new=32" can be used to specify how much
	   alignment (in bytes)	is provided by that function,  but  few	 users
	   will	need to	override the default of	"alignof(std::max_align_t)".

	   This	flag is	enabled	by default for -std=c++17.

       -fchar8_t
       -fno-char8_t
	   Enable  support  for	"char8_t" as adopted for C++20.	 This includes
	   the addition	of a new "char8_t" fundamental type,  changes  to  the
	   types  of  UTF-8  string and	character literals, new	signatures for
	   user-defined	literals, associated standard library updates, and new
	   "__cpp_char8_t" and "__cpp_lib_char8_t" feature test	macros.

	   This	option enables functions to be	overloaded  for	 ordinary  and
	   UTF-8 strings:

		   int f(const char *);	   // #1
		   int f(const char8_t *); // #2
		   int v1 = f("text");	   // Calls #1
		   int v2 = f(u8"text");   // Calls #2

	   and introduces new signatures for user-defined literals:

		   int operator""_udl1(char8_t);
		   int v3 = u8'x'_udl1;
		   int operator""_udl2(const char8_t*, std::size_t);
		   int v4 = u8"text"_udl2;
		   template<typename T,	T...> int operator""_udl3();
		   int v5 = u8"text"_udl3;

	   The	change	to  the	 types	of UTF-8 string	and character literals
	   introduces incompatibilities	with ISO C++11	and  later  standards.
	   For example,	the following code is well-formed under	ISO C++11, but
	   is ill-formed when -fchar8_t	is specified.

		   const char *cp = u8"xx";// error: invalid conversion	from
					   //	     `const char8_t*' to `const	char*'
		   int f(const char*);
		   auto	v = f(u8"xx");	   // error: invalid conversion	from
					   //	     `const char8_t*' to `const	char*'
		   std::string s{u8"xx"};  // error: no	matching function for call to
					   //	     `std::basic_string<char>::basic_string()'
		   using namespace std::literals;
		   s = u8"xx"s;		   // error: conversion	from
					   //	     `basic_string<char8_t>' to	non-scalar
					   //	     type `basic_string<char>' requested

       -fcheck-new
	   Check  that	the  pointer  returned	by  "operator new" is non-null
	   before attempting to	modify the storage allocated.  This  check  is
	   normally  unnecessary  because  the	C++  standard  specifies  that
	   "operator new" only returns 0 if it is declared "throw()", in which
	   case	the compiler always checks the return value even without  this
	   option.   In	 all  other cases, when	"operator new" has a non-empty
	   exception specification, memory exhaustion is signalled by throwing
	   "std::bad_alloc".  See also new (nothrow).

       -fconcepts
       -fconcepts-ts
	   Enable support  for	the  C++  Concepts  feature  for  constraining
	   template  arguments.	  With -std=c++20 and above, Concepts are part
	   of the language standard, so	-fconcepts defaults to on.

	   Some	constructs that	were allowed by	the earlier C++	Extensions for
	   Concepts Technical Specification, ISO 19217 (2015), but didn't make
	   it into the standard, can additionally be enabled by	-fconcepts-ts.
	   The option -fconcepts-ts was	 deprecated  in	 GCC  14  and  may  be
	   removed  in	GCC  15;  users	 are expected to convert their code to
	   C++20 concepts.

       -fconstexpr-depth=n
	   Set	the  maximum  nested  evaluation  depth	 for  C++11  constexpr
	   functions  to  n.   A  limit	 is needed to detect endless recursion
	   during constant expression evaluation.  The	minimum	 specified  by
	   the standard	is 512.

       -fconstexpr-cache-depth=n
	   Set	the  maximum  level  of	 nested	 evaluation  depth  for	 C++11
	   constexpr functions that will be cached to n.  This is a  heuristic
	   that	 trades	 off compilation speed (when the cache avoids repeated
	   calculations) against memory	consumption (when the cache grows very
	   large from highly recursive evaluations).  The default is 8.	  Very
	   few	users  are  likely to want to adjust it, but if	your code does
	   heavy constexpr calculations	you might want to experiment  to  find
	   which value works best for you.

       -fconstexpr-fp-except
	   Annex  F  of	 the  C	 standard specifies that IEC559	floating point
	   exceptions encountered at compile time should not stop compilation.
	   C++ compilers have historically not followed	this guidance, instead
	   treating floating point  division  by  zero	as  non-constant  even
	   though  it  has a well defined value.  This flag tells the compiler
	   to give Annex F priority over other rules saying that a  particular
	   operation is	undefined.

		   constexpr float inf = 1./0.;	// OK with -fconstexpr-fp-except

       -fconstexpr-loop-limit=n
	   Set	the maximum number of iterations for a loop in C++14 constexpr
	   functions to	n.  A limit is needed to detect	infinite loops	during
	   constant expression evaluation.  The	default	is 262144 (1<<18).

       -fconstexpr-ops-limit=n
	   Set	the  maximum  number  of  operations during a single constexpr
	   evaluation.	Even when number of iterations of  a  single  loop  is
	   limited with	the above limit, if there are several nested loops and
	   each	 of  them has many iterations but still	smaller	than the above
	   limit, or if	in a body of some loop or even outside of a  loop  too
	   many	 expressions  need  to	be  evaluated, the resulting constexpr
	   evaluation might take too long.  The	default	is 33554432 (1<<25).

       -fcontracts
	   Enable experimental support	for  the  C++  Contracts  feature,  as
	   briefly  added  to  and  then  removed from the C++20 working paper
	   (N4820).  The implementation	also  includes	proposed  enhancements
	   from	 papers	 P1290,	 P1332,	 and  P1429.   This  functionality  is
	   intended mostly for those  interested  in  experimentation  towards
	   refining  the  feature  to  get  it	into  shape  for  a future C++
	   standard.

	   On violation	of  a  checked	contract,  the	violation  handler  is
	   called.  Users can replace the violation handler by defining

		   void
		   handle_contract_violation (const std::experimental::contract_violation&);

	   There  are  different  sets	of  additional	flags that can be used
	   together to specify which contracts will be checked	and  how,  for
	   N4820  contracts,  P1332  contracts,	or P1429 contracts; these sets
	   cannot be used together.

	   -fcontract-mode=[on|off]
	       Control whether	any  contracts	have  any  semantics  at  all.
	       Defaults	to on.

	   -fcontract-assumption-mode=[on|off]
	       [N4820]	Control	whether	contracts with level axiom should have
	       the assume semantic.  Defaults to on.

	   -fcontract-build-level=[off|default|audit]
	       [N4820] Specify which level of  contracts  to  generate	checks
	       for.  Defaults to default.

	   -fcontract-continuation-mode=[on|off]
	       [N4820]	Control	 whether  to  allow  the  program  to continue
	       executing after a contract  violation.	That  is,  do  checked
	       contracts  have	the maybe semantic described below rather than
	       the never semantic.  Defaults to	off.

	   -fcontract-role=<name>:<default>,<audit>,<axiom>
	       [P1332] Specify the concrete semantics for each contract	 level
	       of a particular contract	role.

	   -fcontract-semantic=[default|audit|axiom]:<semantic>
	       [P1429] Specify the concrete semantic for a particular contract
	       level.

	   -fcontract-strict-declarations=[on|off]
	       Control	whether	to reject adding contracts to a	function after
	       its first declaration.  Defaults	to off.

	   The possible	concrete semantics for	that  can  be  specified  with
	   -fcontract-role or -fcontract-semantic are:

	   "ignore"
	       This contract has no effect.

	   "assume"
	       This contract is	treated	like C++23 "[[assume]]".

	   "check_never_continue"
	   "never"
	   "abort"
	       This  contract  is checked.  If it fails, the violation handler
	       is called.  If the handler returns, "std::terminate" is called.

	   "check_maybe_continue"
	   "maybe"
	       This contract is	checked.  If it	fails, the  violation  handler
	       is   called.   If  the  handler	returns,  execution  continues
	       normally.

       -fcoroutines
	   Enable support for the C++ coroutines extension (experimental).

       -fdiagnostics-all-candidates
	   Permit the C++ front	end to note  all  candidates  during  overload
	   resolution failure, including when a	deleted	function is selected.

       -fno-elide-constructors
	   The	C++  standard  allows  an  implementation  to  omit creating a
	   temporary that is only used to initialize  another  object  of  the
	   same	 type.	Specifying this	option disables	that optimization, and
	   forces G++ to call the copy constructor in all cases.  This	option
	   also	 causes	 G++  to call trivial member functions which otherwise
	   would be expanded inline.

	   In C++17, the compiler is required to omit these  temporaries,  but
	   this	option still affects trivial member functions.

       -fno-enforce-eh-specs
	   Don't   generate   code   to	  check	 for  violation	 of  exception
	   specifications at run time.	This option violates the C++ standard,
	   but may be useful for reducing code size in production builds, much
	   like	defining "NDEBUG".  This does not give user code permission to
	   throw exceptions in violation of the	exception specifications;  the
	   compiler  still  optimizes based on the specifications, so throwing
	   an unexpected exception results in undefined	behavior at run	time.

       -fextern-tls-init
       -fno-extern-tls-init
	   The	C++11  and   OpenMP   standards	  allow	  "thread_local"   and
	   "threadprivate" variables to	have dynamic (runtime) initialization.
	   To  support this, any use of	such a variable	goes through a wrapper
	   function that performs any necessary	initialization.	 When the  use
	   and	definition  of	the variable are in the	same translation unit,
	   this	overhead can be	optimized away,	but  when  the	use  is	 in  a
	   different  translation  unit	 there is significant overhead even if
	   the variable	doesn't	actually need dynamic initialization.  If  the
	   programmer  can  be	sure  that  no	use  of	the variable in	a non-
	   defining TU needs to	trigger	dynamic	initialization (either because
	   the variable	is statically initialized, or a	use of the variable in
	   the defining	TU will	be executed before any uses  in	 another  TU),
	   they	can avoid this overhead	with the -fno-extern-tls-init option.

	   On	targets	  that	 support   symbol   aliases,  the  default  is
	   -fextern-tls-init.  On targets that do not support symbol  aliases,
	   the default is -fno-extern-tls-init.

       -ffold-simple-inlines
       -fno-fold-simple-inlines
	   Permit   the	  C++	frontend   to	fold   calls  to  "std::move",
	   "std::forward", "std::addressof" and	"std::as_const".  In  contrast
	   to  inlining, this means no debug information will be generated for
	   such	calls.	Since these functions are rarely interesting to	debug,
	   this	flag is	enabled	by default unless -fno-inline is active.

       -fno-gnu-keywords
	   Do not recognize "typeof" as	a keyword, so that code	can  use  this
	   word	 as  an	 identifier.   You  can	 use  the keyword "__typeof__"
	   instead.  This option is implied by the strict  ISO	C++  dialects:
	   -ansi, -std=c++98, -std=c++11, etc.

       -fno-immediate-escalation
	   Do	not  enable  immediate	function  escalation  whereby  certain
	   functions can be promoted to	consteval, as  specified  in  P2564R3.
	   For example:

		   consteval int id(int	i) { return i; }

		   constexpr int f(auto	t)
		   {
		     return t +	id(t); // id causes f<int> to be promoted to consteval
		   }

		   void	g(int i)
		   {
		     f (3);
		   }

	   compiles  in	C++20: "f" is an immediate-escalating function (due to
	   the "auto" it is a function template	and is	declared  "constexpr")
	   and id(t) is	an immediate-escalating	expression, so "f" is promoted
	   to "consteval".  Consequently, the call to id(t) is in an immediate
	   context,  so	 doesn't  have	to  produce  a	constant  (that	is the
	   mechanism allowing consteval	function composition).	However,  with
	   -fno-immediate-escalation,  "f" is not promoted to "consteval", and
	   since the call to  consteval	 function  id(t)  is  not  a  constant
	   expression, the compiler rejects the	code.

	   This	 option	is turned on by	default; it is only effective in C++20
	   mode	or later.

       -fimplicit-constexpr
	   Make	inline functions implicitly constexpr,	if  they  satisfy  the
	   requirements	 for a constexpr function.  This option	can be used in
	   C++14 mode or later.	 This can result  in  initialization  changing
	   from	dynamic	to static and other optimizations.

       -fno-implicit-templates
	   Never  emit	code  for  non-inline  templates that are instantiated
	   implicitly  (i.e.  by   use);   only	  emit	 code	for   explicit
	   instantiations.   If	 you  use  this	 option, you must take care to
	   structure  your  code  to  include  all  the	  necessary   explicit
	   instantiations to avoid getting undefined symbols at	link time.

       -fno-implicit-inline-templates
	   Don't  emit	code  for implicit instantiations of inline templates,
	   either.  The	default	is  to	handle	inlines	 differently  so  that
	   compiles  with  and	without	 optimization  need  the  same	set of
	   explicit instantiations.

       -fno-implement-inlines
	   To save space, do not emit out-of-line copies of  inline  functions
	   controlled  by "#pragma implementation".  This causes linker	errors
	   if these functions are not inlined everywhere they are called.

       -fmodules-ts
       -fno-modules-ts
	   Enable support for C++20 modules.  The -fno-modules-ts  is  usually
	   not	needed,	 as  that is the default.  Even	though this is a C++20
	   feature, it is not currently	implicitly enabled by  selecting  that
	   standard version.

       -fmodule-header
       -fmodule-header=user
       -fmodule-header=system
	   Compile a header file to create an importable header	unit.

       -fmodule-implicit-inline
	   Member  functions  defined  in  their  class	 definitions  are  not
	   implicitly  inline  for  modular  code.   This  is	different   to
	   traditional C++ behavior, for good reasons.	However, it may	result
	   in  a  difficulty  during  code  porting.   This  option makes such
	   function definitions	implicitly inline.  It does  however  generate
	   an  ABI  incompatibility, so	you must use it	everywhere or nowhere.
	   (Such definitions outside  of  a  named  module  remain  implicitly
	   inline, regardless.)

       -fno-module-lazy
	   Disable lazy	module importing and module mapper creation.

       -fmodule-mapper=[hostname]:port[?ident]
       -fmodule-mapper=|program[?ident]	args...
       -fmodule-mapper==socket[?ident]
       -fmodule-mapper=<>[inout][?ident]
       -fmodule-mapper=<in>out[?ident]
       -fmodule-mapper=file[?ident]
	   An  oracle  to  query  for  module  name  to	filename mappings.  If
	   unspecified the CXX_MODULE_MAPPER environment variable is used, and
	   if that is unset, an	in-process default is provided.

       -fmodule-only
	   Only	emit the Compiled  Module  Interface,  inhibiting  any	object
	   file.

       -fms-extensions
	   Disable  Wpedantic  warnings	 about constructs used in MFC, such as
	   implicit int	and getting a pointer  to  member  function  via  non-
	   standard syntax.

       -fnew-inheriting-ctors
	   Enable  the	P0136 adjustment to the	semantics of C++11 constructor
	   inheritance.	 This is part of C++17 but also	 considered  to	 be  a
	   Defect  Report  against  C++11  and C++14.  This flag is enabled by
	   default unless -fabi-version=10 or lower is specified.

       -fnew-ttp-matching
	   Enable the P0522 resolution to Core issue  150,  template  template
	   parameters  and  default  arguments:	 this  allows  a template with
	   default template arguments as an argument for a  template  template
	   parameter  with fewer template parameters.  This flag is enabled by
	   default for -std=c++17.

       -fno-nonansi-builtins
	   Disable built-in declarations of functions that are not mandated by
	   ANSI/ISO C.	 These	include	 "ffs",	 "alloca",  "_exit",  "index",
	   "bzero", "conjf", and other related functions.

       -fnothrow-opt
	   Treat   a  "throw()"	 exception  specification  as  if  it  were  a
	   "noexcept" specification to	reduce	or  eliminate  the  text  size
	   overhead  relative  to  a function with no exception	specification.
	   If the function has	local  variables  of  types  with  non-trivial
	   destructors,	  the	exception  specification  actually  makes  the
	   function smaller because the	EH cleanups for	those variables	can be
	   optimized away.  The	semantic effect	is that	 an  exception	thrown
	   out of a function with such an exception specification results in a
	   call	to "terminate" rather than "unexpected".

       -fno-operator-names
	   Do  not  treat the operator name keywords "and", "bitand", "bitor",
	   "compl", "not", "or"	and "xor" as synonyms as keywords.

       -fno-optional-diags
	   Disable diagnostics that the	standard says a	compiler does not need
	   to issue.  Currently, the only such diagnostic issued by G++	is the
	   one for a name having multiple meanings within a class.

       -fno-pretty-templates
	   When	an error message refers	to  a  specialization  of  a  function
	   template,  the  compiler  normally  prints  the  signature  of  the
	   template followed by	the template arguments	and  any  typedefs  or
	   typenames  in the signature (e.g. "void f(T)	[with T	= int]"	rather
	   than	"void f(int)") so that it's clear which	template is  involved.
	   When	 an  error  message  refers  to	 a  specialization  of a class
	   template, the compiler omits	any template arguments that match  the
	   default  template  arguments	for that template.  If either of these
	   behaviors make it harder to understand  the	error  message	rather
	   than	easier,	you can	use -fno-pretty-templates to disable them.

       -fno-rtti
	   Disable  generation	of  information	about every class with virtual
	   functions for use by	the C++	run-time type identification  features
	   ("dynamic_cast" and "typeid").  If you don't	use those parts	of the
	   language,  you  can	save some space	by using this flag.  Note that
	   exception handling uses the same information, but G++ generates  it
	   as  needed. The "dynamic_cast" operator can still be	used for casts
	   that	do not require run-time	type information, i.e. casts to	 "void
	   *" or to unambiguous	base classes.

	   Mixing  code	compiled with -frtti with that compiled	with -fno-rtti
	   may not work.  For example, programs	may fail to link  if  a	 class
	   compiled with -fno-rtti is used as a	base for a class compiled with
	   -frtti.

       -fsized-deallocation
	   Enable the built-in global declarations

		   void	operator delete	(void *, std::size_t) noexcept;
		   void	operator delete[] (void	*, std::size_t)	noexcept;

	   as	introduced   in	  C++14.   This	 is  useful  for  user-defined
	   replacement deallocation functions that, for	example, use the  size
	   of  the  object  to	make  deallocation faster.  Enabled by default
	   under -std=c++14 and	above.	The  flag  -Wsized-deallocation	 warns
	   about places	that might want	to add a definition.

       -fstrict-enums
	   Allow the compiler to optimize using	the assumption that a value of
	   enumerated  type  can  only be one of the values of the enumeration
	   (as defined in the C++ standard; basically, a  value	 that  can  be
	   represented	in  the	minimum	number of bits needed to represent all
	   the enumerators).  This assumption may not be valid if the  program
	   uses	a cast to convert an arbitrary integer value to	the enumerated
	   type.   This	 option	 has  no effect	for an enumeration type	with a
	   fixed underlying type.

       -fstrong-eval-order
	   Evaluate member access, array subscripting, and  shift  expressions
	   in  left-to-right  order,  and evaluate assignment in right-to-left
	   order, as adopted for C++17.	 Enabled by default  with  -std=c++17.
	   -fstrong-eval-order=some enables just the ordering of member	access
	   and shift expressions, and is the default without -std=c++17.

       -ftemplate-backtrace-limit=n
	   Set the maximum number of template instantiation notes for a	single
	   warning or error to n.  The default value is	10.

       -ftemplate-depth=n
	   Set	the  maximum instantiation depth for template classes to n.  A
	   limit on the	template  instantiation	 depth	is  needed  to	detect
	   endless  recursions	during template	class instantiation.  ANSI/ISO
	   C++ conforming programs must	not rely on a  maximum	depth  greater
	   than	 17  (changed to 1024 in C++11).  The default value is 900, as
	   the compiler	can run	out of stack space before hitting 1024 in some
	   situations.

       -fno-threadsafe-statics
	   Do not emit the extra code to use the routines specified in the C++
	   ABI for thread-safe initialization of local statics.	 You  can  use
	   this	 option	to reduce code size slightly in	code that doesn't need
	   to be thread-safe.

       -fuse-cxa-atexit
	   Register destructors	for objects with static	storage	duration  with
	   the	"__cxa_atexit"	function  rather  than	the "atexit" function.
	   This	option is required for fully standards-compliant  handling  of
	   static  destructors,	 but  only  works  if  your C library supports
	   "__cxa_atexit".

       -fno-use-cxa-get-exception-ptr
	   Don't use  the  "__cxa_get_exception_ptr"  runtime  routine.	  This
	   causes  "std::uncaught_exception" to	be incorrect, but is necessary
	   if the runtime routine is not available.

       -fvisibility-inlines-hidden
	   This	switch declares	that the user  does  not  attempt  to  compare
	   pointers  to	inline functions or methods where the addresses	of the
	   two functions are taken in different	shared objects.

	   The effect of this  is  that	 GCC  may,  effectively,  mark	inline
	   methods with	"__attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden")))" so that they
	   do not appear in the	export table of	a DSO and do not require a PLT
	   indirection	when  used  within  the	DSO.  Enabling this option can
	   have	a dramatic effect on load and  link  times  of	a  DSO	as  it
	   massively  reduces  the  size  of the dynamic export	table when the
	   library makes heavy use of templates.

	   The behavior	of this	switch is not quite the	same  as  marking  the
	   methods  as	hidden	directly,  because  it	does not affect	static
	   variables local to the function or cause  the  compiler  to	deduce
	   that	the function is	defined	in only	one shared object.

	   You	may  mark a method as having a visibility explicitly to	negate
	   the effect of the switch for	that method.  For example, if  you  do
	   want	 to  compare pointers to a particular inline method, you might
	   mark	it as having default visibility.  Marking the enclosing	 class
	   with	explicit visibility has	no effect.

	   Explicitly  instantiated  inline  methods  are  unaffected  by this
	   option as their linkage might  otherwise  cross  a  shared  library
	   boundary.

       -fvisibility-ms-compat
	   This	 flag  attempts	 to  use visibility settings to	make GCC's C++
	   linkage model compatible with that of Microsoft Visual Studio.

	   The flag makes these	changes	to GCC's linkage model:

	   1.  It   sets   the	 default   visibility	to   "hidden",	  like
	       -fvisibility=hidden.

	   2.  Types, but not their members, are not hidden by default.

	   3.  The  One	 Definition Rule is relaxed for	types without explicit
	       visibility specifications that are defined  in  more  than  one
	       shared  object:	those  declarations  are permitted if they are
	       permitted when this option is not used.

	   In new code it is better  to	 use  -fvisibility=hidden  and	export
	   those   classes   that  are	intended  to  be  externally  visible.
	   Unfortunately  it  is  possible   for   code	  to   rely,   perhaps
	   accidentally, on the	Visual Studio behavior.

	   Among  the  consequences  of	 these	changes	 are  that static data
	   members of the  same	 type  with  the  same	name  but  defined  in
	   different  shared  objects  are different, so changing one does not
	   change the other; and that pointers to function members defined  in
	   different  shared objects may not compare equal.  When this flag is
	   given, it is	a violation of the ODR to define types with  the  same
	   name	differently.

       -fno-weak
	   Do  not  use	 weak  symbol  support,	 even if it is provided	by the
	   linker.  By default,	G++ uses weak symbols if they  are  available.
	   This	option exists only for testing,	and should not be used by end-
	   users;  it  results	in  inferior  code  and	has no benefits.  This
	   option may be removed in a future release of	G++.

       -fext-numeric-literals (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Accept imaginary, fixed-point, or  machine-defined  literal	number
	   suffixes  as	 GNU extensions.  When this option is turned off these
	   suffixes  are  treated  as  C++11  user-defined   literal   numeric
	   suffixes.  This is on by default for	all pre-C++11 dialects and all
	   GNU dialects: -std=c++98, -std=gnu++98, -std=gnu++11, -std=gnu++14.
	   This	 option	 is  off by default for	ISO C++11 onwards (-std=c++11,
	   ...).

       -nostdinc++
	   Do not search for header files in the standard directories specific
	   to C++, but do still	search the other standard directories.	 (This
	   option is used when building	the C++	library.)

       -flang-info-include-translate
       -flang-info-include-translate-not
       -flang-info-include-translate=header
	   Inform of include translation events.  The first will note accepted
	   include   translations,  the	 second	 will  note  declined  include
	   translations.  The header form will inform of include  translations
	   relating  to	that specific header.  If header is of the form	"user"
	   or "<system>" it will be resolved to	 a  specific  user  or	system
	   header using	the include path.

       -flang-info-module-cmi
       -flang-info-module-cmi=module
	   Inform of Compiled Module Interface pathnames.  The first will note
	   all	read  CMI  pathnames.	The  module  form  will	 not reading a
	   specific module's CMI.  module may be a named module	or  a  header-
	   unit	 (the  latter  indicated by either being a pathname containing
	   directory separators	or enclosed in "<>" or "").

       -stdlib=libstdc++,libc++
	   When	 G++  is  configured  to  support  this	 option,   it	allows
	   specification  of alternate C++ runtime libraries.  Two options are
	   available: libstdc++	(the default, native C++ runtime for G++)  and
	   libc++ which	is the C++ runtime installed on	some operating systems
	   (e.g.  Darwin versions from Darwin11	onwards).  The option switches
	   G++ to use the headers from	the  specified	library	 and  to  emit
	   "-lstdc++"  or "-lc++" respectively,	when a C++ runtime is required
	   for linking.

       In addition, these warning options have meanings	only for C++ programs:

       -Wabi-tag (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	when a type with an ABI	tag is used in a context that does not
	   have	that ABI tag.  See C++ Attributes for more  information	 about
	   ABI tags.

       -Wcomma-subscript (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	 about	uses  of  a  comma  expression	within	a subscripting
	   expression.	This usage was deprecated in C++20 and is going	to  be
	   removed  in C++23.  However,	a comma	expression wrapped in "( )" is
	   not deprecated.  Example:

		   void	f(int *a, int b, int c)	{
		       a[b,c];	   // deprecated in C++20, invalid in C++23
		       a[(b,c)];   // OK
		   }

	   In C++23 it is valid	to  have  comma	 separated  expressions	 in  a
	   subscript  when  an	overloaded  subscript  operator	 is  found and
	   supports the	right number and types of arguments.  G++ will	accept
	   the	formerly  valid	syntax for code	that is	not valid in C++23 but
	   used	to be valid but	deprecated in C++20 with  a  pedantic  warning
	   that	can be disabled	with -Wno-comma-subscript.

	   Enabled by default with -std=c++20 unless -Wno-deprecated, and with
	   -std=c++23 regardless of -Wno-deprecated.

	   This	 warning  is upgraded to an error by -pedantic-errors in C++23
	   mode	or later.

       -Wctad-maybe-unsupported	(C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	when performing	class template argument	deduction (CTAD) on  a
	   type	 with  no  explicitly  written deduction guides.  This warning
	   will	point out cases	where CTAD succeeded only because the compiler
	   synthesized the implicit deduction guides, which might not be  what
	   the	programmer  intended.  Certain style guides allow CTAD only on
	   types that specifically "opt-in"; i.e., on types that are  designed
	   to support CTAD.  This warning can be suppressed with the following
	   pattern:

		   struct allow_ctad_t;	// any name works
		   template <typename T> struct	S {
		     S(T) { }
		   };
		   // Guide with incomplete parameter type will	never be considered.
		   S(allow_ctad_t) -> S<void>;

       -Wctor-dtor-privacy (C++	and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 when  a  class	seems unusable because all the constructors or
	   destructors in that class are private, and it has  neither  friends
	   nor public static member functions.	Also warn if there are no non-
	   private  methods,  and there's at least one private member function
	   that	isn't a	constructor or destructor.

       -Wdangling-reference (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	when a reference is bound to a temporary  whose	 lifetime  has
	   ended.  For example:

		   int n = 1;
		   const int& r	= std::max(n - 1, n + 1); // r is dangling

	   In  the  example  above,  two temporaries are created, one for each
	   argument, and a reference to	one of the  temporaries	 is  returned.
	   However,  both  temporaries	are  destroyed	at the end of the full
	   expression, so the reference	"r" is dangling.   This	 warning  also
	   detects dangling references in member initializer lists:

		   const int& f(const int& i) {	return i; }
		   struct S {
		     const int &r; // r	is dangling
		     S() : r(f(10)) { }
		   };

	   Member  functions  are  checked  as	well,  but  only  their	object
	   argument:

		   struct S {
		      const S& self () { return	*this; }
		   };
		   const S& s =	S().self(); // s is dangling

	   Certain  functions  are  safe  in   this   respect,	 for   example
	   "std::use_facet":  they take	and return a reference,	but they don't
	   return one of its arguments,	which  can  fool  the  warning.	  Such
	   functions  can  be  excluded	from the warning by wrapping them in a
	   "#pragma":

		   #pragma GCC diagnostic push
		   #pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wdangling-reference"
		   const T& foo	(const T&) { ... }
		   #pragma GCC diagnostic pop

	   The "#pragma" can also  surround  the  class;  in  that  case,  the
	   warning will	be disabled for	all the	member functions.

	   -Wdangling-reference	also warns about code like

		   auto	p = std::minmax(1, 2);

	   where  "std::minmax"	 returns  "std::pair<const int&, const int&>",
	   and both references dangle after the	end  of	 the  full  expression
	   that	contains the call to "std::minmax".

	   The	warning	 does  not  warn  for  "std::span"-like	 classes.   We
	   consider classes of the form:

		   template<typename T>
		   struct Span {
		     T*	data_;
		     std::size len_;
		   };

	   as "std::span"-like;	that is, the class is a	non-union  class  that
	   has a pointer data member and a trivial destructor.

	   The	warning	 can  be  disabled  by	using  the  "gnu::no_dangling"
	   attribute.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wdelete-non-virtual-dtor (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	when "delete" is used to destroy an instance of	a  class  that
	   has	virtual	 functions and non-virtual destructor. It is unsafe to
	   delete an instance of a derived class through a pointer to  a  base
	   class  if  the base class does not have a virtual destructor.  This
	   warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wdeprecated-copy (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	that the implicit declaration of a copy	 constructor  or  copy
	   assignment  operator	is deprecated if the class has a user-provided
	   copy	constructor or copy assignment	operator,  in  C++11  and  up.
	   This	 warning  is enabled by	-Wextra.  With -Wdeprecated-copy-dtor,
	   also	deprecate if the class has a user-provided destructor.

       -Wno-deprecated-enum-enum-conversion (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable the warning	about  the  case  when	the  usual  arithmetic
	   conversions	are  applied  on  operands where one is	of enumeration
	   type	and the	other  is  of  a  different  enumeration  type.	  This
	   conversion was deprecated in	C++20.	For example:

		   enum	E1 { e };
		   enum	E2 { f };
		   int k = f - e;

	   -Wdeprecated-enum-enum-conversion   is   enabled  by	 default  with
	   -std=c++20.	In pre-C++20 dialects, this warning can	be enabled  by
	   -Wenum-conversion.

       -Wno-deprecated-enum-float-conversion (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable  the	 warning  about	 the  case  when  the usual arithmetic
	   conversions are applied on operands where  one  is  of  enumeration
	   type	 and  the  other is of a floating-point	type.  This conversion
	   was deprecated in C++20.  For example:

		   enum	E1 { e };
		   enum	E2 { f };
		   bool	b = e <= 3.7;

	   -Wdeprecated-enum-float-conversion  is  enabled  by	default	  with
	   -std=c++20.	 In pre-C++20 dialects,	this warning can be enabled by
	   -Wenum-conversion.

       -Wno-elaborated-enum-base
	   For C++11 and above,	warn if	an (invalid) additional	 enum-base  is
	   used	 in  an	 elaborated-type-specifier.   That is, if an enum with
	   given  underlying  type  and	 no  enumerator	 list  is  used	 in  a
	   declaration	other  than just a standalone declaration of the enum.
	   Enabled by default.	This warning is	 upgraded  to  an  error  with
	   -pedantic-errors.

       -Wno-init-list-lifetime (C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not  warn about uses of "std::initializer_list" that are	likely
	   to result in	dangling pointers.  Since the underlying array for  an
	   "initializer_list"  is  handled like	a normal C++ temporary object,
	   it is easy to inadvertently keep a pointer to the  array  past  the
	   end of the array's lifetime.	 For example:

	   *   If  a  function	returns	 a  temporary "initializer_list", or a
	       local "initializer_list"	variable, the array's lifetime ends at
	       the end of the return statement,	so the value  returned	has  a
	       dangling	pointer.

	   *   If  a  new-expression  creates an "initializer_list", the array
	       only lives until	the end	of the enclosing  full-expression,  so
	       the "initializer_list" in the heap has a	dangling pointer.

	   *   When  an	 "initializer_list" variable is	assigned from a	brace-
	       enclosed	initializer list, the temporary	array created for  the
	       right  side  of	the assignment only lives until	the end	of the
	       full-expression,	   so	 at    the    next    statement	   the
	       "initializer_list" variable has a dangling pointer.

		       // li's initial underlying array	lives as long as li
		       std::initializer_list<int> li = { 1,2,3 };
		       // assignment changes li	to point to a temporary	array
		       li = { 4, 5 };
		       // now the temporary is gone and	li has a dangling pointer
		       int i = li.begin()[0] //	undefined behavior

	   *   When  a	list  constructor  stores the "begin" pointer from the
	       "initializer_list" argument, this doesn't extend	 the  lifetime
	       of  the	array,	so  if	a class	variable is constructed	from a
	       temporary "initializer_list", the pointer is left  dangling  by
	       the end of the variable declaration statement.

       -Winvalid-constexpr
	   Warn	 when  a  function  never  produces a constant expression.  In
	   C++20 and earlier, for  every  "constexpr"  function	 and  function
	   template,  there  must be at	least one set of function arguments in
	   at least one	instantiation such that	an invocation of the  function
	   or  constructor  could  be  an  evaluated  subexpression  of	a core
	   constant expression.	  C++23	 removed  this	restriction,  so  it's
	   possible   to  have	a  function  or	 a  function  template	marked
	   "constexpr" for which no invocation satisfies the requirements of a
	   core	constant expression.

	   This	warning	is enabled as a	pedantic warning by default  in	 C++20
	   and	earlier.   In  C++23, -Winvalid-constexpr can be turned	on, in
	   which case it will be an ordinary warning.  For example:

		   void	f (int&	i);
		   constexpr void
		   g (int& i)
		   {
		     //	Warns by default in C++20, in C++23 only with -Winvalid-constexpr.
		     f(i);
		   }

       -Winvalid-imported-macros
	   Verify all imported macro definitions  are  valid  at  the  end  of
	   compilation.	  This	is  not	 enabled  by  default,	as it requires
	   additional  processing  to  determine.   It	may  be	 useful	  when
	   preparing sets of header-units to ensure consistent macros.

       -Wno-literal-suffix (C++	and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do not warn when a string or	character literal is followed by a ud-
	   suffix  which  does	not begin with an underscore.  As a conforming
	   extension, GCC  treats  such	 suffixes  as  separate	 preprocessing
	   tokens  in order to maintain	backwards compatibility	with code that
	   uses	formatting macros from "<inttypes.h>".	For example:

		   #define __STDC_FORMAT_MACROS
		   #include <inttypes.h>
		   #include <stdio.h>

		   int main() {
		     int64_t i64 = 123;
		     printf("My	int64: %" PRId64"\n", i64);
		   }

	   In this case, "PRId64"  is  treated	as  a  separate	 preprocessing
	   token.

	   This	 option	 also  controls	 warnings  when	a user-defined literal
	   operator is declared	with a literal suffix identifier that  doesn't
	   begin  with	an  underscore.	 Literal suffix	identifiers that don't
	   begin with an underscore are	reserved for future standardization.

	   These warnings are enabled by default.

       -Wno-narrowing (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   For C++11 and later standards, narrowing conversions	are  diagnosed
	   by  default,	 as  required by the standard.	A narrowing conversion
	   from	a constant produces an error, and a narrowing conversion  from
	   a  non-constant  produces  a	warning, but -Wno-narrowing suppresses
	   the diagnostic.  Note that this does	 not  affect  the  meaning  of
	   well-formed	code;  narrowing conversions are still considered ill-
	   formed in SFINAE contexts.

	   With	 -Wnarrowing  in  C++98,  warn	when  a	 narrowing  conversion
	   prohibited by C++11 occurs within { }, e.g.

		   int i = { 2.2 }; // error: narrowing	from double to int

	   This	flag is	included in -Wall and -Wc++11-compat.

       -Wnoexcept (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 when  a  noexcept-expression  evaluates to false because of a
	   call	to a function that does	 not  have  a  non-throwing  exception
	   specification  (i.e.	 "throw()"  or "noexcept") but is known	by the
	   compiler to never throw an exception.

       -Wnoexcept-type (C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	if the C++17 feature making "noexcept" part of a function type
	   changes the mangled name of a symbol	relative to C++14.  Enabled by
	   -Wabi and -Wc++17-compat.

	   As an example:

		   template <class T> void f(T t) { t(); };
		   void	g() noexcept;
		   void	h() { f(g); }

	   In  C++14,  "f"  calls  "f<void(*)()>",  but	 in  C++17  it	 calls
	   "f<void(*)()noexcept>".

       -Wclass-memaccess (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	 when  the destination of a call to a raw memory function such
	   as "memset" or "memcpy" is  an  object  of  class  type,  and  when
	   writing  into  such an object might bypass the class	non-trivial or
	   deleted constructor or copy assignment,  violate  const-correctness
	   or encapsulation, or	corrupt	virtual	table pointers.	 Modifying the
	   representation of such objects may violate invariants maintained by
	   member  functions  of the class.  For example, the call to "memset"
	   below is undefined because it modifies a non-trivial	 class	object
	   and is, therefore, diagnosed.  The safe way to either initialize or
	   clear  the  storage	of  objects  of	 such  types  is  by using the
	   appropriate	constructor  or	 assignment  operator,	 if   one   is
	   available.

		   std::string str = "abc";
		   memset (&str, 0, sizeof str);

	   The	-Wclass-memaccess  option  is  enabled	by  -Wall.  Explicitly
	   casting the pointer to the class object to "void *" or  to  a  type
	   that	 can  be safely	accessed by the	raw memory function suppresses
	   the warning.

       -Wnon-virtual-dtor (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	when a class has virtual  functions  and  an  accessible  non-
	   virtual  destructor	itself	or  in	an accessible polymorphic base
	   class, in which case	 it  is	 possible  but	unsafe	to  delete  an
	   instance  of	 a derived class through a pointer to the class	itself
	   or base class.  This	warning	is automatically enabled  if  -Weffc++
	   is  specified.   The	 -Wdelete-non-virtual-dtor  option (enabled by
	   -Wall) should be preferred because it warns about the unsafe	 cases
	   without false positives.

       -Wregister (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	on uses	of the "register" storage class	specifier, except when
	   it  is  part	of the GNU Explicit Register Variables extension.  The
	   use of the "register" keyword as storage class specifier  has  been
	   deprecated  in C++11	and removed in C++17.  Enabled by default with
	   -std=c++17.

       -Wreorder (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	when the order of member initializers given in the  code  does
	   not match the order in which	they must be executed.	For instance:

		   struct A {
		     int i;
		     int j;
		     A(): j (0), i (1) { }
		   };

	   The	compiler rearranges the	member initializers for	"i" and	"j" to
	   match the declaration order of the members, emitting	a  warning  to
	   that	effect.	 This warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-pessimizing-move (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   This	 warning  warns	 when  a  call	to  "std::move"	 prevents copy
	   elision.  A typical scenario	when copy elision can  occur  is  when
	   returning  in  a  function  with  a	class  return  type,  when the
	   expression being returned is	the name of a  non-volatile  automatic
	   object,  and	 is not	a function parameter, and has the same type as
	   the function	return type.

		   struct T {
		   ...
		   };
		   T fn()
		   {
		     T t;
		     ...
		     return std::move (t);
		   }

	   But in this example,	the "std::move"	call prevents copy elision.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-redundant-move (C++	and Objective-C++ only)
	   This	warning	warns about redundant calls to "std::move";  that  is,
	   when	 a  move  operation would have been performed even without the
	   "std::move" call.  This happens because the compiler	is  forced  to
	   treat the object as if it were an rvalue in certain situations such
	   as returning	a local	variable, where	copy elision isn't applicable.
	   Consider:

		   struct T {
		   ...
		   };
		   T fn(T t)
		   {
		     ...
		     return std::move (t);
		   }

	   Here,  the  "std::move"  call is redundant.	Because	G++ implements
	   Core	Issue 1579, another example is:

		   struct T { // convertible to	U
		   ...
		   };
		   struct U {
		   ...
		   };
		   U fn()
		   {
		     T t;
		     ...
		     return std::move (t);
		   }

	   In this example, copy elision isn't applicable because the type  of
	   the	expression being returned and the function return type differ,
	   yet G++ treats the return value as if  it  were  designated	by  an
	   rvalue.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wrange-loop-construct (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   This	 warning  warns	when a C++ range-based for-loop	is creating an
	   unnecessary copy.  This can happen when the	range  declaration  is
	   not a reference, but	probably should	be.  For example:

		   struct S { char arr[128]; };
		   void	fn () {
		     S arr[5];
		     for (const	auto x : arr) {	... }
		   }

	   It does not warn when the type being	copied is a trivially-copyable
	   type	whose size is less than	64 bytes.

	   This	 warning also warns when a loop	variable in a range-based for-
	   loop	is initialized with a value of a different type	resulting in a
	   copy.  For example:

		   void	fn() {
		     int arr[10];
		     for (const	double &x : arr) { ... }
		   }

	   In the example above, in every iteration of the  loop  a  temporary
	   value  of  type  "double"  is  created  and destroyed, to which the
	   reference "const double &" is bound.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wredundant-tags	(C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	about redundant	class-key and enum-key in references to	 class
	   types  and  enumerated  types  in  contexts	where  the  key	can be
	   eliminated without causing an ambiguity.  For example:

		   struct foo;
		   struct foo *p;   // warn that keyword struct	can be eliminated

	   On the other	hand, in this example there is no warning:

		   struct foo;
		   void	foo ();	  // "hides" struct foo
		   void	bar (struct foo&);  // no warning, keyword struct is necessary

       -Wno-subobject-linkage (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do not warn if a class type has a base or a field whose  type  uses
	   the anonymous namespace or depends on a type	with no	linkage.  If a
	   type	A depends on a type B with no or internal linkage, defining it
	   in multiple translation units would be an ODR violation because the
	   meaning  of	B  is  different  in each translation unit.  If	A only
	   appears in a	single translation unit, the best way to  silence  the
	   warning  is	to  give  it  internal	linkage	 by  putting  it in an
	   anonymous namespace	as  well.   The	 compiler  doesn't  give  this
	   warning  for	 types	defined	 in  the  main	.C  file, as those are
	   unlikely to	have  multiple	definitions.   -Wsubobject-linkage  is
	   enabled by default.

       -Weffc++	(C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 about violations of the following style guidelines from Scott
	   Meyers' Effective C++ series	of books:

	   *   Define a	 copy  constructor  and	 an  assignment	 operator  for
	       classes with dynamically-allocated memory.

	   *   Prefer initialization to	assignment in constructors.

	   *   Have "operator="	return a reference to *this.

	   *   Don't try to return a reference when you	must return an object.

	   *   Distinguish  between  prefix and	postfix	forms of increment and
	       decrement operators.

	   *   Never overload "&&", "||", or ",".

	   This	option also enables -Wnon-virtual-dtor,	which is also  one  of
	   the	effective C++ recommendations.	However, the check is extended
	   to warn about the lack of virtual  destructor  in  accessible  non-
	   polymorphic bases classes too.

	   When	 selecting  this  option,  be  aware that the standard library
	   headers do not obey all of these guidelines;	use grep -v to	filter
	   out those warnings.

       -Wno-exceptions (C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable  the	 warning  about	 the case when an exception handler is
	   shadowed by another handler,	which can point	out a  wrong  ordering
	   of exception	handlers.

       -Wstrict-null-sentinel (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 about	the  use  of  an  uncasted  "NULL"  as sentinel.  When
	   compiling only with GCC this	is a  valid  sentinel,	as  "NULL"  is
	   defined to "__null".	 Although it is	a null pointer constant	rather
	   than	 a  null pointer, it is	guaranteed to be of the	same size as a
	   pointer.  But this use is not portable across different compilers.

       -Wno-non-template-friend	(C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable warnings when non-template friend  functions	 are  declared
	   within  a  template.	  In  very  old	 versions  of GCC that predate
	   implementation of the ISO standard, declarations such as friend int
	   foo(int), where the name of the friend is an	unqualified-id,	 could
	   be  interpreted  as	a  particular  specialization  of  a  template
	   function; the warning exists	to  diagnose  compatibility  problems,
	   and is enabled by default.

       -Wold-style-cast	(C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 if  an	 old-style  (C-style)  cast to a non-void type is used
	   within  a  C++  program.   The  new-style  casts   ("dynamic_cast",
	   "static_cast",   "reinterpret_cast",	 and  "const_cast")  are  less
	   vulnerable to unintended effects and	much easier to search for.

       -Woverloaded-virtual (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
       -Woverloaded-virtual=n
	   Warn	when a function	declaration hides  virtual  functions  from  a
	   base	class.	For example, in:

		   struct A {
		     virtual void f();
		   };

		   struct B: public A {
		     void f(int); // does not override
		   };

	   the "A" class version of "f"	is hidden in "B", and code like:

		   B* b;
		   b->f();

	   fails to compile.

	   In  cases  where  the different signatures are not an accident, the
	   simplest solution is	to add	a  using-declaration  to  the  derived
	   class to un-hide the	base function, e.g. add	"using A::f;" to "B".

	   The	optional  level	 suffix	 controls  the	behavior  when all the
	   declarations	in the derived class override virtual functions	in the
	   base	class, even if not all of the base functions are overridden:

		   struct C {
		     virtual void f();
		     virtual void f(int);
		   };

		   struct D: public C {
		     void f(int); // does override
		   }

	   This	pattern	is less	likely to be a mistake;	 if  D	is  only  used
	   virtually,  the  user  might	 have  decided	that  the  base	 class
	   semantics for some of the overloads are fine.

	   At level 1,	this  case  does  not  warn;  at  level	 2,  it	 does.
	   -Woverloaded-virtual	 by  itself  selects  level  2.	  Level	 1  is
	   included in -Wall.

       -Wno-pmf-conversions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable the diagnostic for converting a  bound  pointer  to	member
	   function to a plain pointer.

       -Wsign-promo (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 when overload resolution chooses a promotion from unsigned or
	   enumerated type to a	signed type, over a conversion to an  unsigned
	   type	 of the	same size.  Previous versions of G++ tried to preserve
	   unsignedness, but the standard mandates the current behavior.

       -Wtemplates (C++	and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	when a primary	template  declaration  is  encountered.	  Some
	   coding  rules  disallow  templates, and this	may be used to enforce
	   that	rule.  The warning is inactive inside a	 system	 header	 file,
	   such	 as  the  STL,	so  one	 can  still use	the STL.  One may also
	   instantiate or specialize templates.

       -Wmismatched-new-delete (C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	for mismatches between calls to	"operator  new"	 or  "operator
	   delete"   and   the	 corresponding	 call  to  the	allocation  or
	   deallocation	function.  This	includes invocations of	C++  "operator
	   delete"  with  pointers  returned  from  either mismatched forms of
	   "operator new", or from other functions that	allocate  objects  for
	   which  the  "operator delete" isn't a suitable deallocator, as well
	   as calls to other deallocation  functions  with  pointers  returned
	   from	 "operator  new"  for  which  the  deallocation	function isn't
	   suitable.

	   For example,	the "delete"  expression  in  the  function  below  is
	   diagnosed  because  it  doesn't  match  the array form of the "new"
	   expression the pointer argument was returned	from.  Similarly,  the
	   call	to "free" is also diagnosed.

		   void	f ()
		   {
		     int *a = new int[n];
		     delete a;	 // warning: mismatch in array forms of	expressions

		     char *p = new char[n];
		     free (p);	 // warning: mismatch between new and free
		   }

	   The	 related   option  -Wmismatched-dealloc	 diagnoses  mismatches
	   involving  allocation  and  deallocation   functions	  other	  than
	   "operator new" and "operator	delete".

	   -Wmismatched-new-delete is included in -Wall.

       -Wmismatched-tags (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	 for declarations of structs, classes, and class templates and
	   their specializations with a	class-key that does not	 match	either
	   the	definition  or	the  first  declaration	 if  no	 definition is
	   provided.

	   For example,	the declaration	of "struct  Object"  in	 the  argument
	   list	 of  "draw"  triggers the warning.  To avoid it, either	remove
	   the redundant class-key "struct" or	replace	 it  with  "class"  to
	   match its definition.

		   class Object	{
		   public:
		     virtual ~Object ()	= 0;
		   };
		   void	draw (struct Object*);

	   It  is  not wrong to	declare	a class	with the class-key "struct" as
	   the example above shows.  The -Wmismatched-tags option is  intended
	   to  help achieve a consistent style of class	declarations.  In code
	   that	is intended to be  portable  to	 Windows-based	compilers  the
	   warning  helps  prevent unresolved references due to	the difference
	   in the mangling of symbols declared with different class-keys.  The
	   option can be used  either  on  its	own  or	 in  conjunction  with
	   -Wredundant-tags.

       -Wmultiple-inheritance (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 when  a  class	 is defined with multiple direct base classes.
	   Some	coding rules disallow multiple inheritance, and	 this  may  be
	   used	to enforce that	rule.  The warning is inactive inside a	system
	   header  file,  such	as the STL, so one can still use the STL.  One
	   may also define classes that	indirectly use multiple	inheritance.

       -Wvirtual-inheritance
	   Warn	when a class is	defined	with  a	 virtual  direct  base	class.
	   Some	 coding	 rules	disallow multiple inheritance, and this	may be
	   used	to enforce that	rule.  The warning is inactive inside a	system
	   header file,	such as	the STL, so one	can still use  the  STL.   One
	   may also define classes that	indirectly use virtual inheritance.

       -Wno-virtual-move-assign
	   Suppress  warnings about inheriting from a virtual base with	a non-
	   trivial C++11 move assignment operator.  This is dangerous  because
	   if  the  virtual  base is reachable along more than one path, it is
	   moved multiple times, which can mean	both objects  end  up  in  the
	   moved-from  state.	If  the	move assignment	operator is written to
	   avoid  moving  from	a  moved-from  object,	this  warning  can  be
	   disabled.

       -Wnamespaces
	   Warn	 when  a  namespace  definition	 is opened.  Some coding rules
	   disallow namespaces,	and this may be	used  to  enforce  that	 rule.
	   The	warning	 is  inactive inside a system header file, such	as the
	   STL,	so one can  still  use	the  STL.   One	 may  also  use	 using
	   directives and qualified names.

       -Wno-template-id-cdtor (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable  the	 warning  about	 the  use of simple-template-id	as the
	   declarator-id of a constructor or destructor, which became  invalid
	   in C++20 via	DR 2237.  For example:

		   template<typename T>	struct S {
		     S<T>(); //	should be S();
		     ~S<T>();  // should be ~S();
		   };

	   -Wtemplate-id-cdtor	is  enabled  by	default	with -std=c++20; it is
	   also	enabled	by -Wc++20-compat.

       -Wno-terminate (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable the warning about a throw-expression	that will  immediately
	   result in a call to "terminate".

       -Wno-vexing-parse (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	 about	the most vexing	parse syntactic	ambiguity.  This warns
	   about  the  cases  when  a  declaration  looks  like	  a   variable
	   definition, but the C++ language requires it	to be interpreted as a
	   function declaration.  For instance:

		   void	f(double a) {
		     int i();	     //	extern int i (void);
		     int n(int(a));  //	extern int n (int);
		   }

	   Another example:

		   struct S { S(int); };
		   void	f(double a) {
		     S x(int(a));   // extern struct S x (int);
		     S y(int());    // extern struct S y (int (*) (void));
		     S z();	    // extern struct S z (void);
		   }

	   The	warning	 will  suggest	options	 how  to  deal	with  such  an
	   ambiguity; e.g., it can suggest removing the	parentheses  or	 using
	   braces instead.

	   This	warning	is enabled by default.

       -Wno-class-conversion (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not  warn  when a conversion function converts an object	to the
	   same	type, to a base	class  of  that	 type,	or  to	void;  such  a
	   conversion function will never be called.

       -Wvolatile (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 about	deprecated  uses  of  the  "volatile" qualifier.  This
	   includes  postfix  and  prefix  "++"	 and   "--"   expressions   of
	   "volatile"-qualified	types, using simple assignments	where the left
	   operand  is	a "volatile"-qualified non-class type for their	value,
	   compound   assignments   where    the    left    operand    is    a
	   "volatile"-qualified	 non-class type, "volatile"-qualified function
	   return type,	"volatile"-qualified parameter	type,  and  structured
	   bindings of a "volatile"-qualified type.  This usage	was deprecated
	   in C++20.

	   Enabled by default with -std=c++20.

       -Wzero-as-null-pointer-constant (C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 when  a literal 0 is used as null pointer constant.  This can
	   be useful to	facilitate the conversion to "nullptr" in C++11.

       -Waligned-new
	   Warn	about  a  new-expression  of  a	 type  that  requires  greater
	   alignment   than   the   "alignof(std::max_align_t)"	 but  uses  an
	   allocation function without an explicit alignment  parameter.  This
	   option is enabled by	-Wall.

	   Normally  this  only	 warns	about global allocation	functions, but
	   -Waligned-new=all  also  warns  about   class   member   allocation
	   functions.

       -Wno-placement-new
       -Wplacement-new=n
	   Warn	 about placement new expressions with undefined	behavior, such
	   as constructing an object in	a buffer that is smaller than the type
	   of the object.  For example,	the placement new expression below  is
	   diagnosed  because it attempts to construct an array	of 64 integers
	   in a	buffer only 64 bytes large.

		   char	buf [64];
		   new (buf) int[64];

	   This	warning	is enabled by default.

	   -Wplacement-new=1
	       This is the default warning level of -Wplacement-new.  At  this
	       level  the  warning  is	not issued for some strictly undefined
	       constructs that GCC allows as extensions	for compatibility with
	       legacy code.  For example, the following	 "new"	expression  is
	       not  diagnosed  at  this	 level	even  though  it has undefined
	       behavior	according to the C++ standard because it  writes  past
	       the end of the one-element array.

		       struct S	{ int n, a[1]; };
		       S *s = (S *)malloc (sizeof *s + 31 * sizeof s->a[0]);
		       new (s->a)int [32]();

	   -Wplacement-new=2
	       At   this  level,  in  addition	to  diagnosing	all  the  same
	       constructs as at	level 1,  a  diagnostic	 is  also  issued  for
	       placement  new expressions that construct an object in the last
	       member of structure whose type is an array of a single  element
	       and  whose  size	 is  less  than	 the  size of the object being
	       constructed.  While the previous	example	 would	be  diagnosed,
	       the  following construct	makes use of the flexible member array
	       extension to avoid the warning at level 2.

		       struct S	{ int n, a[]; };
		       S *s = (S *)malloc (sizeof *s + 32 * sizeof s->a[0]);
		       new (s->a)int [32]();

       -Wcatch-value
       -Wcatch-value=n (C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	about catch handlers that do not catch	via  reference.	  With
	   -Wcatch-value=1 (or -Wcatch-value for short)	warn about polymorphic
	   class  types	 that  are caught by value.  With -Wcatch-value=2 warn
	   about  all  class  types   that   are   caught   by	 value.	  With
	   -Wcatch-value=3  warn  about	 all  types  that  are	not  caught by
	   reference. -Wcatch-value is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wconditionally-supported (C++ and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	for conditionally-supported (C++11 [intro.defs]) constructs.

       -Wno-delete-incomplete (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do not warn when deleting a pointer to incomplete type,  which  may
	   cause  undefined  behavior  at runtime.  This warning is enabled by
	   default.

       -Wextra-semi (C++, Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	  about	  redundant   semicolons   after   in-class   function
	   definitions.

       -Wno-global-module (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable  the	 diagnostic  for  when the global module fragment of a
	   module unit does not	consist	only of	preprocessor directives.

       -Wno-inaccessible-base (C++, Objective-C++ only)
	   This	option controls	warnings when a	base class is inaccessible  in
	   a  class  derived from it due to ambiguity.	The warning is enabled
	   by default.	Note that the warning for ambiguous virtual  bases  is
	   enabled by the -Wextra option.

		   struct A { int a; };

		   struct B : A	{ };

		   struct C : B, A { };

       -Wno-inherited-variadic-ctor
	   Suppress  warnings  about use of C++11 inheriting constructors when
	   the base class inherited from has a	C  variadic  constructor;  the
	   warning is on by default because the	ellipsis is not	inherited.

       -Wno-invalid-offsetof (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Suppress  warnings  from applying the "offsetof" macro to a non-POD
	   type.  According to the 2014	ISO C++	standard, applying  "offsetof"
	   to  a  non-standard-layout  type  is	 undefined.   In  existing C++
	   implementations, however,  "offsetof"  typically  gives  meaningful
	   results.   This  flag  is  for  users  who  are aware that they are
	   writing nonportable code and	who have deliberately chosen to	ignore
	   the warning about it.

	   The restrictions on "offsetof" may be relaxed in a  future  version
	   of the C++ standard.

       -Wsized-deallocation (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	about a	definition of an unsized deallocation function

		   void	operator delete	(void *) noexcept;
		   void	operator delete[] (void	*) noexcept;

	   without  a  definition  of  the  corresponding  sized  deallocation
	   function

		   void	operator delete	(void *, std::size_t) noexcept;
		   void	operator delete[] (void	*, std::size_t)	noexcept;

	   or vice versa.  Enabled by -Wextra along with -fsized-deallocation.

       -Wsuggest-final-types
	   Warn	about types with virtual methods where code quality  would  be
	   improved   if  the  type  were  declared  with  the	C++11  "final"
	   specifier, or, if possible, declared	 in  an	 anonymous  namespace.
	   This	 allows	 GCC to	more aggressively devirtualize the polymorphic
	   calls. This warning is more effective with link-time	 optimization,
	   where  the  information  about  the	class  hierarchy graph is more
	   complete.

       -Wsuggest-final-methods
	   Warn	about virtual methods where code quality would be improved  if
	   the	method	were declared with the C++11 "final" specifier,	or, if
	   possible, its type were declared in an anonymous namespace or  with
	   the	"final"	 specifier.  This warning is more effective with link-
	   time	optimization, where the	information about the class  hierarchy
	   graph  is  more  complete.  It  is  recommended  to	first consider
	   suggestions of -Wsuggest-final-types	 and  then  rebuild  with  new
	   annotations.

       -Wsuggest-override
	   Warn	 about	overriding  virtual functions that are not marked with
	   the "override" keyword.

       -Wno-conversion-null (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do not warn for conversions between "NULL" and  non-pointer	types.
	   -Wconversion-null is	enabled	by default.

   Options Controlling Objective-C and Objective-C++ Dialects
       (NOTE:  This manual does	not describe the Objective-C and Objective-C++
       languages themselves.

       This  section  describes	 the  command-line  options  that   are	  only
       meaningful  for	Objective-C  and Objective-C++ programs.  You can also
       use  most  of  the  language-independent	 GNU  compiler	options.   For
       example,	you might compile a file some_class.m like this:

	       gcc -g -fgnu-runtime -O -c some_class.m

       In  this	example, -fgnu-runtime is an option meant only for Objective-C
       and Objective-C++ programs; you can use	the  other  options  with  any
       language	supported by GCC.

       Note  that  since  Objective-C  is  an  extension  of  the  C language,
       Objective-C compilations	may also use options specific to the C	front-
       end  (e.g.,  -Wtraditional).  Similarly,	Objective-C++ compilations may
       use C++-specific	options	(e.g., -Wabi).

       Here is a list of options that are only for compiling  Objective-C  and
       Objective-C++ programs:

       -fconstant-string-class=class-name
	   Use	class-name  as	the  name of the class to instantiate for each
	   literal string specified with the  syntax  "@"..."".	  The  default
	   class  name is "NXConstantString" if	the GNU	runtime	is being used,
	   and "NSConstantString" if the  NeXT	runtime	 is  being  used  (see
	   below).   On	 Darwin	 /  macOS  platforms, the -fconstant-cfstrings
	   option, if  also  present,  overrides  the  -fconstant-string-class
	   setting  and	 cause	"@"...""  literals  to be laid out as constant
	   CoreFoundation strings.  Note that -fconstant-cfstrings is an alias
	   for the target-specific -mconstant-cfstrings	equivalent.

       -fgnu-runtime
	   Generate object code	compatible with	the standard  GNU  Objective-C
	   runtime.  This is the default for most types	of systems.

       -fnext-runtime
	   Generate  output  compatible	 with  the  NeXT runtime.  This	is the
	   default for NeXT-based systems,  including  Darwin  /  macOS.   The
	   macro "__NEXT_RUNTIME__" is predefined if (and only if) this	option
	   is used.

       -fno-nil-receivers
	   Assume   that   all	 Objective-C  message  dispatches  ("[receiver
	   message:arg]") in this translation unit ensure that the receiver is
	   not "nil".  This allows for more  efficient	entry  points  in  the
	   runtime  to	be used.  This option is only available	in conjunction
	   with	the NeXT runtime and ABI version 0 or 1.

       -fobjc-abi-version=n
	   Use version n of the	Objective-C  ABI  for  the  selected  runtime.
	   This	 option	 is currently supported	only for the NeXT runtime.  In
	   that	case, Version  0  is  the  traditional	(32-bit)  ABI  without
	   support   for  properties  and  other  Objective-C  2.0  additions.
	   Version  1  is  the	traditional  (32-bit)  ABI  with  support  for
	   properties  and  other Objective-C 2.0 additions.  Version 2	is the
	   modern (64-bit) ABI.	 If  nothing  is  specified,  the  default  is
	   Version 0 on	32-bit target machines,	and Version 2 on 64-bit	target
	   machines.

       -fobjc-call-cxx-cdtors
	   For	each Objective-C class,	check if any of	its instance variables
	   is a	C++ object with	a non-trivial  default	constructor.   If  so,
	   synthesize  a special "- (id) .cxx_construct" instance method which
	   runs	 non-trivial  default  constructors  on	 any   such   instance
	   variables,  in  order, and then return "self".  Similarly, check if
	   any	instance  variable  is	a  C++	object	with   a   non-trivial
	   destructor,	 and   if   so,	  synthesize   a   special  "-	(void)
	   .cxx_destruct" method which runs all	such default  destructors,  in
	   reverse order.

	   The	"-  (id)  .cxx_construct" and "- (void)	.cxx_destruct" methods
	   thusly generated only operate on instance variables declared	in the
	   current  Objective-C	 class,	  and	not   those   inherited	  from
	   superclasses.   It is the responsibility of the Objective-C runtime
	   to invoke all such methods in an  object's  inheritance  hierarchy.
	   The	"-  (id)  .cxx_construct"  methods  are	invoked	by the runtime
	   immediately after a new object instance is allocated; the "-	(void)
	   .cxx_destruct" methods are invoked immediately before  the  runtime
	   deallocates an object instance.

	   As  of  this	 writing,  only	 the NeXT runtime on Mac OS X 10.4 and
	   later has support for invoking the "- (id) .cxx_construct"  and  "-
	   (void) .cxx_destruct" methods.

       -fobjc-direct-dispatch
	   Allow  fast	jumps  to  the	message	dispatcher.  On	Darwin this is
	   accomplished	via the	comm page.

       -fobjc-exceptions
	   Enable syntactic  support  for  structured  exception  handling  in
	   Objective-C,	 similar  to  what  is offered by C++.	This option is
	   required to use the	Objective-C  keywords  @try,  @throw,  @catch,
	   @finally and	@synchronized.	This option is available with both the
	   GNU	runtime	and the	NeXT runtime (but not available	in conjunction
	   with	the NeXT runtime on Mac	OS X 10.2 and earlier).

       -fobjc-gc
	   Enable garbage collection (GC)  in  Objective-C  and	 Objective-C++
	   programs.  This option is only available with the NeXT runtime; the
	   GNU	runtime	has a different	garbage	collection implementation that
	   does	not require special compiler flags.

       -fobjc-nilcheck
	   For the NeXT	runtime	with version 2 of the ABI,  check  for	a  nil
	   receiver in method invocations before doing the actual method call.
	   This	 is  the default and can be disabled using -fno-objc-nilcheck.
	   Class methods and super calls are never checked for nil in this way
	   no matter what this flag is	set  to.   Currently  this  flag  does
	   nothing  when  the  GNU  runtime,  or  an older version of the NeXT
	   runtime ABI,	is used.

       -fobjc-std=objc1
	   Conform to the language syntax of  Objective-C  1.0,	 the  language
	   recognized by GCC 4.0.  This	only affects the Objective-C additions
	   to  the  C/C++  language;  it  does not affect conformance to C/C++
	   standards, which is controlled by the separate C/C++	dialect	option
	   flags.   When  this	option	is  used  with	the   Objective-C   or
	   Objective-C++   compiler,   any  Objective-C	 syntax	 that  is  not
	   recognized by GCC 4.0 is rejected.  This is useful if you  need  to
	   make	 sure  that  your  Objective-C code can	be compiled with older
	   versions of GCC.

       -freplace-objc-classes
	   Emit	a special marker instructing ld(1) not to statically  link  in
	   the	resulting  object file,	and allow dyld(1) to load it in	at run
	   time	instead.  This	is  used  in  conjunction  with	 the  Fix-and-
	   Continue  debugging	mode, where the	object file in question	may be
	   recompiled and  dynamically	reloaded  in  the  course  of  program
	   execution,	without	 the  need  to	restart	 the  program  itself.
	   Currently, Fix-and-Continue	functionality  is  only	 available  in
	   conjunction with the	NeXT runtime on	Mac OS X 10.3 and later.

       -fzero-link
	   When	 compiling  for	 the  NeXT  runtime,  the  compiler ordinarily
	   replaces calls to "objc_getClass("...")"  (when  the	 name  of  the
	   class  is  known at compile time) with static class references that
	   get initialized at load time, which improves	run-time  performance.
	   Specifying the -fzero-link flag suppresses this behavior and	causes
	   calls to "objc_getClass("...")"  to be retained.  This is useful in
	   Zero-Link  debugging	 mode,	since  it  allows for individual class
	   implementations to be modified during program execution.   The  GNU
	   runtime  currently  always retains calls to "objc_get_class("...")"
	   regardless of command-line options.

       -fno-local-ivars
	   By default instance variables in Objective-C	can be accessed	as  if
	   they	 were  local  variables	 from  within the methods of the class
	   they're declared in.	 This can lead to shadowing  between  instance
	   variables  and  other  variables  declared  either locally inside a
	   class method	or  globally  with  the	 same  name.   Specifying  the
	   -fno-local-ivars flag disables this behavior	thus avoiding variable
	   shadowing issues.

       -fivar-visibility=[public|protected|private|package]
	   Set	the  default  instance	variable  visibility  to the specified
	   option so that instance variables declared outside the scope	of any
	   access modifier directives default to the specified visibility.

       -gen-decls
	   Dump	interface declarations for all classes seen in the source file
	   to a	file named sourcename.decl.

       -Wassign-intercept (Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	whenever an Objective-C	assignment is being intercepted	by the
	   garbage collector.

       -Wno-property-assign-default (Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do not warn if a property for an Objective-C	object has  no	assign
	   semantics specified.

       -Wno-protocol (Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   If a	class is declared to implement a protocol, a warning is	issued
	   for	every  method  in  the protocol	that is	not implemented	by the
	   class.  The default behavior	is to issue a warning for every	method
	   not	explicitly  implemented	 in  the  class,  even	if  a	method
	   implementation  is  inherited  from the superclass.	If you use the
	   -Wno-protocol option, then methods inherited	 from  the  superclass
	   are	considered  to	be  implemented,  and no warning is issued for
	   them.

       -Wobjc-root-class (Objective-C and Objective-C++	only)
	   Warn	if a class interface lacks a  superclass.  Most	 classes  will
	   inherit  from "NSObject" (or	"Object") for example.	When declaring
	   classes intended to be root classes,	the warning can	be  suppressed
	   by	       marking		their	       interfaces	  with
	   "__attribute__((objc_root_class))".

       -Wselector (Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	if multiple methods of different types for the	same  selector
	   are	found  during compilation.  The	check is performed on the list
	   of methods in the final  stage  of  compilation.   Additionally,  a
	   check   is	performed   for	  each	 selector   appearing	in   a
	   "@selector(...)"  expression, and a corresponding method  for  that
	   selector  has  been found during compilation.  Because these	checks
	   scan	the method  table  only	 at  the  end  of  compilation,	 these
	   warnings  are not produced if the final stage of compilation	is not
	   reached, for	example	because	an error is found during  compilation,
	   or because the -fsyntax-only	option is being	used.

       -Wstrict-selector-match (Objective-C and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 if  multiple  methods	with  differing	argument and/or	return
	   types are found for a given selector	 when  attempting  to  send  a
	   message  using this selector	to a receiver of type "id" or "Class".
	   When	this flag is off (which	is the default behavior), the compiler
	   omits such warnings if any differences found	are confined to	 types
	   that	share the same size and	alignment.

       -Wundeclared-selector (Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 if  a	"@selector(...)" expression referring to an undeclared
	   selector is found.  A  selector  is	considered  undeclared	if  no
	   method with that name has been declared before the "@selector(...)"
	   expression,	 either	 explicitly  in	 an  @interface	 or  @protocol
	   declaration,	or implicitly in  an  @implementation  section.	  This
	   option  always  performs  its  checks as soon as a "@selector(...)"
	   expression is found,	while -Wselector only performs its  checks  in
	   the	final  stage  of  compilation.	 This also enforces the	coding
	   style convention that methods and selectors must be declared	before
	   being used.

       -print-objc-runtime-info
	   Generate C header describing	the largest structure that  is	passed
	   by value, if	any.

   Options to Control Diagnostic Messages Formatting
       Traditionally,  diagnostic messages have	been formatted irrespective of
       the output device's aspect (e.g.	its width,  ...).   You	 can  use  the
       options	described  below  to  control  the  formatting	algorithm  for
       diagnostic messages, e.g. how  many  characters	per  line,  how	 often
       source  location	 information  should  be  reported.   Note  that  some
       language	front ends may not honor these options.

       -fmessage-length=n
	   Try to format error messages	so that	they fit on lines of  about  n
	   characters.	 If  n	is  zero,  then	no line-wrapping is done; each
	   error message appears on a single line.  This is  the  default  for
	   all front ends.

	   Note	 -  this  option  also	affects	 the display of	the #error and
	   #warning   pre-processor    directives,    and    the    deprecated
	   function/type/variable  attribute.	It does	not however affect the
	   pragma GCC warning and pragma GCC error pragmas.

       -fdiagnostics-plain-output
	   This	option requests	 that  diagnostic  output  look	 as  plain  as
	   possible,  which  may  be  useful  when  running  dejagnu  or other
	   utilities that need to parse	diagnostics output and prefer that  it
	   remain   more  stable  over	time.	-fdiagnostics-plain-output  is
	   currently	 equivalent	to     the     following      options:
	   -fno-diagnostics-show-caret	    -fno-diagnostics-show-line-numbers
	   -fdiagnostics-color=never		      -fdiagnostics-urls=never
	   -fdiagnostics-path-format=separate-events
	   -fdiagnostics-text-art-charset=none	In  the	future,	if GCC changes
	   the default appearance of its diagnostics, the corresponding	option
	   to disable the new behavior will be added to	this list.

       -fdiagnostics-show-location=once
	   Only	meaningful in line-wrapping mode.   Instructs  the  diagnostic
	   messages  reporter  to  emit	source location	information once; that
	   is, in case the message is too long to fit  on  a  single  physical
	   line	 and  has  to be wrapped, the source location won't be emitted
	   (as prefix) again, over and over, in	subsequent continuation	lines.
	   This	is the default behavior.

       -fdiagnostics-show-location=every-line
	   Only	meaningful in line-wrapping mode.   Instructs  the  diagnostic
	   messages  reporter to emit the same source location information (as
	   prefix) for physical	lines that result from the process of breaking
	   a message which is too long to fit on a single line.

       -fdiagnostics-color[=WHEN]
       -fno-diagnostics-color
	   Use color in	diagnostics.  WHEN is never,  always,  or  auto.   The
	   default  depends on how the compiler	has been configured, it	can be
	   any	of  the	 above	WHEN  options  or  also	 never	if  GCC_COLORS
	   environment	variable  isn't	 present  in the environment, and auto
	   otherwise.  auto makes GCC use color	only when the  standard	 error
	   is a	terminal, and when not executing in an emacs shell.  The forms
	   -fdiagnostics-color	and  -fno-diagnostics-color  are  aliases  for
	   -fdiagnostics-color=always	   and	    -fdiagnostics-color=never,
	   respectively.

	   The colors are defined by the environment variable GCC_COLORS.  Its
	   value  is a colon-separated list of capabilities and	Select Graphic
	   Rendition (SGR) substrings. SGR commands  are  interpreted  by  the
	   terminal   or   terminal   emulator.	   (See	 the  section  in  the
	   documentation of your text terminal for permitted values and	 their
	   meanings  as	 character  attributes.)   These  substring values are
	   integers in decimal representation and  can	be  concatenated  with
	   semicolons.	Common values to concatenate include 1 for bold, 4 for
	   underline,  5  for  blink, 7	for inverse, 39	for default foreground
	   color, 30 to	37 for foreground colors, 90 to	97 for	16-color  mode
	   foreground  colors,	38;5;0	to 38;5;255 for	88-color and 256-color
	   modes foreground colors, 49 for default background color, 40	to  47
	   for	background  colors,  100  to  107 for 16-color mode background
	   colors, and 48;5;0 to 48;5;255 for  88-color	 and  256-color	 modes
	   background colors.

	   The default GCC_COLORS is

		   error=01;31:warning=01;35:note=01;36:range1=32:range2=34:locus=01:\
		   quote=01:path=01;36:fixit-insert=32:fixit-delete=31:\
		   diff-filename=01:diff-hunk=32:diff-delete=31:diff-insert=32:\
		   type-diff=01;32:fnname=01;32:targs=35:valid=01;31:invalid=01;32

	   where 01;31 is bold red, 01;35 is bold magenta, 01;36 is bold cyan,
	   32  is  green,  34  is  blue,  01  is bold, and 31 is red.  Setting
	   GCC_COLORS  to  the	empty  string  disables	  colors.    Supported
	   capabilities	are as follows.

	   "error="
	       SGR substring for error:	markers.

	   "warning="
	       SGR substring for warning: markers.

	   "note="
	       SGR substring for note: markers.

	   "path="
	       SGR  substring  for  colorizing paths of	control-flow events as
	       printed via -fdiagnostics-path-format=, such as the identifiers
	       of individual events and	lines indicating interprocedural calls
	       and returns.

	   "range1="
	       SGR substring for first additional range.

	   "range2="
	       SGR substring for second	additional range.

	   "locus="
	       SGR  substring	for   location	 information,	file:line   or
	       file:line:column	etc.

	   "quote="
	       SGR substring for information printed within quotes.

	   "fnname="
	       SGR substring for names of C++ functions.

	   "targs="
	       SGR substring for C++ function template parameter bindings.

	   "fixit-insert="
	       SGR  substring  for fix-it hints	suggesting text	to be inserted
	       or replaced.

	   "fixit-delete="
	       SGR substring for fix-it	hints suggesting text to be deleted.

	   "diff-filename="
	       SGR substring for filename headers within generated patches.

	   "diff-hunk="
	       SGR substring for the starts of hunks within generated patches.

	   "diff-delete="
	       SGR substring for deleted lines within generated	patches.

	   "diff-insert="
	       SGR substring for inserted lines	within generated patches.

	   "type-diff="
	       SGR  substring  for  highlighting  mismatching	types	within
	       template	arguments in the C++ frontend.

	   "valid="
	       SGR  substring  for highlighting	valid elements within text art
	       diagrams.

	   "invalid="
	       SGR substring for highlighting invalid elements within text art
	       diagrams.

       -fdiagnostics-urls[=WHEN]
	   Use escape sequences	to embed URLs in  diagnostics.	 For  example,
	   when	 -fdiagnostics-show-option emits text showing the command-line
	   option controlling a	diagnostic, embed a URL	for  documentation  of
	   that	option.

	   WHEN	 is  never,  always,  or  auto.	 auto makes GCC	use URL	escape
	   sequences only when the standard error is a terminal, and when  not
	   executing  in  an  emacs  shell  or any graphical terminal which is
	   known to be incompatible with this feature, see below.

	   The default depends on how the compiler has	been  configured.   It
	   can be any of the above WHEN	options.

	   GCC	     can       also	 be	 configured	 (via	   the
	   --with-diagnostics-urls=auto-if-env configure-time option) so  that
	   the	default	 is  affected  by environment variables.  Under	such a
	   configuration, GCC defaults to using	auto  if  either  GCC_URLS  or
	   TERM_URLS  environment  variables  are present and non-empty	in the
	   environment of the compiler,	or never if neither are.

	   However,  even  with	 -fdiagnostics-urls=always  the	 behavior   is
	   dependent  on  those	 environment  variables: If GCC_URLS is	set to
	   empty or no,	do not embed URLs in diagnostics.  If set to st,  URLs
	   use	ST escape sequences.  If set to	bel, the default, URLs use BEL
	   escape sequences.  Any other	non-empty value	enables	 the  feature.
	   If  GCC_URLS	 is not	set, use TERM_URLS as a	fallback.  Note: ST is
	   an ANSI escape sequence, string terminator ESC \, BEL is  an	 ASCII
	   character, CTRL-G that usually sounds like a	beep.

	   At  this  time  GCC	tries  to detect also a	few terminals that are
	   known to not	implement the URL feature, and have bugs or  at	 least
	   had	bugs  in  some	versions  that are still in use, where the URL
	   escapes are likely to misbehave, i.e. print garbage on the  screen.
	   That	 list  is  currently xfce4-terminal, certain known to be buggy
	   gnome-terminal versions, the	linux console, and mingw.  This	 check
	   can be skipped with the -fdiagnostics-urls=always.

       -fno-diagnostics-show-option
	   By  default,	 each  diagnostic emitted includes text	indicating the
	   command-line	option that directly controls the diagnostic (if  such
	   an  option  is  known to the	diagnostic machinery).	Specifying the
	   -fno-diagnostics-show-option	flag suppresses	that behavior.

       -fno-diagnostics-show-caret
	   By default, each diagnostic emitted includes	 the  original	source
	   line	 and  a	caret ^	indicating the column.	This option suppresses
	   this	information.  The source line is truncated to n	characters, if
	   the -fmessage-length=n option is given.  When the output is done to
	   the terminal, the width is  limited	to  the	 width	given  by  the
	   COLUMNS environment variable	or, if not set,	to the terminal	width.

       -fno-diagnostics-show-labels
	   By	   default,	when	 printing     source	 code	  (via
	   -fdiagnostics-show-caret), diagnostics can label ranges  of	source
	   code	with pertinent information, such as the	types of expressions:

		       printf ("foo %s bar", long_i + long_j);
				    ~^	     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
				     |		    |
				     char *	    long int

	   This	option suppresses the printing of these	labels (in the example
	   above, the vertical bars and	the "char *" and "long int" text).

       -fno-diagnostics-show-cwe
	   Diagnostic messages can optionally have an associated
	    CWE	 ("https://cwe.mitre.org/index.html")  identifier.  GCC	itself
	   only	provides such metadata for some	of the -fanalyzer diagnostics.
	   GCC plugins may also	provide	diagnostics with  such	metadata.   By
	   default,  if	 this  information is present, it will be printed with
	   the diagnostic.   This  option  suppresses  the  printing  of  this
	   metadata.

       -fno-diagnostics-show-rules
	   Diagnostic messages can optionally have rules associated with them,
	   such	 as  from  a  coding standard, or a specification.  GCC	itself
	   does	not do this for	any of its diagnostics,	but plugins may	do so.
	   By default, if this information is present, it will be printed with
	   the diagnostic.   This  option  suppresses  the  printing  of  this
	   metadata.

       -fno-diagnostics-show-line-numbers
	   By	   default,	when	 printing     source	 code	  (via
	   -fdiagnostics-show-caret), a	left margin is printed,	 showing  line
	   numbers.  This option suppresses this left margin.

       -fdiagnostics-minimum-margin-width=width
	   This	 option	 controls the minimum width of the left	margin printed
	   by -fdiagnostics-show-line-numbers.	It defaults to 6.

       -fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits
	   Emit	fix-it hints  in  a  machine-parseable	format,	 suitable  for
	   consumption by IDEs.	 For each fix-it, a line will be printed after
	   the	relevant  diagnostic, starting with the	string "fix-it:".  For
	   example:

		   fix-it:"test.c":{45:3-45:21}:"gtk_widget_show_all"

	   The location	is expressed as	a  half-open  range,  expressed	 as  a
	   count  of bytes, starting at	byte 1 for the initial column.	In the
	   above example, bytes	3 through 20 of	line 45	of "test.c" are	to  be
	   replaced with the given string:

		   00000000011111111112222222222
		   12345678901234567890123456789
		     gtk_widget_showall	(dlg);
		     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
		     gtk_widget_show_all

	   The	filename  and replacement string escape	backslash as "\\", tab
	   as "\t", newline as "\n",  double  quotes  as  "\"",	 non-printable
	   characters as octal (e.g. vertical tab as "\013").

	   An empty replacement	string indicates that the given	range is to be
	   removed.   An  empty	 range	(e.g.  "45:3-45:3") indicates that the
	   string is to	be inserted at the given position.

       -fdiagnostics-generate-patch
	   Print fix-it	hints to stderr	in  unified  diff  format,  after  any
	   diagnostics are printed.  For example:

		   --- test.c
		   +++ test.c
		   @ -42,5 +42,5 @

		    void show_cb(GtkDialog *dlg)
		    {
		   -  gtk_widget_showall(dlg);
		   +  gtk_widget_show_all(dlg);
		    }

	   The	diff  may or may not be	colorized, following the same rules as
	   for diagnostics (see	-fdiagnostics-color).

       -fdiagnostics-show-template-tree
	   In the C++ frontend,	when printing diagnostics showing  mismatching
	   template types, such	as:

		     could not convert 'std::map<int, std::vector<double> >()'
		       from 'map<[...],vector<double>>'	to 'map<[...],vector<float>>

	   the	-fdiagnostics-show-template-tree flag enables printing a tree-
	   like	structure showing the common and differing parts of the	types,
	   such	as:

		     map<
		       [...],
		       vector<
			 [double != float]>>

	   The parts that differ are  highlighted  with	 color	("double"  and
	   "float" in this case).

       -fno-elide-type
	   By  default	when  the  C++	frontend  prints  diagnostics  showing
	   mismatching template	types, common parts of the types  are  printed
	   as "[...]" to simplify the error message.  For example:

		     could not convert 'std::map<int, std::vector<double> >()'
		       from 'map<[...],vector<double>>'	to 'map<[...],vector<float>>

	   Specifying the -fno-elide-type flag suppresses that behavior.  This
	   flag	      also	 affects      the      output	   of	   the
	   -fdiagnostics-show-template-tree flag.

       -fdiagnostics-path-format=KIND
	   Specify how to print	paths of control-flow events  for  diagnostics
	   that	have such a path associated with them.

	   KIND	is none, separate-events, or inline-events, the	default.

	   none	means to not print diagnostic paths.

	   separate-events  means  to  print  a	separate "note"	diagnostic for
	   each	event within the diagnostic.  For example:

		   test.c:29:5:	error: passing NULL as argument	1 to 'PyList_Append' which requires a non-NULL parameter
		   test.c:25:10: note: (1) when	'PyList_New' fails, returning NULL
		   test.c:27:3:	note: (2) when 'i < count'
		   test.c:29:5:	note: (3) when calling 'PyList_Append',	passing	NULL from (1) as argument 1

	   inline-events means to print	the events "inline" within the	source
	   code.   This	 view  attempts	to consolidate the events into runs of
	   sufficiently-close events, printing them as labelled	ranges	within
	   the source.

	   For example,	the same events	as above might be printed as:

		     'test': events 1-3
		       |
		       |   25 |	  list = PyList_New(0);
		       |      |		 ^~~~~~~~~~~~~
		       |      |		 |
		       |      |		 (1) when 'PyList_New' fails, returning	NULL
		       |   26 |
		       |   27 |	  for (i = 0; i	< count; i++) {
		       |      |	  ~~~
		       |      |	  |
		       |      |	  (2) when 'i <	count'
		       |   28 |	    item = PyLong_FromLong(random());
		       |   29 |	    PyList_Append(list,	item);
		       |      |	    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
		       |      |	    |
		       |      |	    (3)	when calling 'PyList_Append', passing NULL from	(1) as argument	1
		       |

	   Interprocedural  control  flow  is  shown by	grouping the events by
	   stack frame,	and using indentation to show  how  stack  frames  are
	   nested, pushed, and popped.

	   For example:

		     'test': events 1-2
		       |
		       |  133 |	{
		       |      |	^
		       |      |	|
		       |      |	(1) entering 'test'
		       |  134 |	  boxed_int *obj = make_boxed_int (i);
		       |      |			   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
		       |      |			   |
		       |      |			   (2) calling 'make_boxed_int'
		       |
		       +--> 'make_boxed_int': events 3-4
			      |
			      |	 120 | {
			      |	     | ^
			      |	     | |
			      |	     | (3) entering 'make_boxed_int'
			      |	 121 |	 boxed_int *result = (boxed_int	*)wrapped_malloc (sizeof (boxed_int));
			      |	     |					  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
			      |	     |					  |
			      |	     |					  (4) calling 'wrapped_malloc'
			      |
			      +--> 'wrapped_malloc': events 5-6
				     |
				     |	  7 | {
				     |	    | ^
				     |	    | |
				     |	    | (5) entering 'wrapped_malloc'
				     |	  8 |	return malloc (size);
				     |	    |	       ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
				     |	    |	       |
				     |	    |	       (6) calling 'malloc'
				     |
		       <-------------+
		       |
		    'test': event 7
		       |
		       |  138 |	  free_boxed_int (obj);
		       |      |	  ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
		       |      |	  |
		       |      |	  (7) calling 'free_boxed_int'
		       |
		   (etc)

       -fdiagnostics-show-path-depths
	   This	 option	provides additional information	when printing control-
	   flow	paths associated with a	diagnostic.

	   If this is option is	provided then the stack	depth will be  printed
	   for	       each	    run		of	  events	within
	   -fdiagnostics-path-format=inline-events.	If    provided	  with
	   -fdiagnostics-path-format=separate-events, then the stack depth and
	   function declaration	will be	appended when printing each event.

	   This	 is  intended  for use by GCC developers and plugin developers
	   when	debugging  diagnostics	that  report  interprocedural  control
	   flow.

       -fno-show-column
	   Do  not print column	numbers	in diagnostics.	 This may be necessary
	   if diagnostics are  being  scanned  by  a  program  that  does  not
	   understand the column numbers, such as dejagnu.

       -fdiagnostics-column-unit=UNIT
	   Select  the	units for the column number.  This affects traditional
	   diagnostics (in the absence of -fno-show-column), as	well  as  JSON
	   format diagnostics if requested.

	   The	default	UNIT, display, considers the number of display columns
	   occupied by each character.	This may be larger than	the number  of
	   bytes  required  to	encode	the  character,	 in  the  case	of tab
	   characters, or  it  may  be	smaller,  in  the  case	 of  multibyte
	   characters.	 For  example,	the  character	"GREEK SMALL LETTER PI
	   (U+03C0)" occupies one  display  column,  and  its  UTF-8  encoding
	   requires two	bytes; the character "SLIGHTLY SMILING FACE (U+1F642)"
	   occupies  two display columns, and its UTF-8	encoding requires four
	   bytes.

	   Setting UNIT	to byte	changes	the column  number  to	the  raw  byte
	   count  in  all  cases,  as was traditionally	output by GCC prior to
	   version 11.1.0.

       -fdiagnostics-column-origin=ORIGIN
	   Select the origin  for  column  numbers,  i.e.  the	column	number
	   assigned  to	 the first column.  The	default	value of 1 corresponds
	   to traditional GCC behavior and  to	the  GNU  style	 guide.	  Some
	   utilities  may perform better with an origin	of 0; any non-negative
	   value may be	specified.

       -fdiagnostics-escape-format=FORMAT
	   When	GCC prints pertinent source lines for a	diagnostic it normally
	   attempts  to	 print	the  source  bytes  directly.	However,  some
	   diagnostics	relate	to encoding issues in the source file, such as
	   malformed UTF-8,  or	 issues	 with  Unicode	normalization.	 These
	   diagnostics	are flagged so that GCC	will escape bytes that are not
	   printable ASCII when	printing their pertinent source	lines.

	   This	option controls	how such bytes should be escaped.

	   The default FORMAT, unicode displays	Unicode	 characters  that  are
	   not	printable  ASCII  in  the form <U+XXXX>, and bytes that	do not
	   correspond to a Unicode character validly-encoded in	 UTF-8-encoded
	   will	be displayed as	hexadecimal in the form	<XX>.

	   For example,	a source line containing the string before followed by
	   the	Unicode	 character U+03C0 ("GREEK SMALL	LETTER PI", with UTF-8
	   encoding 0xCF 0x80) followed	 by  the  byte	0xBF  (a  stray	 UTF-8
	   trailing  byte),  followed  by the string after will	be printed for
	   such	a diagnostic as:

		    before<U+03C0><BF>after

	   Setting FORMAT to bytes will	display	all non-printable-ASCII	 bytes
	   in the form <XX>, thus showing the underlying encoding of non-ASCII
	   Unicode  characters.	  For the example above, the following will be
	   printed:

		    before<CF><80><BF>after

       -fdiagnostics-text-art-charset=CHARSET
	   Some	diagnostics can	contain	"text  art"  diagrams:	visualizations
	   created from	text, intended to be viewed in a monospaced font.

	   This	 option	 selects  which	characters should be used for printing
	   such	diagrams, if any.  CHARSET is none, ascii, unicode, or emoji.

	   The none value suppresses the printing of such diagrams.  The ascii
	   value will ensure that such diagrams	are pure ASCII ("ASCII	art").
	   The	unicode	 value	will  allow  for  conservative	use of unicode
	   drawing characters (such as	box-drawing  characters).   The	 emoji
	   value  further adds the possibility of emoji	in the output (such as
	   emitting  U+26A0  WARNING  SIGN  followed   by   U+FE0F   VARIATION
	   SELECTOR-16 to select the emoji variant of the character).

	   The	default	is emoji, except when the environment variable LANG is
	   set to C, in	which case the default is ascii.

       -fdiagnostics-format=FORMAT
	   Select a different format  for  printing  diagnostics.   FORMAT  is
	   text, sarif-stderr, sarif-file, json, json-stderr, or json-file.

	   The default is text.

	   The	sarif-stderr  and  sarif-file formats both emit	diagnostics in
	   SARIF Version 2.1.0 format, either to stderr, or to	a  file	 named
	   source.sarif, respectively.

	   The	json format is a synonym for json-stderr.  The json-stderr and
	   json-file formats are identical,  apart  from  where	 the  JSON  is
	   emitted  to	-  with	 the  former,  the  JSON is emitted to stderr,
	   whereas with	json-file it is	written	to source.gcc.json.

	   The emitted JSON consists of	a top-level JSON array containing JSON
	   objects representing	the diagnostics.

	   Diagnostics can have	child diagnostics.  For	 example,  this	 error
	   and note:

		   misleading-indentation.c:15:3: warning: this	'if' clause does not
		     guard... [-Wmisleading-indentation]
		      15 |   if	(flag)
			 |   ^~
		   misleading-indentation.c:17:5: note:	...this	statement, but the latter
		     is	misleadingly indented as if it were guarded by the 'if'
		      17 |     y = 2;
			 |     ^

	   might be printed in JSON form (after	formatting) like this:

		   [
		       {
			   "kind": "warning",
			   "locations":	[
			       {
				   "caret": {
				       "display-column": 3,
				       "byte-column": 3,
				       "column": 3,
				       "file": "misleading-indentation.c",
				       "line": 15
				   },
				   "finish": {
				       "display-column": 4,
				       "byte-column": 4,
				       "column": 4,
				       "file": "misleading-indentation.c",
				       "line": 15
				   }
			       }
			   ],
			   "message": "this \u2018if\u2019 clause does not guard...",
			   "option": "-Wmisleading-indentation",
			   "option_url": "https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Warning-Options.html#index-Wmisleading-indentation",
			   "children": [
			       {
				   "kind": "note",
				   "locations":	[
				       {
					   "caret": {
					       "display-column": 5,
					       "byte-column": 5,
					       "column": 5,
					       "file": "misleading-indentation.c",
					       "line": 17
					   }
				       }
				   ],
				   "escape-source": false,
				   "message": "...this statement, but the latter is ..."
			       }
			   ]
			   "escape-source": false,
			   "column-origin": 1,
		       }
		   ]

	   where the "note" is a child of the "warning".

	   A  diagnostic has a "kind".	If this	is "warning", then there is an
	   "option" key	describing the	command-line  option  controlling  the
	   warning.

	   A diagnostic	can contain zero or more locations.  Each location has
	   an  optional	 "label" string	and up to three	positions within it: a
	   "caret" position and	optional "start" and  "finish"	positions.   A
	   position  is	described by a "file" name, a "line" number, and three
	   numbers indicating a	column position:

	   *   "display-column"	counts display columns,	 accounting  for  tabs
	       and multibyte characters.

	   *   "byte-column" counts raw	bytes.

	   *   "column"	 is  equal  to one of the previous two,	as dictated by
	       the -fdiagnostics-column-unit option.

	   All	three  columns	are  relative  to  the	origin	specified   by
	   -fdiagnostics-column-origin,	 which is typically equal to 1 but may
	   be set, for instance, to 0 for compatibility	with  other  utilities
	   that	 number	 columns from 0.  The column origin is recorded	in the
	   JSON	output in the "column-origin" tag.  In the remaining  examples
	   below,  the	extra  column  number  outputs	have  been omitted for
	   brevity.

	   For example,	this error:

		   bad-binary-ops.c:64:23: error: invalid operands to binary + (have 'S' {aka
		      'struct s'} and 'T' {aka 'struct t'})
		      64 |   return callee_4a () + callee_4b ();
			 |	    ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~
			 |	    |		   |
			 |	    |		   T {aka struct t}
			 |	    S {aka struct s}

	   has three locations.	 Its primary location is at the	"+"  token  at
	   column 23.  It has two secondary locations, describing the left and
	   right-hand sides of the expression, which have labels.  It might be
	   printed in JSON form	as:

		       {
			   "children": [],
			   "kind": "error",
			   "locations":	[
			       {
				   "caret": {
				       "column": 23, "file": "bad-binary-ops.c", "line": 64
				   }
			       },
			       {
				   "caret": {
				       "column": 10, "file": "bad-binary-ops.c", "line": 64
				   },
				   "finish": {
				       "column": 21, "file": "bad-binary-ops.c", "line": 64
				   },
				   "label": "S {aka struct s}"
			       },
			       {
				   "caret": {
				       "column": 25, "file": "bad-binary-ops.c", "line": 64
				   },
				   "finish": {
				       "column": 36, "file": "bad-binary-ops.c", "line": 64
				   },
				   "label": "T {aka struct t}"
			       }
			   ],
			   "escape-source": false,
			   "message": "invalid operands	to binary + ..."
		       }

	   If  a  diagnostic  contains	fix-it hints, it has a "fixits"	array,
	   consisting  of  half-open  intervals,  similar  to  the  output  of
	   -fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits.   For example, this diagnostic with
	   a replacement fix-it	hint:

		   demo.c:8:15:	error: 'struct s' has no member	named 'colour';	did you
		     mean 'color'?
		       8 |   return ptr->colour;
			 |		 ^~~~~~
			 |		 color

	   might be printed in JSON form as:

		       {
			   "children": [],
			   "fixits": [
			       {
				   "next": {
				       "column": 21,
				       "file": "demo.c",
				       "line": 8
				   },
				   "start": {
				       "column": 15,
				       "file": "demo.c",
				       "line": 8
				   },
				   "string": "color"
			       }
			   ],
			   "kind": "error",
			   "locations":	[
			       {
				   "caret": {
				       "column": 15,
				       "file": "demo.c",
				       "line": 8
				   },
				   "finish": {
				       "column": 20,
				       "file": "demo.c",
				       "line": 8
				   }
			       }
			   ],
			   "escape-source": false,
			   "message": "\u2018struct s\u2019 has	no member named	..."
		       }

	   where the fix-it hint suggests replacing the	text from  "start"  up
	   to  but  not	including "next" with "string"'s value.	 Deletions are
	   expressed via an empty value	for  "string",	insertions  by	having
	   "start" equal "next".

	   If the diagnostic has a path	of control-flow	events associated with
	   it, it has a	"path" array of	objects	representing the events.  Each
	   event object	has a "description" string, a "location" object, along
	   with	 a  "function"	string	and  a "depth" number for representing
	   interprocedural  paths.   The  "function"  represents  the  current
	   function  at	that event, and	the "depth" represents the stack depth
	   relative to some baseline: the higher, the more frames  are	within
	   the stack.

	   For	  example,    the    intraprocedural	example	   shown   for
	   -fdiagnostics-path-format= might have this JSON for its path:

		       "path": [
			   {
			       "depth":	0,
			       "description": "when 'PyList_New' fails,	returning NULL",
			       "function": "test",
			       "location": {
				   "column": 10,
				   "file": "test.c",
				   "line": 25
			       }
			   },
			   {
			       "depth":	0,
			       "description": "when 'i < count'",
			       "function": "test",
			       "location": {
				   "column": 3,
				   "file": "test.c",
				   "line": 27
			       }
			   },
			   {
			       "depth":	0,
			       "description": "when calling 'PyList_Append', passing NULL from (1) as argument 1",
			       "function": "test",
			       "location": {
				   "column": 5,
				   "file": "test.c",
				   "line": 29
			       }
			   }
		       ]

	   Diagnostics	have  a	 boolean  attribute  "escape-source",  hinting
	   whether  non-ASCII  bytes  should  be  escaped  when	 printing  the
	   pertinent lines of source code ("true"  for	diagnostics  involving
	   source encoding issues).

       -fno-diagnostics-json-formatting
	   By	default,   when	  JSON	 is   emitted	for  diagnostics  (via
	   -fdiagnostics-format=sarif-stderr, -fdiagnostics-format=sarif-file,
	   -fdiagnostics-format=json,	     -fdiagnostics-format=json-stderr,
	   -fdiagnostics-format=json-file),   GCC   will   add	 newlines  and
	   indentation to visually emphasize the hierarchical structure	of the
	   JSON.

	   Use -fno-diagnostics-json-formatting	to suppress  this  whitespace.
	   It must be passed before the	option it is to	affect.

	   This	 is  intended  for compatibility with tools that do not	expect
	   the output to contain newlines, such	as that	emitted	by  older  GCC
	   releases.

   Options to Request or Suppress Warnings
       Warnings	are diagnostic messages	that report constructions that are not
       inherently  erroneous but that are risky	or suggest there may have been
       an error.

       The following  language-independent  options  do	 not  enable  specific
       warnings	but control the	kinds of diagnostics produced by GCC.

       -fsyntax-only
	   Check  the  code  for  syntax  errors, but don't do anything	beyond
	   that.

       -fmax-errors=n
	   Limits the maximum number of	error messages to n,  at  which	 point
	   GCC	bails  out  rather  than attempting to continue	processing the
	   source code.	 If n is 0 (the	default), there	is  no	limit  on  the
	   number  of  error  messages	produced.   If	-Wfatal-errors is also
	   specified, then -Wfatal-errors takes	precedence over	this option.

       -w  Inhibit all warning messages.

       -Werror
	   Make	all warnings into errors.

       -Werror=
	   Make	the specified warning into an  error.	The  specifier	for  a
	   warning  is appended; for example -Werror=switch turns the warnings
	   controlled by -Wswitch into errors.	This switch takes  a  negative
	   form,  to  be  used	to  negate  -Werror for	specific warnings; for
	   example -Wno-error=switch makes -Wswitch warnings  not  be  errors,
	   even	when -Werror is	in effect.

	   The	warning	 message  for  each  controllable warning includes the
	   option that controls	the warning.  That option  can	then  be  used
	   with	-Werror= and -Wno-error= as described above.  (Printing	of the
	   option   in	 the   warning	message	 can  be  disabled  using  the
	   -fno-diagnostics-show-option	flag.)

	   Note	 that  specifying  -Werror=foo	automatically  implies	-Wfoo.
	   However, -Wno-error=foo does	not imply anything.

       -Wfatal-errors
	   This	 option	 causes	the compiler to	abort compilation on the first
	   error occurred rather  than	trying	to  keep  going	 and  printing
	   further error messages.

       You  can	request	many specific warnings with options beginning with -W,
       for example -Wimplicit to request warnings  on  implicit	 declarations.
       Each  of	 these	specific  warning  options  also  has  a negative form
       beginning -Wno- to turn off warnings; for example, -Wno-implicit.  This
       manual lists only one of	the two	forms, whichever is not	 the  default.
       For further language-specific options also refer	to C++ Dialect Options
       and Objective-C and Objective-C++ Dialect Options.  Additional warnings
       can be produced by enabling the static analyzer;

       Some options, such as -Wall and -Wextra,	turn on	other options, such as
       -Wunused,  which	 may  turn on further options, such as -Wunused-value.
       The combined effect  of	positive  and  negative	 forms	is  that  more
       specific	 options  have priority	over less specific ones, independently
       of their	 position  in  the  command-line.  For	options	 of  the  same
       specificity, the	last one takes effect. Options enabled or disabled via
       pragmas take effect as if they appeared at the end of the command-line.

       When    an    unrecognized   warning   option   is   requested	(e.g.,
       -Wunknown-warning), GCC emits a diagnostic stating that the  option  is
       not  recognized.	  However,  if the -Wno- form is used, the behavior is
       slightly	different: no diagnostic is produced for  -Wno-unknown-warning
       unless  other  diagnostics  are being produced.	This allows the	use of
       new -Wno- options with old compilers, but if something goes wrong,  the
       compiler	warns that an unrecognized option is present.

       The  effectiveness of some warnings depends on optimizations also being
       enabled.	For example -Wsuggest-final-types is more effective with link-
       time optimization and some instances  of	 other	warnings  may  not  be
       issued  at  all	unless optimization is enabled.	 While optimization in
       general improves	the  efficacy  of  control  and	 data  flow  sensitive
       warnings, in some cases it may also cause false positives.

       -Wpedantic
       -pedantic
	   Issue  all  the  warnings  demanded	by  strict  ISO	C and ISO C++;
	   diagnose all	programs that use forbidden extensions,	and some other
	   programs that do not	follow ISO C and ISO C++.   This  follows  the
	   version  of	the ISO	C or C++ standard specified by any -std	option
	   used.

	   Valid ISO C and ISO C++ programs should compile  properly  with  or
	   without  this  option  (though  a  rare few require -ansi or	a -std
	   option specifying the version of the	standard).   However,  without
	   this	 option,  certain  GNU	extensions  and	 traditional C and C++
	   features are	 supported  as	well.	With  this  option,  they  are
	   diagnosed (or rejected with -pedantic-errors).

	   -Wpedantic does not cause warning messages for use of the alternate
	   keywords  whose names begin and end with __.	 This alternate	format
	   can also be used to disable warnings	for non-ISO __intN types, i.e.
	   __intN__.  Pedantic warnings	are also disabled  in  the  expression
	   that	 follows  "__extension__".   However, only system header files
	   should use these escape routes; application programs	 should	 avoid
	   them.

	   Some	 warnings  about  non-conforming  programs  are	 controlled by
	   options other than -Wpedantic; in many cases	they  are  implied  by
	   -Wpedantic but can be disabled separately by	their specific option,
	   e.g.	-Wpedantic -Wno-pointer-sign.

	   Where  the  standard	 specified with	-std represents	a GNU extended
	   dialect of C, such as gnu90 or gnu99, there is a corresponding base
	   standard, the version of ISO	C on which the GNU extended dialect is
	   based.  Warnings from -Wpedantic are	given where they are  required
	   by the base standard.  (It does not make sense for such warnings to
	   be  given  only  for	 features  not in the specified	GNU C dialect,
	   since by definition the GNU dialects	of C include all features  the
	   compiler supports with the given option, and	there would be nothing
	   to warn about.)

       -pedantic-errors
	   Give	 an error whenever the base standard (see -Wpedantic) requires
	   a diagnostic, in some cases where there is  undefined  behavior  at
	   compile-time	  and	in  some  other	 cases	that  do  not  prevent
	   compilation of programs that	are valid according to	the  standard.
	   This	 is  not  equivalent to	-Werror=pedantic: the latter option is
	   unlikely to be useful, as it	only makes errors of  the  diagnostics
	   that	are controlled by -Wpedantic, whereas this option also affects
	   required  diagnostics  that	are  always  enabled  or controlled by
	   options other than -Wpedantic.

	   If you want the required diagnostics	that are warnings  by  default
	   to  be errors instead, but don't also want to enable	the -Wpedantic
	   diagnostics,	you can	 specify  -pedantic-errors  -Wno-pedantic  (or
	   -pedantic-errors  -Wno-error=pedantic  to  enable  them but only as
	   warnings).

	   Some	required diagnostics are errors	by default, but	can be reduced
	   to warnings using -fpermissive or their  specific  warning  option,
	   e.g.	-Wno-error=narrowing.

	   Some	 diagnostics  for non-ISO practices are	controlled by specific
	   warning options other than -Wpedantic, but are also made errors  by
	   -pedantic-errors.  For instance:

	   -Wattributes	 (for  standard	 attributes)  -Wchanges-meaning	 (C++)
	   -Wcomma-subscript (C++23  or	 later)	 -Wdeclaration-after-statement
	   (C90	  or   earlier)	  -Welaborated-enum-base   (C++11   or	later)
	   -Wimplicit-int (C99 or later) -Wimplicit-function-declaration  (C99
	   or later) -Wincompatible-pointer-types -Wint-conversion -Wlong-long
	   (C90	   or	earlier)   -Wmain   -Wnarrowing	  (C++11   or	later)
	   -Wpointer-arith     -Wpointer-sign	  -Wincompatible-pointer-types
	   -Wregister  (C++17 or later)	-Wvla (C90 or earlier) -Wwrite-strings
	   (C++11 or later)

       -fpermissive
	   Downgrade some required diagnostics about nonconformant  code  from
	   errors   to	 warnings.    Thus,  using  -fpermissive  allows  some
	   nonconforming code to compile.  Some	C++ diagnostics	are controlled
	   only	 by  this  flag,  but  it  also	 downgrades  some  C  and  C++
	   diagnostics that have their own flag:

	   -Wdeclaration-missing-parameter-type	  (C   and  Objective-C	 only)
	   -Wimplicit-function-declaration   (C	   and	  Objective-C	 only)
	   -Wimplicit-int	 (C	   and	      Objective-C	 only)
	   -Wincompatible-pointer-types	   (C	 and	 Objective-C	 only)
	   -Wint-conversion  (C	 and  Objective-C  only)  -Wnarrowing (C++ and
	   Objective-C++ only) -Wreturn-mismatch (C and	Objective-C only)

	   The -fpermissive option is the  default  for	 historic  C  language
	   modes (-std=c89, -std=gnu89,	-std=c90, -std=gnu90).

       -Wall
	   This	 enables  all the warnings about constructions that some users
	   consider questionable, and that are easy to	avoid  (or  modify  to
	   prevent  the	 warning), even	in conjunction with macros.  This also
	   enables some	language-specific warnings described  in  C++  Dialect
	   Options and Objective-C and Objective-C++ Dialect Options.

	   -Wall turns on the following	warning	flags:

	   -Waddress	-Waligned-new	 (C++	 and	Objective-C++	 only)
	   -Warray-bounds=1	(only	   with	     -O2)      -Warray-compare
	   -Warray-parameter=2	-Wbool-compare -Wbool-operation	-Wc++11-compat
	   -Wc++14-compat  -Wc++17compat  -Wc++20compat	-Wcatch-value (C++ and
	   Objective-C++ only) -Wchar-subscripts  -Wclass-memaccess  (C++  and
	   Objective-C++  only)	-Wcomment -Wdangling-else -Wdangling-pointer=2
	   -Wdelete-non-virtual-dtor	(C++	and    Objective-C++	 only)
	   -Wduplicate-decl-specifier  (C and Objective-C only)	-Wenum-compare
	   (in C/ObjC; this is on by default in	 C++)  -Wenum-int-mismatch  (C
	   and	   Objective-C	  only)	   -Wformat=1	 -Wformat-contains-nul
	   -Wformat-diag	-Wformat-extra-args	   -Wformat-overflow=1
	   -Wformat-truncation=1      -Wformat-zero-length     -Wframe-address
	   -Wimplicit (C and Objective-C only) -Wimplicit-function-declaration
	   (C and Objective-C only) -Wimplicit-int (C  and  Objective-C	 only)
	   -Winfinite-recursion	  -Winit-self  (C++  and  Objective-C++	 only)
	   -Wint-in-bool-context -Wlogical-not-parentheses  -Wmain  (only  for
	   C/ObjC    and    unless    -ffreestanding)	 -Wmaybe-uninitialized
	   -Wmemset-elt-size -Wmemset-transposed-args -Wmisleading-indentation
	   (only for C/C++) -Wmismatched-dealloc -Wmismatched-new-delete  (C++
	   and Objective-C++ only) -Wmissing-attributes	-Wmissing-braces (only
	   for	 C/ObjC)   -Wmultistatement-macros   -Wnarrowing    (C++   and
	   Objective-C++ only) -Wnonnull  -Wnonnull-compare  -Wopenmp-simd  (C
	   and	C++  only) -Woverloaded-virtual=1 (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   -Wpacked-not-aligned	 -Wparentheses	-Wpessimizing-move  (C++   and
	   Objective-C++    only)    -Wpointer-sign    (only	for    C/ObjC)
	   -Wrange-loop-construct (C++ and Objective-C++ only) -Wreorder  (C++
	   and	Objective-C++  only) -Wrestrict	-Wreturn-type -Wself-move (C++
	   and Objective-C++ only) -Wsequence-point  -Wsign-compare  (C++  and
	   Objective-C++    only)    -Wsizeof-array-div	  -Wsizeof-pointer-div
	   -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess  -Wstrict-aliasing   -Wstrict-overflow=1
	   -Wswitch    -Wtautological-compare	 -Wtrigraphs   -Wuninitialized
	   -Wunknown-pragmas	    -Wunused	     -Wunused-but-set-variable
	   -Wunused-const-variable=1   (only   for  C/ObjC)  -Wunused-function
	   -Wunused-label	 -Wunused-local-typedefs	-Wunused-value
	   -Wunused-variable	     -Wuse-after-free=2	       -Wvla-parameter
	   -Wvolatile-register-var -Wzero-length-bounds

	   Note	that some warning flags	are not	implied	 by  -Wall.   Some  of
	   them	 warn about constructions that users generally do not consider
	   questionable, but which occasionally	you might wish to  check  for;
	   others warn about constructions that	are necessary or hard to avoid
	   in  some  cases,  and  there	is no simple way to modify the code to
	   suppress the	warning. Some of them are enabled by -Wextra but  many
	   of them must	be enabled individually.

       -Wextra
	   This	 enables  some	extra  warning	flags  that are	not enabled by
	   -Wall. (This	option used to be called -W.  The older	name is	 still
	   supported, but the newer name is more descriptive.)

	   -Wabsolute-value	 (only	    for	     C/ObjC)	  -Walloc-size
	   -Wcalloc-transposed-args	 -Wcast-function-type	   -Wclobbered
	   -Wdeprecated-copy   (C++   and   Objective-C++  only)  -Wempty-body
	   -Wenum-conversion   (only   for   C/ObjC)	-Wexpansion-to-defined
	   -Wignored-qualifiers	  (only	 for  C/C++)  -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3
	   -Wmaybe-uninitialized		  -Wmissing-field-initializers
	   -Wmissing-parameter-type   (C/ObjC	only)  -Wold-style-declaration
	   (C/ObjC only) -Woverride-init (C/ObjC only)	-Wredundant-move  (C++
	   and	Objective-C++  only) -Wshift-negative-value (in	C++11 to C++17
	   and in C99 and newer) -Wsign-compare	(C++ and  Objective-C++	 only)
	   -Wsized-deallocation	 (C++ and Objective-C++	only) -Wstring-compare
	   -Wtype-limits   -Wuninitialized   -Wunused-parameter	  (only	  with
	   -Wunused  or	 -Wall)	-Wunused-but-set-parameter (only with -Wunused
	   or -Wall)

	   The option -Wextra also prints warning messages for	the  following
	   cases:

	   *   A pointer is compared against integer zero with "<", "<=", ">",
	       or ">=".

	   *   (C++  only) An enumerator and a non-enumerator both appear in a
	       conditional expression.

	   *   (C++ only) Ambiguous virtual bases.

	   *   (C++  only)  Subscripting  an  array  that  has	been  declared
	       "register".

	   *   (C++  only)  Taking  the	 address  of  a	variable that has been
	       declared	"register".

	   *   (C++ only)  A  base  class  is  not  initialized	 in  the  copy
	       constructor of a	derived	class.

       -Wabi (C, Objective-C, C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 about	code affected by ABI changes.  This includes code that
	   may not be compatible with the vendor-neutral C++ ABI  as  well  as
	   the psABI for the particular	target.

	   Since G++ now defaults to updating the ABI with each	major release,
	   normally  -Wabi  warns only about C++ ABI compatibility problems if
	   there is a check added later	in a release series for	an  ABI	 issue
	   discovered  since  the  initial  release.   -Wabi  warns about more
	   things if an	older ABI version is selected (with -fabi-version=n).

	   -Wabi can also be used with an  explicit  version  number  to  warn
	   about  C++ ABI compatibility	with a particular -fabi-version	level,
	   e.g.	-Wabi=2	to warn	about changes relative to -fabi-version=2.

	   If an explicit version number is provided and  -fabi-compat-version
	   is  not  specified, the version number from this option is used for
	   compatibility aliases.  If no explicit version number  is  provided
	   with	 this  option,	but  -fabi-compat-version  is  specified, that
	   version number is used for C++ ABI warnings.

	   Although an effort has been made to	warn  about  all  such	cases,
	   there  are  probably	 some  cases  that  are	not warned about, even
	   though G++ is generating incompatible  code.	  There	 may  also  be
	   cases  where	 warnings  are	emitted	 even  though the code that is
	   generated is	compatible.

	   You should rewrite your code	to avoid these	warnings  if  you  are
	   concerned  about  the  fact	that  code generated by	G++ may	not be
	   binary compatible with code generated by other compilers.

	   Known incompatibilities in -fabi-version=2 (which was  the  default
	   from	GCC 3.4	to 4.9)	include:

	   *   A template with a non-type template parameter of	reference type
	       was mangled incorrectly:

		       extern int N;
		       template	<int &>	struct S {};
		       void n (S<N>) {2}

	       This was	fixed in -fabi-version=3.

	   *   SIMD  vector types declared using "__attribute ((vector_size))"
	       were mangled in a non-standard way  that	 does  not  allow  for
	       overloading of functions	taking vectors of different sizes.

	       The mangling was	changed	in -fabi-version=4.

	   *   "__attribute  ((const))"	 and  "noreturn"  were mangled as type
	       qualifiers, and "decltype" of a plain  declaration  was	folded
	       away.

	       These mangling issues were fixed	in -fabi-version=5.

	   *   Scoped  enumerators  passed as arguments	to a variadic function
	       are promoted like unscoped  enumerators,	 causing  "va_arg"  to
	       complain.   On  most  targets this does not actually affect the
	       parameter passing ABI, as there is no way to pass  an  argument
	       smaller than "int".

	       Also,  the ABI changed the mangling of template argument	packs,
	       "const_cast", "static_cast", prefix increment/decrement,	and  a
	       class scope function used as a template argument.

	       These issues were corrected in -fabi-version=6.

	   *   Lambdas in default argument scope were mangled incorrectly, and
	       the ABI changed the mangling of "nullptr_t".

	       These issues were corrected in -fabi-version=7.

	   *   When  mangling a	function type with function-cv-qualifiers, the
	       un-qualified  function  type  was  incorrectly  treated	as   a
	       substitution candidate.

	       This was	fixed in -fabi-version=8, the default for GCC 5.1.

	   *   "decltype(nullptr)"  incorrectly	had an alignment of 1, leading
	       to unaligned accesses.  Note that this did not affect  the  ABI
	       of  a function with a "nullptr_t" parameter, as parameters have
	       a minimum alignment.

	       This was	fixed in -fabi-version=9, the default for GCC 5.2.

	   *   Target-specific attributes that affect the identity of a	 type,
	       such  as	 ia32 calling conventions on a function	type (stdcall,
	       regparm,	etc.), did not affect the  mangled  name,  leading  to
	       name  collisions	 when  function	pointers were used as template
	       arguments.

	       This was	fixed in -fabi-version=10, the default for GCC 6.1.

	   This	option also enables warnings about psABI-related changes.  The
	   known psABI changes at this point include:

	   *   For SysV/x86-64,	unions with "long double" members  are	passed
	       in  memory  as  specified in psABI.  Prior to GCC 4.4, this was
	       not the case.  For example:

		       union U {
			 long double ld;
			 int i;
		       };

	       "union U" is now	always passed in memory.

       -Wno-changes-meaning (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   C++ requires	that unqualified uses of a name	within	a  class  have
	   the	same  meaning in the complete scope of the class, so declaring
	   the name after using	it is ill-formed:

		   struct A;
		   struct B1 { A a; typedef A A; }; // warning,	'A' changes meaning
		   struct B2 { A a; struct A { }; }; //	error, 'A' changes meaning

	   By default,	the  B1	 case  is  only	 a  warning  because  the  two
	   declarations	 have  the  same  type,	while the B2 case is an	error.
	   Both	 diagnostics  can  be  disabled	  with	 -Wno-changes-meaning.
	   Alternately,	 the  error  case  can	be  reduced  to	a warning with
	   -Wno-error=changes-meaning or -fpermissive.

	   Both	diagnostics are	also suppressed	by -fms-extensions.

       -Wchar-subscripts
	   Warn	if an array subscript has type "char".	This is	a common cause
	   of error, as	programmers often forget that this type	is  signed  on
	   some	machines.  This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-coverage-mismatch
	   Warn	if feedback profiles do	not match when using the -fprofile-use
	   option.   If	 a  source  file  is  changed  between	compiling with
	   -fprofile-generate and  with	 -fprofile-use,	 the  files  with  the
	   profile  feedback  can fail to match	the source file	and GCC	cannot
	   use the profile feedback information.  By default, this warning  is
	   enabled  and	is treated as an error.	 -Wno-coverage-mismatch	can be
	   used	to disable the warning or -Wno-error=coverage-mismatch can  be
	   used	 to  disable  the error.  Disabling the	error for this warning
	   can result in poorly	optimized code and is useful only in the  case
	   of  very  minor changes such	as bug fixes to	an existing code-base.
	   Completely disabling	the warning is not recommended.

       -Wno-coverage-too-many-conditions
	   Warn	if -fcondition-coverage	is used	and  an	 expression  have  too
	   many	 terms	and  GCC gives up coverage.  Coverage is given up when
	   there are more terms	in the conditional than	there are  bits	 in  a
	   "gcov_type_unsigned".  This warning is enabled by default.

       -Wno-coverage-invalid-line-number
	   Warn	 in  case  a  function	ends  earlier than it begins due to an
	   invalid  linenum  macros.   The  warning  is	 emitted   only	  with
	   --coverage enabled.

	   By  default,	 this  warning	is enabled and is treated as an	error.
	   -Wno-coverage-invalid-line-number  can  be  used  to	 disable   the
	   warning  or	-Wno-error=coverage-invalid-line-number	can be used to
	   disable the error.

       -Wno-cpp	(C, Objective-C, C++, Objective-C++ and	Fortran	only)
	   Suppress warning messages emitted by	"#warning" directives.

       -Wdouble-promotion (C, C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Give	a warning when a value of type "float" is implicitly  promoted
	   to  "double".  CPUs with a 32-bit "single-precision"	floating-point
	   unit	 implement  "float"  in	 hardware,  but	 emulate  "double"  in
	   software.   On  such	 a  machine, doing computations	using "double"
	   values is much more expensive because of the	overhead required  for
	   software emulation.

	   It  is  easy	 to accidentally do computations with "double" because
	   floating-point literals  are	 implicitly  of	 type  "double".   For
	   example, in:

		   float area(float radius)
		   {
		      return 3.14159 * radius *	radius;
		   }

	   the	compiler performs the entire computation with "double" because
	   the floating-point literal is a "double".

       -Wduplicate-decl-specifier (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if a declaration has duplicate "const",	"volatile", "restrict"
	   or "_Atomic"	specifier.  This warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wformat
       -Wformat=n
	   Check calls to "printf" and "scanf",	etc., to make  sure  that  the
	   arguments  supplied	have  types  appropriate  to the format	string
	   specified, and that the conversions specified in the	format	string
	   make	sense.	This includes standard functions, and others specified
	   by  format  attributes,  in	the  "printf", "scanf",	"strftime" and
	   "strfmon" (an X/Open	extension, not in the C	standard) families (or
	   other  target-specific  families).	Which  functions  are  checked
	   without  format  attributes	having	been  specified	depends	on the
	   standard version selected, and such checks of functions without the
	   attribute specified are disabled by -ffreestanding or -fno-builtin.

	   The formats are checked against the format  features	 supported  by
	   GNU	libc version 2.2.  These include all ISO C90 and C99 features,
	   as well as features from the	Single Unix Specification and some BSD
	   and GNU extensions.	Other library implementations may not  support
	   all	these  features;  GCC  does not	support	warning	about features
	   that	go beyond a particular	library's  limitations.	  However,  if
	   -Wpedantic  is  used	with -Wformat, warnings	are given about	format
	   features  not  in  the  selected  standard  version	(but  not  for
	   "strfmon"  formats,	since  those  are  not in any version of the C
	   standard).

	   -Wformat=1
	   -Wformat
	       Option -Wformat is equivalent to	-Wformat=1, and	-Wno-format is
	       equivalent to -Wformat=0.  Since	-Wformat also checks for  null
	       format  arguments  for several functions, -Wformat also implies
	       -Wnonnull.  Some	aspects	of this	level of format	 checking  can
	       be   disabled   by   the	  options:   -Wno-format-contains-nul,
	       -Wno-format-extra-args, and -Wno-format-zero-length.   -Wformat
	       is enabled by -Wall.

	   -Wformat=2
	       Enable  -Wformat	 plus  additional  format  checks.   Currently
	       equivalent to  -Wformat	-Wformat-nonliteral  -Wformat-security
	       -Wformat-y2k.

       -Wno-format-contains-nul
	   If  -Wformat	 is  specified,	 do not	warn about format strings that
	   contain NUL bytes.

       -Wno-format-extra-args
	   If -Wformat is specified, do	not warn about excess arguments	 to  a
	   "printf" or "scanf" format function.	 The C standard	specifies that
	   such	arguments are ignored.

	   Where  the  unused  arguments  lie  between used arguments that are
	   specified with $ operand number specifications,  normally  warnings
	   are	still given, since the implementation could not	know what type
	   to pass to "va_arg" to skip the unused arguments.  However, in  the
	   case	 of "scanf" formats, this option suppresses the	warning	if the
	   unused  arguments  are  all	pointers,  since   the	 Single	  Unix
	   Specification says that such	unused arguments are allowed.

       -Wformat-overflow
       -Wformat-overflow=level
	   Warn	 about	calls  to  formatted  input/output  functions  such as
	   "sprintf"  and  "vsprintf"  that  might  overflow  the  destination
	   buffer.   When  the	exact  number  of  bytes  written  by a	format
	   directive cannot be determined  at  compile-time  it	 is  estimated
	   based  on  heuristics  that	depend	on  the	 level argument	and on
	   optimization.  While	 enabling  optimization	 will  in  most	 cases
	   improve  the	 accuracy  of the warning, it may also result in false
	   positives.

	   -Wformat-overflow
	   -Wformat-overflow=1
	       Level 1 of -Wformat-overflow  enabled  by  -Wformat  employs  a
	       conservative  approach  that  warns  only about calls that most
	       likely overflow the buffer.  At this level,  numeric  arguments
	       to  format  directives  with unknown values are assumed to have
	       the value of one, and strings of	unknown	length	to  be	empty.
	       Numeric arguments that are known	to be bounded to a subrange of
	       their  type, or string arguments	whose output is	bounded	either
	       by their	directive's precision or by a  finite  set  of	string
	       literals,  are  assumed	to  take on the	value within the range
	       that results in the most	bytes on  output.   For	 example,  the
	       call  to	 "sprintf" below is diagnosed because even with	both a
	       and b equal to  zero,  the  terminating	NUL  character	('\0')
	       appended	 by  the  function  to	the destination	buffer will be
	       written past its	end.  Increasing the size of the buffer	 by  a
	       single  byte  is	sufficient to avoid the	warning, though	it may
	       not be sufficient to avoid the overflow.

		       void f (int a, int b)
		       {
			 char buf [13];
			 sprintf (buf, "a = %i,	b = %i\n", a, b);
		       }

	   -Wformat-overflow=2
	       Level  2	 warns	also  about  calls  that  might	 overflow  the
	       destination  buffer  given  an argument of sufficient length or
	       magnitude.  At level 2, unknown numeric arguments  are  assumed
	       to have the minimum representable value for signed types	with a
	       precision  greater  than	1, and the maximum representable value
	       otherwise.  Unknown string arguments  whose  length  cannot  be
	       assumed	to  be bounded either by the directive's precision, or
	       by a finite set of string literals they may evaluate to,	or the
	       character array	they  may  point  to,  are  assumed  to	 be  1
	       character long.

	       At  level  2, the call in the example above is again diagnosed,
	       but this	time because with a equal to a	32-bit	"INT_MIN"  the
	       first %i	directive will write some of its digits	beyond the end
	       of the destination buffer.  To make the call safe regardless of
	       the  values  of	the two	variables, the size of the destination
	       buffer must be increased	to at least 34	bytes.	 GCC  includes
	       the  minimum  size  of  the  buffer  in	an  informational note
	       following the warning.

	       An alternative to increasing the	size of	the destination	buffer
	       is to constrain the range of  formatted	values.	  The  maximum
	       length  of  string  arguments  can be bounded by	specifying the
	       precision in the	format directive.  When	numeric	 arguments  of
	       format directives can be	assumed	to be bounded by less than the
	       precision   of  their  type,  choosing  an  appropriate	length
	       modifier	to the	format	specifier  will	 reduce	 the  required
	       buffer  size.  For example, if a	and b in the example above can
	       be assumed to be	within the precision of	the "short  int"  type
	       then  using  either  the	 %hi  format  directive	or casting the
	       argument	to "short" reduces the maximum required	 size  of  the
	       buffer to 24 bytes.

		       void f (int a, int b)
		       {
			 char buf [23];
			 sprintf (buf, "a = %hi, b = %i\n", a, (short)b);
		       }

       -Wno-format-zero-length
	   If  -Wformat	 is  specified,	do not warn about zero-length formats.
	   The C standard specifies that zero-length formats are allowed.

       -Wformat-nonliteral
	   If -Wformat is specified, also warn if the format string is	not  a
	   string literal and so cannot	be checked, unless the format function
	   takes its format arguments as a "va_list".

       -Wformat-security
	   If  -Wformat	is specified, also warn	about uses of format functions
	   that	represent possible security problems.  At present, this	 warns
	   about  calls	 to  "printf"  and  "scanf" functions where the	format
	   string is not a string literal and there are	no  format  arguments,
	   as  in  "printf (foo);".  This may be a security hole if the	format
	   string came	from  untrusted	 input	and  contains  %n.   (This  is
	   currently  a	subset of what -Wformat-nonliteral warns about,	but in
	   future warnings may be added	 to  -Wformat-security	that  are  not
	   included in -Wformat-nonliteral.)

       -Wformat-signedness
	   If  -Wformat	 is specified, also warn if the	format string requires
	   an unsigned argument	and the	argument is signed and vice versa.

       -Wformat-truncation
       -Wformat-truncation=level
	   Warn	about  calls  to  formatted  input/output  functions  such  as
	   "snprintf"  and "vsnprintf" that might result in output truncation.
	   When	the exact number of bytes written by a format directive	cannot
	   be determined at compile-time it is estimated based	on  heuristics
	   that	 depend	 on  the  level	 argument  and on optimization.	 While
	   enabling optimization will in most cases improve  the  accuracy  of
	   the	warning,  it  may  also	 result	in false positives.  Except as
	   noted otherwise, the	option uses the	same logic -Wformat-overflow.

	   -Wformat-truncation
	   -Wformat-truncation=1
	       Level 1 of -Wformat-truncation enabled by  -Wformat  employs  a
	       conservative  approach  that  warns only	about calls to bounded
	       functions whose return value  is	 unused	 and  that  will  most
	       likely result in	output truncation.

	   -Wformat-truncation=2
	       Level  2	 warns	also  about  calls  to bounded functions whose
	       return value is used and	that might result in truncation	 given
	       an argument of sufficient length	or magnitude.

       -Wformat-y2k
	   If  -Wformat	 is specified, also warn about "strftime" formats that
	   may yield only a two-digit year.

       -Wnonnull
	   Warn	about passing a	null pointer for arguments marked as requiring
	   a non-null value by the "nonnull" function attribute.

	   -Wnonnull is	included in -Wall and -Wformat.	 It  can  be  disabled
	   with	the -Wno-nonnull option.

       -Wnonnull-compare
	   Warn	 when comparing	an argument marked with	the "nonnull" function
	   attribute against null inside the function.

	   -Wnonnull-compare is	included in -Wall.  It can  be	disabled  with
	   the -Wno-nonnull-compare option.

       -Wnull-dereference
	   Warn	 if  the  compiler  detects  paths  that  trigger erroneous or
	   undefined behavior due  to  dereferencing  a	 null  pointer.	  This
	   option  is only active when -fdelete-null-pointer-checks is active,
	   which is enabled by optimizations in	most targets.	The  precision
	   of the warnings depends on the optimization options used.

       -Wnrvo (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 if the	compiler does not elide	the copy from a	local variable
	   to the return value of a function in	a context where	it is  allowed
	   by  [class.copy.elision].   This  elision  is commonly known	as the
	   Named Return	Value Optimization.   For  instance,  in  the  example
	   below  the  compiler	cannot elide copies from both v1 and v2, so it
	   elides neither.

		   std::vector<int> f()
		   {
		     std::vector<int> v1, v2;
		     //	...
		     if	(cond) return v1;
		     else return v2; //	warning: not eliding copy
		   }

       -Winfinite-recursion
	   Warn	about infinitely recursive calls.  The warning is effective at
	   all optimization levels  but	 requires  optimization	 in  order  to
	   detect  infinite  recursion in calls	between	two or more functions.
	   -Winfinite-recursion	is included in -Wall.

	   Compare with	-Wanalyzer-infinite-recursion which provides a similar
	   diagnostic, but is implemented in  a	 different  way	 (as  part  of
	   -fanalyzer).

       -Winit-self (C, C++, Objective-C	and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 about	uninitialized  variables  that	are  initialized  with
	   themselves.	 Note  this  option  can  only	be   used   with   the
	   -Wuninitialized option.

	   For	example,  GCC  warns  about  "i"  being	 uninitialized	in the
	   following snippet only when -Winit-self has been specified:

		   int f()
		   {
		     int i = i;
		     return i;
		   }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall in C++.

       -Wno-implicit-int (C and	Objective-C only)
	   This	option controls	warnings when a	declaration does not specify a
	   type.  This warning is enabled by default, as an error, in C99  and
	   later  dialects  of	C,  and	 also  by  -Wall.   The	 error	can be
	   downgraded to a warning  using  -fpermissive	 (along	 with  certain
	   other     errors),	  or	for    this    error	alone,	  with
	   -Wno-error=implicit-int.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wno-implicit-function-declaration (C and Objective-C only)
	   This	option controls	warnings when a	function is used before	 being
	   declared.   This warning is enabled by default, as an error,	in C99
	   and later dialects of C, and	also  by  -Wall.   The	error  can  be
	   downgraded  to  a  warning  using  -fpermissive (along with certain
	   other    errors),	or    for    this    error     alone,	  with
	   -Wno-error=implicit-function-declaration.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wimplicit (C and Objective-C only)
	   Same	 as  -Wimplicit-int and	-Wimplicit-function-declaration.  This
	   warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Whardened
	   Warn	when -fhardened	did not	enable an option  from	its  set  (for
	   which   see	 -fhardened).	For  instance,	using  -fhardened  and
	   -fstack-protector at	the same  time	on  the	 command  line	causes
	   -Whardened  to  warn	 because  -fstack-protector-strong will	not be
	   enabled by -fhardened.

	   This	warning	is  enabled  by	 default  and  has  effect  only  when
	   -fhardened is enabled.

       -Wimplicit-fallthrough
	   -Wimplicit-fallthrough  is the same as -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 and
	   -Wno-implicit-fallthrough is	the same as -Wimplicit-fallthrough=0.

       -Wimplicit-fallthrough=n
	   Warn	when a switch case falls through.  For example:

		   switch (cond)
		     {
		     case 1:
		       a = 1;
		       break;
		     case 2:
		       a = 2;
		     case 3:
		       a = 3;
		       break;
		     }

	   This	warning	does not warn when the last statement of a case	cannot
	   fall	through, e.g. when there is a return statement or  a  call  to
	   function	 declared     with     the     noreturn	    attribute.
	   -Wimplicit-fallthrough=  also  takes	 into  account	control	  flow
	   statements, such as ifs, and	only warns when	appropriate.  E.g.

		   switch (cond)
		     {
		     case 1:
		       if (i > 3) {
			 bar (5);
			 break;
		       } else if (i < 1) {
			 bar (0);
		       } else
			 return;
		     default:
		       ...
		     }

	   Since  there	 are  occasions	 where	a  switch case fall through is
	   desirable,	 GCC	provides    an	  attribute,	"__attribute__
	   ((fallthrough))", that is to	be used	along with a null statement to
	   suppress this warning that would normally occur:

		   switch (cond)
		     {
		     case 1:
		       bar (0);
		       __attribute__ ((fallthrough));
		     default:
		       ...
		     }

	   C++17     provides	 a    standard	  way	 to    suppress	   the
	   -Wimplicit-fallthrough warning using	"[[fallthrough]];" instead  of
	   the	 GNU   attribute.    In	  C++11	  or   C++14   users  can  use
	   "[[gnu::fallthrough]];", which is  a	 GNU  extension.   Instead  of
	   these  attributes, it is also possible to add a fallthrough comment
	   to silence the warning.  The	whole body  of	the  C	or  C++	 style
	   comment  should  match  the given regular expressions listed	below.
	   The option argument n specifies what	kind of	comments are accepted:

	   *<-Wimplicit-fallthrough=0 disables the warning altogether.>
	   *<-Wimplicit-fallthrough=1 matches ".*" regular>
	       expression, any comment is used as fallthrough comment.

	   *<-Wimplicit-fallthrough=2 case insensitively matches>
	       ".*falls?[ \t-]*thr(ough|u).*" regular expression.

	   *<-Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 case sensitively matches one of the>
	       following regular expressions:

	       *<"-fallthrough">
	       *<"@fallthrough@">
	       *<"lint -fallthrough[ \t]*">
	       *<"[ \t.!]*(ELSE,? |INTENTIONAL(LY)? )?FALL(S |
	       |-)?THR(OUGH|U)[	\t.!]*(-[^\n\r]*)?">
	       *<"[ \t.!]*(Else,? |Intentional(ly)? )?Fall((s |
	       |-)[Tt]|t)hr(ough|u)[ \t.!]*(-[^\n\r]*)?">
	       *<"[ \t.!]*([Ee]lse,? |[Ii]ntentional(ly)? )?fall(s |
	       |-)?thr(ough|u)[	\t.!]*(-[^\n\r]*)?">
	   *<-Wimplicit-fallthrough=4 case sensitively matches one of the>
	       following regular expressions:

	       *<"-fallthrough">
	       *<"@fallthrough@">
	       *<"lint -fallthrough[ \t]*">
	       *<"[ \t]*FALLTHR(OUGH|U)[ \t]*">
	   *<-Wimplicit-fallthrough=5 doesn't recognize	any comments as>
	       fallthrough comments, only attributes disable the warning.

	   The comment needs to	be  followed  after  optional  whitespace  and
	   other  comments  by "case" or "default" keywords or by a user label
	   that	precedes some "case" or	"default" label.

		   switch (cond)
		     {
		     case 1:
		       bar (0);
		       /* FALLTHRU */
		     default:
		       ...
		     }

	   The -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3	warning	is enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wno-if-not-aligned (C, C++, Objective-C	and Objective-C++ only)
	   Control  if	warnings  triggered   by   the	 "warn_if_not_aligned"
	   attribute should be issued.	These warnings are enabled by default.

       -Wignored-qualifiers (C and C++ only)
	   Warn	 if the	return type of a function has a	type qualifier such as
	   "const".  For ISO C such a type qualifier has no effect, since  the
	   value  returned  by	a  function  is	 not  an lvalue.  For C++, the
	   warning is  only  emitted  for  scalar  types  or  "void".	ISO  C
	   prohibits qualified "void" return types on function definitions, so
	   such	 return	 types	always	receive	 a  warning  even without this
	   option.

	   This	warning	is also	enabled	by -Wextra.

       -Wno-ignored-attributes (C and C++ only)
	   This	option controls	warnings when an attribute is  ignored.	  This
	   is different	from the -Wattributes option in	that it	warns whenever
	   the	compiler  decides to drop an attribute,	not that the attribute
	   is either unknown, used in a	wrong place,  etc.   This  warning  is
	   enabled by default.

       -Wmain
	   Warn	 if  the  type	of  "main"  is suspicious.  "main" should be a
	   function with external linkage, returning int, taking  either  zero
	   arguments,  two,  or	 three	arguments  of appropriate types.  This
	   warning is enabled by default in C++	and is enabled by either -Wall
	   or -Wpedantic.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wmisleading-indentation	(C and C++ only)
	   Warn	when the indentation of	the code does not  reflect  the	 block
	   structure.	Specifically,  a  warning  is issued for "if", "else",
	   "while", and	"for" clauses with a guarded statement that  does  not
	   use	braces,	 followed  by  an  unguarded  statement	 with the same
	   indentation.

	   In the  following  example,	the  call  to  "bar"  is  misleadingly
	   indented as if it were guarded by the "if" conditional.

		     if	(some_condition	())
		       foo ();
		       bar ();	/* Gotcha: this	is not guarded by the "if".  */

	   In  the  case  of  mixed  tabs  and	spaces,	 the  warning uses the
	   -ftabstop=  option  to  determine  if  the	statements   line   up
	   (defaulting to 8).

	   The warning is not issued for code involving	multiline preprocessor
	   logic such as the following example.

		     if	(flagA)
		       foo (0);
		   #if SOME_CONDITION_THAT_DOES_NOT_HOLD
		     if	(flagB)
		   #endif
		       foo (1);

	   The	warning	 is  not  issued after a "#line" directive, since this
	   typically indicates autogenerated code, and no assumptions  can  be
	   made	about the layout of the	file that the directive	references.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall in C and C++.

       -Wmissing-attributes
	   Warn	 when  a  declaration  of  a  function	is missing one or more
	   attributes that a related  function	is  declared  with  and	 whose
	   absence  may	 adversely  affect  the	 correctness  or efficiency of
	   generated  code.   For  example,  the   warning   is	  issued   for
	   declarations	 of  aliases  that  use	 attributes  to	 specify  less
	   restrictive	requirements  than  those  of  their  targets.	  This
	   typically  represents  a  potential	optimization  opportunity.  By
	   contrast, the -Wattribute-alias=2 option controls  warnings	issued
	   when	 the  alias  is	 more restrictive than the target, which could
	   lead	to incorrect code generation.  Attributes  considered  include
	   "alloc_align",   "alloc_size",   "cold",  "const",  "hot",  "leaf",
	   "malloc",	 "nonnull",	"noreturn",	"nothrow",     "pure",
	   "returns_nonnull", and "returns_twice".

	   In  C++, the	warning	is issued when an explicit specialization of a
	   primary   template	declared   with	   attribute	"alloc_align",
	   "alloc_size",  "assume_aligned",  "format", "format_arg", "malloc",
	   or "nonnull"	is  declared  without  it.   Attributes	 "deprecated",
	   "error", and	"warning" suppress the warning..

	   You	can  use  the  "copy"  attribute  to  apply  the  same	set of
	   attributes to a declaration as that on another declaration  without
	   explicitly  enumerating  the	 attributes.  This  attribute  can  be
	   applied to declarations of functions, variables, or types.

	   -Wmissing-attributes	is enabled by -Wall.

	   For example,	since the declaration of the primary function template
	   below makes use of both attribute  "malloc"	and  "alloc_size"  the
	   declaration	of  the	 explicit  specialization  of  the template is
	   diagnosed because it	is missing one of the attributes.

		   template <class T>
		   T* __attribute__ ((malloc, alloc_size (1)))
		   allocate (size_t);

		   template <>
		   void* __attribute__ ((malloc))   // missing alloc_size
		   allocate<void> (size_t);

       -Wmissing-braces
	   Warn	if an aggregate	or union initializer is	not  fully  bracketed.
	   In  the  following  example,	 the  initializer for "a" is not fully
	   bracketed, but that for "b" is fully	bracketed.

		   int a[2][2] = { 0, 1, 2, 3 };
		   int b[2][2] = { { 0,	1 }, { 2, 3 } };

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wmissing-include-dirs (C, C++, Objective-C, Objective-C++ and Fortran
       only)
	   Warn	if a user-supplied include  directory  does  not  exist.  This
	   option   is	disabled  by  default  for  C,	C++,  Objective-C  and
	   Objective-C++. For Fortran, it is partially enabled by  default  by
	   warning for -I and -J, only.

       -Wno-missing-profile
	   This	option controls	warnings if feedback profiles are missing when
	   using  the -fprofile-use option.  This option diagnoses those cases
	   where a new function	or a new file is added between compiling  with
	   -fprofile-generate and with -fprofile-use, without regenerating the
	   profiles.   In  these cases,	the profile feedback data files	do not
	   contain any	profile	 feedback  information	for  the  newly	 added
	   function  or	 file  respectively.   Also,  in the case when profile
	   count data (.gcda) files are	removed, GCC cannot  use  any  profile
	   feedback  information.   In all these cases,	warnings are issued to
	   inform you that a profile generation	step  is  due.	 Ignoring  the
	   warning  can	result in poorly optimized code.  -Wno-missing-profile
	   can be used to disable the warning, but this	is not recommended and
	   should be done only when non-existent profile data is justified.

       -Wmismatched-dealloc
	   Warn	for calls to deallocation  functions  with  pointer  arguments
	   returned  from  allocation  functions  for which the	former isn't a
	   suitable deallocator.  A pair of functions  can  be	associated  as
	   matching  allocators	and deallocators by use	of attribute "malloc".
	   Unless disabled by the -fno-builtin option the  standard  functions
	   "calloc",   "malloc",   "realloc",  and  "free",  as	 well  as  the
	   corresponding forms of C++ "operator	new" and "operator delete" are
	   implicitly associated as matching allocators	and deallocators.   In
	   the	following  example "mydealloc" is the deallocator for pointers
	   returned from "myalloc".

		   void	mydealloc (void*);

		   __attribute__ ((malloc (mydealloc, 1))) void*
		   myalloc (size_t);

		   void	f (void)
		   {
		     void *p = myalloc (32);
		     //	...use p...
		     free (p);	 // warning: not a matching deallocator	for myalloc
		     mydealloc (p);   // ok
		   }

	   In  C++,  the  related  option  -Wmismatched-new-delete   diagnoses
	   mismatches involving	either "operator new" or "operator delete".

	   Option -Wmismatched-dealloc is included in -Wall.

       -Wmultistatement-macros
	   Warn	 about	unsafe	multiple  statement  macros  that appear to be
	   guarded by a	clause such  as	 "if",	"else",	 "for",	 "switch",  or
	   "while",  in	 which	only  the  first statement is actually guarded
	   after the macro is expanded.

	   For example:

		   #define DOIT	x++; y++
		   if (c)
		     DOIT;

	   will	increment "y" unconditionally, not just	when "c"  holds.   The
	   can usually be fixed	by wrapping the	macro in a do-while loop:

		   #define DOIT	do { x++; y++; } while (0)
		   if (c)
		     DOIT;

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall in C and C++.

       -Wparentheses
	   Warn	 if  parentheses are omitted in	certain	contexts, such as when
	   there is an	assignment  in	a  context  where  a  truth  value  is
	   expected,  or  when	operators  are	nested whose precedence	people
	   often get confused about.

	   Also	 warn  if  a  comparison  like	"x<=y<=z"  appears;  this   is
	   equivalent  to  "(x<=y  ?  1	 :  0)	<=  z",	 which	is a different
	   interpretation from that of ordinary	mathematical notation.

	   Also	warn for dangerous uses	of the	GNU  extension	to  "?:"  with
	   omitted  middle operand. When the condition in the "?": operator is
	   a boolean  expression,  the	omitted	 value	is  always  1.	 Often
	   programmers expect it to be a value computed	inside the conditional
	   expression instead.

	   For	C++  this also warns for some cases of unnecessary parentheses
	   in declarations, which can indicate an attempt at a	function  call
	   instead of a	declaration:

		   {
		     //	Declares a local variable called mymutex.
		     std::unique_lock<std::mutex> (mymutex);
		     //	User meant std::unique_lock<std::mutex>	lock (mymutex);
		   }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-self-move (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   This	  warning   warns  when	 a  value  is  moved  to  itself  with
	   "std::move".	 Such a	"std::move" typically has no effect.

		   struct T {
		   ...
		   };
		   void	fn()
		   {
		     T t;
		     ...
		     t = std::move (t);
		   }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wsequence-point
	   Warn	about code  that  may  have  undefined	semantics  because  of
	   violations of sequence point	rules in the C and C++ standards.

	   The	C and C++ standards define the order in	which expressions in a
	   C/C++ program are evaluated in  terms  of  sequence	points,	 which
	   represent  a	partial	ordering between the execution of parts	of the
	   program: those  executed  before  the  sequence  point,  and	 those
	   executed  after  it.	  These	 occur	after the evaluation of	a full
	   expression (one which is not	part of	a  larger  expression),	 after
	   the	evaluation  of the first operand of a "&&", "||", "? :"	or ","
	   (comma) operator, before  a	function  is  called  (but  after  the
	   evaluation  of its arguments	and the	expression denoting the	called
	   function), and in certain other places.  Other than as expressed by
	   the sequence	point rules, the order of evaluation of	subexpressions
	   of an expression is not specified.  All these rules describe	only a
	   partial order rather	than a total order, since, for example,	if two
	   functions are called	within one expression with no  sequence	 point
	   between  them,  the	order in which the functions are called	is not
	   specified.	However,  the  standards  committee  have  ruled  that
	   function calls do not overlap.

	   It  is  not specified when between sequence points modifications to
	   the values of objects take effect.  Programs	whose behavior depends
	   on this have	undefined behavior; the	C and  C++  standards  specify
	   that	 "Between the previous and next	sequence point an object shall
	   have	its stored value modified at most once by the evaluation of an
	   expression.	Furthermore, the prior value shall  be	read  only  to
	   determine  the  value  to  be  stored.".  If	a program breaks these
	   rules, the results on any particular	 implementation	 are  entirely
	   unpredictable.

	   Examples  of	 code  with undefined behavior are "a =	a++;", "a[n] =
	   b[n++]" and "a[i++] = i;".  Some more  complicated  cases  are  not
	   diagnosed  by  this	option,	 and  it  may give an occasional false
	   positive result, but	in general it has been found fairly  effective
	   at detecting	this sort of problem in	programs.

	   The	C++17 standard will define the order of	evaluation of operands
	   in more cases: in particular	it requires that the  right-hand  side
	   of  an  assignment  be  evaluated before the	left-hand side,	so the
	   above examples are no longer	undefined.  But	this option will still
	   warn	about  them,  to  help	people	avoid  writing	code  that  is
	   undefined in	C and earlier revisions	of C++.

	   The	standard is worded confusingly,	therefore there	is some	debate
	   over	the precise meaning of the  sequence  point  rules  in	subtle
	   cases.   Links  to  discussions  of the problem, including proposed
	   formal definitions, may be found  on	 the  GCC  readings  page,  at
	   <https://gcc.gnu.org/readings.html>.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall for	C and C++.

       -Wno-return-local-addr
	   Do not warn about returning a pointer (or in	C++, a reference) to a
	   variable that goes out of scope after the function returns.

       -Wreturn-mismatch
	   Warn	 about	return	statements without an expressions in functions
	   which do not	return "void".	Also warn about	a  "return"  statement
	   with	 an  expression	 in  a	function  whose	return type is "void",
	   unless the expression type is also "void".  As a GNU	extension, the
	   latter case is accepted without  a  warning	unless	-Wpedantic  is
	   used.

	   Attempting  to  use the return value	of a non-"void"	function other
	   than	"main" that flows off the end by reaching  the	closing	 curly
	   brace that terminates the function is undefined.

	   This	 warning  is specific to C and enabled by default.  In C99 and
	   later language dialects, it is treated as  an  error.   It  can  be
	   downgraded  to  a  warning  using  -fpermissive  (along  with other
	   warnings),	  or	 for	 just	  this	    warning,	  with
	   -Wno-error=return-mismatch.

       -Wreturn-type
	   Warn	 whenever  a  function	is  defined  with  a  return type that
	   defaults to "int" (unless -Wimplicit-int  is	 active,  which	 takes
	   precedence).	  Also	warn  if  execution  may  reach	the end	of the
	   function body, or if	the  function  does  not  contain  any	return
	   statement at	all.

	   Attempting  to  use the return value	of a non-"void"	function other
	   than	"main" that flows off the end by reaching  the	closing	 curly
	   brace that terminates the function is undefined.

	   Unlike  in  C, in C++, flowing off the end of a non-"void" function
	   other than "main" results in	undefined behavior even	when the value
	   of the function is not used.

	   This	warning	is enabled by default in C++ and by -Wall otherwise.

       -Wno-shift-count-negative
	   Controls warnings if	a shift	count is negative.   This  warning  is
	   enabled by default.

       -Wno-shift-count-overflow
	   Controls  warnings if a shift count is greater than or equal	to the
	   bit width of	the type.  This	warning	is enabled by default.

       -Wshift-negative-value
	   Warn	if left	shifting a negative value.  This warning is enabled by
	   -Wextra in C99 (and newer) and C++11	to C++17 modes.

       -Wno-shift-overflow
       -Wshift-overflow=n
	   These options control warnings about	left shift overflows.

	   -Wshift-overflow=1
	       This is the warning level of -Wshift-overflow and is enabled by
	       default in C99 and C++11	modes (and newer).  This warning level
	       does  not  warn	about  left-shifting  1	 into  the  sign  bit.
	       (However,  in C,	such an	overflow is still rejected in contexts
	       where an	integer	constant expression is required.)  No  warning
	       is  emitted  in	C++20  mode (and newer), as signed left	shifts
	       always wrap.

	   -Wshift-overflow=2
	       This warning level also warns about left-shifting  1  into  the
	       sign bit, unless	C++14 mode (or newer) is active.

       -Wswitch
	   Warn	 whenever a "switch" statement has an index of enumerated type
	   and lacks a "case" for one or more  of  the	named  codes  of  that
	   enumeration.	  (The	presence  of  a	 "default" label prevents this
	   warning.)  "case" labels outside the	enumeration range also provoke
	   warnings when this option is	used (even if  there  is  a  "default"
	   label).  This warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wswitch-default
	   Warn	whenever a "switch" statement does not have a "default"	case.

       -Wswitch-enum
	   Warn	 whenever a "switch" statement has an index of enumerated type
	   and lacks a "case" for one or more  of  the	named  codes  of  that
	   enumeration.	  "case"  labels  outside  the	enumeration range also
	   provoke warnings when this option is	 used.	 The  only  difference
	   between  -Wswitch  and  this	 option	 is  that  this	option gives a
	   warning about an omitted  enumeration  code	even  if  there	 is  a
	   "default" label.

       -Wno-switch-bool
	   Do  not warn	when a "switch"	statement has an index of boolean type
	   and the case	values are outside the range of	a boolean type.	 It is
	   possible to	suppress  this	warning	 by  casting  the  controlling
	   expression to a type	other than "bool".  For	example:

		   switch ((int) (a == 4))
		     {
		     ...
		     }

	   This	warning	is enabled by default for C and	C++ programs.

       -Wno-switch-outside-range
	   This	option controls	warnings when a	"switch" case has a value that
	   is  outside	of its respective type range.  This warning is enabled
	   by default for C and	C++ programs.

       -Wno-switch-unreachable
	   Do not warn when a "switch" statement contains  statements  between
	   the	controlling  expression	 and  the first	case label, which will
	   never be executed.  For example:

		   switch (cond)
		     {
		      i	= 15;
		     ...
		      case 5:
		     ...
		     }

	   -Wswitch-unreachable	does not warn if  the  statement  between  the
	   controlling	 expression  and  the  first  case  label  is  just  a
	   declaration:

		   switch (cond)
		     {
		      int i;
		     ...
		      case 5:
		      i	= 5;
		     ...
		     }

	   This	warning	is enabled by default for C and	C++ programs.

       -Wsync-nand (C and C++ only)
	   Warn	 when  "__sync_fetch_and_nand"	 and   "__sync_nand_and_fetch"
	   built-in  functions are used.  These	functions changed semantics in
	   GCC 4.4.

       -Wtrivial-auto-var-init
	   Warn	when "-ftrivial-auto-var-init" cannot initialize the automatic
	   variable.  A	common situation is  an	 automatic  variable  that  is
	   declared  between  the  controlling	expression  and	the first case
	   label of a "switch" statement.

       -Wunused-but-set-parameter
	   Warn	whenever a function parameter is assigned  to,	but  otherwise
	   unused (aside from its declaration).

	   To suppress this warning use	the "unused" attribute.

	   This	warning	is also	enabled	by -Wunused together with -Wextra.

       -Wunused-but-set-variable
	   Warn	whenever a local variable is assigned to, but otherwise	unused
	   (aside from its declaration).  This warning is enabled by -Wall.

	   To suppress this warning use	the "unused" attribute.

	   This	 warning  is  also  enabled  by	 -Wunused, which is enabled by
	   -Wall.

       -Wunused-function
	   Warn	whenever a static function is declared but not	defined	 or  a
	   non-inline  static  function	is unused.  This warning is enabled by
	   -Wall.

       -Wunused-label
	   Warn	whenever a label is declared but not used.   This  warning  is
	   enabled by -Wall.

	   To suppress this warning use	the "unused" attribute.

       -Wunused-local-typedefs (C, Objective-C,	C++ and	Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 when  a  typedef  locally  defined in a function is not used.
	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wunused-parameter
	   Warn	whenever  a  function  parameter  is  unused  aside  from  its
	   declaration.	  This	option	is  not	 enabled  by "-Wunused"	unless
	   "-Wextra" is	also specified.

	   To suppress this warning use	the "unused" attribute.

       -Wno-unused-result
	   Do not warn if  a  caller  of  a  function  marked  with  attribute
	   "warn_unused_result"	 does not use its return value.	The default is
	   -Wunused-result.

       -Wunused-variable
	   Warn	whenever a local or static variable is unused aside  from  its
	   declaration.	 This  option implies -Wunused-const-variable=1	for C,
	   but not for C++. This warning is enabled by -Wall.

	   To suppress this warning use	the "unused" attribute.

       -Wunused-const-variable
       -Wunused-const-variable=n
	   Warn	whenever a constant static variable is unused aside  from  its
	   declaration.

	   To suppress this warning use	the "unused" attribute.

	   -Wunused-const-variable=1
	       Warn  about  unused  static const variables defined in the main
	       compilation unit, but not about static const variables declared
	       in any header included.

	       -Wunused-const-variable=1     is	    enabled	by	either
	       -Wunused-variable or -Wunused for C, but	not for	C++. In	C this
	       declares	 variable  storage,  but  in  C++ this is not an error
	       since const variables take the place of "#define"s.

	   -Wunused-const-variable=2
	       This warning  level  also  warns	 for  unused  constant	static
	       variables   in  headers	(excluding  system  headers).	It  is
	       equivalent to the  short	 form  -Wunused-const-variable.	  This
	       level must be explicitly	requested in both C and	C++ because it
	       might be	hard to	clean up all headers included.

       -Wunused-value
	   Warn	 whenever a statement computes a result	that is	explicitly not
	   used. To suppress  this  warning  cast  the	unused	expression  to
	   "void". This	includes an expression-statement or the	left-hand side
	   of  a  comma	expression that	contains no side effects. For example,
	   an  expression  such	 as   "x[i,j]"	 causes	  a   warning,	 while
	   "x[(void)i,j]" does not.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wunused
	   All the above -Wunused options combined, except those documented as
	   needing to be specified explicitly.

	   In  order  to get a warning about an	unused function	parameter, you
	   must	either specify	-Wextra	 -Wunused  (note  that	-Wall  implies
	   -Wunused),	or   separately	  specify   -Wunused-parameter	and/or
	   -Wunused-but-set-parameter.

	   -Wunused  enables  only   -Wunused-const-variable=1	 rather	  than
	   -Wunused-const-variable, and	only for C, not	C++.

       -Wuse-after-free	(C, Objective-C, C++ and Objective-C++ only)
       -Wuse-after-free=n
	   Warn	 about	uses of	pointers to dynamically	allocated objects that
	   have	been rendered  indeterminate  by  a  call  to  a  deallocation
	   function.   The  warning  is	enabled	at all optimization levels but
	   may yield different results with optimization than without.

	   -Wuse-after-free=1
	       At level	1 the warning attempts to diagnose only	 unconditional
	       uses of pointers	made indeterminate by a	deallocation call or a
	       successful  call	to "realloc", regardless of whether or not the
	       call resulted  in  an  actual  reallocation  of	memory.	  This
	       includes	 double-"free" calls as	well as	uses in	arithmetic and
	       relational   expressions.    Although   undefined,   uses    of
	       indeterminate  pointers in equality (or inequality) expressions
	       are not diagnosed at this level.

	   -Wuse-after-free=2
	       At level	2, in addition to unconditional	uses, the warning also
	       diagnoses conditional uses of pointers made indeterminate by  a
	       deallocation  call.   As	 at  level  2,	uses  in  equality (or
	       inequality) expressions are not diagnosed.   For	 example,  the
	       second call to "free" in	the following function is diagnosed at
	       this level:

		       struct A	{ int refcount;	void *data; };

		       void release (struct A *p)
		       {
			 int refcount =	--p->refcount;
			 free (p);
			 if (refcount == 0)
			   free	(p->data);   //	warning: p may be used after free
		       }

	   -Wuse-after-free=3
	       At  level  3,  the warning also diagnoses uses of indeterminate
	       pointers	in equality expressions.  All  uses  of	 indeterminate
	       pointers	 are  undefined	 but  equality	tests sometimes	appear
	       after calls to "realloc"	as an attempt to determine whether the
	       call resulted in	relocating the object to a different  address.
	       They  are  diagnosed  at	 a  separate  level  to	 aid gradually
	       transitioning legacy code to safe alternatives.	 For  example,
	       the  equality  test  in the function below is diagnosed at this
	       level:

		       void adjust_pointers (int**, int);

		       void grow (int **p, int n)
		       {
			 int **q = (int**)realloc (p, n	*= 2);
			 if (q == p)
			   return;
			 adjust_pointers ((int**)q, n);
		       }

	       To  avoid  the  warning	at  this  level,  store	 offsets  into
	       allocated  memory  instead of pointers.	This approach obviates
	       needing to adjust the stored pointers after reallocation.

	   -Wuse-after-free=2 is included in -Wall.

       -Wuseless-cast (C, Objective-C, C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	when an	expression is cast to its own type.  This warning does
	   not occur when a class object is converted to a non-reference  type
	   as that is a	way to create a	temporary:

		   struct S { };
		   void	g (S&&);
		   void	f (S&& arg)
		   {
		     g (S(arg)); // make arg prvalue so	that it	can bind to S&&
		   }

       -Wuninitialized
	   Warn	 if  an	object with automatic or allocated storage duration is
	   used	without	having been initialized.  In C++, also warn if a  non-
	   static  reference  or  non-static "const" member appears in a class
	   without constructors.

	   In addition,	passing	a pointer (or  in  C++,	 a  reference)	to  an
	   uninitialized  object to a "const"-qualified	argument of a built-in
	   function known to  read  the	 object	 is  also  diagnosed  by  this
	   warning.  (-Wmaybe-uninitialized is issued for ordinary functions.)

	   If you want to warn about code that uses the	uninitialized value of
	   the variable	in its own initializer,	use the	-Winit-self option.

	   These  warnings  occur  for	individual  uninitialized  elements of
	   structure, union or array variables as well as for  variables  that
	   are	uninitialized  as a whole.  They do not	occur for variables or
	   elements declared "volatile".  Because  these  warnings  depend  on
	   optimization,  the  exact variables or elements for which there are
	   warnings depend on the precise optimization options and version  of
	   GCC used.

	   Note	 that  there  may  be no warning about a variable that is used
	   only	to compute a value that	itself is  never  used,	 because  such
	   computations	 may  be  deleted  by  data  flow  analysis before the
	   warnings are	printed.

	   In C++, this	warning	also warns about using	uninitialized  objects
	   in  member-initializer-lists.   For	example,  GCC  warns about "b"
	   being uninitialized in the following	snippet:

		   struct A {
		     int a;
		     int b;
		     A() : a(b)	{ }
		   };

       -Wno-invalid-memory-model
	   This	option controls	warnings for invocations of __atomic Builtins,
	   __sync Builtins, and	the C11	atomic generic functions with a	memory
	   consistency argument	that is	either invalid for  the	 operation  or
	   outside the range of	values of the "memory_order" enumeration.  For
	   example,  since  the	"__atomic_store" and "__atomic_store_n"	built-
	   ins are only	defined	for the	 relaxed,  release,  and  sequentially
	   consistent memory orders the	following code is diagnosed:

		   void	store (int *i)
		   {
		     __atomic_store_n (i, 0, memory_order_consume);
		   }

	   -Winvalid-memory-model is enabled by	default.

       -Wmaybe-uninitialized
	   For	an  object  with  automatic  or	allocated storage duration, if
	   there exists	a path from the	function entry to a use	of the	object
	   that	is initialized,	but there exist	some other paths for which the
	   object  is  not  initialized,  the  compiler	 emits a warning if it
	   cannot prove	the uninitialized paths	are not	executed at run	time.

	   In addition,	passing	a pointer (or  in  C++,	 a  reference)	to  an
	   uninitialized  object  to  a	"const"-qualified function argument is
	   also	diagnosed by this warning.   (-Wuninitialized  is  issued  for
	   built-in  functions	known  to  read	 the  object.)	Annotating the
	   function with attribute "access (none)" indicates that the argument
	   isn't used to access	the object and avoids the warning.

	   These warnings are only possible in optimizing compilation, because
	   otherwise GCC does not keep track of	the state of variables.

	   These warnings are made optional because GCC	may  not  be  able  to
	   determine when the code is correct in spite of appearing to have an
	   error.  Here	is one example of how this can happen:

		   {
		     int x;
		     switch (y)
		       {
		       case 1: x = 1;
			 break;
		       case 2: x = 4;
			 break;
		       case 3: x = 5;
		       }
		     foo (x);
		   }

	   If  the  value  of  "y"  is	always	1,  2 or 3, then "x" is	always
	   initialized,	but GCC	doesn't	know this. To  suppress	 the  warning,
	   you need to provide a default case with assert(0) or	similar	code.

	   This	option also warns when a non-volatile automatic	variable might
	   be  changed	by  a  call  to	"longjmp".  The	compiler sees only the
	   calls to "setjmp".  It cannot know where "longjmp" will be  called;
	   in  fact,  a	signal handler could call it at	any point in the code.
	   As a	result,	you may	get a warning even when	there is  in  fact  no
	   problem  because  "longjmp"	cannot	in fact	be called at the place
	   that	would cause a problem.

	   Some	spurious warnings can  be  avoided  if	you  declare  all  the
	   functions you use that never	return as "noreturn".

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall or -Wextra.

       -Wunknown-pragmas
	   Warn	 when  a  "#pragma"  directive	is  encountered	 that  is  not
	   understood by GCC.  If this command-line option is  used,  warnings
	   are	even  issued for unknown pragmas in system header files.  This
	   is not the case if the warnings  are	 only  enabled	by  the	 -Wall
	   command-line	option.

       -Wno-pragmas
	   Do not warn about misuses of	pragmas, such as incorrect parameters,
	   invalid   syntax,   or   conflicts	between	  pragmas.   See  also
	   -Wunknown-pragmas.

       -Wno-prio-ctor-dtor
	   Do not warn if a priority from 0 to 100 is used for constructor  or
	   destructor.	The use	of constructor and destructor attributes allow
	   you	to  assign a priority to the constructor/destructor to control
	   its order of	execution before "main"	is called or after it returns.
	   The priority	values must  be	 greater  than	100  as	 the  compiler
	   reserves priority values between 0--100 for the implementation.

       -Wstrict-aliasing
	   This	 option	 is  only active when -fstrict-aliasing	is active.  It
	   warns about code that might break the strict	 aliasing  rules  that
	   the compiler	is using for optimization.  The	warning	does not catch
	   all	cases, but does	attempt	to catch the more common pitfalls.  It
	   is included in -Wall.  It is	equivalent to -Wstrict-aliasing=3

       -Wstrict-aliasing=n
	   This	option is only active when -fstrict-aliasing  is  active.   It
	   warns  about	 code  that might break	the strict aliasing rules that
	   the compiler	is using for optimization.  Higher  levels  correspond
	   to  higher  accuracy	 (fewer	 false positives).  Higher levels also
	   correspond  to  more	 effort,  similar  to  the   way   -O	works.
	   -Wstrict-aliasing is	equivalent to -Wstrict-aliasing=3.

	   Level  1:  Most aggressive, quick, least accurate.  Possibly	useful
	   when	higher levels do not warn but -fstrict-aliasing	 still	breaks
	   the code, as	it has very few	false negatives.  However, it has many
	   false   positives.	Warns  for  all	 pointer  conversions  between
	   possibly incompatible types,	even if	never dereferenced.   Runs  in
	   the front end only.

	   Level  2:  Aggressive, quick, not too precise.  May still have many
	   false positives (not	as many	as level  1  though),  and  few	 false
	   negatives  (but  possibly  more  than level 1).  Unlike level 1, it
	   only	warns when an address is taken.	 Warns about incomplete	types.
	   Runs	in the front end only.

	   Level 3 (default for	-Wstrict-aliasing): Should have	very few false
	   positives and few false negatives.  Slightly	slower than  levels  1
	   or  2  when	optimization  is  enabled.   Takes  care of the	common
	   pun+dereference pattern in the front	end: "*(int*)&some_float".  If
	   optimization	is enabled, it also runs in the	 back  end,  where  it
	   deals  with multiple	statement cases	using flow-sensitive points-to
	   information.	  Only	 warns	 when	the   converted	  pointer   is
	   dereferenced.  Does not warn	about incomplete types.

       -Wstrict-overflow
       -Wstrict-overflow=n
	   This	 option	 is only active	when signed overflow is	undefined.  It
	   warns about	cases  where  the  compiler  optimizes	based  on  the
	   assumption  that signed overflow does not occur.  Note that it does
	   not warn about all cases where the code  might  overflow:  it  only
	   warns  about	cases where the	compiler implements some optimization.
	   Thus	this warning depends on	the optimization level.

	   An optimization that	assumes	that signed overflow does not occur is
	   perfectly safe if the values	of the	variables  involved  are  such
	   that	 overflow  never does, in fact,	occur.	Therefore this warning
	   can easily give a false positive: a warning about code that is  not
	   actually  a	problem.   To  help focus on important issues, several
	   warning levels are defined.	No warnings are	issued for the use  of
	   undefined  signed  overflow	when  estimating how many iterations a
	   loop	requires, in particular	when determining whether a  loop  will
	   be executed at all.

	   -Wstrict-overflow=1
	       Warn  about cases that are both questionable and	easy to	avoid.
	       For example the compiler	simplifies "x +	1 >  x"	 to  1.	  This
	       level  of  -Wstrict-overflow is enabled by -Wall; higher	levels
	       are not,	and must be explicitly requested.

	   -Wstrict-overflow=2
	       Also warn about other cases where a comparison is simplified to
	       a constant.  For	example: "abs (x) >= 0".   This	 can  only  be
	       simplified  when	 signed	integer	overflow is undefined, because
	       "abs (INT_MIN)" overflows to  "INT_MIN",	 which	is  less  than
	       zero.   -Wstrict-overflow  (with	 no  level)  is	 the  same  as
	       -Wstrict-overflow=2.

	   -Wstrict-overflow=3
	       Also warn about other cases where a comparison  is  simplified.
	       For example: "x + 1 > 1"	is simplified to "x > 0".

	   -Wstrict-overflow=4
	       Also  warn about	other simplifications not covered by the above
	       cases.  For example: "(x	* 10) /	5" is simplified to "x * 2".

	   -Wstrict-overflow=5
	       Also warn about cases where the compiler	reduces	the  magnitude
	       of  a constant involved in a comparison.	 For example: "x + 2 >
	       y" is simplified	to "x +	1 >= y".  This is reported only	at the
	       highest warning level because this  simplification  applies  to
	       many  comparisons,  so  this  warning  level gives a very large
	       number of false positives.

       -Wstring-compare
	   Warn	for calls to "strcmp" and "strncmp" whose result is determined
	   to be either	zero or	non-zero in tests for such equality  owing  to
	   the length of one argument being greater than the size of the array
	   the	other  argument	 is  stored  in	 (or  the bound	in the case of
	   "strncmp").	Such calls could be mistakes.  For example,  the  call
	   to  "strcmp"	 below	is diagnosed because its result	is necessarily
	   non-zero irrespective of the	contents of the	array "a".

		   extern char a[4];
		   void	f (char	*d)
		   {
		     strcpy (d,	"string");
		     ...
		     if	(0 == strcmp (a, d))   // cannot be true
		       puts ("a	and d are the same");
		   }

	   -Wstring-compare is enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wno-stringop-overflow
       -Wstringop-overflow
       -Wstringop-overflow=type
	   Warn	for calls to string manipulation functions  such  as  "memcpy"
	   and	"strcpy"  that	are  determined	 to  overflow  the destination
	   buffer.  The	optional argument is one  greater  than	 the  type  of
	   Object  Size	 Checking  to  perform	to  determine  the size	of the
	   destination.	 The argument is meaningful only  for  functions  that
	   operate  on	character arrays but not for raw memory	functions like
	   "memcpy" which always make use of Object Size type-0.   The	option
	   also	 warns	for calls that specify a size in excess	of the largest
	   possible object or at  most	"SIZE_MAX  /  2"  bytes.   The	option
	   produces  the best results with optimization	enabled	but can	detect
	   a small subset of simple buffer overflows even without optimization
	   in calls to the GCC built-in	functions like "__builtin_memcpy" that
	   correspond to the standard functions.   In  any  case,  the	option
	   warns  about	 just  a  subset  of  buffer overflows detected	by the
	   corresponding overflow checking built-ins.  For example, the	option
	   issues a warning for	the "strcpy" call below	because	it  copies  at
	   least  5  characters	 (the  string "blue" including the terminating
	   NUL)	into the buffer	of size	4.

		   enum	Color {	blue, purple, yellow };
		   const char* f (enum Color clr)
		   {
		     static char buf [4];
		     const char	*str;
		     switch (clr)
		       {
			 case blue: str	= "blue"; break;
			 case purple: str = "purple"; break;
			 case yellow: str = "yellow"; break;
		       }

		     return strcpy (buf, str);	 // warning here
		   }

	   Option -Wstringop-overflow=2	is enabled by default.

	   -Wstringop-overflow
	   -Wstringop-overflow=1
	       The -Wstringop-overflow=1 option	 uses  type-zero  Object  Size
	       Checking	 to  determine	the  sizes of destination objects.  At
	       this setting the	option does not	warn for writes	past  the  end
	       of subobjects of	larger objects accessed	by pointers unless the
	       size  of	 the  largest  surrounding  object is known.  When the
	       destination may be one of several objects it is assumed	to  be
	       the  largest  one of them.  On Linux systems, when optimization
	       is enabled at this setting the option warns for the  same  code
	       as  when	 the  "_FORTIFY_SOURCE"	macro is defined to a non-zero
	       value.

	   -Wstringop-overflow=2
	       The -Wstringop-overflow=2  option  uses	type-one  Object  Size
	       Checking	 to  determine	the  sizes of destination objects.  At
	       this setting the	option warns about overflows when  writing  to
	       members	of  the	 largest  complete objects whose exact size is
	       known.  However,	it does	not warn for excessive writes  to  the
	       same  members  of  unknown objects referenced by	pointers since
	       they  may  point	 to  arrays  containing	 unknown  numbers   of
	       elements.  This is the default setting of the option.

	   -Wstringop-overflow=3
	       The  -Wstringop-overflow=3  option  uses	 type-two  Object Size
	       Checking	to determine the sizes	of  destination	 objects.   At
	       this  setting  the  option warns	about overflowing the smallest
	       object or data member.  This is the most	restrictive setting of
	       the option that may result in warnings for safe code.

	   -Wstringop-overflow=4
	       The -Wstringop-overflow=4 option	uses  type-three  Object  Size
	       Checking	 to  determine	the  sizes of destination objects.  At
	       this setting  the  option  warns	 about	overflowing  any  data
	       members,	 and when the destination is one of several objects it
	       uses the	size of	the largest of them to decide whether to issue
	       a warning.  Similarly to	-Wstringop-overflow=3 this setting  of
	       the option may result in	warnings for benign code.

       -Wno-stringop-overread
	   Warn	 for  calls to string manipulation functions such as "memchr",
	   or "strcpy" that are	determined to read past	the end	of the	source
	   sequence.

	   Option -Wstringop-overread is enabled by default.

       -Wno-stringop-truncation
	   Do not warn for calls to bounded string manipulation	functions such
	   as "strncat", "strncpy", and	"stpncpy" that may either truncate the
	   copied string or leave the destination unchanged.

	   In  the  following example, the call	to "strncat" specifies a bound
	   that	is less	than the length	of the source string.	As  a  result,
	   the	copy  of  the  source  will  be	 truncated  and	so the call is
	   diagnosed.  To avoid	the warning use	"bufsize - strlen (buf)	-  1)"
	   as the bound.

		   void	append (char *buf, size_t bufsize)
		   {
		     strncat (buf, ".txt", 3);
		   }

	   As  another	example,  the  following  call to "strncpy" results in
	   copying to "d" just the characters preceding	the  terminating  NUL,
	   without  appending  the  NUL	 to  the  end.	Assuming the result of
	   "strncpy" is	 necessarily  a	 NUL-terminated	 string	 is  a	common
	   mistake,  and  so the call is diagnosed.  To	avoid the warning when
	   the result is not expected  to  be  NUL-terminated,	call  "memcpy"
	   instead.

		   void	copy (char *d, const char *s)
		   {
		     strncpy (d, s, strlen (s));
		   }

	   In  the following example, the call to "strncpy" specifies the size
	   of the destination buffer as	the  bound.   If  the  length  of  the
	   source  string  is equal to or greater than this size the result of
	   the copy will not be	NUL-terminated.	 Therefore, the	call  is  also
	   diagnosed.	To  avoid the warning, specify "sizeof buf - 1"	as the
	   bound and set the last element of the buffer	to "NUL".

		   void	copy (const char *s)
		   {
		     char buf[80];
		     strncpy (buf, s, sizeof buf);
		     ...
		   }

	   In situations where a  character  array  is	intended  to  store  a
	   sequence  of	 bytes	with no	terminating "NUL" such an array	may be
	   annotated with attribute "nonstring"	to avoid this  warning.	  Such
	   arrays,  however,  are  not	suitable  arguments  to	functions that
	   expect "NUL"-terminated strings.  To	help detect accidental misuses
	   of such arrays GCC issues warnings unless it	can prove that the use
	   is safe.

       -Wstrict-flex-arrays (C and C++ only)
	   Warn	about improper usages of flexible array	members	 according  to
	   the	level of the "strict_flex_array	(level)" attribute attached to
	   the	trailing  array	 field	of  a  structure  if  it's  available,
	   otherwise	according    to	   the	  level	   of	 the	option
	   -fstrict-flex-arrays=level.	  "-Wstrict-flex-arrays" is  effective
	   only	when level is greater than 0.

	   When	level=1, warnings are issued for a trailing array reference of
	   a  structure	 that have 2 or	more elements if the trailing array is
	   referenced as a flexible array member.

	   When	level=2, in  addition  to  level=1,  additional	 warnings  are
	   issued for a	trailing one-element array reference of	a structure if
	   the array is	referenced as a	flexible array member.

	   When	 level=3,  in  addition	 to  level=2,  additional warnings are
	   issued for a	trailing zero-length array reference of	a structure if
	   the array is	referenced as a	flexible array member.

	   This	option is  more	 effective  when  -ftree-vrp  is  active  (the
	   default  for	-O2 and	above) but some	warnings may be	diagnosed even
	   without optimization.

       -Wsuggest-attribute=[pure|const|noreturn|format|cold|malloc]returns_nonnull|
	   Warn	for cases where	adding an attribute  may  be  beneficial.  The
	   attributes currently	supported are listed below.

	   -Wsuggest-attribute=pure
	   -Wsuggest-attribute=const
	   -Wsuggest-attribute=noreturn
	   -Wmissing-noreturn
	   -Wsuggest-attribute=malloc
	   -Wsuggest-attribute=returns_nonnull
	   -Wno-suggest-attribute=returns_nonnull
	       Warn  about  functions  that might be candidates	for attributes
	       "pure", "const",	"noreturn", "malloc" or	"returns_nonnull". The
	       compiler	only warns for functions visible in other  compilation
	       units or	(in the	case of	"pure" and "const") if it cannot prove
	       that the	function returns normally. A function returns normally
	       if  it doesn't contain an infinite loop or return abnormally by
	       throwing, calling "abort" or trapping.  This analysis  requires
	       option  -fipa-pure-const, which is enabled by default at	-O and
	       higher.	Higher optimization levels improve the accuracy	of the
	       analysis.

	   -Wsuggest-attribute=format
	   -Wmissing-format-attribute
	       Warn about function  pointers  that  might  be  candidates  for
	       "format"	 attributes.  Note these are only possible candidates,
	       not absolute ones.  GCC guesses	that  function	pointers  with
	       "format"	   attributes	 that	 are   used   in   assignment,
	       initialization, parameter passing or return  statements	should
	       have  a corresponding "format" attribute	in the resulting type.
	       I.e. the	left-hand side of the  assignment  or  initialization,
	       the  type  of the parameter variable, or	the return type	of the
	       containing function respectively	should also  have  a  "format"
	       attribute to avoid the warning.

	       GCC  also  warns	 about	function  definitions  that  might  be
	       candidates for "format"	attributes.   Again,  these  are  only
	       possible	 candidates.   GCC  guesses  that  "format" attributes
	       might be	appropriate for	any function  that  calls  a  function
	       like  "vprintf"	or  "vscanf", but this might not always	be the
	       case, and some functions	 for  which  "format"  attributes  are
	       appropriate may not be detected.

	   -Wsuggest-attribute=cold
	       Warn  about  functions  that  might  be	candidates  for	"cold"
	       attribute.  This	is based on  static  detection	and  generally
	       only  warns  about  functions  which  always leads to a call to
	       another "cold" function such as	wrappers  of  C++  "throw"  or
	       fatal error reporting functions leading to "abort".

       -Walloc-size
	   Warn	 about	calls to allocation functions decorated	with attribute
	   "alloc_size"	that specify insufficient size for the target type  of
	   the	pointer	 the  result  is  assigned  to,	including those	to the
	   built-in  forms  of	the   functions	  "aligned_alloc",   "alloca",
	   "calloc", "malloc", and "realloc".

       -Walloc-zero
	   Warn	 about	calls to allocation functions decorated	with attribute
	   "alloc_size"	that specify zero bytes, including those to the	built-
	   in forms of	the  functions	"aligned_alloc",  "alloca",  "calloc",
	   "malloc",  and  "realloc".  Because the behavior of these functions
	   when	called with a zero size	differs	among implementations (and  in
	   the case of "realloc" has been deprecated) relying on it may	result
	   in subtle portability bugs and should be avoided.

       -Wcalloc-transposed-args
	   Warn	 about	calls to allocation functions decorated	with attribute
	   "alloc_size"	with two arguments, which use "sizeof" operator	as the
	   earlier size	argument and don't use it as the later size  argument.
	   This	 is a coding style warning.  The first argument	to "calloc" is
	   documented to be number of elements	in  array,  while  the	second
	   argument  is	size of	each element, so "calloc (n, sizeof (int))" is
	   preferred over "calloc (sizeof (int),  n)".	 If  "sizeof"  in  the
	   earlier argument and	not the	latter is intentional, the warning can
	   be  suppressed  by  using  "calloc  (sizeof	(struct	S) + 0,	n)" or
	   "calloc (1 *	sizeof (struct S), 4)" or using	"sizeof" in the	 later
	   argument as well.

       -Walloc-size-larger-than=byte-size
	   Warn	about calls to functions decorated with	attribute "alloc_size"
	   that	 attempt  to allocate objects larger than the specified	number
	   of bytes, or	where the result of the	size computation in an integer
	   type	with infinite precision	would exceed the value of  PTRDIFF_MAX
	   on  the target.  -Walloc-size-larger-than=PTRDIFF_MAX is enabled by
	   default.  Warnings controlled by the	option can be disabled	either
	   by	 specifying    byte-size   of	SIZE_MAX   or	more   or   by
	   -Wno-alloc-size-larger-than.

       -Wno-alloc-size-larger-than
	   Disable  -Walloc-size-larger-than=	warnings.    The   option   is
	   equivalent to -Walloc-size-larger-than=SIZE_MAX or larger.

       -Walloca
	   This	option warns on	all uses of "alloca" in	the source.

       -Walloca-larger-than=byte-size
	   This	 option	 warns	on  calls to "alloca" with an integer argument
	   whose value is either zero, or that is not bounded by a controlling
	   predicate that limits its value to  at  most	 byte-size.   It  also
	   warns  for  calls  to  "alloca"  where  the bound value is unknown.
	   Arguments of	non-integer types are  considered  unbounded  even  if
	   they	appear to be constrained to the	expected range.

	   For example,	a bounded case of "alloca" could be:

		   void	func (size_t n)
		   {
		     void *p;
		     if	(n <= 1000)
		       p = alloca (n);
		     else
		       p = malloc (n);
		     f (p);
		   }

	   In the above	example, passing "-Walloca-larger-than=1000" would not
	   issue a warning because the call to "alloca"	is known to be at most
	   1000	 bytes.	  However,  if "-Walloca-larger-than=500" were passed,
	   the compiler	would emit a warning.

	   Unbounded uses, on the other	hand, are uses	of  "alloca"  with  no
	   controlling	predicate  constraining	 its  integer  argument.   For
	   example:

		   void	func ()
		   {
		     void *p = alloca (n);
		     f (p);
		   }

	   If "-Walloca-larger-than=500" were passed, the above	would  trigger
	   a warning, but this time because of the lack	of bounds checking.

	   Note,  that	even  seemingly	correct	code involving signed integers
	   could cause a warning:

		   void	func (signed int n)
		   {
		     if	(n < 500)
		       {
			 p = alloca (n);
			 f (p);
		       }
		   }

	   In the above	example, n could be negative, causing  a  larger  than
	   expected argument to	be implicitly cast into	the "alloca" call.

	   This	option also warns when "alloca"	is used	in a loop.

	   -Walloca-larger-than=PTRDIFF_MAX  is	 enabled  by  default  but  is
	   usually only	effective  when	-ftree-vrp is active (default for  -O2
	   and above).

	   See also -Wvla-larger-than=byte-size.

       -Wno-alloca-larger-than
	   Disable  -Walloca-larger-than=  warnings.  The option is equivalent
	   to -Walloca-larger-than=SIZE_MAX or larger.

       -Warith-conversion
	   Do warn about implicit conversions from arithmetic operations  even
	   when	 conversion  of	 the  operands	to the same type cannot	change
	   their   values.    This   affects   warnings	  from	 -Wconversion,
	   -Wfloat-conversion, and -Wsign-conversion.

		   void	f (char	c, int i)
		   {
		     c = c + i;	// warns with B<-Wconversion>
		     c = c + 1;	// only	warns with B<-Warith-conversion>
		   }

       -Warray-bounds
       -Warray-bounds=n
	   Warn	 about	out of bounds subscripts or offsets into arrays.  This
	   warning is enabled by -Wall.	 It is more effective when  -ftree-vrp
	   is active (the default for -O2 and above) but a subset of instances
	   are issued even without optimization.

	   By  default,	the trailing array of a	structure will be treated as a
	   flexible array member by -Warray-bounds or -Warray-bounds=n	if  it
	   is  declared	 as  either  a	flexible array member per C99 standard
	   onwards ([]), a GCC zero-length array extension ([0]), or  an  one-
	   element  array  ([1]).  As  a  result,  out of bounds subscripts or
	   offsets into	zero-length  arrays  or	 one-element  arrays  are  not
	   warned by default.

	   You	   can	   add	   the	  option    -fstrict-flex-arrays    or
	   -fstrict-flex-arrays=level  to  control  how	 this	option	 treat
	   trailing array of a structure as a flexible array member:

	   when	level<=1, no change to the default behavior.

	   when	 level=2, additional warnings will be issued for out of	bounds
	   subscripts or offsets into one-element arrays;

	   when	level=3, in addition to	level=2, additional warnings  will  be
	   issued  for	out  of	 bounds	subscripts or offsets into zero-length
	   arrays.

	   -Warray-bounds=1
	       This is the default warning  level  of  -Warray-bounds  and  is
	       enabled by -Wall; higher	levels are not,	and must be explicitly
	       requested.

	   -Warray-bounds=2
	       This warning level also warns about the intermediate results of
	       pointer	arithmetic  that  may yield out	of bounds values. This
	       warning level may give a	larger number of false	positives  and
	       is deactivated by default.

       -Warray-compare
	   Warn	about equality and relational comparisons between two operands
	   of  array  type.   This  comparison	was  deprecated	in C++20.  For
	   example:

		   int arr1[5];
		   int arr2[5];
		   bool	same = arr1 == arr2;

	   -Warray-compare is enabled by -Wall.

       -Warray-parameter
       -Warray-parameter=n
	   Warn	about redeclarations  of  functions  involving	parameters  of
	   array  or  pointer types of inconsistent kinds or forms, and	enable
	   the detection of  out-of-bounds  accesses  to  such	parameters  by
	   warnings such as -Warray-bounds.

	   If  the  first  function  declaration  uses	the  array  form for a
	   parameter declaration, the bound specified in the array is  assumed
	   to  be  the	minimum	 number	of elements expected to	be provided in
	   calls to the	function and the maximum number	of  elements  accessed
	   by  it.   Failing  to  provide  arguments  of  sufficient  size  or
	   accessing more than the maximum number of elements may be diagnosed
	   by warnings such  as	 -Warray-bounds	 or  -Wstringop-overflow.   At
	   level  1,  the  warning  diagnoses  inconsistencies involving array
	   parameters declared using the "T[static N]" form.

	   For example,	the warning triggers for the second declaration	of "f"
	   because the first one with the keyword "static" specifies that  the
	   array  argument  must have at least four elements, while the	second
	   allows an array of any size to be passed to "f".

		   void	f (int[static 4]);
		   void	f (int[]);	     //	warning	(inconsistent array form)

		   void	g (void)
		   {
		     int *p = (int *)malloc (1 * sizeof	(int));
		     f (p);		     //	warning	(array too small)
		     ...
		   }

	   At level 2 the warning also triggers	for  redeclarations  involving
	   any other inconsistency in array or pointer argument	forms denoting
	   array   sizes.   Pointers  and  arrays  of  unspecified  bound  are
	   considered equivalent and do	not trigger a warning.

		   void	g (int*);
		   void	g (int[]);     // no warning
		   void	g (int[8]);    // warning (inconsistent	array bound)

	   -Warray-parameter=2 is  included  in	 -Wall.	  The  -Wvla-parameter
	   option  triggers  warnings  for  similar  inconsistencies involving
	   Variable Length Array arguments.

	   The short form of the option	 -Warray-parameter  is	equivalent  to
	   -Warray-parameter=2.	  The  negative	 form  -Wno-array-parameter is
	   equivalent to -Warray-parameter=0.

       -Wattribute-alias=n
       -Wno-attribute-alias
	   Warn	about declarations using the "alias"  and  similar  attributes
	   whose target	is incompatible	with the type of the alias.

	   -Wattribute-alias=1
	       The  default  warning  level  of	 the  -Wattribute-alias	option
	       diagnoses incompatibilities  between  the  type	of  the	 alias
	       declaration and that of its target.  Such incompatibilities are
	       typically indicative of bugs.

	   -Wattribute-alias=2
	       At  this	level -Wattribute-alias	also diagnoses cases where the
	       attributes of the alias declaration are more  restrictive  than
	       the  attributes	applied	 to  its target.  These	mismatches can
	       potentially result in  incorrect	 code  generation.   In	 other
	       cases they may be benign	and could be resolved simply by	adding
	       the  missing  attribute to the target.  For comparison, see the
	       -Wmissing-attributes option, which  controls  diagnostics  when
	       the  alias  declaration	is  less  restrictive than the target,
	       rather than more	restrictive.

	       Attributes  considered  include	"alloc_align",	 "alloc_size",
	       "cold",	  "const",   "hot",   "leaf",	"malloc",   "nonnull",
	       "noreturn",   "nothrow",	  "pure",    "returns_nonnull",	   and
	       "returns_twice".

	   -Wattribute-alias  is  equivalent  to -Wattribute-alias=1.  This is
	   the	default.   You	can  disable  these   warnings	 with	either
	   -Wno-attribute-alias	or -Wattribute-alias=0.

       -Wbidi-chars=[none|unpaired|any|ucn]
	   Warn	  about	  possibly   misleading	 UTF-8	bidirectional  control
	   characters in comments, string literals, character  constants,  and
	   identifiers.	  Such	characters  can	 change	 left-to-right writing
	   direction into right-to-left	(and  vice  versa),  which  can	 cause
	   confusion  between the logical order	and visual order.  This	may be
	   dangerous; for instance, it may seem	that a piece of	 code  is  not
	   commented out, whereas it in	fact is.

	   There are three levels of warning supported by GCC.	The default is
	   -Wbidi-chars=unpaired, which	warns about improperly terminated bidi
	   contexts.	  -Wbidi-chars=none    turns	the    warning	  off.
	   -Wbidi-chars=any warns  about  any  use  of	bidirectional  control
	   characters.

	   By default, this warning does not warn about	UCNs.  It is, however,
	   possible	to     turn	on     such    checking	   by	 using
	   -Wbidi-chars=unpaired,ucn	or    -Wbidi-chars=any,ucn.	 Using
	   -Wbidi-chars=ucn	is     valid,	 and	is    equivalent    to
	   -Wbidi-chars=unpaired,ucn,  if  no  previous	 -Wbidi-chars=any  was
	   specified.

       -Wbool-compare
	   Warn	 about	boolean	 expression  compared  with  an	 integer value
	   different  from  "true"/"false".   For  instance,   the   following
	   comparison is always	false:

		   int n = 5;
		   ...
		   if ((n > 1) == 2) { ... }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wbool-operation
	   Warn	 about suspicious operations on	expressions of a boolean type.
	   For instance, bitwise negation of a boolean is very likely a	bug in
	   the program.	 For C,	this warning also warns	about incrementing  or
	   decrementing	 a  boolean,  which  rarely  makes  sense.   (In  C++,
	   decrementing	a boolean is always invalid.  Incrementing  a  boolean
	   is invalid in C++17,	and deprecated otherwise.)

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wduplicated-branches
	   Warn	 when an if-else has identical branches.  This warning detects
	   cases like

		   if (p != NULL)
		     return 0;
		   else
		     return 0;

	   It doesn't warn when	both branches contain just a  null  statement.
	   This	warning	also warn for conditional operators:

		     int i = x ? *p : *p;

       -Wduplicated-cond
	   Warn	 about	duplicated  conditions	in  an	if-else-if chain.  For
	   instance, warn for the following code:

		   if (p->q != NULL) { ... }
		   else	if (p->q != NULL) { ...	}

       -Wframe-address
	   Warn	when the __builtin_frame_address  or  __builtin_return_address
	   is  called  with an argument	greater	than 0.	 Such calls may	return
	   indeterminate values	or crash the program.  The warning is included
	   in -Wall.

       -Wno-discarded-qualifiers (C and	Objective-C only)
	   Do not warn if type qualifiers on  pointers	are  being  discarded.
	   Typically,  the  compiler  warns  if	 a  "const char	*" variable is
	   passed to a function	that takes a "char *" parameter.  This	option
	   can be used to suppress such	a warning.

       -Wno-discarded-array-qualifiers (C and Objective-C only)
	   Do  not warn	if type	qualifiers on arrays which are pointer targets
	   are being discarded.	 Typically, the	compiler warns if a "const int
	   (*)[]" variable is passed to	a function that	takes  a  "int	(*)[]"
	   parameter.  This option can be used to suppress such	a warning.

       -Wno-incompatible-pointer-types (C and Objective-C only)
	   Do  not  warn when there is a conversion between pointers that have
	   incompatible	types.	This warning  is  for  cases  not  covered  by
	   -Wno-pointer-sign,  which  warns  for  pointer  argument passing or
	   assignment with different signedness.

	   By default, in C99 and later	dialects of C, GCC treats  this	 issue
	   as  an  error.   The	 error	can  be	 downgraded to a warning using
	   -fpermissive	(along with certain other errors), or for  this	 error
	   alone, with -Wno-error=incompatible-pointer-types.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wno-int-conversion (C and Objective-C only)
	   Do  not  warn  about	incompatible integer to	pointer	and pointer to
	   integer conversions.	 This warning is about	implicit  conversions;
	   for	explicit conversions the warnings -Wno-int-to-pointer-cast and
	   -Wno-pointer-to-int-cast may	be used.

	   By default, in C99 and later	dialects of C, GCC treats  this	 issue
	   as  an  error.   The	 error	can  be	 downgraded to a warning using
	   -fpermissive	(along with certain other errors), or for  this	 error
	   alone, with -Wno-error=int-conversion.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wzero-length-bounds
	   Warn	 about	accesses to elements of	zero-length array members that
	   might overlap other members of the same object.  Declaring interior
	   zero-length arrays is discouraged  because  accesses	 to  them  are
	   undefined.

	   For	example,  the first two	stores in function "bad" are diagnosed
	   because the array elements overlap the subsequent members  "b"  and
	   "c".	  The third store is diagnosed by -Warray-bounds because it is
	   beyond the bounds of	the enclosing object.

		   struct X { int a[0];	int b, c; };
		   struct X x;

		   void	bad (void)
		   {
		     x.a[0] = 0;   // -Wzero-length-bounds
		     x.a[1] = 1;   // -Wzero-length-bounds
		     x.a[2] = 2;   // -Warray-bounds
		   }

	   Option -Wzero-length-bounds is enabled by -Warray-bounds.

       -Wno-div-by-zero
	   Do not warn about compile-time integer division by zero.  Floating-
	   point division by zero  is  not  warned  about,  as	it  can	 be  a
	   legitimate way of obtaining infinities and NaNs.

       -Wsystem-headers
	   Print warning messages for constructs found in system header	files.
	   Warnings  from  system  headers  are	 normally  suppressed,	on the
	   assumption that they	usually	do  not	 indicate  real	 problems  and
	   would  only	make  the  compiler output harder to read.  Using this
	   command-line	option tells GCC to emit warnings from system  headers
	   as  if  they	occurred in user code.	However, note that using -Wall
	   in conjunction with this option does	not warn about unknown pragmas
	   in system headers---for that, -Wunknown-pragmas must	also be	used.

       -Wtautological-compare
	   Warn	if a self-comparison always evaluates to true or false.	  This
	   warning detects various mistakes such as:

		   int i = 1;
		   ...
		   if (i > i) {	... }

	   This	 warning  also	warns  about  bitwise  comparisons that	always
	   evaluate to true or false, for instance:

		   if ((a & 16)	== 10) { ... }

	   will	always be false.

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wtrampolines
	   Warn	about trampolines generated for	pointers to nested  functions.
	   A  trampoline  is  a	small piece of data or code that is created at
	   run time on the stack when the address  of  a  nested  function  is
	   taken,  and	is  used  to call the nested function indirectly.  For
	   some	targets, it is made up of  data	 only  and  thus  requires  no
	   special  treatment.	 But,  for most	targets, it is made up of code
	   and thus requires the stack to be made executable in	order for  the
	   program to work properly.

       -Wfloat-equal
	   Warn	if floating-point values are used in equality comparisons.

	   The	idea  behind  this is that sometimes it	is convenient (for the
	   programmer) to consider floating-point values as approximations  to
	   infinitely  precise	real numbers.  If you are doing	this, then you
	   need	to compute (by analyzing the code, or in some other  way)  the
	   maximum  or	likely	maximum	error that the computation introduces,
	   and allow for it when performing comparisons	 (and  when  producing
	   output, but that's a	different problem).  In	particular, instead of
	   testing  for	 equality,  you	 should	 check	to see whether the two
	   values have	ranges	that  overlap;	and  this  is  done  with  the
	   relational	operators,   so	  equality  comparisons	 are  probably
	   mistaken.

       -Wtraditional (C	and Objective-C	only)
	   Warn	 about	certain	 constructs   that   behave   differently   in
	   traditional	and ISO	C.  Also warn about ISO	C constructs that have
	   no traditional C equivalent,	 and/or	 problematic  constructs  that
	   should be avoided.

	   *   Macro  parameters  that	appear	within	string literals	in the
	       macro body.  In traditional C  macro  replacement  takes	 place
	       within string literals, but in ISO C it does not.

	   *   In  traditional	C, some	preprocessor directives	did not	exist.
	       Traditional preprocessors  only	considered  a  line  to	 be  a
	       directive if the	# appeared in column 1 on the line.  Therefore
	       -Wtraditional   warns   about  directives  that	traditional  C
	       understands but ignores because the # does not  appear  as  the
	       first  character	 on  the  line.	  It  also  suggests  you hide
	       directives like "#pragma" not understood	by  traditional	 C  by
	       indenting   them.   Some	 traditional  implementations  do  not
	       recognize  "#elif",  so	this  option  suggests	 avoiding   it
	       altogether.

	   *   A function-like macro that appears without arguments.

	   *   The unary plus operator.

	   *   The  U  integer	constant  suffix, or the F or L	floating-point
	       constant	suffixes.  (Traditional	C does support the L suffix on
	       integer constants.)  Note,  these  suffixes  appear  in	macros
	       defined	in the system headers of most modern systems, e.g. the
	       _MIN/_MAX macros	in "<limits.h>".  Use of these macros in  user
	       code  might  normally  lead to spurious warnings, however GCC's
	       integrated preprocessor has enough context to avoid warning  in
	       these cases.

	   *   A  function  declared external in one block and then used after
	       the end of the block.

	   *   A "switch" statement has	an operand of type "long".

	   *   A non-"static" function declaration  follows  a	"static"  one.
	       This construct is not accepted by some traditional C compilers.

	   *   The  ISO	 type  of an integer constant has a different width or
	       signedness from its traditional type.   This  warning  is  only
	       issued if the base of the constant is ten.  I.e.	hexadecimal or
	       octal  values,  which typically represent bit patterns, are not
	       warned about.

	   *   Usage of	ISO string concatenation is detected.

	   *   Initialization of automatic aggregates.

	   *   Identifier  conflicts  with  labels.   Traditional  C  lacks  a
	       separate	namespace for labels.

	   *   Initialization  of  unions.   If	 the  initializer is zero, the
	       warning is omitted.  This is done under the assumption that the
	       zero initializer	in  user  code	appears	 conditioned  on  e.g.
	       "__STDC__"  to avoid missing initializer	warnings and relies on
	       default initialization to zero in the traditional C case.

	   *   Conversions by prototypes between  fixed/floating-point	values
	       and vice	versa.	The absence of these prototypes	when compiling
	       with  traditional  C causes serious problems.  This is a	subset
	       of the possible conversion  warnings;  for  the	full  set  use
	       -Wtraditional-conversion.

	   *   Use   of	 ISO  C	 style	function  definitions.	 This  warning
	       intentionally is	 not  issued  for  prototype  declarations  or
	       variadic	 functions because these ISO C features	appear in your
	       code when using libiberty's traditional C compatibility macros,
	       "PARAMS"	and "VPARAMS".	This  warning  is  also	 bypassed  for
	       nested	functions  because  that  feature  is  already	a  GCC
	       extension and thus not relevant to traditional C	compatibility.

       -Wtraditional-conversion	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if a prototype causes a	type conversion	that is	different from
	   what	would happen  to  the  same  argument  in  the	absence	 of  a
	   prototype.	This  includes	conversions of fixed point to floating
	   and vice versa, and conversions changing the	width or signedness of
	   a  fixed-point  argument  except  when  the	same  as  the  default
	   promotion.

       -Wdeclaration-after-statement (C	and Objective-C	only)
	   Warn	 when  a  declaration  is  found after a statement in a	block.
	   This	construct, known from C++, was introduced with ISO C99 and  is
	   by default allowed in GCC.  It is not supported by ISO C90.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wshadow
	   Warn	 whenever a local variable or type declaration shadows another
	   variable, parameter,	type,  class  member  (in  C++),  or  instance
	   variable  (in  Objective-C)	or  whenever  a	 built-in  function is
	   shadowed.  Note that	in C++,	the compiler warns if a	local variable
	   shadows  an	explicit  typedef,   but   not	 if   it   shadows   a
	   struct/class/enum.	If  this  warning is enabled, it includes also
	   all	 instances   of	  local	  shadowing.	 This	 means	  that
	   -Wno-shadow=local and -Wno-shadow=compatible-local are ignored when
	   -Wshadow is used.  Same as -Wshadow=global.

       -Wno-shadow-ivar	(Objective-C only)
	   Do  not warn	whenever a local variable shadows an instance variable
	   in an Objective-C method.

       -Wshadow=global
	   Warn	for any	shadowing.  Same as -Wshadow.

       -Wshadow=local
	   Warn	when a	local  variable	 shadows  another  local  variable  or
	   parameter.

       -Wshadow=compatible-local
	   Warn	 when  a  local	 variable  shadows  another  local variable or
	   parameter whose type	is  compatible	with  that  of	the  shadowing
	   variable.   In  C++,	 type compatibility here means the type	of the
	   shadowing variable  can  be	converted  to  that  of	 the  shadowed
	   variable.	The   creation	 of   this   flag   (in	  addition  to
	   -Wshadow=local) is based on the idea	that  when  a  local  variable
	   shadows  another  one  of  incompatible  type,  it  is  most	likely
	   intentional,	not a bug or typo, as shown in the following example:

		   for (SomeIterator i = SomeObj.begin(); i != SomeObj.end(); ++i)
		   {
		     for (int i	= 0; i < N; ++i)
		     {
		       ...
		     }
		     ...
		   }

	   Since the two variable "i" in the example above  have  incompatible
	   types,  enabling  only  -Wshadow=compatible-local  does  not	emit a
	   warning.  Because their types are  incompatible,  if	 a  programmer
	   accidentally	 uses  one  in	place  of  the other, type checking is
	   expected to catch that and emit an error or warning.	 Use  of  this
	   flag	 instead  of  -Wshadow=local can possibly reduce the number of
	   warnings triggered by intentional shadowing.	 Note that  this  also
	   means  that	shadowing "const char *i" by "char *i" does not	emit a
	   warning.

	   This	warning	is also	enabled	by -Wshadow=local.

       -Wlarger-than=byte-size
	   Warn	whenever an object is defined whose  size  exceeds  byte-size.
	   -Wlarger-than=PTRDIFF_MAX   is   enabled   by   default.   Warnings
	   controlled by the option can	be disabled either by specifying byte-
	   size	of SIZE_MAX or more or by -Wno-larger-than.

	   Also	warn for calls	to  bounded  functions	such  as  "memchr"  or
	   "strnlen"  that  specify  a bound greater than the largest possible
	   object, which is PTRDIFF_MAX	bytes by default.  These warnings  can
	   only	be disabled by -Wno-larger-than.

       -Wno-larger-than
	   Disable  -Wlarger-than=  warnings.	The  option  is	 equivalent to
	   -Wlarger-than=SIZE_MAX or larger.

       -Wframe-larger-than=byte-size
	   Warn	if the size  of	 a  function  frame  exceeds  byte-size.   The
	   computation	done  to determine the stack frame size	is approximate
	   and not conservative.  The  actual  requirements  may  be  somewhat
	   greater  than  byte-size  even  if  you  do	not get	a warning.  In
	   addition, any space allocated via "alloca", variable-length arrays,
	   or  related	constructs  is	not  included  by  the	compiler  when
	   determining	  whether    or	   not	  to	issue	 a    warning.
	   -Wframe-larger-than=PTRDIFF_MAX is enabled  by  default.   Warnings
	   controlled by the option can	be disabled either by specifying byte-
	   size	of SIZE_MAX or more or by -Wno-frame-larger-than.

       -Wno-frame-larger-than
	   Disable -Wframe-larger-than=	warnings.  The option is equivalent to
	   -Wframe-larger-than=SIZE_MAX	or larger.

       -Wfree-nonheap-object
	   Warn	 when  attempting  to deallocate an object that	was either not
	   allocated on	the heap, or by	using a	pointer	that was not  returned
	   from	 a  prior  call	to the corresponding allocation	function.  For
	   example, because the	call to	"stpcpy"  returns  a  pointer  to  the
	   terminating	nul  character and not to the beginning	of the object,
	   the call to "free" below is diagnosed.

		   void	f (char	*p)
		   {
		     p = stpcpy	(p, "abc");
		     //	...
		     free (p);	 // warning
		   }

	   -Wfree-nonheap-object is included in	-Wall.

       -Wstack-usage=byte-size
	   Warn	if the stack usage of a	function might exceed byte-size.   The
	   computation done to determine the stack usage is conservative.  Any
	   space  allocated  via  "alloca", variable-length arrays, or related
	   constructs is included by the compiler when determining whether  or
	   not to issue	a warning.

	   The message is in keeping with the output of	-fstack-usage.

	   *   If  the	stack  usage is	fully static but exceeds the specified
	       amount, it's:

			 warning: stack	usage is 1120 bytes

	   *   If the stack usage is (partly) dynamic but bounded, it's:

			 warning: stack	usage might be 1648 bytes

	   *   If the stack usage is (partly) dynamic and not bounded, it's:

			 warning: stack	usage might be unbounded

	   -Wstack-usage=PTRDIFF_MAX  is   enabled   by	  default.    Warnings
	   controlled by the option can	be disabled either by specifying byte-
	   size	of SIZE_MAX or more or by -Wno-stack-usage.

       -Wno-stack-usage
	   Disable  -Wstack-usage=  warnings.	The  option  is	 equivalent to
	   -Wstack-usage=SIZE_MAX or larger.

       -Wunsafe-loop-optimizations
	   Warn	if the loop cannot be optimized	because	 the  compiler	cannot
	   assume   anything   on  the	bounds	of  the	 loop  indices.	  With
	   -funsafe-loop-optimizations	warn  if  the  compiler	  makes	  such
	   assumptions.

       -Wno-pedantic-ms-format (MinGW targets only)
	   When	 used  in  combination with -Wformat and -pedantic without GNU
	   extensions,	this  option  disables	the  warnings  about   non-ISO
	   "printf"  /	"scanf"	 format	width specifiers "I32",	"I64", and "I"
	   used	on Windows targets, which depend on the	MS runtime.

       -Wpointer-arith
	   Warn	about anything that depends on the "size of" a	function  type
	   or  of  "void".   GNU  C  assigns  these  types  a  size  of	1, for
	   convenience in calculations with "void *" pointers and pointers  to
	   functions.  In C++, warn also when an arithmetic operation involves
	   "NULL".  This warning is also enabled by -Wpedantic.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wno-pointer-compare
	   Do  not  warn  if  a	 pointer  is  compared	with  a	zero character
	   constant.  This usually means that the  pointer  was	 meant	to  be
	   dereferenced.  For example:

		   const char *p = foo ();
		   if (p == '\0')
		     return 42;

	   Note	that the code above is invalid in C++11.

	   This	warning	is enabled by default.

       -Wno-tsan
	   Disable warnings about unsupported features in ThreadSanitizer.

	   ThreadSanitizer does	not support "std::atomic_thread_fence" and can
	   report false	positives.

       -Wtype-limits
	   Warn	 if  a	comparison  is	always true or always false due	to the
	   limited range of the	data  type,  but  do  not  warn	 for  constant
	   expressions.	 For example, warn if an unsigned variable is compared
	   against  zero  with	"<"  or	">=".  This warning is also enabled by
	   -Wextra.

       -Wabsolute-value	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	for calls to standard  functions  that	compute	 the  absolute
	   value  of  an argument when a more appropriate standard function is
	   available.  For example, calling "abs(3.14)"	triggers  the  warning
	   because  the	 appropriate  function to call to compute the absolute
	   value of a double argument is "fabs".   The	option	also  triggers
	   warnings  when  the	argument  in  a	call to	such a function	has an
	   unsigned type.  This	warning	can be	suppressed  with  an  explicit
	   type	cast and it is also enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wcomment
       -Wcomments
	   Warn	 whenever a comment-start sequence /* appears in a /* comment,
	   or whenever a backslash-newline appears  in	a  //  comment.	  This
	   warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wtrigraphs
	   Warn	if any trigraphs are encountered that might change the meaning
	   of  the  program.   Trigraphs within	comments are not warned	about,
	   except those	that would form	escaped	newlines.

	   This	option is implied by -Wall.   If  -Wall	 is  not  given,  this
	   option  is  still  enabled  unless  trigraphs  are enabled.	To get
	   trigraph conversion without	warnings,  but	get  the  other	 -Wall
	   warnings, use -trigraphs -Wall -Wno-trigraphs.

       -Wundef
	   Warn	if an undefined	identifier is evaluated	in an "#if" directive.
	   Such	identifiers are	replaced with zero.

       -Wexpansion-to-defined
	   Warn	 whenever  defined  is encountered in the expansion of a macro
	   (including  the  case  where	 the  macro  is	 expanded  by  an  #if
	   directive).	 Such  usage  is  not  portable.  This warning is also
	   enabled by -Wpedantic and -Wextra.

       -Wunused-macros
	   Warn	about macros defined in	the main  file	that  are  unused.   A
	   macro  is  used  if it is expanded or tested	for existence at least
	   once.  The preprocessor also	warns if the macro has not  been  used
	   at the time it is redefined or undefined.

	   Built-in  macros,  macros  defined  on the command line, and	macros
	   defined in include files are	not warned about.

	   Note: If a macro  is	 actually  used,  but  only  used  in  skipped
	   conditional blocks, then the	preprocessor reports it	as unused.  To
	   avoid  the  warning	in such	a case,	you might improve the scope of
	   the macro's definition by, for example, moving it  into  the	 first
	   skipped  block.   Alternatively, you	could provide a	dummy use with
	   something like:

		   #if defined the_macro_causing_the_warning
		   #endif

       -Wno-endif-labels
	   Do not warn whenever	an "#else" or  an  "#endif"  are  followed  by
	   text.   This	 sometimes  happens in older programs with code	of the
	   form

		   #if FOO
		   ...
		   #else FOO
		   ...
		   #endif FOO

	   The second and third	"FOO" should be	in comments.  This warning  is
	   on by default.

       -Wbad-function-cast (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	 when  a  function  call  is cast to a non-matching type.  For
	   example, warn if a call to a	function returning an integer type  is
	   cast	to a pointer type.

       -Wc90-c99-compat	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	about features not present in ISO C90, but present in ISO C99.
	   For instance, warn about use	of variable length arrays, "long long"
	   type,  "bool" type, compound	literals, designated initializers, and
	   so on.  This	option is independent of the standards mode.  Warnings
	   are disabled	in the expression that follows "__extension__".

       -Wc99-c11-compat	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	about features not present in ISO C99, but present in ISO C11.
	   For instance, warn about use	of anonymous  structures  and  unions,
	   "_Atomic"  type qualifier, "_Thread_local" storage-class specifier,
	   "_Alignas" specifier, "Alignof" operator, "_Generic"	 keyword,  and
	   so on.  This	option is independent of the standards mode.  Warnings
	   are disabled	in the expression that follows "__extension__".

       -Wc11-c23-compat	(C and Objective-C only)
       -Wc11-c2x-compat	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	about features not present in ISO C11, but present in ISO C23.
	   For	instance,  warn	about omitting the string in "_Static_assert",
	   use of [[]] syntax for attributes, use  of  decimal	floating-point
	   types,  and	so  on.	  This	option is independent of the standards
	   mode.   Warnings  are  disabled  in	the  expression	 that  follows
	   "__extension__".  The name -Wc11-c2x-compat is deprecated.

	   When	 not  compiling	 in  C23  mode,	these warnings are upgraded to
	   errors by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wc++-compat (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	about ISO C constructs that are	outside	of the	common	subset
	   of  ISO  C  and  ISO	C++, e.g. request for implicit conversion from
	   "void *" to a pointer to non-"void" type.

       -Wc++11-compat (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	about C++ constructs whose meaning  differs  between  ISO  C++
	   1998	 and  ISO C++ 2011, e.g., identifiers in ISO C++ 1998 that are
	   keywords in ISO C++ 2011.  This warning turns on -Wnarrowing	and is
	   enabled by -Wall.

       -Wc++14-compat (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	about C++ constructs whose meaning  differs  between  ISO  C++
	   2011	and ISO	C++ 2014.  This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wc++17-compat (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	 about	C++  constructs	 whose meaning differs between ISO C++
	   2014	and ISO	C++ 2017.  This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wc++20-compat (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	about C++ constructs whose meaning  differs  between  ISO  C++
	   2017	and ISO	C++ 2020.  This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-c++11-extensions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not warn	about C++11 constructs in code being compiled using an
	   older  C++  standard.   Even	 without  this	option,	  some	 C++11
	   constructs will only	be diagnosed if	-Wpedantic is used.

       -Wno-c++14-extensions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not warn	about C++14 constructs in code being compiled using an
	   older  C++  standard.   Even	 without  this	option,	  some	 C++14
	   constructs will only	be diagnosed if	-Wpedantic is used.

       -Wno-c++17-extensions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not warn	about C++17 constructs in code being compiled using an
	   older  C++  standard.   Even	 without  this	option,	  some	 C++17
	   constructs will only	be diagnosed if	-Wpedantic is used.

       -Wno-c++20-extensions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not warn	about C++20 constructs in code being compiled using an
	   older  C++  standard.   Even	 without  this	option,	  some	 C++20
	   constructs will only	be diagnosed if	-Wpedantic is used.

       -Wno-c++23-extensions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not warn	about C++23 constructs in code being compiled using an
	   older  C++  standard.   Even	 without  this	option,	  some	 C++23
	   constructs will only	be diagnosed if	-Wpedantic is used.

       -Wno-c++26-extensions (C++ and Objective-C++ only)
	   Do  not warn	about C++26 constructs in code being compiled using an
	   older  C++  standard.   Even	 without  this	option,	  some	 C++26
	   constructs will only	be diagnosed if	-Wpedantic is used.

       -Wcast-qual
	   Warn	 whenever  a  pointer is cast so as to remove a	type qualifier
	   from	the target type.  For example, warn if a  "const  char	*"  is
	   cast	to an ordinary "char *".

	   Also	warn when making a cast	that introduces	a type qualifier in an
	   unsafe  way.	  For example, casting "char **" to "const char	**" is
	   unsafe, as in this example:

		     /*	p is char ** value.  */
		     const char	**q = (const char **) p;
		     /*	Assignment of readonly string to const char * is OK.  */
		     *q	= "string";
		     /*	Now char** pointer points to read-only memory.	*/
		     **p = 'b';

       -Wcast-align
	   Warn	whenever a pointer is cast such	that the required alignment of
	   the target is increased.  For example, warn if a "char *"  is  cast
	   to  an  "int	 *" on machines	where integers can only	be accessed at
	   two-	or four-byte boundaries.

       -Wcast-align=strict
	   Warn	whenever a pointer is cast such	that the required alignment of
	   the target is increased.  For example, warn if a "char *"  is  cast
	   to an "int *" regardless of the target machine.

       -Wcast-function-type
	   Warn	 when  a  function pointer is cast to an incompatible function
	   pointer.  In	a  cast	 involving  function  types  with  a  variable
	   argument list only the types	of initial arguments that are provided
	   are	considered.   Any  parameter of	pointer-type matches any other
	   pointer-type.   Any	benign	differences  in	 integral  types   are
	   ignored,  like  "int"  vs.  "long" on ILP32 targets.	 Likewise type
	   qualifiers are ignored.  The	function type  "void  (*)  (void)"  is
	   special  and	matches	everything, which can be used to suppress this
	   warning.  In	a cast involving pointer to member types this  warning
	   warns  whenever  the	 type  cast  is	changing the pointer to	member
	   type.  This warning is enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wcast-user-defined
	   Warn	when a cast to reference type does not involve a  user-defined
	   conversion that the programmer might	expect to be called.

		   struct A { operator const int&(); } a;
		   auto	r = (int&)a; //	warning

	   This	warning	is enabled by default.

       -Wwrite-strings
	   When	  compiling   C,   give	  string  constants  the  type	"const
	   char[length]" so that copying the address of	one into a non-"const"
	   "char *" pointer produces a warning.	 These warnings	help you  find
	   at  compile time code that can try to write into a string constant,
	   but only if you have	been  very  careful  about  using  "const"  in
	   declarations	 and  prototypes.   Otherwise,	it is just a nuisance.
	   This	is why we did not make -Wall request these warnings.

	   When	compiling C++,	warn  about  the  deprecated  conversion  from
	   string  literals  to	 "char *".  This warning is enabled by default
	   for C++ programs.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors  in	 C++11
	   mode	or later.

       -Wclobbered
	   Warn	 for  variables	that might be changed by "longjmp" or "vfork".
	   This	warning	is also	enabled	by -Wextra.

       -Wno-complain-wrong-lang
	   By default, language	front ends complain when a command-line	option
	   is valid, but not applicable	 to  that  front  end.	 This  may  be
	   disabled with -Wno-complain-wrong-lang, which is mostly useful when
	   invoking a single compiler driver for multiple source files written
	   in different	languages, for example:

		   $ g++ -fno-rtti a.cc	b.f90

	   The	driver	g++  invokes the C++ front end to compile a.cc and the
	   Fortran front end to	compile	b.f90.	The latter front end diagnoses
	   f951:  Warning:  command-line  option  '-fno-rtti'  is  valid   for
	   C++/D/ObjC++	 but  not  for	Fortran,  which	 may  be disabled with
	   -Wno-complain-wrong-lang.

       -Wcompare-distinct-pointer-types	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if pointers of distinct	types are  compared  without  a	 cast.
	   This	warning	is enabled by default.

       -Wconversion
	   Warn	for implicit conversions that may alter	a value. This includes
	   conversions	between	 real  and integer, like "abs (x)" when	"x" is
	   "double"; conversions between signed	and unsigned,  like  "unsigned
	   ui =	-1"; and conversions to	smaller	types, like "sqrtf (M_PI)". Do
	   not	warn  for  explicit  casts  like  "abs	((int)	x)"  and "ui =
	   (unsigned) -1", or if the value is not changed  by  the  conversion
	   like	in "abs	(2.0)".	 Warnings about	conversions between signed and
	   unsigned integers can be disabled by	using -Wno-sign-conversion.

	   For	C++,  also  warn  for  confusing overload resolution for user-
	   defined  conversions;  and  conversions  that  never	 use  a	  type
	   conversion  operator:  conversions to "void", the same type,	a base
	   class or a reference	to them. Warnings  about  conversions  between
	   signed  and unsigned	integers are disabled by default in C++	unless
	   -Wsign-conversion is	explicitly enabled.

	   Warnings about conversion from arithmetic on	a small	type  back  to
	   that	type are only given with -Warith-conversion.

       -Wdangling-else
	   Warn	about constructions where there	may be confusion to which "if"
	   statement  an  "else" branch	belongs.  Here is an example of	such a
	   case:

		   {
		     if	(a)
		       if (b)
			 foo ();
		     else
		       bar ();
		   }

	   In C/C++, every "else" branch belongs  to  the  innermost  possible
	   "if"	 statement,  which in this example is "if (b)".	 This is often
	   not what the	programmer  expected,  as  illustrated	in  the	 above
	   example  by	indentation  the  programmer chose.  When there	is the
	   potential for this confusion, GCC issues a warning when  this  flag
	   is specified.  To eliminate the warning, add	explicit braces	around
	   the	innermost  "if"	 statement  so	there is no way	the "else" can
	   belong to the enclosing "if".  The resulting	code looks like	this:

		   {
		     if	(a)
		       {
			 if (b)
			   foo ();
			 else
			   bar ();
		       }
		   }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wparentheses.

       -Wdangling-pointer
       -Wdangling-pointer=n
	   Warn	about uses of pointers (or C++	references)  to	 objects  with
	   automatic  storage  duration	 after their lifetime has ended.  This
	   includes  local  variables  declared	 in  nested  blocks,  compound
	   literals  and  other	 unnamed temporary objects.  In	addition, warn
	   about storing the address of	such objects in	escaped	pointers.  The
	   warning is  enabled	at  all	 optimization  levels  but  may	 yield
	   different results with optimization than without.

	   -Wdangling-pointer=1
	       At  level  1,  the warning diagnoses only unconditional uses of
	       dangling	pointers.

	   -Wdangling-pointer=2
	       At level	2, in addition to unconditional	uses the warning  also
	       diagnoses conditional uses of dangling pointers.

	   The	  short	   form	   -Wdangling-pointer	 is    equivalent   to
	   -Wdangling-pointer=2,     while	-Wno-dangling-pointer	   and
	   -Wdangling-pointer=0	  have	 the  same  effect  of	disabling  the
	   warnings.  -Wdangling-pointer=2 is included in -Wall.

	   This	example	triggers the warning at	level 1; the  address  of  the
	   unnamed  temporary  is  unconditionally  referenced	outside	of its
	   scope.

		   char	f (char	c1, char c2, char c3)
		   {
		     char *p;
		     {
		       p = (char[]) { c1, c2, c3 };
		     }
		     //	warning: using dangling	pointer	'p' to an unnamed temporary
		     return *p;
		   }

	   In the following function the store of the  address	of  the	 local
	   variable  "x"  in  the  escaped  pointer *p triggers	the warning at
	   level 1.

		   void	g (int **p)
		   {
		     int x = 7;
		     //	warning: storing the address of	local variable 'x' in '*p'
		     *p	= &x;
		   }

	   In this example, the	array a	is out of scope	when the pointer s  is
	   used.   Since  the  code  that sets "s" is conditional, the warning
	   triggers at level 2.

		   extern void frob (const char	*);
		   void	h (char	*s)
		   {
		     if	(!s)
		       {
			 char a[12] = "tmpname";
			 s = a;
		       }
		     //	warning: dangling pointer 's' to 'a' may be used
		     frob (s);
		   }

       -Wdate-time
	   Warn	when macros  "__TIME__",  "__DATE__"  or  "__TIMESTAMP__"  are
	   encountered	as  they might prevent bit-wise-identical reproducible
	   compilations.

       -Wempty-body
	   Warn	if an empty body occurs	in  an	"if",  "else"  or  "do	while"
	   statement.  This warning is also enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wno-endif-labels
	   Do not warn about stray tokens after	"#else"	and "#endif".

       -Wenum-compare
	   Warn	 about	a  comparison  between	values of different enumerated
	   types.   In	C++  enumerated	  type	 mismatches   in   conditional
	   expressions	are  also  diagnosed  and  the	warning	 is enabled by
	   default.  In	C this warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wenum-conversion
	   Warn	when a value of	enumerated type	is implicitly converted	 to  a
	   different  enumerated  type.	 This warning is enabled by -Wextra in
	   C.

       -Wenum-int-mismatch (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	about mismatches between an enumerated	type  and  an  integer
	   type	in declarations.  For example:

		   enum	E { l =	-1, z =	0, g = 1 };
		   int foo(void);
		   enum	E foo(void);

	   In  C,  an  enumerated  type	 is  compatible	 with "char", a	signed
	   integer type, or an unsigned	 integer  type.	  However,  since  the
	   choice   of	 the   underlying   type  of  an  enumerated  type  is
	   implementation-defined,  such  mismatches  may  cause   portability
	   issues.   In	C++, such mismatches are an error.  In C, this warning
	   is enabled by -Wall and -Wc++-compat.

       -Wjump-misses-init (C, Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if a "goto" statement or a "switch"  statement	jumps  forward
	   across  the	initialization	of  a variable,	or jumps backward to a
	   label after the variable has	been  initialized.   This  only	 warns
	   about  variables that are initialized when they are declared.  This
	   warning is only supported for C and Objective-C; in C++  this  sort
	   of branch is	an error in any	case.

	   -Wjump-misses-init is included in -Wc++-compat.  It can be disabled
	   with	the -Wno-jump-misses-init option.

       -Wsign-compare
	   Warn	 when  a  comparison  between signed and unsigned values could
	   produce an incorrect	result when the	signed value is	 converted  to
	   unsigned.  In C++, this warning is also enabled by -Wall.  In C, it
	   is also enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wsign-conversion
	   Warn	 for  implicit	conversions  that  may	change	the sign of an
	   integer value, like assigning a signed  integer  expression	to  an
	   unsigned  integer  variable.	An explicit cast silences the warning.
	   In C, this option is	enabled	also by	-Wconversion.

       -Wflex-array-member-not-at-end (C and C++ only)
	   Warn	when a structure containing a C99 flexible array member	as the
	   last	field is not at	the end	of another  structure.	 This  warning
	   warns e.g. about

		   struct flex	{ int length; char data[]; };
		   struct mid_flex { int m; struct flex	flex_data; int n; };

       -Wfloat-conversion
	   Warn	 for  implicit conversions that	reduce the precision of	a real
	   value.  This	includes conversions from real to  integer,  and  from
	   higher  precision real to lower precision real values.  This	option
	   is also enabled by -Wconversion.

       -Wno-scalar-storage-order
	   Do not warn	on  suspicious	constructs  involving  reverse	scalar
	   storage order.

       -Wsizeof-array-div
	   Warn	 about divisions of two	sizeof operators when the first	one is
	   applied to an array and the divisor does not	equal the size of  the
	   array  element.  In such a case, the	computation will not yield the
	   number of elements in the array, which  is  likely  what  the  user
	   intended.  This warning warns e.g. about

		   int fn ()
		   {
		     int arr[10];
		     return sizeof (arr) / sizeof (short);
		   }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wsizeof-pointer-div
	   Warn	for suspicious divisions of two	sizeof expressions that	divide
	   the	pointer	 size  by  the element size, which is the usual	way to
	   compute the array size but won't work out correctly with  pointers.
	   This	 warning  warns	e.g. about "sizeof (ptr) / sizeof (ptr[0])" if
	   "ptr" is not	an array, but a	pointer.  This warning is  enabled  by
	   -Wall.

       -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess
	   Warn	 for suspicious	length parameters to certain string and	memory
	   built-in functions if the argument  uses  "sizeof".	 This  warning
	   triggers  for example for "memset (ptr, 0, sizeof (ptr));" if "ptr"
	   is not an array, but	a pointer, and suggests	 a  possible  fix,  or
	   about      "memcpy	   (&foo,      ptr,	 sizeof	    (&foo));".
	   -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess also warns about calls to	bounded	string
	   copy	functions like "strncat" or  "strncpy"	that  specify  as  the
	   bound  a  "sizeof" expression of the	source array.  For example, in
	   the following function the call to "strncat"	specifies the size  of
	   the source string as	the bound.  That is almost certainly a mistake
	   and so the call is diagnosed.

		   void	make_file (const char *name)
		   {
		     char path[PATH_MAX];
		     strncpy (path, name, sizeof path -	1);
		     strncat (path, ".text", sizeof ".text");
		     ...
		   }

	   The -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess option is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-sizeof-array-argument
	   Do  not  warn  when the "sizeof" operator is	applied	to a parameter
	   that	is declared as	an  array  in  a  function  definition.	  This
	   warning is enabled by default for C and C++ programs.

       -Wmemset-elt-size
	   Warn	for suspicious calls to	the "memset" built-in function,	if the
	   first  argument  references	an  array, and the third argument is a
	   number equal	to the number of elements, but not equal to  the  size
	   of the array	in memory.  This indicates that	the user has omitted a
	   multiplication  by  the  element  size.  This warning is enabled by
	   -Wall.

       -Wmemset-transposed-args
	   Warn	for suspicious calls to	the "memset" built-in  function	 where
	   the	second	argument  is  not zero and the third argument is zero.
	   For example,	the call "memset (buf, sizeof buf,  0)"	 is  diagnosed
	   because  "memset  (buf,  0,	sizeof	buf)"  was meant instead.  The
	   diagnostic is only emitted if the third argument is a literal zero.
	   Otherwise, if it is an expression that is folded to zero, or	a cast
	   of zero to some type, it is far less	likely that the	arguments have
	   been	mistakenly transposed and no warning is	emitted.  This warning
	   is enabled by -Wall.

       -Waddress
	   Warn	about suspicious uses of address  expressions.	These  include
	   comparing  the  address  of	a function or a	declared object	to the
	   null	pointer	constant such as in

		   void	f (void);
		   void	g (void)
		   {
		     if	(!f)   // warning: expression evaluates	to false
		       abort ();
		   }

	   comparisons of a pointer to a string	literal, such as in

		   void	f (const char *x)
		   {
		     if	(x == "abc")   // warning: expression evaluates	to false
		       puts ("equal");
		   }

	   and tests of	the results of pointer	addition  or  subtraction  for
	   equality to null, such as in

		   void	f (const int *p, int i)
		   {
		     return p +	i == NULL;
		   }

	   Such	 uses  typically  indicate  a programmer error:	the address of
	   most	functions and  objects	necessarily  evaluates	to  true  (the
	   exception  are  weak	 symbols), so their use	in a conditional might
	   indicate missing parentheses	 in  a	function  call	or  a  missing
	   dereference	in an array expression.	 The subset of the warning for
	   object pointers can be suppressed by	casting	the pointer operand to
	   an integer type such	as  "intptr_t"	or  "uintptr_t".   Comparisons
	   against  string literals result in unspecified behavior and are not
	   portable, and suggest the intent was	to call	"strcmp".  The warning
	   is suppressed if the	suspicious expression is the result  of	 macro
	   expansion.  -Waddress warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-address-of-packed-member
	   Do not warn when the	address	of packed member of struct or union is
	   taken,  which  usually results in an	unaligned pointer value.  This
	   is enabled by default.

       -Wlogical-op
	   Warn	about suspicious uses of  logical  operators  in  expressions.
	   This	 includes using	logical	operators in contexts where a bit-wise
	   operator is likely to be expected.  Also warns when the operands of
	   a logical operator are the same:

		   extern int a;
		   if (a < 0 &&	a < 0) { ... }

       -Wlogical-not-parentheses
	   Warn	about logical not used on the left  hand  side	operand	 of  a
	   comparison.	 This  option  does  not  warn if the right operand is
	   considered to be a boolean expression.  Its purpose	is  to	detect
	   suspicious code like	the following:

		   int a;
		   ...
		   if (!a > 1) { ... }

	   It  is  possible  to	 suppress the warning by wrapping the LHS into
	   parentheses:

		   if ((!a) > 1) { ... }

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Waggregate-return
	   Warn	if any functions that return structures	or unions are  defined
	   or  called.	(In languages where you	can return an array, this also
	   elicits a warning.)

       -Wno-aggressive-loop-optimizations
	   Warn	if in a	loop with constant number of iterations	 the  compiler
	   detects  undefined behavior in some statement during	one or more of
	   the iterations.

       -Wno-attributes
	   Do not warn if an  unexpected  "__attribute__"  is  used,  such  as
	   unrecognized	 attributes, function attributes applied to variables,
	   etc.	 This does not stop errors  for	 incorrect  use	 of  supported
	   attributes.

	   Warnings  about ill-formed uses of standard attributes are upgraded
	   to errors by	-pedantic-errors.

	   Additionally, using -Wno-attributes=, it is	possible  to  suppress
	   warnings  about  unknown scoped attributes (in C++11	and C23).  For
	   example, -Wno-attributes=vendor::attr disables  warning  about  the
	   following declaration:

		   [[vendor::attr]] void f();

	   It  is  also	 possible to disable warning about all attributes in a
	   namespace using  -Wno-attributes=vendor::  which  prevents  warning
	   about both of these declarations:

		   [[vendor::safe]] void f();
		   [[vendor::unsafe]] void f2();

	   Note	that -Wno-attributes= does not imply -Wno-attributes.

       -Wno-builtin-declaration-mismatch
	   Warn	 if  a	built-in  function  is	declared  with an incompatible
	   signature or	 as  a	non-function,  or  when	 a  built-in  function
	   declared  with  a  type that	does not include a prototype is	called
	   with	arguments whose	promoted types do not match those expected  by
	   the function.  When -Wextra is specified, also warn when a built-in
	   function that takes arguments is declared without a prototype.  The
	   -Wbuiltin-declaration-mismatch  warning  is enabled by default.  To
	   avoid the warning include  the  appropriate	header	to  bring  the
	   prototypes of built-in functions into scope.

	   For example,	the call to "memset" below is diagnosed	by the warning
	   because  the	 function  expects  a  value  of  type "size_t"	as its
	   argument  but  the  type  of	 32  is	 "int".	  With	-Wextra,   the
	   declaration of the function is diagnosed as well.

		   extern void*	memset ();
		   void	f (void	*d)
		   {
		     memset (d,	'\0', 32);
		   }

       -Wno-builtin-macro-redefined
	   Do  not  warn  if  certain  built-in	 macros	 are  redefined.  This
	   suppresses	warnings   for	 redefinition	of    "__TIMESTAMP__",
	   "__TIME__", "__DATE__", "__FILE__", and "__BASE_FILE__".

       -Wstrict-prototypes (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	 if  a	function is declared or	defined	without	specifying the
	   argument types.  (An	old-style  function  definition	 is  permitted
	   without  a  warning if preceded by a	declaration that specifies the
	   argument types.)

       -Wold-style-declaration (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	for obsolescent	usages,	according to  the  C  Standard,	 in  a
	   declaration.	 For  example,	warn  if storage-class specifiers like
	   "static" are	not the	first things in	a declaration.	 This  warning
	   is also enabled by -Wextra.

       -Wold-style-definition (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	 if  an	 old-style  function definition	is used.  A warning is
	   given even if there is a previous prototype.	 A definition using ()
	   is not considered an	old-style definition in	C23 mode,  because  it
	   is  equivalent  to  (void)  in that case, but is considered an old-
	   style definition for	older standards.

       -Wmissing-parameter-type	(C and Objective-C only)
	   A function parameter	 is  declared  without	a  type	 specifier  in
	   K&R-style functions:

		   void	foo(bar) { }

	   This	warning	is also	enabled	by -Wextra.

       -Wno-declaration-missing-parameter-type (C and Objective-C only)
	   Do  not  warn  if  a	function declaration contains a	parameter name
	   without a type.   Such  function  declarations  do  not  provide  a
	   function  prototype	and  prevent  most  type  checking in function
	   calls.

	   This	warning	is enabled by default.	In C99 and later  dialects  of
	   C,  it  is  treated	as an error.  The error	can be downgraded to a
	   warning using -fpermissive (along with certain  other  errors),  or
	   for		  this		 error		 alone,		  with
	   -Wno-error=declaration-missing-parameter-type.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wmissing-prototypes (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if a global function is	defined	without	a  previous  prototype
	   declaration.	  This warning is issued even if the definition	itself
	   provides a prototype.  Use this option to detect  global  functions
	   that	do not have a matching prototype declaration in	a header file.
	   This	 option	is not valid for C++ because all function declarations
	   provide prototypes  and  a  non-matching  declaration  declares  an
	   overload  rather  than  conflict  with an earlier declaration.  Use
	   -Wmissing-declarations to detect missing declarations in C++.

       -Wmissing-variable-declarations (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	 if  a	global	variable  is  defined	without	  a   previous
	   declaration.	  Use  this  option to detect global variables that do
	   not have a matching extern declaration in a header file.

       -Wmissing-declarations
	   Warn	 if  a	global	function  is  defined	without	  a   previous
	   declaration.	  Do  so  even	if  the	 definition  itself provides a
	   prototype.  Use this	option to detect global	functions that are not
	   declared in header  files.	In  C,	no  warnings  are  issued  for
	   functions	with	previous   non-prototype   declarations;   use
	   -Wmissing-prototypes	to detect  missing  prototypes.	  In  C++,  no
	   warnings   are   issued  for	 function  templates,  or  for	inline
	   functions, or for functions in anonymous namespaces.

       -Wmissing-field-initializers
	   Warn	if a structure's initializer has  some	fields	missing.   For
	   example, the	following code causes such a warning, because "x.h" is
	   implicitly zero:

		   struct s { int f, g,	h; };
		   struct s x =	{ 3, 4 };

	   In  C  this	option does not	warn about designated initializers, so
	   the following modification does not trigger a warning:

		   struct s { int f, g,	h; };
		   struct s x =	{ .f = 3, .g = 4 };

	   In C	this option does not warn about	the universal zero initializer
	   { 0 }:

		   struct s { int f, g,	h; };
		   struct s x =	{ 0 };

	   Likewise, in	C++ this option	does not warn  about  the  empty  {  }
	   initializer,	for example:

		   struct s { int f, g,	h; };
		   s x = { };

	   This	warning	is included in -Wextra.	 To get	other -Wextra warnings
	   without this	one, use -Wextra -Wno-missing-field-initializers.

       -Wno-missing-requires
	   By  default,	 the  compiler warns about a concept-id	appearing as a
	   C++20 simple-requirement:

		   bool	satisfied = requires { C<T> };

	   Here	satisfied will be true if C<T> is a valid expression, which it
	   is for all T.  Presumably the user meant to write

		   bool	satisfied = requires { requires	C<T> };

	   so satisfied	is only	true if	concept	C is satisfied for type	T.

	   This	warning	can be disabled	with -Wno-missing-requires.

       -Wno-missing-template-keyword
	   The member access tokens ., -> and  ::  must	 be  followed  by  the
	   "template" keyword if the parent object is dependent	and the	member
	   being named is a template.

		   template <class X>
		   void	DoStuff	(X x)
		   {
		     x.template	DoSomeOtherStuff<X>(); // Good.
		     x.DoMoreStuff<X>(); // Warning, x is dependent.
		   }

	   In  rare  cases  it	is possible to get false positives. To silence
	   this,  wrap	the  expression	 in  parentheses.  For	example,   the
	   following  is  treated  as  a  template,  even  where  m  and N are
	   integers:

		   void	NotATemplate (my_class t)
		   {
		     int N = 5;

		     bool test = t.m < N > (0);	// Treated as a	template.
		     test = (t.m < N) >	(0); //	Same meaning, but not treated as a template.
		   }

	   This	warning	can be disabled	with -Wno-missing-template-keyword.

       -Wno-multichar
	   Do not warn if a multicharacter constant ('FOOF') is	used.  Usually
	   they	 indicate  a  typo  in	the  user's   code,   as   they	  have
	   implementation-defined  values,  and	should not be used in portable
	   code.

       -Wnormalized=[none|id|nfc|nfkc]
	   In ISO C and	ISO C++, two identifiers are  different	 if  they  are
	   different   sequences   of  characters.   However,  sometimes  when
	   characters outside the basic	ASCII character	set are	used, you  can
	   have	 two  different	 character  sequences  that look the same.  To
	   avoid confusion, the	ISO 10646 standard sets	out some normalization
	   rules which when applied ensure that	two sequences  that  look  the
	   same	 are  turned  into the same sequence.  GCC can warn you	if you
	   are using identifiers that have not been  normalized;  this	option
	   controls that warning.

	   There  are four levels of warning supported by GCC.	The default is
	   -Wnormalized=nfc, which warns about any identifier that is  not  in
	   the	ISO  10646  "C"	 normalized form, NFC.	NFC is the recommended
	   form	for most uses.	It is equivalent to -Wnormalized.

	   Unfortunately, there	are some characters allowed in identifiers  by
	   ISO	C  and	ISO C++	that, when turned into NFC, are	not allowed in
	   identifiers.	 That is, there's no  way  to  use  these  symbols  in
	   portable  ISO  C  or	 C++  and  have	 all  your identifiers in NFC.
	   -Wnormalized=id suppresses the warning for these characters.	 It is
	   hoped that future versions of the standards involved	 will  correct
	   this, which is why this option is not the default.

	   You	can  switch  the  warning  off	for  all characters by writing
	   -Wnormalized=none or	-Wno-normalized.  You should only do  this  if
	   you	are  using some	other normalization scheme (like "D"), because
	   otherwise you can easily create bugs	that are literally  impossible
	   to see.

	   Some	 characters  in	 ISO  10646  have  distinct  meanings but look
	   identical in	some fonts or display methodologies,  especially  once
	   formatting  has  been applied.  For instance	"\u207F", "SUPERSCRIPT
	   LATIN SMALL LETTER N", displays just	like a regular	"n"  that  has
	   been	  placed  in  a	 superscript.	ISO  10646  defines  the  NFKC
	   normalization scheme	to convert all these into a standard  form  as
	   well,  and  GCC  warns  if  your  code  is  not  in NFKC if you use
	   -Wnormalized=nfkc.  This warning is	comparable  to	warning	 about
	   every  identifier  that  contains  the letter O because it might be
	   confused with the digit 0, and so is	not the	default,  but  may  be
	   useful  as a	local coding convention	if the programming environment
	   cannot be fixed to display these characters distinctly.

       -Wno-attribute-warning
	   Do not warn	about  usage  of  functions  declared  with  "warning"
	   attribute.	   By	 default,    this    warning	is    enabled.
	   -Wno-attribute-warning can  be  used	 to  disable  the  warning  or
	   -Wno-error=attribute-warning	 can be	used to	disable	the error when
	   compiled with -Werror flag.

       -Wno-deprecated
	   Do not warn about usage of deprecated features.

       -Wno-deprecated-declarations
	   Do not warn about uses of functions,	variables, and types marked as
	   deprecated by using the "deprecated"	attribute.

       -Wno-overflow
	   Do not warn about compile-time overflow in constant expressions.

       -Wno-odr
	   Warn	 about	One  Definition	 Rule  violations   during   link-time
	   optimization.  Enabled by default.

       -Wopenacc-parallelism
	   Warn	 about	potentially  suboptimal	 choices  related  to  OpenACC
	   parallelism.

       -Wno-openmp
	   Warn	about suspicious OpenMP	code.

       -Wopenmp-simd
	   Warn	if  the	 vectorizer  cost  model  overrides  the  OpenMP  simd
	   directive  set by user.  The	-fsimd-cost-model=unlimited option can
	   be used to relax the	cost model.

       -Woverride-init (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if an initialized field	without	 side  effects	is  overridden
	   when	using designated initializers.

	   This	warning	is included in -Wextra.	 To get	other -Wextra warnings
	   without this	one, use -Wextra -Wno-override-init.

       -Wno-override-init-side-effects (C and Objective-C only)
	   Do not warn if an initialized field with side effects is overridden
	   when	 using	designated  initializers.   This warning is enabled by
	   default.

       -Wpacked
	   Warn	if a structure is given	the packed attribute, but  the	packed
	   attribute  has  no  effect  on the layout or	size of	the structure.
	   Such	 structures  may  be  mis-aligned  for	little	benefit.   For
	   instance,  in  this	code,  the  variable  "f.x" in "struct bar" is
	   misaligned even though "struct bar" does not	itself have the	packed
	   attribute:

		   struct foo {
		     int x;
		     char a, b,	c, d;
		   } __attribute__((packed));
		   struct bar {
		     char z;
		     struct foo	f;
		   };

       -Wnopacked-bitfield-compat
	   The 4.1, 4.2	and 4.3	series of GCC ignore the "packed" attribute on
	   bit-fields of type "char".  This was	 fixed	in  GCC	 4.4  but  the
	   change  can	lead  to  differences  in  the	structure layout.  GCC
	   informs you when the	offset of such a field has changed in GCC 4.4.
	   For example there is	no longer a 4-bit padding  between  field  "a"
	   and "b" in this structure:

		   struct foo
		   {
		     char a:4;
		     char b:8;
		   } __attribute__ ((packed));

	   This	     warning	  is	  enabled     by     default.	   Use
	   -Wno-packed-bitfield-compat to disable this warning.

       -Wpacked-not-aligned (C,	C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Warn	if a structure field with explicitly specified alignment in  a
	   packed  struct or union is misaligned.  For example,	a warning will
	   be issued on	"struct	S", like, "warning: alignment 1	of 'struct  S'
	   is less than	8", in this code:

		   struct __attribute__	((aligned (8)))	S8 { char a[8];	};
		   struct __attribute__	((packed)) S {
		     struct S8 s8;
		   };

	   This	warning	is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wpadded
	   Warn	 if  padding  is  included  in a structure, either to align an
	   element  of	the  structure	or  to	align  the  whole   structure.
	   Sometimes  when this	happens	it is possible to rearrange the	fields
	   of the structure to reduce the padding and so  make	the  structure
	   smaller.

       -Wredundant-decls
	   Warn	if anything is declared	more than once in the same scope, even
	   in cases where multiple declaration is valid	and changes nothing.

       -Wrestrict
	   Warn	 when an object	referenced by a	"restrict"-qualified parameter
	   (or,	in C++,	a  "__restrict"-qualified  parameter)  is  aliased  by
	   another argument, or	when copies between such objects overlap.  For
	   example,  the  call	to  the	 "strcpy"  function  below attempts to
	   truncate the	string by replacing its	initial	 characters  with  the
	   last	 four.	 However,  because the call writes the terminating NUL
	   into	"a[4]",	the copies overlap and the call	is diagnosed.

		   void	foo (void)
		   {
		     char a[] =	"abcd1234";
		     strcpy (a,	a + 4);
		     ...
		   }

	   The -Wrestrict option detects some instances	of simple overlap even
	   without optimization	but works  best	 at  -O2  and  above.	It  is
	   included in -Wall.

       -Wnested-externs	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	if an "extern" declaration is encountered within a function.

       -Winline
	   Warn	 if  a	function that is declared as inline cannot be inlined.
	   Even	with this option, the compiler does not	warn about failures to
	   inline functions declared in	system headers.

	   The compiler	uses a variety of heuristics to	determine  whether  or
	   not	to  inline  a  function.  For example, the compiler takes into
	   account the size of the function being inlined and  the  amount  of
	   inlining  that  has	already	 been  done  in	 the current function.
	   Therefore, seemingly	insignificant changes in  the  source  program
	   can cause the warnings produced by -Winline to appear or disappear.

       -Winterference-size
	   Warn		   about	    use		   of		 C++17
	   "std::hardware_destructive_interference_size"  without   specifying
	   its	value  with  --param destructive-interference-size.  Also warn
	   about questionable values for that option.

	   This	variable is intended to	be used	for controlling	class  layout,
	   to avoid false sharing in concurrent	code:

		   struct independent_fields {
		     alignas(std::hardware_destructive_interference_size)
		       std::atomic<int>	one;
		     alignas(std::hardware_destructive_interference_size)
		       std::atomic<int>	two;
		   };

	   Here	one and	two are	intended to be far enough apart	that stores to
	   one won't require accesses to the other to reload the cache line.

	   By	default,  --param  destructive-interference-size  and  --param
	   constructive-interference-size are set based	on the current	-mtune
	   option,  typically  to  the	L1  cache line size for	the particular
	   target CPU, sometimes to a range if tuning for  a  generic  target.
	   So  all  translation	units that depend on ABI compatibility for the
	   use of these	variables must be compiled with	the  same  -mtune  (or
	   -mcpu).

	   If  ABI  stability  is important, such as if	the use	is in a	header
	   for	a  library,  you  should  probably  not	  use	the   hardware
	   interference	size variables at all.	Alternatively, you can force a
	   particular value with --param.

	   If  you are confident that your use of the variable does not	affect
	   ABI outside a single	build of your project, you can	turn  off  the
	   warning with	-Wno-interference-size.

       -Wint-in-bool-context
	   Warn	 for suspicious	use of integer values where boolean values are
	   expected, such as conditional expressions  (?:)  using  non-boolean
	   integer  constants  in boolean context, like	"if (a <= b ? 2	: 3)".
	   Or left shifting of signed integers in boolean context,  like  "for
	   (a  = 0; 1 << a; a++);".  Likewise for all kinds of multiplications
	   regardless of the data type.	 This warning is enabled by -Wall.

       -Wno-int-to-pointer-cast
	   Suppress warnings from casts	to pointer type	of  an	integer	 of  a
	   different  size.  In	C++, casting to	a pointer type of smaller size
	   is an error.	Wint-to-pointer-cast is	enabled	by default.

       -Wno-pointer-to-int-cast	(C and Objective-C only)
	   Suppress warnings from casts	from a pointer to an integer type of a
	   different size.

       -Winvalid-pch
	   Warn	if a precompiled header	is found in the	search path but	cannot
	   be used.

       -Winvalid-utf8
	   Warn	if an invalid UTF-8 character is found.	 This warning is on by
	   default for C++23 if	-finput-charset=UTF-8 is used and turned  into
	   error with -pedantic-errors.

       -Wno-unicode
	   Don't diagnose invalid forms	of delimited or	named escape sequences
	   which  are  treated	as  separate  tokens.	Wunicode is enabled by
	   default.

       -Wlong-long
	   Warn	if "long long" type  is	 used.	 This  is  enabled  by	either
	   -Wpedantic or -Wtraditional in ISO C90 and C++98 modes.  To inhibit
	   the warning messages, use -Wno-long-long.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wvariadic-macros
	   Warn	 if  variadic  macros  are used	in ISO C90 mode, or if the GNU
	   alternate syntax is used in ISO  C99	 mode.	 This  is  enabled  by
	   either   -Wpedantic	or  -Wtraditional.   To	 inhibit  the  warning
	   messages, use -Wno-variadic-macros.

       -Wno-varargs
	   Do not warn upon questionable usage of the macros  used  to	handle
	   variable  arguments like "va_start".	 These warnings	are enabled by
	   default.

       -Wvector-operation-performance
	   Warn	if vector operation is not implemented via  SIMD  capabilities
	   of  the  architecture.   Mainly  useful for the performance tuning.
	   Vector operation can	be implemented "piecewise", which  means  that
	   the	scalar	operation  is  performed  on every vector element; "in
	   parallel", which means that the  vector  operation  is  implemented
	   using  scalars  of  wider  type, which normally is more performance
	   efficient; and "as a	single scalar",	which means that  vector  fits
	   into	a scalar type.

       -Wvla
	   Warn	 if  a	variable-length	 array	is used	in the code.  -Wno-vla
	   prevents the	-Wpedantic warning of the variable-length array.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wvla-larger-than=byte-size
	   If this option is used, the	compiler  warns	 for  declarations  of
	   variable-length  arrays  whose size is either unbounded, or bounded
	   by an argument that allows  the  array  size	 to  exceed  byte-size
	   bytes.   This  is  similar  to  how	-Walloca-larger-than=byte-size
	   works, but with variable-length arrays.

	   Note	that GCC may optimize small variable-length arrays of a	 known
	   value  into plain arrays, so	this warning may not get triggered for
	   such	arrays.

	   -Wvla-larger-than=PTRDIFF_MAX  is  enabled  by   default   but   is
	   typically only effective when -ftree-vrp is active (default for -O2
	   and above).

	   See also -Walloca-larger-than=byte-size.

       -Wno-vla-larger-than
	   Disable  -Wvla-larger-than=	warnings.  The option is equivalent to
	   -Wvla-larger-than=SIZE_MAX or larger.

       -Wvla-parameter
	   Warn	about  redeclarations  of  functions  involving	 arguments  of
	   Variable  Length  Array  types  of inconsistent kinds or forms, and
	   enable the detection	of out-of-bounds accesses to  such  parameters
	   by warnings such as -Warray-bounds.

	   If  the  first  function  declaration  uses	the VLA	form the bound
	   specified in	the array is assumed  to  be  the  minimum  number  of
	   elements  expected  to be provided in calls to the function and the
	   maximum number of elements accessed	by  it.	  Failing  to  provide
	   arguments  of  sufficient  size  or accessing more than the maximum
	   number of elements may be diagnosed.

	   For example,	the warning triggers for the following	redeclarations
	   because  the	 first one allows an array of any size to be passed to
	   "f" while the second	one specifies that  the	 array	argument  must
	   have	 at  least  "n"	 elements.   In	addition, calling "f" with the
	   associated VLA bound	parameter in excess of the  actual  VLA	 bound
	   triggers a warning as well.

		   void	f (int n, int[n]);
		   // warning: argument	2 previously declared as a VLA
		   void	f (int,	int[]);

		   void	g (int n)
		   {
		       if (n > 4)
			 return;
		       int a[n];
		       // warning: access to a by f may	be out of bounds
		       f (sizeof a, a);
		     ...
		   }

	   -Wvla-parameter is included in -Wall.  The -Warray-parameter	option
	   triggers  warnings  for  similar  problems involving	ordinary array
	   arguments.

       -Wvolatile-register-var
	   Warn	if a register variable is  declared  volatile.	 The  volatile
	   modifier  does  not	inhibit	 all  optimizations that may eliminate
	   reads and/or	writes to register variables.  This warning is enabled
	   by -Wall.

       -Wno-xor-used-as-pow (C,	C++, Objective-C and Objective-C++ only)
	   Disable warnings about uses of  "^",	 the  exclusive	 or  operator,
	   where  it appears the code meant exponentiation.  Specifically, the
	   warning occurs when the left-hand side is the decimal constant 2 or
	   10 and the right-hand side is also a	decimal	constant.

	   In C	and C++,  "^"  means  exclusive	 or,  whereas  in  some	 other
	   languages   (e.g.   TeX  and	 some  versions	 of  BASIC)  it	 means
	   exponentiation.

	   This	warning	can be silenced	by converting one of the  operands  to
	   hexadecimal as well as by compiling with -Wno-xor-used-as-pow.

       -Wdisabled-optimization
	   Warn	 if  a	requested optimization pass is disabled.  This warning
	   does	not generally indicate that there is anything wrong with  your
	   code;  it  merely  indicates	 that  GCC's  optimizers are unable to
	   handle the code effectively.	 Often,	the problem is that your  code
	   is  too  big	 or too	complex; GCC refuses to	optimize programs when
	   the optimization itself is likely to	 take  inordinate  amounts  of
	   time.

       -Wpointer-sign (C and Objective-C only)
	   Warn	 for  pointer  argument	 passing  or assignment	with different
	   signedness.	This option is only supported for C  and  Objective-C.
	   It  is  implied  by	-Wall and by -Wpedantic, which can be disabled
	   with	-Wno-pointer-sign.

	   This	warning	is upgraded to an error	by -pedantic-errors.

       -Wstack-protector
	   This	option is only active when -fstack-protector  is  active.   It
	   warns   about  functions  that  are	not  protected	against	 stack
	   smashing.

       -Woverlength-strings
	   Warn	about string constants	that  are  longer  than	 the  "minimum
	   maximum"  length  specified	in  the	 C standard.  Modern compilers
	   generally allow string constants that  are  much  longer  than  the
	   standard's  minimum	limit, but very	portable programs should avoid
	   using longer	strings.

	   The limit applies after string constant concatenation, and does not
	   count the trailing NUL.  In C90, the	limit was 509  characters;  in
	   C99,	 it  was  raised  to 4095.  C++98 does not specify a normative
	   minimum maximum, so we do not diagnose overlength strings in	C++.

	   This	option is implied by -Wpedantic,  and  can  be	disabled  with
	   -Wno-overlength-strings.

       -Wunsuffixed-float-constants (C and Objective-C only)
	   Issue  a  warning  for  any	floating constant that does not	have a
	   suffix.  When used together with -Wsystem-headers  it  warns	 about
	   such	 constants  in	system	header files.  This can	be useful when
	   preparing code to use with the "FLOAT_CONST_DECIMAL64" pragma  from
	   the decimal floating-point extension	to C99.

       -Wno-lto-type-mismatch
	   During   the	  link-time  optimization,  do	not  warn  about  type
	   mismatches in global	declarations from different compilation	units.
	   Requires -flto to be	enabled.  Enabled by default.

       -Wno-designated-init (C and Objective-C only)
	   Suppress  warnings  when  a	positional  initializer	 is  used   to
	   initialize	a   structure	that   has   been   marked   with  the
	   "designated_init" attribute.

   Options That	Control	Static Analysis
       -fanalyzer
	   This	option enables an static analysis of program flow which	 looks
	   for	"interesting"  interprocedural	paths  through	the  code, and
	   issues warnings for problems	found on them.

	   This	analysis is much more expensive	than other GCC warnings.

	   In technical	terms, it performs coverage-guided symbolic  execution
	   of  the  code being compiled.  It is	neither	sound nor complete: it
	   can have false positives and	false negatives.  It is	a  bug-finding
	   tool, rather	than a tool for	proving	program	correctness.

	   The analyzer	is only	suitable for use on C code in this release.

	   Enabling this option	effectively enables the	following warnings:

	   -Wanalyzer-allocation-size		 -Wanalyzer-deref-before-check
	   -Wanalyzer-double-fclose			-Wanalyzer-double-free
	   -Wanalyzer-exposure-through-output-file
	   -Wanalyzer-exposure-through-uninit-copy
	   -Wanalyzer-fd-access-mode-mismatch	    -Wanalyzer-fd-double-close
	   -Wanalyzer-fd-leak			  -Wanalyzer-fd-phase-mismatch
	   -Wanalyzer-fd-type-mismatch		 -Wanalyzer-fd-use-after-close
	   -Wanalyzer-fd-use-without-check		  -Wanalyzer-file-leak
	   -Wanalyzer-free-of-non-heap	    -Wanalyzer-imprecise-fp-arithmetic
	   -Wanalyzer-infinite-loop		 -Wanalyzer-infinite-recursion
	   -Wanalyzer-jump-through-null			-Wanalyzer-malloc-leak
	   -Wanalyzer-mismatching-deallocation	      -Wanalyzer-null-argument
	   -Wanalyzer-null-dereference		      -Wanalyzer-out-of-bounds
	   -Wanalyzer-overlapping-buffers    -Wanalyzer-possible-null-argument
	   -Wanalyzer-possible-null-dereference	 -Wanalyzer-putenv-of-auto-var
	   -Wanalyzer-shift-count-negative     -Wanalyzer-shift-count-overflow
	   -Wanalyzer-stale-setjmp-buffer   -Wanalyzer-tainted-allocation-size
	   -Wanalyzer-tainted-array-index	  -Wanalyzer-tainted-assertion
	   -Wanalyzer-tainted-divisor		     -Wanalyzer-tainted-offset
	   -Wanalyzer-tainted-size	  -Wanalyzer-undefined-behavior-strtok
	   -Wanalyzer-unsafe-call-within-signal-handler
	   -Wanalyzer-use-after-free
	   -Wanalyzer-use-of-pointer-in-stale-stack-frame
	   -Wanalyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value
	   -Wanalyzer-va-arg-type-mismatch	  -Wanalyzer-va-list-exhausted
	   -Wanalyzer-va-list-leak	   -Wanalyzer-va-list-use-after-va-end
	   -Wanalyzer-write-to-const -Wanalyzer-write-to-string-literal

	   This	 option	 is only available if GCC was configured with analyzer
	   support enabled.

       -Wanalyzer-symbol-too-complex
	   If -fanalyzer is enabled, the analyzer uses various	heuristics  to
	   attempt  to track the state of memory, but these can	be defeated by
	   sufficiently	complicated code.

	   By  default,	 the  analysis	silently  stops	 tracking  values   of
	   expressions	if  they  exceed  the  threshold  defined  by  --param
	   analyzer-max-svalue-depth=value, and	falls  back  to	 an  imprecise
	   representation	 for	    such       expressions.	   The
	   -Wanalyzer-symbol-too-complex option	warns if this occurs.

       -Wanalyzer-too-complex
	   If -fanalyzer is enabled, the analyzer uses various	heuristics  to
	   attempt  to	explore	the control flow and data flow in the program,
	   but these can be defeated by	sufficiently complicated code.

	   By default,	the  analysis  silently	 stops	if  the	 code  is  too
	   complicated	for  the  analyzer  to fully explore and it reaches an
	   internal limit.  The	-Wanalyzer-too-complex option  warns  if  this
	   occurs.

       -Wno-analyzer-allocation-size
	   This	 warning requires -fanalyzer, which enables it;	to disable it,
	   use -Wno-analyzer-allocation-size.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a pointer
	   to a	buffer is assigned to point at a buffer	with a	size  that  is
	   not a multiple of "sizeof (*pointer)".

	   See	   CWE-131:    Incorrect    Calculation	   of	 Buffer	  Size
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/131.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-deref-before-check
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-deref-before-check to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a pointer
	   is  checked	for  "NULL"  *after* it	has already been dereferenced,
	   suggesting that the pointer	could  have  been  NULL.   Such	 cases
	   suggest  that  the  check  for NULL is either redundant, or that it
	   needs to be moved to	before the pointer is dereferenced.

	   This	diagnostic also	considers values passed	to a function argument
	   marked with	"__attribute__((nonnull))"  as	requiring  a  non-NULL
	   value, and thus will	complain if such values	are checked for	"NULL"
	   after returning from	such a function	call.

	   This	 diagnostic  is	 unlikely  to  be  reported  when any level of
	   optimization	is enabled, as GCC's optimization logic	will typically
	   consider such checks	for NULL as being redundant, and optimize them
	   away	before the analyzer "sees" them.  Hence	optimization should be
	   disabled when attempting to trigger this diagnostic.

       -Wno-analyzer-double-fclose
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-double-fclose to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns for paths through the code in which a "FILE
	   *" can have "fclose"	called on it more than once.

	   See	 CWE-1341:  Multiple  Releases	of  Same  Resource  or	Handle
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/1341.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-double-free
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-double-free to	disable	it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a pointer
	   can have a deallocator called on it more than once, either  "free",
	   or a	deallocator referenced by attribute "malloc".

	   See		      CWE-415:		     Double		  Free
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/415.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-exposure-through-output-file
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-exposure-through-output-file to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths	through	 the  code  in which a
	   security-sensitive value is written to  an  output  file  (such  as
	   writing a password to a log file).

	   See	   CWE-532:    Information    Exposure	 Through   Log	 Files
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/532.html").

       -Wanalyzer-exposure-through-uninit-copy
	   This	warning	requires both -fanalyzer and the use of	 a  plugin  to
	   specify  a  function	 that  copies  across a	"trust boundary".  Use
	   -Wno-analyzer-exposure-through-uninit-copy to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for "infoleaks" - paths through the  code  in
	   which  uninitialized	 values	 are copied across a security boundary
	   (such as  code  within  an  OS  kernel  that	 copies	 a  partially-
	   initialized struct on the stack to user space).

	   See	 CWE-200: Exposure of Sensitive	Information to an Unauthorized
	   Actor ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/200.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-access-mode-mismatch
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-access-mode-mismatch to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through code	in which a "read" on a
	   write-only file descriptor is attempted, or vice versa.

	   This	 diagnostic  also  warns  for code paths in a which a function
	   with	attribute "fd_arg_read (N)" is called with a  file  descriptor
	   opened  with	 "O_WRONLY"  at	 referenced argument "N" or a function
	   with	attribute "fd_arg_write	(N)" is	called with a file  descriptor
	   opened with "O_RDONLY" at referenced	argument N.

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-double-close
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-double-close to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for  paths  through  code  in	which  a  file
	   descriptor can be closed more than once.

	   See	 CWE-1341:  Multiple  Releases	of  Same  Resource  or	Handle
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/1341.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-leak
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-leak to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic warns for paths through code in which an open file
	   descriptor is leaked.

	   See	CWE-775: Missing Release of File Descriptor  or	 Handle	 after
	   Effective						      Lifetime
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/775.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-phase-mismatch
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-phase-mismatch to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic warns for paths through code in which an operation
	   is attempted	in the wrong phase of a	 file  descriptor's  lifetime.
	   For	example, it will warn on attempts to call "accept" on a	stream
	   socket that has not yet had "listen"	successfully called on it.

	   See	CWE-666: Operation on Resource	in  Wrong  Phase  of  Lifetime
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/666.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-type-mismatch
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-type-mismatch to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through code	in which an  operation
	   is attempted	on the wrong type of file descriptor.  For example, it
	   will	warn on	attempts to use	socket operations on a file descriptor
	   obtained  via  "open",  or  when  attempting	to use a stream	socket
	   operation on	a datagram socket.

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-use-after-close
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-use-after-close to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths through code in which a read or
	   write is called on a	closed file descriptor.

	   This	diagnostic also	warns  for  paths  through  code  in  which  a
	   function  with  attribute  "fd_arg  (N)"  or	 "fd_arg_read  (N)" or
	   "fd_arg_write (N)" is called	 with  a  closed  file	descriptor  at
	   referenced argument "N".

       -Wno-analyzer-fd-use-without-check
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-fd-use-without-check to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for  paths  through  code  in	which  a  file
	   descriptor is used without being checked for	validity.

	   This	 diagnostic  also  warns  for  paths  through  code in which a
	   function with  attribute  "fd_arg  (N)"  or	"fd_arg_read  (N)"  or
	   "fd_arg_write  (N)" is called with a	file descriptor, at referenced
	   argument "N", without being checked for validity.

       -Wno-analyzer-file-leak
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-file-leak to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths	through	 the  code  in which a
	   "<stdio.h>" "FILE *"	stream object is leaked.

	   See	CWE-775: Missing Release of File Descriptor  or	 Handle	 after
	   Effective						      Lifetime
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/775.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-free-of-non-heap
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-free-of-non-heap to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which "free" is
	   called  on  a  non-heap  pointer  (e.g.  an	on-stack  buffer, or a
	   global).

	   See	  CWE-590:    Free    of    Memory    not    on	   the	  Heap
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/590.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-imprecise-fp-arithmetic
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-imprecise-fp-arithmetic to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which floating-
	   point arithmetic is used in locations where precise computation  is
	   needed.   This  diagnostic  only  warns  on	use  of	floating-point
	   operands inside the	calculation  of	 an  allocation	 size  at  the
	   moment.

       -Wno-analyzer-infinite-loop
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-infinite-loop to disable it.

	   This	diagnostics warns for paths through the	code which  appear  to
	   lead	to an infinite loop.

	   Specifically, the analyzer will issue this warning when it "sees" a
	   loop	in which:

	   *   no externally-visible work could	be being done within the loop

	   *   there is	no way to escape from the loop

	   *   the  analyzer is	sufficiently confident about the program state
	       throughout the loop to know that	the above are true

	   One way for this  warning  to  be  emitted  is  when	 there	is  an
	   execution  path  through  a	loop  for which	taking the path	on one
	   iteration  implies  that  the  same	path  will  be	taken  on  all
	   subsequent iterations.

	   For example,	consider:

		     while (1)
		       {
			 char opcode = *cpu_state.pc;
			 switch	(opcode)
			  {
			  case OPCODE_FOO:
			    handle_opcode_foo (&cpu_state);
			    break;
			  case OPCODE_BAR:
			    handle_opcode_bar (&cpu_state);
			    break;
			  }
		       }

	   The	analyzer  will complain	for the	above case because if "opcode"
	   ever	matches	none of	 the  cases,  the  "switch"  will  follow  the
	   implicit  "default"	case, making the body of the loop be a "no-op"
	   with	"cpu_state.pc" unchanged, and thus using  the  same  value  of
	   "opcode" on all subseqent iterations, leading to an infinite	loop.

	   See	 CWE-835:  Loop	 with  Unreachable  Exit  Condition ('Infinite
	   Loop') ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/835.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-infinite-recursion
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-infinite-recursion to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostics  warns for	paths through the code which appear to
	   lead	to infinite recursion.

	   Specifically, when the analyzer "sees" a recursive  call,  it  will
	   compare the state of	memory at the entry to the new frame with that
	   at  the  entry to the previous frame	of that	function on the	stack.
	   The warning is issued if nothing in memory appears to be  changing;
	   any	changes	 observed to parameters	or globals are assumed to lead
	   to termination of the recursion and thus suppress the warning.

	   This	diagnostic is likely to	miss cases of infinite recursion  that
	   are	convered  to  iteration	 by  the optimizer before the analyzer
	   "sees" them.	 Hence optimization should be disabled when attempting
	   to trigger this diagnostic.

	   Compare  with  -Winfinite-recursion,	 which	provides   a   similar
	   diagnostic, but is implemented in a different way.

	   See		   CWE-674:	      Uncontrolled	     Recursion
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/674.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-jump-through-null
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-jump-through-null to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic warns for paths through the	code in	which a	"NULL"
	   function pointer is called.

       -Wno-analyzer-malloc-leak
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-malloc-leak to	disable	it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a pointer
	   allocated  via  an  allocator  is  leaked:  either  "malloc",  or a
	   function marked with	attribute "malloc".

	   See	CWE-401: Missing Release of Memory  after  Effective  Lifetime
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/401.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-mismatching-deallocation
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-mismatching-deallocation to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which the wrong
	   deallocation	function is called on a	pointer	value, based on	 which
	   function  was  used	to allocate the	pointer	value.	The diagnostic
	   will	warn about mismatches  between	"free",	 scalar	 "delete"  and
	   vector  "delete[]", and those marked	as allocator/deallocator pairs
	   using attribute "malloc".

	   See	   CWE-762:    Mismatched    Memory    Management     Routines
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/762.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-out-of-bounds
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-out-of-bounds to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a	buffer
	   is  definitely  read	 or  written  out-of-bounds.   The  diagnostic
	   applies for cases  where  the  analyzer  is	able  to  determine  a
	   constant  offset  and for accesses past the end of a	buffer,	also a
	   constant capacity.  Further,	the diagnostic does  limited  checking
	   for	accesses  past the end when the	offset as well as the capacity
	   is symbolic.

	   See	CWE-119: Improper Restriction of Operations within the	Bounds
	   of		       a		 Memory			Buffer
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/119.html").

	   For cases where the analyzer	is able,  it  will  emit  a  text  art
	   diagram  visualizing	 the  spatial  relationship between the	memory
	   region that the analyzer predicts would  be	accessed,  versus  the
	   range  of memory that is valid to access: whether they overlap, are
	   touching, are close or far apart; which one is before or  after  in
	   memory,  the	 relative  sizes involved, the direction of the	access
	   (read vs write), and, in some cases,	the values of  data  involved.
	   This	       diagram	     can       be	suppressed	 using
	   -fdiagnostics-text-art-charset=none.

       -Wno-analyzer-overlapping-buffers
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-overlapping-buffers to	disable	it.

	   This	  diagnostic  warns  for  paths	 through  the  code  in	 which
	   overlapping buffers are passed to an	API for	which the behavior  on
	   such	buffers	is undefined.

	   Specifically,  the  diagnostic  occurs  on  calls  to the following
	   functions

	   *<"memcpy">
	   *<"strcat">
	   *<"strcpy">

	   for cases where the buffers are known to overlap.

       -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-argument
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-argument	to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths	through	 the  code  in which a
	   possibly-NULL value is passed to a function	argument  marked  with
	   "__attribute__((nonnull))" as requiring a non-NULL value.

	   See	 CWE-690:  Unchecked  Return Value to NULL Pointer Dereference
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/690.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-dereference
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-dereference to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths	through	 the  code  in which a
	   possibly-NULL value is dereferenced.

	   See	CWE-690: Unchecked Return Value	to  NULL  Pointer  Dereference
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/690.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-null-argument
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-null-argument to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which  a	 value
	   known  to  be  NULL	is  passed  to a function argument marked with
	   "__attribute__((nonnull))" as requiring a non-NULL value.

	   See	       CWE-476:	       NULL	   Pointer	   Dereference
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/476.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-null-dereference
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-null-dereference to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which  a	 value
	   known to be NULL is dereferenced.

	   See		CWE-476:	NULL	    Pointer	   Dereference
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/476.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-putenv-of-auto-var
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-putenv-of-auto-var to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a call to
	   "putenv"  is	 passed	 a  pointer to an automatic variable or	an on-
	   stack buffer.

	   See	POS34-C. Do not	call putenv() with a pointer to	 an  automatic
	   variable		   as		    the		      argument
	   ("https://wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/x/6NYxBQ").

       -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-negative
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-negative to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns for paths through the code in which a shift
	   is attempted	with  a	 negative  count.   It	is  analogous  to  the
	   -Wshift-count-negative  diagnostic  implemented  in the C/C++ front
	   ends, but is	implemented based on analyzing interprocedural	paths,
	   rather  than	merely parsing the syntax tree.	 However, the analyzer
	   does	not prioritize detection of such paths,	so false negatives are
	   more	likely relative	to other warnings.

       -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-overflow
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-overflow to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns for paths through the code in which a shift
	   is attempted	with a count greater than or equal to the precision of
	   the operand's type.	It is analogous	to the	-Wshift-count-overflow
	   diagnostic  implemented in the C/C++	front ends, but	is implemented
	   based  on  analyzing	 interprocedural  paths,  rather  than	merely
	   parsing the syntax tree.  However, the analyzer does	not prioritize
	   detection  of  such	paths,	so  false  negatives  are  more	likely
	   relative to other warnings.

       -Wno-analyzer-stale-setjmp-buffer
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-stale-setjmp-buffer to	disable	it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which "longjmp"
	   is called to	rewind to a "jmp_buf" relating to a "setjmp" call in a
	   function that has returned.

	   When	"setjmp" is called on a	"jmp_buf" to record a rewind location,
	   it  records	the stack frame.  The stack frame becomes invalid when
	   the function	containing the "setjmp"	call returns.	Attempting  to
	   rewind  to  it  via "longjmp" would reference a stack frame that no
	   longer exists, and likely lead to a crash (or worse).

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-allocation-size
	   This	 warning   requires   -fanalyzer   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-allocation-size to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns for paths through the code in which a value
	   that	could be under an attacker's control is	used as	the size of an
	   allocation without being  sanitized,	 so  that  an  attacker	 could
	   inject  an  excessively  large  allocation  and potentially cause a
	   denial of service attack.

	   See	 CWE-789:  Memory  Allocation  with   Excessive	  Size	 Value
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/789.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-assertion
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer   which   enables   it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-assertion to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which  a	 value
	   that	 could	be  under  an  attacker's control is used as part of a
	   condition without being first sanitized, and	that condition	guards
	   a  call to a	function marked	with attribute "noreturn" (such	as the
	   function  "__builtin_unreachable").	  Such	 functions   typically
	   indicate abnormal termination of the	program, such as for assertion
	   failure handlers.  For example:

		   assert (some_tainted_value <	SOME_LIMIT);

	   In such cases:

	   *   when assertion-checking is enabled: an attacker could trigger a
	       denial of service by injecting an assertion failure

	   *   when  assertion-checking	 is  disabled,	such  as  by  defining
	       "NDEBUG", an attacker  could  inject  data  that	 subverts  the
	       process,	 since	it  presumably violates	a precondition that is
	       being assumed by	the code.

	   Note	that when assertion-checking is	disabled, the  assertions  are
	   typically  removed  by  the	preprocessor before the	analyzer has a
	   chance to "see" them, so this diagnostic can	only generate warnings
	   on builds in	which assertion-checking is enabled.

	   For the purpose of this warning, any	function marked	with attribute
	   "noreturn" is considered as a possible assertion  failure  handler,
	   including  "__builtin_unreachable".	 Note that these functions are
	   sometimes removed by	the optimizer before the analyzer "sees" them.
	   Hence optimization should be	disabled when  attempting  to  trigger
	   this	diagnostic.

	   See		    CWE-617:		Reachable	     Assertion
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/617.html").

	   The warning can also	report problematic constructions such as

		   switch (some_tainted_value) {
		   case	0:
		     /*	[...etc; various valid cases omitted...] */
		     break;

		   default:
		     __builtin_unreachable (); /* BUG: attacker	can trigger this  */
		   }

	   despite  the	 above	not  being  an	assertion  failure,   strictly
	   speaking.

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-array-index
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer   which   enables   it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-array-index to	disable	it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which  a	 value
	   that	 could	be under an attacker's control is used as the index of
	   an array access without being sanitized, so that an attacker	 could
	   inject an out-of-bounds access.

	   See	    CWE-129:	Improper    Validation	  of	Array	 Index
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/129.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-divisor
	   This	 warning   requires   -fanalyzer   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-divisor to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns for paths through the code in which a value
	   that	could be under an attacker's control is	used as	the divisor in
	   a division or modulus operation without being sanitized, so that an
	   attacker could inject a division-by-zero.

	   See		 CWE-369:	    Divide	     By		  Zero
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/369.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-offset
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer   which   enables   it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-offset	to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which  a	 value
	   that	 could	be  under  an  attacker's control is used as a pointer
	   offset without being	sanitized, so that an attacker could inject an
	   out-of-bounds access.

	   See	   CWE-823:    Use    of    Out-of-range    Pointer	Offset
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/823.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-size
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer   which   enables   it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-tainted-size to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which  a	 value
	   that	could be under an attacker's control is	used as	the size of an
	   operation  such  as	"memset"  without  being sanitized, so that an
	   attacker could inject an out-of-bounds access.

	   See	   CWE-129:    Improper	   Validation	 of    Array	 Index
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/129.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-undefined-behavior-strtok
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-undefined-behavior-strtok to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a call is
	   made	to "strtok" with undefined behavior.

	   Specifically, passing NULL as the first parameter for  the  initial
	   call	to "strtok" within a process has undefined behavior.

       -Wno-analyzer-unsafe-call-within-signal-handler
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-unsafe-call-within-signal-handler to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns  for  paths  through  the  code  in  which  a
	   function  known  to	be  async-signal-unsafe	(such as "fprintf") is
	   called from a signal	handler.

	   See	CWE-479:  Signal  Handler  Use	of  a  Non-reentrant  Function
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/479.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-use-after-free
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-use-after-free	to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a pointer
	   is used after a deallocator is called on it:	either	"free",	 or  a
	   deallocator referenced by attribute "malloc".

	   See		  CWE-416:	     Use	   After	  Free
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/416.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-use-of-pointer-in-stale-stack-frame
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-use-of-pointer-in-stale-stack-frame to	disable	it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for paths through the code in which a pointer
	   is dereferenced that	points to a variable in	a stale	stack frame.

       -Wno-analyzer-va-arg-type-mismatch
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-va-arg-type-mismatch to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for interprocedural paths  through  the  code
	   for	which  the  analyzer  detects  an  attempt  to use "va_arg" to
	   extract a value passed to a variadic	call, but  uses	 a  type  that
	   does	not match that of the expression passed	to the call.

	   See	  CWE-686:   Function	Call   With  Incorrect	Argument  Type
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/686.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-va-list-exhausted
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-va-list-exhausted to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	interprocedural	paths through the code
	   for which the analyzer detects an attempt to	use "va_arg" to	access
	   the next value passed to a variadic call, but all of	the values  in
	   the "va_list" have already been consumed.

	   See	 CWE-685:  Function  Call  With	 Incorrect Number of Arguments
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/685.html").

       -Wno-analyzer-va-list-leak
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-va-list-leak to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	interprocedural	paths through the code
	   for which the analyzer detects that	"va_start"  or	"va_copy"  has
	   been	 called	 on  a	"va_list"  without  a  corresponding  call  to
	   "va_end".

       -Wno-analyzer-va-list-use-after-va-end
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-va-list-use-after-va-end to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	interprocedural	paths through the code
	   for which the analyzer detects an attempt to	use a "va_list"	 after
	   "va_end" has	been called on it.  "va_list".

       -Wno-analyzer-write-to-const
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-write-to-const	to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths	through	 the code in which the
	   analyzer detects an attempt to write	through	a pointer to a "const"
	   object.  However, the analyzer does	not  prioritize	 detection  of
	   such	 paths,	 so  false negatives are more likely relative to other
	   warnings.

       -Wno-analyzer-write-to-string-literal
	   This	 warning  requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables   it;   use
	   -Wno-analyzer-write-to-string-literal to disable it.

	   This	 diagnostic  warns  for	 paths	through	 the code in which the
	   analyzer detects an attempt to write	through	a pointer to a	string
	   literal.   However,	the  analyzer does not prioritize detection of
	   such	paths, so false	negatives are more likely  relative  to	 other
	   warnings.

       -Wno-analyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value
	   This	  warning   requires   -fanalyzer,   which   enables  it;  use
	   -Wno-analyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value to disable it.

	   This	diagnostic warns for  paths  through  the  code	 in  which  an
	   uninitialized value is used.

	   See	     CWE-457:	   Use	    of	    Uninitialized     Variable
	   ("https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/457.html").

       The  analyzer  has  hardcoded  knowledge	 about	the  behavior  of  the
       following memory-management functions:

       *<"alloca">
       *<The built-in functions	"__builtin_alloc",>
	   "__builtin_alloc_with_align",       @item	   "__builtin_calloc",
	   "__builtin_free",	  "__builtin_malloc",	   "__builtin_memcpy",
	   "__builtin_memcpy_chk", "__builtin_memset", "__builtin_memset_chk",
	   "__builtin_realloc",		"__builtin_stack_restore",	   and
	   "__builtin_stack_save"

       *<"calloc">
       *<"free">
       *<"malloc">
       *<"memset">
       *<"operator delete">
       *<"operator delete []">
       *<"operator new">
       *<"operator new []">
       *<"realloc">
       *<"strdup">
       *<"strndup">

       of the following	functions for working with file	descriptors:

       *<"open">
       *<"close">
       *<"creat">
       *<"dup",	"dup2" and "dup3">
       *<"isatty">
       *<"pipe", and "pipe2">
       *<"read">
       *<"write">
       *<"socket", "bind", "listen", "accept", and "connect">

       of the following	functions for working with "<stdio.h>" streams:

       *<The built-in functions	"__builtin_fprintf",>
	   "__builtin_fprintf_unlocked",		    "__builtin_fputc",
	   "__builtin_fputc_unlocked",			    "__builtin_fputs",
	   "__builtin_fputs_unlocked",			   "__builtin_fwrite",
	   "__builtin_fwrite_unlocked",			   "__builtin_printf",
	   "__builtin_printf_unlocked",	"__builtin_putc", "__builtin_putchar",
	   "__builtin_putchar_unlocked",	    "__builtin_putc_unlocked",
	   "__builtin_puts",  "__builtin_puts_unlocked", "__builtin_vfprintf",
	   and "__builtin_vprintf"

       *<"fopen">
       *<"fclose">
       *<"ferror">
       *<"fgets">
       *<"fgets_unlocked">
       *<"fileno">
       *<"fread">
       *<"getc">
       *<"getchar">
       *<"fprintf">
       *<"printf">
       *<"fwrite">

       and of the following functions:

       *<The built-in functions	"__builtin_expect",>
	   "__builtin_expect_with_probability",		   "__builtin_strchr",
	   "__builtin_strcpy",	 "__builtin_strcpy_chk",   "__builtin_strlen",
	   "__builtin_va_copy",	and "__builtin_va_start"

       *<The GNU extensions "error" and	"error_at_line">
       *<"getpass">
       *<"longjmp">
       *<"putenv">
       *<"setjmp">
       *<"siglongjmp">
       *<"signal">
       *<"sigsetjmp">
       *<"strcat">
       *<"strchr">
       *<"strlen">

       In addition,  various  functions	 with  an  "__analyzer_"  prefix  have
       special meaning to the analyzer,	described in the GCC Internals manual.

       Pertinent parameters for	controlling the	exploration are:

       *<--param analyzer-bb-explosion-factor=value>
       *<--param analyzer-max-enodes-per-program-point=value>
       *<--param analyzer-max-recursion-depth=value>
       *<--param analyzer-min-snodes-for-call-summary=value>

       The following options control the analyzer.

       -fanalyzer-call-summaries
	   Simplify  interprocedural  analysis	by  computing  the  effect  of
	   certain calls, rather than exploring	all paths through the function
	   from	callsite to each possible return.

	   If enabled, call summaries are only used for	 functions  with  more
	   than	 one  call site, and that are sufficiently complicated (as per
	   --param analyzer-min-snodes-for-call-summary=value).

       -fanalyzer-checker=name
	   Restrict the	analyzer to run	just the named checker,	and enable it.

       -fanalyzer-debug-text-art-headings
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.  If	 enabled,  the
	   analyzer will add extra annotations to any diagrams it generates.

       -fno-analyzer-feasibility
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.

	   By  default	the analyzer verifies that there is a feasible control
	   flow	path for each diagnostic it emits: that	 the  conditions  that
	   hold	are not	mutually exclusive.  Diagnostics for which no feasible
	   path	 can  be found are rejected.  This filtering can be suppressed
	   with	-fno-analyzer-feasibility, for debugging issues	in this	code.

       -fanalyzer-fine-grained
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.

	   Internally the analyzer builds an "exploded	graph"	that  combines
	   control flow	graphs with data flow information.

	   By  default,	an edge	in this	graph can contain the effects of a run
	   of	multiple   statements	within	 a    basic    block.	  With
	   -fanalyzer-fine-grained, each statement gets	its own	edge.

       -fanalyzer-show-duplicate-count
	   This	 option	 is  intended  for  analyzer  developers:  if multiple
	   diagnostics have been detected as being duplicates of  each	other,
	   it  emits  a	 note  when  reporting the best	diagnostic, giving the
	   number of  additional  diagnostics  that  were  suppressed  by  the
	   deduplication logic.

       -fanalyzer-show-events-in-system-headers
	   By  default	the  analyzer  emits  simplified  diagnostics paths by
	   hiding  events  fully  located  within  a  system   header.	  With
	   -fanalyzer-show-events-in-system-headers  such events are no	longer
	   suppressed.

       -fno-analyzer-state-merge
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.

	   By default the analyzer attempts to simplify	 analysis  by  merging
	   sufficiently	 similar states	at each	program	point as it builds its
	   "exploded graph".  With -fno-analyzer-state-merge this merging  can
	   be suppressed, for debugging	state-handling issues.

       -fno-analyzer-state-purge
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.

	   By  default	the  analyzer attempts to simplify analysis by purging
	   aspects of state at a program point that appear  to	no  longer  be
	   relevant  e.g.  the	values of locals that aren't accessed later in
	   the function	and which aren't relevant to leak analysis.

	   With	 -fno-analyzer-state-purge  this  purging  of  state  can   be
	   suppressed, for debugging state-handling issues.

       -fno-analyzer-suppress-followups
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.

	   By default the analyzer will	stop exploring an execution path after
	   encountering	 certain  diagnostics,	in  order to avoid potentially
	   issuing a cascade of	follow-up diagnostics.

	   The diagnostics that	terminate analysis along a path	are:

	   *<-Wanalyzer-null-argument>
	   *<-Wanalyzer-null-dereference>
	   *<-Wanalyzer-use-after-free>
	   *<-Wanalyzer-use-of-pointer-in-stale-stack-frame>
	   *<-Wanalyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value>

	   With	-fno-analyzer-suppress-followups the analyzer will continue to
	   explore such	paths  even  after  such  diagnostics,	which  may  be
	   helpful   for   debugging   issues	in   the   analyzer,   or  for
	   microbenchmarks for detecting undefined behavior.

       -fanalyzer-transitivity
	   This	 option	 enables  transitivity	of  constraints	  within   the
	   analyzer.

       -fno-analyzer-undo-inlining
	   This	option is intended for analyzer	developers.

	   -fanalyzer  runs  relatively	 late  compared	to other code analysis
	   tools, and some optimizations have  already	been  applied  to  the
	   code.   In  particular function inlining may	have occurred, leading
	   to the interprocedural execution  paths  emitted  by	 the  analyzer
	   containing  function	 frames	 that don't correspond to those	in the
	   original source code.

	   By default  the  analyzer  attempts	to  reconstruct	 the  original
	   function frames, and	to emit	events showing the inlined calls.

	   With	 -fno-analyzer-undo-inlining  this  attempt to reconstruct the
	   original frame information can be disabled, which may  be  of  help
	   when	debugging issues in the	analyzer.

       -fanalyzer-verbose-edges
	   This	 option	 is intended for analyzer developers.  It enables more
	   verbose, lower-level	detail in the  descriptions  of	 control  flow
	   within diagnostic paths.

       -fanalyzer-verbose-state-changes
	   This	 option	 is intended for analyzer developers.  It enables more
	   verbose, lower-level	detail in the descriptions of events  relating
	   to state machines within diagnostic paths.

       -fanalyzer-verbosity=level
	   This	 option	controls the complexity	of the control flow paths that
	   are emitted for analyzer diagnostics.

	   The level can be one	of:

	   0   At this level,  interprocedural	call  and  return  events  are
	       displayed,  along  with	the most pertinent state-change	events
	       relating	to a diagnostic.  For  example,	 for  a	 double-"free"
	       diagnostic, both	calls to "free"	will be	shown.

	   1   As  per	the previous level, but	also show events for the entry
	       to each function.

	   2   As per the previous level, but also  show  events  relating  to
	       control flow that are significant to triggering the issue (e.g.
	       "true path taken" at a conditional).

	       This level is the default.

	   3   As  per	the  previous level, but show all control flow events,
	       not just	significant ones.

	   4   This level is intended for analyzer developers; it adds various
	       other events intended for debugging the analyzer.

       -fdump-analyzer
	   Dump	 internal  details  about  what	 the  analyzer	is  doing   to
	   file.analyzer.txt.  -fdump-analyzer-stderr overrides	this option.

       -fdump-analyzer-stderr
	   Dump	 internal  details about what the analyzer is doing to stderr.
	   This	option overrides -fdump-analyzer.

       -fdump-analyzer-callgraph
	   Dump	a representation of the	call graph suitable for	 viewing  with
	   GraphViz to file.callgraph.dot.

       -fdump-analyzer-exploded-graph
	   Dump	 a representation of the "exploded graph" suitable for viewing
	   with	GraphViz to  file.eg.dot.   Nodes  are	color-coded  based  on
	   state-machine states	to emphasize state changes.

       -fdump-analyzer-exploded-nodes
	   Emit	diagnostics showing where nodes	in the "exploded graph"	are in
	   relation to the program source.

       -fdump-analyzer-exploded-nodes-2
	   Dump	  a   textual	representation	of  the	 "exploded  graph"  to
	   file.eg.txt.

       -fdump-analyzer-exploded-nodes-3
	   Dump	a textual representation of the	"exploded graph" to  one  dump
	   file	per node, to file.eg-id.txt.  This is typically	a large	number
	   of dump files.

       -fdump-analyzer-exploded-paths
	   Dump	 a  textual  representation  of	 the  "exploded	path" for each
	   diagnostic to file.idx.kind.epath.txt.

       -fdump-analyzer-feasibility
	   Dump	internal details about	the  analyzer's	 search	 for  feasible
	   paths.  The details are written in a	form suitable for viewing with
	   GraphViz to filenames of the	form file.*.fg.dot, file.*.tg.dot, and
	   file.*.fpath.txt.

       -fdump-analyzer-infinite-loop
	   Dump	 internal  details  about  the	analyzer's search for infinite
	   loops.  The details are written in a	form suitable for viewing with
	   GraphViz to filenames of the	form file.*.infinite-loop.dot.

       -fdump-analyzer-json
	   Dump	a compressed JSON  representation  of  analyzer	 internals  to
	   file.analyzer.json.gz.  The precise format is subject to change.

       -fdump-analyzer-state-purge
	   As  per  -fdump-analyzer-supergraph,	 dump  a representation	of the
	   "supergraph"	suitable for viewing with GraphViz, but	 annotate  the
	   graph  with	information on what state will be purged at each node.
	   The graph is	written	to file.state-purge.dot.

       -fdump-analyzer-supergraph
	   Dump	representations	of the "supergraph" suitable for viewing  with
	   GraphViz  to	 file.supergraph.dot  and  to  file.supergraph-eg.dot.
	   These show all of the control flow  graphs  in  the	program,  with
	   interprocedural  edges  for	calls  and  returns.   The second dump
	   contains annotations	showing	nodes  in  the	"exploded  graph"  and
	   diagnostics associated with them.

       -fdump-analyzer-untracked
	   Emit	 custom	 warnings  with	internal details intended for analyzer
	   developers.

   Options for Debugging Your Program
       To tell GCC to emit extra information for use by	a debugger, in	almost
       all  cases  you	need only to add -g to your other options.  Some debug
       formats can co-exist (like DWARF	with CTF) when each of them is enabled
       explicitly by adding the	respective command line	option to  your	 other
       options.

       GCC  allows  you	 to  use -g with -O.  The shortcuts taken by optimized
       code may	occasionally be	surprising: some variables  you	 declared  may
       not  exist  at  all; flow of control may	briefly	move where you did not
       expect it; some statements may not be  executed	because	 they  compute
       constant	 results  or their values are already at hand; some statements
       may execute in different	places because they have  been	moved  out  of
       loops.	Nevertheless  it  is possible to debug optimized output.  This
       makes it	reasonable to use the optimizer	for programs that  might  have
       bugs.

       If you are not using some other optimization option, consider using -Og
       with  -g.   With	no -O option at	all, some compiler passes that collect
       information useful for debugging	do not run at all,  so	that  -Og  may
       result in a better debugging experience.

       -g  Produce  debugging  information  in	the  operating system's	native
	   format (stabs, COFF,	XCOFF, or DWARF).   GDB	 can  work  with  this
	   debugging information.

	   On  most  systems  that  use	 stabs format, -g enables use of extra
	   debugging information that only GDB can use;	this extra information
	   makes debugging  work  better  in  GDB  but	probably  makes	 other
	   debuggers  crash  or	 refuse	 to  read the program.	If you want to
	   control for certain whether to generate the extra information,  use
	   -gvms (see below).

       -ggdb
	   Produce  debugging  information  for	use by GDB.  This means	to use
	   the most expressive format available	(DWARF,	stabs, or  the	native
	   format if neither of	those are supported), including	GDB extensions
	   if at all possible.

       -gdwarf
       -gdwarf-version
	   Produce   debugging	 information  in  DWARF	 format	 (if  that  is
	   supported).	The value of version may be either 2, 3, 4 or  5;  the
	   default  version  for  most	targets	 is  5	(with the exception of
	   VxWorks, TPF	and Darwin / macOS, which default to  version  2,  and
	   AIX,	which defaults to version 4).

	   Note	 that  with DWARF Version 2, some ports	require	and always use
	   some	non-conflicting	DWARF 3	extensions in the unwind tables.

	   Version 4 may require GDB 7.0  and  -fvar-tracking-assignments  for
	   maximum benefit. Version 5 requires GDB 8.0 or higher.

	   GCC	no  longer  supports  DWARF  Version 1,	which is substantially
	   different than Version 2 and	later.	For historical	reasons,  some
	   other  DWARF-related	 options such as -fno-dwarf2-cfi-asm) retain a
	   reference to	DWARF Version 2	in  their  names,  but	apply  to  all
	   currently-supported versions	of DWARF.

       -gbtf
	   Request BTF debug information.  BTF is the default debugging	format
	   for	the  eBPF  target.   On	 other	targets,  like	x86, BTF debug
	   information can be generated	along  with  DWARF  debug  information
	   when	 both  of  the	debug formats are enabled explicitly via their
	   respective command line options.

       -gctf
       -gctflevel
	   Request CTF debug information and use level to specify how much CTF
	   debug information  should  be  produced.   If  -gctf	 is  specified
	   without  a  value  for  level,  the	default	 level	of  CTF	 debug
	   information is 2.

	   CTF debug information can  be  generated  along  with  DWARF	 debug
	   information	when  both of the debug	formats	are enabled explicitly
	   via their respective	command	line options.

	   Level 0 produces no CTF debug information  at  all.	 Thus,	-gctf0
	   negates -gctf.

	   Level  1  produces  CTF  information	 for  tracebacks  only.	  This
	   includes  callsite  information,  but   does	  not	include	  type
	   information.

	   Level  2  produces  type  information for entities (functions, data
	   objects etc.)  at file-scope	or global-scope	only.

       -gvms
	   Produce debugging information in Alpha/VMS debug format (if that is
	   supported).	This is	the format used	by DEBUG on Alpha/VMS systems.

       -gcodeview
	   Produce debugging information in CodeView debug format (if that  is
	   supported).	 This  is  the	format used by Microsoft Visual	C++ on
	   Windows.

       -glevel
       -ggdblevel
       -gvmslevel
	   Request debugging information and also use  level  to  specify  how
	   much	information.  The default level	is 2.

	   Level  0  produces  no debug	information at all.  Thus, -g0 negates
	   -g.

	   Level 1 produces minimal information, enough	for making  backtraces
	   in  parts  of  the  program	that  you  don't  plan to debug.  This
	   includes descriptions of functions and external variables, and line
	   number tables, but no information about local variables.

	   Level  3  includes  extra  information,  such  as  all  the	 macro
	   definitions	present	 in the	program.  Some debuggers support macro
	   expansion when you use -g3.

	   If you use multiple -g options, with	or without level numbers,  the
	   last	such option is the one that is effective.

	   -gdwarf  does  not  accept  a  concatenated	debug  level, to avoid
	   confusion with -gdwarf-level.  Instead use  an  additional  -glevel
	   option to change the	debug level for	DWARF.

       -fno-eliminate-unused-debug-symbols
	   By  default,	 no debug information is produced for symbols that are
	   not actually	used. Use this option if you  want  debug  information
	   for all symbols.

       -femit-class-debug-always
	   Instead  of	emitting debugging information for a C++ class in only
	   one object file, emit it in all object files	using the class.  This
	   option should be used only with debuggers that are unable to	handle
	   the way  GCC	 normally  emits  debugging  information  for  classes
	   because   using   this  option  increases  the  size	 of  debugging
	   information by as much as a factor of two.

       -fno-merge-debug-strings
	   Direct the linker to	not merge together strings  in	the  debugging
	   information	that are identical in different	object files.  Merging
	   is not supported by all assemblers or linkers.   Merging  decreases
	   the size of the debug information in	the output file	at the cost of
	   increasing link processing time.  Merging is	enabled	by default.

       -fdebug-prefix-map=old=new
	   When	 compiling  files  residing in directory old, record debugging
	   information describing them as if the files	resided	 in  directory
	   new instead.	 This can be used to replace a build-time path with an
	   install-time	path in	the debug info.	 It can	also be	used to	change
	   an  absolute	 path to a relative path by using . for	new.  This can
	   give	more reproducible builds, which	are location independent,  but
	   may	require	 an extra command to tell GDB where to find the	source
	   files. See also -ffile-prefix-map and -fcanon-prefix-map.

       -fvar-tracking
	   Run variable	tracking pass.	It computes where variables are	stored
	   at each position in code.  Better  debugging	 information  is  then
	   generated  (if  the	debugging  information	format	supports  this
	   information).

	   It is enabled by default when compiling with	optimization (-Os, -O,
	   -O2,	...), debugging	information (-g) and  the  debug  info	format
	   supports it.

       -fvar-tracking-assignments
	   Annotate assignments	to user	variables early	in the compilation and
	   attempt  to	carry  the annotations over throughout the compilation
	   all the way to the end, in an attempt to improve debug  information
	   while optimizing.  Use of -gdwarf-4 is recommended along with it.

	   It  can  be enabled even if var-tracking is disabled, in which case
	   annotations are created and maintained, but discarded at  the  end.
	   By  default,	 this  flag  is	 enabled together with -fvar-tracking,
	   except when selective scheduling is enabled.

       -gsplit-dwarf
	   If  DWARF  debugging	 information  is  enabled,  separate  as  much
	   debugging  information as possible into a separate output file with
	   the extension .dwo.	This option allows the build system  to	 avoid
	   linking  files  with	 debug information.  To	be useful, this	option
	   requires a debugger capable of reading .dwo files.

       -gdwarf32
       -gdwarf64
	   If DWARF debugging information is enabled,  the  -gdwarf32  selects
	   the	32-bit DWARF format and	the -gdwarf64 selects the 64-bit DWARF
	   format.  The	default	is target specific,  on	 most  targets	it  is
	   -gdwarf32  though.	The  32-bit DWARF format is smaller, but can't
	   support more	than 2GiB of debug information in  any	of  the	 DWARF
	   debug  information sections.	 The 64-bit DWARF format allows	larger
	   debug information and might not be well supported by	all  consumers
	   yet.

       -gdescribe-dies
	   Add	description  attributes	 to  some DWARF	DIEs that have no name
	   attribute, such as artificial variables,  external  references  and
	   call	site parameter DIEs.

       -gpubnames
	   Generate DWARF ".debug_pubnames" and	".debug_pubtypes" sections.

       -ggnu-pubnames
	   Generate  ".debug_pubnames"	and  ".debug_pubtypes"	sections  in a
	   format suitable for conversion into a GDB index.   This  option  is
	   only	useful with a linker that can produce GDB index	version	7.

       -fdebug-types-section
	   When	 using	DWARF  Version	4 or higher, type DIEs can be put into
	   their own ".debug_types" section instead of making them part	of the
	   ".debug_info" section.  It is more  efficient  to  put  them	 in  a
	   separate   comdat   section	 since	the  linker  can  then	remove
	   duplicates.	But not	all  DWARF  consumers  support	".debug_types"
	   sections  yet  and  on  some	objects	".debug_types" produces	larger
	   instead of smaller debugging	information.

       -grecord-gcc-switches
       -gno-record-gcc-switches
	   This	switch causes the command-line	options	 used  to  invoke  the
	   compiler  that  may	affect	code  generation to be appended	to the
	   DW_AT_producer  attribute  in  DWARF	 debugging  information.   The
	   options  are	 concatenated  with  spaces  separating	them from each
	   other and from the compiler version.	 It  is	 enabled  by  default.
	   See	also -frecord-gcc-switches for another way of storing compiler
	   options into	the object file.

       -gstrict-dwarf
	   Disallow using extensions of	 later	DWARF  standard	 version  than
	   selected   with   -gdwarf-version.	On  most  targets  using  non-
	   conflicting	DWARF  extensions  from	 later	standard  versions  is
	   allowed.

       -gno-strict-dwarf
	   Allow  using	 extensions  of	 later	DWARF  standard	 version  than
	   selected with -gdwarf-version.

       -gas-loc-support
	   Inform the compiler that the	assembler supports ".loc"  directives.
	   It  may  then  use  them for	the assembler to generate DWARF2+ line
	   number tables.

	   This	is  generally  desirable,  because  assembler-generated	 line-
	   number  tables  are	a lot more compact than	those the compiler can
	   generate itself.

	   This	option will be enabled by default if, at GCC  configure	 time,
	   the assembler was found to support such directives.

       -gno-as-loc-support
	   Force  GCC  to  generate  DWARF2+ line number tables	internally, if
	   DWARF2+ line	number tables are to be	generated.

       -gas-locview-support
	   Inform the compiler that the	assembler supports  "view"  assignment
	   and reset assertion checking	in ".loc" directives.

	   This	 option	 will be enabled by default if,	at GCC configure time,
	   the assembler was found to support them.

       -gno-as-locview-support
	   Force   GCC	  to	assign	  view	  numbers    internally,    if
	   -gvariable-location-views are explicitly requested.

       -gcolumn-info
       -gno-column-info
	   Emit	 location column information into DWARF	debugging information,
	   rather than just file and line.  This option	is enabled by default.

       -gstatement-frontiers
       -gno-statement-frontiers
	   This	 option	 causes	 GCC  to  create  markers  in	the   internal
	   representation  at  the  beginning  of statements, and to keep them
	   roughly in place throughout compilation, using them	to  guide  the
	   output  of  "is_stmt"  markers  in  the line	number table.  This is
	   enabled by default when compiling with optimization (-Os, -O1, -O2,
	   ...), and outputting	DWARF 2	debug information at the normal	level.

       -gvariable-location-views
       -gvariable-location-views=incompat5
       -gno-variable-location-views
	   Augment variable  location  lists  with  progressive	 view  numbers
	   implied from	the line number	table.	This enables debug information
	   consumers  to  inspect state	at certain points of the program, even
	   if  no  instructions	 associated  with  the	corresponding	source
	   locations  are  present  at	that  point.   If  the assembler lacks
	   support for view numbers in line number tables, this	will cause the
	   compiler to emit the	line number table, which generally makes  them
	   somewhat  less  compact.   The  augmented  line  number  tables and
	   location lists  are	fully  backward-compatible,  so	 they  can  be
	   consumed by debug information consumers that	are not	aware of these
	   augmentations, but they won't derive	any benefit from them either.

	   This	  is   enabled	by  default  when  outputting  DWARF  2	 debug
	   information at the normal level, as	long  as  there	 is  assembler
	   support,  -fvar-tracking-assignments	 is enabled and	-gstrict-dwarf
	   is not.  When assembler support is not available, this may still be
	   enabled, but	it will	force  GCC  to	output	internal  line	number
	   tables, and if -ginternal-reset-location-views is not enabled, that
	   will	most certainly lead to silently	mismatching location views.

	   There  is  a	 proposed  representation for view numbers that	is not
	   backward compatible with the	location  list	format	introduced  in
	   DWARF       5,	that	   can	     be	     enabled	  with
	   -gvariable-location-views=incompat5.	 This option may be removed in
	   the future, is only provided	as a reference implementation  of  the
	   proposed  representation.   Debug  information  consumers  are  not
	   expected to	support	 this  extended	 format,  and  they  would  be
	   rendered unable to decode location lists using it.

       -ginternal-reset-location-views
       -gno-internal-reset-location-views
	   Attempt  to	determine  location  views  that  can  be omitted from
	   location view lists.	 This  requires	 the  compiler	to  have  very
	   accurate insn length	estimates, which isn't always the case,	and it
	   may	cause incorrect	view lists to be generated silently when using
	   an assembler	that does not support location view  lists.   The  GNU
	   assembler  will  flag  any  such error as a "view number mismatch".
	   This	is only	enabled	on ports that  define  a  reliable  estimation
	   function.

       -ginline-points
       -gno-inline-points
	   Generate   extended	 debug	 information  for  inlined  functions.
	   Location view  tracking  markers  are  inserted  at	inlined	 entry
	   points, so that address and view numbers can	be computed and	output
	   in  debug  information.   This  can	be  enabled  independently  of
	   location views, in which case the view numbers won't	be output, but
	   it can only be enabled along	with statement frontiers,  and	it  is
	   only	enabled	by default if location views are enabled.

       -gz[=type]
	   Produce  compressed	debug  sections	 in  DWARF  format, if that is
	   supported.  If type is not given, the default type depends  on  the
	   capabilities	 of the	assembler and linker used.  type may be	one of
	   none	(don't compress	debug sections), or zlib (use zlib compression
	   in ELF  gABI	 format).   If	the  linker  doesn't  support  writing
	   compressed  debug  sections,	the option is rejected.	 Otherwise, if
	   the assembler does not support them,	-gz is silently	 ignored  when
	   producing object files.

       -femit-struct-debug-baseonly
	   Emit	 debug	information  for  struct-like types only when the base
	   name	of the compilation source file matches the base	name  of  file
	   in which the	struct is defined.

	   This	  option   substantially   reduces   the   size	 of  debugging
	   information,	but at significant potential loss in type  information
	   to  the  debugger.	See  -femit-struct-debug-reduced  for  a  less
	   aggressive  option.	 See  -femit-struct-debug-detailed  for	  more
	   detailed control.

	   This	option works only with DWARF debug output.

       -femit-struct-debug-reduced
	   Emit	 debug	information  for  struct-like types only when the base
	   name	of the compilation source file matches the base	name  of  file
	   in  which  the  type	is defined, unless the struct is a template or
	   defined in a	system header.

	   This	 option	 significantly	 reduces   the	 size	of   debugging
	   information,	 with  some  potential loss in type information	to the
	   debugger.  See -femit-struct-debug-baseonly for a  more  aggressive
	   option.    See   -femit-struct-debug-detailed   for	more  detailed
	   control.

	   This	option works only with DWARF debug output.

       -femit-struct-debug-detailed[=spec-list]
	   Specify the struct-like types  for  which  the  compiler  generates
	   debug  information.	The intent is to reduce	duplicate struct debug
	   information between different object	files within the same program.

	   This	option is a detailed  version  of  -femit-struct-debug-reduced
	   and -femit-struct-debug-baseonly, which serves for most needs.

	   A		    specification		 has		   the
	   syntax[dir:|ind:][ord:|gen:](any|sys|base|none)

	   The optional	first word limits the specification  to	 structs  that
	   are	used directly (dir:) or	used indirectly	(ind:).	 A struct type
	   is used directly when  it  is  the  type  of	 a  variable,  member.
	   Indirect uses arise through pointers	to structs.  That is, when use
	   of  an incomplete struct is valid, the use is indirect.  An example
	   is struct one direct; struct	two * indirect;.

	   The optional	second	word  limits  the  specification  to  ordinary
	   structs  (ord:)  or	generic	structs	(gen:).	 Generic structs are a
	   bit complicated  to	explain.   For	C++,  these  are  non-explicit
	   specializations of template classes,	or non-template	classes	within
	   the	 above.	   Other  programming  languages  have	generics,  but
	   -femit-struct-debug-detailed	does not yet implement them.

	   The third word specifies the	source files  for  those  structs  for
	   which  the compiler should emit debug information.  The values none
	   and any have	the normal meaning.  The value	base  means  that  the
	   base	of name	of the file in which the type declaration appears must
	   match  the  base  of	 the  name  of	the main compilation file.  In
	   practice, this means	that when compiling foo.c,  debug  information
	   is  generated  for  types  declared in that file and	foo.h, but not
	   other header	files.	The value sys  means  those  types  satisfying
	   base	or declared in system or compiler headers.

	   You	may need to experiment to determine the	best settings for your
	   application.

	   The default is -femit-struct-debug-detailed=all.

	   This	option works only with DWARF debug output.

       -fno-dwarf2-cfi-asm
	   Emit	DWARF unwind info as compiler  generated  ".eh_frame"  section
	   instead of using GAS	".cfi_*" directives.

       -fno-eliminate-unused-debug-types
	   Normally,  when  producing DWARF output, GCC	avoids producing debug
	   symbol output for types that	are nowhere used in  the  source  file
	   being  compiled.  Sometimes it is useful to have GCC	emit debugging
	   information	for  all  types	 declared  in  a   compilation	 unit,
	   regardless  of  whether  or	not  they  are	actually  used in that
	   compilation unit, for example if, in	the debugger, you want to cast
	   a value to a	type that is not actually used in your program (but is
	   declared).  More often, however,  this  results  in	a  significant
	   amount of wasted space.

   Options That	Control	Optimization
       These options control various sorts of optimizations.

       Without	any  optimization option, the compiler's goal is to reduce the
       cost of compilation and to make debugging produce the expected results.
       Statements are independent: if you stop the program with	 a  breakpoint
       between	statements, you	can then assign	a new value to any variable or
       change the program counter to any other statement in the	 function  and
       get exactly the results you expect from the source code.

       Turning on optimization flags makes the compiler	attempt	to improve the
       performance  and/or  code  size	at the expense of compilation time and
       possibly	the ability to debug the program.

       The compiler performs optimization based	on the knowledge it has	of the
       program.	 Compiling multiple files at once to a single output file mode
       allows the compiler to use information gained from  all	of  the	 files
       when compiling each of them.

       Not  all	 optimizations	are  controlled	 directly  by  a  flag.	  Only
       optimizations that have a flag are listed in this section.

       Most optimizations are completely disabled at -O0 or if an -O level  is
       not  set	on the command line, even if individual	optimization flags are
       specified.  Similarly, -Og suppresses many optimization passes.

       Depending on  the  target  and  how  GCC	 was  configured,  a  slightly
       different  set  of  optimizations  may be enabled at each -O level than
       those listed here.  You can invoke GCC  with  -Q	 --help=optimizers  to
       find out	the exact set of optimizations that are	enabled	at each	level.

       -O
       -O1 Optimize.   Optimizing  compilation takes somewhat more time, and a
	   lot more memory for a large function.

	   With	-O, the	compiler tries to reduce code size and execution time,
	   without performing any optimizations	that  take  a  great  deal  of
	   compilation time.

	   -O turns on the following optimization flags:

	   -fauto-inc-dec    -fbranch-count-reg	   -fcombine-stack-adjustments
	   -fcompare-elim -fcprop-registers -fdce -fdefer-pop -fdelayed-branch
	   -fdse	-fforward-propagate	    -fguess-branch-probability
	   -fif-conversion   -fif-conversion2	-finline-functions-called-once
	   -fipa-modref	  -fipa-profile	   -fipa-pure-const    -fipa-reference
	   -fipa-reference-addressable			     -fmerge-constants
	   -fmove-loop-invariants   -fmove-loop-stores	  -fomit-frame-pointer
	   -freorder-blocks	   -fshrink-wrap	-fshrink-wrap-separate
	   -fsplit-wide-types	-fssa-backprop	 -fssa-phiopt	-ftree-bit-ccp
	   -ftree-ccp	 -ftree-ch    -ftree-coalesce-vars    -ftree-copy-prop
	   -ftree-dce	-ftree-dominator-opts	 -ftree-dse    -ftree-forwprop
	   -ftree-fre  -ftree-phiprop -ftree-pta -ftree-scev-cprop -ftree-sink
	   -ftree-slsr -ftree-sra -ftree-ter -funit-at-a-time

       -O2 Optimize  even   more.    GCC   performs   nearly   all   supported
	   optimizations  that	do  not	 involve  a  space-speed tradeoff.  As
	   compared to -O, this	option increases both compilation time and the
	   performance of the generated	code.

	   -O2 turns on	all optimization flags	specified  by  -O1.   It  also
	   turns on the	following optimization flags:

	   -falign-functions	-falign-jumps	-falign-labels	 -falign-loops
	   -fcaller-saves  -fcode-hoisting  -fcrossjumping  -fcse-follow-jumps
	   -fcse-skip-blocks	-fdelete-null-pointer-checks	-fdevirtualize
	   -fdevirtualize-speculatively		     -fexpensive-optimizations
	   -ffinite-loops     -fgcse	  -fgcse-lm	-fhoist-adjacent-loads
	   -finline-functions	-finline-small-functions   -findirect-inlining
	   -fipa-bit-cp	  -fipa-cp   -fipa-icf	-fipa-ra  -fipa-sra  -fipa-vrp
	   -fisolate-erroneous-paths-dereference		   -flra-remat
	   -foptimize-sibling-calls    -foptimize-strlen    -fpartial-inlining
	   -fpeephole2				-freorder-blocks-algorithm=stc
	   -freorder-blocks-and-partition		   -freorder-functions
	   -frerun-cse-after-loop     -fschedule-insns	     -fschedule-insns2
	   -fsched-interblock	-fsched-spec -fstore-merging -fstrict-aliasing
	   -fthread-jumps    -ftree-builtin-call-dce	 -ftree-loop-vectorize
	   -ftree-pre	    -ftree-slp-vectorize      -ftree-switch-conversion
	   -ftree-tail-merge -ftree-vrp	-fvect-cost-model=very-cheap

	   Please note the warning under -fgcse	about invoking -O2 on programs
	   that	use computed gotos.

       -O3 Optimize yet	more.  -O3 turns on all	optimizations specified	by -O2
	   and also turns on the following optimization	flags:

	   -fgcse-after-reload	      -fipa-cp-clone	    -floop-interchange
	   -floop-unroll-and-jam      -fpeel-loops	-fpredictive-commoning
	   -fsplit-loops	-fsplit-paths	      -ftree-loop-distribution
	   -ftree-partial-pre	 -funswitch-loops    -fvect-cost-model=dynamic
	   -fversion-loops-for-strides

       -O0 Reduce compilation time and make  debugging	produce	 the  expected
	   results.  This is the default.

       -Os Optimize  for size.	-Os enables all	-O2 optimizations except those
	   that	often increase code size:

	   -falign-functions   -falign-jumps   -falign-labels	 -falign-loops
	   -fprefetch-loop-arrays  -freorder-blocks-algorithm=stc

	   It also enables -finline-functions, causes the compiler to tune for
	   code	 size  rather  than  execution	speed,	and  performs  further
	   optimizations designed to reduce code size.

       -Ofast
	   Disregard strict standards  compliance.   -Ofast  enables  all  -O3
	   optimizations.   It	also  enables optimizations that are not valid
	   for all standard-compliant  programs.   It  turns  on  -ffast-math,
	   -fallow-store-data-races  and  the Fortran-specific -fstack-arrays,
	   unless -fmax-stack-var-size is specified, and  -fno-protect-parens.
	   It turns off	-fsemantic-interposition.

       -Og Optimize  debugging	experience.   -Og  should  be the optimization
	   level of choice for the standard edit-compile-debug cycle, offering
	   a  reasonable  level	 of  optimization   while   maintaining	  fast
	   compilation and a good debugging experience.	 It is a better	choice
	   than	-O0 for	producing debuggable code because some compiler	passes
	   that	collect	debug information are disabled at -O0.

	   Like	 -O0,  -Og completely disables a number	of optimization	passes
	   so  that  individual	 options  controlling  them  have  no  effect.
	   Otherwise  -Og  enables all -O1 optimization	flags except for those
	   that	may interfere with debugging:

	   -fbranch-count-reg	 -fdelayed-branch    -fdse     -fif-conversion
	   -fif-conversion2			-finline-functions-called-once
	   -fmove-loop-invariants	-fmove-loop-stores	  -fssa-phiopt
	   -ftree-bit-ccp  -ftree-dse  -ftree-pta  -ftree-sra

       -Oz Optimize  aggressively  for	size  rather  than  speed.   This  may
	   increase the	number of instructions executed	if those  instructions
	   require  fewer  bytes  to  encode.	-Oz  behaves  similarly	to -Os
	   including enabling most -O2 optimizations.

       If you use multiple -O options, with or without level numbers, the last
       such option is the one that is effective.

       Options of the form -fflag  specify  machine-independent	 flags.	  Most
       flags have both positive	and negative forms; the	negative form of -ffoo
       is -fno-foo.  In	the table below, only one of the forms is listed---the
       one  you	 typically  use.   You can figure out the other	form by	either
       removing	no- or adding it.

       The following options control specific optimizations.  They are	either
       activated  by  -O options or are	related	to ones	that are.  You can use
       the  following  flags  in  the  rare  cases   when   "fine-tuning"   of
       optimizations to	be performed is	desired.

       -fno-defer-pop
	   For	machines that must pop arguments after a function call,	always
	   pop the arguments as	soon as	each function returns.	At levels  -O1
	   and higher, -fdefer-pop is the default; this	allows the compiler to
	   let	arguments  accumulate  on the stack for	several	function calls
	   and pop them	all at once.

       -fforward-propagate
	   Perform a forward propagation pass  on  RTL.	  The  pass  tries  to
	   combine   two   instructions	 and  checks  if  the  result  can  be
	   simplified.	If loop	unrolling is active, two passes	are  performed
	   and the second is scheduled after loop unrolling.

	   This	 option	is enabled by default at optimization levels -O1, -O2,
	   -O3,	-Os.

       -ffp-contract=style
	   -ffp-contract=off disables floating-point  expression  contraction.
	   -ffp-contract=fast  enables	floating-point	expression contraction
	   such	as forming of fused multiply-add operations if the target  has
	   native  support  for	them.  -ffp-contract=on	enables	floating-point
	   expression contraction if allowed by	the language  standard.	  This
	   is  implemented  for	C and C++, where it enables contraction	within
	   one expression, but not across different statements.

	   The default is -ffp-contract=off for	C  in  a  standards  compliant
	   mode	(-std=c11 or similar), -ffp-contract=fast otherwise.

       -fomit-frame-pointer
	   Omit	 the  frame  pointer  in  functions that don't need one.  This
	   avoids the instructions to save,  set  up  and  restore  the	 frame
	   pointer; on many targets it also makes an extra register available.

	   On  some  targets  this  flag  has  no  effect because the standard
	   calling sequence always uses	a  frame  pointer,  so	it  cannot  be
	   omitted.

	   Note	 that  -fno-omit-frame-pointer	doesn't	 guarantee  the	 frame
	   pointer is used in all functions.  Several targets always omit  the
	   frame pointer in leaf functions.

	   Enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -foptimize-sibling-calls
	   Optimize sibling and	tail recursive calls.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -foptimize-strlen
	   Optimize  various  standard	C  string  functions  (e.g.  "strlen",
	   "strchr" or "strcpy") and their "_FORTIFY_SOURCE" counterparts into
	   faster alternatives.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -finline-stringops[=fn]
	   Expand memory  and  string  operations  (for	 now,  only  "memset")
	   inline,  even  when	the  length  is	 variable  or big enough as to
	   require looping.  This is most useful along with -ffreestanding and
	   -fno-builtin.

	   In some circumstances, it enables the  compiler  to	generate  code
	   that	takes advantage	of known alignment and length multipliers, but
	   even	  then	it  may	 be  less  efficient  than  optimized  runtime
	   implementations, and	grow code  size	 so  much  that	 even  a  less
	   performant  but shared implementation runs faster due to better use
	   of code caches.  This option	is disabled by default.

       -fno-inline
	   Do not expand any functions inline apart from those marked with the
	   "always_inline"  attribute.	 This  is   the	  default   when   not
	   optimizing.

	   Single functions can	be exempted from inlining by marking them with
	   the "noinline" attribute.

       -finline-small-functions
	   Integrate  functions	 into their callers when their body is smaller
	   than	expected function call code (so	overall	size of	 program  gets
	   smaller).   The  compiler heuristically decides which functions are
	   simple enough to be worth integrating in this way.	This  inlining
	   applies to all functions, even those	not declared inline.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -findirect-inlining
	   Inline  also	 indirect  calls  that	are  discovered	to be known at
	   compile time	thanks to previous  inlining.	This  option  has  any
	   effect   only   when	  inlining   itself   is   turned  on  by  the
	   -finline-functions or -finline-small-functions options.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -finline-functions
	   Consider all	functions for inlining,	even if	they are not  declared
	   inline.   The  compiler  heuristically  decides which functions are
	   worth integrating in	this way.

	   If all calls	to a given function are	integrated, and	 the  function
	   is  declared	 "static", then	the function is	normally not output as
	   assembler code in its own right.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.  Also enabled by -fprofile-use and
	   -fauto-profile.

       -finline-functions-called-once
	   Consider all	"static" functions called once for inlining into their
	   caller even if they are not marked "inline".	 If a call to a	 given
	   function  is	 integrated,  then  the	 function  is  not  output  as
	   assembler code in its own right.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3 and -Os, but	not -Og.

       -fearly-inlining
	   Inline functions marked by "always_inline" and functions whose body
	   seems smaller than the function call	overhead  early	 before	 doing
	   -fprofile-generate  instrumentation	and real inlining pass.	 Doing
	   so makes  profiling	significantly  cheaper	and  usually  inlining
	   faster on programs having large chains of nested wrapper functions.

	   Enabled by default.

       -fipa-sra
	   Perform  interprocedural  scalar replacement	of aggregates, removal
	   of unused  parameters  and  replacement  of	parameters  passed  by
	   reference by	parameters passed by value.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3 and -Os.

       -finline-limit=n
	   By  default,	 GCC limits the	size of	functions that can be inlined.
	   This	flag allows coarse control of this limit.  n is	 the  size  of
	   functions that can be inlined in number of pseudo instructions.

	   Inlining  is	 actually  controlled by a number of parameters, which
	   may be specified individually by  using  --param  name=value.   The
	   -finline-limit=n option sets	some of	these parameters as follows:

	   max-inline-insns-single
	       is set to n/2.

	   max-inline-insns-auto
	       is set to n/2.

	   See	 below	for  a	documentation  of  the	individual  parameters
	   controlling inlining	and for	the defaults of	these parameters.

	   Note: there may be no  value	 to  -finline-limit  that  results  in
	   default behavior.

	   Note: pseudo	instruction represents,	in this	particular context, an
	   abstract  measurement  of  function's  size.	  In  no  way  does it
	   represent a count of	assembly instructions and as  such  its	 exact
	   meaning might change	from one release to an another.

       -fno-keep-inline-dllexport
	   This	 is  a	more  fine-grained version of -fkeep-inline-functions,
	   which applies  only	to  functions  that  are  declared  using  the
	   "dllexport" attribute or declspec.

       -fkeep-inline-functions
	   In  C,  emit	"static" functions that	are declared "inline" into the
	   object file,	even if	the function has been inlined into all of  its
	   callers.   This  switch does	not affect functions using the "extern
	   inline" extension in	GNU C90.  In C++,  emit	 any  and  all	inline
	   functions into the object file.

       -fkeep-static-functions
	   Emit	 "static" functions into the object file, even if the function
	   is never used.

       -fkeep-static-consts
	   Emit	variables declared  "static  const"  when  optimization	 isn't
	   turned on, even if the variables aren't referenced.

	   GCC	enables	 this  option  by  default.   If you want to force the
	   compiler to check  if  a  variable  is  referenced,	regardless  of
	   whether    or    not	  optimization	 is   turned   on,   use   the
	   -fno-keep-static-consts option.

       -fmerge-constants
	   Attempt  to	merge  identical  constants  (string   constants   and
	   floating-point constants) across compilation	units.

	   This	 option	 is  the  default  for	optimized  compilation	if the
	   assembler and  linker  support  it.	 Use  -fno-merge-constants  to
	   inhibit this	behavior.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fmerge-all-constants
	   Attempt to merge identical constants	and identical variables.

	   This	   option   implies   -fmerge-constants.    In	 addition   to
	   -fmerge-constants this considers  e.g.  even	 constant  initialized
	   arrays or initialized constant variables with integral or floating-
	   point  types.   Languages  like  C  or  C++	require	each variable,
	   including multiple instances	of  the	 same  variable	 in  recursive
	   calls,  to have distinct locations, so using	this option results in
	   non-conforming behavior.

       -fmodulo-sched
	   Perform  swing  modulo  scheduling  immediately  before  the	 first
	   scheduling  pass.   This pass looks at innermost loops and reorders
	   their instructions by overlapping different iterations.

       -fmodulo-sched-allow-regmoves
	   Perform more	aggressive SMS-based modulo scheduling	with  register
	   moves allowed.  By setting this flag	certain	anti-dependences edges
	   are	deleted,  which	 triggers the generation of reg-moves based on
	   the life-range  analysis.   This  option  is	 effective  only  with
	   -fmodulo-sched enabled.

       -fno-branch-count-reg
	   Disable  the	 optimization pass that	scans for opportunities	to use
	   "decrement and branch" instructions on a count register instead  of
	   instruction sequences that decrement	a register, compare it against
	   zero,  and  then branch based upon the result.  This	option is only
	   meaningful on architectures that support such  instructions,	 which
	   include   x86,   PowerPC,   IA-64   and   S/390.    Note  that  the
	   -fno-branch-count-reg  option  doesn't  remove  the	decrement  and
	   branch   instructions   from	  the	generated  instruction	stream
	   introduced by other optimization passes.

	   The default is -fbranch-count-reg at	-O1  and  higher,  except  for
	   -Og.

       -fno-function-cse
	   Do  not  put	function addresses in registers; make each instruction
	   that	calls a	 constant  function  contain  the  function's  address
	   explicitly.

	   This	 option	results	in less	efficient code,	but some strange hacks
	   that	 alter	the  assembler	output	may   be   confused   by   the
	   optimizations performed when	this option is not used.

	   The default is -ffunction-cse

       -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss
	   If the target supports a BSS	section, GCC by	default	puts variables
	   that	 are initialized to zero into BSS.  This can save space	in the
	   resulting code.

	   This	 option	 turns	off  this  behavior  because   some   programs
	   explicitly  rely  on	variables going	to the data section---e.g., so
	   that	the resulting  executable  can	find  the  beginning  of  that
	   section and/or make assumptions based on that.

	   The default is -fzero-initialized-in-bss.

       -fthread-jumps
	   Perform  optimizations  that	 check	to see if a jump branches to a
	   location where another comparison subsumed by the first  is	found.
	   If  so, the first branch is redirected to either the	destination of
	   the second branch or	a point	immediately following it, depending on
	   whether the condition is known to be	true or	false.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fsplit-wide-types
	   When	using a	type that occupies multiple registers, such  as	 "long
	   long"  on  a	 32-bit	system,	split the registers apart and allocate
	   them	independently.	This normally generates	better code for	 those
	   types, but may make debugging more difficult.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fsplit-wide-types-early
	   Fully  split	 wide  types early, instead of very late.  This	option
	   has no effect unless	-fsplit-wide-types is turned on.

	   This	is the default on some targets.

       -fcse-follow-jumps
	   In  common  subexpression  elimination  (CSE),  scan	 through  jump
	   instructions	 when  the  target  of	the jump is not	reached	by any
	   other path.	For example, when CSE  encounters  an  "if"  statement
	   with	 an  "else"  clause,  CSE  follows the jump when the condition
	   tested is false.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fcse-skip-blocks
	   This	is similar to -fcse-follow-jumps, but  causes  CSE  to	follow
	   jumps  that	conditionally skip over	blocks.	 When CSE encounters a
	   simple "if" statement with no else clause, -fcse-skip-blocks	causes
	   CSE to follow the jump around the body of the "if".

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -frerun-cse-after-loop
	   Re-run common subexpression elimination  after  loop	 optimizations
	   are performed.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fgcse
	   Perform  a global common subexpression elimination pass.  This pass
	   also	performs global	constant and copy propagation.

	   Note:  When	compiling  a  program  using  computed	gotos,	a  GCC
	   extension,  you  may	get better run-time performance	if you disable
	   the	global	common	subexpression  elimination  pass   by	adding
	   -fno-gcse to	the command line.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fgcse-lm
	   When	 -fgcse-lm is enabled, global common subexpression elimination
	   attempts to	move  loads  that  are	only  killed  by  stores  into
	   themselves.	This allows a loop containing a	load/store sequence to
	   be  changed to a load outside the loop, and a copy/store within the
	   loop.

	   Enabled by default when -fgcse is enabled.

       -fgcse-sm
	   When	-fgcse-sm is enabled, a	store motion pass is run after	global
	   common  subexpression  elimination.	 This  pass  attempts  to move
	   stores out of loops.	 When  used  in	 conjunction  with  -fgcse-lm,
	   loops  containing  a	 load/store  sequence can be changed to	a load
	   before the loop and a store after the loop.

	   Not enabled at any optimization level.

       -fgcse-las
	   When	 -fgcse-las  is	 enabled,  the	global	common	 subexpression
	   elimination	pass eliminates	redundant loads	that come after	stores
	   to the same memory location (both partial and full redundancies).

	   Not enabled at any optimization level.

       -fgcse-after-reload
	   When	-fgcse-after-reload is enabled,	a redundant  load  elimination
	   pass	 is  performed	after  reload.	The purpose of this pass is to
	   clean up redundant spilling.

	   Enabled by -O3, -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -faggressive-loop-optimizations
	   This	option tells the loop optimizer	to use language	constraints to
	   derive bounds for the number	of iterations of a loop.  This assumes
	   that	loop code does not invoke undefined behavior  by  for  example
	   causing  signed  integer  overflows or out-of-bound array accesses.
	   The bounds for the number of	iterations of a	loop are used to guide
	   loop	unrolling and peeling and loop exit test optimizations.	  This
	   option is enabled by	default.

       -funconstrained-commons
	   This	 option	 tells	the compiler that variables declared in	common
	   blocks (e.g.	Fortran) may later be overridden with longer  trailing
	   arrays.  This prevents certain optimizations	that depend on knowing
	   the array bounds.

       -fcrossjumping
	   Perform cross-jumping transformation.  This transformation  unifies
	   equivalent code and saves code size.	 The resulting code may	or may
	   not perform better than without cross-jumping.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fauto-inc-dec
	   Combine increments or decrements of addresses with memory accesses.
	   This	 pass  is  always  skipped  on	architectures that do not have
	   instructions	to support this.  Enabled by default at	-O1 and	higher
	   on architectures that support this.

       -fdce
	   Perform dead	code elimination (DCE) on RTL.	Enabled	by default  at
	   -O1 and higher.

       -fdse
	   Perform dead	store elimination (DSE)	on RTL.	 Enabled by default at
	   -O1 and higher.

       -fif-conversion
	   Attempt   to	  transform   conditional   jumps   into   branch-less
	   equivalents.	 This includes use of conditional moves, min, max, set
	   flags and abs instructions, and  some  tricks  doable  by  standard
	   arithmetics.	 The use of conditional	execution on chips where it is
	   available is	controlled by -fif-conversion2.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os, but not with -Og.

       -fif-conversion2
	   Use	 conditional   execution   (where   available)	 to  transform
	   conditional jumps into branch-less equivalents.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os, but not with -Og.

       -fdeclone-ctor-dtor
	   The C++ ABI requires	multiple entry	points	for  constructors  and
	   destructors:	 one  for a base subobject, one	for a complete object,
	   and one  for	 a  virtual  destructor	 that  calls  operator	delete
	   afterwards.	 For  a	 hierarchy  with  virtual  bases, the base and
	   complete variants  are  clones,  which  means  two  copies  of  the
	   function.   With  this  option,  the	base and complete variants are
	   changed to be thunks	that call a common implementation.

	   Enabled by -Os.

       -fdelete-null-pointer-checks
	   Assume that programs	cannot safely dereference null	pointers,  and
	   that	 no code or data element resides at address zero.  This	option
	   enables simple constant folding optimizations at  all  optimization
	   levels.   In	 addition,  other  optimization	passes in GCC use this
	   flag	to control global dataflow  analyses  that  eliminate  useless
	   checks  for	null  pointers;	 these	assume that a memory access to
	   address zero	always results in a trap, so  that  if	a  pointer  is
	   checked after it has	already	been dereferenced, it cannot be	null.

	   Note	however	that in	some environments this assumption is not true.
	   Use	-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks	 to  disable this optimization
	   for programs	that depend on that behavior.

	   This	option is enabled by default on	most targets.  On Nios II ELF,
	   it defaults to off.	On AVR and MSP430, this	option	is  completely
	   disabled.

	   Passes  that	use the	dataflow information are enabled independently
	   at different	optimization levels.

       -fdevirtualize
	   Attempt to convert calls to	virtual	 functions  to	direct	calls.
	   This	 is done both within a procedure and interprocedurally as part
	   of  indirect	 inlining  (-findirect-inlining)  and  interprocedural
	   constant propagation	(-fipa-cp).  Enabled at	levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fdevirtualize-speculatively
	   Attempt to convert calls to virtual functions to speculative	direct
	   calls.   Based  on  the  analysis  of  the  type inheritance	graph,
	   determine for a given call the set of likely	targets. If the	set is
	   small, preferably of	size 1,	change the  call  into	a  conditional
	   deciding  between direct and	indirect calls.	 The speculative calls
	   enable more	optimizations,	such  as  inlining.   When  they  seem
	   useless  after  further  optimization, they are converted back into
	   original form.

       -fdevirtualize-at-ltrans
	   Stream extra	information  needed  for  aggressive  devirtualization
	   when	 running the link-time optimizer in local transformation mode.
	   This	 option	 enables  more	devirtualization   but	 significantly
	   increases the size of streamed data.	For this reason	it is disabled
	   by default.

       -fexpensive-optimizations
	   Perform  a  number  of  minor  optimizations	 that  are  relatively
	   expensive.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -free
	   Attempt  to	remove	redundant  extension  instructions.   This  is
	   especially  helpful	for  the x86-64	architecture, which implicitly
	   zero-extends	in 64-bit  registers  after  writing  to  their	 lower
	   32-bit half.

	   Enabled  for	 Alpha,	 AArch64,  LoongArch,  PowerPC,	RISC-V,	SPARC,
	   h83000 and x86 at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fno-lifetime-dse
	   In C++ the value of an object is only affected  by  changes	within
	   its	lifetime:  when	 the  constructor  begins,  the	 object	has an
	   indeterminate value,	and any	changes	during	the  lifetime  of  the
	   object  are dead when the object is destroyed.  Normally dead store
	   elimination will take advantage of this; if your code relies	on the
	   value of the	object storage persisting beyond the lifetime  of  the
	   object,  you	 can  use  this	flag to	disable	this optimization.  To
	   preserve stores before the constructor starts  (e.g.	 because  your
	   operator  new clears	the object storage) but	still treat the	object
	   as dead after the destructor, you can  use  -flifetime-dse=1.   The
	   default  behavior can be explicitly selected	with -flifetime-dse=2.
	   -flifetime-dse=0 is equivalent to -fno-lifetime-dse.

       -flive-range-shrinkage
	   Attempt to decrease register	pressure through register  live	 range
	   shrinkage.	This  is  helpful  for	fast  processors with small or
	   moderate size register sets.

       -fira-algorithm=algorithm
	   Use the specified coloring algorithm	for  the  integrated  register
	   allocator.  The algorithm argument can be priority, which specifies
	   Chow's  priority  coloring,	or  CB,	which specifies	Chaitin-Briggs
	   coloring.  Chaitin-Briggs  coloring	is  not	 implemented  for  all
	   architectures,  but for those targets that do support it, it	is the
	   default because it generates	better code.

       -fira-region=region
	   Use specified regions for the integrated register  allocator.   The
	   region argument should be one of the	following:

	   all Use  all	 loops	as register allocation regions.	 This can give
	       the best	results	for machines with  a  small  and/or  irregular
	       register	set.

	   mixed
	       Use  all	loops except for loops with small register pressure as
	       the regions.  This value	usually	gives the best results in most
	       cases and for most architectures, and  is  enabled  by  default
	       when compiling with optimization	for speed (-O, -O2, ...).

	   one Use  all	 functions as a	single region.	This typically results
	       in the smallest code size, and is enabled by default for	-Os or
	       -O0.

       -fira-hoist-pressure
	   Use IRA to evaluate register	pressure in the	code hoisting pass for
	   decisions to	hoist expressions.  This  option  usually  results  in
	   smaller code, but it	can slow the compiler down.

	   This	option is enabled at level -Os for all targets.

       -fira-loop-pressure
	   Use	IRA  to	 evaluate  register pressure in	loops for decisions to
	   move	loop invariants.  This option usually results in generation of
	   faster and smaller code on machines with large register  files  (>=
	   32 registers), but it can slow the compiler down.

	   This	option is enabled at level -O3 for some	targets.

       -fno-ira-share-save-slots
	   Disable  sharing  of	 stack	slots  used  for saving	call-used hard
	   registers living  through  a	 call.	 Each  hard  register  gets  a
	   separate  stack  slot,  and	as  a result function stack frames are
	   larger.

       -fno-ira-share-spill-slots
	   Disable sharing of  stack  slots  allocated	for  pseudo-registers.
	   Each	 pseudo-register  that	does  not  get	a hard register	gets a
	   separate stack slot,	and as a  result  function  stack  frames  are
	   larger.

       -flra-remat
	   Enable  CFG-sensitive rematerialization in LRA.  Instead of loading
	   values of spilled pseudos, LRA tries	to rematerialize (recalculate)
	   values if it	is profitable.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fdelayed-branch
	   If  supported  for  the  target   machine,	attempt	  to   reorder
	   instructions	 to  exploit instruction slots available after delayed
	   branch instructions.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os, but not at -Og.

       -fschedule-insns
	   If  supported  for  the  target   machine,	attempt	  to   reorder
	   instructions	 to  eliminate	execution  stalls due to required data
	   being unavailable.  This helps machines  that  have	slow  floating
	   point or memory load	instructions by	allowing other instructions to
	   be	issued	 until	the  result  of	 the  load  or	floating-point
	   instruction is required.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -fschedule-insns2
	   Similar to -fschedule-insns,	but requests  an  additional  pass  of
	   instruction	scheduling  after  register  allocation	has been done.
	   This	is especially useful  on  machines  with  a  relatively	 small
	   number  of  registers  and where memory load	instructions take more
	   than	one cycle.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fno-sched-interblock
	   Disable  instruction	 scheduling  across  basic  blocks,  which  is
	   normally  enabled  when scheduling before register allocation, i.e.
	   with	-fschedule-insns or at -O2 or higher.

       -fno-sched-spec
	   Disable speculative	motion	of  non-load  instructions,  which  is
	   normally  enabled  when scheduling before register allocation, i.e.
	   with	-fschedule-insns or at -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-pressure
	   Enable register pressure sensitive insn scheduling before  register
	   allocation.	 This only makes sense when scheduling before register
	   allocation is enabled, i.e. with  -fschedule-insns  or  at  -O2  or
	   higher.   Usage  of	this option can	improve	the generated code and
	   decrease its	size by	preventing register  pressure  increase	 above
	   the	number	of  available  hard registers and subsequent spills in
	   register allocation.

       -fsched-spec-load
	   Allow speculative motion of	some  load  instructions.   This  only
	   makes  sense	 when scheduling before	register allocation, i.e. with
	   -fschedule-insns or at -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-spec-load-dangerous
	   Allow speculative motion of	more  load  instructions.   This  only
	   makes  sense	 when scheduling before	register allocation, i.e. with
	   -fschedule-insns or at -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-stalled-insns
       -fsched-stalled-insns=n
	   Define how many insns (if any) can be moved	prematurely  from  the
	   queue  of  stalled  insns  into  the	 ready	list during the	second
	   scheduling pass.  -fno-sched-stalled-insns means that no insns  are
	   moved  prematurely, -fsched-stalled-insns=0 means there is no limit
	   on	how   many   queued   insns   can   be	 moved	  prematurely.
	   -fsched-stalled-insns    without   a	  value	  is   equivalent   to
	   -fsched-stalled-insns=1.

       -fsched-stalled-insns-dep
       -fsched-stalled-insns-dep=n
	   Define how many insn	groups (cycles)	are examined for a  dependency
	   on  a  stalled  insn	that is	a candidate for	premature removal from
	   the queue of	stalled	insns.	This has an  effect  only  during  the
	   second  scheduling pass, and	only if	-fsched-stalled-insns is used.
	   -fno-sched-stalled-insns-dep	       is	 equivalent	    to
	   -fsched-stalled-insns-dep=0.	  -fsched-stalled-insns-dep  without a
	   value is equivalent to -fsched-stalled-insns-dep=1.

       -fsched2-use-superblocks
	   When	 scheduling  after   register	allocation,   use   superblock
	   scheduling.	 This  allows  motion  across  basic block boundaries,
	   resulting in	faster schedules.  This	option is experimental,	as not
	   all machine descriptions used by GCC	model the CPU  closely	enough
	   to avoid unreliable results from the	algorithm.

	   This	 only  makes  sense when scheduling after register allocation,
	   i.e.	with -fschedule-insns2 or at -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-group-heuristic
	   Enable the group heuristic in the scheduler.	 This heuristic	favors
	   the instruction that	belongs	to a schedule group.  This is  enabled
	   by  default	when scheduling	is enabled, i.e. with -fschedule-insns
	   or -fschedule-insns2	or at -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-critical-path-heuristic
	   Enable  the	critical-path  heuristic  in  the   scheduler.	  This
	   heuristic  favors  instructions  on	the  critical  path.   This is
	   enabled  by	default	 when  scheduling  is	enabled,   i.e.	  with
	   -fschedule-insns or -fschedule-insns2 or at -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-spec-insn-heuristic
	   Enable  the	speculative  instruction  heuristic  in	the scheduler.
	   This	 heuristic  favors  speculative	 instructions	with   greater
	   dependency weakness.	 This is enabled by default when scheduling is
	   enabled, i.e.  with -fschedule-insns	or -fschedule-insns2 or	at -O2
	   or higher.

       -fsched-rank-heuristic
	   Enable  the rank heuristic in the scheduler.	 This heuristic	favors
	   the instruction belonging to	a basic	block  with  greater  size  or
	   frequency.	This is	enabled	by default when	scheduling is enabled,
	   i.e.	 with -fschedule-insns	or  -fschedule-insns2  or  at  -O2  or
	   higher.

       -fsched-last-insn-heuristic
	   Enable  the	last-instruction  heuristic  in	 the  scheduler.  This
	   heuristic favors the	instruction that is less dependent on the last
	   instruction scheduled.  This	is enabled by default when  scheduling
	   is  enabled,	 i.e. with -fschedule-insns or -fschedule-insns2 or at
	   -O2 or higher.

       -fsched-dep-count-heuristic
	   Enable  the	dependent-count	 heuristic  in	the  scheduler.	  This
	   heuristic   favors  the  instruction	 that  has  more  instructions
	   depending on	it.  This is enabled by	 default  when	scheduling  is
	   enabled, i.e.  with -fschedule-insns	or -fschedule-insns2 or	at -O2
	   or higher.

       -freschedule-modulo-scheduled-loops
	   Modulo scheduling is	performed before traditional scheduling.  If a
	   loop	 is  modulo  scheduled,	later scheduling passes	may change its
	   schedule.  Use this option to control that behavior.

       -fselective-scheduling
	   Schedule  instructions  using   selective   scheduling   algorithm.
	   Selective scheduling	runs instead of	the first scheduler pass.

       -fselective-scheduling2
	   Schedule   instructions   using   selective	scheduling  algorithm.
	   Selective scheduling	runs instead of	the second scheduler pass.

       -fsel-sched-pipelining
	   Enable software pipelining  of  innermost  loops  during  selective
	   scheduling.	  This	 option	  has	no   effect   unless   one  of
	   -fselective-scheduling or -fselective-scheduling2 is	turned on.

       -fsel-sched-pipelining-outer-loops
	   When	pipelining loops during	selective  scheduling,	also  pipeline
	   outer    loops.     This    option	 has	no    effect	unless
	   -fsel-sched-pipelining is turned on.

       -fsemantic-interposition
	   Some	object formats,	like ELF, allow	interposing of symbols by  the
	   dynamic linker.  This means that for	symbols	exported from the DSO,
	   the	compiler  cannot perform interprocedural propagation, inlining
	   and other  optimizations  in	 anticipation  that  the  function  or
	   variable  in	question may change. While this	feature	is useful, for
	   example, to rewrite memory  allocation  functions  by  a  debugging
	   implementation, it is expensive in the terms	of code	quality.  With
	   -fno-semantic-interposition	  the	compiler   assumes   that   if
	   interposition happens for functions the overwriting	function  will
	   have	precisely the same semantics (and side effects).  Similarly if
	   interposition   happens  for	 variables,  the  constructor  of  the
	   variable will be the	same. The flag has  no	effect	for  functions
	   explicitly	declared   inline  (where  it  is  never  allowed  for
	   interposition to  change  semantics)	 and  for  symbols  explicitly
	   declared weak.

       -fshrink-wrap
	   Emit	function prologues only	before parts of	the function that need
	   it,	rather	than at	the top	of the function.  This flag is enabled
	   by default at -O and	higher.

       -fshrink-wrap-separate
	   Shrink-wrap separate	parts of the prologue and epilogue separately,
	   so that those parts are only	executed when needed.  This option  is
	   on  by  default,  but  has  no  effect unless -fshrink-wrap is also
	   turned on and the target supports this.

       -fcaller-saves
	   Enable allocation of	values to  registers  that  are	 clobbered  by
	   function  calls, by emitting	extra instructions to save and restore
	   the registers around	such calls.  Such allocation is	done only when
	   it seems to result in better	code.

	   This	option is always  enabled  by  default	on  certain  machines,
	   usually  those  which  have	no  call-preserved  registers  to  use
	   instead.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fcombine-stack-adjustments
	   Tracks  stack  adjustments  (pushes	and  pops)  and	 stack	memory
	   references and then tries to	find ways to combine them.

	   Enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -fipa-ra
	   Use caller save registers for allocation if those registers are not
	   used	 by  any called	function.  In that case	it is not necessary to
	   save	and restore them around	 calls.	  This	is  only  possible  if
	   called  functions  are  part	 of  same  compilation unit as current
	   function and	they are compiled before it.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os, however the	option is disabled  if
	   generated  code  will be instrumented for profiling (-p, or -pg) or
	   if callee's register	usage cannot be	known exactly (this happens on
	   targets that	do not expose prologues	and epilogues in RTL).

       -fconserve-stack
	   Attempt to minimize stack usage.  The compiler attempts to use less
	   stack space,	even if	that makes the program	slower.	  This	option
	   implies  setting  the  large-stack-frame  parameter	to 100 and the
	   large-stack-frame-growth parameter to 400.

       -ftree-reassoc
	   Perform reassociation on trees.  This flag is enabled by default at
	   -O1 and higher.

       -fcode-hoisting
	   Perform code	hoisting.  Code	hoisting tries to move the  evaluation
	   of  expressions executed on all paths to the	function exit as early
	   as  possible.   This	 is  especially	 useful	  as   a   code	  size
	   optimization, but it	often helps for	code speed as well.  This flag
	   is enabled by default at -O2	and higher.

       -ftree-pre
	   Perform  partial  redundancy	elimination (PRE) on trees.  This flag
	   is enabled by default at -O2	and -O3.

       -ftree-partial-pre
	   Make	partial	redundancy elimination (PRE)  more  aggressive.	  This
	   flag	is enabled by default at -O3.

       -ftree-forwprop
	   Perform  forward  propagation  on  trees.   This flag is enabled by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-fre
	   Perform full	redundancy elimination (FRE) on	trees.	The difference
	   between FRE and PRE is that FRE only	considers expressions that are
	   computed on all paths leading to the	redundant  computation.	  This
	   analysis  is	faster than PRE, though	it exposes fewer redundancies.
	   This	flag is	enabled	by default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-phiprop
	   Perform hoisting of loads from conditional pointers on trees.  This
	   pass	is enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -fhoist-adjacent-loads
	   Speculatively hoist loads from both branches	of an if-then-else  if
	   the loads are from adjacent locations in the	same structure and the
	   target  architecture	has a conditional move instruction.  This flag
	   is enabled by default at -O2	and higher.

       -ftree-copy-prop
	   Perform  copy  propagation  on   trees.    This   pass   eliminates
	   unnecessary	copy  operations.   This flag is enabled by default at
	   -O1 and higher.

       -fipa-pure-const
	   Discover which functions are	pure or	constant.  Enabled by  default
	   at -O1 and higher.

       -fipa-reference
	   Discover which static variables do not escape the compilation unit.
	   Enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -fipa-reference-addressable
	   Discover   read-only,   write-only	and   non-addressable	static
	   variables.  Enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -fipa-stack-alignment
	   Reduce stack	alignment on  call  sites  if  possible.   Enabled  by
	   default.

       -fipa-pta
	   Perform   interprocedural   pointer	analysis  and  interprocedural
	   modification	 and  reference	 analysis.   This  option  can	 cause
	   excessive memory and	compile-time usage on large compilation	units.
	   It is not enabled by	default	at any optimization level.

       -fipa-profile
	   Perform  interprocedural profile propagation.  The functions	called
	   only	from  cold  functions  are  marked  as	cold.  Also  functions
	   executed  once  (such as "cold", "noreturn",	static constructors or
	   destructors)	are identified.	Cold functions and loop	less parts  of
	   functions  executed	once  are then optimized for size.  Enabled by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -fipa-modref
	   Perform  interprocedural  mod/ref  analysis.	   This	  optimization
	   analyzes  the  side effects of functions (memory locations that are
	   modified or referenced) and enables better optimization across  the
	   function call boundary.  This flag is enabled by default at -O1 and
	   higher.

       -fipa-cp
	   Perform  interprocedural  constant  propagation.  This optimization
	   analyzes the	program	to determine when values passed	 to  functions
	   are	constants  and	then optimizes accordingly.  This optimization
	   can substantially  increase	performance  if	 the  application  has
	   constants  passed to	functions.  This flag is enabled by default at
	   -O2,	-Os  and  -O3.	 It  is	 also  enabled	by  -fprofile-use  and
	   -fauto-profile.

       -fipa-cp-clone
	   Perform   function	cloning	  to   make  interprocedural  constant
	   propagation	stronger.   When  enabled,  interprocedural   constant
	   propagation	performs  function  cloning  when  externally  visible
	   function can	be  called  with  constant  arguments.	 Because  this
	   optimization	 can  create  multiple	copies	of  functions,	it may
	   significantly     increase	  code	   size	     (see      --param
	   ipa-cp-unit-growth=value).  This flag is enabled by default at -O3.
	   It is also enabled by -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -fipa-bit-cp
	   When	enabled, perform interprocedural bitwise constant propagation.
	   This	 flag  is  enabled  by default at -O2 and by -fprofile-use and
	   -fauto-profile.  It requires	that -fipa-cp is enabled.

       -fipa-vrp
	   When	enabled, perform interprocedural propagation of	value  ranges.
	   This	 flag  is enabled by default at	-O2. It	requires that -fipa-cp
	   is enabled.

       -fipa-icf
	   Perform  Identical  Code  Folding  for  functions   and   read-only
	   variables.	The  optimization  reduces  code  size and may disturb
	   unwind stacks by replacing a	function  by  equivalent  one  with  a
	   different  name. The	optimization works more	effectively with link-
	   time	optimization enabled.

	   Although  the  behavior  is	similar	 to  the  Gold	Linker's   ICF
	   optimization,  GCC  ICF  works  on  different  levels  and thus the
	   optimizations are not same -	there are equivalences that are	 found
	   only	by GCC and equivalences	found only by Gold.

	   This	flag is	enabled	by default at -O2 and -Os.

       -flive-patching=level
	   Control  GCC's  optimizations  to produce output suitable for live-
	   patching.

	   If  the  compiler's	optimization  uses  a	function's   body   or
	   information	extracted  from	 its  body  to optimize/change another
	   function, the latter	is called an impacted function of the  former.
	   If  a function is patched, its impacted functions should be patched
	   too.

	   The	impacted  functions   are   determined	 by   the   compiler's
	   interprocedural  optimizations.   For example, a caller is impacted
	   when	inlining a function into its caller, cloning  a	 function  and
	   changing  its  caller  to  call  this  new  clone,  or extracting a
	   function's pureness/constness information to	optimize its direct or
	   indirect callers, etc.

	   Usually, the	more IPA optimizations enabled,	the larger the	number
	   of  impacted	 functions for each function.  In order	to control the
	   number of impacted functions	and more easily	compute	 the  list  of
	   impacted  function,	IPA  optimizations can be partially enabled at
	   two different levels.

	   The level argument should be	one of the following:

	   inline-clone
	       Only enable inlining and	cloning	optimizations, which  includes
	       inlining,   cloning,   interprocedural  scalar  replacement  of
	       aggregates and partial inlining.	 As a result, when patching  a
	       function, all its callers and its clones' callers are impacted,
	       therefore need to be patched as well.

	       -flive-patching=inline-clone	disables     the     following
	       optimization flags: -fwhole-program  -fipa-pta  -fipa-reference
	       -fipa-ra	 -fipa-icf   -fipa-icf-functions   -fipa-icf-variables
	       -fipa-bit-cp		-fipa-vrp	      -fipa-pure-const
	       -fipa-reference-addressable -fipa-stack-alignment -fipa-modref

	   inline-only-static
	       Only enable inlining of static functions.  As  a	 result,  when
	       patching	a static function, all its callers are impacted	and so
	       need to be patched as well.

	       In  addition to all the flags that -flive-patching=inline-clone
	       disables,   -flive-patching=inline-only-static	disables   the
	       following   additional	optimization   flags:	-fipa-cp-clone
	       -fipa-sra  -fpartial-inlining  -fipa-cp

	   When	-flive-patching	is specified without any  value,  the  default
	   value is inline-clone.

	   This	flag is	disabled by default.

	   Note	  that	 -flive-patching   is  not  supported  with  link-time
	   optimization	(-flto).

       -fisolate-erroneous-paths-dereference
	   Detect paths	that trigger erroneous or undefined  behavior  due  to
	   dereferencing  a  null  pointer.  Isolate those paths from the main
	   control flow	and turn the statement	with  erroneous	 or  undefined
	   behavior  into  a trap.  This flag is enabled by default at -O2 and
	   higher  and	depends	 on  -fdelete-null-pointer-checks  also	 being
	   enabled.

       -fisolate-erroneous-paths-attribute
	   Detect  paths that trigger erroneous	or undefined behavior due to a
	   null	value being used in a way forbidden by a "returns_nonnull"  or
	   "nonnull"  attribute.   Isolate  those  paths from the main control
	   flow	and turn the statement with erroneous  or  undefined  behavior
	   into	 a trap.  This is not currently	enabled, but may be enabled by
	   -O2 in the future.

       -ftree-sink
	   Perform forward store motion	on trees.  This	 flag  is  enabled  by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-bit-ccp
	   Perform  sparse  conditional	 bit constant propagation on trees and
	   propagate pointer alignment information.  This pass	only  operates
	   on  local  scalar  variables	 and  is enabled by default at -O1 and
	   higher, except for -Og.  It requires	that -ftree-ccp	is enabled.

       -ftree-ccp
	   Perform sparse conditional constant	propagation  (CCP)  on	trees.
	   This	pass only operates on local scalar variables and is enabled by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -fssa-backprop
	   Propagate information about uses of a value up the definition chain
	   in  order  to  simplify  the	 definitions.	For example, this pass
	   strips sign operations if the sign of a value never	matters.   The
	   flag	is enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -fssa-phiopt
	   Perform  pattern  matching on SSA PHI nodes to optimize conditional
	   code.  This pass is enabled by default at -O1  and  higher,	except
	   for -Og.

       -ftree-switch-conversion
	   Perform  conversion	of  simple  initializations  in	 a  switch  to
	   initializations from	a scalar  array.   This	 flag  is  enabled  by
	   default at -O2 and higher.

       -ftree-tail-merge
	   Look	 for identical code sequences.	When found, replace one	with a
	   jump	to the other.  This optimization is known as tail  merging  or
	   cross  jumping.  This flag is enabled by default at -O2 and higher.
	   The compilation time	in this	pass can be  limited  using  max-tail-
	   merge-comparisons	 parameter    and    max-tail-merge-iterations
	   parameter.

       -ftree-dce
	   Perform dead	code elimination (DCE) on trees.  This flag is enabled
	   by default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-builtin-call-dce
	   Perform conditional dead code elimination (DCE) for calls to	built-
	   in functions	that may set "errno" but are otherwise	free  of  side
	   effects.   This flag	is enabled by default at -O2 and higher	if -Os
	   is not also specified.

       -ffinite-loops
	   Assume that a loop with an exit will	eventually take	the  exit  and
	   not	loop  indefinitely.   This allows the compiler to remove loops
	   that	otherwise  have	 no  side-effects,  not	 considering  eventual
	   endless looping as such.

	   This	option is enabled by default at	-O2 for	C++ with -std=c++11 or
	   higher.

       -ftree-dominator-opts
	   Perform   a	 variety  of  simple  scalar  cleanups	(constant/copy
	   propagation,	 redundancy   elimination,   range   propagation   and
	   expression  simplification)	based  on  a dominator tree traversal.
	   This	also performs jump threading (to reduce	jumps to jumps).  This
	   flag	is enabled by default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-dse
	   Perform  dead  store	elimination (DSE) on trees.  A dead store is a
	   store into a	memory location	that is	later overwritten  by  another
	   store  without  any	intervening  loads.   In this case the earlier
	   store can be	deleted.  This flag is enabled by default at  -O1  and
	   higher.

       -ftree-ch
	   Perform  loop header	copying	on trees.  This	is beneficial since it
	   increases effectiveness of  code  motion  optimizations.   It  also
	   saves one jump.  This flag is enabled by default at -O1 and higher.
	   It is not enabled for -Os, since it usually increases code size.

       -ftree-loop-optimize
	   Perform  loop  optimizations	 on  trees.   This  flag is enabled by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-loop-linear
       -floop-strip-mine
       -floop-block
	   Perform loop	nest optimizations.  Same as -floop-nest-optimize.  To
	   use this  code  transformation,  GCC	 has  to  be  configured  with
	   --with-isl	 to    enable	the   Graphite	 loop	transformation
	   infrastructure.

       -fgraphite-identity
	   Enable the identity transformation for graphite.  For every SCoP we
	   generate the	polyhedral representation and  transform  it  back  to
	   gimple.   Using  -fgraphite-identity	 we  can  check	 the  costs or
	   benefits of the GIMPLE -> GRAPHITE -> GIMPLE	transformation.	  Some
	   minimal optimizations are also performed by the code	generator isl,
	   like	index splitting	and dead code elimination in loops.

       -floop-nest-optimize
	   Enable  the	isl based loop nest optimizer.	This is	a generic loop
	   nest	optimizer based	on  the	 Pluto	optimization  algorithms.   It
	   calculates	a  loop	 structure  optimized  for  data-locality  and
	   parallelism.	 This option is	experimental.

       -floop-parallelize-all
	   Use the Graphite data dependence analysis to	 identify  loops  that
	   can	be  parallelized.   Parallelize	 all  the  loops  that	can be
	   analyzed to not contain loop	carried	dependences  without  checking
	   that	it is profitable to parallelize	the loops.

       -ftree-coalesce-vars
	   While  transforming	the  program  out  of  the SSA representation,
	   attempt to reduce copying by	coalescing versions of different user-
	   defined variables, instead of just compiler temporaries.  This  may
	   severely  limit  the	ability	to debug an optimized program compiled
	   with	-fno-var-tracking-assignments.	In the negated form, this flag
	   prevents SSA	coalescing of user variables.  This option is  enabled
	   by  default	if  optimization  is  enabled, and it does very	little
	   otherwise.

       -ftree-loop-if-convert
	   Attempt to transform	conditional jumps in the  innermost  loops  to
	   branch-less equivalents.  The intent	is to remove control-flow from
	   the	innermost  loops  in  order  to	 improve  the  ability	of the
	   vectorization pass to handle	 these	loops.	 This  is  enabled  by
	   default if vectorization is enabled.

       -ftree-loop-distribution
	   Perform loop	distribution.  This flag can improve cache performance
	   on  big  loop  bodies  and  allow  further loop optimizations, like
	   parallelization or vectorization, to	take place.  For example,  the
	   loop

		   DO I	= 1, N
		     A(I) = B(I) + C
		     D(I) = E(I) * F
		   ENDDO

	   is transformed to

		   DO I	= 1, N
		      A(I) = B(I) + C
		   ENDDO
		   DO I	= 1, N
		      D(I) = E(I) * F
		   ENDDO

	   This	 flag  is  enabled  by	default	at -O3.	 It is also enabled by
	   -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -ftree-loop-distribute-patterns
	   Perform loop	distribution of	patterns that can  be  code  generated
	   with	 calls	to  a library.	This flag is enabled by	default	at -O2
	   and higher, and by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

	   This	pass distributes the initialization loops and generates	a call
	   to memset zero.  For	example, the loop

		   DO I	= 1, N
		     A(I) = 0
		     B(I) = A(I) + I
		   ENDDO

	   is transformed to

		   DO I	= 1, N
		      A(I) = 0
		   ENDDO
		   DO I	= 1, N
		      B(I) = A(I) + I
		   ENDDO

	   and the initialization loop is transformed into a  call  to	memset
	   zero.

       -floop-interchange
	   Perform  loop  interchange  outside	of  graphite.	This  flag can
	   improve cache performance on	 loop  nest  and  allow	 further  loop
	   optimizations, like vectorization, to take place.  For example, the
	   loop

		   for (int i =	0; i < N; i++)
		     for (int j	= 0; j < N; j++)
		       for (int	k = 0; k < N; k++)
			 c[i][j] = c[i][j] + a[i][k]*b[k][j];

	   is transformed to

		   for (int i =	0; i < N; i++)
		     for (int k	= 0; k < N; k++)
		       for (int	j = 0; j < N; j++)
			 c[i][j] = c[i][j] + a[i][k]*b[k][j];

	   This	 flag  is  enabled  by	default	at -O3.	 It is also enabled by
	   -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -floop-unroll-and-jam
	   Apply unroll	and jam	transformations	on feasible loops.  In a  loop
	   nest	 this  unrolls	the  outer  loop  by some factor and fuses the
	   resulting multiple inner loops.  This flag is enabled by default at
	   -O3.	 It is also enabled by -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -ftree-loop-im
	   Perform loop	invariant motion  on  trees.   This  pass  moves  only
	   invariants  that  are  hard to handle at RTL	level (function	calls,
	   operations that expand to nontrivial	 sequences  of	insns).	  With
	   -funswitch-loops  it	 also  moves  operands	of conditions that are
	   invariant out of  the  loop,	 so  that  we  can  use	 just  trivial
	   invariantness analysis in loop unswitching.	The pass also includes
	   store motion.

       -ftree-loop-ivcanon
	   Create  a  canonical	 counter for number of iterations in loops for
	   which  determining  number  of  iterations	requires   complicated
	   analysis.   Later  optimizations  then  may	determine  the	number
	   easily.  Useful especially in connection with unrolling.

       -ftree-scev-cprop
	   Perform final value replacement.  If	a variable is  modified	 in  a
	   loop	 in  such  a  way  that	its value when exiting the loop	can be
	   determined using only its initial value  and	 the  number  of  loop
	   iterations,	replace	uses of	the final value	by such	a computation,
	   provided it is sufficiently cheap.  This reduces data  dependencies
	   and	may  allow further simplifications.  Enabled by	default	at -O1
	   and higher.

       -fivopts
	   Perform  induction  variable	 optimizations	(strength   reduction,
	   induction  variable	merging	and induction variable elimination) on
	   trees.

       -ftree-parallelize-loops=n
	   Parallelize loops, i.e., split their	iteration space	to  run	 in  n
	   threads.   This  is	only  possible	for loops whose	iterations are
	   independent and can be arbitrarily reordered.  The optimization  is
	   only	profitable on multiprocessor machines, for loops that are CPU-
	   intensive,  rather than constrained e.g. by memory bandwidth.  This
	   option implies -pthread, and	thus is	only supported on targets that
	   have	support	for -pthread.

       -ftree-pta
	   Perform function-local points-to analysis on	trees.	This  flag  is
	   enabled by default at -O1 and higher, except	for -Og.

       -ftree-sra
	   Perform  scalar  replacement	 of  aggregates.   This	 pass replaces
	   structure references	with scalars to	prevent	committing  structures
	   to  memory  too  early.  This flag is enabled by default at -O1 and
	   higher, except for -Og.

       -fstore-merging
	   Perform merging of narrow stores to consecutive  memory  addresses.
	   This	 pass  merges  contiguous  stores of immediate values narrower
	   than	a word into  fewer  wider  stores  to  reduce  the  number  of
	   instructions.  This is enabled by default at	-O2 and	higher as well
	   as -Os.

       -ftree-ter
	   Perform  temporary  expression  replacement	during the SSA->normal
	   phase.  Single use/single def temporaries are replaced at their use
	   location with their defining	 expression.   This  results  in  non-
	   GIMPLE  code,  but  gives  the expanders much more complex trees to
	   work	on resulting in	better RTL generation.	 This  is  enabled  by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-slsr
	   Perform straight-line strength reduction on trees.  This recognizes
	   related  expressions	involving multiplications and replaces them by
	   less	expensive calculations when  possible.	 This  is  enabled  by
	   default at -O1 and higher.

       -ftree-vectorize
	   Perform    vectorization    on    trees.    This    flag    enables
	   -ftree-loop-vectorize and -ftree-slp-vectorize  if  not  explicitly
	   specified.

       -ftree-loop-vectorize
	   Perform  loop  vectorization	 on  trees.  This  flag	 is enabled by
	   default  at	-O2  and  by  -ftree-vectorize,	  -fprofile-use,   and
	   -fauto-profile.

       -ftree-slp-vectorize
	   Perform basic block vectorization on	trees. This flag is enabled by
	   default   at	  -O2  and  by	-ftree-vectorize,  -fprofile-use,  and
	   -fauto-profile.

       -ftrivial-auto-var-init=choice
	   Initialize automatic	variables with either a	pattern	or with	zeroes
	   to increase	the  security  and  predictability  of	a  program  by
	   preventing  uninitialized  memory  disclosure  and  use.  GCC still
	   considers an	automatic  variable  that  doesn't  have  an  explicit
	   initializer	    as	    uninitialized,     -Wuninitialized	   and
	   -Wanalyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value  will	still  report  warning
	   messages  on	such automatic variables and the compiler will perform
	   optimization	as if the  variable  were  uninitialized.   With  this
	   option, GCC will also initialize any	padding	of automatic variables
	   that	have structure or union	types to zeroes.  However, the current
	   implementation  cannot  initialize  automatic  variables  that  are
	   declared between the	controlling expression and the first case of a
	   "switch" statement.	Using -Wtrivial-auto-var-init  to  report  all
	   such	cases.

	   The three values of choice are:

	   *   uninitialized doesn't initialize	any automatic variables.  This
	       is C and	C++'s default.

	   *   pattern	Initialize  automatic variables	with values which will
	       likely transform	logic bugs into	crashes	 down  the  line,  are
	       easily recognized in a crash dump and without being values that
	       programmers  can	 rely  on  for	useful program semantics.  The
	       current value is	byte-repeatable	pattern	with byte "0xFE".  The
	       values used for pattern initialization might be changed in  the
	       future.

	   *   zero Initialize automatic variables with	zeroes.

	   The default is uninitialized.

	   Note	that the initializer values, whether zero or pattern, refer to
	   data	 representation	 (in memory or machine registers), rather than
	   to their interpretation as numerical	values.	 This distinction  may
	   be  important  in  languages	 that  support	types  with  biases or
	   implicit multipliers, and with such extensions  as  hardbool.   For
	   example,  a	variable  that	uses  8	 bits  to  represent  (biased)
	   quantities in the "range 160..400" will be initialized with the bit
	   patterns 0x00 or 0xFE, depending on choice, whether	or  not	 these
	   representations  stand  for	values in that range, and even if they
	   do, the interpretation of the  value	 held  by  the	variable  will
	   depend  on  the bias.  A hardbool variable that uses	say "0X5A" and
	   0xA5	for "false" and	"true",	respectively, will  trap  with	either
	   choice  of  trivial initializer, i.e., zero initialization will not
	   convert to the representation for "false", even if it would	for  a
	   "static"  variable  of  the	same type.  This means the initializer
	   pattern doesn't generally depend on the  type  of  the  initialized
	   variable.   One  notable  exception	is that	(non-hardened) boolean
	   variables that  fit	in  registers  are  initialized	 with  "false"
	   (zero), even	when pattern is	requested.

	   You	can control this behavior for a	specific variable by using the
	   variable attribute "uninitialized".

       -fvect-cost-model=model
	   Alter the cost model	used for vectorization.	  The  model  argument
	   should be one of unlimited, dynamic,	cheap or very-cheap.  With the
	   unlimited   model   the  vectorized	code-path  is  assumed	to  be
	   profitable while with the dynamic model a runtime check guards  the
	   vectorized  code-path  to  enable it	only for iteration counts that
	   will	likely execute faster than when	executing the original	scalar
	   loop.   The cheap model disables vectorization of loops where doing
	   so would be cost prohibitive	for example due	 to  required  runtime
	   checks  for	data dependence	or alignment but otherwise is equal to
	   the dynamic model.  The very-cheap model only allows	 vectorization
	   if  the  vector code	would entirely replace the scalar code that is
	   being vectorized.  For example, if each iteration of	 a  vectorized
	   loop	 would	only  be able to handle	exactly	four iterations	of the
	   scalar loop,	the very-cheap model would only	allow vectorization if
	   the scalar iteration	count is known to be a multiple	of four.

	   The default cost model depends on other optimization	flags  and  is
	   either dynamic or cheap.

       -fsimd-cost-model=model
	   Alter  the  cost  model used	for vectorization of loops marked with
	   the OpenMP simd directive.  The model argument  should  be  one  of
	   unlimited,  dynamic,	 cheap.	  All  values  of  model have the same
	   meaning as described	in -fvect-cost-model and  by  default  a  cost
	   model defined with -fvect-cost-model	is used.

       -ftree-vrp
	   Perform  Value  Range Propagation on	trees.	This is	similar	to the
	   constant propagation	pass, but instead of values, ranges of	values
	   are	propagated.   This allows the optimizers to remove unnecessary
	   range checks	like array bound checks	and null pointer checks.  This
	   is enabled by default  at  -O2  and	higher.	  Null	pointer	 check
	   elimination	 is   only  done  if  -fdelete-null-pointer-checks  is
	   enabled.

       -fsplit-paths
	   Split paths leading to loop backedges.  This	can improve dead  code
	   elimination	and common subexpression elimination.  This is enabled
	   by default at -O3 and above.

       -fsplit-ivs-in-unroller
	   Enables expression  of  values  of  induction  variables  in	 later
	   iterations  of  the	unrolled  loop	using  the  value in the first
	   iteration.  This breaks  long  dependency  chains,  thus  improving
	   efficiency of the scheduling	passes.

	   A  combination  of  -fweb and CSE is	often sufficient to obtain the
	   same	effect.	 However, that is not reliable in cases	where the loop
	   body	is more	complicated than a single basic	block.	It  also  does
	   not	work  at  all on some architectures due	to restrictions	in the
	   CSE pass.

	   This	optimization is	enabled	by default.

       -fvariable-expansion-in-unroller
	   With	this option, the compiler  creates  multiple  copies  of  some
	   local variables when	unrolling a loop, which	can result in superior
	   code.

	   This	 optimization  is  enabled by default for PowerPC targets, but
	   disabled by default otherwise.

       -fpartial-inlining
	   Inline parts	of functions.  This option has any  effect  only  when
	   inlining   itself   is  turned  on  by  the	-finline-functions  or
	   -finline-small-functions options.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fpredictive-commoning
	   Perform   predictive	  commoning   optimization,   i.e.,    reusing
	   computations	 (especially  memory  loads  and  stores) performed in
	   previous iterations of loops.

	   This	option is enabled  at  level  -O3.   It	 is  also  enabled  by
	   -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -fprefetch-loop-arrays
	   If  supported  by  the  target  machine,  generate  instructions to
	   prefetch memory to improve the performance  of  loops  that	access
	   large arrays.

	   This	 option	 may generate better or	worse code; results are	highly
	   dependent on	the structure of loops within the source code.

	   Disabled at level -Os.

       -fno-printf-return-value
	   Do not substitute constants for known  return  value	 of  formatted
	   output  functions  such  as	"sprintf", "snprintf", "vsprintf", and
	   "vsnprintf" (but not	"printf" of "fprintf").	  This	transformation
	   allows  GCC	to  optimize  or  even eliminate branches based	on the
	   known return	value of these functions called	 with  arguments  that
	   are	either	constant,  or  whose values are	known to be in a range
	   that	makes  determining  the	 exact	return	value  possible.   For
	   example,  when  -fprintf-return-value is in effect, both the	branch
	   and the body	of the "if" statement (but not the call	to  "snprint")
	   can	be  optimized  away  when  "i"	is a 32-bit or smaller integer
	   because the return value is guaranteed to be	at most	8.

		   char	buf[9];
		   if (snprintf	(buf, "%08x", i) >= sizeof buf)
		     ...

	   The -fprintf-return-value option relies on other optimizations  and
	   yields  best	 results  with -O2 and above.  It works	in tandem with
	   the	-Wformat-overflow  and	 -Wformat-truncation   options.	   The
	   -fprintf-return-value option	is enabled by default.

       -fno-peephole
       -fno-peephole2
	   Disable   any   machine-specific   peephole	 optimizations.	   The
	   difference between -fno-peephole and	-fno-peephole2 is in how  they
	   are implemented in the compiler; some targets use one, some use the
	   other, a few	use both.

	   -fpeephole  is  enabled  by default.	 -fpeephole2 enabled at	levels
	   -O2,	-O3, -Os.

       -fno-guess-branch-probability
	   Do not guess	branch probabilities using heuristics.

	   GCC uses heuristics to guess	branch probabilities if	they  are  not
	   provided  by	profiling feedback (-fprofile-arcs).  These heuristics
	   are based on	the control flow graph.	 If some branch	 probabilities
	   are	specified  by "__builtin_expect", then the heuristics are used
	   to guess branch probabilities for the  rest	of  the	 control  flow
	   graph,  taking  the	"__builtin_expect"  info  into	account.   The
	   interactions	between	the heuristics and "__builtin_expect"  can  be
	   complex,  and  in  some  cases,  it	may  be	 useful	to disable the
	   heuristics so that the effects of "__builtin_expect"	are easier  to
	   understand.

	   It  is  also	 possible  to  specify	expected  probability  of  the
	   expression	with   "__builtin_expect_with_probability"    built-in
	   function.

	   The	default	 is -fguess-branch-probability at levels -O, -O2, -O3,
	   -Os.

       -freorder-blocks
	   Reorder basic blocks	in the compiled	function in  order  to	reduce
	   number of taken branches and	improve	code locality.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -freorder-blocks-algorithm=algorithm
	   Use	the  specified	algorithm  for	basic  block  reordering.  The
	   algorithm argument can be simple, which does	not increase code size
	   (except sometimes due to secondary effects like alignment), or stc,
	   the "software trace cache" algorithm, which tries to	put all	 often
	   executed  code together, minimizing the number of branches executed
	   by making extra copies of code.

	   The default is simple at levels -O1,	-Os, and stc  at  levels  -O2,
	   -O3.

       -freorder-blocks-and-partition
	   In addition to reordering basic blocks in the compiled function, in
	   order  to  reduce number of taken branches, partitions hot and cold
	   basic blocks	into separate sections of the assembly and  .o	files,
	   to improve paging and cache locality	performance.

	   This	 optimization  is  automatically turned	off in the presence of
	   exception   handling	  or   unwind	tables	 (on   targets	 using
	   setjump/longjump or target specific scheme),	for linkonce sections,
	   for	functions  with	 a  user-defined  section attribute and	on any
	   architecture	 that  does  not   support   named   sections.	  When
	   -fsplit-stack  is  used  this  option is not	enabled	by default (to
	   avoid linker	errors), but may be enabled  explicitly	 (if  using  a
	   working linker).

	   Enabled for x86 at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -freorder-functions
	   Reorder  functions  in  the	object	file  in order to improve code
	   locality.   This  is	 implemented  by  using	 special   subsections
	   ".text.hot"	  for	most   frequently   executed   functions   and
	   ".text.unlikely" for	unlikely executed  functions.	Reordering  is
	   done	 by  the  linker  so  object  file  format  must support named
	   sections and	linker must place them in a reasonable way.

	   This	option isn't  effective	 unless	 you  either  provide  profile
	   feedback  (see  -fprofile-arcs  for	details)  or manually annotate
	   functions with "hot"	or "cold" attributes.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fstrict-aliasing
	   Allow  the  compiler	 to  assume  the  strictest   aliasing	 rules
	   applicable  to  the language	being compiled.	 For C (and C++), this
	   activates optimizations based  on  the  type	 of  expressions.   In
	   particular, an object of one	type is	assumed	never to reside	at the
	   same	address	as an object of	a different type, unless the types are
	   almost  the	same.	For  example,  an  "unsigned int" can alias an
	   "int", but not a "void*" or a "double".  A character	type may alias
	   any other type.

	   Pay special attention to code like this:

		   union a_union {
		     int i;
		     double d;
		   };

		   int f() {
		     union a_union t;
		     t.d = 3.0;
		     return t.i;
		   }

	   The practice	of reading from	a different union member than the  one
	   most	 recently  written to (called "type-punning") is common.  Even
	   with	 -fstrict-aliasing,  type-punning  is  allowed,	 provided  the
	   memory  is  accessed	 through  the  union type.  So,	the code above
	   works as expected.	 However, this code might not:

		   int f() {
		     union a_union t;
		     int* ip;
		     t.d = 3.0;
		     ip	= &t.i;
		     return *ip;
		   }

	   Similarly, access by	taking	the  address,  casting	the  resulting
	   pointer  and	 dereferencing the result has undefined	behavior, even
	   if the cast uses a union type, e.g.:

		   int f() {
		     double d =	3.0;
		     return ((union a_union *) &d)->i;
		   }

	   The -fstrict-aliasing option	is enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fipa-strict-aliasing
	   Controls whether rules  of  -fstrict-aliasing  are  applied	across
	   function  boundaries.  Note that if multiple	functions gets inlined
	   into	a single function the memory accesses are no longer considered
	   to be crossing a function boundary.

	   The -fipa-strict-aliasing option  is	 enabled  by  default  and  is
	   effective only in combination with -fstrict-aliasing.

       -falign-functions
       -falign-functions=n
       -falign-functions=n:m
       -falign-functions=n:m:n2
       -falign-functions=n:m:n2:m2
	   Align  the start of functions to the	next power-of-two greater than
	   or equal to n, skipping up to m-1  bytes.   This  ensures  that  at
	   least  the  first m bytes of	the function can be fetched by the CPU
	   without  crossing  an  n-byte  alignment  boundary.	 This  is   an
	   optimization	 of  code  performance	and  alignment	is ignored for
	   functions considered	 cold.	 If  alignment	is  required  for  all
	   functions, use -fmin-function-alignment.

	   If m	is not specified, it defaults to n.

	   Examples: -falign-functions=32 aligns functions to the next 32-byte
	   boundary,  -falign-functions=24 aligns to the next 32-byte boundary
	   only	 if  this  can	be  done  by  skipping	23  bytes   or	 less,
	   -falign-functions=32:7  aligns to the next 32-byte boundary only if
	   this	can be done by skipping	6 bytes	or less.

	   The second pair of n2:m2 values allows you to specify  a  secondary
	   alignment:  -falign-functions=64:7:32:3  aligns to the next 64-byte
	   boundary if this can	be done	by skipping 6 bytes or less, otherwise
	   aligns to the next 32-byte boundary if this can be done by skipping
	   2 bytes or less.  If	m2 is not specified, it	defaults to n2.

	   Some	assemblers only	support	this flag when n is a power of two; in
	   that	case, it is rounded up.

	   -fno-align-functions	and  -falign-functions=1  are  equivalent  and
	   mean	that functions are not aligned.

	   If  n is not	specified or is	zero, use a machine-dependent default.
	   The maximum allowed n option	value is 65536.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -flimit-function-alignment
	   If  this  option  is	 enabled,  the	 compiler   tries   to	 avoid
	   unnecessarily  overaligning	functions. It attempts to instruct the
	   assembler to	align by the amount  specified	by  -falign-functions,
	   but not to skip more	bytes than the size of the function.

       -falign-labels
       -falign-labels=n
       -falign-labels=n:m
       -falign-labels=n:m:n2
       -falign-labels=n:m:n2:m2
	   Align all branch targets to a power-of-two boundary.

	   Parameters  of  this	 option	are analogous to the -falign-functions
	   option.  -fno-align-labels and -falign-labels=1 are equivalent  and
	   mean	that labels are	not aligned.

	   If  -falign-loops  or  -falign-jumps	are applicable and are greater
	   than	this value, then their values are used instead.

	   If n	is not specified or is zero, use a  machine-dependent  default
	   which  is  very  likely to be 1, meaning no alignment.  The maximum
	   allowed n option value is 65536.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -falign-loops
       -falign-loops=n
       -falign-loops=n:m
       -falign-loops=n:m:n2
       -falign-loops=n:m:n2:m2
	   Align loops to a power-of-two boundary.  If the loops are  executed
	   many	 times,	 this  makes up	for any	execution of the dummy padding
	   instructions.  This is an  optimization  of	code  performance  and
	   alignment is	ignored	for loops considered cold.

	   If  -falign-labels  is  greater  than this value, then its value is
	   used	instead.

	   Parameters of this option are analogous  to	the  -falign-functions
	   option.   -fno-align-loops  and  -falign-loops=1 are	equivalent and
	   mean	that loops are not aligned.   The  maximum  allowed  n	option
	   value is 65536.

	   If n	is not specified or is zero, use a machine-dependent default.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -falign-jumps
       -falign-jumps=n
       -falign-jumps=n:m
       -falign-jumps=n:m:n2
       -falign-jumps=n:m:n2:m2
	   Align branch	targets	to a power-of-two boundary, for	branch targets
	   where the targets can only be reached by jumping.  In this case, no
	   dummy operations need be executed.  This is an optimization of code
	   performance and alignment is	ignored	for jumps considered cold.

	   If  -falign-labels  is  greater  than this value, then its value is
	   used	instead.

	   Parameters of this option are analogous  to	the  -falign-functions
	   option.   -fno-align-jumps  and  -falign-jumps=1 are	equivalent and
	   mean	that loops are not aligned.

	   If n	is not specified or is zero, use a machine-dependent  default.
	   The maximum allowed n option	value is 65536.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -fmin-function-alignment
	   Specify  minimal  alignment	of  functions to the next power-of-two
	   greater than	or equal to n. Unlike -falign-functions	this alignment
	   is applied also to all functions (even those	considered cold).  The
	   alignment is	also not affected by -flimit-function-alignment

       -fno-allocation-dce
	   Do not remove unused	C++ allocations	in dead	code elimination.

       -fallow-store-data-races
	   Allow the compiler to perform optimizations that may	introduce  new
	   data	 races	on stores, without proving that	the variable cannot be
	   concurrently	 accessed  by  other   threads.	   Does	  not	affect
	   optimization	of local data.	It is safe to use this option if it is
	   known that global data will not be accessed by multiple threads.

	   Examples   of  optimizations	 enabled  by  -fallow-store-data-races
	   include hoisting or if-conversions that may cause a value that  was
	   already  in memory to be re-written with that same value.  Such re-
	   writing is safe in a	single threaded	context	but may	be unsafe in a
	   multi-threaded  context.   Note  that  on  some   processors,   if-
	   conversions may be required in order	to enable vectorization.

	   Enabled at level -Ofast.

       -funit-at-a-time
	   This	option is left for compatibility reasons. -funit-at-a-time has
	   no  effect, while -fno-unit-at-a-time implies -fno-toplevel-reorder
	   and -fno-section-anchors.

	   Enabled by default.

       -fno-toplevel-reorder
	   Do  not  reorder  top-level	 functions,   variables,   and	 "asm"
	   statements.	 Output	them in	the same order that they appear	in the
	   input  file.	  When	this  option  is  used,	 unreferenced	static
	   variables  are  not	removed.   This	 option	is intended to support
	   existing code that relies on	a particular ordering.	For new	 code,
	   it is better	to use attributes when possible.

	   -ftoplevel-reorder  is  the	default	at -O1 and higher, and also at
	   -O0 if -fsection-anchors  is	 explicitly  requested.	  Additionally
	   -fno-toplevel-reorder implies -fno-section-anchors.

       -funreachable-traps
	   With	    this    option,    the    compiler	  turns	   calls    to
	   "__builtin_unreachable" into	 traps,	 instead  of  using  them  for
	   optimization.    This   also	 affects  any  such  calls  implicitly
	   generated by	the compiler.

	   This	 option	 has  the  same	  effect   as	-fsanitize=unreachable
	   -fsanitize-trap=unreachable,	 but  does  not	 affect	 the values of
	   those options.  If -fsanitize=unreachable is	enabled,  that	option
	   takes priority over this one.

	   This	option is enabled by default at	-O0 and	-Og.

       -fweb
	   Constructs  webs  as	commonly used for register allocation purposes
	   and assign each web individual pseudo register.   This  allows  the
	   register  allocation	 pass to operate on pseudos directly, but also
	   strengthens several other optimization passes, such	as  CSE,  loop
	   optimizer  and  trivial  dead  code remover.	 It can, however, make
	   debugging impossible, since variables no longer  stay  in  a	 "home
	   register".

	   Enabled by default with -funroll-loops.

       -fwhole-program
	   Assume  that	 the  current  compilation  unit  represents the whole
	   program being compiled.  All	public functions  and  variables  with
	   the	 exception   of	  "main"   and	 those	 merged	 by  attribute
	   "externally_visible"	become static  functions  and  in  effect  are
	   optimized more aggressively by interprocedural optimizers.

	   With	 -flto	this  option  has  a  limited  use.  In	most cases the
	   precise list	of symbols used	or exported from the binary  is	 known
	   the resolution info passed to the link-time optimizer by the	linker
	   plugin.   It	 is still useful if no linker plugin is	used or	during
	   incremental link step when  final  code  is	produced  (with	 -flto
	   -flinker-output=nolto-rel).

       -flto[=n]
	   This	 option	 runs  the standard link-time optimizer.  When invoked
	   with	source code,  it  generates  GIMPLE  (one  of  GCC's  internal
	   representations)  and  writes  it  to  special  ELF sections	in the
	   object file.	 When the object files are linked  together,  all  the
	   function  bodies  are read from these ELF sections and instantiated
	   as if they had been part of the same	translation unit.

	   To use the link-time	 optimizer,  -flto  and	 optimization  options
	   should  be specified	at compile time	and during the final link.  It
	   is recommended that you compile all the files participating in  the
	   same	 link  with the	same options and also specify those options at
	   link	time.  For example:

		   gcc -c -O2 -flto foo.c
		   gcc -c -O2 -flto bar.c
		   gcc -o myprog -flto -O2 foo.o bar.o

	   The first two invocations to	GCC save a bytecode representation  of
	   GIMPLE into special ELF sections inside foo.o and bar.o.  The final
	   invocation  reads  the GIMPLE bytecode from foo.o and bar.o,	merges
	   the two files into a	single internal	image, and compiles the	result
	   as usual.  Since both foo.o and bar.o  are  merged  into  a	single
	   image,   this   causes   all	  the	interprocedural	 analyses  and
	   optimizations in GCC	to work	across the two files as	if they	were a
	   single one.	This means, for	example, that the inliner is  able  to
	   inline functions in bar.o into functions in foo.o and vice-versa.

	   Another (simpler) way to enable link-time optimization is:

		   gcc -o myprog -flto -O2 foo.c bar.c

	   The	above  generates  bytecode  for	 foo.c	and bar.c, merges them
	   together into a single GIMPLE representation	and optimizes them  as
	   usual to produce myprog.

	   The	important  thing  to  keep in mind is that to enable link-time
	   optimizations you need to use the GCC driver	to  perform  the  link
	   step.   GCC automatically performs link-time	optimization if	any of
	   the objects involved	were  compiled	with  the  -flto  command-line
	   option.  You	can always override the	automatic decision to do link-
	   time	optimization by	passing	-fno-lto to the	link command.

	   To  make  whole  program optimization effective, it is necessary to
	   make	certain	whole program assumptions.  The	compiler needs to know
	   what	functions and variables	 can  be  accessed  by	libraries  and
	   runtime outside of the link-time optimized unit.  When supported by
	   the	linker,	 the  linker  plugin  (see -fuse-linker-plugin)	passes
	   information to the  compiler	 about	used  and  externally  visible
	   symbols.   When the linker plugin is	not available, -fwhole-program
	   should be used to allow the compiler	 to  make  these  assumptions,
	   which leads to more aggressive optimization decisions.

	   When	a file is compiled with	-flto without -fuse-linker-plugin, the
	   generated  object file is larger than a regular object file because
	   it  contains	 GIMPLE	 bytecodes  and	 the  usual  final  code  (see
	   -ffat-lto-objects).	  This	 means	that  object  files  with  LTO
	   information can be linked as	normal object files;  if  -fno-lto  is
	   passed to the linker, no interprocedural optimizations are applied.
	   Note	that when -fno-fat-lto-objects is enabled the compile stage is
	   faster but you cannot perform a regular, non-LTO link on them.

	   When	 producing  the	 final	binary,	 GCC  only  applies  link-time
	   optimizations to those files	that contain bytecode.	Therefore, you
	   can mix and match object files and libraries	with GIMPLE  bytecodes
	   and	final  object  code.  GCC automatically	selects	which files to
	   optimize in LTO mode	 and  which  files  to	link  without  further
	   processing.

	   Generally,  options specified at link time override those specified
	   at compile time, although in	some cases GCC attempts	to infer link-
	   time	options	from the settings used to compile the input files.

	   If you do not specify an optimization level option -O at link time,
	   then	GCC uses the highest optimization level	 used  when  compiling
	   the object files.  Note that	it is generally	ineffective to specify
	   an  optimization  level option only at link time and	not at compile
	   time, for  two  reasons.   First,  compiling	 without  optimization
	   suppresses  compiler	 passes	 that  gather  information  needed for
	   effective  optimization  at	link   time.	Second,	  some	 early
	   optimization	 passes	 can be	performed only at compile time and not
	   at link time.

	   There  are  some  code  generation  flags  preserved	 by  GCC  when
	   generating  bytecodes,  as  they  need  to be used during the final
	   link.  Currently, the following  options  and  their	 settings  are
	   taken  from	the  first object file that explicitly specifies them:
	   -fcommon, -fexceptions, -fnon-call-exceptions, -fgnu-tm and all the
	   -m target flags.

	   The following options -fPIC,	-fpic, -fpie and  -fPIE	 are  combined
	   based on the	following scheme:

		   B<-fPIC> + B<-fpic> = B<-fpic>
		   B<-fPIC> + B<-fno-pic> = B<-fno-pic>
		   B<-fpic/-fPIC> + (no	option)	= (no option)
		   B<-fPIC> + B<-fPIE> = B<-fPIE>
		   B<-fpic> + B<-fPIE> = B<-fpie>
		   B<-fPIC/-fpic> + B<-fpie> = B<-fpie>

	   Certain ABI-changing	flags are required to match in all compilation
	   units,  and trying to override this at link time with a conflicting
	   value   is	ignored.     This    includes	 options    such    as
	   -freg-struct-return and -fpcc-struct-return.

	   Other options such as -ffp-contract,	-fno-strict-overflow, -fwrapv,
	   -fno-trapv  or  -fno-strict-aliasing	are passed through to the link
	   stage and merged conservatively for conflicting translation	units.
	   Specifically	 -fno-strict-overflow,	-fwrapv	 and  -fno-trapv  take
	   precedence; and for example -ffp-contract=off takes precedence over
	   -ffp-contract=fast.	You can	override them at link time.

	   Diagnostic options such as -Wstringop-overflow are  passed  through
	   to  the  link  stage	and their setting matches that of the compile-
	   step	at function granularity.  Note	that  this  matters  only  for
	   diagnostics emitted during optimization.  Note that code transforms
	   such	as inlining can	lead to	warnings being enabled or disabled for
	   regions if code not consistent with the setting at compile time.

	   When	 you  need  to	pass  options  to  the	assembler  via	-Wa or
	   -Xassembler make sure to either compile such	translation units with
	   -fno-lto or consistently use	the  same  assembler  options  on  all
	   translation	units.	 You  can alternatively	also specify assembler
	   options at LTO link time.

	   To enable debug info	generation you need to supply  -g  at  compile
	   time.  If any of the	input files at link time were built with debug
	   info	 generation enabled the	link will enable debug info generation
	   as well.  Any elaborate debug info settings like  the  dwarf	 level
	   -gdwarf-5 need to be	explicitly repeated at the linker command line
	   and	mixing	different  settings  in	different translation units is
	   discouraged.

	   If LTO encounters objects with C linkage declared with incompatible
	   types  in  separate	translation  units  to	be   linked   together
	   (undefined  behavior	 according  to	ISO  C99  6.2.7),  a non-fatal
	   diagnostic may be issued.  The behavior is still undefined  at  run
	   time.  Similar diagnostics may be raised for	other languages.

	   Another   feature   of   LTO	 is  that  it  is  possible  to	 apply
	   interprocedural  optimizations  on  files  written	in   different
	   languages:

		   gcc -c -flto	foo.c
		   g++ -c -flto	bar.cc
		   gfortran -c -flto baz.f90
		   g++ -o myprog -flto -O3 foo.o bar.o baz.o -lgfortran

	   Notice  that	the final link is done with g++	to get the C++ runtime
	   libraries and -lgfortran  is	 added	to  get	 the  Fortran  runtime
	   libraries.	In  general,  when  mixing  languages in LTO mode, you
	   should use the same link command options as when  mixing  languages
	   in a	regular	(non-LTO) compilation.

	   If  object files containing GIMPLE bytecode are stored in a library
	   archive, say	libfoo.a, it is	possible to extract and	use them in an
	   LTO link if you are using a linker with plugin support.  To	create
	   static  libraries  suitable	for  LTO,  use	gcc-ar	and gcc-ranlib
	   instead of ar and ranlib; to	show the symbols of object files  with
	   GIMPLE  bytecode,  use  gcc-nm.   Those  commands  require that ar,
	   ranlib and nm have been compiled  with  plugin  support.   At  link
	   time,  use  the flag	-fuse-linker-plugin to ensure that the library
	   participates	in the LTO optimization	process:

		   gcc -o myprog -O2 -flto -fuse-linker-plugin a.o b.o -lfoo

	   With	the linker plugin enabled,  the	 linker	 extracts  the	needed
	   GIMPLE files	from libfoo.a and passes them on to the	running	GCC to
	   make	them part of the aggregated GIMPLE image to be optimized.

	   If  you  are	 not  using a linker with plugin support and/or	do not
	   enable the linker plugin, then  the	objects	 inside	 libfoo.a  are
	   extracted  and  linked as usual, but	they do	not participate	in the
	   LTO optimization process.   In  order  to  make  a  static  library
	   suitable  for  both LTO optimization	and usual linkage, compile its
	   object files	with -flto -ffat-lto-objects.

	   Link-time optimizations do not require the presence	of  the	 whole
	   program to operate.	If the program does not	require	any symbols to
	   be exported,	it is possible to combine -flto	and -fwhole-program to
	   allow   the	interprocedural	 optimizers  to	 use  more  aggressive
	   assumptions which may lead to improved optimization	opportunities.
	   Use	of  -fwhole-program is not needed when linker plugin is	active
	   (see	-fuse-linker-plugin).

	   The current implementation of LTO  makes  no	 attempt  to  generate
	   bytecode  that  is  portable	between	different types	of hosts.  The
	   bytecode files are versioned	and there is a strict  version	check,
	   so  bytecode	files generated	in one version of GCC do not work with
	   an older or newer version of	GCC.

	   Link-time optimization  does	 not  work  well  with	generation  of
	   debugging   information   on	 systems  other	 than  those  using  a
	   combination of ELF and DWARF.

	   If you specify the optional n, the optimization and code generation
	   done	at link	time is	executed in parallel using n parallel jobs  by
	   utilizing an	installed make program.	 The environment variable MAKE
	   may be used to override the program used.

	   You	can  also specify -flto=jobserver to use GNU make's job	server
	   mode	to determine the number	of parallel jobs. This is useful  when
	   the	Makefile  calling  GCC	is already executing in	parallel.  You
	   must	prepend	a + to the command recipe in the parent	 Makefile  for
	   this	 to  work.  This option	likely only works if MAKE is GNU make.
	   Even	without	the option value, GCC tries to automatically detect  a
	   running GNU make's job server.

	   Use	-flto=auto  to	use  GNU  make's  job server, if available, or
	   otherwise fall back to autodetection	of the number of  CPU  threads
	   present in your system.

       -flto-partition=alg
	   Specify the partitioning algorithm used by the link-time optimizer.
	   The	value  is  either 1to1 to specify a partitioning mirroring the
	   original source files or  balanced  to  specify  partitioning  into
	   equally  sized  chunks  (whenever  possible)	 or  max to create new
	   partition for every symbol where possible.  Specifying none	as  an
	   algorithm  disables	partitioning  and  streaming  completely.  The
	   default value is balanced. While 1to1 can be	used as	an  workaround
	   for	various	code ordering issues, the max partitioning is intended
	   for internal	testing	only.  The value one  specifies	 that  exactly
	   one	partition  should  be  used  while  the	 value	none  bypasses
	   partitioning	and executes the link-time optimization	step  directly
	   from	the WPA	phase.

       -flto-compression-level=n
	   This	  option   specifies   the   level  of	compression  used  for
	   intermediate	language written to LTO	 object	 files,	 and  is  only
	   meaningful  in  conjunction	with  LTO mode (-flto).	 GCC currently
	   supports two	LTO compression	algorithms. For	zstd, valid values are
	   0 (no compression) to 19 (maximum compression), while zlib supports
	   values from 0 to 9.	Values	outside	 this  range  are  clamped  to
	   either  minimum  or maximum of the supported	values.	 If the	option
	   is not given, a default balanced compression	setting	is used.

       -fuse-linker-plugin
	   Enables the use of a	linker plugin during  link-time	 optimization.
	   This	 option	 relies	 on  plugin  support  in  the linker, which is
	   available in	gold or	in GNU ld 2.21 or newer.

	   This	option enables the extraction  of  object  files  with	GIMPLE
	   bytecode  out  of  library  archives.  This improves	the quality of
	   optimization	by exposing more  code	to  the	 link-time  optimizer.
	   This	 information specifies what symbols can	be accessed externally
	   (by non-LTO object or  during  dynamic  linking).   Resulting  code
	   quality  improvements  on  binaries	(and shared libraries that use
	   hidden visibility) are similar to -fwhole-program.  See -flto for a
	   description of the effect of	this flag and how to use it.

	   This	option is enabled by  default  when  LTO  support  in  GCC  is
	   enabled  and	 GCC  was  configured for use with a linker supporting
	   plugins (GNU	ld 2.21	or newer or gold).

       -ffat-lto-objects
	   Fat LTO objects are object files that contain both the intermediate
	   language and	the object code. This makes them usable	for  both  LTO
	   linking  and	 normal	 linking.  This	 option	is effective only when
	   compiling with -flto	and is ignored at link time.

	   -fno-fat-lto-objects	improves compilation time over plain LTO,  but
	   requires  the  complete toolchain to	be aware of LTO. It requires a
	   linker  with	 linker	 plugin	 support  for	basic	functionality.
	   Additionally,  nm,  ar and ranlib need to support linker plugins to
	   allow a full-featured build environment (capable of building	static
	   libraries  etc).   GCC  provides  the  gcc-ar,  gcc-nm,  gcc-ranlib
	   wrappers to pass the	right options to these tools. With non fat LTO
	   makefiles need to be	modified to use	them.

	   Note	 that  modern  binutils	 provide  plugin  auto-load mechanism.
	   Installing the linker plugin	into $libdir/bfd-plugins has the  same
	   effect  as  usage  of the command wrappers (gcc-ar, gcc-nm and gcc-
	   ranlib).

	   The default is -fno-fat-lto-objects on targets with	linker	plugin
	   support.

       -fcompare-elim
	   After  register allocation and post-register	allocation instruction
	   splitting, identify arithmetic instructions that compute  processor
	   flags  similar  to a	comparison operation based on that arithmetic.
	   If possible,	eliminate the explicit comparison operation.

	   This	pass only applies to certain targets  that  cannot  explicitly
	   represent  the  comparison  operation before	register allocation is
	   complete.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -ffold-mem-offsets
       -fno-fold-mem-offsets
	   Try to  eliminate  add  instructions	 by  folding  them  in	memory
	   loads/stores.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3.

       -fcprop-registers
	   After  register allocation and post-register	allocation instruction
	   splitting,  perform	a  copy-propagation  pass  to  try  to	reduce
	   scheduling dependencies and occasionally eliminate the copy.

	   Enabled at levels -O1, -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -fprofile-correction
	   Profiles  collected using an	instrumented binary for	multi-threaded
	   programs may	be inconsistent	due to missed  counter	updates.  When
	   this	 option	is specified, GCC uses heuristics to correct or	smooth
	   out such inconsistencies. By	default, GCC emits  an	error  message
	   when	an inconsistent	profile	is detected.

	   This	option is enabled by -fauto-profile.

       -fprofile-partial-training
	   With	 "-fprofile-use"  all portions of programs not executed	during
	   train run are optimized agressively for size	rather than speed.  In
	   some	cases it is not	practical to train all possible	hot  paths  in
	   the	program.  (For example,	program	may contain functions specific
	   for a given hardware	 and  trianing	may  not  cover	 all  hardware
	   configurations	program	      is      run      on.)	  With
	   "-fprofile-partial-training"	profile	feedback will be  ignored  for
	   all	functions not executed during the train	run leading them to be
	   optimized as	if they	were compiled without profile  feedback.  This
	   leads  to  better  performance when train run is not	representative
	   but also leads to significantly bigger code.

       -fprofile-use
       -fprofile-use=path
	   Enable profile feedback-directed optimizations, and	the  following
	   optimizations,  many	 of  which  are	generally profitable only with
	   profile feedback available:

	   -fbranch-probabilities	 -fprofile-values	-funroll-loops
	   -fpeel-loops	    -ftracer	-fvpt	-finline-functions    -fipa-cp
	   -fipa-cp-clone  -fipa-bit-cp	-fpredictive-commoning	 -fsplit-loops
	   -funswitch-loops	-fgcse-after-reload	 -ftree-loop-vectorize
	   -ftree-slp-vectorize			     -fvect-cost-model=dynamic
	   -ftree-loop-distribute-patterns -fprofile-reorder-functions

	   Before  you	can use	this option, you must first generate profiling
	   information.

	   By default, GCC emits an error message if the feedback profiles  do
	   not match the source	code.  This error can be turned	into a warning
	   by  using  -Wno-error=coverage-mismatch.   Note  this may result in
	   poorly optimized code.  Additionally, by default, GCC also emits  a
	   warning  message  if	 the  feedback	profiles  do  not  exist  (see
	   -Wmissing-profile).

	   If path is specified, GCC looks at the path	to  find  the  profile
	   feedback data files.	See -fprofile-dir.

       -fauto-profile
       -fauto-profile=path
	   Enable  sampling-based  feedback-directed  optimizations,  and  the
	   following optimizations, many of  which  are	 generally  profitable
	   only	with profile feedback available:

	   -fbranch-probabilities	 -fprofile-values	-funroll-loops
	   -fpeel-loops	   -ftracer    -fvpt   -finline-functions     -fipa-cp
	   -fipa-cp-clone   -fipa-bit-cp -fpredictive-commoning	 -fsplit-loops
	   -funswitch-loops	-fgcse-after-reload	 -ftree-loop-vectorize
	   -ftree-slp-vectorize			     -fvect-cost-model=dynamic
	   -ftree-loop-distribute-patterns -fprofile-correction

	   path	is the name of a file containing AutoFDO profile  information.
	   If omitted, it defaults to fbdata.afdo in the current directory.

	   Producing  an  AutoFDO  profile  data  file	requires  running your
	   program with	the perf  utility  on  a  supported  GNU/Linux	target
	   system.  For	more information, see <https://perf.wiki.kernel.org/>.

	   E.g.

		   perf	record -e br_inst_retired:near_taken -b	-o perf.data \
		       -- your_program

	   Then	 use the create_gcov tool to convert the raw profile data to a
	   format that	can  be	 used  by  GCC.	  You  must  also  supply  the
	   unstripped	binary	 for   your   program	to   this  tool.   See
	   <https://github.com/google/autofdo>.

	   E.g.

		   create_gcov --binary=your_program.unstripped	--profile=perf.data \
		       --gcov=profile.afdo

       The following options control  compiler	behavior  regarding  floating-
       point   arithmetic.    These   options  trade  off  between  speed  and
       correctness.  All must be specifically enabled.

       -ffloat-store
	   Do not store	floating-point variables  in  registers,  and  inhibit
	   other  options  that	might change whether a floating-point value is
	   taken from a	register or memory.

	   This	option prevents	undesirable excess precision on	machines  such
	   as  the 68000 where the floating registers (of the 68881) keep more
	   precision than a "double" is	supposed to have.  Similarly  for  the
	   x86	architecture.	For  most  programs, the excess	precision does
	   only	good, but a few	programs rely on  the  precise	definition  of
	   IEEE	 floating  point.   Use	-ffloat-store for such programs, after
	   modifying them to store  all	 pertinent  intermediate  computations
	   into	variables.

       -fexcess-precision=style
	   This	 option	 allows	 further  control  over	 excess	 precision  on
	   machines where floating-point operations occur  in  a  format  with
	   more	 precision  or	range  than  the IEEE standard and interchange
	   floating-point types.  By default,  -fexcess-precision=fast	is  in
	   effect;  this  means	 that operations may be	carried	out in a wider
	   precision than the types specified in  the  source  if  that	 would
	   result in faster code, and it is unpredictable when rounding	to the
	   types  specified  in	the source code	takes place.  When compiling C
	   or C++, if -fexcess-precision=standard  is  specified  then	excess
	   precision  follows  the  rules  specified  in  ISO  C99  or C++; in
	   particular, both casts and assignments cause	values to  be  rounded
	   to	their  semantic	 types	(whereas  -ffloat-store	 only  affects
	   assignments).  This option is enabled by default for	C or C++ if  a
	   strict  conformance	option such as -std=c99	or -std=c++17 is used.
	   -ffast-math enables -fexcess-precision=fast by  default  regardless
	   of	whether	  a   strict   conformance   option   is   used.    If
	   -fexcess-precision=16 is specified, constants and  the  results  of
	   expressions with types "_Float16" and "__bf16" are computed without
	   excess precision.

	   -fexcess-precision=standard	is not implemented for languages other
	   than	C or C++.  On the x86, it has no  effect  if  -mfpmath=sse  or
	   -mfpmath=sse+387  is	 specified; in the former case,	IEEE semantics
	   apply without excess	precision, and	in  the	 latter,  rounding  is
	   unpredictable.

       -ffast-math
	   Sets	  the  options	-fno-math-errno,  -funsafe-math-optimizations,
	   -ffinite-math-only,	  -fno-rounding-math,	  -fno-signaling-nans,
	   -fcx-limited-range and -fexcess-precision=fast.

	   This	 option	 causes	 the  preprocessor macro "__FAST_MATH__" to be
	   defined.

	   This	option is not turned on	by any -O option besides -Ofast	 since
	   it  can  result  in incorrect output	for programs that depend on an
	   exact implementation	of IEEE	or ISO rules/specifications  for  math
	   functions.  It may, however,	yield faster code for programs that do
	   not require the guarantees of these specifications.

       -fno-math-errno
	   Do not set "errno" after calling math functions that	 are  executed
	   with	 a single instruction, e.g., "sqrt".  A	program	that relies on
	   IEEE	exceptions for math error handling may want to use  this  flag
	   for speed while maintaining IEEE arithmetic compatibility.

	   This	 option	 is not	turned on by any -O option since it can	result
	   in  incorrect  output  for  programs	 that  depend  on   an	 exact
	   implementation   of	IEEE  or  ISO  rules/specifications  for  math
	   functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs that  do
	   not require the guarantees of these specifications.

	   The default is -fmath-errno.

	   On  Darwin  systems,	the math library never sets "errno".  There is
	   therefore no	reason for the compiler	to  consider  the  possibility
	   that	it might, and -fno-math-errno is the default.

       -funsafe-math-optimizations
	   Allow  optimizations	 for floating-point arithmetic that (a)	assume
	   that	arguments and results are valid	and (b)	may  violate  IEEE  or
	   ANSI	 standards.   When used	at link	time, it may include libraries
	   or startup files that change	the default FPU	control	word or	 other
	   similar optimizations.

	   This	 option	 is not	turned on by any -O option since it can	result
	   in  incorrect  output  for  programs	 that  depend  on   an	 exact
	   implementation   of	IEEE  or  ISO  rules/specifications  for  math
	   functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs that  do
	   not	require	 the  guarantees  of  these  specifications.   Enables
	   -fno-signed-zeros,	-fno-trapping-math,   -fassociative-math   and
	   -freciprocal-math.

	   The default is -fno-unsafe-math-optimizations.

       -fassociative-math
	   Allow  re-association  of  operands	in  series  of	floating-point
	   operations.	This violates the ISO C	and C++	language  standard  by
	   possibly changing computation result.  NOTE:	re-ordering may	change
	   the	sign  of  zero	as  well  as ignore NaNs and inhibit or	create
	   underflow or	overflow (and thus cannot be used on code that	relies
	   on  rounding	behavior like "(x + 2**52) - 2**52".  May also reorder
	   floating-point comparisons and thus may not be  used	 when  ordered
	   comparisons	 are   required.    This  option  requires  that  both
	   -fno-signed-zeros and -fno-trapping-math be in  effect.   Moreover,
	   it  doesn't	make  much sense with -frounding-math. For Fortran the
	   option is automatically enabled  when  both	-fno-signed-zeros  and
	   -fno-trapping-math are in effect.

	   The default is -fno-associative-math.

       -freciprocal-math
	   Allow  the  reciprocal of a value to	be used	instead	of dividing by
	   the value if	this enables optimizations.  For example "x /  y"  can
	   be replaced with "x * (1/y)", which is useful if "(1/y)" is subject
	   to	common	 subexpression	elimination.   Note  that  this	 loses
	   precision and increases the number of flops operating on the	value.

	   The default is -fno-reciprocal-math.

       -ffinite-math-only
	   Allow optimizations for floating-point arithmetic that assume  that
	   arguments and results are not NaNs or +-Infs.

	   This	 option	 is not	turned on by any -O option since it can	result
	   in  incorrect  output  for  programs	 that  depend  on   an	 exact
	   implementation   of	IEEE  or  ISO  rules/specifications  for  math
	   functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs that  do
	   not require the guarantees of these specifications.

	   The default is -fno-finite-math-only.

       -fno-signed-zeros
	   Allow  optimizations	 for floating-point arithmetic that ignore the
	   signedness of zero.	IEEE  arithmetic  specifies  the  behavior  of
	   distinct  +0.0 and -0.0 values, which then prohibits	simplification
	   of	expressions   such   as	  x+0.0	  or	0.0*x	 (even	  with
	   -ffinite-math-only).	  This	option implies that the	sign of	a zero
	   result isn't	significant.

	   The default is -fsigned-zeros.

       -fno-trapping-math
	   Compile  code  assuming  that  floating-point   operations	cannot
	   generate user-visible traps.	 These traps include division by zero,
	   overflow,  underflow,  inexact  result and invalid operation.  This
	   option requires that	-fno-signaling-nans  be	 in  effect.   Setting
	   this	 option	may allow faster code if one relies on "non-stop" IEEE
	   arithmetic, for example.

	   This	option should never be turned on by any	-O option since	it can
	   result in incorrect output for programs that	 depend	 on  an	 exact
	   implementation   of	IEEE  or  ISO  rules/specifications  for  math
	   functions.

	   The default is -ftrapping-math.

	   Future versions of GCC may provide finer control  of	 this  setting
	   using C99's "FENV_ACCESS" pragma.  This command-line	option will be
	   used	 along	with  -frounding-math to specify the default state for
	   "FENV_ACCESS".

       -frounding-math
	   Disable  transformations  and  optimizations	 that  assume  default
	   floating-point  rounding  behavior.	 This is round-to-zero for all
	   floating point to integer conversions, and round-to-nearest for all
	   other arithmetic truncations.  This option should be	specified  for
	   programs  that change the FP	rounding mode dynamically, or that may
	   be executed with a non-default rounding mode.  This option disables
	   constant folding of	floating-point	expressions  at	 compile  time
	   (which   may	  be   affected	  by  rounding	mode)  and  arithmetic
	   transformations that	are unsafe in the presence  of	sign-dependent
	   rounding modes.

	   The default is -fno-rounding-math.

	   This	 option	 is  experimental  and does not	currently guarantee to
	   disable all GCC optimizations that are affected by  rounding	 mode.
	   Future  versions  of	 GCC may provide finer control of this setting
	   using C99's "FENV_ACCESS" pragma.  This command-line	option will be
	   used	along with -ftrapping-math to specify the  default  state  for
	   "FENV_ACCESS".

       -fsignaling-nans
	   Compile  code  assuming that	IEEE signaling NaNs may	generate user-
	   visible  traps  during  floating-point  operations.	 Setting  this
	   option  disables  optimizations  that  may  change  the  number  of
	   exceptions  visible	with  signaling	 NaNs.	 This  option  implies
	   -ftrapping-math.

	   This	 option	causes the preprocessor	macro "__SUPPORT_SNAN__" to be
	   defined.

	   The default is -fno-signaling-nans.

	   This	option is experimental and does	 not  currently	 guarantee  to
	   disable all GCC optimizations that affect signaling NaN behavior.

       -fno-fp-int-builtin-inexact
	   Do  not  allow  the built-in	functions "ceil", "floor", "round" and
	   "trunc", and	their "float" and "long	double"	variants, to  generate
	   code	  that	raises	the  "inexact"	floating-point	exception  for
	   noninteger arguments.  ISO C99 and C11  allow  these	 functions  to
	   raise  the  "inexact" exception, but	ISO/IEC	TS 18661-1:2014, the C
	   bindings to IEEE 754-2008, as integrated into  ISO  C23,  does  not
	   allow these functions to do so.

	   The	default	is -ffp-int-builtin-inexact, allowing the exception to
	   be raised, unless C23 or a later  C	standard  is  selected.	  This
	   option does nothing unless -ftrapping-math is in effect.

	   Even	 if  -fno-fp-int-builtin-inexact  is  used,  if	 the functions
	   generate a call to a	library	function then the "inexact"  exception
	   may	be  raised  if	the  library implementation does not follow TS
	   18661.

       -fsingle-precision-constant
	   Treat floating-point	 constants  as	single	precision  instead  of
	   implicitly converting them to double-precision constants.

       -fcx-limited-range
	   When	enabled, this option states that a range reduction step	is not
	   needed  when	 performing  complex  division.	  Also,	 there	is  no
	   checking whether the	result of a complex multiplication or division
	   is "NaN + I*NaN", with an attempt to	rescue the situation  in  that
	   case.   The	default	 is  -fno-cx-limited-range,  but is enabled by
	   -ffast-math.

	   This	 option	 controls  the	default	 setting  of   the   ISO   C99
	   "CX_LIMITED_RANGE" pragma.  Nevertheless, the option	applies	to all
	   languages.

       -fcx-fortran-rules
	   Complex  multiplication  and	 division follow Fortran rules.	 Range
	   reduction is	done as	part of	complex	 division,  but	 there	is  no
	   checking whether the	result of a complex multiplication or division
	   is  "NaN  + I*NaN", with an attempt to rescue the situation in that
	   case.

	   The default is -fno-cx-fortran-rules.

       The  following  options	control	  optimizations	  that	 may   improve
       performance,  but  are  not  enabled  by	 any -O	options.  This section
       includes	experimental options that may produce broken code.

       -fbranch-probabilities
	   After running a  program  compiled  with  -fprofile-arcs,  you  can
	   compile  it	a second time using -fbranch-probabilities, to improve
	   optimizations based on the number of	times each branch  was	taken.
	   When	 a  program  compiled  with -fprofile-arcs exits, it saves arc
	   execution counts to a file called sourcename.gcda for  each	source
	   file.   The	information in this data file is very dependent	on the
	   structure of	the generated code, so you must	use  the  same	source
	   code	 and the same optimization options for both compilations.  See
	   details about the file naming in -fprofile-arcs.

	   With	-fbranch-probabilities,	GCC puts a REG_BR_PROB	note  on  each
	   JUMP_INSN   and   CALL_INSN.	   These   can	 be  used  to  improve
	   optimization.  Currently, they are  only  used  in  one  place:  in
	   reorg.cc, instead of	guessing which path a branch is	most likely to
	   take,  the  REG_BR_PROB  values are used to exactly determine which
	   path	is taken more often.

	   Enabled by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

       -fprofile-values
	   If combined with -fprofile-arcs, it adds code  so  that  some  data
	   about values	of expressions in the program is gathered.

	   With	 -fbranch-probabilities,  it reads back	the data gathered from
	   profiling values of expressions for usage in	optimizations.

	   Enabled by -fprofile-generate, -fprofile-use, and -fauto-profile.

       -fprofile-reorder-functions
	   Function reordering based on	profile	instrumentation	collects first
	   time	of execution of	a  function  and  orders  these	 functions  in
	   ascending order.

	   Enabled with	-fprofile-use.

       -fvpt
	   If combined with -fprofile-arcs, this option	instructs the compiler
	   to add code to gather information about values of expressions.

	   With	 -fbranch-probabilities,  it  reads back the data gathered and
	   actually performs the optimizations based on	them.	Currently  the
	   optimizations  include  specialization of division operations using
	   the knowledge about the value of the	denominator.

	   Enabled with	-fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -frename-registers
	   Attempt to avoid false dependencies in scheduled code by making use
	   of  registers  left	 over	after	register   allocation.	  This
	   optimization	 most  benefits	 processors  with  lots	 of registers.
	   Depending on	the debug information format adopted  by  the  target,
	   however,  it	 can  make  debugging  impossible,  since variables no
	   longer stay in a "home register".

	   Enabled by default with -funroll-loops.

       -fschedule-fusion
	   Performs a target dependent pass over  the  instruction  stream  to
	   schedule  instructions of same type together	because	target machine
	   can execute them more efficiently if	 they  are  adjacent  to  each
	   other in the	instruction flow.

	   Enabled at levels -O2, -O3, -Os.

       -ftracer
	   Perform   tail   duplication	 to  enlarge  superblock  size.	  This
	   transformation simplifies the control flow of the function allowing
	   other optimizations to do a better job.

	   Enabled by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

       -funroll-loops
	   Unroll loops	whose  number  of  iterations  can  be	determined  at
	   compile  time  or  upon  entry to the loop.	-funroll-loops implies
	   -frerun-cse-after-loop,  -fweb  and	-frename-registers.   It  also
	   turns on complete loop peeling (i.e.	complete removal of loops with
	   a  small  constant  number  of iterations).	This option makes code
	   larger, and may or may not make it run faster.

	   Enabled by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

       -funroll-all-loops
	   Unroll all loops, even if their number of iterations	 is  uncertain
	   when	 the  loop  is	entered.  This usually makes programs run more
	   slowly.    -funroll-all-loops   implies   the   same	  options   as
	   -funroll-loops.

       -fpeel-loops
	   Peels  loops	for which there	is enough information that they	do not
	   roll	much (from profile feedback  or	 static	 analysis).   It  also
	   turns on complete loop peeling (i.e.	complete removal of loops with
	   small constant number of iterations).

	   Enabled by -O3, -fprofile-use, and -fauto-profile.

       -fmove-loop-invariants
	   Enables  the	 loop invariant	motion pass in the RTL loop optimizer.
	   Enabled at level -O1	and higher, except for -Og.

       -fmove-loop-stores
	   Enables the loop store motion pass in the  GIMPLE  loop  optimizer.
	   This	 moves	invariant  stores  to  after  the  end	of the loop in
	   exchange for	carrying the stored value in  a	 register  across  the
	   iteration.	Note  for this option to have an effect	-ftree-loop-im
	   has to be enabled as	well.  Enabled at level	-O1 and	higher,	except
	   for -Og.

       -fsplit-loops
	   Split a loop	into two if it contains	a condition that's always true
	   for one side	of the iteration space and false for the other.

	   Enabled by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

       -funswitch-loops
	   Move	branches with loop invariant conditions	out of the loop,  with
	   duplicates  of  the	loop  on  both branches	(modified according to
	   result of the condition).

	   Enabled by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

       -fversion-loops-for-strides
	   If a	loop iterates over an array with  a  variable  stride,	create
	   another  version of the loop	that assumes the stride	is always one.
	   For example:

		   for (int i =	0; i < n; ++i)
		     x[i * stride] = ...;

	   becomes:

		   if (stride == 1)
		     for (int i	= 0; i < n; ++i)
		       x[i] = ...;
		   else
		     for (int i	= 0; i < n; ++i)
		       x[i * stride] = ...;

	   This	is particularly	useful for  assumed-shape  arrays  in  Fortran
	   where   (for	 example)  it  allows  better  vectorization  assuming
	   contiguous accesses.	 This flag is enabled by default at  -O3.   It
	   is also enabled by -fprofile-use and	-fauto-profile.

       -ffunction-sections
       -fdata-sections
	   Place each function or data item into its own section in the	output
	   file	 if  the  target supports arbitrary sections.  The name	of the
	   function or the name	of the data item determines the	section's name
	   in the output file.

	   Use	these  options	on  systems  where  the	 linker	 can   perform
	   optimizations  to  improve locality of reference in the instruction
	   space.  Most	systems	using the ELF object format have linkers  with
	   such	  optimizations.   On  AIX,  the  linker  rearranges  sections
	   (CSECTs) based on the call graph.  The performance impact varies.

	   Together with a linker  garbage  collection	(linker	 --gc-sections
	   option)   these  options  may  lead	to  smaller  statically-linked
	   executables (after stripping).

	   On ELF/DWARF	systems	these options do not degenerate	the quality of
	   the debug information.  There could be  issues  with	 other	object
	   files/debug info formats.

	   Only	 use  these  options  when there are significant benefits from
	   doing so.  When you specify these options, the assembler and	linker
	   create larger object	and executable	files  and  are	 also  slower.
	   These  options  affect code generation.  They prevent optimizations
	   by the compiler and assembler using	relative  locations  inside  a
	   translation	unit  since the	locations are unknown until link time.
	   An example of such an optimization is relaxing calls	to short  call
	   instructions.

       -fstdarg-opt
	   Optimize  the  prologue of variadic argument	functions with respect
	   to usage of those arguments.

       -fsection-anchors
	   Try to reduce the number of symbolic	address	calculations by	 using
	   shared   "anchor"   symbols	 to   address  nearby  objects.	  This
	   transformation can help to reduce the number	of GOT entries and GOT
	   accesses on some targets.

	   For example,	the implementation of the following function "foo":

		   static int a, b, c;
		   int foo (void) { return a + b + c; }

	   usually calculates the addresses of all three variables, but	if you
	   compile it with -fsection-anchors, it accesses the variables	from a
	   common  anchor  point  instead.   The  effect  is  similar  to  the
	   following pseudocode	(which isn't valid C):

		   int foo (void)
		   {
		     register int *xr =	&x;
		     return xr[&a - &x]	+ xr[&b	- &x] +	xr[&c -	&x];
		   }

	   Not all targets support this	option.

       -fzero-call-used-regs=choice
	   Zero	 call-used  registers  at  function return to increase program
	   security by either  mitigating  Return-Oriented  Programming	 (ROP)
	   attacks or preventing information leakage through registers.

	   The	 possible   values   of	  choice  are  the  same  as  for  the
	   "zero_call_used_regs" attribute.  The default is skip.

	   You can control this	behavior for a specific	function by using  the
	   function attribute "zero_call_used_regs".

       --param name=value
	   In some places, GCC uses various constants to control the amount of
	   optimization	 that  is  done.   For	example,  GCC  does not	inline
	   functions that contain more than a certain number of	 instructions.
	   You	can  control some of these constants on	the command line using
	   the --param option.

	   The names of	specific parameters, and the meaning  of  the  values,
	   are	tied  to  the  internals  of  the compiler, and	are subject to
	   change without notice in future releases.

	   In order to get the	minimal,  maximal  and	default	 values	 of  a
	   parameter, use the --help=param -Q options.

	   In  each  case,  the	value is an integer.  The following choices of
	   name	are recognized for all targets:

	   predictable-branch-outcome
	       When branch is predicted	to be  taken  with  probability	 lower
	       than  this  threshold  (in percent), then it is considered well
	       predictable.

	   max-rtl-if-conversion-insns
	       RTL if-conversion tries to remove conditional branches around a
	       block   and   replace   them   with   conditionally    executed
	       instructions.   This  parameter	gives  the  maximum  number of
	       instructions in a block which  should  be  considered  for  if-
	       conversion.   The  compiler  will  also use other heuristics to
	       decide whether if-conversion is likely to be profitable.

	   max-rtl-if-conversion-predictable-cost
	       RTL if-conversion  will	try  to	 remove	 conditional  branches
	       around  a  block	 and  replace them with	conditionally executed
	       instructions.  These parameters give  the  maximum  permissible
	       cost  for the sequence that would be generated by if-conversion
	       depending on whether the	branch is statically determined	to  be
	       predictable  or not.  The units for this	parameter are the same
	       as those	for the	GCC internal seq_cost  metric.	 The  compiler
	       will  try  to  provide  a reasonable default for	this parameter
	       using the BRANCH_COST target macro.

	   max-crossjump-edges
	       The maximum number of incoming edges  to	 consider  for	cross-
	       jumping.	 The algorithm used by -fcrossjumping is O(N^2)	in the
	       number of edges incoming	to each	block.	Increasing values mean
	       more  aggressive	 optimization,	making	the  compilation  time
	       increase	with probably small improvement	in executable size.

	   min-crossjump-insns
	       The minimum number of instructions that must be matched at  the
	       end  of	two  blocks before cross-jumping is performed on them.
	       This value is ignored in	the case where all instructions	in the
	       block being cross-jumped	from are matched.

	   max-grow-copy-bb-insns
	       The maximum code	 size  expansion  factor  when	copying	 basic
	       blocks instead of jumping.  The expansion is relative to	a jump
	       instruction.

	   max-goto-duplication-insns
	       The maximum number of instructions to duplicate to a block that
	       jumps to	a computed goto.  To avoid O(N^2) behavior in a	number
	       of  passes, GCC factors computed	gotos early in the compilation
	       process,	and unfactors them as late as possible.	 Only computed
	       jumps at	the end	of a basic blocks with no more than  max-goto-
	       duplication-insns are unfactored.

	   max-delay-slot-insn-search
	       The maximum number of instructions to consider when looking for
	       an  instruction	to  fill  a  delay  slot.   If	more than this
	       arbitrary number	of instructions	are searched, the time savings
	       from filling the	delay slot are	minimal,  so  stop  searching.
	       Increasing values mean more aggressive optimization, making the
	       compilation  time  increase  with probably small	improvement in
	       execution time.

	   max-delay-slot-live-search
	       When  trying  to	 fill  delay  slots,  the  maximum  number  of
	       instructions  to	consider when searching	for a block with valid
	       live register information.  Increasing this arbitrarily	chosen
	       value   means  more  aggressive	optimization,  increasing  the
	       compilation time.  This parameter should	be  removed  when  the
	       delay  slot  code  is  rewritten	 to  maintain the control-flow
	       graph.

	   max-gcse-memory
	       The approximate maximum amount of memory	in "kB"	 that  can  be
	       allocated  in  order to perform the global common subexpression
	       elimination optimization.  If more  memory  than	 specified  is
	       required, the optimization is not done.

	   max-gcse-insertion-ratio
	       If  the	ratio  of expression insertions	to deletions is	larger
	       than this value for any expression, then	 RTL  PRE  inserts  or
	       removes	the  expression	 and  thus  leaves partially redundant
	       computations in the instruction stream.

	   max-pending-list-length
	       The maximum number of pending  dependencies  scheduling	allows
	       before  flushing	 the  current  state and starting over.	 Large
	       functions with few branches or  calls  can  create  excessively
	       large lists which needlessly consume memory and resources.

	   max-modulo-backtrack-attempts
	       The  maximum  number of backtrack attempts the scheduler	should
	       make  when  modulo  scheduling  a  loop.	  Larger  values   can
	       exponentially increase compilation time.

	   max-inline-functions-called-once-loop-depth
	       Maximal	loop  depth  of	a call considered by inline heuristics
	       that tries to inline all	functions called once.

	   max-inline-functions-called-once-insns
	       Maximal estimated size of  functions  produced  while  inlining
	       functions called	once.

	   max-inline-insns-single
	       Several	parameters control the tree inliner used in GCC.  This
	       number sets the maximum	number	of  instructions  (counted  in
	       GCC's  internal	representation)	 in a single function that the
	       tree  inliner  considers	 for  inlining.	  This	only   affects
	       functions  declared  inline  and	methods	implemented in a class
	       declaration (C++).

	   max-inline-insns-auto
	       When you	use -finline-functions (included in  -O3),  a  lot  of
	       functions  that	would otherwise	not be considered for inlining
	       by the  compiler	 are  investigated.   To  those	 functions,  a
	       different   (more  restrictive)	limit  compared	 to  functions
	       declared	inline can be applied (--param max-inline-insns-auto).

	   max-inline-insns-small
	       This is bound applied to	calls which  are  considered  relevant
	       with -finline-small-functions.

	   max-inline-insns-size
	       This  is	 bound	applied	to calls which are optimized for size.
	       Small  growth  may  be  desirable  to  anticipate  optimization
	       oppurtunities exposed by	inlining.

	   uninlined-function-insns
	       Number  of  instructions	 accounted  by	inliner	 for  function
	       overhead	such as	function prologue and epilogue.

	   uninlined-function-time
	       Extra time accounted by inliner for function overhead  such  as
	       time needed to execute function prologue	and epilogue.

	   inline-heuristics-hint-percent
	       The   scale   (in  percents)  applied  to  inline-insns-single,
	       inline-insns-single-O2,	  inline-insns-auto    when	inline
	       heuristics  hints that inlining is very profitable (will	enable
	       later optimizations).

	   uninlined-thunk-insns
	   uninlined-thunk-time
	       Same as --param uninlined-function-insns	and --param uninlined-
	       function-time but applied to function thunks.

	   inline-min-speedup
	       When estimated  performance  improvement	 of  caller  +	callee
	       runtime	exceeds	 this threshold	(in percent), the function can
	       be inlined regardless of	the limit on --param max-inline-insns-
	       single and --param max-inline-insns-auto.

	   large-function-insns
	       The limit specifying really  large  functions.	For  functions
	       larger  than this limit after inlining, inlining	is constrained
	       by --param large-function-growth.   This	 parameter  is	useful
	       primarily  to  avoid  extreme  compilation  time	caused by non-
	       linear algorithms used by the back end.

	   large-function-growth
	       Specifies maximal growth	of large function caused  by  inlining
	       in  percents.   For  example,  parameter	value 100 limits large
	       function	growth to 2.0 times the	original size.

	   large-unit-insns
	       The limit specifying large translation unit.  Growth caused  by
	       inlining	 of units larger than this limit is limited by --param
	       inline-unit-growth.  For	small units this might be  too	tight.
	       For  example,  consider a unit consisting of function A that is
	       inline and B that just calls A three  times.   If  B  is	 small
	       relative	 to  A,	 the  growth  of  unit	is  300\% and yet such
	       inlining	is very	sane.  For  very  large	 units	consisting  of
	       small  inlineable  functions,  however, the overall unit	growth
	       limit is	needed to avoid	exponential explosion  of  code	 size.
	       Thus for	smaller	units, the size	is increased to	--param	large-
	       unit-insns before applying --param inline-unit-growth.

	   lazy-modules
	       Maximum	number of concurrently open C++	module files when lazy
	       loading.

	   inline-unit-growth
	       Specifies maximal overall growth	of the compilation unit	caused
	       by inlining.  For  example,  parameter  value  20  limits  unit
	       growth  to  1.2 times the original size.	Cold functions (either
	       marked cold via an attribute or by profile  feedback)  are  not
	       accounted into the unit size.

	   ipa-cp-unit-growth
	       Specifies maximal overall growth	of the compilation unit	caused
	       by   interprocedural   constant	 propagation.	 For  example,
	       parameter value 10 limits unit growth to	1.1 times the original
	       size.

	   ipa-cp-large-unit-insns
	       The size	of translation unit that IPA-CP	pass considers large.

	   large-stack-frame
	       The limit specifying large stack	frames.	  While	 inlining  the
	       algorithm is trying to not grow past this limit too much.

	   large-stack-frame-growth
	       Specifies  maximal  growth  of  large  stack  frames  caused by
	       inlining	in percents.  For example, parameter value 1000	limits
	       large stack frame growth	to 11 times the	original size.

	   max-inline-insns-recursive
	   max-inline-insns-recursive-auto
	       Specifies the maximum number  of	 instructions  an  out-of-line
	       copy  of	 a  self-recursive  inline  function  can grow into by
	       performing recursive inlining.

	       --param	 max-inline-insns-recursive   applies	to   functions
	       declared	 inline.  For functions	not declared inline, recursive
	       inlining	happens	only when -finline-functions (included in -O3)
	       is  enabled;  --param  max-inline-insns-recursive-auto  applies
	       instead.

	   max-inline-recursive-depth
	   max-inline-recursive-depth-auto
	       Specifies  the  maximum	recursion  depth  used	for  recursive
	       inlining.

	       --param	 max-inline-recursive-depth   applies	to   functions
	       declared	 inline.  For functions	not declared inline, recursive
	       inlining	happens	only when -finline-functions (included in -O3)
	       is  enabled;  --param  max-inline-recursive-depth-auto  applies
	       instead.

	   min-inline-recursive-probability
	       Recursive  inlining is profitable only for function having deep
	       recursion in average and	can hurt for  function	having	little
	       recursion  depth	 by increasing the prologue size or complexity
	       of function body	to other optimizers.

	       When profile feedback is	available (see -fprofile-generate) the
	       actual recursion	depth can be guessed from the probability that
	       function	recurses via a given call expression.  This  parameter
	       limits  inlining	 only  to  call	 expressions whose probability
	       exceeds the given threshold (in percents).

	   early-inlining-insns
	       Specify growth that the early inliner can make.	In  effect  it
	       increases  the  amount  of  inlining  for  code	having a large
	       abstraction penalty.

	   max-early-inliner-iterations
	       Limit of	iterations  of	the  early  inliner.   This  basically
	       bounds  the  number  of nested indirect calls the early inliner
	       can resolve.  Deeper chains are still handled by	late inlining.

	   comdat-sharing-probability
	       Probability (in percent)	that C++ inline	function  with	comdat
	       visibility are shared across multiple compilation units.

	   modref-max-bases
	   modref-max-refs
	   modref-max-accesses
	       Specifies  the  maximal number of base pointers,	references and
	       accesses	stored for a single function by	mod/ref	analysis.

	   modref-max-tests
	       Specifies the maxmal number of tests alias oracle  can  perform
	       to disambiguate memory locations	using the mod/ref information.
	       This parameter ought to be bigger than --param modref-max-bases
	       and --param modref-max-refs.

	   modref-max-depth
	       Specifies  the  maximum depth of	DFS walk used by modref	escape
	       analysis.  Setting to 0 disables	the analysis completely.

	   modref-max-escape-points
	       Specifies the maximum number of escape points tracked by	modref
	       per SSA-name.

	   modref-max-adjustments
	       Specifies the maximum  number  the  access  range  is  enlarged
	       during modref dataflow analysis.

	   profile-func-internal-id
	       A  parameter  to	control	whether	to use function	internal id in
	       profile database	lookup.	If the value is	0, the	compiler  uses
	       an  id  that  is	based on function assembler name and filename,
	       which makes old profile data more tolerant  to  source  changes
	       such as function	reordering etc.

	   min-vect-loop-bound
	       The  minimum  number  of	 iterations  under which loops are not
	       vectorized  when	 -ftree-vectorize  is  used.   The  number  of
	       iterations  after  vectorization	 needs	to be greater than the
	       value specified by this option to allow vectorization.

	   gcse-cost-distance-ratio
	       Scaling factor in calculation of	maximum	distance an expression
	       can  be	moved  by  GCSE	 optimizations.	  This	is   currently
	       supported  only	in  the	 code  hoisting	 pass.	The bigger the
	       ratio,  the  more  aggressive  code  hoisting  is  with	simple
	       expressions,  i.e.,  the	 expressions  that have	cost less than
	       gcse-unrestricted-cost.	 Specifying  0	disables  hoisting  of
	       simple expressions.

	   gcse-unrestricted-cost
	       Cost,  roughly measured as the cost of a	single typical machine
	       instruction, at which GCSE optimizations	do not	constrain  the
	       distance	an expression can travel.  This	is currently supported
	       only  in	the code hoisting pass.	 The lesser the	cost, the more
	       aggressive  code	 hoisting  is.	 Specifying   0	  allows   all
	       expressions to travel unrestricted distances.

	   max-hoist-depth
	       The  depth  of  search in the dominator tree for	expressions to
	       hoist.  This is used to avoid quadratic	behavior  in  hoisting
	       algorithm.   The	 value	of 0 does not limit on the search, but
	       may slow	down compilation of huge functions.

	   max-tail-merge-comparisons
	       The maximum amount of similar bbs to compare a bb  with.	  This
	       is used to avoid	quadratic behavior in tree tail	merging.

	   max-tail-merge-iterations
	       The maximum amount of iterations	of the pass over the function.
	       This is used to limit compilation time in tree tail merging.

	   store-merging-allow-unaligned
	       Allow  the  store merging pass to introduce unaligned stores if
	       it is legal to do so.

	   max-stores-to-merge
	       The maximum number of stores to attempt	to  merge  into	 wider
	       stores in the store merging pass.

	   max-store-chains-to-track
	       The maximum number of store chains to track at the same time in
	       the  attempt  to	 merge	them  into  wider  stores in the store
	       merging pass.

	   max-stores-to-track
	       The maximum number of stores to track at	the same time  in  the
	       attemt  to to merge them	into wider stores in the store merging
	       pass.

	   max-unrolled-insns
	       The maximum number of instructions that a loop may have	to  be
	       unrolled.    If	 a  loop  is  unrolled,	 this  parameter  also
	       determines how many times the loop code is unrolled.

	   max-average-unrolled-insns
	       The maximum number of instructions biased by  probabilities  of
	       their execution that a loop may have to be unrolled.  If	a loop
	       is  unrolled, this parameter also determines how	many times the
	       loop code is unrolled.

	   max-unroll-times
	       The maximum number of unrollings	of a single loop.

	   max-peeled-insns
	       The maximum number of instructions that a loop may have	to  be
	       peeled.	 If  a	loop is	peeled,	this parameter also determines
	       how many	times the loop code is peeled.

	   max-peel-times
	       The maximum number of peelings of a single loop.

	   max-peel-branches
	       The maximum number of branches on  the  hot  path  through  the
	       peeled sequence.

	   max-completely-peeled-insns
	       The maximum number of insns of a	completely peeled loop.

	   max-completely-peel-times
	       The  maximum  number of iterations of a loop to be suitable for
	       complete	peeling.

	   max-completely-peel-loop-nest-depth
	       The maximum depth of a loop nest	suitable for complete peeling.

	   max-unswitch-insns
	       The maximum number of insns of an unswitched loop.

	   max-unswitch-depth
	       The maximum depth of a loop nest	to be unswitched.

	   lim-expensive
	       The minimum  cost  of  an  expensive  expression	 in  the  loop
	       invariant motion.

	   min-loop-cond-split-prob
	       When FDO	profile	information is available, min-loop-cond-split-
	       prob  specifies	minimum	 threshold  for	 probability  of semi-
	       invariant condition statement to	trigger	loop split.

	   iv-consider-all-candidates-bound
	       Bound on	number of candidates for  induction  variables,	 below
	       which  all  candidates are considered for each use in induction
	       variable	optimizations.	If  there  are	more  candidates  than
	       this,  only  the	 most  relevant	 ones  are considered to avoid
	       quadratic time complexity.

	   iv-max-considered-uses
	       The induction variable optimizations  give  up  on  loops  that
	       contain more induction variable uses.

	   iv-always-prune-cand-set-bound
	       If  the	number	of  candidates in the set is smaller than this
	       value, always try to remove unnecessary ivs from	the  set  when
	       adding a	new one.

	   avg-loop-niter
	       Average number of iterations of a loop.

	   dse-max-object-size
	       Maximum	size  (in  bytes)  of objects tracked bytewise by dead
	       store  elimination.   Larger  values  may  result   in	larger
	       compilation times.

	   dse-max-alias-queries-per-store
	       Maximum	number	of  queries  into  the alias oracle per	store.
	       Larger values result in larger compilation times	and may	result
	       in more removed dead stores.

	   scev-max-expr-size
	       Bound on	size of	expressions  used  in  the  scalar  evolutions
	       analyzer.  Large	expressions slow the analyzer.

	   scev-max-expr-complexity
	       Bound  on  the  complexity  of  the  expressions	 in the	scalar
	       evolutions analyzer.  Complex expressions slow the analyzer.

	   max-tree-if-conversion-phi-args
	       Maximum number of arguments in  a  PHI  supported  by  TREE  if
	       conversion unless the loop is marked with simd pragma.

	   vect-max-layout-candidates
	       The   maximum  number  of  possible  vector  layouts  (such  as
	       permutations)  to  consider  when  optimizing  to-be-vectorized
	       code.

	   vect-max-version-for-alignment-checks
	       The  maximum  number  of	 run-time checks that can be performed
	       when doing loop versioning for alignment	in the vectorizer.

	   vect-max-version-for-alias-checks
	       The maximum number of run-time checks  that  can	 be  performed
	       when doing loop versioning for alias in the vectorizer.

	   vect-max-peeling-for-alignment
	       The  maximum  number  of	loop peels to enhance access alignment
	       for vectorizer. Value -1	means no limit.

	   max-iterations-to-track
	       The maximum number of iterations	 of  a	loop  the  brute-force
	       algorithm  for analysis of the number of	iterations of the loop
	       tries to	evaluate.

	   hot-bb-count-fraction
	       The denominator n of fraction  1/n  of  the  maximal  execution
	       count of	a basic	block in the entire program that a basic block
	       needs  to  at  least  have  in order to be considered hot.  The
	       default is 10000, which means that a basic block	is  considered
	       hot  if	its  execution	count  is  greater than	1/10000	of the
	       maximal execution count.	 0 means that it is  never  considered
	       hot.  Used in non-LTO mode.

	   hot-bb-count-ws-permille
	       The  number of most executed permilles, ranging from 0 to 1000,
	       of the profiled execution of the	entire program	to  which  the
	       execution count of a basic block	must be	part of	in order to be
	       considered  hot.	  The default is 990, which means that a basic
	       block is	considered hot if its execution	count  contributes  to
	       the upper 990 permilles,	or 99.0%, of the profiled execution of
	       the  entire  program.  0	means that it is never considered hot.
	       Used in LTO mode.

	   hot-bb-frequency-fraction
	       The denominator n of fraction 1/n of the	execution frequency of
	       the entry block of a  function  that  a	basic  block  of  this
	       function	 needs to at least have	in order to be considered hot.
	       The default  is	1000,  which  means  that  a  basic  block  is
	       considered  hot in a function if	it is executed more frequently
	       than 1/1000  of	the  frequency	of  the	 entry	block  of  the
	       function.  0 means that it is never considered hot.

	   unlikely-bb-count-fraction
	       The  denominator	 n  of	fraction 1/n of	the number of profiled
	       runs of the entire program below	which the execution count of a
	       basic block must	 be  in	 order	for  the  basic	 block	to  be
	       considered  unlikely  executed.	The default is 20, which means
	       that a basic block is considered	unlikely  executed  if	it  is
	       executed	in fewer than 1/20, or 5%, of the runs of the program.
	       0 means that it is always considered unlikely executed.

	   max-predicted-iterations
	       The  maximum  number  of	loop iterations	we predict statically.
	       This is useful in cases where a function	contains a single loop
	       with known bound	and another  loop  with	 unknown  bound.   The
	       known  number  of  iterations is	predicted correctly, while the
	       unknown number of iterations average to roughly 10.  This means
	       that the	loop without bounds appears artificially cold relative
	       to the other one.

	   builtin-expect-probability
	       Control the probability of the expression having	the  specified
	       value.  This  parameter	takes a	percentage (i.e. 0 ... 100) as
	       input.

	   builtin-string-cmp-inline-length
	       The maximum length of a constant	string for  a  builtin	string
	       cmp call	eligible for inlining.

	   align-threshold
	       Select  fraction	 of  the  maximal frequency of executions of a
	       basic block in a	function to align the basic block.

	   align-loop-iterations
	       A loop expected to iterate at  least  the  selected  number  of
	       iterations is aligned.

	   tracer-dynamic-coverage
	   tracer-dynamic-coverage-feedback
	       This value is used to limit superblock formation	once the given
	       percentage  of  executed	 instructions is covered.  This	limits
	       unnecessary code	size expansion.

	       The tracer-dynamic-coverage-feedback  parameter	is  used  only
	       when  profile  feedback	is  available.	 The real profiles (as
	       opposed to statically estimated ones) are  much	less  balanced
	       allowing	the threshold to be larger value.

	   tracer-max-code-growth
	       Stop  tail  duplication	once  code  growth  has	 reached given
	       percentage.  This is a rather artificial	limit, as most of  the
	       duplicates  are eliminated later	in cross jumping, so it	may be
	       set to much higher values than is the desired code growth.

	   tracer-min-branch-ratio
	       Stop reverse growth when	the reverse probability	of  best  edge
	       is less than this threshold (in percent).

	   tracer-min-branch-probability
	   tracer-min-branch-probability-feedback
	       Stop forward growth if the best edge has	probability lower than
	       this threshold.

	       Similarly   to	tracer-dynamic-coverage	  two  parameters  are
	       provided.  tracer-min-branch-probability-feedback is  used  for
	       compilation   with   profile  feedback  and  tracer-min-branch-
	       probability compilation without.	  The  value  for  compilation
	       with profile feedback needs to be more conservative (higher) in
	       order to	make tracer effective.

	   stack-clash-protection-guard-size
	       Specify	the  size of the operating system provided stack guard
	       as 2 raised to num bytes.  Higher values	may reduce the	number
	       of  explicit  probes,  but  a  value  larger than the operating
	       system provided guard will leave	code vulnerable	to stack clash
	       style attacks.

	   stack-clash-protection-probe-interval
	       Stack clash protection involves probing stack space  as	it  is
	       allocated.   This  param	 controls the maximum distance between
	       probes into the stack as	2 raised to num	bytes.	Higher	values
	       may  reduce  the	 number	of explicit probes, but	a value	larger
	       than the	 operating  system  provided  guard  will  leave  code
	       vulnerable to stack clash style attacks.

	   max-cse-path-length
	       The maximum number of basic blocks on path that CSE considers.

	   max-cse-insns
	       The   maximum  number  of  instructions	CSE  processes	before
	       flushing.

	   ggc-min-expand
	       GCC  uses  a  garbage  collector	 to  manage  its  own	memory
	       allocation.  This parameter specifies the minimum percentage by
	       which  the garbage collector's heap should be allowed to	expand
	       between	collections.   Tuning  this  may  improve  compilation
	       speed; it has no	effect on code generation.

	       The  default  is	 30%  +	70% * (RAM/1GB)	with an	upper bound of
	       100% when RAM >=	1GB.  If "getrlimit" is	available, the	notion
	       of  "RAM"  is  the  smallest of actual RAM and "RLIMIT_DATA" or
	       "RLIMIT_AS".  If	 GCC  is  not  able  to	 calculate  RAM	 on  a
	       particular  platform,  the lower	bound of 30% is	used.  Setting
	       this parameter and  ggc-min-heapsize  to	 zero  causes  a  full
	       collection  to  occur  at every opportunity.  This is extremely
	       slow, but can be	useful for debugging.

	   ggc-min-heapsize
	       Minimum size of the garbage collector's heap before  it	begins
	       bothering  to  collect  garbage.	  The  first collection	occurs
	       after the  heap	expands	 by  ggc-min-expand%  beyond  ggc-min-
	       heapsize.   Again,  tuning  this	may improve compilation	speed,
	       and has no effect on code generation.

	       The default is the smaller of RAM/8,  RLIMIT_RSS,  or  a	 limit
	       that  tries  to	ensure	that  RLIMIT_DATA or RLIMIT_AS are not
	       exceeded, but with a lower bound	of 4096	(four  megabytes)  and
	       an  upper  bound	of 131072 (128 megabytes).  If GCC is not able
	       to calculate RAM	on a particular	platform, the lower  bound  is
	       used.   Setting	this parameter very large effectively disables
	       garbage collection.  Setting this parameter and	ggc-min-expand
	       to zero causes a	full collection	to occur at every opportunity.

	   max-reload-search-insns
	       The  maximum  number of instruction reload should look backward
	       for  equivalent	register.    Increasing	  values   mean	  more
	       aggressive  optimization,  making the compilation time increase
	       with probably slightly better performance.

	   max-cselib-memory-locations
	       The maximum number of memory locations cselib should take  into
	       account.	  Increasing values mean more aggressive optimization,
	       making the compilation time  increase  with  probably  slightly
	       better performance.

	   max-sched-ready-insns
	       The  maximum  number  of	 instructions  ready  to be issued the
	       scheduler should	consider at any	given time  during  the	 first
	       scheduling   pass.    Increasing	  values  mean	more  thorough
	       searches, making	the compilation	time  increase	with  probably
	       little benefit.

	   max-sched-region-blocks
	       The  maximum  number of blocks in a region to be	considered for
	       interblock scheduling.

	   max-pipeline-region-blocks
	       The maximum number of blocks in a region	to be  considered  for
	       pipelining in the selective scheduler.

	   max-sched-region-insns
	       The  maximum  number  of	insns in a region to be	considered for
	       interblock scheduling.

	   max-pipeline-region-insns
	       The maximum number of insns in a	region to  be  considered  for
	       pipelining in the selective scheduler.

	   min-spec-prob
	       The  minimum  probability  (in  percents)  of reaching a	source
	       block for interblock speculative	scheduling.

	   max-sched-extend-regions-iters
	       The maximum number of iterations	through	CFG to extend regions.
	       A value of 0 disables region extensions.

	   max-sched-insn-conflict-delay
	       The maximum conflict delay for an insn  to  be  considered  for
	       speculative motion.

	   sched-spec-prob-cutoff
	       The  minimal  probability of speculation	success	(in percents),
	       so that speculative insns are scheduled.

	   sched-state-edge-prob-cutoff
	       The minimum probability an edge must have for the scheduler  to
	       save its	state across it.

	   sched-mem-true-dep-cost
	       Minimal	distance  (in  CPU  cycles)  between  store  and  load
	       targeting same memory locations.

	   selsched-max-lookahead
	       The  maximum  size  of  the  lookahead  window	of   selective
	       scheduling.    It   is	a   depth   of	search	for  available
	       instructions.

	   selsched-max-sched-times
	       The maximum number of times that	an  instruction	 is  scheduled
	       during  selective  scheduling.  This is the limit on the	number
	       of iterations through which the instruction may be pipelined.

	   selsched-insns-to-rename
	       The maximum number of best instructions in the ready list  that
	       are considered for renaming in the selective scheduler.

	   sms-min-sc
	       The  minimum  value  of stage count that	swing modulo scheduler
	       generates.

	   max-last-value-rtl
	       The maximum size	 measured  as  number  of  RTLs	 that  can  be
	       recorded	 in an expression in combiner for a pseudo register as
	       last known value	of that	register.

	   max-combine-insns
	       The maximum number of instructions the RTL  combiner  tries  to
	       combine.

	   integer-share-limit
	       Small  integer  constants  can  use  a  shared  data structure,
	       reducing	the compiler's memory usage and	increasing its	speed.
	       This sets the maximum value of a	shared integer constant.

	   ssp-buffer-size
	       The  minimum  size  of buffers (i.e. arrays) that receive stack
	       smashing	protection when	-fstack-protector is used.

	   min-size-for-stack-sharing
	       The minimum size	of variables taking part in stack slot sharing
	       when not	optimizing.

	   max-jump-thread-duplication-stmts
	       Maximum number of statements allowed in a block that  needs  to
	       be duplicated when threading jumps.

	   max-jump-thread-paths
	       The maximum number of paths to consider when searching for jump
	       threading  opportunities.   When	 arriving at a block, incoming
	       edges are only considered if the	number of paths	to be searched
	       so far multiplied by the	number	of  incoming  edges  does  not
	       exhaust the specified maximum number of paths to	consider.

	   max-fields-for-field-sensitive
	       Maximum	number	of  fields  in	a structure treated in a field
	       sensitive manner	during pointer analysis.

	   prefetch-latency
	       Estimate	on average number of instructions  that	 are  executed
	       before  prefetch	 finishes.   The  distance prefetched ahead is
	       proportional to this constant.  Increasing this number may also
	       lead  to	 less  streams	being  prefetched  (see	 simultaneous-
	       prefetches).

	   simultaneous-prefetches
	       Maximum number of prefetches that can run at the	same time.

	   l1-cache-line-size
	       The size	of cache line in L1 data cache,	in bytes.

	   l1-cache-size
	       The size	of L1 data cache, in kilobytes.

	   l2-cache-size
	       The size	of L2 data cache, in kilobytes.

	   prefetch-dynamic-strides
	       Whether	the  loop  array  prefetch  pass should	issue software
	       prefetch	hints for strides  that	 are  non-constant.   In  some
	       cases  this  may	 be  beneficial, though	the fact the stride is
	       non-constant may	make it	hard to	predict	when  there  is	 clear
	       benefit to issuing these	hints.

	       Set  to	1  if  the  prefetch  hints  should be issued for non-
	       constant	strides.  Set to 0 if prefetch hints should be	issued
	       only  for  strides  that	 are  known  to	 be constant and below
	       prefetch-minimum-stride.

	   prefetch-minimum-stride
	       Minimum constant	stride,	in  bytes,  to	start  using  prefetch
	       hints for.  If the stride is less than this threshold, prefetch
	       hints will not be issued.

	       This  setting  is  useful  for  processors  that	 have hardware
	       prefetchers, in which case there	may be conflicts  between  the
	       hardware	 prefetchers  and  the	software  prefetchers.	If the
	       hardware	prefetchers have a maximum stride they can handle,  it
	       should be used here to improve the use of software prefetchers.

	       A  value	 of  -1	 means we don't	have a threshold and therefore
	       prefetch	hints can be issued for	any constant stride.

	       This setting is only useful for	strides	 that  are  known  and
	       constant.

	   destructive-interference-size
	   constructive-interference-size
	       The	 values	      for	the	  C++17	     variables
	       "std::hardware_destructive_interference_size"		   and
	       "std::hardware_constructive_interference_size".		   The
	       destructive interference	size is	the minimum recommended	offset
	       between	two  independent  concurrently-accessed	 objects;  the
	       constructive  interference size is the maximum recommended size
	       of contiguous memory accessed together.	Typically both will be
	       the size	of an L1 cache line for	the target, in bytes.	For  a
	       generic	target	covering  a  range  of	L1  cache  line	sizes,
	       typically the constructive interference size will be the	 small
	       end  of	the  range  and	the destructive	size will be the large
	       end.

	       The destructive interference size is intended to	 be  used  for
	       layout,	and  thus  has	ABI  impact.  The default value	is not
	       expected	to be stable, and on some targets varies with  -mtune,
	       so  use	of  this  variable in a	context	where ABI stability is
	       important, such as  the	public	interface  of  a  library,  is
	       strongly	 discouraged; if it is used in that context, users can
	       stabilize the value using this option.

	       The constructive	interference size is less sensitive, as	it  is
	       typically only used in a	static_assert to make sure that	a type
	       fits within a cache line.

	       See also	-Winterference-size.

	   loop-interchange-max-num-stmts
	       The maximum number of stmts in a	loop to	be interchanged.

	   loop-interchange-stride-ratio
	       The  minimum  ratio between stride of two loops for interchange
	       to be profitable.

	   min-insn-to-prefetch-ratio
	       The minimum ratio between the number of	instructions  and  the
	       number of prefetches to enable prefetching in a loop.

	   prefetch-min-insn-to-mem-ratio
	       The  minimum  ratio  between the	number of instructions and the
	       number of memory	references to enable prefetching in a loop.

	   use-canonical-types
	       Whether the compiler should use the  "canonical"	 type  system.
	       Should  always  be  1,  which  uses  a  more efficient internal
	       mechanism  for  comparing  types	 in  C++  and	Objective-C++.
	       However,	 if  bugs  in  the  canonical  type system are causing
	       compilation failures, set this value to 0 to disable  canonical
	       types.

	   switch-conversion-max-branch-ratio
	       Switch  initialization conversion refuses to create arrays that
	       are bigger than	switch-conversion-max-branch-ratio  times  the
	       number of branches in the switch.

	   max-partial-antic-length
	       Maximum	length	of  the	 partial antic set computed during the
	       tree partial redundancy elimination  optimization  (-ftree-pre)
	       when  optimizing	 at  -O3  and above.  For some sorts of	source
	       code the	enhanced partial redundancy  elimination  optimization
	       can run away, consuming all of the memory available on the host
	       machine.	 This parameter	sets a limit on	the length of the sets
	       that   are  computed,  which  prevents  the  runaway  behavior.
	       Setting a value of 0 for	this parameter allows an unlimited set
	       length.

	   rpo-vn-max-loop-depth
	       Maximum loop depth that is value-numbered optimistically.  When
	       the limit hits the innermost  rpo-vn-max-loop-depth  loops  and
	       the   outermost	loop  in  the  loop  nest  are	value-numbered
	       optimistically and the remaining	ones not.

	   sccvn-max-alias-queries-per-access
	       Maximum number of alias-oracle queries we perform when  looking
	       for  redundancies  for  loads and stores.  If this limit	is hit
	       the search is aborted and the load or store is  not  considered
	       redundant.  The number of queries is algorithmically limited to
	       the number of stores on all paths from the load to the function
	       entry.

	   ira-max-loops-num
	       IRA  uses  regional  register  allocation  by  default.	 If  a
	       function	contains more loops than  the  number  given  by  this
	       parameter,   only   at  most  the  given	 number	 of  the  most
	       frequently-executed loops form regions  for  regional  register
	       allocation.

	   ira-max-conflict-table-size
	       Although	 IRA  uses  a  sophisticated algorithm to compress the
	       conflict	table, the table can still require  excessive  amounts
	       of  memory  for	huge  functions.   If the conflict table for a
	       function	could be more than  the	 size  in  MB  given  by  this
	       parameter,  the	register  allocator  instead  uses  a  faster,
	       simpler,	and lower-quality  algorithm  that  does  not  require
	       building	a pseudo-register conflict table.

	   ira-loop-reserved-regs
	       IRA  can	be used	to evaluate more accurate register pressure in
	       loops for decisions to move loop	 invariants  (see  -O3).   The
	       number  of available registers reserved for some	other purposes
	       is given	by this	parameter.  Default of the  parameter  is  the
	       best found from numerous	experiments.

	   ira-consider-dup-in-all-alts
	       Make  IRA  to  consider matching	constraint (duplicated operand
	       number) heavily in all  available  alternatives	for  preferred
	       register	 class.	  If  it  is  set  as  zero, it	means IRA only
	       respects	 the  matching	constraint  when  it's	in  the	  only
	       available  alternative  with  an	 appropriate  register	class.
	       Otherwise, it means IRA will check all  available  alternatives
	       for  preferred  register	class even if it has found some	choice
	       with an	appropriate  register  class  and  respect  the	 found
	       qualified matching constraint.

	   ira-simple-lra-insn-threshold
	       Approximate  function insn number in 1K units triggering	simple
	       local RA.

	   lra-inheritance-ebb-probability-cutoff
	       LRA tries to reuse values reloaded in registers	in  subsequent
	       insns.	This  optimization is called inheritance.  EBB is used
	       as a region to do this optimization.  The parameter  defines  a
	       minimal fall-through edge probability in	percentage used	to add
	       BB  to  inheritance  EBB	 in LRA.  The default value was	chosen
	       from numerous runs of SPEC2000 on x86-64.

	   loop-invariant-max-bbs-in-loop
	       Loop  invariant	motion	can  be	 very	expensive,   both   in
	       compilation  time  and in amount	of needed compile-time memory,
	       with very large loops.  Loops with more basic blocks than  this
	       parameter   won't   have	 loop  invariant  motion  optimization
	       performed on them.

	   loop-max-datarefs-for-datadeps
	       Building	data dependencies is expensive for very	 large	loops.
	       This  parameter	limits	the number of data references in loops
	       that are	considered for data dependence analysis.  These	 large
	       loops  are  no  handled	by  the	 optimizations using loop data
	       dependencies.

	   max-vartrack-size
	       Sets a maximum  number  of  hash	 table	slots  to  use	during
	       variable	 tracking  dataflow analysis of	any function.  If this
	       limit  is  exceeded  with  variable  tracking  at   assignments
	       enabled,	 analysis  for	that  function	is retried without it,
	       after removing all debug	insns from the function.  If the limit
	       is exceeded even	without	debug insns, var tracking analysis  is
	       completely disabled for the function.  Setting the parameter to
	       zero makes it unlimited.

	   max-vartrack-expr-depth
	       Sets  a	maximum	 number	of recursion levels when attempting to
	       map variable names or debug temporaries to  value  expressions.
	       This   trades   compilation   time   for	 more  complete	 debug
	       information.  If	this is	set too	low,  value  expressions  that
	       are available and could be represented in debug information may
	       end  up	not  being  used;  setting  this higher	may enable the
	       compiler	to find	more complex debug  expressions,  but  compile
	       time and	memory use may grow.

	   max-debug-marker-count
	       Sets  a	threshold  on  the number of debug markers (e.g. begin
	       stmt markers) to	avoid  complexity  explosion  at  inlining  or
	       expanding  to  RTL.   If	 a function has	more such gimple stmts
	       than the	set limit, such	stmts will be dropped from the inlined
	       copy of a function, and from its	RTL expansion.

	   min-nondebug-insn-uid
	       Use uids	starting at this parameter for	nondebug  insns.   The
	       range  below  the  parameter  is	reserved exclusively for debug
	       insns created by	-fvar-tracking-assignments,  but  debug	 insns
	       may  get	 (non-overlapping) uids	above it if the	reserved range
	       is exhausted.

	   ipa-sra-deref-prob-threshold
	       IPA-SRA replaces	a pointer which	is known not be	NULL with  one
	       or  more	 new parameters	only when the probability (in percent,
	       relative	to function entry) of it being dereferenced is	higher
	       than this parameter.

	   ipa-sra-ptr-growth-factor
	       IPA-SRA replaces	a pointer to an	aggregate with one or more new
	       parameters  only	when their cumulative size is less or equal to
	       ipa-sra-ptr-growth-factor  times	 the  size  of	the   original
	       pointer parameter.

	   ipa-sra-ptrwrap-growth-factor
	       Additional   maximum  allowed  growth  of  total	 size  of  new
	       parameters that ipa-sra replaces	 a  pointer  to	 an  aggregate
	       with,  if  it  points  to a local variable that the caller only
	       writes to and passes it as an argument to other functions.

	   ipa-sra-max-replacements
	       Maximum pieces of an  aggregate	that  IPA-SRA  tracks.	 As  a
	       consequence, it is also the maximum number of replacements of a
	       formal parameter.

	   sra-max-scalarization-size-Ospeed
	   sra-max-scalarization-size-Osize
	       The two Scalar Reduction	of Aggregates passes (SRA and IPA-SRA)
	       aim  to	replace	 scalar	 parts	of  aggregates	with  uses  of
	       independent scalar variables.   These  parameters  control  the
	       maximum	 size,	 in  storage  units,  of  aggregate  which  is
	       considered for replacement when compiling for  speed  (sra-max-
	       scalarization-size-Ospeed) or size (sra-max-scalarization-size-
	       Osize) respectively.

	   sra-max-propagations
	       The   maximum   number	of  artificial	accesses  that	Scalar
	       Replacement of Aggregates  (SRA)	 will  track,  per  one	 local
	       variable, in order to facilitate	copy propagation.

	   tm-max-aggregate-size
	       When  making copies of thread-local variables in	a transaction,
	       this  parameter	specifies  the	size  in  bytes	 after	 which
	       variables  are  saved  with the logging functions as opposed to
	       save/restore code sequence pairs.   This	 option	 only  applies
	       when using -fgnu-tm.

	   graphite-max-nb-scop-params
	       To  avoid  exponential effects in the Graphite loop transforms,
	       the number of parameters	in a Static  Control  Part  (SCoP)  is
	       bounded.	  A  value  of	zero can be used to lift the bound.  A
	       variable	whose value is unknown at compilation time and defined
	       outside a SCoP is a parameter of	the SCoP.

	   hardcfr-max-blocks
	       Disable -fharden-control-flow-redundancy	for functions  with  a
	       larger number of	blocks than the	specified value.  Zero removes
	       any limit.

	   hardcfr-max-inline-blocks
	       Force   -fharden-control-flow-redundancy	  to  use  out-of-line
	       checking	for functions with a larger  number  of	 basic	blocks
	       than the	specified value.

	   loop-block-tile-size
	       Loop   blocking	 or  strip  mining  transforms,	 enabled  with
	       -floop-block or -floop-strip-mine, strip	mine each loop in  the
	       loop  nest  by  a given number of iterations.  The strip	length
	       can be changed using the	loop-block-tile-size parameter.

	   ipa-jump-function-lookups
	       Specifies number	of statements  visited	during	jump  function
	       offset discovery.

	   ipa-cp-value-list-size
	       IPA-CP  attempts	 to track all possible values and types	passed
	       to a function's	parameter  in  order  to  propagate  them  and
	       perform	 devirtualization.    ipa-cp-value-list-size   is  the
	       maximum number of values	and types it  stores  per  one	formal
	       parameter of a function.

	   ipa-cp-eval-threshold
	       IPA-CP  calculates  its	own  score  of	cloning	 profitability
	       heuristics and performs those cloning opportunities with	scores
	       that exceed ipa-cp-eval-threshold.

	   ipa-cp-max-recursive-depth
	       Maximum depth of	recursive cloning for self-recursive function.

	   ipa-cp-min-recursive-probability
	       Recursive cloning only  when  the  probability  of  call	 being
	       executed	exceeds	the parameter.

	   ipa-cp-profile-count-base
	       When  using  -fprofile-use  option,  IPA-CP  will  consider the
	       measured	 execution  count  of  a  call	graph  edge  at	  this
	       percentage  position  in	 their	histogram as the basis for its
	       heuristics calculation.

	   ipa-cp-recursive-freq-factor
	       The number of times interprocedural  copy  propagation  expects
	       recursive functions to call themselves.

	   ipa-cp-recursion-penalty
	       Percentage  penalty  the	 recursive functions will receive when
	       they are	evaluated for cloning.

	   ipa-cp-single-call-penalty
	       Percentage  penalty  functions  containing  a  single  call  to
	       another	function  will	receive	 when  they  are evaluated for
	       cloning.

	   ipa-max-agg-items
	       IPA-CP is also capable to propagate a number of	scalar	values
	       passed  in an aggregate.	ipa-max-agg-items controls the maximum
	       number of such values per one parameter.

	   ipa-cp-loop-hint-bonus
	       When IPA-CP determines that a cloning candidate would make  the
	       number  of  iterations of a loop	known, it adds a bonus of ipa-
	       cp-loop-hint-bonus to the profitability score of	the candidate.

	   ipa-max-loop-predicates
	       The maximum number of different	predicates  IPA	 will  use  to
	       describe	when loops in a	function have known properties.

	   ipa-max-aa-steps
	       During  its  analysis  of function bodies, IPA-CP employs alias
	       analysis	in order  to  track  values  pointed  to  by  function
	       parameters.   In	 order	not spend too much time	analyzing huge
	       functions, it gives up and consider all memory clobbered	 after
	       examining ipa-max-aa-steps statements modifying memory.

	   ipa-max-switch-predicate-bounds
	       Maximal	number	of boundary endpoints of case ranges of	switch
	       statement.  For switch exceeding	this limit,  IPA-CP  will  not
	       construct  cloning  cost	 predicate,  which is used to estimate
	       cloning benefit,	for default case of the	switch statement.

	   ipa-max-param-expr-ops
	       IPA-CP will analyze conditional statement that references  some
	       function	parameter to estimate benefit for cloning upon certain
	       constant	 value.	  But  if  number of operations	in a parameter
	       expression exceeds ipa-max-param-expr-ops,  the	expression  is
	       treated as complicated one, and is not handled by IPA analysis.

	   lto-partitions
	       Specify	desired	 number	 of  partitions	 produced during WHOPR
	       compilation.  The number	of partitions should exceed the	number
	       of CPUs used for	compilation.

	   lto-min-partition
	       Size   of   minimal   partition	 for   WHOPR   (in   estimated
	       instructions).	This prevents expenses of splitting very small
	       programs	into too many partitions.

	   lto-max-partition
	       Size of max partition for WHOPR	(in  estimated	instructions).
	       to  provide  an	upper  bound for individual size of partition.
	       Meant to	be used	only with balanced partitioning.

	   lto-max-streaming-parallelism
	       Maximal number of parallel processes used for LTO streaming.

	   cxx-max-namespaces-for-diagnostic-help
	       The maximum number of namespaces	 to  consult  for  suggestions
	       when C++	name lookup fails for an identifier.

	   sink-frequency-threshold
	       The  maximum  relative execution	frequency (in percents)	of the
	       target block relative to	a statement's original block to	 allow
	       statement  sinking  of  a  statement.  Larger numbers result in
	       more aggressive statement sinking.  A small positive adjustment
	       is applied for statements with memory  operands	as  those  are
	       even more profitable so sink.

	   max-stores-to-sink
	       The maximum number of conditional store pairs that can be sunk.
	       Set  to	0  if  either  vectorization (-ftree-vectorize)	or if-
	       conversion (-ftree-loop-if-convert) is disabled.

	   case-values-threshold
	       The smallest number of different	values for which it is best to
	       use a jump-table	instead	of a tree of conditional branches.  If
	       the value is 0, use the default for the machine.

	   jump-table-max-growth-ratio-for-size
	       The maximum code	size growth ratio when expanding into  a  jump
	       table  (in percent).  The parameter is used when	optimizing for
	       size.

	   jump-table-max-growth-ratio-for-speed
	       The maximum code	size growth ratio when expanding into  a  jump
	       table  (in percent).  The parameter is used when	optimizing for
	       speed.

	   tree-reassoc-width
	       Set the maximum number of instructions executed in parallel  in
	       reassociated  tree.  This  parameter overrides target dependent
	       heuristics used by default if has non zero value.

	   sched-pressure-algorithm
	       Choose	between	  the	two   available	  implementations   of
	       -fsched-pressure.   Algorithm  1	is the original	implementation
	       and is the more	likely	to  prevent  instructions  from	 being
	       reordered.  Algorithm 2 was designed to be a compromise between
	       the  relatively	conservative approach taken by algorithm 1 and
	       the rather aggressive approach taken by the default  scheduler.
	       It  relies  more	 heavily on having a regular register file and
	       accurate	register pressure classes.  See	haifa-sched.cc in  the
	       GCC sources for more details.

	       The default choice depends on the target.

	   max-slsr-cand-scan
	       Set   the  maximum  number  of  existing	 candidates  that  are
	       considered  when	 seeking  a  basis  for	 a  new	 straight-line
	       strength	reduction candidate.

	   asan-globals
	       Enable buffer overflow detection	for global objects.  This kind
	       of   protection	 is  enabled  by  default  if  you  are	 using
	       -fsanitize=address   option.    To   disable   global   objects
	       protection use --param asan-globals=0.

	   asan-stack
	       Enable  buffer overflow detection for stack objects.  This kind
	       of   protection	 is   enabled	by    default	 when	 using
	       -fsanitize=address.   To	 disable  stack	protection use --param
	       asan-stack=0 option.

	   asan-instrument-reads
	       Enable buffer overflow detection	for memory reads.   This  kind
	       of    protection	   is	 enabled   by	default	  when	 using
	       -fsanitize=address.  To disable	memory	reads  protection  use
	       --param asan-instrument-reads=0.

	   asan-instrument-writes
	       Enable  buffer overflow detection for memory writes.  This kind
	       of   protection	 is   enabled	by    default	 when	 using
	       -fsanitize=address.   To	 disable  memory writes	protection use
	       --param asan-instrument-writes=0	option.

	   asan-memintrin
	       Enable  detection  for  built-in	 functions.   This   kind   of
	       protection is enabled by	default	when using -fsanitize=address.
	       To   disable   built-in	 functions   protection	  use  --param
	       asan-memintrin=0.

	   asan-use-after-return
	       Enable detection	of use-after-return.  This kind	of  protection
	       is enabled by default when using	the -fsanitize=address option.
	       To disable it use --param asan-use-after-return=0.

	       Note:  By default the check is disabled at run time.  To	enable
	       it, add "detect_stack_use_after_return=1"  to  the  environment
	       variable	ASAN_OPTIONS.

	   asan-instrumentation-with-call-threshold
	       If  number of memory accesses in	function being instrumented is
	       greater or equal	to  this  number,  use	callbacks  instead  of
	       inline  checks.	 E.g.  to  disable  inline  code  use  --param
	       asan-instrumentation-with-call-threshold=0.

	   asan-kernel-mem-intrinsic-prefix
	       If nonzero, prefix calls	to "memcpy",  "memset"	and  "memmove"
	       with  __asan_  or  __hwasan_  for  -fsanitize=kernel-address or
	       -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress, respectively.

	   hwasan-instrument-stack
	       Enable  hwasan  instrumentation	of  statically	sized	stack-
	       allocated  variables.   This kind of instrumentation is enabled
	       by default when	using  -fsanitize=hwaddress  and  disabled  by
	       default	when  using  -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress.   To disable
	       stack instrumentation  use  --param  hwasan-instrument-stack=0,
	       and to enable it	use --param hwasan-instrument-stack=1.

	   hwasan-random-frame-tag
	       When   using  stack  instrumentation,  decide  tags  for	 stack
	       variables using a deterministic sequence	beginning at a	random
	       tag  for	each frame.  With this parameter unset tags are	chosen
	       using the same sequence but beginning from 1.  This is  enabled
	       by   default   for  -fsanitize=hwaddress	 and  unavailable  for
	       -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress.   To  disable   it	 use   --param
	       hwasan-random-frame-tag=0.

	   hwasan-instrument-allocas
	       Enable  hwasan  instrumentation	of  dynamically	 sized	stack-
	       allocated variables.  This kind of instrumentation  is  enabled
	       by  default  when  using	 -fsanitize=hwaddress  and disabled by
	       default when  using  -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress.   To  disable
	       instrumentation	   of	  such	   variables	use    --param
	       hwasan-instrument-allocas=0,  and  to  enable  it  use  --param
	       hwasan-instrument-allocas=1.

	   hwasan-instrument-reads
	       Enable hwasan checks on memory reads.  Instrumentation of reads
	       is   enabled  by	 default  for  both  -fsanitize=hwaddress  and
	       -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress.  To	disable	checking memory	 reads
	       use --param hwasan-instrument-reads=0.

	   hwasan-instrument-writes
	       Enable  hwasan  checks  on  memory  writes.  Instrumentation of
	       writes is enabled by default for	both -fsanitize=hwaddress  and
	       -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress.  To	disable	checking memory	writes
	       use --param hwasan-instrument-writes=0.

	   hwasan-instrument-mem-intrinsics
	       Enable	 hwasan	   instrumentation   of	  builtin   functions.
	       Instrumentation	of  these  builtin  functions  is  enabled  by
	       default	     for       both	 -fsanitize=hwaddress	   and
	       -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress.   To  disable  instrumentation  of
	       builtin		   functions		use	       --param
	       hwasan-instrument-mem-intrinsics=0.

	   use-after-scope-direct-emission-threshold
	       If the size of a	local variable in bytes	is smaller or equal to
	       this  number,  directly	poison	(or  unpoison)	shadow	memory
	       instead of using	run-time callbacks.

	   tsan-distinguish-volatile
	       Emit special instrumentation for	accesses to volatiles.

	   tsan-instrument-func-entry-exit
	       Emit   instrumentation	calls	to   __tsan_func_entry()   and
	       __tsan_func_exit().

	   max-fsm-thread-path-insns
	       Maximum number of instructions to copy when duplicating	blocks
	       on a finite state automaton jump	thread path.

	   threader-debug
	       threader-debug=[none|all]   Enables   verbose  dumping  of  the
	       threader	solver.

	   parloops-chunk-size
	       Chunk size of omp schedule for loops parallelized by parloops.

	   parloops-schedule
	       Schedule	 type  of  omp	schedule  for  loops  parallelized  by
	       parloops	(static, dynamic, guided, auto,	runtime).

	   parloops-min-per-thread
	       The  minimum  number  of	 iterations per	thread of an innermost
	       parallelized  loop  for	which  the  parallelized  variant   is
	       preferred  over	the  single  threaded  one.   Note  that for a
	       parallelized loop nest the minimum number of iterations of  the
	       outermost loop per thread is two.

	   max-ssa-name-query-depth
	       Maximum	depth  of  recursion  when  querying properties	of SSA
	       names in	things like fold routines.   One  level	 of  recursion
	       corresponds to following	a use-def chain.

	   max-speculative-devirt-maydefs
	       The  maximum  number  of	may-defs we analyze when looking for a
	       must-def	specifying the dynamic type of an object that  invokes
	       a virtual call we may be	able to	devirtualize speculatively.

	   ranger-debug
	       Specifies the type of debug output to be	issued for ranges.

	   unroll-jam-min-percent
	       The  minimum  percentage	 of  memory  references	 that  must be
	       optimized away for  the	unroll-and-jam	transformation	to  be
	       considered profitable.

	   unroll-jam-max-unroll
	       The  maximum  number of times the outer loop should be unrolled
	       by the unroll-and-jam transformation.

	   max-rtl-if-conversion-unpredictable-cost
	       Maximum	permissible  cost  for	the  sequence  that  would  be
	       generated  by  the  RTL if-conversion pass for a	branch that is
	       considered unpredictable.

	   max-variable-expansions-in-unroller
	       If -fvariable-expansion-in-unroller is used, the	maximum	number
	       of times	that an	individual variable will  be  expanded	during
	       loop unrolling.

	   partial-inlining-entry-probability
	       Maximum probability of the entry	BB of split region (in percent
	       relative	 to entry BB of	the function) to make partial inlining
	       happen.

	   max-tracked-strlens
	       Maximum number of strings for which  strlen  optimization  pass
	       will track string lengths.

	   gcse-after-reload-partial-fraction
	       The   threshold	 ratio	 for   performing  partial  redundancy
	       elimination after reload.

	   gcse-after-reload-critical-fraction
	       The threshold ratio of  critical	 edges	execution  count  that
	       permit performing redundancy elimination	after reload.

	   max-loop-header-insns
	       The  maximum  number  of	insns in loop header duplicated	by the
	       copy loop headers pass.

	   vect-epilogues-nomask
	       Enable loop epilogue vectorization using	smaller	vector size.

	   vect-partial-vector-usage
	       Controls	when  the  loop	 vectorizer  considers	using  partial
	       vector  loads  and  stores as an	alternative to falling back to
	       scalar code.  0 stops the vectorizer from  ever	using  partial
	       vector  loads  and  stores.   1 allows partial vector loads and
	       stores if vectorization	removes	 the  need  for	 the  code  to
	       iterate.	  2  allows  partial  vector  loads  and stores	in all
	       loops.  The parameter  only  has	 an  effect  on	 targets  that
	       support partial vector loads and	stores.

	   vect-inner-loop-cost-factor
	       The  maximum  factor  which  the	loop vectorizer	applies	to the
	       cost of statements in an	inner loop relative to the loop	 being
	       vectorized.  The	factor applied is the maximum of the estimated
	       number of iterations of the inner loop and this parameter.  The
	       default value of	this parameter is 50.

	   vect-induction-float
	       Enable loop vectorization of floating point inductions.

	   vrp-sparse-threshold
	       Maximum	number of basic	blocks before VRP uses a sparse	bitmap
	       cache.

	   vrp-switch-limit
	       Maximum number of outgoing edges	in a switch  before  VRP  will
	       not process it.

	   vrp-vector-threshold
	       Maximum	number	of  basic  blocks for VRP to use a basic cache
	       vector.

	   avoid-fma-max-bits
	       Maximum number of bits for which	we avoid creating FMAs.

	   fully-pipelined-fma
	       Whether the target fully	pipelines FMA instructions.   If  non-
	       zero,  reassociation  considers	the  benefit  of parallelizing
	       FMA's multiplication part and addition part, assuming FMUL  and
	       FMA use the same	units that can also do FADD.

	   sms-loop-average-count-threshold
	       A  threshold  on	the average loop count considered by the swing
	       modulo scheduler.

	   sms-dfa-history
	       The number of cycles the	swing modulo scheduler considers  when
	       checking	conflicts using	DFA.

	   graphite-allow-codegen-errors
	       Whether codegen errors should be	ICEs when -fchecking.

	   sms-max-ii-factor
	       A factor	for tuning the upper bound that	swing modulo scheduler
	       uses for	scheduling a loop.

	   lra-max-considered-reload-pseudos
	       The  max	 number	 of reload pseudos which are considered	during
	       spilling	a non-reload pseudo.

	   max-pow-sqrt-depth
	       Maximum	depth  of  sqrt	 chains	 to  use   when	  synthesizing
	       exponentiation by a real	constant.

	   max-dse-active-local-stores
	       Maximum	number	of  active  local  stores  in  RTL  dead store
	       elimination.

	   asan-instrument-allocas
	       Enable asan allocas/VLAs	protection.

	   max-iterations-computation-cost
	       Bound on	the cost of an expression to  compute  the  number  of
	       iterations.

	   max-isl-operations
	       Maximum number of isl operations, 0 means unlimited.

	   graphite-max-arrays-per-scop
	       Maximum number of arrays	per scop.

	   max-vartrack-reverse-op-size
	       Max. size of loc	list for which reverse ops should be added.

	   fsm-scale-path-stmts
	       Scale  factor  to  apply	 to  the  number  of  statements  in a
	       threading path crossing	a  loop	 backedge  when	 comparing  to
	       --param=max-jump-thread-duplication-stmts.

	   uninit-control-dep-attempts
	       Maximum	 number	  of   nested  calls  to  search  for  control
	       dependencies during uninitialized variable analysis.

	   uninit-max-chain-len
	       Maximum number of predicates anded for each predicate  ored  in
	       the normalized predicate	chain.

	   uninit-max-num-chains
	       Maximum	number	of predicates ored in the normalized predicate
	       chain.

	   sched-autopref-queue-depth
	       Hardware	autoprefetcher scheduler model control	flag.	Number
	       of  lookahead  cycles  the model	looks into; at ' ' only	enable
	       instruction sorting heuristic.

	   loop-versioning-max-inner-insns
	       The maximum number of instructions that an inner	loop can  have
	       before the loop versioning pass considers it too	big to copy.

	   loop-versioning-max-outer-insns
	       The  maximum number of instructions that	an outer loop can have
	       before the loop versioning pass considers it too	big  to	 copy,
	       discounting  any	 instructions  in  inner  loops	 that directly
	       benefit from versioning.

	   ssa-name-def-chain-limit
	       The  maximum  number  of	 SSA_NAME  assignments	to  follow  in
	       determining  a  property	of a variable such as its value.  This
	       limits the number of iterations or recursive calls GCC performs
	       when optimizing certain statements or  when  determining	 their
	       validity	prior to issuing diagnostics.

	   store-merging-max-size
	       Maximum size of a single	store merging region in	bytes.

	   hash-table-verification-limit
	       The  number  of	elements  for which hash table verification is
	       done for	each searched element.

	   max-find-base-term-values
	       Maximum number of VALUEs	handled	during a single	find_base_term
	       call.

	   analyzer-max-enodes-per-program-point
	       The maximum number of exploded nodes per	program	 point	within
	       the analyzer, before terminating	analysis of that point.

	   analyzer-max-constraints
	       The maximum number of constraints per state.

	   analyzer-min-snodes-for-call-summary
	       The  minimum  number  of	 supernodes  within a function for the
	       analyzer	to consider summarizing	its effects at call sites.

	   analyzer-max-enodes-for-full-dump
	       The maximum depth of exploded nodes that	should appear in a dot
	       dump before switching to	a less verbose format.

	   analyzer-max-recursion-depth
	       The maximum number of times a callsite can  appear  in  a  call
	       stack  within  the  analyzer,  before terminating analysis of a
	       call that would recurse deeper.

	   analyzer-max-svalue-depth
	       The maximum depth of a symbolic value, before approximating the
	       value as	unknown.

	   analyzer-max-infeasible-edges
	       The  maximum  number  of	 infeasible  edges  to	reject	before
	       declaring a diagnostic as infeasible.

	   gimple-fe-computed-hot-bb-threshold
	       The  number  of executions of a basic block which is considered
	       hot.  The parameter is used only	in GIMPLE FE.

	   analyzer-bb-explosion-factor
	       The maximum number of 'after supernode' exploded	 nodes	within
	       the analyzer per	supernode, before terminating analysis.

	   analyzer-text-art-string-ellipsis-threshold
	       The  number  of	bytes at which to ellipsize string literals in
	       analyzer	text art diagrams.

	   analyzer-text-art-ideal-canvas-width
	       The ideal width in characters of	text art diagrams generated by
	       the analyzer.

	   analyzer-text-art-string-ellipsis-head-len
	       The number of literal bytes to show at the  head	 of  a	string
	       literal in text art when	ellipsizing it.

	   analyzer-text-art-string-ellipsis-tail-len
	       The  number  of	literal	 bytes to show at the tail of a	string
	       literal in text art when	ellipsizing it.

	   ranger-logical-depth
	       Maximum depth of	logical	expression evaluation ranger will look
	       through when evaluating outgoing	edge ranges.

	   ranger-recompute-depth
	       Maximum	depth  of   instruction	  chains   to	consider   for
	       recomputation in	the outgoing range calculator.

	   relation-block-limit
	       Maximum number of relations the oracle will register in a basic
	       block.

	   min-pagesize
	       Minimum page size for warning purposes.

	   openacc-kernels
	       Specify	mode  of  OpenACC `kernels' constructs handling.  With
	       --param=openacc-kernels=decompose, OpenACC `kernels' constructs
	       are decomposed into parts, a sequence  of  compute  constructs,
	       each  then  handled  individually.   This  is work in progress.
	       With   --param=openacc-kernels=parloops,	  OpenACC    `kernels'
	       constructs  are handled by the parloops pass, en	bloc.  This is
	       the current default.

	   openacc-privatization
	       Control	whether	  the	-fopt-info-omp-note   and   applicable
	       -fdump-tree-*-details   options	 emit	OpenACC	 privatization
	       diagnostics.  With  --param=openacc-privatization=quiet,	 don't
	       diagnose.     This    is	   the	  current    default.	  With
	       --param=openacc-privatization=noisy, do diagnose.

	   The following choices of name are available on AArch64 targets:

	   aarch64-vect-compare-costs
	       When vectorizing, consider using	multiple different  approaches
	       and  use	 the  cost  model  to  choose  the cheapest one.  This
	       includes:

	       *   Trying both SVE and Advanced	SIMD, when SVE is available.

	       *   Trying to use 64-bit	Advanced SIMD vectors for the smallest
		   data	 elements,  rather  than  using	 128-bit  vectors  for
		   everything.

	       *   Trying  to use "unpacked" SVE vectors for smaller elements.
		   This	includes storing smaller elements in larger containers
		   and accessing elements with extending loads and  truncating
		   stores.

	   aarch64-float-recp-precision
	       The  number of Newton iterations	for calculating	the reciprocal
	       for float type.	The precision of division is  proportional  to
	       this param when division	approximation is enabled.  The default
	       value is	1.

	   aarch64-double-recp-precision
	       The  number of Newton iterations	for calculating	the reciprocal
	       for double type.	 The precision of division is  propotional  to
	       this param when division	approximation is enabled.  The default
	       value is	2.

	   aarch64-autovec-preference
	       Force   an   ISA	 selection  strategy  for  auto-vectorization.
	       Accepts values from 0 to	4, inclusive.

	       0   Use the default heuristics.

	       1   Use only Advanced SIMD for auto-vectorization.

	       2   Use only SVE	for auto-vectorization.

	       3   Use both Advanced SIMD and SVE.  Prefer Advanced SIMD  when
		   the costs are deemed	equal.

	       4   Use	both Advanced SIMD and SVE.  Prefer SVE	when the costs
		   are deemed equal.

	       The default value is 0.

	   aarch64-ldp-policy
	       Fine-grained	policy	   for	   load	     pairs.	  With
	       --param=aarch64-ldp-policy=default,   use  the  policy  of  the
	       tuning  structure.   This  is  the   current   default.	  With
	       --param=aarch64-ldp-policy=always,   emit   ldp	regardless  of
	       alignment.  With	--param=aarch64-ldp-policy=never, do not  emit
	       ldp.  With --param=aarch64-ldp-policy=aligned, emit ldp only if
	       the  source pointer is aligned to at least double the alignment
	       of the type.

	   aarch64-stp-policy
	       Fine-grained	policy	   for	   store     pairs.	  With
	       --param=aarch64-stp-policy=default,   use  the  policy  of  the
	       tuning  structure.   This  is  the   current   default.	  With
	       --param=aarch64-stp-policy=always,   emit   stp	regardless  of
	       alignment.  With	--param=aarch64-stp-policy=never, do not  emit
	       stp.  With --param=aarch64-stp-policy=aligned, emit stp only if
	       the  source pointer is aligned to at least double the alignment
	       of the type.

	   aarch64-ldp-alias-check-limit
	       Limit on	the number of alias checks performed  by  the  AArch64
	       load/store pair fusion pass when	attempting to form an ldp/stp.
	       Higher  values  make  the  pass	more aggressive	at re-ordering
	       loads over stores, at the expense of increased compile time.

	   aarch64-ldp-writeback
	       Param to	control	which writeback	opportunities we try to	handle
	       in the AArch64 load/store pair fusion pass.  A  value  of  zero
	       disables	 writeback  handling.	One means we try to form pairs
	       involving one or	more existing  individual  writeback  accesses
	       where   possible.   A  value  of	 two  means  we	 also  try  to
	       opportunistically form writeback	opportunities  by  folding  in
	       trailing	 destructive  updates  of  the base register used by a
	       pair.

	   aarch64-loop-vect-issue-rate-niters
	       The tuning for some AArch64 CPUs	tries to take  both  latencies
	       and  issue  rates  into	account	 when  deciding	whether	a loop
	       should be vectorized using SVE, vectorized using	Advanced SIMD,
	       or not vectorized at all.  If this parameter is set to  n,  GCC
	       will not	use this heuristic for loops that are known to execute
	       in fewer	than n Advanced	SIMD iterations.

	   aarch64-vect-unroll-limit
	       The   vectorizer	 will  use  available  tuning  information  to
	       determine whether it would be beneficial	 to  unroll  the  main
	       vectorized  loop	 and  by  how  much.  This parameter set's the
	       upper bound of how much the vectorizer  will  unroll  the  main
	       loop.  The default value	is four.

	   The following choices of name are available on GCN targets:

	   gcn-preferred-vectorization-factor
	       Preferred vectorization factor: default,	32, 64.

	   The	following  choices  of	name  are available on i386 and	x86_64
	   targets:

	   x86-stlf-window-ninsns
	       Instructions number above  which	 STFL  stall  penalty  can  be
	       compensated.

	   x86-stv-max-visits
	       The maximum number of use and def visits	when discovering a STV
	       chain before the	discovery is aborted.

   Program Instrumentation Options
       GCC  supports a number of command-line options that control adding run-
       time instrumentation to the code	it normally generates.	 For  example,
       one  purpose of instrumentation is collect profiling statistics for use
       in finding program hot spots, code coverage analysis, or	profile-guided
       optimizations.  Another class of	program	instrumentation	is adding run-
       time  checking  to  detect  programming	errors	like  invalid  pointer
       dereferences  or	 out-of-bounds array accesses, as well as deliberately
       hostile attacks such as stack smashing or C++ vtable hijacking.	 There
       is  also	 a  general hook which can be used to implement	other forms of
       tracing or function-level instrumentation for debug or program analysis
       purposes.

       -p
       -pg Generate extra code to write	profile	information suitable  for  the
	   analysis  program  prof  (for -p) or	gprof (for -pg).  You must use
	   this	option when compiling the source files you  want  data	about,
	   and you must	also use it when linking.

	   You	can  use  the  function	 attribute "no_instrument_function" to
	   suppress profiling of  individual  functions	 when  compiling  with
	   these options.

       -fprofile-arcs
	   Add	code  so  that	program	 flow  arcs  are instrumented.	During
	   execution the program records how many times	each branch  and  call
	   is  executed	and how	many times it is taken or returns.  On targets
	   that	support	constructors with priority support, profiling properly
	   handles  constructors,  destructors	and  C++   constructors	  (and
	   destructors)	 of  classes  which  are  used	as  a type of a	global
	   variable.

	   When	the compiled program exits it saves this data to a file	called
	   auxname.gcda	for each source	 file.	 The  data  may	 be  used  for
	   profile-directed  optimizations  (-fbranch-probabilities),  or  for
	   test	 coverage  analysis  (-ftest-coverage).	  Each	object	file's
	   auxname  is	generated  from	 the  name  of	the  output  file,  if
	   explicitly specified	and it is not the final	executable,  otherwise
	   it is the basename of the source file.  In both cases any suffix is
	   removed  (e.g.  foo.gcda  for input file dir/foo.c, or dir/foo.gcda
	   for output file specified as	-o dir/foo.o).

	   Note	that if	a  command  line  directly  links  source  files,  the
	   corresponding .gcda files will be prefixed with the unsuffixed name
	   of  the  output  file.  E.g.	"gcc a.c b.c -o	binary"	would generate
	   binary-a.gcda and binary-b.gcda files.

       -fcondition-coverage
	   Add code so	that  program  conditions  are	instrumented.	During
	   execution   the   program  records  what  terms  in	a  conditional
	   contributes to a decision, which can	be used	 to  verify  that  all
	   terms  in  a	 Boolean  function  are	tested and have	an independent
	   effect on the outcome of a decision.	 The result can	be  read  with
	   "gcov --conditions".

       --coverage
	   This	 option	 is  used  to  compile	and link code instrumented for
	   coverage analysis.  The option  is  a  synonym  for	-fprofile-arcs
	   -ftest-coverage  (when  compiling)  and -lgcov (when	linking).  See
	   the documentation for those options for more	details.

	   *   Compile the source files	with -fprofile-arcs plus  optimization
	       and  code  generation options.  For test	coverage analysis, use
	       the additional -ftest-coverage option.	You  do	 not  need  to
	       profile every source file in a program.

	   *   Compile	the  source files additionally with -fprofile-abs-path
	       to create absolute path names in	the .gcno files.  This	allows
	       gcov to find the	correct	sources	in projects where compilations
	       occur with different working directories.

	   *   Link  your  object  files  with	-lgcov	or -fprofile-arcs (the
	       latter implies the former).

	   *   Run the program on a representative workload  to	 generate  the
	       arc  profile  information.   This may be	repeated any number of
	       times.  You can run concurrent instances	of your	 program,  and
	       provided	 that the file system supports locking,	the data files
	       will be correctly updated.   Unless  a  strict  ISO  C  dialect
	       option  is  in  effect, "fork" calls are	detected and correctly
	       handled without double counting.

	       Moreover, an object file	can be recompiled multiple  times  and
	       the  corresponding .gcda	file merges as long as the source file
	       and the compiler	options	are unchanged.

	   *   For profile-directed optimizations, compile  the	 source	 files
	       again  with  the	 same optimization and code generation options
	       plus -fbranch-probabilities.

	   *   For test	coverage analysis, use gcov to produce human  readable
	       information  from the .gcno and .gcda files.  Refer to the gcov
	       documentation for further information.

	   With	-fprofile-arcs,	for each function of your program GCC  creates
	   a  program  flow  graph,  then finds	a spanning tree	for the	graph.
	   Only	 arcs  that  are  not  on  the	spanning  tree	have   to   be
	   instrumented:  the  compiler	adds code to count the number of times
	   that	these arcs are executed.  When an arc is the only exit or only
	   entrance to a block,	the instrumentation code can be	added  to  the
	   block;  otherwise,  a  new  basic block must	be created to hold the
	   instrumentation code.

	   With	-fcondition-coverage, for each conditional in your program GCC
	   creates a bitset and	records	the exercised boolean values that have
	   an independent effect on the	outcome	of that	expression.

       -ftest-coverage
	   Produce a notes file	that the gcov code-coverage utility can	use to
	   show	program	coverage.  Each	source	file's	note  file  is	called
	   auxname.gcno.   Refer  to  the  -fprofile-arcs  option  above for a
	   description of auxname and instructions on  how  to	generate  test
	   coverage data.  Coverage data matches the source files more closely
	   if you do not optimize.

       -fprofile-abs-path
	   Automatically  convert  relative source file	names to absolute path
	   names in the	.gcno files.  This allows gcov	to  find  the  correct
	   sources in projects where compilations occur	with different working
	   directories.

       -fprofile-dir=path
	   Set	the directory to search	for the	profile	data files in to path.
	   This	 option	 affects  only	 the   profile	 data	generated   by
	   -fprofile-generate,	-ftest-coverage,  -fprofile-arcs  and  used by
	   -fprofile-use and -fbranch-probabilities and	its  related  options.
	   Both	absolute and relative paths can	be used.  By default, GCC uses
	   the	current	 directory as path, thus the profile data file appears
	   in the same directory as the	object file.  In order to prevent  the
	   file	 name  clashing,  if  the  object file name is not an absolute
	   path, we mangle the absolute	path of	the sourcename.gcda  file  and
	   use	it  as	the  file name of a .gcda file.	 See details about the
	   file	naming in -fprofile-arcs.  See similar option -fprofile-note.

	   When	an executable is run in	a massive parallel environment,	it  is
	   recommended to save profile to different folders.  That can be done
	   with	variables in path that are exported during run-time:

	   %p  process ID.

	   %q{VAR}
	       value of	environment variable VAR

       -fprofile-generate
       -fprofile-generate=path
	   Enable  options  usually  used  for	instrumenting  application  to
	   produce  profile  useful  for  later	 recompilation	with   profile
	   feedback  based optimization.  You must use -fprofile-generate both
	   when	compiling and when linking your	program.

	   The	  following    options	  are	  enabled:     -fprofile-arcs,
	   -fprofile-values, -finline-functions, and -fipa-bit-cp.

	   If  path  is	 specified,  GCC looks at the path to find the profile
	   feedback data files.	See -fprofile-dir.

	   To optimize the program based on the	collected profile information,
	   use -fprofile-use.

       -fprofile-info-section
       -fprofile-info-section=name
	   Register the	profile	information in the specified  section  instead
	   of  using a constructor/destructor.	The section name is name if it
	   is specified, otherwise the section name defaults to	 ".gcov_info".
	   A pointer to	the profile information	generated by -fprofile-arcs is
	   placed  in  the  specified section for each translation unit.  This
	   option disables the	profile	 information  registration  through  a
	   constructor	and  it	 disables  the	profile	information processing
	   through a destructor.  This option is not intended to  be  used  in
	   hosted  environments	 such  as  GNU/Linux.  It targets freestanding
	   environments	(for example embedded systems) with limited  resources
	   which do not	support	constructors/destructors or the	C library file
	   I/O.

	   The	linker could collect the input sections	in a continuous	memory
	   block and define start  and	end  symbols.	A  GNU	linker	script
	   example which defines a linker output section follows:

		     .gcov_info	     :
		     {
		       PROVIDE (__gcov_info_start = .);
		       KEEP (*(.gcov_info))
		       PROVIDE (__gcov_info_end	= .);
		     }

	   The program could dump the profiling	information registered in this
	   linker set for example like this:

		   #include <gcov.h>
		   #include <stdio.h>
		   #include <stdlib.h>

		   extern const	struct gcov_info *const	__gcov_info_start[];
		   extern const	struct gcov_info *const	__gcov_info_end[];

		   static void
		   dump	(const void *d,	unsigned n, void *arg)
		   {
		     const unsigned char *c = d;

		     for (unsigned i = 0; i < n; ++i)
		       printf ("%02x", c[i]);
		   }

		   static void
		   filename (const char	*f, void *arg)
		   {
		     __gcov_filename_to_gcfn (f, dump, arg );
		   }

		   static void *
		   allocate (unsigned length, void *arg)
		   {
		     return malloc (length);
		   }

		   static void
		   dump_gcov_info (void)
		   {
		     const struct gcov_info *const *info = __gcov_info_start;
		     const struct gcov_info *const *end	= __gcov_info_end;

		     /*	Obfuscate variable to prevent compiler optimizations.  */
		     __asm__ ("" : "+r"	(info));

		     while (info != end)
		     {
		       void *arg = NULL;
		       __gcov_info_to_gcda (*info, filename, dump, allocate, arg);
		       putchar ('\n');
		       ++info;
		     }
		   }

		   int
		   main	(void)
		   {
		     dump_gcov_info ();
		     return 0;
		   }

	   The merge-stream subcommand of gcov-tool may	be used	to deserialize
	   the	data  stream  generated	 by  the "__gcov_filename_to_gcfn" and
	   "__gcov_info_to_gcda" functions and merge the  profile  information
	   into	.gcda files on the host	filesystem.

       -fprofile-note=path
	   If  path is specified, GCC saves .gcno file into path location.  If
	   you combine the option with multiple	source files, the  .gcno  file
	   will	be overwritten.

       -fprofile-prefix-path=path
	   This	    option     can     be    used    in	   combination	  with
	   profile-generate=profile_dir	and profile-use=profile_dir to	inform
	   GCC	where  is the base directory of	built source tree.  By default
	   profile_dir will contain files with mangled absolute	paths  of  all
	   object  files  in  the  built  project.  This is not	desirable when
	   directory used to build the instrumented binary  differs  from  the
	   directory  used to build the	binary optimized with profile feedback
	   because the profile data will not be	 found	during	the  optimized
	   build.    In	  such	setups	-fprofile-prefix-path=path  with  path
	   pointing to the base	directory of the build can be  used  to	 strip
	   the irrelevant part of the path and keep all	file names relative to
	   the main build directory.

       -fprofile-prefix-map=old=new
	   When	 compiling  files  residing in directory old, record profiling
	   information (with --coverage)  describing  them  as	if  the	 files
	   resided  in	directory new instead.	See also -ffile-prefix-map and
	   -fcanon-prefix-map.

       -fprofile-update=method
	   Alter the update method for an application instrumented for profile
	   feedback based optimization.	 The method argument should be one  of
	   single,  atomic  or	prefer-atomic.	 The  first  one is useful for
	   single-threaded applications, while the second one prevents profile
	   corruption by emitting thread-safe code.

	   Warning: When an application	does not properly join all threads (or
	   creates an detached thread),	a profile file can be still corrupted.

	   Using prefer-atomic would be	transformed  either  to	 atomic,  when
	   supported  by  a  target,  or  to single otherwise.	The GCC	driver
	   automatically selects prefer-atomic when -pthread is	present	in the
	   command line, otherwise the default method is single.

	   If atomic is	selected, then	the  profile  information  is  updated
	   using  atomic  operations  on  a  best-effort  basis.  Ideally, the
	   profile  information	 is  updated  through  atomic  operations   in
	   hardware.   If  the	target	platform does not support the required
	   atomic operations in	hardware,  however,  libatomic	is  available,
	   then	the profile information	is updated through calls to libatomic.
	   If  the  target  platform  neither  supports	 the  required	atomic
	   operations in hardware nor libatomic, then the profile  information
	   is  not  atomically updated and a warning is	issued.	 In this case,
	   the obtained	 profiling  information	 may  be  corrupt  for	multi-
	   threaded applications.

	   For	performance  reasons,  if  64-bit  counters  are  used for the
	   profiling information and the target	platform only supports	32-bit
	   atomic  operations  in  hardware,  then  the	 performance  critical
	   profiling updates are done using two	32-bit atomic  operations  for
	   each	 counter  update.  If a	signal interrupts these	two operations
	   updating a counter, then the	profiling information  may  be	in  an
	   inconsistent	state.

       -fprofile-filter-files=regex
	   Instrument  only functions from files whose name matches any	of the
	   regular expressions (separated by semi-colons).

	   For	 example,   -fprofile-filter-files=main\.c;module.*\.c	  will
	   instrument only main.c and all C files starting with	'module'.

       -fprofile-exclude-files=regex
	   Instrument  only functions from files whose name does not match any
	   of the regular expressions (separated by semi-colons).

	   For	 example,   -fprofile-exclude-files=/usr/.*    will    prevent
	   instrumentation of all files	that are located in the	/usr/ folder.

       -fprofile-reproducible=[multithreaded|parallel-runs|serial]
	   Control   level   of	  reproducibility   of	 profile  gathered  by
	   "-fprofile-generate".  This makes it	possible  to  rebuild  program
	   with	 same  outcome	which is useful, for example, for distribution
	   packages.

	   With	 -fprofile-reproducible=serial	 the   profile	 gathered   by
	   -fprofile-generate  is  reproducible	 provided  the trained program
	   behaves the same at each invocation of the train  run,  it  is  not
	   multi-threaded  and	profile	 data  streaming is always done	in the
	   same	order.	Note that profile streaming  happens  at  the  end  of
	   program run but also	before "fork" function is invoked.

	   Note	 that it is quite common that execution	counts of some part of
	   programs depends, for example, on length of temporary file names or
	   memory space	randomization (that may	 affect	 hash-table  collision
	   rate).   Such non-reproducible part of programs may be annotated by
	   "no_instrument_function" function attribute.	gcov-dump with -l  can
	   be  used  to	 dump  gathered	 data  and verify that they are	indeed
	   reproducible.

	   With	-fprofile-reproducible=parallel-runs collected	profile	 stays
	   reproducible	 regardless  the  order	 of streaming of the data into
	   gcda	files.	 This  setting	makes  it  possible  to	 run  multiple
	   instances  of  instrumented program in parallel (such as with "make
	   -j"). This reduces quality  of  gathered  data,  in	particular  of
	   indirect call profiling.

       -fsanitize=address
	   Enable  AddressSanitizer,  a	 fast  memory  error detector.	Memory
	   access instructions are instrumented	to  detect  out-of-bounds  and
	   use-after-free	 bugs.	       The	  option       enables
	   -fsanitize-address-use-after-scope.				   See
	   <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizer>	   for
	   more	details.  The run-time behavior	can be	influenced  using  the
	   ASAN_OPTIONS	 environment  variable.	  When	set  to	 "help=1", the
	   available options are shown at startup of the instrumented program.
	   See
	   <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerFlags#run-time-flags>
	   for a list of supported options.  The  option  cannot  be  combined
	   with	-fsanitize=thread or -fsanitize=hwaddress.  Note that the only
	   targets  -fsanitize=hwaddress  is currently supported on are	x86-64
	   (only with "-mlam=u48" or "-mlam=u57" options) and AArch64, in both
	   cases only in ABIs with 64-bit pointers.

	   To get more accurate	stack traces, it is possible  to  use  options
	   such	 as  -O0,  -O1,	 or  -Og  (which,  for	instance, prevent most
	   function  inlining),	 -fno-optimize-sibling-calls  (which  prevents
	   optimizing  sibling	and  tail  recursive  calls;  this  option  is
	   implicit for	-O0, -O1, or -Og),  or	-fno-ipa-icf  (which  disables
	   Identical  Code Folding for functions).  Since multiple runs	of the
	   program may yield backtraces	with different addresses due  to  ASLR
	   (Address  Space  Layout Randomization), it may be desirable to turn
	   ASLR	off.  On Linux,	this can be achieved with setarch  `uname  -m`
	   -R ./prog.

       -fsanitize=kernel-address
	   Enable      AddressSanitizer	    for	    Linux     kernel.	   See
	   <https://github.com/google/kernel-sanitizers> for more details.

       -fsanitize=hwaddress
	   Enable Hardware-assisted AddressSanitizer, which  uses  a  hardware
	   ability  to ignore the top byte of a	pointer	to allow the detection
	   of memory  errors  with  a  low  memory  overhead.	Memory	access
	   instructions	 are  instrumented  to	detect	out-of-bounds and use-
	   after-free	     bugs.	    The		option	       enables
	   -fsanitize-address-use-after-scope.				   See
	   <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.html>
	   for more details.  The run-time behavior can	 be  influenced	 using
	   the HWASAN_OPTIONS environment variable.  When set to "help=1", the
	   available options are shown at startup of the instrumented program.
	   The	 option	  cannot   be	combined   with	 -fsanitize=thread  or
	   -fsanitize=address, and is currently	only available on AArch64.

       -fsanitize=kernel-hwaddress
	   Enable Hardware-assisted AddressSanitizer for  compilation  of  the
	   Linux  kernel.   Similar  to	-fsanitize=kernel-address but using an
	   alternate	instrumentation	    method,	and	similar	    to
	   -fsanitize=hwaddress	but with instrumentation differences necessary
	   for	compiling  the	Linux  kernel.	These differences are to avoid
	   hwasan library initialization calls and to account  for  the	 stack
	   pointer having a different value in its top byte.

	   Note:    This    option    has    different	  defaults    to   the
	   -fsanitize=hwaddress.  Instrumenting	the stack and alloca calls are
	   not on by default but are still possible by specifying the command-
	   line	 options   --param   hwasan-instrument-stack=1	 and   --param
	   hwasan-instrument-allocas=1	respectively. Using a random frame tag
	   is not implemented for kernel instrumentation.

       -fsanitize=pointer-compare
	   Instrument  comparison  operation  (<,  <=,	>,  >=)	 with  pointer
	   operands.	 The	option	  must	 be   combined	 with	either
	   -fsanitize=kernel-address or	-fsanitize=address The	option	cannot
	   be  combined	with -fsanitize=thread.	 Note: By default the check is
	   disabled    at     run     time.	 To	enable	   it,	   add
	   "detect_invalid_pointer_pairs=2"   to   the	 environment  variable
	   ASAN_OPTIONS.   Using   "detect_invalid_pointer_pairs=1"    detects
	   invalid operation only when both pointers are non-null.

       -fsanitize=pointer-subtract
	   Instrument  subtraction  with pointer operands.  The	option must be
	   combined	with	 either	     -fsanitize=kernel-address	    or
	   -fsanitize=address	 The	option	 cannot	  be   combined	  with
	   -fsanitize=thread.  Note: By	default	the check is disabled  at  run
	   time.   To  enable  it, add "detect_invalid_pointer_pairs=2"	to the
	   environment		variable	  ASAN_OPTIONS.		 Using
	   "detect_invalid_pointer_pairs=1"  detects  invalid  operation  only
	   when	both pointers are non-null.

       -fsanitize=shadow-call-stack
	   Enable ShadowCallStack, a security enhancement  mechanism  used  to
	   protect  programs  against  return  address	overwrites (e.g. stack
	   buffer overflows.)  It works	by saving a function's return  address
	   to  a  separately  allocated	 shadow	 call  stack  in  the function
	   prologue and	restoring the return  address  from  the  shadow  call
	   stack  in  the  function  epilogue.	Instrumentation	only occurs in
	   functions that need to save the return address to the stack.

	   Currently  it  only	supports  the	aarch64	  platform.    It   is
	   specifically	  designed   for   linux   kernels   that  enable  the
	   CONFIG_SHADOW_CALL_STACK option.   For  the	user  space  programs,
	   runtime  support  is	 not  currently	 provided  in libc and libgcc.
	   Users who want to use this feature in user space  need  to  provide
	   their  own  support	for the	runtime.  It should be noted that this
	   may cause the ABI rules to be broken.

	   On aarch64, the instrumentation makes use of	the platform  register
	   "x18".  This	generally means	that any code that may run on the same
	   thread  as code compiled with ShadowCallStack must be compiled with
	   the	flag  -ffixed-x18,  otherwise	functions   compiled   without
	   -ffixed-x18	might  clobber	"x18"  and so corrupt the shadow stack
	   pointer.

	   Also, because there is no userspace runtime support,	code  compiled
	   with	  ShadowCallStack   cannot   use   exception   handling.   Use
	   -fno-exceptions to turn off exceptions.

	   See	<https://clang.llvm.org/docs/ShadowCallStack.html>  for	  more
	   details.

       -fsanitize=thread
	   Enable  ThreadSanitizer,  a fast data race detector.	 Memory	access
	   instructions	are  instrumented  to  detect  data  race  bugs.   See
	   <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki#threadsanitizer>	   for
	   more	details. The run-time behavior can  be	influenced  using  the
	   TSAN_OPTIONS		  environment		variable;	   see
	   <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/ThreadSanitizerFlags>
	   for a list of supported options.  The  option  cannot  be  combined
	   with	-fsanitize=address, -fsanitize=leak.

	   Note	 that  sanitized  atomic builtins cannot throw exceptions when
	   operating on	invalid	 memory	 addresses  with  non-call  exceptions
	   (-fnon-call-exceptions).

       -fsanitize=leak
	   Enable  LeakSanitizer,  a  memory  leak detector.  This option only
	   matters for linking	of  executables.   The	executable  is	linked
	   against  a  library	that  overrides	 "malloc"  and other allocator
	   functions.							   See
	   <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerLeakSanitizer>
	   for	more  details.	 The run-time behavior can be influenced using
	   the	LSAN_OPTIONS  environment  variable.   The  option  cannot  be
	   combined with -fsanitize=thread.

       -fsanitize=undefined
	   Enable   UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer,	  a  fast  undefined  behavior
	   detector.   Various	computations  are   instrumented   to	detect
	   undefined	     behavior	      at	 runtime.	   See
	   <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer.html>   for
	   more	 details.    The run-time behavior can be influenced using the
	   UBSAN_OPTIONS environment variable.	Current	suboptions are:

	   -fsanitize=shift
	       This option  enables  checking  that  the  result  of  a	 shift
	       operation   is  not  undefined.	 Note  that  what  exactly  is
	       considered undefined differs slightly between  C	 and  C++,  as
	       well  as	 between  ISO  C90  and	C99, etc.  This	option has two
	       suboptions,		-fsanitize=shift-base		   and
	       -fsanitize=shift-exponent.

	   -fsanitize=shift-exponent
	       This  option  enables  checking	that  the second argument of a
	       shift operation	is  not	 negative  and	is  smaller  than  the
	       precision of the	promoted first argument.

	   -fsanitize=shift-base
	       If  the	second	argument of a shift operation is within	range,
	       check that the result of	a shift	operation  is  not  undefined.
	       Note that what exactly is considered undefined differs slightly
	       between C and C++, as well as between ISO C90 and C99, etc.

	   -fsanitize=integer-divide-by-zero
	       Detect integer division by zero.

	   -fsanitize=unreachable
	       With	this	 option,     the     compiler	  turns	   the
	       "__builtin_unreachable" call into a  diagnostics	 message  call
	       instead.	  When	reaching the "__builtin_unreachable" call, the
	       behavior	is undefined.

	   -fsanitize=vla-bound
	       This option instructs the compiler to check that	the size of  a
	       variable	length array is	positive.

	   -fsanitize=null
	       This   option  enables  pointer	checking.   Particularly,  the
	       application built with this option  turned  on  will  issue  an
	       error  message  when it tries to	dereference a NULL pointer, or
	       if a reference (possibly	an rvalue reference)  is  bound	 to  a
	       NULL pointer, or	if a method is invoked on an object pointed by
	       a NULL pointer.

	   -fsanitize=return
	       This  option enables return statement checking.	Programs built
	       with this option	turned on will issue an	error message when the
	       end  of	a  non-void  function  is  reached  without   actually
	       returning a value.  This	option works in	C++ only.

	   -fsanitize=signed-integer-overflow
	       This option enables signed integer overflow checking.  We check
	       that the	result of "+", "*", and	both unary and binary "-" does
	       not  overflow  in  the  signed  arithmetics.  This also detects
	       "INT_MIN	/ -1" signed division.	Note, integer promotion	 rules
	       must  be	 taken into account.  That is, the following is	not an
	       overflow:

		       signed char a = SCHAR_MAX;
		       a++;

	   -fsanitize=bounds
	       This option enables instrumentation of array  bounds.   Various
	       out  of	bounds accesses	are detected.  Flexible	array members,
	       flexible	 array	member-like  arrays,   and   initializers   of
	       variables  with	static	storage	are not	instrumented, with the
	       exception  of  flexible	array  member-like  arrays  for	 which
	       "-fstrict-flex-arrays"  or  "-fstrict-flex-arrays="  options or
	       "strict_flex_array" attributes say they	shouldn't  be  treated
	       like flexible array member-like arrays.

	   -fsanitize=bounds-strict
	       This  option  enables  strict  instrumentation of array bounds.
	       Most out	of bounds accesses are	detected,  including  flexible
	       array  member-like  arrays.   Initializers  of  variables  with
	       static storage are not instrumented.

	   -fsanitize=alignment
	       This option enables checking of alignment of pointers when they
	       are  dereferenced,  or	when   a   reference   is   bound   to
	       insufficiently  aligned target, or when a method	or constructor
	       is invoked on insufficiently aligned object.

	   -fsanitize=object-size
	       This option enables instrumentation of memory references	 using
	       the  "__builtin_dynamic_object_size"  function.	Various	out of
	       bounds pointer accesses are detected.

	   -fsanitize=float-divide-by-zero
	       Detect floating-point division by zero.	Unlike	other  similar
	       options,	 -fsanitize=float-divide-by-zero  is  not  enabled  by
	       -fsanitize=undefined, since floating-point division by zero can
	       be a legitimate way of obtaining	infinities and NaNs.

	   -fsanitize=float-cast-overflow
	       This option enables floating-point type to  integer  conversion
	       checking.   We check that the result of the conversion does not
	       overflow.       Unlike	    other	similar	      options,
	       -fsanitize=float-cast-overflow	  is	 not	 enabled    by
	       -fsanitize=undefined.  This option  does	 not  work  well  with
	       "FE_INVALID" exceptions enabled.

	   -fsanitize=nonnull-attribute
	       This  option enables instrumentation of calls, checking whether
	       null values are not passed to arguments marked as  requiring  a
	       non-null	value by the "nonnull" function	attribute.

	   -fsanitize=returns-nonnull-attribute
	       This  option  enables  instrumentation  of return statements in
	       functions marked	with "returns_nonnull" function	attribute,  to
	       detect returning	of null	values from such functions.

	   -fsanitize=bool
	       This  option  enables instrumentation of	loads from bool.  If a
	       value other than	0/1 is loaded, a run-time error	is issued.

	   -fsanitize=enum
	       This option enables instrumentation of loads from an enum type.
	       If a value outside the range of values for  the	enum  type  is
	       loaded, a run-time error	is issued.

	   -fsanitize=vptr
	       This  option  enables  instrumentation  of  C++ member function
	       calls, member accesses and some conversions between pointers to
	       base and	derived	classes, to verify the referenced  object  has
	       the correct dynamic type.

	   -fsanitize=pointer-overflow
	       This option enables instrumentation of pointer arithmetics.  If
	       the pointer arithmetics overflows, a run-time error is issued.

	   -fsanitize=builtin
	       This  option  enables  instrumentation of arguments to selected
	       builtin functions.  If an  invalid  value  is  passed  to  such
	       arguments,  a  run-time error is	issued.	 E.g. passing 0	as the
	       argument	 to   "__builtin_ctz"	or   "__builtin_clz"   invokes
	       undefined behavior and is diagnosed by this option.

	   Note	 that  sanitizers  tend	to increase the	rate of	false positive
	   warnings, most  notably  those  around  -Wmaybe-uninitialized.   We
	   recommend against combining -Werror and [the	use of]	sanitizers.

	   While  -ftrapv  causes  traps  for  signed overflows	to be emitted,
	   -fsanitize=undefined	gives a	diagnostic  message.   This  currently
	   works only for the C	family of languages.

       -fno-sanitize=all
	   This	  option   disables   all   previously	 enabled   sanitizers.
	   -fsanitize=all is not allowed, as some sanitizers  cannot  be  used
	   together.

       -fasan-shadow-offset=number
	   This	  option   forces   GCC	  to   use  custom  shadow  offset  in
	   AddressSanitizer checks.   It  is  useful  for  experimenting  with
	   different shadow memory layouts in Kernel AddressSanitizer.

       -fsanitize-sections=s1,s2,...
	   Sanitize  global  variables	in selected user-defined sections.  si
	   may contain wildcards.

       -fsanitize-recover[=opts]
	   -fsanitize-recover= controls	error  recovery	 mode  for  sanitizers
	   mentioned  in  comma-separated  list	of opts.  Enabling this	option
	   for a sanitizer component causes it to attempt to continue  running
	   the	program	 as if no error	happened.  This	means multiple runtime
	   errors can be reported in a single program run, and the  exit  code
	   of  the  program  may  indicate  success even when errors have been
	   reported.  The -fno-sanitize-recover= option	can be used  to	 alter
	   this	 behavior:  only  the  first  detected	error  is reported and
	   program then	exits with a non-zero exit code.

	   Currently this feature only works for -fsanitize=undefined (and its
	   suboptions	  except      for      -fsanitize=unreachable	   and
	   -fsanitize=return),		       -fsanitize=float-cast-overflow,
	   -fsanitize=float-divide-by-zero,	     -fsanitize=bounds-strict,
	   -fsanitize=kernel-address   and   -fsanitize=address.    For	 these
	   sanitizers  error  recovery	is  turned  on	by   default,	except
	   -fsanitize=address,	 for   which  this  feature  is	 experimental.
	   -fsanitize-recover=all  and	 -fno-sanitize-recover=all   is	  also
	   accepted,  the  former  enables  recovery  for  all sanitizers that
	   support it, the latter disables recovery for	 all  sanitizers  that
	   support it.

	   Even	if a recovery mode is turned on	the compiler side, it needs to
	   be also enabled on the runtime library side,	otherwise the failures
	   are still fatal.  The runtime library defaults to "halt_on_error=0"
	   for	ThreadSanitizer	 and UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer, while default
	   value  for  AddressSanitizer	 is  "halt_on_error=1".	 This  can  be
	   overridden	through	  setting  the	"halt_on_error"	 flag  in  the
	   corresponding environment variable.

	   Syntax without an explicit opts parameter  is  deprecated.	It  is
	   equivalent to specifying an opts list of:

		   undefined,float-cast-overflow,float-divide-by-zero,bounds-strict

       -fsanitize-address-use-after-scope
	   Enable  sanitization	 of  local variables to	detect use-after-scope
	   bugs.  The option sets -fstack-reuse	to none.

       -fsanitize-trap[=opts]
	   The -fsanitize-trap=	option instructs the compiler  to  report  for
	   sanitizers  mentioned  in  comma-separated  list  of	opts undefined
	   behavior using "__builtin_trap" rather than	a  "libubsan"  library
	   routine.  If	this option is enabled for certain sanitizer, it takes
	   precedence	over  the  -fsanitizer-recover=	 for  that  sanitizer,
	   "__builtin_trap" will be emitted and	be fatal regardless of whether
	   recovery is enabled or disabled using -fsanitize-recover=.

	   The advantage of this is that the "libubsan"	library	is not	needed
	   and	is  not	 linked	 in,  so  this	is usable even in freestanding
	   environments.

	   Currently this feature works	 with  -fsanitize=undefined  (and  its
	   suboptions		except		for	     -fsanitize=vptr),
	   -fsanitize=float-cast-overflow, -fsanitize=float-divide-by-zero and
	   -fsanitize=bounds-strict.   "-fsanitize-trap=all"   can   be	  also
	   specified,	which	enables	  it   for   "undefined"   suboptions,
	   -fsanitize=float-cast-overflow, -fsanitize=float-divide-by-zero and
	   -fsanitize=bounds-strict.	If   "-fsanitize-trap=undefined"    or
	   "-fsanitize-trap=all"  is  used and "-fsanitize=vptr" is enabled on
	   the command line, the instrumentation is silently  ignored  as  the
	   instrumentation	always	    needs      "libubsan"     support,
	   -fsanitize-trap=vptr	is not allowed.

       -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error
	   The	 -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error   option   is   deprecated
	   equivalent of -fsanitize-trap=all.

       -fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc
	   Enable  coverage-guided  fuzzing  code  instrumentation.  Inserts a
	   call	to "__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc" into every basic block.

       -fsanitize-coverage=trace-cmp
	   Enable dataflow guided fuzzing  code	 instrumentation.   Inserts  a
	   call	to "__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp1", "__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp2",
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp4"	 or  "__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp8"  for
	   integral   comparison    with    both    operands	variable    or
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp1",
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp2",
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp4"				    or
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp8" for integral comparison with one
	   operand	 constant,	 "__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmpf"	    or
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmpd"	 for  float  or	double comparisons and
	   "__sanitizer_cov_trace_switch" for switch statements.

       -fcf-protection=[full|branch|return|none|check]
	   Enable code instrumentation of control-flow transfers  to  increase
	   program  security by	checking that target addresses of control-flow
	   transfer instructions (such as  indirect  function  call,  function
	   return, indirect jump) are valid.  This prevents diverting the flow
	   of  control	to  an unexpected target.  This	is intended to protect
	   against such	threats	 as  Return-oriented  Programming  (ROP),  and
	   similarly call/jmp-oriented programming (COP/JOP).

	   The	value  "branch"	 tells	the  compiler to implement checking of
	   validity of control-flow transfer at	the point of  indirect	branch
	   instructions,  i.e.	call/jmp  instructions.	  The  value  "return"
	   implements checking of validity at the point	of  returning  from  a
	   function.   The  value  "full"  is  an  alias  for  specifying both
	   "branch" and	"return". The value "none" turns off instrumentation.

	   To override -fcf-protection,	-fcf-protection=none needs to be added
	   and then with -fcf-protection=xxx.

	   The value "check"  is  used	for  the  final	 link  with  link-time
	   optimization	 (LTO).	  An  error  is	issued if LTO object files are
	   compiled with different -fcf-protection values.  The	value  "check"
	   is ignored at the compile time.

	   The	macro  "__CET__" is defined when -fcf-protection is used.  The
	   first bit of	"__CET__" is set to 1 for the value "branch"  and  the
	   second bit of "__CET__" is set to 1 for the "return".

	   You	can  also  use	the  "nocf_check"  attribute to	identify which
	   functions and calls should be skipped from instrumentation.

	   Currently the x86 GNU/Linux target provides an implementation based
	   on Intel Control-flow Enforcement Technology	(CET) which works  for
	   i686	processor or newer.

       -fharden-compares
	   For	every  logical	test that survives gimple optimizations	and is
	   not the condition in	a conditional branch (for example,  conditions
	   tested  for	conditional  moves, or to store	in boolean variables),
	   emit	extra code to compute and verify the reversed  condition,  and
	   to  call  "__builtin_trap"  if  the results do not match.  Use with
	   -fharden-conditional-branches to cover all conditionals.

       -fharden-conditional-branches
	   For every non-vectorized conditional	branch	that  survives	gimple
	   optimizations,  emit	 extra code to compute and verify the reversed
	   condition,  and  to	call  "__builtin_trap"	if   the   result   is
	   unexpected.	Use with -fharden-compares to cover all	conditionals.

       -fharden-control-flow-redundancy
	   Emit	 extra code to set booleans when entering basic	blocks,	and to
	   verify and trap, at function	exits, when the	booleans do  not  form
	   an execution	path that is compatible	with the control flow graph.

	   Verification	 takes	place  before  returns,	 before	mandatory tail
	   calls (see below) and, optionally, before escaping exceptions  with
	   -fhardcfr-check-exceptions,	  before    returning	 calls	  with
	   -fhardcfr-check-returning-calls, and	 before	 noreturn  calls  with
	   -fhardcfr-check-noreturn-calls).   Tuning  options --param hardcfr-
	   max-blocks and --param hardcfr-max-inline-blocks are	available.

	   Tail	call optimization takes	place too late to affect control  flow
	   redundancy, but calls annotated as mandatory	tail calls by language
	   front-ends,	and  any  calls	 marked	early enough as	potential tail
	   calls would also have verification  issued  before  the  call,  but
	   these possibilities are merely theoretical, as these	conditions can
	   only	be met when using custom compiler plugins.

       -fhardcfr-skip-leaf
	   Disable -fharden-control-flow-redundancy in leaf functions.

       -fhardcfr-check-exceptions
	   When	-fharden-control-flow-redundancy is active, check the recorded
	   execution  path  against the	control	flow graph at exception	escape
	   points, as if the function body was wrapped with a cleanup  handler
	   that	 performed  the	check and reraised.  This option is enabled by
	   default; use	-fno-hardcfr-check-exceptions to disable it.

       -fhardcfr-check-returning-calls
	   When	-fharden-control-flow-redundancy is active, check the recorded
	   execution path against the control flow graph before	 any  function
	   call	 immediately followed by a return of its result, if any, so as
	   to not  prevent  tail-call  optimization,  whether  or  not	it  is
	   ultimately optimized	to a tail call.

	   This	  option   is	enabled	  by  default  whenever	 sibling  call
	   optimizations are enabled (see  -foptimize-sibling-calls),  but  it
	   can	be  enabled  (or disabled, using its negated form) explicitly,
	   regardless of the optimizations.

       -fhardcfr-check-noreturn-calls=[always|no-xthrow|nothrow|never]
	   When	-fharden-control-flow-redundancy is active, check the recorded
	   execution path against the control  flow  graph  before  "noreturn"
	   calls,  either  all of them (always), those that aren't expected to
	   return control to the caller	through	an exception  (no-xthrow,  the
	   default),  those  that may not return control to the	caller through
	   an exception	either (nothrow), or none of them (never).

	   Checking before a "noreturn"	function that may  return  control  to
	   the	caller through an exception may	cause checking to be performed
	   more	than once, if the exception is caught in the  caller,  whether
	   by a	handler	or a cleanup.  When -fhardcfr-check-exceptions is also
	   enabled, the	compiler will avoid associating	a "noreturn" call with
	   the	implicitly-added  cleanup handler, since it would be redundant
	   with	the check performed before the call,  but  other  handlers  or
	   cleanups  in	 the  function,	if activated, will modify the recorded
	   execution path and check it again when another checkpoint  is  hit.
	   The checkpoint may even be another "noreturn" call, so checking may
	   end up performed multiple times.

	   Various  optimizers	may  cause  calls  to  be marked as "noreturn"
	   and/or  "nothrow",  even  in	 the  absence  of  the	 corresponding
	   attributes,	which may affect the placement of checks before	calls,
	   as well as the addition of  implicit	 cleanup  handlers  for	 them.
	   This	 unpredictability,  and	 the  fact  that raising and reraising
	   exceptions frequently  amounts  to  implicitly  calling  "noreturn"
	   functions, have made	no-xthrow the default setting for this option:
	   it  excludes	 from the "noreturn" treatment only internal functions
	   used	to (re)raise  exceptions,  that	 are  not  affected  by	 these
	   optimizations.

       -fhardened
	   Enable  a  set  of flags for	C and C++ that improve the security of
	   the generated code without affecting	its ABI.   The	precise	 flags
	   enabled   may  change  between  major  releases  of	GCC,  but  are
	   currently:

	   -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=3				 -D_GLIBCXX_ASSERTIONS
	   -ftrivial-auto-var-init=zero	  -fPIE	   -pie	   -Wl,-z,relro,-z,now
	   -fstack-protector-strong		      -fstack-clash-protection
	   -fcf-protection=full	(x86 GNU/Linux only)

	   The	list  of  options enabled by -fhardened	can be generated using
	   the --help=hardened option.

	   When	the system glibc is older than	2.35,  -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2  is
	   used	instead.

	   This	option is intended to be used in production builds, not	merely
	   in debug builds.

	   Currently, -fhardened is only supported on GNU/Linux	targets.

	   -fhardened  only  enables  a	particular option if it	wasn't already
	   specified anywhere on the command line.  For	 instance,  -fhardened
	   -fstack-protector  will  only  enable  -fstack-protector,  but  not
	   -fstack-protector-strong.

       -fstack-protector
	   Emit	extra code to  check  for  buffer  overflows,  such  as	 stack
	   smashing  attacks.	This  is  done	by  adding a guard variable to
	   functions with vulnerable objects.  This  includes  functions  that
	   call	"alloca", and functions	with buffers larger than or equal to 8
	   bytes.   The	 guards	are initialized	when a function	is entered and
	   then	checked	when the function exits.  If a guard check  fails,  an
	   error  message  is  printed	and the	program	exits.	Only variables
	   that	are actually allocated on the stack are	considered,  optimized
	   away	variables or variables allocated in registers don't count.

       -fstack-protector-all
	   Like	-fstack-protector except that all functions are	protected.

       -fstack-protector-strong
	   Like	 -fstack-protector  but	 includes  additional  functions to be
	   protected --- those that have  local	 array	definitions,  or  have
	   references  to  local  frame	 addresses.   Only  variables that are
	   actually allocated on the  stack  are  considered,  optimized  away
	   variables or	variables allocated in registers don't count.

       -fstack-protector-explicit
	   Like	-fstack-protector but only protects those functions which have
	   the "stack_protect" attribute.

       -fstack-check
	   Generate  code  to verify that you do not go	beyond the boundary of
	   the stack.  You should specify this flag if you are running	in  an
	   environment	with  multiple	threads,  but  you only	rarely need to
	   specify it in a single-threaded environment since stack overflow is
	   automatically detected on nearly all	systems	if there is  only  one
	   stack.

	   Note	 that this switch does not actually cause checking to be done;
	   the operating system	or the language	runtime	 must  do  that.   The
	   switch  causes generation of	code to	ensure that they see the stack
	   being extended.

	   You can additionally	 specify  a  string  parameter:	 no  means  no
	   checking,  generic  means  force  the  use  of  old-style checking,
	   specific means use the best checking	method and  is	equivalent  to
	   bare	-fstack-check.

	   Old-style checking is a generic mechanism that requires no specific
	   target  support  in	the  compiler  but  comes  with	 the following
	   drawbacks:

	   1.  Modified	allocation strategy for	large objects: they are	always
	       allocated dynamically if	their size exceeds a fixed  threshold.
	       Note this may change the	semantics of some code.

	   2.  Fixed  limit on the size	of the static frame of functions: when
	       it is topped by a particular function, stack  checking  is  not
	       reliable	and a warning is issued	by the compiler.

	   3.  Inefficiency:  because of both the modified allocation strategy
	       and the generic implementation, code performance	is hampered.

	   Note	that old-style stack checking is also the fallback method  for
	   specific if no target support has been added	in the compiler.

	   -fstack-check=  is  designed	 for  Ada's  needs  to detect infinite
	   recursion and stack overflows.  specific  is	 an  excellent	choice
	   when	compiling Ada code.  It	is not generally sufficient to protect
	   against  stack-clash	 attacks.   To	protect	against	those you want
	   -fstack-clash-protection.

       -fstack-clash-protection
	   Generate code to prevent stack  clash  style	 attacks.   When  this
	   option  is  enabled,	 the  compiler	will only allocate one page of
	   stack space at a time and each page is accessed  immediately	 after
	   allocation.	 Thus,	it  prevents allocations from jumping over any
	   stack guard page provided by	the operating system.

	   Most	targets	do not fully support stack clash protection.  However,
	   on those  targets  -fstack-clash-protection	will  protect  dynamic
	   stack   allocations.	  -fstack-clash-protection  may	 also  provide
	   limited protection for  static  stack  allocations  if  the	target
	   supports -fstack-check=specific.

       -fstack-limit-register=reg
       -fstack-limit-symbol=sym
       -fno-stack-limit
	   Generate  code  to  ensure  that  the  stack	does not grow beyond a
	   certain value, either the value of a	register or the	address	 of  a
	   symbol.   If	 a larger stack	is required, a signal is raised	at run
	   time.  For most targets, the	signal	is  raised  before  the	 stack
	   overruns  the  boundary,  so	 it  is	 possible  to catch the	signal
	   without taking special precautions.

	   For instance, if the	stack starts at	 absolute  address  0x80000000
	   and	   grows     downwards,	    you	    can	   use	  the	 flags
	   -fstack-limit-symbol=__stack_limit				   and
	   -Wl,--defsym,__stack_limit=0x7ffe0000  to  enforce a	stack limit of
	   128KB.  Note	that this may only work	with the GNU linker.

	   You	can  locally  override	stack  limit  checking	by  using  the
	   "no_stack_limit" function attribute.

       -fsplit-stack
	   Generate code to automatically split	the stack before it overflows.
	   The	resulting  program  has	 a  discontiguous stack	which can only
	   overflow if the program is unable  to  allocate  any	 more  memory.
	   This	 is  most  useful  when	running	threaded programs, as it is no
	   longer necessary to calculate a good	stack size  to	use  for  each
	   thread.   This  is  currently  only implemented for the x86 targets
	   running GNU/Linux.

	   When	code compiled with -fsplit-stack calls code  compiled  without
	   -fsplit-stack,  there may not be much stack space available for the
	   latter code to run.	If compiling all code, including library code,
	   with	-fsplit-stack is not an	option,	then the  linker  can  fix  up
	   these  calls	so that	the code compiled without -fsplit-stack	always
	   has a large stack.  Support for this	is  implemented	 in  the  gold
	   linker in GNU binutils release 2.21 and later.

       -fstrub=disable
	   Disable  stack scrubbing entirely, ignoring any "strub" attributes.
	   See

       -fstrub=strict
	   Functions default to	"strub"	mode "disabled",  and  apply  strictly
	   the	  restriction	 that	 only	 functions   associated	  with
	   "strub"-"callable"	 modes	   ("at-calls",	    "callable"	   and
	   "always_inline"   "internal")  are  "callable"  by  functions  with
	   "strub"-enabled modes ("at-calls" and "internal").

       -fstrub=relaxed
	   Restore the default stack scrub ("strub") setting, namely,  "strub"
	   is  only  enabled as	required by "strub" attributes associated with
	   function and	data types.  "Relaxed" means that strub	 contexts  are
	   only	 prevented  from  calling functions explicitly associated with
	   "strub" mode	"disabled".  This option is only  useful  to  override
	   other -fstrub=* options that	precede	it in the command line.

       -fstrub=at-calls
	   Enable  "at-calls"  "strub"	mode where viable.  The	primary	use of
	   this	option is for testing.	It exercises the "strub" machinery  in
	   scenarios  strictly local to	a translation unit.  This "strub" mode
	   modifies function interfaces, so any	function that  is  visible  to
	   other translation units, or that has	its address taken, will	not be
	   affected  by	 this  option.	 Optimization  options may also	affect
	   viability.  See the "strub" attribute documentation for details  on
	   viability and eligibility requirements.

       -fstrub=internal
	   Enable  "internal"  "strub"	mode where viable.  The	primary	use of
	   this	option is for testing.	This option is	intended  to  exercise
	   thoroughly  parts  of the "strub" machinery that implement the less
	   efficient, but interface-preserving "strub" mode.   Functions  that
	   would not be	affected by this option	are quite uncommon.

       -fstrub=all
	   Enable  some	 "strub" mode where viable.  When both strub modes are
	   viable, "at-calls" is preferred.  -fdump-ipa-strubm	adds  function
	   attributes  that  tell  which  mode was selected for	each function.
	   The primary	use  of	 this  option  is  for	testing,  to  exercise
	   thoroughly the "strub" machinery.

       -fvtable-verify=[std|preinit|none]
	   This	option is only available when compiling	C++ code.  It turns on
	   (or	off,  if using -fvtable-verify=none) the security feature that
	   verifies at run time, for  every  virtual  call,  that  the	vtable
	   pointer through which the call is made is valid for the type	of the
	   object,  and	 has not been corrupted	or overwritten.	 If an invalid
	   vtable pointer is detected at run time, an error  is	 reported  and
	   execution of	the program is immediately halted.

	   This	 option	causes run-time	data structures	to be built at program
	   startup, which are used for verifying  the  vtable  pointers.   The
	   options  std	 and  preinit  control	the  timing of when these data
	   structures are built.  In both cases	the data structures are	 built
	   before  execution reaches "main".  Using -fvtable-verify=std	causes
	   the data structures to be built after shared	 libraries  have  been
	   loaded  and initialized.  -fvtable-verify=preinit causes them to be
	   built before	shared libraries have been loaded and initialized.

	   If this option appears multiple times  in  the  command  line  with
	   different  values  specified, none takes highest priority over both
	   std and preinit; preinit takes priority over	std.

       -fvtv-debug
	   When	  used	 in   conjunction    with    -fvtable-verify=std    or
	   -fvtable-verify=preinit,  causes  debug  versions  of  the  runtime
	   functions for the vtable verification feature to be	called.	  This
	   flag	also causes the	compiler to log	information about which	vtable
	   pointers it finds for each class.  This information is written to a
	   file	 named	vtv_set_ptr_data.log  in  the  directory  named	by the
	   environment variable	VTV_LOGS_DIR if	that is	defined	or the current
	   working directory otherwise.

	   Note:  This feature appends data to the log file.  If  you  want  a
	   fresh log file, be sure to delete any existing one.

       -fvtv-counts
	   This	  is   a  debugging  flag.   When  used	 in  conjunction  with
	   -fvtable-verify=std or  -fvtable-verify=preinit,  this  causes  the
	   compiler  to	 keep  track  of  the total number of virtual calls it
	   encounters and the number of	verifications  it  inserts.   It  also
	   counts  the	number	of calls to certain run-time library functions
	   that	it inserts and logs  this  information	for  each  compilation
	   unit.   The	compiler  writes  this	information  to	 a  file named
	   vtv_count_data.log  in  the	directory  named  by  the  environment
	   variable  VTV_LOGS_DIR  if  that  is	defined	or the current working
	   directory otherwise.	 It also counts	the size of the	vtable pointer
	   sets	  for	each   class,	and   writes   this   information   to
	   vtv_class_set_sizes.log in the same directory.

	   Note:   This	 feature  appends data to the log files.  To get fresh
	   log files, be sure to delete	any existing ones.

       -finstrument-functions
	   Generate instrumentation calls for entry  and  exit	to  functions.
	   Just	 after	function  entry	 and  just  before  function exit, the
	   following profiling functions are called with the  address  of  the
	   current   function	and   its  call	 site.	 (On  some  platforms,
	   "__builtin_return_address"  does  not  work	beyond	 the   current
	   function,  so the call site information may not be available	to the
	   profiling functions otherwise.)

		   void	__cyg_profile_func_enter (void *this_fn,
						  void *call_site);
		   void	__cyg_profile_func_exit	 (void *this_fn,
						  void *call_site);

	   The first argument is the address  of  the  start  of  the  current
	   function, which may be looked up exactly in the symbol table.

	   This	 instrumentation is also done for functions expanded inline in
	   other functions.  The profiling calls indicate where, conceptually,
	   the inline  function	 is  entered  and  exited.   This  means  that
	   addressable	versions  of such functions must be available.	If all
	   your	uses of	a function are	expanded  inline,  this	 may  mean  an
	   additional  expansion  of code size.	 If you	use "extern inline" in
	   your	C code,	an addressable	version	 of  such  functions  must  be
	   provided.   (This is	normally the case anyway, but if you get lucky
	   and the optimizer always expands the	functions  inline,  you	 might
	   have	gotten away without providing static copies.)

	   A  function may be given the	attribute "no_instrument_function", in
	   which case this instrumentation is not done.	 This can be used, for
	   example, for	the profiling functions	 listed	 above,	 high-priority
	   interrupt  routines,	 and  any  functions  from which the profiling
	   functions cannot safely be called (perhaps signal handlers, if  the
	   profiling routines generate output or allocate memory).

       -finstrument-functions-once
	   This	 is  similar  to  -finstrument-functions,  but	the  profiling
	   functions are called	only once per instrumented function, i.e.  the
	   first  profiling  function is called	after the first	entry into the
	   instrumented	function and the second	profiling function  is	called
	   before the exit corresponding to this first entry.

	   The definition of "once" for	the purpose of this option is a	little
	   vague  because  the	implementation	is  not	protected against data
	   races.  As a	result,	the implementation only	 guarantees  that  the
	   profiling  functions	 are  called  at least once per	process	and at
	   most	once per thread, but the calls are always paired, that	is  to
	   say,	 if  a	thread calls the first function, then it will call the
	   second  function,  unless  it  never	 reaches  the  exit   of   the
	   instrumented	function.

       -finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list=file,file,...
	   Set	the  list  of functions	that are excluded from instrumentation
	   (see	the description	of -finstrument-functions).  If	the file  that
	   contains  a function	definition matches with	one of file, then that
	   function is not instrumented.  The match is done on substrings:  if
	   the	file  parameter	 is  a	substring  of  the  file  name,	 it is
	   considered to be a match.

	   For example:

		   -finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list=/bits/stl,include/sys

	   excludes any	inline	function  defined  in  files  whose  pathnames
	   contain /bits/stl or	include/sys.

	   If,	for  some  reason, you want to include letter ,	in one of sym,
	   write		,.		  For		      example,
	   -finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list=',,tmp'  (note  the	single
	   quote surrounding the option).

       -finstrument-functions-exclude-function-list=sym,sym,...
	   This	is similar  to	-finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list,  but
	   this	 option	 sets  the  list of function names to be excluded from
	   instrumentation.  The function name to  be  matched	is  its	 user-
	   visible  name, such as "vector<int> blah(const vector<int> &)", not
	   the internal	mangled	name (e.g., "_Z4blahRSt6vectorIiSaIiEE").  The
	   match is done on substrings:	if the sym parameter is	a substring of
	   the function	name, it is considered to be a match.  For C99 and C++
	   extended identifiers, the function name must	be given in UTF-8, not
	   using universal character names.

       -fpatchable-function-entry=N[,M]
	   Generate N NOPs right at the	beginning of each function,  with  the
	   function  entry  point  before  the	Mth  NOP.  If M	is omitted, it
	   defaults to 0 so the	function entry points to the address  just  at
	   the	first NOP.  The	NOP instructions reserve extra space which can
	   be used to patch  in	 any  desired  instrumentation	at  run	 time,
	   provided that the code segment is writable.	The amount of space is
	   controllable	indirectly via the number of NOPs; the NOP instruction
	   used	 corresponds  to  the  instruction emitted by the internal GCC
	   back-end interface "gen_nop".  This behavior	is target-specific and
	   may	also  depend  on  the  architecture   variant	and/or	 other
	   compilation options.

	   For run-time	identification,	the starting addresses of these	areas,
	   which  correspond to	their respective function entries minus	M, are
	   additionally	 collected   in	  the	"__patchable_function_entries"
	   section of the resulting binary.

	   Note	 that  the  value of "__attribute__ ((patchable_function_entry
	   (N,M)))"    takes	precedence    over     command-line	option
	   -fpatchable-function-entry=N,M.   This  can be used to increase the
	   area	size or	to remove it completely	 on  a	single	function.   If
	   "N=0", no pad location is recorded.

	   The	NOP instructions are inserted at---and maybe before, depending
	   on M---the function entry address, even before  the	prologue.   On
	   PowerPC  with the ELFv2 ABI,	for a function with dual entry points,
	   the local entry point is this function entry	address.

	   The maximum value of	N and M	is 65535.  On PowerPC with  the	 ELFv2
	   ABI,	 for  a	 function with dual entry points, the supported	values
	   for M are 0,	2, 6 and 14.

   Options Controlling the Preprocessor
       These options control the C preprocessor, which is run on each C	source
       file before actual compilation.

       If you use the -E option, nothing is done except	 preprocessing.	  Some
       of  these  options  make	sense only together with -E because they cause
       the preprocessor	output to be unsuitable	for actual compilation.

       In addition to the options listed here, there are a number  of  options
       to  control  search  paths  for	include	 files documented in Directory
       Options.	 Options to control preprocessor  diagnostics  are  listed  in
       Warning Options.

       -D name
	   Predefine name as a macro, with definition 1.

       -D name=definition
	   The	contents  of definition	are tokenized and processed as if they
	   appeared during translation phase three in a	#define	directive.  In
	   particular,	the  definition	 is  truncated	by  embedded   newline
	   characters.

	   If  you  are	 invoking  the preprocessor from a shell or shell-like
	   program you may need	to use the shell's quoting syntax  to  protect
	   characters such as spaces that have a meaning in the	shell syntax.

	   If  you  wish  to define a function-like macro on the command line,
	   write its argument list with	 surrounding  parentheses  before  the
	   equals  sign	 (if any).  Parentheses	are meaningful to most shells,
	   so	you   should   quote   the   option.	With   sh   and	  csh,
	   -D'name(args...)=definition'	works.

	   -D  and -U options are processed in the order they are given	on the
	   command line.  All -imacros file  and  -include  file  options  are
	   processed after all -D and -U options.

       -U name
	   Cancel any previous definition of name, either built	in or provided
	   with	a -D option.

       -include	file
	   Process  file as if "#include "file"" appeared as the first line of
	   the primary source file.  However, the first	directory searched for
	   file	 is  the  preprocessor's  working  directory  instead  of  the
	   directory  containing the main source file.	If not found there, it
	   is searched for in the remainder of	the  "#include	"...""	search
	   chain as normal.

	   If  multiple	 -include options are given, the files are included in
	   the order they appear on the	command	line.

       -imacros	file
	   Exactly like	-include, except that any output produced by  scanning
	   file	 is  thrown  away.   Macros  it	 defines remain	defined.  This
	   allows you to acquire all the macros	from  a	 header	 without  also
	   processing its declarations.

	   All	files  specified  by  -imacros	are processed before all files
	   specified by	-include.

       -undef
	   Do not predefine any	system-specific	or GCC-specific	 macros.   The
	   standard predefined macros remain defined.

       -pthread
	   Define  additional  macros  required	 for  using  the POSIX threads
	   library.   You  should  use	this  option  consistently  for	  both
	   compilation	and  linking.	This  option is	supported on GNU/Linux
	   targets, most other Unix derivatives, and also on  x86  Cygwin  and
	   MinGW targets.

       -M  Instead  of	outputting  the	result of preprocessing, output	a rule
	   suitable for	make describing	the dependencies of  the  main	source
	   file.  The preprocessor outputs one make rule containing the	object
	   file	 name  for that	source file, a colon, and the names of all the
	   included files, including those coming from	-include  or  -imacros
	   command-line	options.

	   Unless specified explicitly (with -MT or -MQ), the object file name
	   consists  of	 the  name of the source file with any suffix replaced
	   with	object file  suffix  and  with	any  leading  directory	 parts
	   removed.   If  there	are many included files	then the rule is split
	   into	several	lines using \-newline.	The rule has no	commands.

	   This	option does not	suppress the preprocessor's debug output, such
	   as -dM.  To avoid mixing such  debug	 output	 with  the  dependency
	   rules you should explicitly specify the dependency output file with
	   -MF,	 or  use  an  environment  variable  like DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT.
	   Debug output	is still sent to the regular output stream as normal.

	   Passing -M to the driver implies -E,	and suppresses	warnings  with
	   an implicit -w.

       -MM Like	 -M  but  do not mention header	files that are found in	system
	   header directories, nor header files	that are included, directly or
	   indirectly, from such a header.

	   This	implies	that the choice	of angle brackets or double quotes  in
	   an  #include	 directive  does  not in itself	determine whether that
	   header appears in -MM dependency output.

       -MF file
	   When	 used  with  -M	 or  -MM,  specifies  a	 file  to  write   the
	   dependencies	 to.  If no -MF	switch is given	the preprocessor sends
	   the rules to	the same place it would	send preprocessed output.

	   When	used with the driver options -MD or -MMD,  -MF	overrides  the
	   default dependency output file.

	   If file is -, then the dependencies are written to stdout.

       -MG In  conjunction  with  an  option  such as -M requesting dependency
	   generation, -MG assumes missing header files	 are  generated	 files
	   and adds them to the	dependency list	without	raising	an error.  The
	   dependency filename is taken	directly from the "#include" directive
	   without  prepending	any  path.   -MG  also suppresses preprocessed
	   output, as a	missing	header file renders this useless.

	   This	feature	is used	in automatic updating of makefiles.

       -Mno-modules
	   Disable dependency generation for compiled module interfaces.

       -MP This	option instructs CPP to	add a phony target for each dependency
	   other than the main file, causing each to depend on nothing.	 These
	   dummy rules work around errors make	gives  if  you	remove	header
	   files without updating the Makefile to match.

	   This	is typical output:

		   test.o: test.c test.h

		   test.h:

       -MT target
	   Change the target of	the rule emitted by dependency generation.  By
	   default  CPP	 takes	the  name  of the main input file, deletes any
	   directory components	and any	file suffix such as  .c,  and  appends
	   the platform's usual	object suffix.	The result is the target.

	   An -MT option sets the target to be exactly the string you specify.
	   If  you  want  multiple  targets,  you can specify them as a	single
	   argument to -MT, or use multiple -MT	options.

	   For example,	-MT '$(objpfx)foo.o' might give

		   $(objpfx)foo.o: foo.c

       -MQ target
	   Same	as -MT,	but it quotes any  characters  which  are  special  to
	   Make.  -MQ '$(objpfx)foo.o' gives

		   $$(objpfx)foo.o: foo.c

	   The	default	 target	 is  automatically quoted, as if it were given
	   with	-MQ.

       -MD -MD is equivalent to	-M -MF file, except that -E  is	 not  implied.
	   The	driver determines file based on	whether	an -o option is	given.
	   If it is, the driver	uses its argument but with  a  suffix  of  .d,
	   otherwise  it  takes	 the  name  of	the  input  file,  removes any
	   directory components	and suffix, and	applies	a .d suffix.

	   If -MD is used in conjunction with -E, any -o switch	is  understood
	   to specify the dependency output file, but if used without -E, each
	   -o is understood to specify a target	object file.

	   Since  -E  is not implied, -MD can be used to generate a dependency
	   output file as a side effect	of the compilation process.

       -MMD
	   Like	-MD except mention only	user header files, not	system	header
	   files.

       -fpreprocessed
	   Indicate  to	 the preprocessor that the input file has already been
	   preprocessed.   This	 suppresses  things  like   macro   expansion,
	   trigraph  conversion,  escaped  newline splicing, and processing of
	   most	directives.  The preprocessor  still  recognizes  and  removes
	   comments,  so  that you can pass a file preprocessed	with -C	to the
	   compiler  without  problems.	   In	this   mode   the   integrated
	   preprocessor	is little more than a tokenizer	for the	front ends.

	   -fpreprocessed  is  implicit	 if  the  input	 file  has  one	of the
	   extensions .i, .ii or .mi.  These are the extensions	that GCC  uses
	   for preprocessed files created by -save-temps.

       -fdirectives-only
	   When	preprocessing, handle directives, but do not expand macros.

	   The option's	behavior depends on the	-E and -fpreprocessed options.

	   With	 -E,  preprocessing  is	 limited to the	handling of directives
	   such	as "#define",  "#ifdef",  and  "#error".   Other  preprocessor
	   operations, such as macro expansion and trigraph conversion are not
	   performed.  In addition, the	-dD option is implicitly enabled.

	   With	-fpreprocessed,	predefinition of command line and most builtin
	   macros   is	 disabled.   Macros  such  as  "__LINE__",  which  are
	   contextually	 dependent,  are  handled  normally.	This   enables
	   compilation	  of	files	previously   preprocessed   with   "-E
	   -fdirectives-only".

	   With	both -E	and -fpreprocessed, the	rules for -fpreprocessed  take
	   precedence.	 This  enables	full preprocessing of files previously
	   preprocessed	with "-E -fdirectives-only".

       -fdollars-in-identifiers
	   Accept $ in identifiers.

       -fextended-identifiers
	   Accept  universal  character	 names	and  extended  characters   in
	   identifiers.	  This option is enabled by default for	C99 (and later
	   C standard versions)	and C++.

       -fno-canonical-system-headers
	   When	 preprocessing,	 do  not  shorten  system  header  paths  with
	   canonicalization.

       -fmax-include-depth=depth
	   Set the maximum depth of the	nested #include. The default is	200.

       -ftabstop=width
	   Set	the  distance  between tab stops.  This	helps the preprocessor
	   report correct column numbers in warnings or	errors,	even  if  tabs
	   appear  on  the  line.  If the value	is less	than 1 or greater than
	   100,	the option is ignored.	The default is 8.

       -ftrack-macro-expansion[=level]
	   Track locations of tokens across macro expansions. This allows  the
	   compiler to emit diagnostic about the current macro expansion stack
	   when	 a  compilation	 error occurs in a macro expansion. Using this
	   option makes	the preprocessor and the compiler consume more memory.
	   The level parameter can be used to choose the level of precision of
	   token location tracking thus	decreasing the memory  consumption  if
	   necessary.  Value  0	 of  level  de-activates  this option. Value 1
	   tracks tokens locations in a	degraded mode for the sake of  minimal
	   memory  overhead.  In  this	mode  all  tokens  resulting  from the
	   expansion of	an argument of a function-like	macro  have  the  same
	   location. Value 2 tracks tokens locations completely. This value is
	   the most memory hungry.  When this option is	given no argument, the
	   default parameter value is 2.

	   Note	that "-ftrack-macro-expansion=2" is activated by default.

       -fmacro-prefix-map=old=new
	   When	 preprocessing	files  residing	 in  directory old, expand the
	   "__FILE__" and "__BASE_FILE__" macros as if the  files  resided  in
	   directory new instead.  This	can be used to change an absolute path
	   to  a  relative  path  by  using . for new which can	result in more
	   reproducible	builds that are	 location  independent.	  This	option
	   also	 affects  "__builtin_FILE()"  during  compilation.   See  also
	   -ffile-prefix-map and -fcanon-prefix-map.

       -fexec-charset=charset
	   Set the execution character set,  used  for	string	and  character
	   constants.	The  default  is  UTF-8.   charset can be any encoding
	   supported by	the system's "iconv" library routine.

       -fwide-exec-charset=charset
	   Set the wide	execution character set,  used	for  wide  string  and
	   character  constants.   The	default	 is one	of UTF-32BE, UTF-32LE,
	   UTF-16BE, or	 UTF-16LE,  whichever  corresponds  to	the  width  of
	   "wchar_t" and the big-endian	or little-endian byte order being used
	   for	code  generation.   As with -fexec-charset, charset can	be any
	   encoding  supported	by  the	 system's  "iconv"  library   routine;
	   however,  you  will	have  problems	with encodings that do not fit
	   exactly in "wchar_t".

       -finput-charset=charset
	   Set	the  input  character  set,  used  for	translation  from  the
	   character set of the	input file to the source character set used by
	   GCC.	  If  the  locale  does	 not  specify,	or GCC cannot get this
	   information from the	locale,	the default is	UTF-8.	 This  can  be
	   overridden  by  either  the	locale	or  this  command-line option.
	   Currently the command-line option takes  precedence	if  there's  a
	   conflict.   charset	can  be	any encoding supported by the system's
	   "iconv" library routine.

       -fpch-deps
	   When	using precompiled headers, this	flag  causes  the  dependency-
	   output  flags  to also list the files from the precompiled header's
	   dependencies.  If not specified, only the  precompiled  header  are
	   listed and not the files that were used to create it, because those
	   files are not consulted when	a precompiled header is	used.

       -fpch-preprocess
	   This	 option	 allows	 use of	a precompiled header together with -E.
	   It  inserts	a  special  "#pragma",	"#pragma  GCC	pch_preprocess
	   "filename""	in  the	output to mark the place where the precompiled
	   header was found, and its filename.	When -fpreprocessed is in use,
	   GCC recognizes this "#pragma" and loads the PCH.

	   This	option is off by default, because the  resulting  preprocessed
	   output  is only really suitable as input to GCC.  It	is switched on
	   by -save-temps.

	   You should not write	this "#pragma" in your own  code,  but	it  is
	   safe	 to  edit  the	filename  if  the  PCH	file is	available in a
	   different location.	The filename may be  absolute  or  it  may  be
	   relative to GCC's current directory.

       -fworking-directory
	   Enable  generation  of  linemarkers in the preprocessor output that
	   let the compiler know the current working directory at the time  of
	   preprocessing.   When  this	option	is  enabled,  the preprocessor
	   emits, after	the initial linemarker,	a second linemarker  with  the
	   current  working  directory followed	by two slashes.	 GCC uses this
	   directory, when it's	present	in  the	 preprocessed  input,  as  the
	   directory   emitted	as  the	 current  working  directory  in  some
	   debugging information formats.  This	option is  implicitly  enabled
	   if debugging	information is enabled,	but this can be	inhibited with
	   the negated form -fno-working-directory.  If	the -P flag is present
	   in  the  command  line, this	option has no effect, since no "#line"
	   directives are emitted whatsoever.

       -A predicate=answer
	   Make	an assertion with the predicate	predicate and  answer  answer.
	   This	 form  is  preferred  to  the older form -A predicate(answer),
	   which is still supported, because it	does  not  use	shell  special
	   characters.

       -A -predicate=answer
	   Cancel an assertion with the	predicate predicate and	answer answer.

       -C  Do  not  discard  comments.	All comments are passed	through	to the
	   output file,	except for comments in processed directives, which are
	   deleted along with the directive.

	   You should be prepared for side effects when	using  -C;  it	causes
	   the	preprocessor  to  treat	comments as tokens in their own	right.
	   For example,	comments appearing at the start	of  what  would	 be  a
	   directive  line  have  the  effect  of  turning  that  line into an
	   ordinary source line, since the first  token	 on  the  line	is  no
	   longer a #.

       -CC Do not discard comments, including during macro expansion.  This is
	   like	 -C,  except  that  comments  contained	within macros are also
	   passed through to the output	file where the macro is	expanded.

	   In addition to the side effects of the -C option,  the  -CC	option
	   causes  all	C++-style  comments  inside a macro to be converted to
	   C-style comments.  This is to prevent later use of that macro  from
	   inadvertently commenting out	the remainder of the source line.

	   The -CC option is generally used to support lint comments.

       -P  Inhibit   generation	  of   linemarkers  in	the  output  from  the
	   preprocessor.  This might be	useful when running  the  preprocessor
	   on  something  that	is  not	 C code, and will be sent to a program
	   which might be confused by the linemarkers.

       -traditional
       -traditional-cpp
	   Try to imitate the behavior of  pre-standard	 C  preprocessors,  as
	   opposed  to	ISO  C	preprocessors.	 See  the  GNU	CPP manual for
	   details.

	   Note	that GCC does not otherwise attempt to emulate a  pre-standard
	   C  compiler,	 and  these  options  are  only	 supported with	the -E
	   switch, or when invoking CPP	explicitly.

       -trigraphs
	   Support ISO C trigraphs.  These are three-character sequences,  all
	   starting  with  ??,	that  are defined by ISO C to stand for	single
	   characters.	For  example,  ??/  stands  for	 \,  so	 '??/n'	 is  a
	   character constant for a newline.

	   The nine trigraphs and their	replacements are

		   Trigraph:	   ??(	??)  ??<  ??>  ??=  ??/	 ??'  ??!  ??-
		   Replacement:	     [	  ]    {    }	 #    \	   ^	|    ~

	   By default, GCC ignores trigraphs, but in standard-conforming modes
	   it converts them.  See the -std and -ansi options.

       -remap
	   Enable  special  code to work around	file systems which only	permit
	   very	short file names, such as MS-DOS.

       -H  Print the name of each header  file	used,  in  addition  to	 other
	   normal  activities.	 Each name is indented to show how deep	in the
	   #include stack it is.  Precompiled header files are	also  printed,
	   even	if they	are found to be	invalid; an invalid precompiled	header
	   file	is printed with	...x and a valid one with ...! .

       -dletters
	   Says	 to  make  debugging  dumps during compilation as specified by
	   letters.  The flags documented  here	 are  those  relevant  to  the
	   preprocessor.   Other  letters  are	interpreted  by	 the  compiler
	   proper, or reserved for future versions of GCC, and so are silently
	   ignored.  If	you specify  letters  whose  behavior  conflicts,  the
	   result is undefined.

	   -dM Instead	of  the	 normal	 output,  generate  a  list of #define
	       directives for all the macros defined during the	 execution  of
	       the  preprocessor, including predefined macros.	This gives you
	       a way of	finding	out what is predefined in your version of  the
	       preprocessor.  Assuming you have	no file	foo.h, the command

		       touch foo.h; cpp	-dM foo.h

	       shows all the predefined	macros.

	       If  you	use -dM	without	the -E option, -dM is interpreted as a
	       synonym for -fdump-rtl-mach.

	   -dD Like -dM	except that it outputs both the	#define	directives and
	       the result of preprocessing.  Both kinds	of output  go  to  the
	       standard	output file.

	   -dN Like -dD, but emit only the macro names,	not their expansions.

	   -dI Output  #include	 directives  in	 addition  to  the  result  of
	       preprocessing.

	   -dU Like -dD	except that only macros	that are  expanded,  or	 whose
	       definedness  is	tested in preprocessor directives, are output;
	       the output is delayed until the use or test of the  macro;  and
	       #undef  directives  are	also  output  for  macros  tested  but
	       undefined at the	time.

       -fdebug-cpp
	   This	option is only useful for debugging GCC.  When used  from  CPP
	   or  with  -E,  it  dumps debugging information about	location maps.
	   Every token in the output is	preceded by the	dump of	 the  map  its
	   location belongs to.

	   When	used from GCC without -E, this option has no effect.

       -Wp,option
	   You	can  use  -Wp,option  to  bypass  the compiler driver and pass
	   option directly through to the preprocessor.	  If  option  contains
	   commas,  it is split	into multiple options at the commas.  However,
	   many	 options  are  modified,  translated  or  interpreted  by  the
	   compiler  driver  before  being passed to the preprocessor, and -Wp
	   forcibly bypasses this phase.  The preprocessor's direct  interface
	   is  undocumented  and  subject  to change, so whenever possible you
	   should avoid	using -Wp  and	let  the  driver  handle  the  options
	   instead.

       -Xpreprocessor option
	   Pass	 option	as an option to	the preprocessor.  You can use this to
	   supply system-specific  preprocessor	 options  that	GCC  does  not
	   recognize.

	   If  you want	to pass	an option that takes an	argument, you must use
	   -Xpreprocessor  twice,  once	 for  the  option  and	once  for  the
	   argument.

       -no-integrated-cpp
	   Perform  preprocessing  as  a separate pass before compilation.  By
	   default, GCC	performs preprocessing as an integrated	part of	 input
	   tokenization	  and  parsing.	  If  this  option  is	provided,  the
	   appropriate language	front end (cc1,	cc1plus, or cc1obj for C, C++,
	   and Objective-C, respectively) is instead invoked twice,  once  for
	   preprocessing   only	  and  once  for  actual  compilation  of  the
	   preprocessed	input.	This option may	be useful in conjunction  with
	   the	-B or -wrapper options to specify an alternate preprocessor or
	   perform additional processing of the	program	source between	normal
	   preprocessing and compilation.

       -flarge-source-files
	   Adjust  GCC	to expect large	source files, at the expense of	slower
	   compilation and higher memory usage.

	   Specifically, GCC normally tracks  both  column  numbers  and  line
	   numbers  within  source  files and it normally prints both of these
	   numbers in diagnostics.  However, once it has processed  a  certain
	   number  of  source lines, it	stops tracking column numbers and only
	   tracks line numbers.	 This means that diagnostics for  later	 lines
	   do  not  include  column  numbers.  It also means that options like
	   -Wmisleading-indentation cease to work at that point, although  the
	   compiler    prints	 a    note    if    this   happens.    Passing
	   -flarge-source-files	significantly increases	the number  of	source
	   lines that GCC can process before it	stops tracking columns.

   Passing Options to the Assembler
       You can pass options to the assembler.

       -Wa,option
	   Pass	 option	 as  an	 option	 to the	assembler.  If option contains
	   commas, it is split into multiple options at	the commas.

       -Xassembler option
	   Pass	option as an option to the assembler.  You  can	 use  this  to
	   supply   system-specific   assembler	 options  that	GCC  does  not
	   recognize.

	   If you want to pass an option that takes an argument, you must  use
	   -Xassembler twice, once for the option and once for the argument.

   Options for Linking
       These  options come into	play when the compiler links object files into
       an executable output file.  They	are meaningless	if the compiler	is not
       doing a link step.

       object-file-name
	   A file name that does not end in a  special	recognized  suffix  is
	   considered  to  name	 an object file	or library.  (Object files are
	   distinguished from libraries	by the linker according	 to  the  file
	   contents.)	If  linking  is	 done,	these object files are used as
	   input to the	linker.

       -c
       -S
       -E  If any of these options is used, then the linker is	not  run,  and
	   object file names should not	be used	as arguments.

       -flinker-output=type
	   This	 option	 controls  code	generation of the link-time optimizer.
	   By default the linker output	is  automatically  determined  by  the
	   linker  plugin.   For  debugging  the  compiler  and	if incremental
	   linking with	a non-LTO object file is desired, it may be useful  to
	   control the type manually.

	   If  type is exec, code generation produces a	static binary. In this
	   case	-fpic and -fpie	are both disabled.

	   If type is dyn, code	generation produces a shared library.  In this
	   case	-fpic or -fPIC is preserved, but  not  enabled	automatically.
	   This	 allows	to build shared	libraries without position-independent
	   code	on architectures where this is possible, i.e. on x86.

	   If type is pie, code	generation produces an -fpie executable.  This
	   results  in	similar	optimizations as exec except that -fpie	is not
	   disabled if specified at compilation	time.

	   If type is rel, the compiler	assumes	that  incremental  linking  is
	   done.   The	sections  containing  intermediate  code for link-time
	   optimization	are merged, pre-optimized, and output to the resulting
	   object file.	In addition, if	-ffat-lto-objects is specified,	binary
	   code	is produced  for  future  non-LTO  linking.  The  object  file
	   produced  by	 incremental  linking is smaller than a	static library
	   produced from the same object files.	 At link time  the  result  of
	   incremental	linking	 also  loads  faster  than  a  static  library
	   assuming that the majority of objects in the	library	are used.

	   Finally nolto-rel configures	the compiler for  incremental  linking
	   where  code	generation  is forced, a final binary is produced, and
	   the intermediate code for later link-time optimization is stripped.
	   When	multiple object	files are linked together the  resulting  code
	   is better optimized than with link-time optimizations disabled (for
	   example,  cross-module  inlining  happens), but most	of benefits of
	   whole program optimizations are lost.

	   During the incremental link (by -r) the linker plugin  defaults  to
	   rel.	 With  current	interfaces  to	GNU Binutils it	is however not
	   possible to incrementally link LTO objects and non-LTO objects into
	   a single mixed object file.	If any of object files in  incremental
	   link	 cannot	 be used for link-time optimization, the linker	plugin
	   issues a warning and	uses  nolto-rel.  To  maintain	whole  program
	   optimization,  it  is  recommended to link such objects into	static
	   library instead. Alternatively it is	 possible  to  use  H.J.  Lu's
	   binutils with support for mixed objects.

       -fuse-ld=bfd
	   Use the bfd linker instead of the default linker.

       -fuse-ld=gold
	   Use the gold	linker instead of the default linker.

       -fuse-ld=lld
	   Use the LLVM	lld linker instead of the default linker.

       -fuse-ld=mold
	   Use the Modern Linker (mold)	instead	of the default linker.

       -llibrary
       -l library
	   Search  the	library	 named	library	 when  linking.	  (The	second
	   alternative with the	library	as a separate  argument	 is  only  for
	   POSIX compliance and	is not recommended.)

	   The	-l  option  is passed directly to the linker by	GCC.  Refer to
	   your	 linker	 documentation	for  exact   details.	 The   general
	   description below applies to	the GNU	linker.

	   The linker searches a standard list of directories for the library.
	   The	 directories   searched	  include   several   standard	system
	   directories plus any	that you specify with -L.

	   Static libraries are	archives of object files, and have file	 names
	   like	 liblibrary.a.	 Some  targets	also support shared libraries,
	   which typically have	names like liblibrary.so.  If both static  and
	   shared  libraries are found,	the linker gives preference to linking
	   with	the shared library unless the -static option is	used.

	   It makes a difference where in the command you write	 this  option;
	   the linker searches and processes libraries and object files	in the
	   order they are specified.  Thus, foo.o -lz bar.o searches library z
	   after file foo.o but	before bar.o.  If bar.o	refers to functions in
	   z, those functions may not be loaded.

       -lobjc
	   You	need  this  special  case of the -l option in order to link an
	   Objective-C or Objective-C++	program.

       -nostartfiles
	   Do not use the standard system startup  files  when	linking.   The
	   standard  system  libraries	are  used  normally, unless -nostdlib,
	   -nolibc, or -nodefaultlibs is used.

       -nodefaultlibs
	   Do not use the standard system libraries when  linking.   Only  the
	   libraries  you  specify  are	 passed	 to  the  linker,  and options
	   specifying linkage of the system libraries, such as	-static-libgcc
	   or  -shared-libgcc,	are  ignored.	The standard startup files are
	   used	normally, unless -nostartfiles is used.

	   The compiler	may generate calls to "memcmp",	"memset", "memcpy" and
	   "memmove".  These entries are usually resolved by entries in	 libc.
	   These  entry	points should be supplied through some other mechanism
	   when	this option is specified.

       -nolibc
	   Do not use the C library or system libraries	tightly	 coupled  with
	   it  when  linking.	Still  link  with the startup files, libgcc or
	   toolchain provided language	support	 libraries  such  as  libgnat,
	   libgfortran	or libstdc++ unless options preventing their inclusion
	   are used as well.  This typically removes -lc from the link command
	   line, as well as system libraries that  normally  go	 with  it  and
	   become  meaningless	when  absence  of  a C library is assumed, for
	   example -lpthread or	-lm in some configurations.  This is  intended
	   for bare-board targets when there is	indeed no C library available.

       -nostdlib
	   Do  not  use	 the  standard	system startup files or	libraries when
	   linking.  No	startup	files and only the libraries you  specify  are
	   passed  to the linker, and options specifying linkage of the	system
	   libraries, such as -static-libgcc or	-shared-libgcc,	are ignored.

	   The compiler	may generate calls to "memcmp",	"memset", "memcpy" and
	   "memmove".  These entries are usually resolved by entries in	 libc.
	   These  entry	points should be supplied through some other mechanism
	   when	this option is specified.

	   One	of  the	 standard  libraries   bypassed	  by   -nostdlib   and
	   -nodefaultlibs is libgcc.a, a library of internal subroutines which
	   GCC	uses  to  overcome  shortcomings  of  particular  machines, or
	   special needs for some languages.

	   In most cases, you need libgcc.a even when you want to avoid	 other
	   standard  libraries.	 In other words, when you specify -nostdlib or
	   -nodefaultlibs you should usually  specify  -lgcc  as  well.	  This
	   ensures  that  you  have  no	 unresolved references to internal GCC
	   library subroutines.	 (An example of	such an	internal subroutine is
	   "__main", used to ensure C++	constructors are called.)

       -nostdlib++
	   Do not implicitly link with standard	C++ libraries.

       -e entry
       --entry=entry
	   Specify that	the program entry point	is  entry.   The  argument  is
	   interpreted	by  the	linker;	the GNU	linker accepts either a	symbol
	   name	or an address.

       -pie
	   Produce a dynamically linked	 position  independent	executable  on
	   targets  that  support  it.	For predictable	results, you must also
	   specify the same set	of options used	for compilation	(-fpie,	-fPIE,
	   or model suboptions)	when you specify this linker option.

       -no-pie
	   Don't produce a dynamically linked position independent executable.

       -static-pie
	   Produce a static position independent executable  on	 targets  that
	   support it.	A static position independent executable is similar to
	   a  static  executable,  but	can be loaded at any address without a
	   dynamic linker.  For	predictable results, you must also specify the
	   same	set of options used for	compilation (-fpie,  -fPIE,  or	 model
	   suboptions) when you	specify	this linker option.

       -pthread
	   Link	 with  the POSIX threads library.  This	option is supported on
	   GNU/Linux targets, most other Unix derivatives,  and	 also  on  x86
	   Cygwin  and	MinGW  targets.	 On some targets this option also sets
	   flags for the preprocessor, so it should be used  consistently  for
	   both	compilation and	linking.

       -r  Produce  a  relocatable  object  as	output.	 This is also known as
	   partial linking.

       -rdynamic
	   Pass	the flag -export-dynamic to the	ELF linker,  on	 targets  that
	   support  it.	This instructs the linker to add all symbols, not only
	   used	ones, to the dynamic symbol table. This	option is  needed  for
	   some	 uses of "dlopen" or to	allow obtaining	backtraces from	within
	   a program.

       -s  Remove  all	symbol	table  and  relocation	information  from  the
	   executable.

       -static
	   On  systems	that  support dynamic linking, this overrides -pie and
	   prevents linking with the shared libraries.	On other systems, this
	   option has no effect.

       -shared
	   Produce a shared object which can then be linked with other objects
	   to form an executable.  Not all systems support this	 option.   For
	   predictable	results, you must also specify the same	set of options
	   used	for compilation	(-fpic,	-fPIC, or model	suboptions)  when  you
	   specify this	linker option.[1]

       -shared-libgcc
       -static-libgcc
	   On  systems	that provide libgcc as a shared	library, these options
	   force the use of either the shared or static	version, respectively.
	   If no shared	version	of libgcc was  built  when  the	 compiler  was
	   configured, these options have no effect.

	   There are several situations	in which an application	should use the
	   shared  libgcc  instead  of the static version.  The	most common of
	   these is when the application wishes	to throw and catch  exceptions
	   across  different  shared  libraries.   In  that  case, each	of the
	   libraries as	well as	the application	itself should use  the	shared
	   libgcc.

	   Therefore,	the   G++  driver  automatically  adds	-shared-libgcc
	   whenever you	build a	shared library or a main  executable,  because
	   C++	programs  typically use	exceptions, so this is the right thing
	   to do.

	   If, instead,	you use	the GCC	driver to create shared	libraries, you
	   may find that they are not always linked with  the  shared  libgcc.
	   If  GCC  finds,  at its configuration time, that you	have a non-GNU
	   linker or a GNU linker that does not	support	option --eh-frame-hdr,
	   it links the	shared version of  libgcc  into	 shared	 libraries  by
	   default.  Otherwise,	it takes advantage of the linker and optimizes
	   away	 the  linking  with the	shared version of libgcc, linking with
	   the static version of libgcc	by default.  This allows exceptions to
	   propagate  through  such  shared   libraries,   without   incurring
	   relocation costs at library load time.

	   However,  if	 a  library or main executable is supposed to throw or
	   catch exceptions, you must link it using the	G++ driver,  or	 using
	   the	option	-shared-libgcc,	such that it is	linked with the	shared
	   libgcc.

       -static-libasan
	   When	the -fsanitize=address option is used to link a	 program,  the
	   GCC	driver	automatically  links  against  libasan.	 If libasan is
	   available as	a shared library, and the -static option is not	 used,
	   then	 this  links  against  the  shared  version  of	 libasan.  The
	   -static-libasan option directs  the	GCC  driver  to	 link  libasan
	   statically, without necessarily linking other libraries statically.

       -static-libtsan
	   When	 the  -fsanitize=thread	 option	is used	to link	a program, the
	   GCC driver automatically links  against  libtsan.   If  libtsan  is
	   available  as a shared library, and the -static option is not used,
	   then	this  links  against  the  shared  version  of	libtsan.   The
	   -static-libtsan  option  directs  the  GCC  driver  to link libtsan
	   statically, without necessarily linking other libraries statically.

       -static-liblsan
	   When	the -fsanitize=leak option is used to link a program, the  GCC
	   driver   automatically   links  against  liblsan.   If  liblsan  is
	   available as	a shared library, and the -static option is not	 used,
	   then	 this  links  against  the  shared  version  of	 liblsan.  The
	   -static-liblsan option directs  the	GCC  driver  to	 link  liblsan
	   statically, without necessarily linking other libraries statically.

       -static-libubsan
	   When	the -fsanitize=undefined option	is used	to link	a program, the
	   GCC	driver	automatically  links against libubsan.	If libubsan is
	   available as	a shared library, and the -static option is not	 used,
	   then	 this  links  against  the  shared  version  of	libubsan.  The
	   -static-libubsan option directs the GCC  driver  to	link  libubsan
	   statically, without necessarily linking other libraries statically.

       -static-libstdc++
	   When	 the  g++  program  is used to link a C++ program, it normally
	   automatically links against libstdc++.  If libstdc++	 is  available
	   as  a shared	library, and the -static option	is not used, then this
	   links against the shared version of libstdc++.   That  is  normally
	   fine.   However,  it	 is  sometimes useful to freeze	the version of
	   libstdc++ used by the program without going all the way to a	 fully
	   static  link.   The -static-libstdc++ option	directs	the g++	driver
	   to link libstdc++ statically,  without  necessarily	linking	 other
	   libraries statically.

       -symbolic
	   Bind	 references  to	 global	symbols	when building a	shared object.
	   Warn	about any unresolved references	(unless	overridden by the link
	   editor option -Xlinker -z  -Xlinker	defs).	 Only  a  few  systems
	   support this	option.

       -T script
	   Use	script as the linker script.  This option is supported by most
	   systems using the GNU linker.  On some targets, such	as  bare-board
	   targets  without an operating system, the -T	option may be required
	   when	linking	to avoid references to undefined symbols.

       -Xlinker	option
	   Pass	option as an option to the linker.  You	can use	this to	supply
	   system-specific linker options that GCC does	not recognize.

	   If you want to pass an option that takes a separate	argument,  you
	   must	 use  -Xlinker	twice,	once  for  the option and once for the
	   argument.  For example, to pass -assert definitions,	you must write
	   -Xlinker -assert -Xlinker definitions.  It does not work  to	 write
	   -Xlinker  "-assert  definitions",  because  this  passes the	entire
	   string as a single argument,	which is not what the linker expects.

	   When	using the GNU linker, it is usually more  convenient  to  pass
	   arguments  to  linker options using the option=value	syntax than as
	   separate  arguments.	  For  example,	 you  can   specify   -Xlinker
	   -Map=output.map  rather  than  -Xlinker  -Map  -Xlinker output.map.
	   Other linkers may not support this syntax for command-line options.

       -Wl,option
	   Pass	option as an option to the linker.  If option contains commas,
	   it is split into multiple options at	the commas.  You can use  this
	   syntax   to	 pass	an  argument  to  the  option.	 For  example,
	   -Wl,-Map,output.map passes -Map output.map  to  the	linker.	  When
	   using  the  GNU  linker,  you  can  also  get  the same effect with
	   -Wl,-Map=output.map.

       -u symbol
	   Pretend the symbol symbol is	undefined, to force linking of library
	   modules to define it.  You can use -u multiple times	with different
	   symbols to force loading of additional library modules.

       -z keyword
	   -z is passed	directly on to	the  linker  along  with  the  keyword
	   keyword.  See  the  section in the documentation of your linker for
	   permitted values and	their meanings.

   Options for Directory Search
       These options specify directories  to  search  for  header  files,  for
       libraries and for parts of the compiler:

       -I dir
       -iquote dir
       -isystem	dir
       -idirafter dir
	   Add the directory dir to the	list of	directories to be searched for
	   header  files  during  preprocessing.   If  dir  begins  with  = or
	   $SYSROOT, then the =	or $SYSROOT is replaced	by the sysroot prefix;
	   see --sysroot and -isysroot.

	   Directories specified with -iquote apply only to the	quote form  of
	   the	directive,  "#include "file"".	Directories specified with -I,
	   -isystem,  or   -idirafter	apply	to   lookup   for   both   the
	   "#include "file"" and "#include <file>" directives.

	   You	can  specify any number	or combination of these	options	on the
	   command line	to search for header  files  in	 several  directories.
	   The lookup order is as follows:

	   1.  For  the	 quote form of the include directive, the directory of
	       the current file	is searched first.

	   2.  For the quote form of the include  directive,  the  directories
	       specified  by  -iquote  options	are  searched in left-to-right
	       order, as they appear on	the command line.

	   3.  Directories specified with -I options are scanned  in  left-to-
	       right order.

	   4.  Directories  specified  with  -isystem  options	are scanned in
	       left-to-right order.

	   5.  Standard	system directories are scanned.

	   6.  Directories specified with -idirafter options  are  scanned  in
	       left-to-right order.

	   You	can use	-I to override a system	header file, substituting your
	   own version,	 since	these  directories  are	 searched  before  the
	   standard  system  header file directories.  However,	you should not
	   use this option to add  directories	that  contain  vendor-supplied
	   system header files;	use -isystem for that.

	   The	-isystem  and  -idirafter options also mark the	directory as a
	   system directory, so	that it	gets the same special  treatment  that
	   is applied to the standard system directories.

	   If  a  standard  system include directory, or a directory specified
	   with	-isystem, is also specified with -I, the -I option is ignored.
	   The directory is still searched but as a system  directory  at  its
	   normal  position  in	 the  system include chain.  This is to	ensure
	   that	GCC's procedure	to fix buggy system headers and	 the  ordering
	   for	the  "#include_next"  directive	are not	inadvertently changed.
	   If  you  really  need  to  change  the  search  order  for	system
	   directories,	use the	-nostdinc and/or -isystem options.

       -I- Split  the  include path.  This option has been deprecated.	Please
	   use -iquote instead for -I directories before the  -I-  and	remove
	   the -I- option.

	   Any	directories  specified with -I options before -I- are searched
	   only	for headers requested with  "#include "file"";	they  are  not
	   searched  for  "#include <file>".   If  additional  directories are
	   specified with -I options after  the	 -I-,  those  directories  are
	   searched for	all #include directives.

	   In  addition,  -I- inhibits the use of the directory	of the current
	   file	directory as the first search directory	for "#include "file"".
	   There is no way to override this effect of -I-.

       -iprefix	prefix
	   Specify prefix as the prefix	for subsequent	-iwithprefix  options.
	   If  the prefix represents a directory, you should include the final
	   /.

       -iwithprefix dir
       -iwithprefixbefore dir
	   Append dir to the prefix specified previously  with	-iprefix,  and
	   add	 the   resulting   directory   to  the	include	 search	 path.
	   -iwithprefixbefore puts it in the same place	-I would; -iwithprefix
	   puts	it where -idirafter would.

       -isysroot dir
	   This	option is like the  --sysroot  option,	but  applies  only  to
	   header  files  (except for Darwin targets, where it applies to both
	   header files	and libraries).	 See the  --sysroot  option  for  more
	   information.

       -imultilib dir
	   Use	dir  as	 a  subdirectory  of  the directory containing target-
	   specific C++	headers.

       -nostdinc
	   Do not search the standard system  directories  for	header	files.
	   Only	  the  directories  explicitly	specified  with	 -I,  -iquote,
	   -isystem, and/or -idirafter	options	 (and  the  directory  of  the
	   current file, if appropriate) are searched.

       -nostdinc++
	   Do  not  search  for	 header	 files	in  the	 C++-specific standard
	   directories,	but do still search the	 other	standard  directories.
	   (This option	is used	when building the C++ library.)

       -iplugindir=dir
	   Set	the  directory	to  search  for	 plugins  that	are  passed by
	   -fplugin=name instead of -fplugin=path/name.so.  This option	is not
	   meant to be used by the user, but only passed by the	driver.

       -Ldir
	   Add directory dir to	the list of directories	to be searched for -l.

       -Bprefix
	   This	option specifies where to  find	 the  executables,  libraries,
	   include files, and data files of the	compiler itself.

	   The	compiler  driver  program  runs	one or more of the subprograms
	   cpp,	cc1, as	and ld.	 It tries prefix as a prefix for each  program
	   it  tries  to  run,	both with and without machine/version/ for the
	   corresponding target	machine	and compiler version.

	   For each subprogram to be run, the compiler driver first tries  the
	   -B  prefix,	if  any.   If  that name is not	found, or if -B	is not
	   specified, the driver tries two  standard  prefixes,	 /usr/lib/gcc/
	   and	/usr/local/lib/gcc/.   If  neither  of those results in	a file
	   name	that is	found, the unmodified program  name  is	 searched  for
	   using the directories specified in your PATH	environment variable.

	   The	compiler  checks to see	if the path provided by	-B refers to a
	   directory, and if necessary it adds a directory separator character
	   at the end of the path.

	   -B prefixes that effectively	specify	directory names	also apply  to
	   libraries  in  the  linker,	because	 the compiler translates these
	   options into	-L options for the linker.  They also apply to include
	   files in the	preprocessor, because the  compiler  translates	 these
	   options  into -isystem options for the preprocessor.	 In this case,
	   the compiler	appends	include	to the prefix.

	   The runtime support file libgcc.a can also be  searched  for	 using
	   the	-B  prefix,  if	 needed.   If  it  is not found	there, the two
	   standard prefixes above are tried, and that is all.	 The  file  is
	   left	out of the link	if it is not found by those means.

	   Another  way	 to specify a prefix much like the -B prefix is	to use
	   the environment variable GCC_EXEC_PREFIX.

	   As a	special	kludge,	if the path provided by	-B  is	[dir/]stageN/,
	   where  N  is	 a  number in the range	0 to 9,	then it	is replaced by
	   [dir/]include.  This	is to help with	boot-strapping the compiler.

       -no-canonical-prefixes
	   Do not expand any symbolic links, resolve  references  to  /../  or
	   /./,	or make	the path absolute when generating a relative prefix.

       --sysroot=dir
	   Use	dir  as	 the logical root directory for	headers	and libraries.
	   For example,	if the	compiler  normally  searches  for  headers  in
	   /usr/include	  and  libraries  in  /usr/lib,	 it  instead  searches
	   dir/usr/include and dir/usr/lib.

	   If you use both this	option and  the	 -isysroot  option,  then  the
	   --sysroot  option  applies  to  libraries, but the -isysroot	option
	   applies to header files.

	   The GNU linker (beginning with  version  2.16)  has	the  necessary
	   support  for	 this  option.	 If  your linker does not support this
	   option, the header file aspect of --sysroot still  works,  but  the
	   library aspect does not.

       --no-sysroot-suffix
	   For some targets, a suffix is added to the root directory specified
	   with	 --sysroot,  depending	on  the	 other	options	 used, so that
	   headers may for example be found in dir/suffix/usr/include  instead
	   of  dir/usr/include.	  This	option disables	the addition of	such a
	   suffix.

   Options for Code Generation Conventions
       These machine-independent options  control  the	interface  conventions
       used in code generation.

       Most  of	 them have both	positive and negative forms; the negative form
       of -ffoo	is -fno-foo.  In the table below, only one  of	the  forms  is
       listed---the one	that is	not the	default.  You can figure out the other
       form by either removing no- or adding it.

       -fstack-reuse=reuse-level
	   This	option controls	stack space reuse for user declared local/auto
	   variables  and  compiler generated temporaries.  reuse_level	can be
	   all,	named_vars, or none. all enables stack	reuse  for  all	 local
	   variables  and  temporaries,	 named_vars enables the	reuse only for
	   user	defined	local variables	with names, and	 none  disables	 stack
	   reuse  completely.  The  default value is all. The option is	needed
	   when	the program extends the	lifetime of a scoped local variable or
	   a compiler generated	temporary beyond the end point defined by  the
	   language.   When a lifetime of a variable ends, and if the variable
	   lives in memory, the	optimizing compiler has	the freedom  to	 reuse
	   its	stack  space  with other temporaries or	scoped local variables
	   whose live range does not overlap with it.  Legacy  code  extending
	   local   lifetime   is   likely   to	break  with  the  stack	 reuse
	   optimization.

	   For example,

		      int *p;
		      {
			int local1;

			p = &local1;
			local1 = 10;
			....
		      }
		      {
			 int local2;
			 local2	= 20;
			 ...
		      }

		      if (*p ==	10)  //	out of scope use of local1
			{

			}

	   Another example:

		      struct A
		      {
			  A(int	k) : i(k), j(k)	{ }
			  int i;
			  int j;
		      };

		      A	*ap;

		      void foo(const A&	ar)
		      {
			 ap = &ar;
		      }

		      void bar()
		      {
			 foo(A(10)); //	temp object's lifetime ends when foo returns

			 {
			   A a(20);
			   ....
			 }
			 ap->i+= 10;  // ap references out of scope temp whose space
				      // is reused with	a. What	is the value of	ap->i?
		      }

	   The lifetime	of a compiler generated	temporary is well  defined  by
	   the	C++  standard. When a lifetime of a temporary ends, and	if the
	   temporary lives in memory, the optimizing compiler has the  freedom
	   to  reuse  its  stack  space	with other temporaries or scoped local
	   variables whose live	range does not overlap with it.	 However  some
	   of  the  legacy  code  relies on the	behavior of older compilers in
	   which temporaries' stack space is not reused, the aggressive	 stack
	   reuse  can  lead  to	runtime	errors.	This option is used to control
	   the temporary stack reuse optimization.

       -ftrapv
	   This	option	generates  traps  for  signed  overflow	 on  addition,
	   subtraction,	 multiplication	 operations.   The options -ftrapv and
	   -fwrapv override each  other,  so  using  -ftrapv  -fwrapv  on  the
	   command-line	 results  in  -fwrapv being effective.	Note that only
	   active options override, so using -ftrapv -fwrapv -fno-wrapv	on the
	   command-line	results	in -ftrapv being effective.

       -fwrapv
	   This	option instructs the compiler to assume	that signed arithmetic
	   overflow of addition, subtraction and multiplication	 wraps	around
	   using  twos-complement  representation.   This  flag	 enables  some
	   optimizations and disables others.  The options -ftrapv and -fwrapv
	   override each other,	so using -ftrapv -fwrapv on  the  command-line
	   results  in -fwrapv being effective.	 Note that only	active options
	   override, so	using -ftrapv -fwrapv -fno-wrapv on  the  command-line
	   results in -ftrapv being effective.

       -fwrapv-pointer
	   This	  option   instructs  the  compiler  to	 assume	 that  pointer
	   arithmetic overflow on addition and subtraction wraps around	 using
	   twos-complement    representation.	 This	flag   disables	  some
	   optimizations which assume pointer overflow is invalid.

       -fstrict-overflow
	   This	option implies -fno-wrapv -fno-wrapv-pointer and when  negated
	   implies -fwrapv -fwrapv-pointer.

       -fexceptions
	   Enable   exception	handling.   Generates  extra  code  needed  to
	   propagate exceptions.  For some targets, this implies GCC generates
	   frame unwind	information  for  all  functions,  which  can  produce
	   significant	data  size  overhead,  although	 it  does  not	affect
	   execution.  If you do not specify this option, GCC  enables	it  by
	   default  for	 languages  like  C++  that normally require exception
	   handling, and disables it for languages like	C that do not normally
	   require it.	However, you may  need	to  enable  this  option  when
	   compiling C code that needs to interoperate properly	with exception
	   handlers  written in	C++.  You may also wish	to disable this	option
	   if you are compiling	older C++ programs that	 don't	use  exception
	   handling.

       -fnon-call-exceptions
	   Generate   code   that   allows   trapping  instructions  to	 throw
	   exceptions.	Note  that  this  requires  platform-specific  runtime
	   support  that  does not exist everywhere.  Moreover,	it only	allows
	   trapping instructions to throw exceptions, i.e.  memory  references
	   or floating-point instructions.  It does not	allow exceptions to be
	   thrown  from	 arbitrary  signal  handlers  such as "SIGALRM".  This
	   enables -fexceptions.

       -fdelete-dead-exceptions
	   Consider that instructions that  may	 throw	exceptions  but	 don't
	   otherwise  contribute  to  the  execution  of  the  program	can be
	   optimized away.  This does not affect  calls	 to  functions	except
	   those  with	the  "pure"  or	 "const"  attributes.	This option is
	   enabled by default for the Ada and C++ compilers, as	 permitted  by
	   the	language  specifications.  Optimization	passes that cause dead
	   exceptions to be removed are	 enabled  independently	 at  different
	   optimization	levels.

       -funwind-tables
	   Similar  to	-fexceptions, except that it just generates any	needed
	   static data,	but does not affect the	generated code	in  any	 other
	   way.	  You  normally	 do not	need to	enable this option; instead, a
	   language processor that needs this  handling	 enables  it  on  your
	   behalf.

       -fasynchronous-unwind-tables
	   Generate  unwind  table  in	DWARF  format,	if supported by	target
	   machine.  The table is exact	at each	instruction  boundary,	so  it
	   can	be  used for stack unwinding from asynchronous events (such as
	   debugger or garbage collector).

       -fno-gnu-unique
	   On systems with  recent  GNU	 assembler  and	 C  library,  the  C++
	   compiler  uses  the	"STB_GNU_UNIQUE"  binding  to  make  sure that
	   definitions of  template  static  data  members  and	 static	 local
	   variables  in  inline  functions are	unique even in the presence of
	   "RTLD_LOCAL"; this is necessary to avoid problems  with  a  library
	   used	  by   two  different  "RTLD_LOCAL"  plugins  depending	 on  a
	   definition in one of	them and therefore disagreeing with the	 other
	   one	about the binding of the symbol.  But this causes "dlclose" to
	   be  ignored	for  affected  DSOs;  if  your	 program   relies   on
	   reinitialization  of	 a DSO via "dlclose" and "dlopen", you can use
	   -fno-gnu-unique.

       -fpcc-struct-return
	   Return "short" "struct" and "union" values in  memory  like	longer
	   ones, rather	than in	registers.  This convention is less efficient,
	   but	it has the advantage of	allowing intercallability between GCC-
	   compiled  files  and	  files	  compiled   with   other   compilers,
	   particularly	the Portable C Compiler	(pcc).

	   The	precise	 convention for	returning structures in	memory depends
	   on the target configuration macros.

	   Short structures and	unions are  those  whose  size	and  alignment
	   match that of some integer type.

	   Warning:  code  compiled with the -fpcc-struct-return switch	is not
	   binary compatible with code compiled	with  the  -freg-struct-return
	   switch.   Use  it  to  conform  to a	non-default application	binary
	   interface.

       -freg-struct-return
	   Return "struct" and "union"	values	in  registers  when  possible.
	   This	   is	 more	 efficient    for    small   structures	  than
	   -fpcc-struct-return.

	   If you specify neither -fpcc-struct-return nor -freg-struct-return,
	   GCC defaults	to whichever convention	is standard  for  the  target.
	   If	there	is   no	  standard   convention,   GCC	 defaults   to
	   -fpcc-struct-return,	except on targets where	GCC is	the  principal
	   compiler.  In those cases, we can choose the	standard, and we chose
	   the more efficient register return alternative.

	   Warning:  code  compiled with the -freg-struct-return switch	is not
	   binary compatible with code compiled	with  the  -fpcc-struct-return
	   switch.   Use  it  to  conform  to a	non-default application	binary
	   interface.

       -fshort-enums
	   Allocate to an "enum" type only as many bytes as it needs  for  the
	   declared  range  of possible	values.	 Specifically, the "enum" type
	   is equivalent to the	smallest integer type that  has	 enough	 room.
	   This	 option	 has  no  effect  for an enumeration type with a fixed
	   underlying type.

	   Warning: the	-fshort-enums switch causes GCC	to generate code  that
	   is  not  binary compatible with code	generated without that switch.
	   Use it to conform to	a non-default application binary interface.

       -fshort-wchar
	   Override the	underlying type	for "wchar_t" to  be  "short  unsigned
	   int"	 instead of the	default	for the	target.	 This option is	useful
	   for building	programs to run	under WINE.

	   Warning: the	-fshort-wchar switch causes GCC	to generate code  that
	   is  not  binary compatible with code	generated without that switch.
	   Use it to conform to	a non-default application binary interface.

       -fcommon
	   In C	code, this option controls the placement of  global  variables
	   defined  without  an	initializer, known as tentative	definitions in
	   the	C  standard.   Tentative   definitions	 are   distinct	  from
	   declarations	 of a variable with the	"extern" keyword, which	do not
	   allocate storage.

	   The default is  -fno-common,	 which	specifies  that	 the  compiler
	   places  uninitialized  global  variables  in	the BSS	section	of the
	   object file.	 This inhibits the merging of tentative	definitions by
	   the linker so you get  a  multiple-definition  error	 if  the  same
	   variable is accidentally defined in more than one compilation unit.

	   The	-fcommon  places  uninitialized	 global	 variables in a	common
	   block.  This	allows the linker to resolve all tentative definitions
	   of the same variable	in different compilation  units	 to  the  same
	   object,  or	to  a  non-tentative  definition.   This  behavior  is
	   inconsistent	with C++, and on many targets implies a	speed and code
	   size	penalty	on global variable references.	It is mainly useful to
	   enable legacy code to link without errors.

       -fno-ident
	   Ignore the "#ident" directive.

       -finhibit-size-directive
	   Don't output	a ".size" assembler directive, or anything  else  that
	   would cause trouble if the function is split	in the middle, and the
	   two	halves	are  placed  at	 locations  far	apart in memory.  This
	   option is used when compiling crtstuff.c; you should	 not  need  to
	   use it for anything else.

       -fverbose-asm
	   Put	extra commentary information in	the generated assembly code to
	   make	it more	readable.  This	option is generally  only  of  use  to
	   those  who  actually	 need  to  read	 the  generated	 assembly code
	   (perhaps while debugging the	compiler itself).

	   -fno-verbose-asm, the default, causes the extra information	to  be
	   omitted and is useful when comparing	two assembler files.

	   The added comments include:

	   *   information on the compiler version and command-line options,

	   *   the   source   code   lines   associated	  with	 the  assembly
	       instructions, in	the form FILENAME:LINENUMBER:CONTENT OF	LINE,

	   *   hints on	which high-level expressions correspond	to the various
	       assembly	instruction operands.

	   For example,	given this C source file:

		   int test (int n)
		   {
		     int i;
		     int total = 0;

		     for (i = 0; i < n;	i++)
		       total +=	i * i;

		     return total;
		   }

	   compiling to	(x86_64) assembly  via	-S  and	 emitting  the	result
	   direct to stdout via	-o -

		   gcc -S test.c -fverbose-asm -Os -o -

	   gives output	similar	to this:

			   .file   "test.c"
		   # GNU C11 (GCC) version 7.0.0 20160809 (experimental) (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
		     [...snip...]
		   # options passed:
		     [...snip...]

			   .text
			   .globl  test
			   .type   test, @function
		   test:
		   .LFB0:
			   .cfi_startproc
		   # test.c:4:	 int total = 0;
			   xorl	   %eax, %eax	   # <retval>
		   # test.c:6:	 for (i	= 0; i < n; i++)
			   xorl	   %edx, %edx	   # i
		   .L2:
		   # test.c:6:	 for (i	= 0; i < n; i++)
			   cmpl	   %edi, %edx	   # n,	i
			   jge	   .L5	   #,
		   # test.c:7:	   total += i *	i;
			   movl	   %edx, %ecx	   # i,	tmp92
			   imull   %edx, %ecx	   # i,	tmp92
		   # test.c:6:	 for (i	= 0; i < n; i++)
			   incl	   %edx	   # i
		   # test.c:7:	   total += i *	i;
			   addl	   %ecx, %eax	   # tmp92, <retval>
			   jmp	   .L2	   #
		   .L5:
		   # test.c:10:	}
			   ret
			   .cfi_endproc
		   .LFE0:
			   .size   test, .-test
			   .ident  "GCC: (GNU) 7.0.0 20160809 (experimental)"
			   .section	   .note.GNU-stack,"",@progbits

	   The comments	are intended for humans	rather than machines and hence
	   the precise format of the comments is subject to change.

       -frecord-gcc-switches
	   This	 switch	causes the command line	used to	invoke the compiler to
	   be recorded into the	object	file  that  is	being  created.	  This
	   switch  is only implemented on some targets and the exact format of
	   the recording is target and binary file format  dependent,  but  it
	   usually  takes  the	form of	a section containing ASCII text.  This
	   switch is related to	the -fverbose-asm switch, but that switch only
	   records information in the assembler	output file as comments, so it
	   never reaches the object file.  See also -grecord-gcc-switches  for
	   another way of storing compiler options into	the object file.

       -fpic
	   Generate  position-independent  code	 (PIC)	suitable  for use in a
	   shared library, if supported	for the	 target	 machine.   Such  code
	   accesses  all  constant  addresses  through	a  global offset table
	   (GOT).  The dynamic	loader	resolves  the  GOT  entries  when  the
	   program  starts  (the dynamic loader	is not part of GCC; it is part
	   of  the  operating  system).	  If  the  GOT	size  for  the	linked
	   executable  exceeds	a  machine-specific  maximum  size, you	get an
	   error message from the linker indicating that -fpic does not	 work;
	   in that case, recompile with	-fPIC instead.	(These maximums	are 8k
	   on  the SPARC, 28k on AArch64 and 32k on the	m68k and RS/6000.  The
	   x86 has no such limit.)

	   Position-independent	code requires special support,	and  therefore
	   works  only on certain machines.  For the x86, GCC supports PIC for
	   System V but	not for	the Sun	386i.	Code  generated	 for  the  IBM
	   RS/6000 is always position-independent.

	   When	 this  flag  is	 set,  the  macros "__pic__" and "__PIC__" are
	   defined to 1.

       -fPIC
	   If supported	for  the  target  machine,  emit  position-independent
	   code,  suitable  for	 dynamic linking and avoiding any limit	on the
	   size	of the global offset table.  This option makes a difference on
	   AArch64, m68k, PowerPC and SPARC.

	   Position-independent	code requires special support,	and  therefore
	   works only on certain machines.

	   When	 this  flag  is	 set,  the  macros "__pic__" and "__PIC__" are
	   defined to 2.

       -fpie
       -fPIE
	   These options are similar to	-fpic and  -fPIC,  but	the  generated
	   position-independent	 code  can  be	only  linked into executables.
	   Usually these options are used to compile code that will be	linked
	   using the -pie GCC option.

	   -fpie  and  -fPIE  both  define the macros "__pie__"	and "__PIE__".
	   The macros have the value 1 for -fpie and 2 for -fPIE.

       -fno-plt
	   Do not use  the  PLT	 for  external	function  calls	 in  position-
	   independent	code.	Instead, load the callee address at call sites
	   from	the GOT	and branch to it.  This	leads to more  efficient  code
	   by  eliminating  PLT	stubs and exposing GOT loads to	optimizations.
	   On architectures such as 32-bit x86 where PLT stubs expect the  GOT
	   pointer in a	specific register, this	gives more register allocation
	   freedom  to	the  compiler.	 Lazy binding requires use of the PLT;
	   with	-fno-plt all external symbols are resolved at load time.

	   Alternatively, the function attribute "noplt" can be	used to	 avoid
	   calls through the PLT for specific external functions.

	   In  position-dependent  code,  a  few targets also convert calls to
	   functions that are marked to	 not  use  the	PLT  to	 use  the  GOT
	   instead.

       -fno-jump-tables
	   Do not use jump tables for switch statements	even where it would be
	   more	 efficient than	other code generation strategies.  This	option
	   is of use in	conjunction with -fpic or -fPIC	for building code that
	   forms part of a dynamic linker and cannot reference the address  of
	   a  jump  table.   On	some targets, jump tables do not require a GOT
	   and this option is not needed.

       -fno-bit-tests
	   Do not use bit tests	for switch statements even where it  would  be
	   more	efficient than other code generation strategies.

       -ffixed-reg
	   Treat  the  register	 named reg as a	fixed register;	generated code
	   should never	refer to it (except perhaps as a stack pointer,	 frame
	   pointer or in some other fixed role).

	   reg	must  be  the name of a	register.  The register	names accepted
	   are machine-specific	and are	defined	in the "REGISTER_NAMES"	 macro
	   in the machine description macro file.

	   This	 flag  does  not  have a negative form,	because	it specifies a
	   three-way choice.

       -fcall-used-reg
	   Treat the register named reg	 as  an	 allocable  register  that  is
	   clobbered  by  function calls.  It may be allocated for temporaries
	   or variables	that do	not live across	a  call.   Functions  compiled
	   this	way do not save	and restore the	register reg.

	   It  is  an  error  to use this flag with the	frame pointer or stack
	   pointer.  Use of this flag for  other  registers  that  have	 fixed
	   pervasive   roles   in   the	 machine's  execution  model  produces
	   disastrous results.

	   This	flag does not have a negative form,  because  it  specifies  a
	   three-way choice.

       -fcall-saved-reg
	   Treat  the  register	 named	reg  as	an allocable register saved by
	   functions.  It may be allocated even	for temporaries	 or  variables
	   that	 live  across  a  call.	  Functions compiled this way save and
	   restore the register	reg if they use	it.

	   It is an error to use this flag with	the  frame  pointer  or	 stack
	   pointer.   Use  of  this  flag  for other registers that have fixed
	   pervasive  roles  in	 the  machine's	  execution   model   produces
	   disastrous results.

	   A  different	sort of	disaster results from the use of this flag for
	   a register in which function	values may be returned.

	   This	flag does not have a negative form,  because  it  specifies  a
	   three-way choice.

       -fpack-struct[=n]
	   Without  a  value  specified,  pack	all structure members together
	   without holes.  When	a value	is specified (which must  be  a	 small
	   power  of  two),  pack  structure  members according	to this	value,
	   representing	the maximum alignment (that is,	objects	 with  default
	   alignment  requirements  larger  than  this	are output potentially
	   unaligned at	the next fitting location.

	   Warning: the	-fpack-struct switch causes GCC	to generate code  that
	   is  not  binary compatible with code	generated without that switch.
	   Additionally, it makes the code suboptimal.	Use it to conform to a
	   non-default application binary interface.

       -fleading-underscore
	   This	option and its counterpart, -fno-leading-underscore,  forcibly
	   change  the	way C symbols are represented in the object file.  One
	   use is to help link with legacy assembly code.

	   Warning: the	-fleading-underscore switch  causes  GCC  to  generate
	   code	that is	not binary compatible with code	generated without that
	   switch.   Use  it  to  conform  to a	non-default application	binary
	   interface.  Not all	targets	 provide  complete  support  for  this
	   switch.

       -ftls-model=model
	   Alter  the  thread-local  storage  model  to	 be  used.   The model
	   argument should be one of global-dynamic,  local-dynamic,  initial-
	   exec	  or   local-exec.    Note  that  the  choice  is  subject  to
	   optimization: the compiler may  use	a  more	 efficient  model  for
	   symbols not visible outside of the translation unit,	or if -fpic is
	   not given on	the command line.

	   The	default	 without -fpic is initial-exec;	with -fpic the default
	   is global-dynamic.

       -ftrampolines
	   For targets that normally need trampolines  for  nested  functions,
	   always  generate them instead of using descriptors.	Otherwise, for
	   targets that	do not need them, like for example HP-PA or IA-64,  do
	   nothing.

	   A  trampoline  is a small piece of code that	is created at run time
	   on the stack	when the address of a nested function is taken,	and is
	   used	 to  call  the	nested	function  indirectly.	Therefore,  it
	   requires  the  stack	to be made executable in order for the program
	   to work properly.

	   -fno-trampolines is enabled by default on a	language  by  language
	   basis  to  let  the	compiler avoid generating them,	if it computes
	   that	this is	safe, and replace them with descriptors.   Descriptors
	   are	made  up of data only, but the generated code must be prepared
	   to deal with	them.  As of this writing, -fno-trampolines is enabled
	   by default only for Ada.

	   Moreover, code compiled with	-ftrampolines and code	compiled  with
	   -fno-trampolines  are not binary compatible if nested functions are
	   present.  This option must therefore	 be  used  on  a  program-wide
	   basis and be	manipulated with extreme care.

	   For	 languages   other   than   Ada,   the	 "-ftrampolines"   and
	   "-fno-trampolines"  options	 currently   have   no	 effect,   and
	   trampolines	are  always  generated on platforms that need them for
	   nested functions.

       -ftrampoline-impl=[stack|heap]
	   By default, trampolines are generated on stack.   However,  certain
	   platforms (such as the Apple	M1) do not permit an executable	stack.
	   Compiling	with	-ftrampoline-impl=heap	 generate   calls   to
	   "__gcc_nested_func_ptr_created" and "__gcc_nested_func_ptr_deleted"
	   in order  to	 allocate  and	deallocate  trampoline	space  on  the
	   executable  heap.   These  functions	are implemented	in libgcc, and
	   will	only be	provided on specific targets:  x86_64  Darwin,	x86_64
	   and	 aarch64   Linux.   PLEASE  NOTE:  Heap	 trampolines  are  not
	   guaranteed to be correctly deallocated if you "setjmp", instantiate
	   nested functions, and then "longjmp"	 back  to  a  state  prior  to
	   having allocated those nested functions.

       -fvisibility=[default|internal|hidden|protected]
	   Set	the  default  ELF  image  symbol  visibility  to the specified
	   option---all	symbols	are marked with	this unless overridden	within
	   the	code.	Using  this  feature  can  very	 substantially improve
	   linking and load times of shared  object  libraries,	 produce  more
	   optimized  code, provide near-perfect API export and	prevent	symbol
	   clashes.  It	is strongly recommended	 that  you  use	 this  in  any
	   shared objects you distribute.

	   Despite  the	 nomenclature,	default	 always	 means	public;	 i.e.,
	   available to	be linked against  from	 outside  the  shared  object.
	   protected  and  internal  are pretty	useless	in real-world usage so
	   the only other commonly used	option	is  hidden.   The  default  if
	   -fvisibility	 isn't	specified  is default, i.e., make every	symbol
	   public.

	   A good explanation of the benefits offered by ensuring ELF  symbols
	   have	 the  correct  visibility  is  given  by  "How To Write	Shared
	   Libraries"	by   Ulrich   Drepper	(which	 can   be   found   at
	   <https://www.akkadia.org/drepper/>)---however  a  superior solution
	   made	possible by this option	to  marking  things  hidden  when  the
	   default  is	public	is  to make the	default	hidden and mark	things
	   public.   This  is  the  norm  with	DLLs  on  Windows   and	  with
	   -fvisibility=hidden	and  "__attribute__ ((visibility("default")))"
	   instead  of	"__declspec(dllexport)"	 you  get   almost   identical
	   semantics  with  identical  syntax.	 This is a great boon to those
	   working with	cross-platform projects.

	   For those adding visibility support to existing code, you may  find
	   "#pragma  GCC  visibility" of use.  This works by you enclosing the
	   declarations	you wish to set	 visibility  for  with	(for  example)
	   "#pragma  GCC  visibility push(hidden)" and "#pragma	GCC visibility
	   pop".  Bear in mind that symbol visibility should be	viewed as part
	   of the API interface	contract and thus all new code	should	always
	   specify  visibility	when it	is not the default; i.e., declarations
	   only	 for  use  within  the	local  DSO  should  always  be	marked
	   explicitly	as   hidden   as   so	to   avoid   PLT   indirection
	   overheads---making this abundantly clear also aids readability  and
	   self-documentation	of  the	 code.	 Note  that  due  to  ISO  C++
	   specification requirements, "operator new"  and  "operator  delete"
	   must	always be of default visibility.

	   Be  aware  that  headers  from  outside your	project, in particular
	   system headers and headers from any other library you use, may  not
	   be expecting	to be compiled with visibility other than the default.
	   You	 may   need   to   explicitly	say  "#pragma  GCC  visibility
	   push(default)" before including any such headers.

	   "extern" declarations are not affected by -fvisibility, so a	lot of
	   code	 can  be   recompiled	with   -fvisibility=hidden   with   no
	   modifications.    However,	this  means  that  calls  to  "extern"
	   functions with no explicit visibility use the PLT, so  it  is  more
	   effective  to  use "__attribute ((visibility))" and/or "#pragma GCC
	   visibility" to tell the compiler which "extern" declarations	should
	   be treated as hidden.

	   Note	that -fvisibility does affect C++ vague	linkage	entities. This
	   means that, for instance, an	exception  class  that	is  be	thrown
	   between  DSOs  must be explicitly marked with default visibility so
	   that	the type_info nodes are	unified	between	the DSOs.

	   An overview of these	techniques, their benefits and how to use them
	   is at <https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility>.

       -fstrict-volatile-bitfields
	   This	option should be used if accesses to volatile  bit-fields  (or
	   other  structure fields, although the compiler usually honors those
	   types anyway) should	use a  single  access  of  the	width  of  the
	   field's  type,  aligned  to	a  natural alignment if	possible.  For
	   example, targets  with  memory-mapped  peripheral  registers	 might
	   require  all	 such  accesses	to be 16 bits wide; with this flag you
	   can declare all peripheral bit-fields as "unsigned short" (assuming
	   short is 16 bits on these targets)  to  force  GCC  to  use	16-bit
	   accesses instead of,	perhaps, a more	efficient 32-bit access.

	   If  this  option  is	disabled, the compiler uses the	most efficient
	   instruction.	 In the	previous example, that might be	a 32-bit  load
	   instruction,	 even  though  that accesses bytes that	do not contain
	   any portion of the bit-field, or memory-mapped registers  unrelated
	   to the one being updated.

	   In  some cases, such	as when	the "packed" attribute is applied to a
	   structure field, it may not be possible to access the field with  a
	   single  read	 or  write  that  is  correctly	aligned	for the	target
	   machine.  In	this  case  GCC	 falls	back  to  generating  multiple
	   accesses rather than	code that will fault or	truncate the result at
	   run time.

	   Note:   Due	to  restrictions  of  the  C/C++11 memory model, write
	   accesses are	not allowed to touch non  bit-field  members.	It  is
	   therefore  recommended  to  define  all bits	of the field's type as
	   bit-field members.

	   The default value of	this option is determined by  the  application
	   binary interface for	the target processor.

       -fsync-libcalls
	   This	 option	 controls  whether  any	 out-of-line  instance	of the
	   "__sync" family of functions	may be used  to	 implement  the	 C++11
	   "__atomic" family of	functions.

	   The	default	 value of this option is enabled, thus the only	useful
	   form	of the option is -fno-sync-libcalls.  This option is  used  in
	   the implementation of the libatomic runtime library.

   GCC Developer Options
       This  section  describes	 command-line  options	that  are primarily of
       interest	to GCC	developers,  including	options	 to  support  compiler
       testing and investigation of compiler bugs and compile-time performance
       problems.   This	 includes  options that	produce	debug dumps at various
       points in the compilation; that print statistics	such as	memory use and
       execution time; and that	print information about	 GCC's	configuration,
       such as where it	searches for libraries.	 You should rarely need	to use
       any of these options for	ordinary compilation and linking tasks.

       Many  developer options that cause GCC to dump output to	a file take an
       optional	=filename suffix. You can specify  stdout  or  -  to  dump  to
       standard	output,	and stderr for standard	error.

       If  =filename  is  omitted,  a default dump file	name is	constructed by
       concatenating the base dump file	name, a	pass number, phase letter, and
       pass name.  The base dump file name is the name of output file produced
       by  the	compiler  if  explicitly  specified  and  not  an  executable;
       otherwise it is the source file name.  The pass number is determined by
       the order passes	are registered with the	compiler's pass	manager.  This
       is  generally the same as the order of execution, but passes registered
       by plugins,  target-specific  passes,  or  passes  that	are  otherwise
       registered  late	are numbered higher than the pass named	final, even if
       they are	executed earlier.  The	phase  letter  is  one	of  i  (inter-
       procedural analysis), l (language-specific), r (RTL), or	t (tree).  The
       files are created in the	directory of the output	file.

       -fcallgraph-info
       -fcallgraph-info=MARKERS
	   Makes the compiler output callgraph information for the program, on
	   a  per-object-file  basis.	The  information  is  generated	in the
	   common VCG format.  It can be decorated with	 additional,  per-node
	   and/or  per-edge  information, if a list of comma-separated markers
	   is additionally specified.  When the	"su" marker is specified,  the
	   callgraph   is  decorated  with  stack  usage  information;	it  is
	   equivalent to -fstack-usage.	 When the "da"	marker	is  specified,
	   the	callgraph  is  decorated  with	information  about dynamically
	   allocated objects.

	   When	compiling with -flto, no callgraph information is output along
	   with	the object file.   At  LTO  link  time,	 -fcallgraph-info  may
	   generate  multiple callgraph	information files next to intermediate
	   LTO output files.

       -dletters
       -fdump-rtl-pass
       -fdump-rtl-pass=filename
	   Says	to make	debugging dumps	during compilation at times  specified
	   by letters.	This is	used for debugging the RTL-based passes	of the
	   compiler.

	   Some	 -dletters switches have different meaning when	-E is used for
	   preprocessing.

	   Debug dumps can be enabled with a  -fdump-rtl  switch  or  some  -d
	   option  letters.  Here are the possible letters for use in pass and
	   letters, and	their meanings:

	   -fdump-rtl-alignments
	       Dump after branch alignments have been computed.

	   -fdump-rtl-asmcons
	       Dump after fixing rtl statements	that have  unsatisfied	in/out
	       constraints.

	   -fdump-rtl-auto_inc_dec
	       Dump  after  auto-inc-dec  discovery.  This pass	is only	run on
	       architectures that have auto inc	or auto	dec instructions.

	   -fdump-rtl-barriers
	       Dump after cleaning up the barrier instructions.

	   -fdump-rtl-bbpart
	       Dump after partitioning hot and cold basic blocks.

	   -fdump-rtl-bbro
	       Dump after block	reordering.

	   -fdump-rtl-btl1
	   -fdump-rtl-btl2
	       -fdump-rtl-btl1 and -fdump-rtl-btl2 enable  dumping  after  the
	       two branch target load optimization passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-bypass
	       Dump after jump bypassing and control flow optimizations.

	   -fdump-rtl-combine
	       Dump after the RTL instruction combination pass.

	   -fdump-rtl-compgotos
	       Dump after duplicating the computed gotos.

	   -fdump-rtl-ce1
	   -fdump-rtl-ce2
	   -fdump-rtl-ce3
	       -fdump-rtl-ce1,	 -fdump-rtl-ce2,   and	-fdump-rtl-ce3	enable
	       dumping after the three if conversion passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-cprop_hardreg
	       Dump after hard register	copy propagation.

	   -fdump-rtl-csa
	       Dump after combining stack adjustments.

	   -fdump-rtl-cse1
	   -fdump-rtl-cse2
	       -fdump-rtl-cse1 and -fdump-rtl-cse2 enable  dumping  after  the
	       two common subexpression	elimination passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-dce
	       Dump after the standalone dead code elimination passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-dbr
	       Dump after delayed branch scheduling.

	   -fdump-rtl-dce1
	   -fdump-rtl-dce2
	       -fdump-rtl-dce1	and  -fdump-rtl-dce2  enable dumping after the
	       two dead	store elimination passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-eh
	       Dump after finalization of EH handling code.

	   -fdump-rtl-eh_ranges
	       Dump after conversion of	EH handling range regions.

	   -fdump-rtl-expand
	       Dump after RTL generation.

	   -fdump-rtl-fwprop1
	   -fdump-rtl-fwprop2
	       -fdump-rtl-fwprop1 and -fdump-rtl-fwprop2 enable	dumping	 after
	       the two forward propagation passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-gcse1
	   -fdump-rtl-gcse2
	       -fdump-rtl-gcse1	 and  -fdump-rtl-gcse2	enable	dumping	 after
	       global common subexpression elimination.

	   -fdump-rtl-init-regs
	       Dump after the initialization of	the registers.

	   -fdump-rtl-initvals
	       Dump after the computation of the initial value sets.

	   -fdump-rtl-into_cfglayout
	       Dump after converting to	cfglayout mode.

	   -fdump-rtl-ira
	       Dump after iterated register allocation.

	   -fdump-rtl-jump
	       Dump after the second jump optimization.

	   -fdump-rtl-loop2
	       -fdump-rtl-loop2	  enables   dumping   after   the   rtl	  loop
	       optimization passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-mach
	       Dump  after  performing	the  machine  dependent	reorganization
	       pass, if	that pass exists.

	   -fdump-rtl-mode_sw
	       Dump after removing redundant mode switches.

	   -fdump-rtl-rnreg
	       Dump after register renumbering.

	   -fdump-rtl-outof_cfglayout
	       Dump after converting from cfglayout mode.

	   -fdump-rtl-peephole2
	       Dump after the peephole pass.

	   -fdump-rtl-postreload
	       Dump after post-reload optimizations.

	   -fdump-rtl-pro_and_epilogue
	       Dump after generating the function prologues and	epilogues.

	   -fdump-rtl-sched1
	   -fdump-rtl-sched2
	       -fdump-rtl-sched1 and -fdump-rtl-sched2	enable	dumping	 after
	       the basic block scheduling passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-ree
	       Dump after sign/zero extension elimination.

	   -fdump-rtl-seqabstr
	       Dump after common sequence discovery.

	   -fdump-rtl-shorten
	       Dump after shortening branches.

	   -fdump-rtl-sibling
	       Dump after sibling call optimizations.

	   -fdump-rtl-split1
	   -fdump-rtl-split2
	   -fdump-rtl-split3
	   -fdump-rtl-split4
	   -fdump-rtl-split5
	       These  options  enable dumping after five rounds	of instruction
	       splitting.

	   -fdump-rtl-sms
	       Dump after modulo scheduling.  This pass	is only	 run  on  some
	       architectures.

	   -fdump-rtl-stack
	       Dump after conversion from GCC's	"flat register file" registers
	       to  the	x87's  stack-like registers.  This pass	is only	run on
	       x86 variants.

	   -fdump-rtl-subreg1
	   -fdump-rtl-subreg2
	       -fdump-rtl-subreg1 and -fdump-rtl-subreg2 enable	dumping	 after
	       the two subreg expansion	passes.

	   -fdump-rtl-unshare
	       Dump after all rtl has been unshared.

	   -fdump-rtl-vartrack
	       Dump after variable tracking.

	   -fdump-rtl-vregs
	       Dump after converting virtual registers to hard registers.

	   -fdump-rtl-web
	       Dump after live range splitting.

	   -fdump-rtl-regclass
	   -fdump-rtl-subregs_of_mode_init
	   -fdump-rtl-subregs_of_mode_finish
	   -fdump-rtl-dfinit
	   -fdump-rtl-dfinish
	       These dumps are defined but always produce empty	files.

	   -da
	   -fdump-rtl-all
	       Produce all the dumps listed above.

	   -dA Annotate	 the  assembler	 output	 with  miscellaneous debugging
	       information.

	   -dD Dump all	macro definitions, at the  end	of  preprocessing,  in
	       addition	to normal output.

	   -dH Produce a core dump whenever an error occurs.

	   -dp Annotate	 the  assembler	output with a comment indicating which
	       pattern and alternative is used.	 The length and	cost  of  each
	       instruction are also printed.

	   -dP Dump  the  RTL in the assembler output as a comment before each
	       instruction.  Also turns	on -dp annotation.

	   -dx Just generate RTL for  a	 function  instead  of	compiling  it.
	       Usually used with -fdump-rtl-expand.

       -fdump-debug
	   Dump	 debugging  information	 generated during the debug generation
	   phase.

       -fdump-earlydebug
	   Dump	 debugging  information	 generated  during  the	 early	 debug
	   generation phase.

       -fdump-noaddr
	   When	doing debugging	dumps, suppress	address	output.	 This makes it
	   more	  feasible  to	use  diff  on  debugging  dumps	 for  compiler
	   invocations with different compiler binaries	and/or different  text
	   / bss / data	/ heap / stack / dso start locations.

       -freport-bug
	   Collect  and	 dump  debug  information  into	a temporary file if an
	   internal compiler error (ICE) occurs.

       -fdump-unnumbered
	   When	 doing	debugging  dumps,  suppress  instruction  numbers  and
	   address  output.   This  makes  it  more  feasible  to  use diff on
	   debugging dumps for compiler	invocations with different options, in
	   particular with and without -g.

       -fdump-unnumbered-links
	   When	 doing	debugging  dumps  (see	-d  option  above),   suppress
	   instruction	numbers	 for  the  links  to  the  previous  and  next
	   instructions	in a sequence.

       -fdump-ipa-switch
       -fdump-ipa-switch-options
	   Control the dumping at various stages of inter-procedural  analysis
	   language tree to a file.  The file name is generated	by appending a
	   switch  specific  suffix  to	 the source file name, and the file is
	   created in the same directory as the	output	file.	The  following
	   dumps are possible:

	   all Enables all inter-procedural analysis dumps.

	   cgraph
	       Dumps   information   about   call-graph	 optimization,	unused
	       function	removal, and inlining decisions.

	   inline
	       Dump after function inlining.

	   strubm
	       Dump  after  selecting  "strub"	modes,	 and   recording   the
	       selections as function attributes.

	   strub
	       Dump   "strub"  transformations:	 interface  changes,  function
	       wrapping, and insertion of builtin calls	 for  stack  scrubbing
	       and watermarking.

	   Additionally,  the options -optimized, -missed, -note, and -all can
	   be provided,	with the same meaning as for -fopt-info, defaulting to
	   -optimized.

	   For	 example,   -fdump-ipa-inline-optimized-missed	  will	  emit
	   information	on  callsites  that were inlined, along	with callsites
	   that	were not inlined.

	   By  default,	 the  dump  will  contain  messages  about  successful
	   optimizations  (equivalent  to  -optimized) together	with low-level
	   details about the analysis.

       -fdump-lang
	   Dump	language-specific information.	 The  file  name  is  made  by
	   appending .lang to the source file name.

       -fdump-lang-all
       -fdump-lang-switch
       -fdump-lang-switch-options
       -fdump-lang-switch-options=filename
	   Control  the	dumping	of language-specific information.  The options
	   and filename	 portions  behave  as  described  in  the  -fdump-tree
	   option.  The	following switch values	are accepted:

	   all Enable all language-specific dumps.

	   class
	       Dump class hierarchy information.  Virtual table	information is
	       emitted	unless 'slim' is specified.  This option is applicable
	       to C++ only.

	   module
	       Dump module information.	  Options  lineno  (locations),	 graph
	       (reachability),	blocks	(clusters), uid	(serialization), alias
	       (mergeable), asmname (Elrond), eh (mapper) & vops (macros)  may
	       provide	additional  information.  This option is applicable to
	       C++ only.

	   raw Dump the	raw internal tree data.	 This option is	applicable  to
	       C++ only.

       -fdump-passes
	   Print  on stderr the	list of	optimization passes that are turned on
	   and off by the current command-line options.

       -fdump-statistics-option
	   Enable and control dumping of pass statistics in a  separate	 file.
	   The	file  name  is	generated  by  appending  a  suffix  ending in
	   .statistics to the source file name,	and the	file is	created	in the
	   same	directory as the output	file.  If the -option  form  is	 used,
	   -stats causes counters to be	summed over the	whole compilation unit
	   while  -details dumps every event as	the passes generate them.  The
	   default with	no  option  is	to  sum	 counters  for	each  function
	   compiled.

       -fdump-tree-all
       -fdump-tree-switch
       -fdump-tree-switch-options
       -fdump-tree-switch-options=filename
	   Control   the   dumping   at	  various  stages  of  processing  the
	   intermediate	language tree to a file.   If  the  -options  form  is
	   used,  options  is  a list of - separated options which control the
	   details of the dump.	 Not all options are applicable	to all	dumps;
	   those  that	are not	meaningful are ignored.	 The following options
	   are available

	   address
	       Print the address of each node.	Usually	this is	not meaningful
	       as it changes according to the  environment  and	 source	 file.
	       Its  primary  use  is  for  tying  up  a	dump file with a debug
	       environment.

	   asmname
	       If "DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME"	has been set for  a  given  decl,  use
	       that  in	 the  dump instead of "DECL_NAME".  Its	primary	use is
	       ease of use working backward from mangled names in the assembly
	       file.

	   slim
	       When dumping front-end  intermediate  representations,  inhibit
	       dumping	of  members  of	 a  scope or body of a function	merely
	       because that scope has been reached.  Only dump such items when
	       they are	directly reachable by some other path.

	       When dumping pretty-printed trees, this option inhibits dumping
	       the bodies of control structures.

	       When dumping RTL,  print	 the  RTL  in  slim  (condensed)  form
	       instead of the default LISP-like	representation.

	   raw Print  a	raw representation of the tree.	 By default, trees are
	       pretty-printed into a C-like representation.

	   details
	       Enable more detailed dumps (not honored by every	dump  option).
	       Also include information	from the optimization passes.

	   stats
	       Enable  dumping	various	statistics about the pass (not honored
	       by every	dump option).

	   blocks
	       Enable showing basic block boundaries (disabled in raw dumps).

	   graph
	       For each	of the other indicated dump  files  (-fdump-rtl-pass),
	       dump  a	representation	of the control flow graph suitable for
	       viewing with GraphViz to	file.passid.pass.dot.	Each  function
	       in  the	file is	pretty-printed as a subgraph, so that GraphViz
	       can render them all in a	single plot.

	       This option currently only works	for RTL	dumps, and the RTL  is
	       always dumped in	slim form.

	   vops
	       Enable showing virtual operands for every statement.

	   lineno
	       Enable showing line numbers for statements.

	   uid Enable showing the unique ID ("DECL_UID") for each variable.

	   verbose
	       Enable showing the tree dump for	each statement.

	   eh  Enable showing the EH region number holding each	statement.

	   scev
	       Enable showing scalar evolution analysis	details.

	   optimized
	       Enable  showing	optimization  information  (only  available in
	       certain passes).

	   missed
	       Enable showing missed optimization information (only  available
	       in certain passes).

	   note
	       Enable  other detailed optimization information (only available
	       in certain passes).

	   all Turn on all options, except raw,	slim, verbose and lineno.

	   optall
	       Turn on all optimization	options, i.e., optimized, missed,  and
	       note.

	   To  determine  what tree dumps are available	or find	the dump for a
	   pass	of interest follow the steps below.

	   1.  Invoke GCC with -fdump-passes and in the	stderr output look for
	       a code that corresponds to the pass you are interested in.  For
	       example,	the codes "tree-evrp",	"tree-vrp1",  and  "tree-vrp2"
	       correspond  to  the  three Value	Range Propagation passes.  The
	       number at the end distinguishes	distinct  invocations  of  the
	       same pass.

	   2.  To  enable  the creation	of the dump file, append the pass code
	       to the -fdump- option prefix  and  invoke  GCC  with  it.   For
	       example,	 to  enable  the  dump	from  the  Early  Value	 Range
	       Propagation pass, invoke	GCC with the -fdump-tree-evrp  option.
	       Optionally,  you	may specify the	name of	the dump file.	If you
	       don't specify one, GCC creates as described below.

	   3.  Find the	pass dump in a file whose name is  composed  of	 three
	       components  separated  by a period: the name of the source file
	       GCC was invoked to compile, a  numeric  suffix  indicating  the
	       pass  number  followed by the letter t for tree passes (and the
	       letter r	for RTL	passes),  and  finally	the  pass  code.   For
	       example,	 the  Early  VRP  pass	dump  might be in a file named
	       myfile.c.038t.evrp in the current working directory.  Note that
	       the numeric codes are  not  stable  and	may  change  from  one
	       version of GCC to another.

       -fopt-info
       -fopt-info-options
       -fopt-info-options=filename
	   Controls  optimization  dumps  from various optimization passes. If
	   the -options	form is	used, options is a list	of - separated	option
	   keywords to select the dump details and optimizations.

	   The options can be divided into three groups:

	   1.  options describing what kinds of	messages should	be emitted,

	   2.  options describing the verbosity	of the dump, and

	   3.  options describing which	optimizations should be	included.

	   The	options	 from  each group can be freely	mixed as they are non-
	   overlapping.	However, in case of any	conflicts, the	later  options
	   override the	earlier	options	on the command line.

	   The	following  options  control  which kinds of messages should be
	   emitted:

	   optimized
	       Print information when an optimization is successfully applied.
	       It is up	to a pass to decide which information is relevant. For
	       example,	the vectorizer passes print  the  source  location  of
	       loops which are successfully vectorized.

	   missed
	       Print information about missed optimizations. Individual	passes
	       control which information to include in the output.

	   note
	       Print  verbose information about	optimizations, such as certain
	       transformations,	more detailed messages about decisions etc.

	   all Print  detailed	 optimization	information.   This   includes
	       optimized, missed, and note.

	   The following option	controls the dump verbosity:

	   internals
	       By default, only	"high-level" messages are emitted. This	option
	       enables	additional,  more detailed, messages, which are	likely
	       to only be of interest to GCC developers.

	   One or more of  the	following  option  keywords  can  be  used  to
	   describe a group of optimizations:

	   ipa Enable dumps from all interprocedural optimizations.

	   loop
	       Enable dumps from all loop optimizations.

	   inline
	       Enable dumps from all inlining optimizations.

	   omp Enable  dumps  from  all	 OMP (Offloading and Multi Processing)
	       optimizations.

	   vec Enable dumps from all vectorization optimizations.

	   optall
	       Enable dumps from all optimizations. This is a superset of  the
	       optimization groups listed above.

	   If options is omitted, it defaults to optimized-optall, which means
	   to  dump  messages  about  successful  optimizations	 from  all the
	   passes, omitting messages that are treated as "internals".

	   If the filename is provided,	then the dumps from all	the applicable
	   optimizations are concatenated into the  filename.	Otherwise  the
	   dump	 is output onto	stderr.	Though multiple	-fopt-info options are
	   accepted, only one  of  them	 can  include  a  filename.  If	 other
	   filenames  are  provided  then  all	but  the first such option are
	   ignored.

	   Note	that the output	filename is overwritten	in  case  of  multiple
	   translation	units.	If a combined output from multiple translation
	   units is desired, stderr should be used instead.

	   In the following  example,  the  optimization  info	is  output  to
	   stderr:

		   gcc -O3 -fopt-info

	   This	example:

		   gcc -O3 -fopt-info-missed=missed.all

	   outputs  missed  optimization  report  from	all  the  passes  into
	   missed.all, and this	one:

		   gcc -O2 -ftree-vectorize -fopt-info-vec-missed

	   prints information about  missed  optimization  opportunities  from
	   vectorization passes	on stderr.  Note that -fopt-info-vec-missed is
	   equivalent to -fopt-info-missed-vec.	 The order of the optimization
	   group  names	 and  message  types  listed after -fopt-info does not
	   matter.

	   As another example,

		   gcc -O3 -fopt-info-inline-optimized-missed=inline.txt

	   outputs information about missed optimizations as well as optimized
	   locations from all the inlining passes into inline.txt.

	   Finally, consider:

		   gcc -fopt-info-vec-missed=vec.miss -fopt-info-loop-optimized=loop.opt

	   Here	the two	output filenames vec.miss and loop.opt are in conflict
	   since only one output file is allowed. In this case,	only the first
	   option takes	effect and the subsequent options  are	ignored.  Thus
	   only	 vec.miss is produced which contains dumps from	the vectorizer
	   about missed	opportunities.

       -fsave-optimization-record
	   Write   a   SRCFILE.opt-record.json.gz    file    detailing	  what
	   optimizations  were performed, for those optimizations that support
	   -fopt-info.

	   This	option is experimental and the format of the data  within  the
	   compressed JSON file	is subject to change.

	   It	is   roughly  equivalent  to  a	 machine-readable  version  of
	   -fopt-info-all, as a	collection of messages with source file,  line
	   number  and	column	number,	with the following additional data for
	   each	message:

	   *   the execution count of the code	being  optimized,  along  with
	       metadata	 about	whether	 this was from actual profile data, or
	       just an estimate, allowing consumers to prioritize messages  by
	       code hotness,

	   *   the   function	name   of  the	code  being  optimized,	 where
	       applicable,

	   *   the "inlining chain" for	the code being optimized, so that when
	       a function is inlined  into  several  different	places	(which
	       might  themselves  be  inlined),	 the  reader  can  distinguish
	       between the copies,

	   *   objects identifying those parts of the message  that  refer  to
	       expressions,  statements	 or symbol-table nodes,	which of these
	       categories they are, and, when  available,  their  source  code
	       location,

	   *   the GCC pass that emitted the message, and

	   *   the  location  in  GCC's	 own  code  from which the message was
	       emitted

	   Additionally, some  messages	 are  logically	 nested	 within	 other
	   messages,  reflecting  implementation  details  of the optimization
	   passes.

       -fsched-verbose=n
	   On targets that use instruction scheduling,	this  option  controls
	   the	amount	of  debugging  output the scheduler prints to the dump
	   files.

	   For	n  greater  than  zero,	 -fsched-verbose  outputs   the	  same
	   information	as  -fdump-rtl-sched1  and  -fdump-rtl-sched2.	 For n
	   greater  than  one,	it  also  output  basic	 block	probabilities,
	   detailed  ready list	information and	unit/insn info.	 For n greater
	   than	two, it	includes RTL at	abort point, control-flow and  regions
	   info.    And	  for  n  over	four,  -fsched-verbose	also  includes
	   dependence info.

       -fenable-kind-pass
       -fdisable-kind-pass=range-list
	   This	is a set of options that are used to explicitly	disable/enable
	   optimization	passes.	  These	 options  are  intended	 for  use  for
	   debugging  GCC.   Compiler  users  should  use  regular options for
	   enabling/disabling passes instead.

	   -fdisable-ipa-pass
	       Disable IPA pass	pass. pass is the pass name.  If the same pass
	       is statically invoked in	the compiler multiple times, the  pass
	       name  should be appended	with a sequential number starting from
	       1.

	   -fdisable-rtl-pass
	   -fdisable-rtl-pass=range-list
	       Disable RTL pass	pass.  pass is the pass	 name.	 If  the  same
	       pass  is	statically invoked in the compiler multiple times, the
	       pass name should	be appended with a sequential number  starting
	       from  1.	  range-list  is  a  comma-separated  list of function
	       ranges or  assembler  names.   Each  range  is  a  number  pair
	       separated by a colon.  The range	is inclusive in	both ends.  If
	       the  range  is  trivial,	the number pair	can be simplified as a
	       single number.  If the function's call graph node's  uid	 falls
	       within  one  of	the specified ranges, the pass is disabled for
	       that function.  The uid is shown	in the function	 header	 of  a
	       dump  file,  and	 the  pass names can be	dumped by using	option
	       -fdump-passes.

	   -fdisable-tree-pass
	   -fdisable-tree-pass=range-list
	       Disable tree pass pass.	See -fdisable-rtl for the  description
	       of option arguments.

	   -fenable-ipa-pass
	       Enable IPA pass pass.  pass is the pass name.  If the same pass
	       is  statically invoked in the compiler multiple times, the pass
	       name should be appended with a sequential number	starting  from
	       1.

	   -fenable-rtl-pass
	   -fenable-rtl-pass=range-list
	       Enable  RTL  pass  pass.	 See -fdisable-rtl for option argument
	       description and examples.

	   -fenable-tree-pass
	   -fenable-tree-pass=range-list
	       Enable tree pass	pass.  See -fdisable-rtl for  the  description
	       of option arguments.

	   Here	are some examples showing uses of these	options.

		   # disable ccp1 for all functions
		      -fdisable-tree-ccp1
		   # disable complete unroll for function whose	cgraph node uid	is 1
		      -fenable-tree-cunroll=1
		   # disable gcse2 for functions at the	following ranges [1,1],
		   # [300,400],	and [400,1000]
		   # disable gcse2 for functions foo and foo2
		      -fdisable-rtl-gcse2=foo,foo2
		   # disable early inlining
		      -fdisable-tree-einline
		   # disable ipa inlining
		      -fdisable-ipa-inline
		   # enable tree full unroll
		      -fenable-tree-unroll

       -fchecking
       -fchecking=n
	   Enable  internal  consistency checking.  The	default	depends	on the
	   compiler  configuration.   -fchecking=2  enables  further  internal
	   consistency checking	that might affect code generation.

       -frandom-seed=string
	   This	 option	 provides  a  seed  that  GCC  uses in place of	random
	   numbers  in	generating  certain  symbol  names  that  have	to  be
	   different  in every compiled	file.  It is also used to place	unique
	   stamps in coverage data files and the  object  files	 that  produce
	   them.  You can use the -frandom-seed	option to produce reproducibly
	   identical object files.

	   The	string	can  either  be	a number (decimal, octal or hex) or an
	   arbitrary string (in	which case  it's  converted  to	 a  number  by
	   computing CRC32).

	   The string should be	different for every file you compile.

       -save-temps
	   Store  the  usual  "temporary" intermediate files permanently; name
	   them	as  auxiliary  output  files,  as  specified  described	 under
	   -dumpbase and -dumpdir.

	   When	  used	 in  combination  with	the  -x	 command-line  option,
	   -save-temps is sensible enough to avoid overwriting an input	source
	   file	 with  the  same  extension  as	 an  intermediate  file.   The
	   corresponding  intermediate	file  may  be obtained by renaming the
	   source file before using -save-temps.

       -save-temps=cwd
	   Equivalent to -save-temps -dumpdir ./.

       -save-temps=obj
	   Equivalent to -save-temps -dumpdir outdir/, where  outdir/  is  the
	   directory  of  the  output  file  specified	after  the  -o option,
	   including any directory separators.	If the -o option is not	 used,
	   the -save-temps=obj switch behaves like -save-temps=cwd.

       -time[=file]
	   Report  the	CPU  time  taken by each subprocess in the compilation
	   sequence.  For C source files, this	is  the	 compiler  proper  and
	   assembler (plus the linker if linking is done).

	   Without  the	specification of an output file, the output looks like
	   this:

		   # cc1 0.12 0.01
		   # as	0.00 0.01

	   The first number on each line is the	 "user	time",	that  is  time
	   spent  executing  the program itself.  The second number is "system
	   time", time spent executing operating system	routines on behalf  of
	   the program.	 Both numbers are in seconds.

	   With	the specification of an	output file, the output	is appended to
	   the named file, and it looks	like this:

		   0.12	0.01 cc1 <options>
		   0.00	0.01 as	<options>

	   The	"user time" and	the "system time" are moved before the program
	   name, and the options passed	to the program are displayed, so  that
	   one	can  later  tell  what file was	being compiled,	and with which
	   options.

       -fdump-final-insns[=file]
	   Dump	the final internal  representation  (RTL)  to  file.   If  the
	   optional  argument  is omitted (or if file is "."), the name	of the
	   dump	file is	determined by appending	".gkd" to the dump base	 name,
	   see -dumpbase.

       -fcompare-debug[=opts]
	   If  no  error  occurs during	compilation, run the compiler a	second
	   time, adding	 opts  and  -fcompare-debug-second  to	the  arguments
	   passed   to	the  second  compilation.   Dump  the  final  internal
	   representation in both compilations,	and print  an  error  if  they
	   differ.

	   If the equal	sign is	omitted, the default -gtoggle is used.

	   The	environment  variable GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG, if defined, non-empty
	   and	  nonzero,    implicitly    enables    -fcompare-debug.	    If
	   GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG is	defined	to a string starting with a dash, then
	   it is used for opts,	otherwise the default -gtoggle is used.

	   -fcompare-debug=,   with  the  equal	 sign  but  without  opts,  is
	   equivalent to -fno-compare-debug, which disables the	dumping	of the
	   final representation	and the	second	compilation,  preventing  even
	   GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG from taking effect.

	   To	verify	full  coverage	during	-fcompare-debug	 testing,  set
	   GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG to	say -fcompare-debug-not-overridden, which  GCC
	   rejects as an invalid option	in any actual compilation (rather than
	   preprocessing,  assembly  or	 linking).   To	 get  just  a warning,
	   setting GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG  to  -w%n-fcompare-debug  not  overridden
	   will	do.

       -fcompare-debug-second
	   This	 option	 is  implicitly	 passed	to the compiler	for the	second
	   compilation requested by -fcompare-debug,  along  with  options  to
	   silence  warnings,  and omitting other options that would cause the
	   compiler to produce output to files or to standard output as	a side
	   effect.  Dump files and preserved temporary files are renamed so as
	   to  contain	the  ".gk"  additional	extension  during  the	second
	   compilation,	to avoid overwriting those generated by	the first.

	   When	 this  option  is passed to the	compiler driver, it causes the
	   first compilation to	be skipped, which makes	it useful  for	little
	   other than debugging	the compiler proper.

       -gtoggle
	   Turn	 off  generation  of  debug  info,  if leaving out this	option
	   generates it, or turn it on at level	2 otherwise.  The position  of
	   this	 argument in the command line does not matter; it takes	effect
	   after all other options are processed, and it does so only once, no
	   matter how many times it is given.  This is mainly intended	to  be
	   used	with -fcompare-debug.

       -fvar-tracking-assignments-toggle
	   Toggle  -fvar-tracking-assignments,	in  the	same way that -gtoggle
	   toggles -g.

       -Q  Makes the compiler print out	each function name as it is  compiled,
	   and print some statistics about each	pass when it finishes.

       -ftime-report
	   Makes  the  compiler	print some statistics to stderr	about the time
	   consumed by each pass when it finishes.

	   If	SARIF	output	  of	diagnostics    was    requested	   via
	   -fdiagnostics-format=sarif-file				    or
	   -fdiagnostics-format=sarif-stderr	then	 the	 -ftime-report
	   information	is  instead  emitted  in  JSON	form  as part of SARIF
	   output.  The	precise	format of this JSON data is subject to change,
	   and the values may not exactly match	those emitted to stderr	due to
	   being  written  out	at  a  slightly	 different  place  within  the
	   compiler.

       -ftime-report-details
	   Record  the	time  consumed	by infrastructure parts	separately for
	   each	pass.

       -fira-verbose=n
	   Control the verbosity of the	dump file for the integrated  register
	   allocator.	The  default value is 5.  If the value n is greater or
	   equal to 10,	the dump output	is  sent  to  stderr  using  the  same
	   format as n minus 10.

       -flto-report
	   Prints  a report with internal details on the workings of the link-
	   time	optimizer.  The	contents of this report	vary from  version  to
	   version.   It  is  meant  to	 be  useful  to	 GCC  developers  when
	   processing object files in LTO mode (via -flto).

	   Disabled by default.

       -flto-report-wpa
	   Like	-flto-report, but only print for the WPA  phase	 of  link-time
	   optimization.

       -fmem-report
	   Makes  the  compiler	 print	some statistics	about permanent	memory
	   allocation when it finishes.

       -fmem-report-wpa
	   Makes the compiler print some  statistics  about  permanent	memory
	   allocation for the WPA phase	only.

       -fpre-ipa-mem-report
       -fpost-ipa-mem-report
	   Makes  the  compiler	 print	some statistics	about permanent	memory
	   allocation before or	after interprocedural optimization.

       -fmultiflags
	   This	option enables multilib-aware "TFLAGS" to  be  used  to	 build
	   target  libraries with options different from those the compiler is
	   configured to use by	default, through the use of specs  set	up  by
	   compiler  internals,	 by  the  target,  or by builders at configure
	   time.

	   Like	"TFLAGS", this allows the target libraries  to	be  built  for
	   portable baseline environments, while the compiler defaults to more
	   demanding  ones.   That's  useful because users can easily override
	   the defaults	the compiler is	configured to use to build  their  own
	   programs,   if   the	 defaults  are	not  ideal  for	 their	target
	   environment,	whereas	rebuilding the runtime	libraries  is  usually
	   not as easy or desirable.

	   Unlike  "TFLAGS",  the  use	of specs enables different flags to be
	   selected for	different multilibs.  The way to accomplish that is to
	   build   with	  make	  TFLAGS=-fmultiflags,	  after	   configuring
	   --with-specs=%{fmultiflags:...}.

	   This	 option	 is  discarded by the driver once it's done processing
	   driver self spec.

	   It is also useful to	check that "TFLAGS" are	being  used  to	 build
	   all	target	libraries,  by	configuring  a	non-bootstrap compiler
	   --with-specs='%{!fmultiflags:%emissing TFLAGS}'  and	 building  the
	   compiler and	target libraries.

       -fprofile-report
	   Makes  the  compiler	print some statistics about consistency	of the
	   (estimated) profile and effect of individual	passes.

       -fstack-usage
	   Makes the compiler output stack usage information for the  program,
	   on  a  per-function	basis.	 The  filename for the dump is made by
	   appending .su to the	auxname.  auxname is generated from  the  name
	   of  the  output  file,  if  explicitly  specified  and it is	not an
	   executable, otherwise it is the basename of the  source  file.   An
	   entry is made up of three fields:

	   *   The name	of the function.

	   *   A number	of bytes.

	   *   One or more qualifiers: "static", "dynamic", "bounded".

	   The	qualifier  "static"  means  that  the function manipulates the
	   stack statically: a fixed number of bytes  are  allocated  for  the
	   frame  on  function	entry  and released on function	exit; no stack
	   adjustments are otherwise made in the function.  The	 second	 field
	   is this fixed number	of bytes.

	   The	qualifier  "dynamic"  means  that the function manipulates the
	   stack dynamically: in addition to the static	 allocation  described
	   above,  stack adjustments are made in the body of the function, for
	   example to  push/pop	 arguments  around  function  calls.   If  the
	   qualifier   "bounded"   is	also  present,	the  amount  of	 these
	   adjustments is bounded at compile time and the second field	is  an
	   upper  bound	of the total amount of stack used by the function.  If
	   it is not present, the amount of these adjustments is  not  bounded
	   at  compile	time  and the second field only	represents the bounded
	   part.

       -fstats
	   Emit	statistics about  front-end  processing	 at  the  end  of  the
	   compilation.	  This	option is supported only by the	C++ front end,
	   and the information is generally only useful	to the G++ development
	   team.

       -fdbg-cnt-list
	   Print the name and the counter upper	bound for all debug counters.

       -fdbg-cnt=counter-value-list
	   Set the internal debug counter lower	 and  upper  bound.   counter-
	   value-list	    is	     a	     comma-separated	  list	    of
	   name:lower_bound1-upper_bound1      [:lower_bound2-upper_bound2...]
	   tuples  which  sets	the  name  of  the  counter and	list of	closed
	   intervals.  The lower_bound is optional and is zero initialized  if
	   not	set.   For example, with -fdbg-cnt=dce:2-4:10-11,tail_call:10,
	   "dbg_cnt(dce)" returns true only for	second,	third,	fourth,	 tenth
	   and eleventh	invocation.  For "dbg_cnt(tail_call)" true is returned
	   for first 10	invocations.

       -print-file-name=library
	   Print the full absolute name	of the library file library that would
	   be  used  when  linking---and  don't	 do  anything else.  With this
	   option, GCC does not	compile	or link	anything; it just  prints  the
	   file	name.

       -print-multi-directory
	   Print  the directory	name corresponding to the multilib selected by
	   any other switches present in the command line.  This directory  is
	   supposed to exist in	GCC_EXEC_PREFIX.

       -print-multi-lib
	   Print  the  mapping	from  multilib	directory  names  to  compiler
	   switches that enable	them.  The directory name  is  separated  from
	   the	switches by ;, and each	switch starts with an @	instead	of the
	   -, without spaces between multiple switches.	 This is  supposed  to
	   ease	shell processing.

       -print-multi-os-directory
	   Print  the path to OS libraries for the selected multilib, relative
	   to some lib subdirectory.  If OS libraries are present in  the  lib
	   subdirectory	 and no	multilibs are used, this is usually just ., if
	   OS libraries	are present  in	 libsuffix  sibling  directories  this
	   prints  e.g.	 ../lib64,  ../lib or ../lib32,	or if OS libraries are
	   present in lib/subdir subdirectories	it prints e.g. amd64,  sparcv9
	   or ev6.

       -print-multiarch
	   Print the path to OS	libraries for the selected multiarch, relative
	   to some lib subdirectory.

       -print-prog-name=program
	   Like	-print-file-name, but searches for a program such as cpp.

       -print-libgcc-file-name
	   Same	as -print-file-name=libgcc.a.

	   This	 is useful when	you use	-nostdlib or -nodefaultlibs but	you do
	   want	to link	with libgcc.a.	You can	do:

		   gcc -nostdlib <files>... `gcc -print-libgcc-file-name`

       -print-search-dirs
	   Print the name of the configured installation directory and a  list
	   of  program	and  library  directories  gcc searches---and don't do
	   anything else.

	   This	is useful when	gcc  prints  the  error	 message  installation
	   problem,  cannot  exec cpp0:	No such	file or	directory.  To resolve
	   this	you either need	to put cpp0 and	the other compiler  components
	   where  gcc  expects	to  find  them,	or you can set the environment
	   variable GCC_EXEC_PREFIX to the directory where you installed them.
	   Don't forget	the trailing /.

       -print-sysroot
	   Print the target sysroot directory that is used during compilation.
	   This	is the target sysroot specified	either at  configure  time  or
	   using  the  --sysroot  option,  possibly  with an extra suffix that
	   depends on compilation options.  If no target sysroot is specified,
	   the option prints nothing.

       -print-sysroot-headers-suffix
	   Print the suffix added to the target	 sysroot  when	searching  for
	   headers,  or	 give  an error	if the compiler	is not configured with
	   such	a suffix---and don't do	anything else.

       -dumpmachine
	   Print    the	   compiler's	 target	   machine    (for    example,
	   i686-pc-linux-gnu)---and don't do anything else.

       -dumpversion
	   Print  the  compiler	 version  (for example,	3.0, 6.3.0 or 7)---and
	   don't do anything else.  This  is  the  compiler  version  used  in
	   filesystem  paths and specs.	Depending on how the compiler has been
	   configured it can be	just a	single	number	(major	version),  two
	   numbers  separated  by  a  dot  (major  and minor version) or three
	   numbers separated by	dots (major, minor and patchlevel version).

       -dumpfullversion
	   Print the full compiler version---and don't do anything  else.  The
	   output  is always three numbers separated by	dots, major, minor and
	   patchlevel version.

       -dumpspecs
	   Print the compiler's	built-in specs---and don't do  anything	 else.
	   (This is used when GCC itself is being built.)

   Machine-Dependent Options
       Each  target  machine  supported	 by GCC	can have its own options---for
       example,	to allow you to	compile	for a particular processor variant  or
       ABI,  or	 to  control  optimizations  specific  to  that	 machine.   By
       convention, the names of	machine-specific options start with -m.

       Some configurations of the compiler  also  support  additional  target-
       specific	options, usually for compatibility with	other compilers	on the
       same platform.

       AArch64 Options

       These options are defined for AArch64 implementations:

       -mabi=name
	   Generate code for the specified data	model.	Permissible values are
	   ilp32 for SysV-like data model where	int, long int and pointers are
	   32  bits,  and  lp64	for SysV-like data model where int is 32 bits,
	   but long int	and pointers are 64 bits.

	   The default depends on the  specific	 target	 configuration.	  Note
	   that	 the  LP64  and	 ILP32	ABIs are not link-compatible; you must
	   compile your	entire program with the	same  ABI,  and	 link  with  a
	   compatible set of libraries.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate  big-endian	 code.	 This  is  the	default	 when  GCC  is
	   configured for an aarch64_be-*-* target.

       -mgeneral-regs-only
	   Generate code which uses only the general-purpose registers.	  This
	   will	 prevent  the  compiler	from using floating-point and Advanced
	   SIMD	 registers  but	 will  not  impose  any	 restrictions  on  the
	   assembler.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate  little-endian  code.   This  is  the  default when	GCC is
	   configured for an aarch64-*-* but not an aarch64_be-*-* target.

       -mcmodel=tiny
	   Generate code for  the  tiny	 code  model.	The  program  and  its
	   statically  defined	symbols	 must  be  within  1MB	of each	other.
	   Programs can	be statically or dynamically linked.

       -mcmodel=small
	   Generate code for the  small	 code  model.	The  program  and  its
	   statically  defined	symbols	 must  be  within  4GB	of each	other.
	   Programs can	be statically or  dynamically  linked.	 This  is  the
	   default code	model.

       -mcmodel=large
	   Generate  code for the large	code model.  This makes	no assumptions
	   about addresses and sizes of	sections.  Programs can	be  statically
	   linked  only.   The	-mcmodel=large	option	is  incompatible  with
	   -mabi=ilp32,	-fpic and -fPIC.

       -mtp=name
	   Specify the system register to use as a thread pointer.  The	 valid
	   values are tpidr_el0, tpidrro_el0, tpidr_el1, tpidr_el2, tpidr_el3.
	   For backwards compatibility the aliases el0,	el1, el2, el3 are also
	   accepted.   The default setting is tpidr_el0.  It is	recommended to
	   compile all code intended to	interoperate with the  same  value  of
	   this	 option	to avoid accessing a different thread pointer from the
	   wrong exception level.

       -mstrict-align
       -mno-strict-align
	   Avoid or allow generating memory accesses that may not  be  aligned
	   on  a  natural  object  boundary  as	 described in the architecture
	   specification.

       -momit-leaf-frame-pointer
       -mno-omit-leaf-frame-pointer
	   Omit	or keep	the frame  pointer  in	leaf  functions.   The	former
	   behavior is the default.

       -mstack-protector-guard=guard
       -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
       -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset
	   Generate  stack  protection	code using canary at guard.  Supported
	   locations are global	for a global canary or sysreg for a canary  in
	   an appropriate system register.

	   With	 the latter choice the options -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   and -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset furthermore specify which
	   system register to use as base register for reading the canary, and
	   from	what offset from that  base  register.	There  is  no  default
	   register  or	 offset	 as  this is entirely for use within the Linux
	   kernel.

       -mtls-dialect=desc
	   Use TLS descriptors	as  the	 thread-local  storage	mechanism  for
	   dynamic accesses of TLS variables.  This is the default.

       -mtls-dialect=traditional
	   Use	traditional  TLS  as  the  thread-local	 storage mechanism for
	   dynamic accesses of TLS variables.

       -mtls-size=size
	   Specify bit size of immediate TLS offsets.  Valid  values  are  12,
	   24, 32, 48.	This option requires binutils 2.26 or newer.

       -mfix-cortex-a53-835769
       -mno-fix-cortex-a53-835769
	   Enable  or  disable	the  workaround	for the	ARM Cortex-A53 erratum
	   number 835769.  This	involves inserting a NOP  instruction  between
	   memory   instructions   and	 64-bit	  integer  multiply-accumulate
	   instructions.

       -mfix-cortex-a53-843419
       -mno-fix-cortex-a53-843419
	   Enable or disable the workaround for	 the  ARM  Cortex-A53  erratum
	   number  843419.   This  erratum workaround is made at link time and
	   this	will only pass the corresponding flag to the linker.

       -mlow-precision-recip-sqrt
       -mno-low-precision-recip-sqrt
	   Enable or disable the reciprocal square root	 approximation.	  This
	   option     only     has     an    effect    if    -ffast-math    or
	   -funsafe-math-optimizations is used as well.	 Enabling this reduces
	   precision of	reciprocal square root results to about	 16  bits  for
	   single precision and	to 32 bits for double precision.

       -mlow-precision-sqrt
       -mno-low-precision-sqrt
	   Enable  or disable the square root approximation.  This option only
	   has an effect if -ffast-math	or -funsafe-math-optimizations is used
	   as well.  Enabling this reduces precision of	square root results to
	   about 16 bits for single  precision	and  to	 32  bits  for	double
	   precision.  If enabled, it implies -mlow-precision-recip-sqrt.

       -mlow-precision-div
       -mno-low-precision-div
	   Enable or disable the division approximation.  This option only has
	   an  effect if -ffast-math or	-funsafe-math-optimizations is used as
	   well.  Enabling this	reduces	precision of division results to about
	   16 bits for single precision	and to 32 bits for double precision.

       -mtrack-speculation
       -mno-track-speculation
	   Enable  or  disable	generation  of	additional   code   to	 track
	   speculative	execution  through conditional branches.  The tracking
	   state can then be used by the  compiler  when  expanding  calls  to
	   "__builtin_speculation_safe_copy"  to  permit a more	efficient code
	   sequence to be generated.

       -moutline-atomics
       -mno-outline-atomics
	   Enable or disable calls to out-of-line helpers to implement	atomic
	   operations.	 These	helpers	will, at runtime, determine if the LSE
	   instructions	from ARMv8.1-A can be used; if not, they will use  the
	   load/store-exclusive	 instructions  that  are  present  in the base
	   ARMv8.0 ISA.

	   This	option is only applicable when compiling for the base  ARMv8.0
	   instruction	set.  If using a later revision, e.g. -march=armv8.1-a
	   or -march=armv8-a+lse, the  ARMv8.1-Atomics	instructions  will  be
	   used	 directly.   The  same	applies	 when  using  -mcpu=  when the
	   selected cpu	supports the  lse  feature.   This  option  is	on  by
	   default.

       -march=name
	   Specify the name of the target architecture and, optionally,	one or
	   more	   feature    modifiers.     This    option   has   the	  form
	   -march=arch{+[no]feature}*.

	   The table below summarizes the permissible values for arch and  the
	   features that they enable by	default:

	   arch	value :	Architecture : Includes	by default
	   armv8-a : Armv8-A : +fp, +simd
	   armv8.1-a : Armv8.1-A : armv8-a, +crc, +lse,	+rdma
	   armv8.2-a : Armv8.2-A : armv8.1-a
	   armv8.3-a : Armv8.3-A : armv8.2-a, +pauth
	   armv8.4-a : Armv8.4-A : armv8.3-a, +flagm, +fp16fml,	+dotprod
	   armv8.5-a : Armv8.5-A : armv8.4-a, +sb, +ssbs, +predres
	   armv8.6-a : Armv8.6-A : armv8.5-a, +bf16, +i8mm
	   armv8.7-a : Armv8.7-A : armv8.6-a, +ls64
	   armv8.8-a : Armv8.8-a : armv8.7-a, +mops
	   armv8.9-a : Armv8.9-a : armv8.8-a
	   armv9-a : Armv9-A : armv8.5-a, +sve,	+sve2
	   armv9.1-a : Armv9.1-A : armv9-a, +bf16, +i8mm
	   armv9.2-a : Armv9.2-A : armv9.1-a, +ls64
	   armv9.3-a : Armv9.3-A : armv9.2-a, +mops
	   armv9.4-a : Armv9.4-A : armv9.3-a
	   armv8-r : Armv8-R : armv8-r

	   The	value  native  is  available  on  native AArch64 GNU/Linux and
	   causes the compiler to pick the architecture	of  the	 host  system.
	   This	 option	 has  no effect	if the compiler	is unable to recognize
	   the architecture of the host	system,

	   The permissible values for feature are listed in the	sub-section on
	   aarch64-feature-modifiers,,-march  and  -mcpu  Feature   Modifiers.
	   Where  conflicting  feature modifiers are specified,	the right-most
	   feature is used.

	   GCC uses name to determine what kind	of instructions	 it  can  emit
	   when	 generating  assembly  code.   If  -march is specified without
	   either of -mtune or -mcpu also being	specified, the code  is	 tuned
	   to  perform	well  across a range of	target processors implementing
	   the target architecture.

       -mtune=name
	   Specify the name of the target processor for	which GCC should  tune
	   the	performance  of	 the code.  Permissible	values for this	option
	   are:	 generic,  cortex-a35,	cortex-a53,  cortex-a55,   cortex-a57,
	   cortex-a72,	 cortex-a73,   cortex-a75,  cortex-a76,	 cortex-a76ae,
	   cortex-a77,	cortex-a65,  cortex-a65ae,   cortex-a34,   cortex-a78,
	   cortex-a78ae,   cortex-a78c,	  ares,	  exynos-m1,   emag,   falkor,
	   neoverse-512tvb,	neoverse-e1,	 neoverse-n1,	  neoverse-n2,
	   neoverse-n3,	 neoverse-v1, neoverse-v2, neoverse-v3,	neoverse-v3ae,
	   grace,  qdf24xx,  saphira,  phecda,	 xgene1,   vulcan,   octeontx,
	   octeontx81,	  octeontx83,  octeontx2,  octeontx2t98,  octeontx2t96
	   octeontx2t93, octeontx2f95, octeontx2f95n,  octeontx2f95mm,	a64fx,
	   fujitsu-monaka,  thunderx, thunderxt88, thunderxt88p1, thunderxt81,
	   tsv110,    thunderxt83,    thunderx2t99,    thunderx3t110,	 zeus,
	   cortex-a57.cortex-a53,			cortex-a72.cortex-a53,
	   cortex-a73.cortex-a35,			cortex-a73.cortex-a53,
	   cortex-a75.cortex-a55,      cortex-a76.cortex-a55,	   cortex-r82,
	   cortex-x1,	 cortex-x1c,	cortex-x2,    cortex-x3,    cortex-x4,
	   cortex-x925,	 cortex-a510,  cortex-a520,  cortex-a710, cortex-a715,
	   cortex-a720,	cortex-a725, ampere1, ampere1a,	 ampere1b,  cobalt-100
	   and native.

	   The	   values     cortex-a57.cortex-a53,	cortex-a72.cortex-a53,
	   cortex-a73.cortex-a35,			cortex-a73.cortex-a53,
	   cortex-a75.cortex-a55,   cortex-a76.cortex-a55   specify  that  GCC
	   should tune for a big.LITTLE	system.

	   The value  neoverse-512tvb  specifies  that	GCC  should  tune  for
	   Neoverse  cores  that (a) implement SVE and (b) have	a total	vector
	   bandwidth of	512 bits per cycle.  In	other words, the option	 tells
	   GCC	to tune	for Neoverse cores that	can execute 4 128-bit Advanced
	   SIMD	arithmetic instructions	 a  cycle  and	that  can  execute  an
	   equivalent  number  of SVE arithmetic instructions per cycle	(2 for
	   256-bit SVE,	4 for 128-bit SVE).  This is more general than	tuning
	   for	a specific core	like Neoverse V1 but is	more specific than the
	   default tuning described below.

	   Additionally	on native AArch64 GNU/Linux systems the	 value	native
	   tunes performance to	the host system.  This option has no effect if
	   the	compiler  is  unable  to  recognize  the processor of the host
	   system.

	   Where none of -mtune=, -mcpu= or -march= are	specified, the code is
	   tuned to perform well across	a range	of target processors.

	   This	option cannot be suffixed by feature modifiers.

       -mcpu=name
	   Specify the name of the target processor,  optionally  suffixed  by
	   one	 or   more  feature  modifiers.	  This	option	has  the  form
	   -mcpu=cpu{+[no]feature}*, where the permissible values for cpu  are
	   the same as those available for -mtune.  The	permissible values for
	   feature     are     documented     in     the     sub-section    on
	   aarch64-feature-modifiers,,-march  and  -mcpu  Feature   Modifiers.
	   Where  conflicting  feature modifiers are specified,	the right-most
	   feature is used.

	   GCC uses name to determine what kind	of instructions	 it  can  emit
	   when	 generating  assembly  code (as	if by -march) and to determine
	   the target processor	for which to tune for performance  (as	if  by
	   -mtune).   Where  this option is used in conjunction	with -march or
	   -mtune, those options take precedence over the appropriate part  of
	   this	option.

	   -mcpu=neoverse-512tvb  is  special  in  that	it does	not refer to a
	   specific core, but instead refers to	all Neoverse  cores  that  (a)
	   implement  SVE  and (b) have	a total	vector bandwidth of 512	bits a
	   cycle.   Unless   overridden	  by   -march,	 -mcpu=neoverse-512tvb
	   generates  code  that can run on a Neoverse V1 core,	since Neoverse
	   V1 is the  first  Neoverse  core  with  these  properties.	Unless
	   overridden  by -mtune, -mcpu=neoverse-512tvb	tunes code in the same
	   way as for -mtune=neoverse-512tvb.

       -moverride=string
	   Override tuning decisions made by the back-end  in  response	 to  a
	   -mtune=  switch.   The  syntax,  semantics, and accepted values for
	   string in this option are not guaranteed to	be  consistent	across
	   releases.

	   This	option is only intended	to be useful when developing GCC.

       -mverbose-cost-dump
	   Enable  verbose  cost  model	dumping	in the debug dump files.  This
	   option is provided for use in debugging the compiler.

       -mpc-relative-literal-loads
       -mno-pc-relative-literal-loads
	   Enable or disable PC-relative  literal  loads.   With  this	option
	   literal  pools  are accessed	using a	single instruction and emitted
	   after each function.	 This limits the maximum size of functions  to
	   1MB.	 This is enabled by default for	-mcmodel=tiny.

       -msign-return-address=scope
	   Select  the	function scope on which	return address signing will be
	   applied.   Permissible  values  are	none,  which  disables	return
	   address  signing,  non-leaf,	 which	enables	 pointer  signing  for
	   functions which are not leaf	 functions,  and  all,	which  enables
	   pointer signing for all functions.  The default value is none. This
	   option has been deprecated by -mbranch-protection.

       -mbranch-protection=none|standard|pac-ret[+leaf+b-key]|bti
	   Select  the branch protection features to use.  none	is the default
	   and turns off all types of branch protection.   standard  turns  on
	   all	types  of  branch  protection  features.   If  a  feature  has
	   additional tuning options, then standard sets it  to	 its  standard
	   level.   pac-ret[+leaf]  turns  on  return  address	signing	to its
	   standard level: signing functions that save the return  address  to
	   memory  (non-leaf  functions	will practically always	do this) using
	   the a-key.  The optional argument leaf can be used  to  extend  the
	   signing to include leaf functions.  The optional argument b-key can
	   be  used to sign the	functions with the B-key instead of the	A-key.
	   bti turns on	branch target identification mechanism.

       -mharden-sls=opts
	   Enable compiler hardening against straight line speculation	(SLS).
	   opts	is a comma-separated list of the following options:

	   retbr
	   blr

	   In  addition,  -mharden-sls=all  enables  all  SLS  hardening while
	   -mharden-sls=none disables all SLS hardening.

       -mearly-ra=scope
	   Determine when to enable an early register allocation  pass.	  This
	   pass	 runs before instruction scheduling and	tries to find a	spill-
	   free	allocation of floating-point and vector	code.  It  also	 tries
	   to  make use	of strided multi-register instructions,	such as	SME2's
	   strided LD1 and ST1.

	   The possible	values of scope	are: all, which	runs the pass  on  all
	   functions;  strided,	 which	runs  the  pass	on functions that have
	   access to strided  multi-register  instructions;  and  none,	 which
	   disables the	pass.

	   -mearly-ra=all  is  the  default  for  -O2  and above, and for -Os.
	   -mearly-ra=none is the default otherwise.

       -mearly-ldp-fusion
	   Enable the copy of the AArch64 load/store  pair  fusion  pass  that
	   runs	 before	 register  allocation.	 Enabled  by default at	-O and
	   above.

       -mlate-ldp-fusion
	   Enable the copy of the AArch64 load/store  pair  fusion  pass  that
	   runs	 after	register  allocation.	Enabled	 by  default at	-O and
	   above.

       -msve-vector-bits=bits
	   Specify the number of bits in an SVE	vector register.  This	option
	   only	has an effect when SVE is enabled.

	   GCC	supports  two  forms  of  SVE  code generation:	"vector-length
	   agnostic" output that works with any	size of	 vector	 register  and
	   "vector-length specific" output that	allows GCC to make assumptions
	   about the vector length when	it is useful for optimization reasons.
	   The	possible values	of bits	are: scalable, 128, 256, 512, 1024 and
	   2048.  Specifying scalable selects vector-length  agnostic  output.
	   At	present	 -msve-vector-bits=128	also  generates	 vector-length
	   agnostic output for big-endian targets.  All	other values  generate
	   vector-length  specific  code.   The	 behavior  of these values may
	   change in future releases and no value except  scalable  should  be
	   relied  on  for  producing  code  that is portable across different
	   hardware SVE	vector lengths.

	   The default is -msve-vector-bits=scalable, which  produces  vector-
	   length agnostic code.

       -march and -mcpu	Feature	Modifiers

       Feature	modifiers  used	 with  -march  and  -mcpu  can	be  any	of the
       following and their inverses nofeature:

       crc Enable CRC extension.  This is on by	default	for -march=armv8.1-a.

       crypto
	   Enable Crypto extension.   This  also  enables  Advanced  SIMD  and
	   floating-point instructions.

       fp  Enable  floating-point instructions.	 This is on by default for all
	   possible values for options -march and -mcpu.

       simd
	   Enable Advanced SIMD	instructions.	This  also  enables  floating-
	   point  instructions.	 This is on by default for all possible	values
	   for options -march and -mcpu.

       sve Enable Scalable Vector Extension instructions.  This	 also  enables
	   Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

       lse Enable  Large System	Extension instructions.	 This is on by default
	   for -march=armv8.1-a.

       rdma
	   Enable Round	Double Multiply	Accumulate instructions.  This	is  on
	   by default for -march=armv8.1-a.

       fp16
	   Enable   FP16   extension.	 This	also   enables	floating-point
	   instructions.

       fp16fml
	   Enable FP16 fmla extension.	This also enables FP16 extensions  and
	   floating-point  instructions. This option is	enabled	by default for
	   -march=armv8.4-a. Use of this option	with  architectures  prior  to
	   Armv8.2-A is	not supported.

       rcpc
	   Enable  the	RCpc  extension.   This	 enables  the use of the LDAPR
	   instructions	for load-acquire atomic	semantics, and passes it on to
	   the assembler, enabling inline asm statements to  use  instructions
	   from	the RCpc extension.

       dotprod
	   Enable  the Dot Product extension.  This also enables Advanced SIMD
	   instructions.

       aes Enable the Armv8-a aes  and	pmull  crypto  extension.   This  also
	   enables Advanced SIMD instructions.

       sha2
	   Enable  the	Armv8-a	 sha2  crypto  extension.   This  also enables
	   Advanced SIMD instructions.

       sha3
	   Enable the sha512 and sha3 crypto  extension.   This	 also  enables
	   Advanced  SIMD  instructions. Use of	this option with architectures
	   prior to Armv8.2-A is not supported.

       sm4 Enable the  sm3  and	 sm4  crypto  extension.   This	 also  enables
	   Advanced  SIMD instructions.	 Use of	this option with architectures
	   prior to Armv8.2-A is not supported.

       profile
	   Enable the Statistical Profiling extension.	This option is only to
	   enable the extension	at the assembler level	and  does  not	affect
	   code	generation.

       rng Enable  the	Armv8.5-a  Random Number instructions.	This option is
	   only	to enable the extension	at the assembler level	and  does  not
	   affect code generation.

       memtag
	   Enable the Armv8.5-a	Memory Tagging Extensions.  Use	of this	option
	   with	architectures prior to Armv8.5-A is not	supported.

       sb  Enable the Armv8-a Speculation Barrier instruction.	This option is
	   only	 to  enable  the extension at the assembler level and does not
	   affect code generation.  This option	 is  enabled  by  default  for
	   -march=armv8.5-a.

       ssbs
	   Enable the Armv8-a Speculative Store	Bypass Safe instruction.  This
	   option  is  only to enable the extension at the assembler level and
	   does	not affect code	generation.  This option is enabled by default
	   for -march=armv8.5-a.

       predres
	   Enable  the	Armv8-a	 Execution  and	 Data  Prediction  Restriction
	   instructions.   This	 option	is only	to enable the extension	at the
	   assembler level and does not	affect code generation.	  This	option
	   is enabled by default for -march=armv8.5-a.

       sve2
	   Enable  the Armv8-a Scalable	Vector Extension 2.  This also enables
	   SVE instructions.

       sve2-bitperm
	   Enable  SVE2	 bitperm  instructions.	  This	 also	enables	  SVE2
	   instructions.

       sve2-sm4
	   Enable SVE2 sm4 instructions.  This also enables SVE2 instructions.

       sve2-aes
	   Enable SVE2 aes instructions.  This also enables SVE2 instructions.

       sve2-sha3
	   Enable   SVE2   sha3	  instructions.	   This	  also	 enables  SVE2
	   instructions.

       tme Enable the Transactional Memory Extension.

       i8mm
	   Enable 8-bit	 Integer  Matrix  Multiply  instructions.   This  also
	   enables Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.  This	option
	   is  enabled	by  default  for -march=armv8.6-a.  Use	of this	option
	   with	architectures prior to Armv8.2-A is not	supported.

       f32mm
	   Enable 32-bit Floating point	Matrix	Multiply  instructions.	  This
	   also	  enables   SVE	  instructions.	   Use	of  this  option  with
	   architectures prior to Armv8.2-A is not supported.

       f64mm
	   Enable 64-bit Floating point	Matrix	Multiply  instructions.	  This
	   also	  enables   SVE	  instructions.	   Use	of  this  option  with
	   architectures prior to Armv8.2-A is not supported.

       bf16
	   Enable brain	half-precision floating-point instructions.  This also
	   enables Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.  This	option
	   is enabled by default for -march=armv8.6-a.	 Use  of  this	option
	   with	architectures prior to Armv8.2-A is not	supported.

       ls64
	   Enable   the	  64-byte  atomic  load	 and  store  instructions  for
	   accelerators.    This   option   is	 enabled   by	default	   for
	   -march=armv8.7-a.

       mops
	   Enable  the	instructions  to  accelerate  memory  operations  like
	   "memcpy", "memmove",	"memset".  This	option is enabled  by  default
	   for -march=armv8.8-a

       flagm
	   Enable the Flag Manipulation	instructions Extension.

       pauth
	   Enable the Pointer Authentication Extension.

       cssc
	   Enable the Common Short Sequence Compression	instructions.

       sme Enable the Scalable Matrix Extension.

       sme-i16i64
	   Enable the FEAT_SME_I16I64 extension	to SME.

       sme-f64f64
	   Enable  the	FEAT_SME_F64F64	 extension to SME.  +@item sme2	Enable
	   the	Scalable  Matrix  Extension  2.	   This	  also	 enables   SME
	   instructions.

       lse128
	   Enable the LSE128 128-bit atomic instructions extension.  This also
	   enables LSE instructions.

       d128
	   Enable support for 128-bit system register read/write instructions.
	   This	also enables the LSE128	extension.

       gcs Enable support for Armv9.4-a	Guarded	Control	Stack extension.

       the Enable support for Armv8.9-a/9.4-a translation hardening extension.

       rcpc3
	   Enable the RCpc3 (Release Consistency) extension.

       Feature	 crypto	 implies  aes,	sha2,  and  simd,  which  implies  fp.
       Conversely, nofp	implies	nosimd,	 which	implies	 nocrypto,  noaes  and
       nosha2.

       Adapteva	Epiphany Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	Adapteva Epiphany:

       -mhalf-reg-file
	   Don't  allocate  any	 register  in  the  range "r32"..."r63".  That
	   allows code to run on hardware variants that	lack these registers.

       -mprefer-short-insn-regs
	   Preferentially allocate  registers  that  allow  short  instruction
	   generation.	 This  can  result  in increased instruction count, so
	   this	may either reduce or increase overall code size.

       -mbranch-cost=num
	   Set the cost	of branches  to	 roughly  num  "simple"	 instructions.
	   This	 cost  is  only	 a  heuristic and is not guaranteed to produce
	   consistent results across releases.

       -mcmove
	   Enable the generation of conditional	moves.

       -mnops=num
	   Emit	num NOPs before	every other generated instruction.

       -mno-soft-cmpsf
	   For single-precision	floating-point	comparisons,  emit  an	"fsub"
	   instruction	and  test  the	flags.	This is	faster than a software
	   comparison, but can get incorrect results in	the presence of	 NaNs,
	   or  when  two  different small numbers are compared such that their
	   difference is calculated as zero.   The  default  is	 -msoft-cmpsf,
	   which uses slower, but IEEE-compliant, software comparisons.

       -mstack-offset=num
	   Set	the offset between the top of the stack	and the	stack pointer.
	   E.g., a value of  8	means  that  the  eight	 bytes	in  the	 range
	   "sp+0...sp+7"   can	 be  used  by  leaf  functions	without	 stack
	   allocation.	Values other than 8 or 16 are untested and unlikely to
	   work.  Note also that this option  changes  the  ABI;  compiling  a
	   program  with a different stack offset than the libraries have been
	   compiled with generally does	not work.  This	option can  be	useful
	   if  you want	to evaluate if a different stack offset	would give you
	   better code,	but to actually	use a different	stack offset to	 build
	   working programs, it	is recommended to configure the	toolchain with
	   the appropriate --with-stack-offset=num option.

       -mno-round-nearest
	   Make	 the  scheduler	 assume	that the rounding mode has been	set to
	   truncating.	The default is -mround-nearest.

       -mlong-calls
	   If not otherwise specified by an attribute, assume all calls	 might
	   be  beyond  the  offset  range  of the "b" /	"bl" instructions, and
	   therefore  load  the	 function  address  into  a  register	before
	   performing a	(otherwise direct) call.  This is the default.

       -mshort-calls
	   If not otherwise specified by an attribute, assume all direct calls
	   are	in  the	 range	of  the	 "b" / "bl" instructions, so use these
	   instructions	for direct calls.  The default is -mlong-calls.

       -msmall16
	   Assume addresses can	be loaded as  16-bit  unsigned	values.	  This
	   does	 not  apply  to	 function  addresses  for  which  -mlong-calls
	   semantics are in effect.

       -mfp-mode=mode
	   Set	the  prevailing	 mode  of  the	floating-point	 unit.	  This
	   determines the floating-point mode that is provided and expected at
	   function call and return time.  Making this mode match the mode you
	   predominantly need at function start	can make your programs smaller
	   and faster by avoiding unnecessary mode switches.

	   mode	can be set to one the following	values:

	   caller
	       Any  mode  at function entry is valid, and retained or restored
	       when the	function returns, and when it calls  other  functions.
	       This   mode   is	  useful  for  compiling  libraries  or	 other
	       compilation units you might want	to incorporate into  different
	       programs	  with	 different   prevailing	 FPU  modes,  and  the
	       convenience of being able to use	a single object	file outweighs
	       the size	and speed overhead for any extra mode  switching  that
	       might be	needed,	compared with what would be needed with	a more
	       specific	choice of prevailing FPU mode.

	   truncate
	       This  is	 the  mode  used  for floating-point calculations with
	       truncating (i.e.	 round	towards	 zero)	rounding  mode.	  That
	       includes	conversion from	floating point to integer.

	   round-nearest
	       This  is	 the  mode  used  for floating-point calculations with
	       round-to-nearest-or-even	rounding mode.

	   int This is the mode	used to	perform	integer	 calculations  in  the
	       FPU,   e.g.    integer	multiply,   or	integer	 multiply-and-
	       accumulate.

	   The default is -mfp-mode=caller

       -mno-split-lohi
       -mno-postinc
       -mno-postmodify
	   Code	generation tweaks that	disable,  respectively,	 splitting  of
	   32-bit   loads,   generation	  of   post-increment  addresses,  and
	   generation of post-modify addresses.	 The defaults are msplit-lohi,
	   -mpost-inc, and -mpost-modify.

       -mnovect-double
	   Change  the	preferred  SIMD	 mode  to  SImode.   The  default   is
	   -mvect-double, which	uses DImode as preferred SIMD mode.

       -max-vect-align=num
	   The	maximum	alignment for SIMD vector mode types.  num may be 4 or
	   8.  The default is 8.  Note that this is an ABI change, even	though
	   many	library	function interfaces are	unaffected if they  don't  use
	   SIMD	 vector	 modes	in places that affect size and/or alignment of
	   relevant types.

       -msplit-vecmove-early
	   Split vector	moves into single word moves before reload.  In	theory
	   this	can give better	register allocation, but so  far  the  reverse
	   seems to be generally the case.

       -m1reg-reg
	   Specify  a  register	 to  hold the constant -1, which makes loading
	   small negative constants and	certain	 bitmasks  faster.   Allowable
	   values  for reg are r43 and r63, which specify use of that register
	   as a	fixed register,	and none, which	means that no register is used
	   for this purpose.  The default is -m1reg-none.

       AMD GCN Options

       These options are defined specifically for the AMD GCN port.

       -march=gpu
       -mtune=gpu
	   Set architecture type or tuning for gpu. Supported values  for  gpu
	   are

	   fiji
	       Compile	for  GCN3  Fiji	devices	(gfx803).  Support deprecated;
	       availablility depends on	 how  GCC  has	been  configured,  see
	       --with-arch and --with-multilib-list.

	   gfx900
	       Compile for GCN5	Vega 10	devices	(gfx900).

	   gfx906
	       Compile for GCN5	Vega 20	devices	(gfx906).

	   gfx908
	       Compile for CDNA1 Instinct MI100	series devices (gfx908).

	   gfx90a
	       Compile for CDNA2 Instinct MI200	series devices (gfx90a).

	   gfx90c
	       Compile for GCN5	Vega 7 devices (gfx90c).

	   gfx1030
	       Compile for RDNA2 gfx1030 devices (GFX10	series).

	   gfx1036
	       Compile for RDNA2 gfx1036 devices (GFX10	series).

	   gfx1100
	       Compile for RDNA3 gfx1100 devices (GFX11	series).

	   gfx1103
	       Compile for RDNA3 gfx1103 devices (GFX11	series).

       -msram-ecc=on
       -msram-ecc=off
       -msram-ecc=any
	   Compile  binaries  suitable	for  devices with the SRAM-ECC feature
	   enabled, disabled, or either	mode.  This  feature  can  be  enabled
	   per-process	on  some  devices.   The  compiled code	must match the
	   device mode.	The default is any, for	devices	that support it.

       -mstack-size=bytes
	   Specify how many bytes of stack space will be  requested  for  each
	   GPU thread (wave-front).  Beware that there may be many threads and
	   limited  memory  available.	 The  size of the stack	allocation may
	   also	have an	impact on run-time performance.	 The default  is  32KB
	   when	using OpenACC or OpenMP, and 1MB otherwise.

       -mxnack=on
       -mxnack=off
       -mxnack=any
	   Compile  binaries  suitable	for  devices  with  the	 XNACK feature
	   enabled, disabled, or either	mode.	Some  devices  always  require
	   XNACK  and  some  allow  the	user to	configure XNACK.  The compiled
	   code	must match the device mode.  The  default  is  -mxnack=any  on
	   devices   that   support  Unified  Shared  Memory,  and  -mxnack=no
	   otherwise.

       ARC Options

       The following options control the architecture variant for  which  code
       is being	compiled:

       -mbarrel-shifter
	   Generate  instructions  supported  by  barrel shifter.  This	is the
	   default unless -mcpu=ARC601 or -mcpu=ARCEM is in effect.

       -mjli-always
	   Force to call a function using jli_s	instruction.  This  option  is
	   valid only for ARCv2	architecture.

       -mcpu=cpu
	   Set	architecture  type, register usage, and	instruction scheduling
	   parameters  for  cpu.   There  are  also  shortcut  alias   options
	   available  for  backward  compatibility and convenience.  Supported
	   values for cpu are

	   arc600
	       Compile for ARC600.  Aliases: -mA6, -mARC600.

	   arc601
	       Compile for ARC601.  Alias: -mARC601.

	   arc700
	       Compile for ARC700.  Aliases:  -mA7,  -mARC700.	 This  is  the
	       default when configured with --with-cpu=arc700.

	   arcem
	       Compile for ARC EM.

	   archs
	       Compile for ARC HS.

	   em  Compile for ARC EM CPU with no hardware extensions.

	   em4 Compile for ARC EM4 CPU.

	   em4_dmips
	       Compile for ARC EM4 DMIPS CPU.

	   em4_fpus
	       Compile	for  ARC  EM4  DMIPS  CPU  with	 the  single-precision
	       floating-point extension.

	   em4_fpuda
	       Compile for ARC EM4 DMIPS CPU with  single-precision  floating-
	       point and double	assist instructions.

	   hs  Compile	for  ARC HS CPU	with no	hardware extensions except the
	       atomic instructions.

	   hs34
	       Compile for ARC HS34 CPU.

	   hs38
	       Compile for ARC HS38 CPU.

	   hs38_linux
	       Compile for ARC HS38 CPU	with all hardware extensions on.

	   hs4x
	       Compile for ARC HS4x CPU.

	   hs4xd
	       Compile for ARC HS4xD CPU.

	   hs4x_rel31
	       Compile for ARC HS4x CPU	release	3.10a.

	   arc600_norm
	       Compile for ARC 600 CPU with "norm" instructions	enabled.

	   arc600_mul32x16
	       Compile for ARC 600 CPU	with  "norm"  and  32x16-bit  multiply
	       instructions enabled.

	   arc600_mul64
	       Compile	 for  ARC  600	CPU  with  "norm"  and	"mul64"-family
	       instructions enabled.

	   arc601_norm
	       Compile for ARC 601 CPU with "norm" instructions	enabled.

	   arc601_mul32x16
	       Compile for ARC 601 CPU	with  "norm"  and  32x16-bit  multiply
	       instructions enabled.

	   arc601_mul64
	       Compile	 for  ARC  601	CPU  with  "norm"  and	"mul64"-family
	       instructions enabled.

	   nps400
	       Compile for ARC 700 on NPS400 chip.

	   em_mini
	       Compile for ARC EM minimalist configuration  featuring  reduced
	       register	set.

       -mdpfp
       -mdpfp-compact
	   Generate  double-precision  FPX instructions, tuned for the compact
	   implementation.

       -mdpfp-fast
	   Generate double-precision FPX  instructions,	 tuned	for  the  fast
	   implementation.

       -mno-dpfp-lrsr
	   Disable  "lr"  and  "sr"  instructions from using FPX extension aux
	   registers.

       -mea
	   Generate extended arithmetic	instructions.  Currently only "divaw",
	   "adds",  "subs",  and  "sat16"  are	supported.   Only  valid   for
	   -mcpu=ARC700.

       -mno-mpy
	   Do  not generate "mpy"-family instructions for ARC700.  This	option
	   is deprecated.

       -mmul32x16
	   Generate 32x16-bit multiply and multiply-accumulate instructions.

       -mmul64
	   Generate  "mul64"  and  "mulu64"  instructions.   Only  valid   for
	   -mcpu=ARC600.

       -mnorm
	   Generate  "norm" instructions.  This	is the default if -mcpu=ARC700
	   is in effect.

       -mspfp
       -mspfp-compact
	   Generate single-precision FPX instructions, tuned for  the  compact
	   implementation.

       -mspfp-fast
	   Generate  single-precision  FPX  instructions,  tuned  for the fast
	   implementation.

       -msimd
	   Enable generation of	 ARC  SIMD  instructions  via  target-specific
	   builtins.  Only valid for -mcpu=ARC700.

       -msoft-float
	   This	 option	 ignored;  it  is  provided for	compatibility purposes
	   only.  Software floating-point code is emitted by default, and this
	   default can overridden by FPX options; -mspfp,  -mspfp-compact,  or
	   -mspfp-fast	for  single  precision,	and -mdpfp, -mdpfp-compact, or
	   -mdpfp-fast for double precision.

       -mswap
	   Generate "swap" instructions.

       -matomic
	   This	enables	use of the locked load/store conditional extension  to
	   implement  atomic memory built-in functions.	 Not available for ARC
	   6xx or ARC EM cores.

       -mdiv-rem
	   Enable "div"	and "rem" instructions for ARCv2 cores.

       -mcode-density
	   Enable code density instructions for	ARC EM.	 This option is	on  by
	   default for ARC HS.

       -mll64
	   Enable double load/store operations for ARC HS cores.

       -mtp-regno=regno
	   Specify thread pointer register number.

       -mmpy-option=multo
	   Compile  ARCv2  code	 with  a  multiplier  design  option.  You can
	   specify the option using either  a  string  or  numeric  value  for
	   multo.  wlh1	is the default value.  The recognized values are:

	   0
	   none
	       No multiplier available.

	   1
	   w   16x16  multiplier, fully	pipelined.  The	following instructions
	       are enabled: "mpyw" and "mpyuw".

	   2
	   wlh1
	       32x32 multiplier, fully pipelined  (1  stage).	The  following
	       instructions  are  additionally enabled:	"mpy", "mpyu", "mpym",
	       "mpymu",	and "mpy_s".

	   3
	   wlh2
	       32x32 multiplier, fully pipelined (2  stages).	The  following
	       instructions  are  additionally enabled:	"mpy", "mpyu", "mpym",
	       "mpymu",	and "mpy_s".

	   4
	   wlh3
	       Two 16x16 multipliers,  blocking,  sequential.	The  following
	       instructions  are  additionally enabled:	"mpy", "mpyu", "mpym",
	       "mpymu",	and "mpy_s".

	   5
	   wlh4
	       One 16x16  multiplier,  blocking,  sequential.	The  following
	       instructions  are  additionally enabled:	"mpy", "mpyu", "mpym",
	       "mpymu",	and "mpy_s".

	   6
	   wlh5
	       One  32x4  multiplier,  blocking,  sequential.	The  following
	       instructions  are  additionally enabled:	"mpy", "mpyu", "mpym",
	       "mpymu",	and "mpy_s".

	   7
	   plus_dmpy
	       ARC HS SIMD support.

	   8
	   plus_macd
	       ARC HS SIMD support.

	   9
	   plus_qmacw
	       ARC HS SIMD support.

	   This	option is only available for ARCv2 cores.

       -mfpu=fpu
	   Enables support for specific	floating-point hardware	extensions for
	   ARCv2 cores.	 Supported values for fpu are:

	   fpus
	       Enables support for  single-precision  floating-point  hardware
	       extensions.

	   fpud
	       Enables	support	 for  double-precision floating-point hardware
	       extensions.  The	single-precision floating-point	 extension  is
	       also enabled.  Not available for	ARC EM.

	   fpuda
	       Enables	support	 for  double-precision floating-point hardware
	       extensions using	 double-precision  assist  instructions.   The
	       single-precision	 floating-point	 extension  is	also  enabled.
	       This option is only available for ARC EM.

	   fpuda_div
	       Enables support for  double-precision  floating-point  hardware
	       extensions  using  double-precision  assist  instructions.  The
	       single-precision	 floating-point,   square-root,	  and	divide
	       extensions are also enabled.  This option is only available for
	       ARC EM.

	   fpuda_fma
	       Enables	support	 for  double-precision floating-point hardware
	       extensions using	 double-precision  assist  instructions.   The
	       single-precision	 floating-point	 and  fused  multiply  and add
	       hardware	extensions are also  enabled.	This  option  is  only
	       available for ARC EM.

	   fpuda_all
	       Enables	support	 for  double-precision floating-point hardware
	       extensions using	 double-precision  assist  instructions.   All
	       single-precision	 floating-point	 hardware  extensions are also
	       enabled.	 This option is	only available for ARC EM.

	   fpus_div
	       Enables support for  single-precision  floating-point,  square-
	       root and	divide hardware	extensions.

	   fpud_div
	       Enables	support	 for  double-precision floating-point, square-
	       root and	divide	hardware  extensions.	This  option  includes
	       option fpus_div.	Not available for ARC EM.

	   fpus_fma
	       Enables	support	 for single-precision floating-point and fused
	       multiply	and add	hardware extensions.

	   fpud_fma
	       Enables support for double-precision floating-point  and	 fused
	       multiply	 and  add  hardware  extensions.  This option includes
	       option fpus_fma.	 Not available for ARC EM.

	   fpus_all
	       Enables	support	 for   all   single-precision	floating-point
	       hardware	extensions.

	   fpud_all
	       Enables	support	for all	single-	and double-precision floating-
	       point hardware extensions.  Not available for ARC EM.

       -mirq-ctrl-saved=register-range,	blink, lp_count
	   Specifies   general-purposes	  registers   that    the    processor
	   automatically   saves/restores   on	 interrupt   entry  and	 exit.
	   register-range is specified as two registers	separated by  a	 dash.
	   The register	range always starts with "r0", the upper limit is "fp"
	   register.   blink  and  lp_count are	optional.  This	option is only
	   valid for ARC EM and	ARC HS cores.

       -mrgf-banked-regs=number
	   Specifies the number	of registers  replicated  in  second  register
	   bank	 on  entry  to fast interrupt.	Fast interrupts	are interrupts
	   with	the highest priority level P0.	These interrupts save only  PC
	   and	 STATUS32   registers  to  avoid  memory  transactions	during
	   interrupt entry and exit sequences.	Use this option	when  you  are
	   using  fast	interrupts  in	an ARC V2 family processor.  Permitted
	   values are 4, 8, 16,	and 32.

       -mlpc-width=width
	   Specify the width of	the "lp_count"	register.   Valid  values  for
	   width  are  8,  16,	20,  24, 28 and	32 bits.  The default width is
	   fixed to 32 bits.  If the width is less than	32, the	compiler  does
	   not	attempt	 to  transform	loops in your program to use the zero-
	   delay loop  mechanism  unless  it  is  known	 that  the  "lp_count"
	   register  can  hold	the required loop-counter value.  Depending on
	   the width  specified,  the  compiler	 and  run-time	library	 might
	   continue  to	use the	loop mechanism for various needs.  This	option
	   defines macro "__ARC_LPC_WIDTH__" with the value of width.

       -mrf16
	   This	option instructs the compiler to generate code for a  16-entry
	   register file.  This	option defines the "__ARC_RF16__" preprocessor
	   macro.

       -mbranch-index
	   Enable use of "bi" or "bih" instructions to implement jump tables.

       The  following  options	are  passed through to the assembler, and also
       define preprocessor macro symbols.

       -mdsp-packa
	   Passed down to the assembler	to enable the DSP Pack	A  extensions.
	   Also	 sets  the preprocessor	symbol "__Xdsp_packa".	This option is
	   deprecated.

       -mdvbf
	   Passed down to the assembler	to enable the dual  Viterbi  butterfly
	   extension.	Also  sets  the	 preprocessor  symbol "__Xdvbf".  This
	   option is deprecated.

       -mlock
	   Passed down to  the	assembler  to  enable  the  locked  load/store
	   conditional	 extension.    Also   sets   the  preprocessor	symbol
	   "__Xlock".

       -mmac-d16
	   Passed down to the assembler.  Also sets  the  preprocessor	symbol
	   "__Xxmac_d16".  This	option is deprecated.

       -mmac-24
	   Passed  down	 to  the assembler.  Also sets the preprocessor	symbol
	   "__Xxmac_24".  This option is deprecated.

       -mrtsc
	   Passed down to  the	assembler  to  enable  the  64-bit  time-stamp
	   counter  extension  instruction.  Also sets the preprocessor	symbol
	   "__Xrtsc".  This option is deprecated.

       -mswape
	   Passed down to the assembler	 to  enable  the  swap	byte  ordering
	   extension   instruction.    Also   sets   the  preprocessor	symbol
	   "__Xswape".

       -mtelephony
	   Passed down to the assembler	to  enable  dual-  and	single-operand
	   instructions	 for  telephony.   Also	 sets  the preprocessor	symbol
	   "__Xtelephony".  This option	is deprecated.

       -mxy
	   Passed down to the assembler	to enable  the	XY  memory  extension.
	   Also	sets the preprocessor symbol "__Xxy".

       The following options control how the assembly code is annotated:

       -misize
	   Annotate assembler instructions with	estimated addresses.

       -mannotate-align
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       The following options are passed	through	to the linker:

       -marclinux
	   Passed  through  to	the  linker,  to specify use of	the "arclinux"
	   emulation.  This option is enabled by default in tool chains	 built
	   for	 "arc-linux-uclibc"   and  "arceb-linux-uclibc"	 targets  when
	   profiling is	not requested.

       -marclinux_prof
	   Passed through to the linker, to specify use	of the "arclinux_prof"
	   emulation.  This option is enabled by default in tool chains	 built
	   for	 "arc-linux-uclibc"   and  "arceb-linux-uclibc"	 targets  when
	   profiling is	requested.

       The following options control the semantics of generated	code:

       -mlong-calls
	   Generate calls as register indirect calls, thus providing access to
	   the full 32-bit address range.

       -mmedium-calls
	   Don't use less than 25-bit addressing range for calls, which	is the
	   offset available for	an unconditional branch-and-link  instruction.
	   Conditional execution of function calls is suppressed, to allow use
	   of  the 25-bit range, rather	than the 21-bit	range with conditional
	   branch-and-link.  This is the default for  tool  chains  built  for
	   "arc-linux-uclibc" and "arceb-linux-uclibc" targets.

       -G num
	   Put	definitions of externally-visible data in a small data section
	   if that data	is no bigger than num bytes.  The default value	of num
	   is 4	for any	ARC configuration, or 8	when we	have double load/store
	   operations.

       -mno-sdata
	   Do not generate sdata references.  This is  the  default  for  tool
	   chains   built   for	 "arc-linux-uclibc"  and  "arceb-linux-uclibc"
	   targets.

       -mvolatile-cache
	   Use ordinarily cached  memory  accesses  for	 volatile  references.
	   This	is the default.

       -mno-volatile-cache
	   Enable cache	bypass for volatile references.

       The following options fine tune code generation:

       -malign-call
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       -mauto-modify-reg
	   Enable the use of pre/post modify with register displacement.

       -mbbit-peephole
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       -mno-brcc
	   This	 option	 disables  a  target-specific  pass  in	 arc_reorg  to
	   generate  compare-and-branch	 ("brcc")  instructions.   It  has  no
	   effect  on  generation of these instructions	driven by the combiner
	   pass.

       -mcase-vector-pcrel
	   Use PC-relative switch case tables to enable	case table shortening.
	   This	is the default for -Os.

       -mcompact-casesi
	   Enable compact "casesi" pattern.  This is the default for -Os,  and
	   only	available for ARCv1 cores.  This option	is deprecated.

       -mno-cond-exec
	   Disable   the   ARCompact-specific  pass  to	 generate  conditional
	   execution instructions.

	   Due to delay	 slot  scheduling  and	interactions  between  operand
	   numbers,  literal  sizes,  instruction lengths, and the support for
	   conditional execution,  the	target-independent  pass  to  generate
	   conditional	execution is often lacking, so the ARC port has	kept a
	   special pass	around that tries to find more	conditional  execution
	   generation	opportunities	after	register   allocation,	branch
	   shortening, and delay slot scheduling have been  done.   This  pass
	   generally,  but  not	always,	improves performance and code size, at
	   the cost of extra compilation time, which is	why there is an	option
	   to switch it	off.  If you have a  problem  with  call  instructions
	   exceeding   their   allowable   offset   range   because  they  are
	   conditionalized, you	should consider	using -mmedium-calls instead.

       -mearly-cbranchsi
	   Enable pre-reload use of the	"cbranchsi" pattern.

       -mexpand-adddi
	   Expand "adddi3" and "subdi3"	at RTL generation time	into  "add.f",
	   "adc" etc.  This option is deprecated.

       -mindexed-loads
	   Enable  the	use of indexed loads.  This can	be problematic because
	   some	optimizers then	assume that indexed stores exist, which	is not
	   the case.

       -mlra
	   Enable Local	Register Allocation.  This is still  experimental  for
	   ARC,	 so  by	 default  the  compiler	 uses  standard	 reload	 (i.e.
	   -mno-lra).

       -mlra-priority-none
	   Don't indicate any priority for target registers.

       -mlra-priority-compact
	   Indicate target register priority for r0..r3	/ r12..r15.

       -mlra-priority-noncompact
	   Reduce target register priority for r0..r3 /	r12..r15.

       -mmillicode
	   When	optimizing for size (using -Os), prologues and epilogues  that
	   have	 to  save  or  restore	a  large number	of registers are often
	   shortened by	using call to a	special	function in  libgcc;  this  is
	   referred  to	 as  a	millicode  call.   As  these  calls  can  pose
	   performance issues, and/or cause linking issues when	linking	 in  a
	   nonstandard	way,  this  option  is	provided  to  turn  on	or off
	   millicode call generation.

       -mcode-density-frame
	   This	option	enable	the  compiler  to  emit	 "enter"  and  "leave"
	   instructions.   These  instructions	are  only  valid for CPUs with
	   code-density	feature.

       -mmixed-code
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       -mq-class
	   Ths option is deprecated.  Enable q instruction alternatives.  This
	   is the default for -Os.

       -mRcq
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       -mRcw
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       -msize-level=level
	   Fine-tune size optimization with regards to instruction lengths and
	   alignment.  The recognized values for level are:

	   0   No size optimization.  This level  is  deprecated  and  treated
	       like 1.

	   1   Short instructions are used opportunistically.

	   2   In  addition, alignment of loops	and of code after barriers are
	       dropped.

	   3   In addition, optional data alignment is dropped,	and the	option
	       Os is enabled.

	   This	defaults to 3 when -Os is in effect.  Otherwise, the  behavior
	   when	this is	not set	is equivalent to level 1.

       -mtune=cpu
	   Set	instruction  scheduling	 parameters  for  cpu,	overriding any
	   implied by -mcpu=.

	   Supported values for	cpu are

	   ARC600
	       Tune for	ARC600 CPU.

	   ARC601
	       Tune for	ARC601 CPU.

	   ARC700
	       Tune for	ARC700 CPU with	standard multiplier block.

	   ARC700-xmac
	       Tune for	ARC700 CPU with	XMAC block.

	   ARC725D
	       Tune for	ARC725D	CPU.

	   ARC750D
	       Tune for	ARC750D	CPU.

	   core3
	       Tune for	ARCv2 core3 type CPU.  This  option  enable  usage  of
	       "dbnz" instruction.

	   release31a
	       Tune for	ARC4x release 3.10a.

       -mmultcost=num
	   Cost	 to assume for a multiply instruction, with 4 being equal to a
	   normal instruction.

       -munalign-prob-threshold=probability
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       The following options are maintained for	 backward  compatibility,  but
       are now deprecated and will be removed in a future release:

       -margonaut
	   Obsolete FPX.

       -mbig-endian
       -EB Compile  code  for big-endian targets.  Use of these	options	is now
	   deprecated.	Big-endian code	is supported  by  configuring  GCC  to
	   build "arceb-elf32" and "arceb-linux-uclibc"	targets, for which big
	   endian is the default.

       -mlittle-endian
       -EL Compile  code  for  little-endian targets.  Use of these options is
	   now deprecated.  Little-endian code is supported by configuring GCC
	   to build "arc-elf32"	 and  "arc-linux-uclibc"  targets,  for	 which
	   little endian is the	default.

       -mbarrel_shifter
	   Replaced by -mbarrel-shifter.

       -mdpfp_compact
	   Replaced by -mdpfp-compact.

       -mdpfp_fast
	   Replaced by -mdpfp-fast.

       -mdsp_packa
	   Replaced by -mdsp-packa.

       -mEA
	   Replaced by -mea.

       -mmac_24
	   Replaced by -mmac-24.

       -mmac_d16
	   Replaced by -mmac-d16.

       -mspfp_compact
	   Replaced by -mspfp-compact.

       -mspfp_fast
	   Replaced by -mspfp-fast.

       -mtune=cpu
	   Values  arc600, arc601, arc700 and arc700-xmac for cpu are replaced
	   by ARC600, ARC601, ARC700 and ARC700-xmac respectively.

       -multcost=num
	   Replaced by -mmultcost.

       ARM Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the ARM	port:

       -mabi=name
	   Generate code for the specified ABI.	 Permissible values are: apcs-
	   gnu,	atpcs, aapcs, aapcs-linux and iwmmxt.

       -mapcs-frame
	   Generate a stack frame that is compliant  with  the	ARM  Procedure
	   Call	 Standard  for	all  functions,	 even  if this is not strictly
	   necessary  for  correct  execution	of   the   code.    Specifying
	   -fomit-frame-pointer	 with  this option causes the stack frames not
	   to	be   generated	 for   leaf   functions.    The	  default   is
	   -mno-apcs-frame.  This option is deprecated.

       -mapcs
	   This	is a synonym for -mapcs-frame and is deprecated.

       -mthumb-interwork
	   Generate  code  that	 supports  calling  between  the ARM and Thumb
	   instruction sets.  Without this option,  on	pre-v5	architectures,
	   the	two  instruction  sets	cannot	be  reliably  used  inside one
	   program.   The  default  is	-mno-thumb-interwork,  since  slightly
	   larger  code	 is generated when -mthumb-interwork is	specified.  In
	   AAPCS configurations	this option is meaningless.

       -mno-sched-prolog
	   Prevent the reordering of instructions in the function prologue, or
	   the merging of those	 instruction  with  the	 instructions  in  the
	   function's  body.   This  means  that  all  functions  start	with a
	   recognizable	set of instructions (or	in fact	one of a choice	from a
	   small set of	different function prologues),	and  this  information
	   can	be  used to locate the start of	functions inside an executable
	   piece of code.  The default is -msched-prolog.

       -mfloat-abi=name
	   Specifies which floating-point ABI to use.  Permissible values are:
	   soft, softfp	and hard.

	   Specifying soft causes GCC to generate  output  containing  library
	   calls  for floating-point operations.  softfp allows	the generation
	   of code using hardware floating-point instructions, but still  uses
	   the	soft-float  calling  conventions.   hard  allows generation of
	   floating-point   instructions   and	 uses	FPU-specific   calling
	   conventions.

	   The	default	 depends  on  the specific target configuration.  Note
	   that	the hard-float and soft-float ABIs  are	 not  link-compatible;
	   you	must  compile  your entire program with	the same ABI, and link
	   with	a compatible set of libraries.

       -mgeneral-regs-only
	   Generate code which uses only the general-purpose registers.	  This
	   will	 prevent  the  compiler	from using floating-point and Advanced
	   SIMD	 registers  but	 will  not  impose  any	 restrictions  on  the
	   assembler.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate  code for a	processor running in little-endian mode.  This
	   is the default for all standard configurations.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a	processor  running  in	big-endian  mode;  the
	   default is to compile code for a little-endian processor.

       -mbe8
       -mbe32
	   When	 linking  a  big-endian	 image	select	between	 BE8  and BE32
	   formats.  The option	has no effect for little-endian	images and  is
	   ignored.    The   default  is  dependent  on	 the  selected	target
	   architecture.  For ARMv6 and	later  architectures  the  default  is
	   BE8,	 for older architectures the default is	BE32.  BE32 format has
	   been	deprecated by ARM.

       -march=name[+extension...]
	   This	specifies the name of the target ARM architecture.   GCC  uses
	   this	 name  to determine what kind of instructions it can emit when
	   generating assembly code.  This option can be used  in  conjunction
	   with	or instead of the -mcpu= option.

	   Permissible	names  are:  armv4t,  armv5t,  armv5te,	armv6, armv6j,
	   armv6k, armv6kz, armv6t2, armv6z, armv6zk, armv7, armv7-a, armv7ve,
	   armv8-a, armv8.1-a,	armv8.2-a,  armv8.3-a,	armv8.4-a,  armv8.5-a,
	   armv8.6-a,  armv9-a,	 armv7-r, armv8-r, armv6-m, armv6s-m, armv7-m,
	   armv7e-m,  armv8-m.base,  armv8-m.main,  armv8.1-m.main,   armv9-a,
	   iwmmxt and iwmmxt2.

	   Additionally,  the  following architectures,	which lack support for
	   the	Thumb  execution  state,  are  recognized   but	  support   is
	   deprecated: armv4.

	   Many	 of  the architectures support extensions.  These can be added
	   by  appending  +extension  to  the  architecture  name.   Extension
	   options  are	 processed  in	order and capabilities accumulate.  An
	   extension will also enable any necessary base extensions upon which
	   it depends.	For example, the +crypto extension will	always	enable
	   the +simd extension.	 The exception to the additive construction is
	   for	extensions  that  are  prefixed	 with +no...: these extensions
	   disable the specified option	and  any  other	 extensions  that  may
	   depend on the presence of that extension.

	   For	 example,   -march=armv7-a+simd+nofp+vfpv4  is	equivalent  to
	   writing -march=armv7-a+vfpv4	since the  +simd  option  is  entirely
	   disabled by the +nofp option	that follows it.

	   Most	extension names	are generically	named, but have	an effect that
	   is  dependent  upon	the  architecture to which it is applied.  For
	   example, the	+simd option  can  be  applied	to  both  armv7-a  and
	   armv8-a   architectures,  but  will	enable	the  original  ARMv7-A
	   Advanced SIMD (Neon)	extensions for armv7-a and the ARMv8-A variant
	   for armv8-a.

	   The	table  below  lists  the   supported   extensions   for	  each
	   architecture.   Architectures  not  mentioned  do  not  support any
	   extensions.

	   armv5te
	   armv6
	   armv6j
	   armv6k
	   armv6kz
	   armv6t2
	   armv6z
	   armv6zk
	       +fp The	VFPv2  floating-point  instructions.   The   extension
		   +vfpv2 can be used as an alias for this extension.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point instructions.

	   armv7
	       The   common   subset  of  the  ARMv7-A,	 ARMv7-R  and  ARMv7-M
	       architectures.

	       +fp The VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  16  double-
		   precision  registers.  The extension	+vfpv3-d16 can be used
		   as an alias for this	extension.  Note  that	floating-point
		   is  not  supported by the base ARMv7-M architecture,	but is
		   compatible with both	the ARMv7-A and	ARMv7-R	architectures.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point instructions.

	   armv7-a
	       +mp The multiprocessing extension.

	       +sec
		   The security	extension.

	       +fp The VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  16  double-
		   precision  registers.  The extension	+vfpv3-d16 can be used
		   as an alias for this	extension.

	       +simd
		   The Advanced	SIMD (Neon) v1 and  the	 VFPv3	floating-point
		   instructions.   The extensions +neon	and +neon-vfpv3	can be
		   used	as aliases for this extension.

	       +vfpv3
		   The VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  32  double-
		   precision registers.

	       +vfpv3-d16-fp16
		   The	VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  16 double-
		   precision registers and the	half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +vfpv3-fp16
		   The	VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  32 double-
		   precision registers and the	half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +vfpv4-d16
		   The	VFPv4  floating-point  instructions,  with  16 double-
		   precision registers.

	       +vfpv4
		   The VFPv4  floating-point  instructions,  with  32  double-
		   precision registers.

	       +neon-fp16
		   The	Advanced  SIMD	(Neon) v1 and the VFPv3	floating-point
		   instructions,  with	 the   half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +neon-vfpv4
		   The	Advanced  SIMD	(Neon) v2 and the VFPv4	floating-point
		   instructions.

	       +nosimd
		   Disable the Advanced	SIMD instructions  (does  not  disable
		   floating point).

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point and Advanced SIMD	instructions.

	   armv7ve
	       The  extended  version of the ARMv7-A architecture with support
	       for virtualization.

	       +fp The VFPv4  floating-point  instructions,  with  16  double-
		   precision  registers.  The extension	+vfpv4-d16 can be used
		   as an alias for this	extension.

	       +simd
		   The Advanced	SIMD (Neon) v2 and  the	 VFPv4	floating-point
		   instructions.   The extension +neon-vfpv4 can be used as an
		   alias for this extension.

	       +vfpv3-d16
		   The VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  16  double-
		   precision registers.

	       +vfpv3
		   The	VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  32 double-
		   precision registers.

	       +vfpv3-d16-fp16
		   The VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  16  double-
		   precision  registers	 and the half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +vfpv3-fp16
		   The VFPv3  floating-point  instructions,  with  32  double-
		   precision  registers	 and the half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +vfpv4-d16
		   The VFPv4  floating-point  instructions,  with  16  double-
		   precision registers.

	       +vfpv4
		   The	VFPv4  floating-point  instructions,  with  32 double-
		   precision registers.

	       +neon
		   The Advanced	SIMD (Neon) v1 and  the	 VFPv3	floating-point
		   instructions.   The extension +neon-vfpv3 can be used as an
		   alias for this extension.

	       +neon-fp16
		   The Advanced	SIMD (Neon) v1 and  the	 VFPv3	floating-point
		   instructions,   with	  the	half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +nosimd
		   Disable the Advanced	SIMD instructions  (does  not  disable
		   floating point).

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point and Advanced SIMD	instructions.

	   armv8-a
	       +crc
		   The Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) instructions.

	       +simd
		   The ARMv8-A Advanced	SIMD and floating-point	instructions.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic instructions.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic instructions.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	       +sb Speculation Barrier Instruction.

	       +predres
		   Execution and Data Prediction Restriction Instructions.

	   armv8.1-a
	       +simd
		   The	  ARMv8.1-A    Advanced	   SIMD	  and	floating-point
		   instructions.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic  instructions.   This  also  enables  the
		   Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic instructions.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	       +sb Speculation Barrier Instruction.

	       +predres
		   Execution and Data Prediction Restriction Instructions.

	   armv8.2-a
	   armv8.3-a
	       +fp16
		   The	  half-precision    floating-point   data   processing
		   instructions.  This also  enables  the  Advanced  SIMD  and
		   floating-point instructions.

	       +fp16fml
		   The	half-precision	floating-point	fmla  extension.  This
		   also	enables	the  half-precision  floating-point  extension
		   and Advanced	SIMD and floating-point	instructions.

	       +simd
		   The	  ARMv8.1-A    Advanced	   SIMD	  and	floating-point
		   instructions.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic  instructions.   This  also  enables  the
		   Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	       +dotprod
		   Enable  the	Dot  Product  extension.   This	 also  enables
		   Advanced SIMD instructions.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic extension.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	       +sb Speculation Barrier Instruction.

	       +predres
		   Execution and Data Prediction Restriction Instructions.

	       +i8mm
		   8-bit Integer  Matrix  Multiply  instructions.   This  also
		   enables Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	       +bf16
		   Brain  half-precision  floating-point  instructions.	  This
		   also	enables	Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	   armv8.4-a
	       +fp16
		   The	 half-precision	  floating-point    data    processing
		   instructions.   This	 also  enables	the  Advanced SIMD and
		   floating-point instructions as  well	 as  the  Dot  Product
		   extension   and   the  half-precision  floating-point  fmla
		   extension.

	       +simd
		   The ARMv8.3-A Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions
		   as well as the Dot Product extension.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic  instructions.   This  also  enables  the
		   Advanced  SIMD  and	floating-point instructions as well as
		   the Dot Product extension.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic extension.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	       +sb Speculation Barrier Instruction.

	       +predres
		   Execution and Data Prediction Restriction Instructions.

	       +i8mm
		   8-bit Integer  Matrix  Multiply  instructions.   This  also
		   enables Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	       +bf16
		   Brain  half-precision  floating-point  instructions.	  This
		   also	enables	Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	   armv8.5-a
	       +fp16
		   The	 half-precision	  floating-point    data    processing
		   instructions.   This	 also  enables	the  Advanced SIMD and
		   floating-point instructions as  well	 as  the  Dot  Product
		   extension   and   the  half-precision  floating-point  fmla
		   extension.

	       +simd
		   The ARMv8.3-A Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions
		   as well as the Dot Product extension.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic  instructions.   This  also  enables  the
		   Advanced  SIMD  and	floating-point instructions as well as
		   the Dot Product extension.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic extension.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	       +i8mm
		   8-bit Integer  Matrix  Multiply  instructions.   This  also
		   enables Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	       +bf16
		   Brain  half-precision  floating-point  instructions.	  This
		   also	enables	Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	   armv8.6-a
	       +fp16
		   The	 half-precision	  floating-point    data    processing
		   instructions.   This	 also  enables	the  Advanced SIMD and
		   floating-point instructions as  well	 as  the  Dot  Product
		   extension   and   the  half-precision  floating-point  fmla
		   extension.

	       +simd
		   The ARMv8.3-A Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions
		   as well as the Dot Product extension.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic  instructions.   This  also  enables  the
		   Advanced  SIMD  and	floating-point instructions as well as
		   the Dot Product extension.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic extension.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	       +i8mm
		   8-bit Integer  Matrix  Multiply  instructions.   This  also
		   enables Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	       +bf16
		   Brain  half-precision  floating-point  instructions.	  This
		   also	enables	Advanced SIMD and floating-point instructions.

	   armv7-r
	       +fp.sp
		   The	single-precision  VFPv3	 floating-point	 instructions.
		   The	extension  +vfpv3xd  can  be used as an	alias for this
		   extension.

	       +fp The	VFPv3  floating-point  instructions  with  16  double-
		   precision  registers.  The extension	+vfpv3-d16 can be used
		   as an alias for this	extension.

	       +vfpv3xd-d16-fp16
		   The single-precision	VFPv3 floating-point instructions with
		   16  double-precision	 registers  and	  the	half-precision
		   floating-point conversion operations.

	       +vfpv3-d16-fp16
		   The	VFPv3  floating-point  instructions  with  16  double-
		   precision registers and the	half-precision	floating-point
		   conversion operations.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point extension.

	       +idiv
		   The ARM-state integer division instructions.

	       +noidiv
		   Disable the ARM-state integer division extension.

	   armv7e-m
	       +fp The single-precision	VFPv4 floating-point instructions.

	       +fpv5
		   The single-precision	FPv5 floating-point instructions.

	       +fp.dp
		   The	 single-   and	double-precision  FPv5	floating-point
		   instructions.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point extensions.

	   armv8.1-m.main
	       +dsp
		   The DSP instructions.

	       +mve
		   The M-Profile Vector	Extension (MVE)	integer	instructions.

	       +mve.fp
		   The M-Profile Vector	Extension  (MVE)  integer  and	single
		   precision floating-point instructions.

	       +fp The single-precision	floating-point instructions.

	       +fp.dp
		   The	  single-    and    double-precision	floating-point
		   instructions.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point extension.

	       +cdecp0,	+cdecp1, ... , +cdecp7
		   Enable the Custom  Datapath	Extension  (CDE)  on  selected
		   coprocessors	 according to the numbers given	in the options
		   in the range	0 to 7.

	       +pacbti
		   Enable  the	Pointer	 Authentication	 and   Branch	Target
		   Identification Extension.

	   armv8-m.main
	       +dsp
		   The DSP instructions.

	       +nodsp
		   Disable the DSP extension.

	       +fp The single-precision	floating-point instructions.

	       +fp.dp
		   The	  single-    and    double-precision	floating-point
		   instructions.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point extension.

	       +cdecp0,	+cdecp1, ... , +cdecp7
		   Enable the Custom  Datapath	Extension  (CDE)  on  selected
		   coprocessors	 according to the numbers given	in the options
		   in the range	0 to 7.

	   armv8-r
	       +crc
		   The Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) instructions.

	       +fp.sp
		   The single-precision	FPv5 floating-point instructions.

	       +simd
		   The ARMv8-A Advanced	SIMD and floating-point	instructions.

	       +crypto
		   The cryptographic instructions.

	       +nocrypto
		   Disable the cryptographic instructions.

	       +nofp
		   Disable the floating-point, Advanced	SIMD and cryptographic
		   instructions.

	   -march=native causes	the compiler to	auto-detect  the  architecture
	   of  the build computer.  At present,	this feature is	only supported
	   on GNU/Linux, and not all architectures  are	 recognized.   If  the
	   auto-detect is unsuccessful the option has no effect.

       -mtune=name
	   This	 option	 specifies  the	 name  of the target ARM processor for
	   which GCC should tune the performance of the	code.	For  some  ARM
	   implementations  better  performance	 can be	obtained by using this
	   option.  Permissible	 names	are:  arm7tdmi,	 arm7tdmi-s,  arm710t,
	   arm720t,    arm740t,	   strongarm,	strongarm110,	strongarm1100,
	   strongarm1110, arm8,	arm810,	arm9, arm9e, arm920, arm920t, arm922t,
	   arm946e-s, arm966e-s,  arm968e-s,  arm926ej-s,  arm940t,  arm9tdmi,
	   arm10tdmi,	arm1020t,  arm1026ej-s,	 arm10e,  arm1020e,  arm1022e,
	   arm1136j-s,	 arm1136jf-s,	mpcore,	  mpcorenovfp,	  arm1156t2-s,
	   arm1156t2f-s,     arm1176jz-s,    arm1176jzf-s,    generic-armv7-a,
	   cortex-a5, cortex-a7, cortex-a8, cortex-a9, cortex-a12, cortex-a15,
	   cortex-a17,	 cortex-a32,   cortex-a35,   cortex-a53,   cortex-a55,
	   cortex-a57,	 cortex-a72,   cortex-a73,   cortex-a75,   cortex-a76,
	   cortex-a76ae, cortex-a77,  cortex-a78,  cortex-a78ae,  cortex-a78c,
	   cortex-a710,	 ares,	cortex-r4,  cortex-r4f,	 cortex-r5, cortex-r7,
	   cortex-r8, cortex-r52,  cortex-r52plus,  cortex-m0,	cortex-m0plus,
	   cortex-m1, cortex-m3, cortex-m4, cortex-m7, cortex-m23, cortex-m33,
	   cortex-m35p,	  cortex-m52,	cortex-m55,   cortex-m85,   cortex-x1,
	   cortex-x1c,	 cortex-m1.small-multiply,   cortex-m0.small-multiply,
	   cortex-m0plus.small-multiply,  exynos-m1, marvell-pj4, neoverse-n1,
	   neoverse-n2,	neoverse-v1, xscale, iwmmxt, iwmmxt2,  ep9312,	fa526,
	   fa626, fa606te, fa626te, fmp626, fa726te, star-mc1, xgene1.

	   Additionally,  this	option	can  specify  that GCC should tune the
	   performance of the code for a big.LITTLE system.  Permissible names
	   are:		 cortex-a15.cortex-a7,		 cortex-a17.cortex-a7,
	   cortex-a57.cortex-a53,			cortex-a72.cortex-a53,
	   cortex-a72.cortex-a35,			cortex-a73.cortex-a53,
	   cortex-a75.cortex-a55, cortex-a76.cortex-a55.

	   -mtune=generic-arch	specifies that GCC should tune the performance
	   for a blend of processors within architecture arch.	The aim	is  to
	   generate code that run well on the current most popular processors,
	   balancing  between  optimizations  that  benefit  some  CPUs	in the
	   range, and  avoiding	 performance  pitfalls	of  other  CPUs.   The
	   effects  of	this  option  may change in future GCC versions	as CPU
	   models come and go.

	   -mtune permits  the	same  extension	 options  as  -mcpu,  but  the
	   extension options do	not affect the tuning of the generated code.

	   -mtune=native  causes  the  compiler	 to auto-detect	the CPU	of the
	   build computer.  At present,	this  feature  is  only	 supported  on
	   GNU/Linux,  and not all architectures are recognized.  If the auto-
	   detect is unsuccessful the option has no effect.

       -mcpu=name[+extension...]
	   This	specifies the name of the target ARM processor.	 GCC uses this
	   name	to derive the name of  the  target  ARM	 architecture  (as  if
	   specified  by  -march) and the ARM processor	type for which to tune
	   for performance (as if specified by -mtune).	 Where this option  is
	   used	 in  conjunction  with	-march	or  -mtune, those options take
	   precedence over the appropriate part	of this	option.

	   Many	 of  the  supported  CPUs  implement  optional	 architectural
	   extensions.	 Where	this  is  so  the architectural	extensions are
	   normally enabled by default.	  If  implementations  that  lack  the
	   extension  exist,  then the extension syntax	can be used to disable
	   those extensions that have been omitted.   For  floating-point  and
	   Advanced  SIMD  (Neon)  instructions,  the  settings	of the options
	   -mfloat-abi and -mfpu must also be considered:  floating-point  and
	   Advanced  SIMD instructions will only be used if -mfloat-abi	is not
	   set to soft;	and any	setting	of -mfpu other than auto will override
	   the available floating-point	and SIMD extension instructions.

	   For example,	cortex-a9 can be found in three	major  configurations:
	   integer  only,  with	 just  a floating-point	unit or	with floating-
	   point and  Advanced	SIMD.	The  default  is  to  enable  all  the
	   instructions,  but  the extensions +nosimd and +nofp	can be used to
	   disable  just  the  SIMD  or	 both  the  SIMD  and	floating-point
	   instructions	respectively.

	   Permissible names for this option are the same as those for -mtune.

	   The following extension options are common to the listed CPUs:

	   +nodsp
	       Disable	 the  DSP  instructions	 on  cortex-m33,  cortex-m35p,
	       cortex-m52,  cortex-m55	and  cortex-m85.   Also	 disable   the
	       M-Profile  Vector  Extension (MVE) integer and single precision
	       floating-point  instructions  on	 cortex-m52,  cortex-m55   and
	       cortex-m85.

	   +nopacbti
	       Disable	 the   Pointer	 Authentication	  and	Branch	Target
	       Identification Extension	on cortex-m52 and cortex-m85.

	   +nomve
	       Disable the M-Profile Vector Extension (MVE) integer and	single
	       precision floating-point	instructions on	cortex-m52, cortex-m55
	       and cortex-m85.

	   +nomve.fp
	       Disable the M-Profile Vector Extension (MVE)  single  precision
	       floating-point	instructions  on  cortex-m52,  cortex-m55  and
	       cortex-m85.

	   +cdecp0, +cdecp1, ... , +cdecp7
	       Enable  the  Custom  Datapath  Extension	 (CDE)	 on   selected
	       coprocessors  according	to the numbers given in	the options in
	       the range 0 to 7	on cortex-m52 and cortex-m55.

	   +nofp
	       Disables	the floating-point instructions	on  arm9e,  arm946e-s,
	       arm966e-s,  arm968e-s,  arm10e, arm1020e, arm1022e, arm926ej-s,
	       arm1026ej-s,  cortex-r5,	  cortex-r7,   cortex-r8,   cortex-m4,
	       cortex-m7,  cortex-m33, cortex-m35p, cortex-m52,	cortex-m55 and
	       cortex-m85.  Disables the floating-point	and SIMD  instructions
	       on generic-armv7-a, cortex-a5, cortex-a7, cortex-a8, cortex-a9,
	       cortex-a12,   cortex-a15,   cortex-a17,	 cortex-a15.cortex-a7,
	       cortex-a17.cortex-a7, cortex-a32,  cortex-a35,  cortex-a53  and
	       cortex-a55.

	   +nofp.dp
	       Disables	 the  double-precision component of the	floating-point
	       instructions on cortex-r5,  cortex-r7,  cortex-r8,  cortex-r52,
	       cortex-r52plus and cortex-m7.

	   +nosimd
	       Disables	 the  SIMD  (but  not  floating-point) instructions on
	       generic-armv7-a,	cortex-a5, cortex-a7 and cortex-a9.

	   +crypto
	       Enables	 the   cryptographic   instructions   on   cortex-a32,
	       cortex-a35,  cortex-a53,	 cortex-a55,  cortex-a57,  cortex-a72,
	       cortex-a73,	  cortex-a75,	     exynos-m1,	       xgene1,
	       cortex-a57.cortex-a53,			cortex-a72.cortex-a53,
	       cortex-a73.cortex-a35,	     cortex-a73.cortex-a53	   and
	       cortex-a75.cortex-a55.

	   Additionally	 the  generic-armv7-a  pseudo target defaults to VFPv3
	   with	16 double-precision  registers.	  It  supports	the  following
	   extension  options:	mp,  sec,  vfpv3-d16,  vfpv3,  vfpv3-d16-fp16,
	   vfpv3-fp16,	vfpv4-d16,   vfpv4,   neon,   neon-vfpv3,   neon-fp16,
	   neon-vfpv4.	 The  meanings	are  the same as for the extensions to
	   -march=armv7-a.

	   -mcpu=generic-arch  is  also	 permissible,  and  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=arch -mtune=generic-arch.  See -mtune	for more information.

	   -mcpu=native	 causes	 the  compiler	to  auto-detect	the CPU	of the
	   build computer.  At present,	this  feature  is  only	 supported  on
	   GNU/Linux,  and not all architectures are recognized.  If the auto-
	   detect is unsuccessful the option has no effect.

       -mfpu=name
	   This	specifies what floating-point hardware (or hardware emulation)
	   is available	on the target.	Permissible names  are:	 auto,	vfpv2,
	   vfpv3,     vfpv3-fp16,    vfpv3-d16,	   vfpv3-d16-fp16,    vfpv3xd,
	   vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-vfpv3, neon-fp16,	vfpv4, vfpv4-d16, fpv4-sp-d16,
	   neon-vfpv4,	fpv5-d16,  fpv5-sp-d16,	 fp-armv8,  neon-fp-armv8  and
	   crypto-neon-fp-armv8.   Note	 that  neon is an alias	for neon-vfpv3
	   and vfp is an alias for vfpv2.

	   The setting auto is the default and	is  special.   It  causes  the
	   compiler   to   select   the	  floating-point   and	Advanced  SIMD
	   instructions	based on the settings of -mcpu and -march.

	   If the selected floating-point hardware includes the	NEON extension
	   (e.g. -mfpu=neon), note  that  floating-point  operations  are  not
	   generated	 by	GCC's	  auto-vectorization	pass	unless
	   -funsafe-math-optimizations is also	specified.   This  is  because
	   NEON	 hardware  does	 not fully implement the IEEE 754 standard for
	   floating-point  arithmetic  (in  particular	denormal  values   are
	   treated  as	zero),	so  the	use of NEON instructions may lead to a
	   loss	of precision.

	   You can also	set the	fpu  name  at  function	 level	by  using  the
	   "target("fpu=")" function attributes	or pragmas.

       -mfp16-format=name
	   Specify  the	 format	 of the	"__fp16" half-precision	floating-point
	   type.  Permissible names  are  none,	 ieee,	and  alternative;  the
	   default is none, in which case the "__fp16" type is not defined.

       -mstructure-size-boundary=n
	   The sizes of	all structures and unions are rounded up to a multiple
	   of  the  number of bits set by this option.	Permissible values are
	   8, 32 and 64.  The default value varies for	different  toolchains.
	   For the COFF	targeted toolchain the default value is	8.  A value of
	   64 is only allowed if the underlying	ABI supports it.

	   Specifying a	larger number can produce faster, more efficient code,
	   but	can  also  increase the	size of	the program.  Different	values
	   are potentially incompatible.  Code compiled	with one value	cannot
	   necessarily	expect	to  work  with code or libraries compiled with
	   another value, if they exchange  information	 using	structures  or
	   unions.

	   This	option is deprecated.

       -mabort-on-noreturn
	   Generate  a call to the function "abort" at the end of a "noreturn"
	   function.  It is executed if	the function tries to return.

       -mlong-calls
       -mno-long-calls
	   Tells the compiler to perform function calls	by first  loading  the
	   address  of	the  function  into  a	register and then performing a
	   subroutine call on this register.  This switch  is  needed  if  the
	   target function lies	outside	of the 64-megabyte addressing range of
	   the offset-based version of subroutine call instruction.

	   Even	 if  this switch is enabled, not all function calls are	turned
	   into	long calls.  The heuristic is that static functions, functions
	   that	have the "short_call" attribute, functions that	are inside the
	   scope of a "#pragma no_long_calls" directive, and  functions	 whose
	   definitions	 have	already	  been	compiled  within  the  current
	   compilation unit are	not turned into	long calls.  The exceptions to
	   this	rule are that weak function definitions,  functions  with  the
	   "long_call"	attribute  or  the  "section" attribute, and functions
	   that	are within the scope of	a "#pragma long_calls"	directive  are
	   always turned into long calls.

	   This	feature	is not enabled by default.  Specifying -mno-long-calls
	   restores  the  default behavior, as does placing the	function calls
	   within the scope of a  "#pragma  long_calls_off"  directive.	  Note
	   these switches have no effect on how	the compiler generates code to
	   handle function calls via function pointers.

       -msingle-pic-base
	   Treat  the  register	 used  for PIC addressing as read-only,	rather
	   than	loading	it in the prologue for	each  function.	  The  runtime
	   system  is  responsible  for	 initializing  this  register  with an
	   appropriate value before execution begins.

       -mpic-register=reg
	   Specify the register	to be used for PIC addressing.	 For  standard
	   PIC	base  case, the	default	is any suitable	register determined by
	   compiler.  For single PIC base case,	the default is R9 if target is
	   EABI	based or stack-checking	is enabled, otherwise the  default  is
	   R10.

       -mpic-data-is-text-relative
	   Assume  that	the displacement between the text and data segments is
	   fixed  at  static  link  time.   This  permits  using   PC-relative
	   addressing  operations  to  access  data  known  to	be in the data
	   segment.  For non-VxWorks RTP targets, this option  is  enabled  by
	   default.    When   disabled	 on   such  targets,  it  will	enable
	   -msingle-pic-base by	default.

       -mpoke-function-name
	   Write the name of each function into	 the  text  section,  directly
	   preceding  the function prologue.  The generated code is similar to
	   this:

			t0
			    .ascii "arm_poke_function_name", 0
			    .align
			t1
			    .word 0xff000000 + (t1 - t0)
			arm_poke_function_name
			    mov	    ip,	sp
			    stmfd   sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc}
			    sub	    fp,	ip, #4

	   When	performing a stack backtrace, code can inspect	the  value  of
	   "pc"	 stored	 at  "fp  +  0".   If the trace	function then looks at
	   location "pc	- 12" and the top 8 bits are set, then	we  know  that
	   there  is  a	 function  name	 embedded  immediately	preceding this
	   location and	has length "((pc[-3]) &	0xff000000)".

       -mthumb
       -marm
	   Select between generating code  that	 executes  in  ARM  and	 Thumb
	   states.   The  default  for most configurations is to generate code
	   that	executes in ARM	state, but  the	 default  can  be  changed  by
	   configuring GCC with	the --with-mode=state configure	option.

	   You	can  also override the ARM and Thumb mode for each function by
	   using the "target("thumb")" and "target("arm")" function attributes
	   or pragmas.

       -mflip-thumb
	   Switch ARM/Thumb modes on alternating functions.   This  option  is
	   provided for	regression testing of mixed Thumb/ARM code generation,
	   and is not intended for ordinary use	in compiling code.

       -mtpcs-frame
	   Generate  a	stack frame that is compliant with the Thumb Procedure
	   Call	Standard for all non-leaf functions.  (A leaf function is  one
	   that	  does	 not  call  any	 other	functions.)   The  default  is
	   -mno-tpcs-frame.

       -mtpcs-leaf-frame
	   Generate a stack frame that is compliant with the  Thumb  Procedure
	   Call	Standard for all leaf functions.  (A leaf function is one that
	   does	  not	call   any   other   functions.)    The	  default   is
	   -mno-apcs-leaf-frame.

       -mcallee-super-interworking
	   Gives all externally	visible	functions in the file  being  compiled
	   an  ARM  instruction	set header which switches to Thumb mode	before
	   executing the rest of the function.	This allows these functions to
	   be called from non-interworking code.  This option is not valid  in
	   AAPCS configurations	because	interworking is	enabled	by default.

       -mcaller-super-interworking
	   Allows calls	via function pointers (including virtual functions) to
	   execute  correctly  regardless  of whether the target code has been
	   compiled for	interworking or	not.  There is a small overhead	in the
	   cost	of executing a function	pointer	if  this  option  is  enabled.
	   This	  option   is	not  valid  in	AAPCS  configurations  because
	   interworking	is enabled by default.

       -mtp=name
	   Specify the access model for	the thread local storage pointer.  The
	   model soft generates	calls to  "__aeabi_read_tp".   Other  accepted
	   models  are	tpidrurw, tpidruro and tpidrprw	which fetch the	thread
	   pointer from	the corresponding system register directly  (supported
	   from	the arm6k architecture and later).  These system registers are
	   accessed  through  the CP15 co-processor interface and the argument
	   cp15	is also	accepted as a  convenience  alias  of  tpidruro.   The
	   argument  auto  uses	 the  best  available  method for the selected
	   processor.  The default setting is auto.

       -mtls-dialect=dialect
	   Specify the dialect to use for accessing thread local storage.  Two
	   dialects are	supported---gnu	and gnu2.  The gnu dialect selects the
	   original GNU	scheme for supporting local  and  global  dynamic  TLS
	   models.   The gnu2 dialect selects the GNU descriptor scheme, which
	   provides  better  performance  for  shared  libraries.    The   GNU
	   descriptor  scheme is compatible with the original scheme, but does
	   require new assembler, linker and  library  support.	  Initial  and
	   local  exec TLS models are unaffected by this option	and always use
	   the original	scheme.

       -mword-relocations
	   Only	generate  absolute  relocations	 on  word-sized	 values	 (i.e.
	   R_ARM_ABS32).   This	 is  enabled  by  default on targets (uClinux,
	   SymbianOS) where the	runtime	loader imposes this  restriction,  and
	   when	 -fpic	or  -fPIC  is  specified.  This	 option	conflicts with
	   -mslow-flash-data.

       -mfix-cortex-m3-ldrd
	   Some	 Cortex-M3  cores  can	cause  data  corruption	 when	"ldrd"
	   instructions	 with  overlapping  destination	and base registers are
	   used.  This option  avoids  generating  these  instructions.	  This
	   option is enabled by	default	when -mcpu=cortex-m3 is	specified.

       -mfix-cortex-a57-aes-1742098
       -mno-fix-cortex-a57-aes-1742098
       -mfix-cortex-a72-aes-1655431
       -mno-fix-cortex-a72-aes-1655431
	   Enable  (disable)  mitigation  for  an  erratum  on	Cortex-A57 and
	   Cortex-A72 that affects the AES cryptographic  instructions.	  This
	   option  is  enabled	by  default  when  either  -mcpu=cortex-a57 or
	   -mcpu=cortex-a72 is specified.

       -munaligned-access
       -mno-unaligned-access
	   Enables (or disables) reading and writing of	16- and	32- bit	values
	   from	addresses that are not 16- or 32-  bit	aligned.   By  default
	   unaligned access is disabled	for all	pre-ARMv6, all ARMv6-M and for
	   ARMv8-M   Baseline	architectures,	 and  enabled  for  all	 other
	   architectures.  If unaligned	access is not enabled  then  words  in
	   packed data structures are accessed a byte at a time.

	   The	 ARM   attribute  "Tag_CPU_unaligned_access"  is  set  in  the
	   generated object file to either true	or false, depending  upon  the
	   setting  of	this  option.  If unaligned access is enabled then the
	   preprocessor	symbol "__ARM_FEATURE_UNALIGNED" is also defined.

       -mneon-for-64bits
	   This	option is deprecated and has no	effect.

       -mslow-flash-data
	   Assume loading data from flash is slower than fetching instruction.
	   Therefore literal load is minimized for better  performance.	  This
	   option is only supported when compiling for ARMv7 M-profile and off
	   by default. It conflicts with -mword-relocations.

       -masm-syntax-unified
	   Assume  inline  assembler is	using unified asm syntax.  The default
	   is currently	off which implies divided syntax.  This	option has  no
	   impact  on  Thumb2.	However, this may change in future releases of
	   GCC.	 Divided syntax	should be considered deprecated.

       -mrestrict-it
	   Restricts generation	of IT  blocks  to  conform  to	the  rules  of
	   ARMv8-A.   IT  blocks  can only contain a single 16-bit instruction
	   from	a select set of	instructions. This option is on	by default for
	   ARMv8-A Thumb mode.

       -mprint-tune-info
	   Print CPU tuning information	as comment in assembler	file.  This is
	   an option used only for regression testing of the compiler and  not
	   intended  for  ordinary  use	 in  compiling	code.	This option is
	   disabled by default.

       -mverbose-cost-dump
	   Enable verbose cost model dumping in	the debug  dump	 files.	  This
	   option is provided for use in debugging the compiler.

       -mpure-code
	   Do  not  allow  constant  data  to  be  placed  in  code  sections.
	   Additionally, when compiling	for ELF	object format  give  all  text
	   sections    the    ELF    processor-specific	   section   attribute
	   "SHF_ARM_PURECODE".	This option is only available when  generating
	   non-pic code	for M-profile targets.

       -mcmse
	   Generate  secure  code  as  per  the	 "ARMv8-M Security Extensions:
	   Requirements	on Development Tools Engineering Specification", which
	   can			be		    found		    on
	   <https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ecm0359818/latest/>.

       -mfix-cmse-cve-2021-35465
	   Mitigate  against  a	 potential  security  issue  with  the "VLLDM"
	   instruction	 in   some   M-profile	 devices   when	  using	  CMSE
	   (CVE-2021-365465).	This  option  is  enabled  by default when the
	   option   -mcpu=   is	  used	 with	"cortex-m33",	"cortex-m35p",
	   "cortex-m52",  "cortex-m55",	"cortex-m85" or	"star-mc1". The	option
	   -mno-fix-cmse-cve-2021-35465	can be used to disable the mitigation.

       -mstack-protector-guard=guard
       -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset
	   Generate stack protection code using	canary	at  guard.   Supported
	   locations  are  global  for	a  global  canary  or tls for a	canary
	   accessible	  via	  the	  TLS	  register.	The	option
	   -mstack-protector-guard-offset=	is	for	 use	  with
	   -fstack-protector-guard=tls and not for use in user-land code.

       -mfdpic
       -mno-fdpic
	   Select the FDPIC ABI, which uses  64-bit  function  descriptors  to
	   represent  pointers	to functions.  When the	compiler is configured
	   for "arm-*-uclinuxfdpiceabi"	targets, this option is	on by  default
	   and	implies	 -fPIE	if  none  of  the  PIC/PIE-related  options is
	   provided.  On other targets,	it  only  enables  the	FDPIC-specific
	   code	 generation  features,	and the	user should explicitly provide
	   the PIC/PIE-related options as needed.

	   Note	that static linking is not supported because  it  would	 still
	   involve  the	 dynamic  linker  when the program self-relocates.  If
	   such	behavior is acceptable,	use  -static  and  -Wl,-dynamic-linker
	   options.

	   The	opposite  -mno-fdpic  option is	useful (and required) to build
	   the	Linux  kernel  using   the   same   ("arm-*-uclinuxfdpiceabi")
	   toolchain as	the one	used to	build the userland programs.

       -mbranch-protection=none|standard|pac-ret[+leaf][+bti]|bti[+pac-
       ret[+leaf]]
	   Enable  branch  protection  features	 (armv8.1-m.main  only).  none
	   generate code without branch	protection or return address  signing.
	   standard[+leaf]  generate  code with	all branch protection features
	   enabled at their standard level.  pac-ret[+leaf] generate code with
	   return address signing set to its standard level, which is to  sign
	   all	functions  that	 save the return address to memory.  leaf When
	   return address signing is enabled, also sign	leaf functions even if
	   they	do not write the return	address	to memory.  +bti Add  landing-
	   pad	instructions  at  the  permitted  targets  of  indirect	branch
	   instructions.

	   If the +pacbti architecture extension  is  not  enabled,  then  all
	   branch   protection	and  return  address  signing  operations  are
	   constrained	to  use	 only  the   instructions   defined   in   the
	   architectural-NOP  space. The generated code	will remain backwards-
	   compatible with earlier  versions  of  the  architecture,  but  the
	   additional  security	 can be	enabled	at run time on processors that
	   support the PACBTI extension.

	   Branch target enforcement using BTI can only	be enabled at  runtime
	   if  all  code  in  the  application has been	compiled with at least
	   -mbranch-protection=bti.

	   Any setting other than none is supported only  on  armv8-m.main  or
	   later.

	   The default is to generate code without branch protection or	return
	   address signing.

       AVR Options

       These options are defined for AVR implementations:

       -mmcu=mcu
	   Specify  the	AVR instruction	set architecture (ISA) or device type.
	   The default for this	option is "avr2".

	   The following AVR devices and ISAs are supported.  Note: A complete
	   device support consists of startup code "crtmcu.o", a device	header
	   "avr/io*.h",	 a  device  library  "libmcu.a"	 and  a	  device-specs
	   ("https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/avr-gcc#spec-files")  file  "specs-mcu".
	   Only	the latter is provided by the compiler according the supported
	   "mcu"s   below.    The    rest    is	   supported	by    AVR-LibC
	   ("https://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/"),   or  by  means  of  "atpack"
	   ("https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/avr-gcc#atpack") files from the hardware
	   manufacturer.

	   "avr2"
	       "Classic" devices with up to 8 KiB of program  memory.	mcu  =
	       "attiny22",  "attiny26",	"at90s2313", "at90s2323", "at90s2333",
	       "at90s2343",	"at90s4414",	 "at90s4433",	  "at90s4434",
	       "at90c8534", "at90s8515", "at90s8535".

	   "avr25"
	       "Classic"  devices  with	up to 8	KiB of program memory and with
	       the  "MOVW"  instruction.   mcu	=   "attiny13",	  "attiny13a",
	       "attiny24", "attiny24a",	"attiny25", "attiny261", "attiny261a",
	       "attiny2313",	 "attiny2313a",	   "attiny43u",	   "attiny44",
	       "attiny44a", "attiny45",	"attiny48", "attiny441",  "attiny461",
	       "attiny461a",	 "attiny4313",	   "attiny84",	  "attiny84a",
	       "attiny85", "attiny87", "attiny88",  "attiny828",  "attiny841",
	       "attiny861", "attiny861a", "ata5272", "ata6616c", "at86rf401".

	   "avr3"
	       "Classic"  devices  with	16 KiB up to 64	KiB of program memory.
	       mcu = "at76c711", "at43usb355".

	   "avr31"
	       "Classic" devices with  128  KiB	 of  program  memory.	mcu  =
	       "atmega103", "at43usb320".

	   "avr35"
	       "Classic"  devices  with	 16 KiB	up to 64 KiB of	program	memory
	       and  with  the  "MOVW"	instruction.	mcu   =	  "attiny167",
	       "attiny1634",	"atmega8u2",	"atmega16u2",	 "atmega32u2",
	       "ata5505", "ata6617c", "ata664251", "at90usb82",	"at90usb162".

	   "avr4"
	       "Enhanced" devices with up to 8 KiB of program memory.	mcu  =
	       "atmega48",     "atmega48a",	"atmega48p",	 "atmega48pa",
	       "atmega48pb", "atmega8",	"atmega8a", "atmega8hva",  "atmega88",
	       "atmega88a",	"atmega88p",	"atmega88pa",	 "atmega88pb",
	       "atmega8515", "atmega8535",  "ata5795",	"ata6285",  "ata6286",
	       "ata6289",  "ata6612c",	"at90pwm1",  "at90pwm2",  "at90pwm2b",
	       "at90pwm3", "at90pwm3b",	"at90pwm81".

	   "avr5"
	       "Enhanced" devices with 16 KiB up to 64 KiB of program  memory.
	       mcu  =  "atmega16", "atmega16a",	"atmega16hva", "atmega16hva2",
	       "atmega16hvb", "atmega16hvbrevb",  "atmega16m1",	 "atmega16u4",
	       "atmega161",	"atmega162",	 "atmega163",	 "atmega164a",
	       "atmega164p",   "atmega164pa",	 "atmega165",	 "atmega165a",
	       "atmega165p",	"atmega165pa",	  "atmega168",	 "atmega168a",
	       "atmega168p",   "atmega168pa",	"atmega168pb",	  "atmega169",
	       "atmega169a",	"atmega169p",	 "atmega169pa",	   "atmega32",
	       "atmega32a",  "atmega32c1",  "atmega32hvb",  "atmega32hvbrevb",
	       "atmega32m1",	"atmega32u4",	 "atmega32u6",	  "atmega323",
	       "atmega324a",   "atmega324p",   "atmega324pa",	"atmega324pb",
	       "atmega325",    "atmega325a",	"atmega325p",	"atmega325pa",
	       "atmega328",    "atmega328p",	"atmega328pb",	  "atmega329",
	       "atmega329a",	"atmega329p",	"atmega329pa",	 "atmega3250",
	       "atmega3250a",  "atmega3250p",  "atmega3250pa",	 "atmega3290",
	       "atmega3290a",	"atmega3290p",	 "atmega3290pa",  "atmega406",
	       "atmega64",    "atmega64a",    "atmega64c1",	"atmega64hve",
	       "atmega64hve2",	 "atmega64m1",	 "atmega64rfr2",  "atmega640",
	       "atmega644",   "atmega644a",    "atmega644p",	"atmega644pa",
	       "atmega644rfr2",	  "atmega645",	 "atmega645a",	 "atmega645p",
	       "atmega649",    "atmega649a",	"atmega649p",	 "atmega6450",
	       "atmega6450a",	"atmega6450p",	 "atmega6490",	"atmega6490a",
	       "atmega6490p", "ata5790",  "ata5790n",  "ata5791",  "ata6613c",
	       "ata6614q",   "ata5782",	  "ata5831",   "ata8210",   "ata8510",
	       "ata5787",     "ata5835",     "ata5700m322",	"ata5702m322",
	       "at90pwm161",	"at90pwm216",	 "at90pwm316",	  "at90can32",
	       "at90can64", "at90scr100", "at90usb646",	"at90usb647", "at94k",
	       "m3000".

	   "avr51"
	       "Enhanced" devices with 128  KiB	 of  program  memory.	mcu  =
	       "atmega128",  "atmega128a",  "atmega128rfa1",  "atmega128rfr2",
	       "atmega1280",   "atmega1281",   "atmega1284",	"atmega1284p",
	       "atmega1284rfr2", "at90can128", "at90usb1286", "at90usb1287".

	   "avr6"
	       "Enhanced"  devices with	3-byte PC, i.e.	with more than 128 KiB
	       of  program  memory.   mcu  =  "atmega256rfr2",	 "atmega2560",
	       "atmega2561", "atmega2564rfr2".

	   "avrxmega2"
	       "XMEGA"	devices	 with  more  than  8  KiB  and up to 64	KiB of
	       program	 memory.    mcu	  =    "atxmega8e5",	"atxmega16a4",
	       "atxmega16a4u",	"atxmega16c4",	"atxmega16d4",	"atxmega16e5",
	       "atxmega32a4",  "atxmega32a4u",	"atxmega32c3",	"atxmega32c4",
	       "atxmega32d3",	"atxmega32d4",	 "atxmega32e5",	  "avr64da28",
	       "avr64da32",	"avr64da48",	 "avr64da64",	  "avr64db28",
	       "avr64db32",	"avr64db48",	 "avr64db64",	  "avr64dd14",
	       "avr64dd20",	"avr64dd28",	 "avr64dd32",	  "avr64du28",
	       "avr64du32",	"avr64ea28",	 "avr64ea32",	  "avr64ea48",
	       "avr64sd28", "avr64sd32", "avr64sd48".

	   "avrxmega3"
	       "XMEGA" devices with up to 64 KiB of  combined  program	memory
	       and  RAM,  and  with  program memory visible in the RAM address
	       space.	 mcu   =   "attiny202",	  "attiny204",	  "attiny212",
	       "attiny214",	"attiny402",	 "attiny404",	  "attiny406",
	       "attiny412",   "attiny414",    "attiny416",    "attiny416auto",
	       "attiny417",	"attiny424",	 "attiny426",	  "attiny427",
	       "attiny804",	"attiny806",	 "attiny807",	  "attiny814",
	       "attiny816",	"attiny817",	 "attiny824",	  "attiny826",
	       "attiny827",    "attiny1604",	"attiny1606",	 "attiny1607",
	       "attiny1614",	"attiny1616",	 "attiny1617",	 "attiny1624",
	       "attiny1626",   "attiny1627",	"attiny3214",	 "attiny3216",
	       "attiny3217",	"attiny3224",	 "attiny3226",	 "attiny3227",
	       "atmega808",    "atmega809",    "atmega1608",	 "atmega1609",
	       "atmega3208",	"atmega3209",	 "atmega4808",	 "atmega4809",
	       "avr16dd14",	"avr16dd20",	 "avr16dd28",	  "avr16dd32",
	       "avr16du14",	"avr16du20",	 "avr16du28",	  "avr16du32",
	       "avr16ea28",	"avr16ea32",	 "avr16ea48",	  "avr16eb14",
	       "avr16eb20",	"avr16eb28",	 "avr16eb32",	  "avr32da28",
	       "avr32da32",	"avr32da48",	 "avr32db28",	  "avr32db32",
	       "avr32db48",	"avr32dd14",	 "avr32dd20",	  "avr32dd28",
	       "avr32dd32",	"avr32du14",	 "avr32du20",	  "avr32du28",
	       "avr32du32",	"avr32ea28",	 "avr32ea32",	  "avr32ea48",
	       "avr32sd20", "avr32sd28", "avr32sd32".

	   "avrxmega4"
	       "XMEGA" devices with more than 64 KiB and  up  to  128  KiB  of
	       program	 memory.    mcu	  =   "atxmega64a3",   "atxmega64a3u",
	       "atxmega64a4u",	"atxmega64b1",	"atxmega64b3",	"atxmega64c3",
	       "atxmega64d3",	"atxmega64d4",	 "avr128da28",	 "avr128da32",
	       "avr128da48",   "avr128da64",	"avr128db28",	 "avr128db32",
	       "avr128db48", "avr128db64".

	   "avrxmega5"
	       "XMEGA"	devices	 with  more  than  64 KiB and up to 128	KiB of
	       program	memory	and  more  than	 64  KiB  of   RAM.    mcu   =
	       "atxmega64a1", "atxmega64a1u".

	   "avrxmega6"
	       "XMEGA"	devices	with more than 128 KiB of program memory.  mcu
	       =     "atxmega128a3",	 "atxmega128a3u",      "atxmega128b1",
	       "atxmega128b3", "atxmega128c3", "atxmega128d3", "atxmega128d4",
	       "atxmega192a3",	       "atxmega192a3u",	       "atxmega192c3",
	       "atxmega192d3",	      "atxmega256a3",	      "atxmega256a3b",
	       "atxmega256a3bu",	"atxmega256a3u",       "atxmega256c3",
	       "atxmega256d3", "atxmega384c3", "atxmega384d3".

	   "avrxmega7"
	       "XMEGA" devices with more than 128 KiB of  program  memory  and
	       more   than   64	  KiB	of   RAM.    mcu   =   "atxmega128a1",
	       "atxmega128a1u",	"atxmega128a4u".

	   "avrtiny"
	       "Reduced	Tiny" Tiny core	devices	with only 16  general  purpose
	       registers  and  512  B  up  to  4 KiB of	program	memory.	 mcu =
	       "attiny4",  "attiny5",  "attiny9",   "attiny10",	  "attiny102",
	       "attiny104", "attiny20",	"attiny40".

	   "avr1"
	       This  ISA  is implemented by the	minimal	AVR core and supported
	       for assembler only.  mcu	= "attiny11", "attiny12",  "attiny15",
	       "attiny28", "at90s1200".

       -mabsdata
	   Assume that all data	in static storage can be accessed by LDS / STS
	   instructions.   This	 option	 has  only  an	effect on reduced Tiny
	   devices  like  ATtiny40.   See  also	 the  "absdata"	 AVR  Variable
	   Attributes,variable attribute.

       -maccumulate-args
	   Accumulate  outgoing	 function  arguments  and  acquire/release the
	   needed stack	space for outgoing function arguments once in function
	   prologue/epilogue.  Without this  option,  outgoing	arguments  are
	   pushed before calling a function and	popped afterwards.

	   Popping  the	 arguments after the function call can be expensive on
	   AVR so that accumulating the	stack  space  might  lead  to  smaller
	   executables	because	 arguments  need not be	removed	from the stack
	   after such a	function call.

	   This	option can lead	 to  reduced  code  size  for  functions  that
	   perform  several calls to functions that get	their arguments	on the
	   stack like calls to printf-like functions.

       -mbranch-cost=cost
	   Set the branch costs	for conditional	branch instructions  to	 cost.
	   Reasonable  values  for  cost are small, non-negative integers. The
	   default branch cost is 0.

       -mcall-prologues
	   Functions prologues/epilogues are expanded as calls to  appropriate
	   subroutines.	 Code size is smaller.

       -mfuse-add
       -mno-fuse-add
       -mfuse-add=level
	   Optimize  indirect  memory  accesses	 on reduced Tiny devices.  The
	   default uses	"level=1" for optimizations -Og	and -O1, and "level=2"
	   for higher optimizations.  Valid values for level are 0, 1 and 2.

       -mdouble=bits
       -mlong-double=bits
	   Set the size	(in bits) of  the  "double"  or	 "long	double"	 type,
	   respectively.   Possible values for bits are	32 and 64.  Whether or
	   not	a  specific  value  for	 bits  is  allowed  depends   on   the
	   "--with-double="    and   "--with-long-double="   configure options
	   ("https://gcc.gnu.org/install/configure.html#avr"),	and  the  same
	   applies for the default values of the options.

       -mgas-isr-prologues
	   Interrupt  service  routines	 (ISRs)	may use	the "__gcc_isr"	pseudo
	   instruction supported by GNU	Binutils.  If this option is  on,  the
	   feature  can	 still be disabled for individual ISRs by means	of the
	   AVR	Function  Attributes,,"no_gccisr"  function  attribute.	  This
	   feature  is	activated  per	default	if optimization	is on (but not
	   with	-Og, @pxref{Optimize Options}),	and if	GNU  Binutils  support
	   PR21683 ("https://sourceware.org/PR21683").

       -mint8
	   Assume  "int"  to  be 8-bit integer.	 This affects the sizes	of all
	   types: a "char" is 1	byte, an "int" is 1 byte, a "long" is 2	bytes,
	   and "long long" is 4	bytes.	Please note that this option does  not
	   conform to the C standards, but it results in smaller code size.

       -mmain-is-OS_task
	   Do  not  save  registers  in	 "main".   The effect is the same like
	   attaching attribute AVR Function Attributes,,"OS_task"  to  "main".
	   It is activated per default if optimization is on.

       -mno-interrupts
	   Generated  code  is	not compatible with hardware interrupts.  Code
	   size	is smaller.

       -mrelax
	   Try to replace  "CALL"  resp.  "JMP"	 instruction  by  the  shorter
	   "RCALL"  resp.  "RJMP"  instruction if applicable.  Setting -mrelax
	   just	adds the --mlink-relax option to the assembler's command  line
	   and the --relax option to the linker's command line.

	   Jump	 relaxing  is performed	by the linker because jump offsets are
	   not known before code is located.  Therefore,  the  assembler  code
	   generated  by the compiler is the same, but the instructions	in the
	   executable may differ from instructions in the assembler code.

	   Relaxing must be turned on if linker	 stubs	are  needed,  see  the
	   section on "EIND" and linker	stubs below.

       -mrodata-in-ram
       -mno-rodata-in-ram
	   Locate  the	".rodata" sections for read-only data in RAM resp.  in
	   program memory.  For	most devices, there  is	 no  choice  and  this
	   option acts rather like an assertion.

	   Since  v14  and  for	 the  AVR64* and AVR128* devices, ".rodata" is
	   located in flash memory per	default,  provided  the	 required  GNU
	   Binutils  support  (PR31124	("https://sourceware.org/PR31124")) is
	   available.  In that case, -mrodata-in-ram can be used to return  to
	   the old layout with ".rodata" in RAM.

       -mstrict-X
	   Use	address	 register "X" in a way proposed	by the hardware.  This
	   means that "X" is only used in  indirect,  post-increment  or  pre-
	   decrement addressing.

	   Without  this  option, the "X" register may be used in the same way
	   as "Y" or "Z" which then is emulated	 by  additional	 instructions.
	   For example,	loading	a value	with "X+const" addressing with a small
	   non-negative	"const < 64" to	a register Rn is performed as

		   adiw	r26, const   ; X += const
		   ld	<Rn>, X	       ; <Rn> =	*X
		   sbiw	r26, const   ; X -= const

       -mtiny-stack
	   Only	change the lower 8 bits	of the stack pointer.

       -mfract-convert-truncate
	   Allow  to  use  truncation  instead	of  rounding  towards zero for
	   fractional fixed-point types.

       -nodevicelib
	   Don't link against AVR-LibC's device	specific library "lib<mcu>.a".

       -nodevicespecs
	   Don't add -specs=device-specs/specs-mcu to  the  compiler  driver's
	   command line.  The user takes responsibility	for supplying the sub-
	   processes   like   compiler	 proper,  assembler  and  linker  with
	   appropriate command line options.  This means that the user has  to
	   supply  her	private	 device	specs file by means of -specs=path-to-
	   specs-file.	There is no more need for option -mmcu=mcu.

	   This	option can also	serve as a replacement for the	older  way  of
	   specifying  custom  device-specs  files that	needed -B some-path to
	   point to a directory	which contains a folder	 named	"device-specs"
	   which  contains  a  specs  file  named  "specs-mcu",	 where mcu was
	   specified by	-mmcu=mcu.

       -Waddr-space-convert
	   Warn	about conversions between address spaces in the	case where the
	   resulting address space is not contained in	the  incoming  address
	   space.

       -Wmisspelled-isr
	   Warn	 if  the  ISR  is  misspelled,	i.e.  without __vector prefix.
	   Enabled by default.

       "EIND" and Devices with More Than 128 Ki	Bytes of Flash

       Pointers	in the implementation are 16 bits  wide.   The	address	 of  a
       function	or label is represented	as word	address	so that	indirect jumps
       and calls can target any	code address in	the range of 64	Ki words.

       In  order  to facilitate	indirect jump on devices with more than	128 Ki
       bytes of	program	memory space, there is	a  special  function  register
       called  "EIND"  that  serves  as	 most  significant  part of the	target
       address when "EICALL" or	"EIJMP"	instructions are used.

       Indirect	jumps and calls	on these devices are handled as	follows	by the
       compiler	and are	subject	to some	limitations:

       *   The compiler	never sets "EIND".

       *   The	 compiler   uses   "EIND"   implicitly	 in   "EICALL"/"EIJMP"
	   instructions	 or  might read	"EIND" directly	in order to emulate an
	   indirect call/jump by means of a "RET" instruction.

       *   The compiler	assumes	that "EIND" never changes during  the  startup
	   code	 or  during  the  application.	In  particular,	 "EIND"	is not
	   saved/restored   in	 function   or	 interrupt   service   routine
	   prologue/epilogue.

       *   For	indirect  calls	 to  functions	and  computed goto, the	linker
	   generates  stubs.  Stubs  are  jump	pads  sometimes	 also	called
	   trampolines.	 Thus,	the  indirect  call/jump jumps to such a stub.
	   The stub contains a direct jump to the desired address.

       *   Linker relaxation must be turned on so that	the  linker  generates
	   the	stubs  correctly  in  all  situations. See the compiler	option
	   -mrelax and the linker option  --relax.   There  are	 corner	 cases
	   where  the  linker is supposed to generate stubs but	aborts without
	   relaxation and without a helpful error message.

       *   The default linker script is	arranged for code with "EIND = 0".  If
	   code	is supposed to work for	a setup	with "EIND  !=	0",  a	custom
	   linker  script  has to be used in order to place the	sections whose
	   name	start with ".trampolines" into the segment where "EIND"	points
	   to.

       *   The startup code  from  libgcc  never  sets	"EIND".	  Notice  that
	   startup  code is a blend of code from libgcc	and AVR-LibC.  For the
	   impact  of  AVR-LibC	 on  "EIND",  see   the	  AVR-LibC user	manual
	   ("https://www.nongnu.org/avr-libc/user-manual/").

       *   It  is  legitimate  for user-specific startup code to set up	"EIND"
	   early, for example by  means	 of  initialization  code  located  in
	   section ".init3". Such code runs prior to general startup code that
	   initializes	RAM  and  calls	 constructors,	but  after  the	bit of
	   startup code	from AVR-LibC that sets	"EIND" to  the	segment	 where
	   the vector table is located.

		   #include <avr/io.h>

		   static void
		   __attribute__((section(".init3"),naked,used,no_instrument_function))
		   init3_set_eind (void)
		   {
		     __asm volatile ("ldi r24,pm_hh8(__trampolines_start)\n\t"
				     "out %i0,r24" :: "n" (&EIND) : "r24","memory");
		   }

	   The "__trampolines_start" symbol is defined in the linker script.

       *   Stubs  are  generated  automatically	by the linker if the following
	   two conditions are met:

	   -<The address of a label is taken by	means of the "gs" modifier>
	       (short for generate stubs) like so:

		       LDI r24,	lo8(gs(<func>))
		       LDI r25,	hi8(gs(<func>))

	   -<The final location	of that	label is in a code segment>
	       outside the segment where the stubs are located.

       *   The compiler	emits such "gs"	 modifiers  for	 code  labels  in  the
	   following situations:

	   -<Taking address of a function or code label.>
	   -<Computed goto.>
	   -<If	prologue-save function is used,	see -mcall-prologues>
	       command-line option.

	   -<Switch/case dispatch tables. If you do not	want such dispatch>
	       tables	you  can  specify  the	-fno-jump-tables  command-line
	       option.

	   -<C and C++ constructors/destructors	called during
	   startup/shutdown.>
	   -<If	the tools hit a	"gs()" modifier	explained above.>
       *   Jumping to non-symbolic addresses like so is	not supported:

		   int main (void)
		   {
		       /* Call function	at word	address	0x2 */
		       return ((int(*)(void)) 0x2)();
		   }

	   Instead, a stub has to be set up,  i.e.  the	 function  has	to  be
	   called through a symbol ("func_4" in	the example):

		   int main (void)
		   {
		       extern int func_4 (void);

		       /* Call function	at byte	address	0x4 */
		       return func_4();
		   }

	   and	 the   application  be	linked	with  -Wl,--defsym,func_4=0x4.
	   Alternatively, "func_4" can be defined in the linker	script.

       Handling	of the "RAMPD",	"RAMPX", "RAMPY" and "RAMPZ" Special  Function
       Registers

       Some AVR	devices	support	memories larger	than the 64 KiB	range that can
       be  accessed  with 16-bit pointers.  To access memory locations outside
       this 64 KiB range, the content of a "RAMP" register  is	used  as  high
       part of the address: The	"X", "Y", "Z" address register is concatenated
       with   the   "RAMPX",   "RAMPY",	 "RAMPZ"  special  function  register,
       respectively, to	 get  a	 wide  address.	 Similarly,  "RAMPD"  is  used
       together	with direct addressing.

       *   The	startup	code initializes the "RAMP" special function registers
	   with	zero.

       *   If a	AVR  Named  Address  Spaces,named  address  space  other  than
	   generic  or "__flash" is used, then "RAMPZ" is set as needed	before
	   the operation.

       *   If the device supports RAM larger than  64  KiB  and	 the  compiler
	   needs  to  change  "RAMPZ"  to  accomplish an operation, "RAMPZ" is
	   reset to zero after the operation.

       *   If the device comes	with  a	 specific  "RAMP"  register,  the  ISR
	   prologue/epilogue  saves/restores  that SFR and initializes it with
	   zero	in case	the ISR	code might (implicitly)	use it.

       *   RAM larger than 64 KiB is not supported by GCC for AVR targets.  If
	   you use inline assembler to read from locations outside the	16-bit
	   address  range  and	change	one  of	the "RAMP" registers, you must
	   reset it to zero after the access.

       AVR Built-in Macros

       GCC defines several built-in macros so that the user code can test  for
       the  presence  or  absence  of  features.   Almost any of the following
       built-in	macros are deduced from	device capabilities and	thus triggered
       by the -mmcu= command-line option.

       For even	more AVR-specific built-in macros see AVR Named	Address	Spaces
       and AVR Built-in	Functions.

       "__AVR_ARCH__"
	   Build-in macro that resolves	to a decimal  number  that  identifies
	   the	architecture  and  depends  on the -mmcu=mcu option.  Possible
	   values are:

	   2, 25, 3, 31, 35, 4,	5, 51, 6

	   for mcu="avr2", "avr25", "avr3", "avr31", "avr35", "avr4",  "avr5",
	   "avr51", "avr6",

	   respectively	and

	   100,	102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107

	   for	  mcu="avrtiny",    "avrxmega2",   "avrxmega3",	  "avrxmega4",
	   "avrxmega5",	 "avrxmega6",  "avrxmega7",  respectively.    If   mcu
	   specifies  a	 device,  this	built-in macro is set accordingly. For
	   example, with -mmcu=atmega8 the macro is defined to 4.

       "__AVR_Device__"
	   Setting -mmcu=device	defines	this built-in macro which reflects the
	   device's name. For  example,	 -mmcu=atmega8	defines	 the  built-in
	   macro       "__AVR_ATmega8__",	-mmcu=attiny261a       defines
	   "__AVR_ATtiny261A__", etc.

	   The built-in	macros'	names follow the scheme	"__AVR_Device__" where
	   Device is the  device  name	as  from  the  AVR  user  manual.  The
	   difference  between	Device	in  the	 built-in  macro and device in
	   -mmcu=device	is that	the latter is always lowercase.

	   If device is	not a device but only a	core architecture like	avr51,
	   this	macro is not defined.

       "__AVR_DEVICE_NAME__"
	   Setting  -mmcu=device  defines  this	built-in macro to the device's
	   name. For example, with  -mmcu=atmega8  the	macro  is  defined  to
	   "atmega8".

	   If  device is not a device but only a core architecture like	avr51,
	   this	macro is not defined.

       "__AVR_XMEGA__"
	   The device /	architecture belongs to	the XMEGA family of devices.

       "__AVR_HAVE_ADIW__"
	   The device has the "ADIW" and "SBIW"	instructions.

       "__AVR_HAVE_ELPM__"
	   The device has the "ELPM" instruction.

       "__AVR_HAVE_ELPMX__"
	   The device has the "ELPM Rn,Z" and "ELPM Rn,Z+" instructions.

       "__AVR_HAVE_LPMX__"
	   The device has the "LPM Rn,Z" and "LPM Rn,Z+" instructions.

       "__AVR_HAVE_MOVW__"
	   The device has the "MOVW" instruction to perform  16-bit  register-
	   register moves.

       "__AVR_HAVE_MUL__"
	   The device has a hardware multiplier.

       "__AVR_HAVE_JMP_CALL__"
	   The device has the "JMP" and	"CALL" instructions.  This is the case
	   for devices with more than 8	KiB of program memory.

       "__AVR_HAVE_EIJMP_EICALL__"
       "__AVR_3_BYTE_PC__"
	   The	device has the "EIJMP" and "EICALL" instructions.  This	is the
	   case	for devices with more than 128 KiB of  program	memory.	  This
	   also	means that the program counter (PC) is 3 bytes wide.

       "__AVR_2_BYTE_PC__"
	   The	program	 counter  (PC)	is  2 bytes wide. This is the case for
	   devices with	up to 128 KiB of program memory.

       "__AVR_HAVE_8BIT_SP__"
       "__AVR_HAVE_16BIT_SP__"
	   The stack pointer (SP) register is treated  as  8-bit  respectively
	   16-bit register by the compiler.  The definition of these macros is
	   affected by -mtiny-stack.

       "__AVR_HAVE_SPH__"
       "__AVR_SP8__"
	   The	device	has  the  SPH  (high  part  of	stack pointer) special
	   function register or	has an 8-bit stack pointer, respectively.  The
	   definition of these macros is affected by -mmcu= and	in  the	 cases
	   of -mmcu=avr2 and -mmcu=avr25 also by -msp8.

       "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPD__"
       "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPX__"
       "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPY__"
       "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPZ__"
	   The	device	has  the  "RAMPD",  "RAMPX",  "RAMPY", "RAMPZ" special
	   function register, respectively.

       "__NO_INTERRUPTS__"
	   This	macro reflects the -mno-interrupts command-line	option.

       "__AVR_ERRATA_SKIP__"
       "__AVR_ERRATA_SKIP_JMP_CALL__"
	   Some	AVR  devices  (AT90S8515,  ATmega103)  must  not  skip	32-bit
	   instructions	 because of a hardware erratum.	 Skip instructions are
	   "SBRS", "SBRC", "SBIS", "SBIC" and "CPSE".	The  second  macro  is
	   only	defined	if "__AVR_HAVE_JMP_CALL__" is also set.

       "__AVR_ISA_RMW__"
	   The	device	has  Read-Modify-Write instructions (XCH, LAC, LAS and
	   LAT).

       "__AVR_SFR_OFFSET__=offset"
	   Instructions	 that  can  address  I/O  special  function  registers
	   directly  like "IN",	"OUT", "SBI", etc. may use a different address
	   as if addressed by an instruction to	access RAM like	"LD" or	"STS".
	   This	offset depends on  the	device	architecture  and  has	to  be
	   subtracted  from the	RAM address in order to	get the	respective I/O
	   address.

       "__AVR_SHORT_CALLS__"
	   The -mshort-calls command line option is set.

       "__AVR_PM_BASE_ADDRESS__=addr"
	   Some	devices	support	reading	from flash memory by  means  of	 "LD*"
	   instructions.   The	flash memory is	seen in	the data address space
	   at an offset	of "__AVR_PM_BASE_ADDRESS__".  If this	macro  is  not
	   defined,  this  feature  is not available.  If defined, the address
	   space is linear and there is	no need	to  put	 ".rodata"  into  RAM.
	   This	 is  handled  by  the  default linker description file,	and is
	   currently available	for  "avrtiny"	and  "avrxmega3".   Even  more
	   convenient,	there  is no need to use address spaces	like "__flash"
	   or features like attribute "progmem"	and "pgm_read_*".

       "__AVR_HAVE_FLMAP__"
	   This	macro is defined provided the following	conditions are met:

	   *<The device	has the	"NVMCTRL_CTRLB.FLMAP" bitfield.>
	       This applies to the AVR64* and AVR128* devices.

	   *<It's not known at assembler-time which emulation will be used.>

	   This	implies	the compiler was configured  with  GNU	Binutils  that
	   implement PR31124 ("https://sourceware.org/PR31124").

       "__AVR_RODATA_IN_RAM__"
	   This	 macro	is  undefined  when  the  code	is compiled for	a core
	   architecture.

	   When	the code is compiled for a device, the macro is	defined	 to  1
	   when	 the  ".rodata"	sections for read-only data is located in RAM;
	   and defined to 0, otherwise.

       "__WITH_AVRLIBC__"
	   The compiler	is configured to be used together with AVR-Libc.   See
	   the --with-avrlibc configure	option.

       "__HAVE_DOUBLE_MULTILIB__"
	   Defined if -mdouble=	acts as	a multilib option.

       "__HAVE_DOUBLE32__"
       "__HAVE_DOUBLE64__"
	   Defined if the compiler supports 32-bit double resp.	64-bit double.
	   The actual layout is	specified by option -mdouble=.

       "__DEFAULT_DOUBLE__"
	   The	size in	bits of	"double" if -mdouble= is not set.  To test the
	   layout  of  "double"	 in  a	program,  use	the   built-in	 macro
	   "__SIZEOF_DOUBLE__".

       "__HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE32__"
       "__HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE64__"
       "__HAVE_LONG_DOUBLE_MULTILIB__"
       "__DEFAULT_LONG_DOUBLE__"
	   Same	as above, but for "long	double"	instead	of "double".

       "__WITH_DOUBLE_COMPARISON__"
	   Reflects    the    "--with-double-comparison={tristate|bool|libf7}"
	   configure option ("https://gcc.gnu.org/install/configure.html#avr")
	   and is defined to 2 or 3.

       "__WITH_LIBF7_LIBGCC__"
       "__WITH_LIBF7_MATH__"
       "__WITH_LIBF7_MATH_SYMBOLS__"
	   Reflects	  the	     "--with-libf7={libgcc|math|math-symbols}"
	   configure option
	   ("https://gcc.gnu.org/install/configure.html#avr").

       AVR Internal Options

       The  following  options	are  used  internally  by  the compiler	and to
       communicate between device specs	files and  the	compiler  proper.  You
       don't  need  to	set  these options by hand, in particular they are not
       optimization options.  Using these options in the wrong way may lead to
       sub-optimal or wrong code.  They	are documented for  completeness,  and
       in    order   to	  get	a   better   understanding   of	  device specs
       ("https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/avr-gcc#spec-files") files.

       -mn-flash=num
	   Assume that the flash memory	has a size of num times	64 KiB.	  This
	   determines which "__flashN" address spaces are available.

       -mflmap
	   The	device	has  the "FLMAP" bit field located in special function
	   register "NVMCTRL_CTRLB".

       -mrmw
	   Assume that the device supports the Read-Modify-Write  instructions
	   "XCH", "LAC", "LAS" and "LAT".

       -mshort-calls
	   Assume that "RJMP" and "RCALL" can target the whole program memory.
	   This	 option	 is used for multilib generation and selection for the
	   devices from	architecture "avrxmega3".

       -mskip-bug
	   Generate  code  without  skips  ("CPSE",  "SBRS",  "SBRC",  "SBIS",
	   "SBIC") over	32-bit instructions.

       -msp8
	   Treat  the stack pointer register as	an 8-bit register, i.e.	assume
	   the high byte of the	stack pointer is zero.	This option is used by
	   the compiler	to select and build multilibs for architectures	"avr2"
	   and "avr25".	 These architectures  mix  devices  with  and  without
	   "SPH".

       Blackfin	Options

       -mcpu=cpu[-sirevision]
	   Specifies  the  name	 of the	target Blackfin	processor.  Currently,
	   cpu can be one of bf512, bf514, bf516, bf518, bf522,	bf523,	bf524,
	   bf525,  bf526,  bf527,  bf531,  bf532,  bf533, bf534, bf536,	bf537,
	   bf538, bf539, bf542,	bf544, bf547, bf548,  bf549,  bf542m,  bf544m,
	   bf547m, bf548m, bf549m, bf561, bf592.

	   The	optional  sirevision  specifies	 the  silicon  revision	of the
	   target Blackfin  processor.	 Any  workarounds  available  for  the
	   targeted  silicon  revision are enabled.  If	sirevision is none, no
	   workarounds are enabled.  If	sirevision is any, all workarounds for
	   the targeted	processor  are	enabled.   The	"__SILICON_REVISION__"
	   macro  is  defined to two hexadecimal digits	representing the major
	   and minor numbers in	the silicon revision.  If sirevision is	 none,
	   the	"__SILICON_REVISION__"	is not defined.	 If sirevision is any,
	   the "__SILICON_REVISION__"  is  defined  to	be  0xffff.   If  this
	   optional  sirevision	 is  not  used,	 GCC  assumes the latest known
	   silicon revision of the targeted Blackfin processor.

	   GCC defines a preprocessor macro for	the specified  cpu.   For  the
	   bfin-elf toolchain, this option causes the hardware BSP provided by
	   libgloss to be linked in if -msim is	not given.

	   Without this	option,	bf532 is used as the processor by default.

	   Note	 that  support	for  bf561 is incomplete.  For bf561, only the
	   preprocessor	macro is defined.

       -msim
	   Specifies that the program will be  run  on	the  simulator.	  This
	   causes  the	simulator  BSP	provided  by libgloss to be linked in.
	   This	option has effect only for bfin-elf toolchain.	Certain	 other
	   options, such as -mid-shared-library	and -mfdpic, imply -msim.

       -momit-leaf-frame-pointer
	   Don't  keep	the  frame  pointer  in	a register for leaf functions.
	   This	avoids the instructions	to save,  set  up  and	restore	 frame
	   pointers and	makes an extra register	available in leaf functions.

       -mspecld-anomaly
	   When	enabled, the compiler ensures that the generated code does not
	   contain  speculative	 loads after jump instructions.	If this	option
	   is used, "__WORKAROUND_SPECULATIVE_LOADS" is	defined.

       -mno-specld-anomaly
	   Don't  generate  extra  code	 to  prevent  speculative  loads  from
	   occurring.

       -mcsync-anomaly
	   When	enabled, the compiler ensures that the generated code does not
	   contain  CSYNC  or  SSYNC  instructions  too	soon after conditional
	   branches.  If this option is	used, "__WORKAROUND_SPECULATIVE_SYNCS"
	   is defined.

       -mno-csync-anomaly
	   Don't generate extra	code to	prevent	CSYNC  or  SSYNC  instructions
	   from	occurring too soon after a conditional branch.

       -mlow64k
	   When	 enabled,  the	compiler  is  free  to	take  advantage	of the
	   knowledge that the entire program fits into the low 64k of memory.

       -mno-low64k
	   Assume that the program is arbitrarily large.  This is the default.

       -mstack-check-l1
	   Do stack checking  using  information  placed  into	L1  scratchpad
	   memory by the uClinux kernel.

       -mid-shared-library
	   Generate  code  that	 supports  shared libraries via	the library ID
	   method.  This allows	for execute in place and shared	 libraries  in
	   an  environment  without  virtual  memory  management.  This	option
	   implies -fPIC.  With	a bfin-elf target, this	option implies -msim.

       -mno-id-shared-library
	   Generate code that doesn't assume  ID-based	shared	libraries  are
	   being used.	This is	the default.

       -mleaf-id-shared-library
	   Generate  code  that	 supports  shared libraries via	the library ID
	   method, but assumes that this  library  or  executable  won't  link
	   against any other ID	shared libraries.  That	allows the compiler to
	   use faster code for jumps and calls.

       -mno-leaf-id-shared-library
	   Do  not  assume that	the code being compiled	won't link against any
	   ID shared libraries.	 Slower	code is	generated for  jump  and  call
	   insns.

       -mshared-library-id=n
	   Specifies  the identification number	of the ID-based	shared library
	   being compiled.  Specifying a value of  0  generates	 more  compact
	   code;  specifying other values forces the allocation	of that	number
	   to the current library but is no more space-	or time-efficient than
	   omitting this option.

       -msep-data
	   Generate code that allows the data  segment	to  be	located	 in  a
	   different  area  of	memory from the	text segment.  This allows for
	   execute  in	place  in  an  environment  without   virtual	memory
	   management by eliminating relocations against the text section.

       -mno-sep-data
	   Generate  code  that	assumes	that the data segment follows the text
	   segment.  This is the default.

       -mlong-calls
       -mno-long-calls
	   Tells the compiler to perform function calls	by first  loading  the
	   address  of	the  function  into  a	register and then performing a
	   subroutine call on this register.  This switch  is  needed  if  the
	   target  function lies outside of the	24-bit addressing range	of the
	   offset-based	version	of subroutine call instruction.

	   This	feature	is not enabled by default.  Specifying -mno-long-calls
	   restores the	default	behavior.  Note	these switches have no	effect
	   on  how  the	 compiler  generates code to handle function calls via
	   function pointers.

       -mfast-fp
	   Link	with the fast floating-point  library.	This  library  relaxes
	   some	 of  the  IEEE	floating-point	standard's  rules for checking
	   inputs against Not-a-Number (NAN), in the interest of performance.

       -minline-plt
	   Enable inlining of PLT entries in function calls to functions  that
	   are not known to bind locally.  It has no effect without -mfdpic.

       -mmulticore
	   Build  a  standalone	application for	multicore Blackfin processors.
	   This	option causes proper start files and link  scripts  supporting
	   multicore to	be used, and defines the macro "__BFIN_MULTICORE".  It
	   can only be used with -mcpu=bf561[-sirevision].

	   This	 option	can be used with -mcorea or -mcoreb, which selects the
	   one-application-per-core programming	 model.	  Without  -mcorea  or
	   -mcoreb,  the  single-application/dual-core	programming  model  is
	   used. In this model,	the main function of Core B should be named as
	   "coreb_main".

	   If this option is not used, the single-core application programming
	   model is used.

       -mcorea
	   Build a standalone application for Core A of	BF561 when  using  the
	   one-application-per-core  programming model.	Proper start files and
	   link	 scripts  are  used  to	 support  Core	A,   and   the	 macro
	   "__BFIN_COREA"  is  defined.	  This	option	can  only  be  used in
	   conjunction with -mmulticore.

       -mcoreb
	   Build a standalone application for Core B of	BF561 when  using  the
	   one-application-per-core  programming model.	Proper start files and
	   link	 scripts  are  used  to	 support  Core	B,   and   the	 macro
	   "__BFIN_COREB"  is  defined.	When this option is used, "coreb_main"
	   should be used instead of "main".  This option can only be used  in
	   conjunction with -mmulticore.

       -msdram
	   Build  a  standalone	 application for SDRAM.	Proper start files and
	   link	scripts	are used to put	the application	into  SDRAM,  and  the
	   macro  "__BFIN_SDRAM"  is  defined.	 The  loader should initialize
	   SDRAM before	loading	the application.

       -micplb
	   Assume that ICPLBs are enabled at run time.	This has an effect  on
	   certain  anomaly workarounds.  For Linux targets, the default is to
	   assume ICPLBs are enabled; for standalone applications the  default
	   is off.

       C6X Options

       -march=name
	   This	 specifies the name of the target architecture.	 GCC uses this
	   name	to determine what  kind	 of  instructions  it  can  emit  when
	   generating  assembly	 code.	 Permissible  names  are:  c62x, c64x,
	   c64x+, c67x,	c67x+, c674x.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a big-endian target.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code for a little-endian target.  This is the default.

       -msim
	   Choose startup files	and linker script suitable for the simulator.

       -msdata=default
	   Put small global and	static data in the ".neardata" section,	 which
	   is  pointed	to  by register	"B14".	Put small uninitialized	global
	   and static data in the ".bss" section, which	 is  adjacent  to  the
	   ".neardata"	section.   Put small read-only data into the ".rodata"
	   section.  The corresponding sections	used for large pieces of  data
	   are ".fardata", ".far" and ".const".

       -msdata=all
	   Put	all  data,  not	just small objects, into the sections reserved
	   for small data, and use addressing relative to the  "B14"  register
	   to access them.

       -msdata=none
	   Make	 no  use  of  the  sections  reserved  for small data, and use
	   absolute addresses to access	all data.  Put all initialized	global
	   and	static	data  in the ".fardata"	section, and all uninitialized
	   data	in the	".far"	section.   Put	all  constant  data  into  the
	   ".const" section.

       CRIS Options

       These options are defined specifically for the CRIS ports.

       -march=architecture-type
       -mcpu=architecture-type
	   Generate  code  for	the  specified	architecture.  The choices for
	   architecture-type are v3, v8	 and  v10  for	respectively  ETRAX 4,
	   ETRAX 100, and ETRAX	100 LX.	 Default is v0.

       -mtune=architecture-type
	   Tune	to architecture-type everything	applicable about the generated
	   code,  except  for  the  ABI	and the	set of available instructions.
	   The	choices	 for   architecture-type   are	 the   same   as   for
	   -march=architecture-type.

       -mmax-stack-frame=n
	   Warn	when the stack frame of	a function exceeds n bytes.

       -metrax4
       -metrax100
	   The	options	-metrax4 and -metrax100	are synonyms for -march=v3 and
	   -march=v8 respectively.

       -mmul-bug-workaround
       -mno-mul-bug-workaround
	   Work	around a bug in	the "muls" and	"mulu"	instructions  for  CPU
	   models where	it applies.  This option is disabled by	default.

       -mpdebug
	   Enable  CRIS-specific  verbose  debug-related  information  in  the
	   assembly code.  This	option also has	the effect of turning off  the
	   #NO_APP  formatted-code indicator to	the assembler at the beginning
	   of the assembly file.

       -mcc-init
	   Do not use condition-code results from previous instruction;	always
	   emit	compare	and test instructions before use of condition codes.

       -mno-side-effects
	   Do not emit instructions with  side	effects	 in  addressing	 modes
	   other than post-increment.

       -mstack-align
       -mno-stack-align
       -mdata-align
       -mno-data-align
       -mconst-align
       -mno-const-align
	   These  options  (no-	 options) arrange (eliminate arrangements) for
	   the stack frame, individual data and	constants to  be  aligned  for
	   the	maximum	single data access size	for the	chosen CPU model.  The
	   default is to arrange for 32-bit alignment.	ABI  details  such  as
	   structure layout are	not affected by	these options.

       -m32-bit
       -m16-bit
       -m8-bit
	   Similar  to	the  stack- data- and const-align options above, these
	   options arrange for stack frame, writable data and constants	to all
	   be  32-bit,	16-bit	or  8-bit  aligned.   The  default  is	32-bit
	   alignment.

       -mno-prologue-epilogue
       -mprologue-epilogue
	   With	 -mno-prologue-epilogue,  the  normal  function	 prologue  and
	   epilogue which set up the stack frame are  omitted  and  no	return
	   instructions	 or  return  sequences are generated in	the code.  Use
	   this	option only together with visual inspection  of	 the  compiled
	   code: no warnings or	errors are generated when call-saved registers
	   must	 be  saved,  or	 storage  for  local  variables	 needs	to  be
	   allocated.

       -melf
	   Legacy no-op	option.

       -sim
	   This	option arranges	to link	with  input-output  functions  from  a
	   simulator  library.	 Code,	initialized  data and zero-initialized
	   data	are allocated consecutively.

       -sim2
	   Like	-sim, but pass linker options to locate	 initialized  data  at
	   0x40000000 and zero-initialized data	at 0x80000000.

       C-SKY Options

       GCC supports these options when compiling for C-SKY V2 processors.

       -march=arch
	   Specify  the	C-SKY target architecture.  Valid values for arch are:
	   ck801, ck802, ck803,	ck807, and ck810.  The default is ck810.

       -mcpu=cpu
	   Specify the C-SKY target processor.	 Valid	values	for  cpu  are:
	   ck801,  ck801t,  ck802,  ck802t,  ck802j,  ck803,  ck803h,  ck803t,
	   ck803ht,  ck803f,  ck803fh,	ck803e,	 ck803eh,  ck803et,  ck803eht,
	   ck803ef, ck803efh, ck803ft, ck803eft, ck803efht, ck803r1, ck803hr1,
	   ck803tr1,  ck803htr1,  ck803fr1,  ck803fhr1,	 ck803er1,  ck803ehr1,
	   ck803etr1,	ck803ehtr1,    ck803efr1,    ck803efhr1,    ck803ftr1,
	   ck803eftr1,	 ck803efhtr1,	ck803s,	  ck803st,  ck803se,  ck803sf,
	   ck803sef,  ck803seft,  ck807e,  ck807ef,  ck807,  ck807f,   ck810e,
	   ck810et, ck810ef, ck810eft, ck810, ck810v, ck810f, ck810t, ck810fv,
	   ck810tv, ck810ft, and ck810ftv.

       -mbig-endian
       -EB
       -mlittle-endian
       -EL Select big- or little-endian	code.  The default is little-endian.

       -mfloat-abi=name
	   Specifies which floating-point ABI to use.  Permissible values are:
	   soft, softfp	and hard.

	   Specifying  soft  causes  GCC to generate output containing library
	   calls for floating-point operations.	 softfp	allows the  generation
	   of  code using hardware floating-point instructions,	but still uses
	   the soft-float calling  conventions.	  hard	allows	generation  of
	   floating-point   instructions   and	 uses	FPU-specific   calling
	   conventions.

	   The default depends on the  specific	 target	 configuration.	  Note
	   that	 the  hard-float  and soft-float ABIs are not link-compatible;
	   you must compile your entire	program	with the same  ABI,  and  link
	   with	a compatible set of libraries.

       -mhard-float
       -msoft-float
	   Select  hardware  or	 software floating-point implementations.  The
	   default is soft float.

       -mdouble-float
       -mno-double-float
	   When	-mhard-float  is  in  effect,  enable  generation  of  double-
	   precision  float  instructions.   This  is  the default except when
	   compiling for CK803.

       -mfdivdu
       -mno-fdivdu
	   When	-mhard-float is	in effect,  enable  generation	of  "frecipd",
	   "fsqrtd",  and  "fdivd"  instructions.   This is the	default	except
	   when	compiling for CK803.

       -mfpu=fpu
	   Select the floating-point processor.	 This option can only be  used
	   with	 -mhard-float.	 Values	 for  fpu  are	fpv2_sf	(equivalent to
	   -mno-double-float -mno-fdivdu), fpv2	 (-mdouble-float  -mno-divdu),
	   and fpv2_divd (-mdouble-float -mdivdu).

       -melrw
       -mno-elrw
	   Enable  the extended	"lrw" instruction.  This option	defaults to on
	   for CK801 and off otherwise.

       -mistack
       -mno-istack
	   Enable interrupt stack instructions;	the default is off.

	   The -mistack	option is required to handle the "interrupt" and "isr"
	   function attributes.

       -mmp
	   Enable multiprocessor instructions; the default is off.

       -mcp
	   Enable coprocessor instructions; the	default	is off.

       -mcache
	   Enable coprocessor instructions; the	default	is off.

       -msecurity
	   Enable C-SKY	security instructions; the default is off.

       -mtrust
	   Enable C-SKY	trust instructions; the	default	is off.

       -mdsp
       -medsp
       -mvdsp
	   Enable  C-SKY  DSP,	Enhanced  DSP,	or  Vector  DSP	 instructions,
	   respectively.  All of these options default to off.

       -mdiv
       -mno-div
	   Generate divide instructions.  Default is off.

       -msmart
       -mno-smart
	   Generate  code for Smart Mode, using	only registers numbered	0-7 to
	   allow use of	16-bit instructions.  This option is ignored for CK801
	   where this is the required behavior,	and  it	 defaults  to  on  for
	   CK802.  For other targets, the default is off.

       -mhigh-registers
       -mno-high-registers
	   Generate code using the high	registers numbered 16-31.  This	option
	   is  not  supported  on  CK801,  CK802,  or CK803, and is enabled by
	   default for other processors.

       -manchor
       -mno-anchor
	   Generate code using global anchor symbol addresses.

       -mpushpop
       -mno-pushpop
	   Generate code using "push" and  "pop"  instructions.	  This	option
	   defaults to on.

       -mmultiple-stld
       -mstm
       -mno-multiple-stld
       -mno-stm
	   Generate  code  using  "stm"	 and  "ldm" instructions.  This	option
	   isn't supported on  CK801  but  is  enabled	by  default  on	 other
	   processors.

       -mconstpool
       -mno-constpool
	   Create  constant  pools  in the compiler instead of deferring it to
	   the assembler.  This	option is the default and required for correct
	   code	generation on CK801  and  CK802,  and  is  optional  on	 other
	   processors.

       -mstack-size
       -mno-stack-size
	   Emit	 ".stack_size"	directives  for	 each function in the assembly
	   output.  This option	defaults to off.

       -mccrt
       -mno-ccrt
	   Generate code for the C-SKY compiler	 runtime  instead  of  libgcc.
	   This	option defaults	to off.

       -mbranch-cost=n
	   Set	the  branch costs to roughly "n" instructions.	The default is
	   1.

       -msched-prolog
       -mno-sched-prolog
	   Permit scheduling of	 function  prologue  and  epilogue  sequences.
	   Using this option can result	in code	that is	not compliant with the
	   C-SKY  V2  ABI prologue requirements	and that cannot	be debugged or
	   backtraced.	It is disabled by default.

       -msim
	   Links the library libsemi.a which is	in compatible with  simulator.
	   Applicable to ELF compiler only.

       Darwin Options

       These  options  are  defined  for  all architectures running the	Darwin
       operating system.

       FSF GCC on Darwin does not create "fat" object  files;  it  creates  an
       object  file  for the single architecture that GCC was built to target.
       Apple's GCC on Darwin does create "fat" files if	multiple -arch options
       are used; it does so by running the compiler or linker  multiple	 times
       and joining the results together	with lipo.

       The  subtype  of	 the  file created (like ppc7400 or ppc970 or i686) is
       determined by the flags that specify the	ISA  that  GCC	is  targeting,
       like  -mcpu or -march.  The -force_cpusubtype_ALL option	can be used to
       override	this.

       The Darwin tools	vary in	their behavior	when  presented	 with  an  ISA
       mismatch.  The assembler, as, only permits instructions to be used that
       are  valid  for the subtype of the file it is generating, so you	cannot
       put 64-bit instructions in a ppc750 object file.	 The linker for	shared
       libraries, /usr/bin/libtool, fails and prints  an  error	 if  asked  to
       create  a shared	library	with a less restrictive	subtype	than its input
       files (for instance, trying to put a ppc970 object file	in  a  ppc7400
       library).  The linker for executables, ld, quietly gives	the executable
       the most	restrictive subtype of any of its input	files.

       -Fdir
	   Add	the  framework	directory  dir	to  the	 head  of  the list of
	   directories to be searched for header files.	 These directories are
	   interleaved with those specified by -I options and are scanned in a
	   left-to-right order.

	   A framework directory is a directory	 with  frameworks  in  it.   A
	   framework  is  a  directory	with  a	 Headers and/or	PrivateHeaders
	   directory contained directly	in it that ends	 in  .framework.   The
	   name	 of  a	framework  is the name of this directory excluding the
	   .framework.	Headers	associated with	the framework are found	in one
	   of those two	directories, with Headers  being  searched  first.   A
	   subframework	 is  a	framework  directory  that is in a framework's
	   Frameworks directory.  Includes of subframework  headers  can  only
	   appear  in  a header	of a framework that contains the subframework,
	   or  in  a  sibling  subframework  header.   Two  subframeworks  are
	   siblings  if	 they  occur  in  the  same framework.	A subframework
	   should not have the same name as a framework; a warning  is	issued
	   if	this  is  violated.   Currently	 a  subframework  cannot  have
	   subframeworks; in the future, the  mechanism	 may  be  extended  to
	   support   this.    The   standard   frameworks   can	 be  found  in
	   /System/Library/Frameworks  and  /Library/Frameworks.   An  example
	   include looks like "#include	<Framework/header.h>", where Framework
	   denotes  the	 name  of  the	framework and header.h is found	in the
	   PrivateHeaders or Headers directory.

       -iframeworkdir
	   Like	-F except the directory	is a treated as	 a  system  directory.
	   The	main  difference  between this -iframework and -F is that with
	   -iframework the compiler does not warn about	 constructs  contained
	   within  header  files found via dir.	 This option is	valid only for
	   the C family	of languages.

       -gused
	   Emit	debugging information for symbols that are  used.   For	 stabs
	   debugging  format,  this  enables -feliminate-unused-debug-symbols.
	   This	is by default ON.

       -gfull
	   Emit	debugging information for all symbols and types.

       -fconstant-cfstrings
	   The -fconstant-cfstrings is an alias	for -mconstant-cfstrings.

       -mconstant-cfstrings
	   When	the NeXT runtime is being used (the default on these systems),
	   override any	-fconstant-string-class	 setting  and  cause  "@"...""
	   literals to be laid out as constant CoreFoundation strings.

       -mmacosx-version-min=version
	   The earliest	version	of MacOS X that	this executable	will run on is
	   version.   Typical  values supported	for version include 12,	10.12,
	   and 10.5.8.

	   If the compiler was built to	use the	system's headers  by  default,
	   then	the default for	this option is the system version on which the
	   compiler  is	running, otherwise the default is to make choices that
	   are compatible with as many systems and code	bases as possible.

       -mkernel
	   Enable kernel development mode.  The	-mkernel option	sets  -static,
	   -fno-common,		 -fno-use-cxa-atexit,	      -fno-exceptions,
	   -fno-non-call-exceptions,  -fapple-kext,  -fno-weak	and  -fno-rtti
	   where  applicable.  This mode also sets -mno-altivec, -msoft-float,
	   -fno-builtin	and -mlong-branch for PowerPC targets.

       -mone-byte-bool
	   Override the	defaults for "bool"  so	 that  "sizeof(bool)==1".   By
	   default "sizeof(bool)" is 4 when compiling for Darwin/PowerPC and 1
	   when	compiling for Darwin/x86, so this option has no	effect on x86.

	   Warning:  The  -mone-byte-bool  switch  causes GCC to generate code
	   that	is not binary compatible  with	code  generated	 without  that
	   switch.   Using  this  switch  may  require	recompiling  all other
	   modules in a	program, including system libraries.  Use this	switch
	   to conform to a non-default data model.

       -mfix-and-continue
       -ffix-and-continue
       -findirect-data
	   Generate  code suitable for fast turnaround development, such as to
	   allow  GDB  to  dynamically	load  .o  files	 into  already-running
	   programs.   -findirect-data and -ffix-and-continue are provided for
	   backwards compatibility.

       -all_load
	   Loads all members of	static archive libraries.  See man  ld(1)  for
	   more	information.

       -arch_errors_fatal
	   Cause  the  errors  having  to  do  with  files that	have the wrong
	   architecture	to be fatal.

       -bind_at_load
	   Causes the output file to be	marked such that  the  dynamic	linker
	   will	 bind  all  undefined  references  when	 the file is loaded or
	   launched.

       -bundle
	   Produce a Mach-o bundle  format  file.   See	 man  ld(1)  for  more
	   information.

       -bundle_loader executable
	   This	 option	 specifies  the	 executable  that  will	load the build
	   output file being linked.  See man ld(1) for	more information.

       -dynamiclib
	   When	passed this option, GCC	produces a dynamic library instead  of
	   an executable when linking, using the Darwin	libtool	command.

       -force_cpusubtype_ALL
	   This	 causes	 GCC's output file to have the ALL subtype, instead of
	   one controlled by the -mcpu or -march option.

       -nodefaultrpaths
	   Do not add default run paths	for the	compiler  library  directories
	   to  executables,  modules  or  dynamic libraries. On	macOS 10.5 and
	   later, the embedded runpath is added	by  default  unless  the  user
	   adds	 -nodefaultrpaths  to the link line. Run paths are needed (and
	   therefore enforced) to build	on macOS version 10.11 or later.

       -allowable_client  client_name
       -client_name
       -compatibility_version
       -current_version
       -dead_strip
       -dependency-file
       -dylib_file
       -dylinker_install_name
       -dynamic
       -exported_symbols_list
       -filelist
       -flat_namespace
       -force_flat_namespace
       -headerpad_max_install_names
       -image_base
       -init
       -install_name
       -keep_private_externs
       -multi_module
       -multiply_defined
       -multiply_defined_unused
       -noall_load
       -no_dead_strip_inits_and_terms
       -nofixprebinding
       -nomultidefs
       -noprebind
       -noseglinkedit
       -pagezero_size
       -prebind
       -prebind_all_twolevel_modules
       -private_bundle
       -read_only_relocs
       -sectalign
       -sectobjectsymbols
       -whyload
       -seg1addr
       -sectcreate
       -sectobjectsymbols
       -sectorder
       -segaddr
       -segs_read_only_addr
       -segs_read_write_addr
       -seg_addr_table
       -seg_addr_table_filename
       -seglinkedit
       -segprot
       -segs_read_only_addr
       -segs_read_write_addr
       -single_module
       -static
       -sub_library
       -sub_umbrella
       -twolevel_namespace
       -umbrella
       -undefined
       -unexported_symbols_list
       -weak_reference_mismatches
       -whatsloaded
	   These options are passed to the Darwin linker.  The	Darwin	linker
	   man page describes them in detail.

       DEC Alpha Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the DEC	Alpha implementations:

       -mno-soft-float
       -msoft-float
	   Use	(do  not  use)	the  hardware  floating-point instructions for
	   floating-point  operations.	 When	-msoft-float   is   specified,
	   functions   in   libgcc.a   are   used  to  perform	floating-point
	   operations.	Unless they are	replaced by routines that emulate  the
	   floating-point  operations,	or  compiled  in such a	way as to call
	   such	 emulations  routines,	these  routines	 issue	floating-point
	   operations.	  If  you are compiling	for an Alpha without floating-
	   point operations, you must ensure that the library is built	so  as
	   not to call them.

	   Note	 that  Alpha implementations without floating-point operations
	   are required	to have	floating-point registers.

       -mfp-reg
       -mno-fp-regs
	   Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point  register
	   set.	  -mno-fp-regs	implies	 -msoft-float.	 If the	floating-point
	   register set	is not used, floating-point  operands  are  passed  in
	   integer  registers  as  if  they  were  integers and	floating-point
	   results are passed in $0 instead of $f0.  This  is  a  non-standard
	   calling sequence, so	any function with a floating-point argument or
	   return value	called by code compiled	with -mno-fp-regs must also be
	   compiled with that option.

	   A  typical  use  of	this option is building	a kernel that does not
	   use,	and hence  need	 not  save  and	 restore,  any	floating-point
	   registers.

       -mieee
	   The Alpha architecture implements floating-point hardware optimized
	   for	maximum	 performance.	It  is	mostly compliant with the IEEE
	   floating-point standard.  However, for  full	 compliance,  software
	   assistance  is  required.   This  option generates code fully IEEE-
	   compliant code except that the inexact-flag is not maintained  (see
	   below).   If	 this  option  is  turned  on,	the preprocessor macro
	   "_IEEE_FP" is defined during	compilation.  The  resulting  code  is
	   less	 efficient  but	 is  able  to  correctly  support denormalized
	   numbers and	exceptional  IEEE  values  such	 as  not-a-number  and
	   plus/minus  infinity.   Other  Alpha	 compilers  call  this	option
	   -ieee_with_no_inexact.

       -mieee-with-inexact
	   This	is like	-mieee except the generated code  also	maintains  the
	   IEEE	 inexact-flag.	 Turning  on  this option causes the generated
	   code	to  implement  fully-compliant	IEEE  math.   In  addition  to
	   "_IEEE_FP",	"_IEEE_FP_EXACT"  is  defined as a preprocessor	macro.
	   On some  Alpha  implementations  the	 resulting  code  may  execute
	   significantly  slower  than	the  code generated by default.	 Since
	   there is very little	code that depends  on  the  inexact-flag,  you
	   should  normally  not  specify  this	option.	 Other Alpha compilers
	   call	this option -ieee_with_inexact.

       -mfp-trap-mode=trap-mode
	   This	option controls	what floating-point related traps are enabled.
	   Other Alpha compilers call this option -fptm	trap-mode.   The  trap
	   mode	can be set to one of four values:

	   n   This  is	the default (normal) setting.  The only	traps that are
	       enabled are the ones that cannot	be disabled in software	(e.g.,
	       division	by zero	trap).

	   u   In addition to the traps	enabled	 by  n,	 underflow  traps  are
	       enabled as well.

	   su  Like u, but the instructions are	marked to be safe for software
	       completion (see Alpha architecture manual for details).

	   sui Like su,	but inexact traps are enabled as well.

       -mfp-rounding-mode=rounding-mode
	   Selects  the	 IEEE  rounding	mode.  Other Alpha compilers call this
	   option -fprm	rounding-mode.	The rounding-mode can be one of:

	   n   Normal IEEE rounding mode.  Floating-point numbers are  rounded
	       towards	the nearest machine number or towards the even machine
	       number in case of a tie.

	   m   Round towards minus infinity.

	   c   Chopped rounding	 mode.	 Floating-point	 numbers  are  rounded
	       towards zero.

	   d   Dynamic	rounding  mode.	 A field in the	floating-point control
	       register	 (fpcr,	 see  Alpha  architecture  reference   manual)
	       controls	  the	rounding   mode	 in  effect.   The  C  library
	       initializes this	register for rounding towards  plus  infinity.
	       Thus,  unless  your program modifies the	fpcr, d	corresponds to
	       round towards plus infinity.

       -mtrap-precision=trap-precision
	   In the Alpha	 architecture,	floating-point	traps  are  imprecise.
	   This	 means without software	assistance it is impossible to recover
	   from	a floating trap	and program execution  normally	 needs	to  be
	   terminated.	GCC can	generate code that can assist operating	system
	   trap	 handlers  in  determining  the	 exact	location that caused a
	   floating-point  trap.   Depending  on  the	requirements   of   an
	   application,	different levels of precisions can be selected:

	   p   Program precision.  This	option is the default and means	a trap
	       handler can only	identify which program caused a	floating-point
	       exception.

	   f   Function	  precision.   The  trap  handler  can	determine  the
	       function	that caused a floating-point exception.

	   i   Instruction precision.  The  trap  handler  can	determine  the
	       exact instruction that caused a floating-point exception.

	   Other   Alpha  compilers  provide  the  equivalent  options	called
	   -scope_safe and -resumption_safe.

       -mieee-conformant
	   This	option marks the generated code	as IEEE	conformant.  You  must
	   not	use this option	unless you also	specify	-mtrap-precision=i and
	   either -mfp-trap-mode=su or -mfp-trap-mode=sui.  Its	only effect is
	   to emit the	line  .eflag  48  in  the  function  prologue  of  the
	   generated assembly file.

       -mbuild-constants
	   Normally GCC	examines a 32- or 64-bit integer constant to see if it
	   can	 construct   it	  from	smaller	 constants  in	two  or	 three
	   instructions.  If it	cannot,	it outputs the constant	as  a  literal
	   and generates code to load it from the data segment at run time.

	   Use	this  option to	require	GCC to construct all integer constants
	   using code, even if it takes	 more  instructions  (the  maximum  is
	   six).

	   You	typically  use	this  option to	build a	shared library dynamic
	   loader.  Itself a shared library, it	must relocate itself in	memory
	   before it can find the variables and	 constants  in	its  own  data
	   segment.

       -mbwx
       -mno-bwx
       -mcix
       -mno-cix
       -mfix
       -mno-fix
       -mmax
       -mno-max
	   Indicate  whether GCC should	generate code to use the optional BWX,
	   CIX,	FIX and	MAX instruction	sets.	The  default  is  to  use  the
	   instruction	sets  supported	 by  the CPU type specified via	-mcpu=
	   option or that of the CPU  on  which	 GCC  was  built  if  none  is
	   specified.

       -mfloat-vax
       -mfloat-ieee
	   Generate  code  that	uses (does not use) VAX	F and G	floating-point
	   arithmetic instead of IEEE single and double	precision.

       -mexplicit-relocs
       -mno-explicit-relocs
	   Older  Alpha	 assemblers  provided  no  way	to   generate	symbol
	   relocations	except via assembler macros.  Use of these macros does
	   not allow optimal  instruction  scheduling.	 GNU  binutils	as  of
	   version  2.12  supports  a  new  syntax that	allows the compiler to
	   explicitly  mark  which   relocations   should   apply   to	 which
	   instructions.   This	 option	is mostly useful for debugging,	as GCC
	   detects the capabilities of the assembler when it is	built and sets
	   the default accordingly.

       -msmall-data
       -mlarge-data
	   When	-mexplicit-relocs is in	effect,	static data  is	 accessed  via
	   gp-relative	relocations.   When  -msmall-data  is  used, objects 8
	   bytes long or smaller are placed in a small data area (the ".sdata"
	   and ".sbss" sections) and are accessed via 16-bit  relocations  off
	   of  the  $gp	register.  This	limits the size	of the small data area
	   to 64KB, but	allows the variables to	be  directly  accessed	via  a
	   single instruction.

	   The	default	 is  -mlarge-data.   With this option the data area is
	   limited to just below 2GB.  Programs	that require more than 2GB  of
	   data	 must  use "malloc" or "mmap" to allocate the data in the heap
	   instead of in the program's data segment.

	   When	 generating  code  for	 shared	  libraries,   -fpic   implies
	   -msmall-data	and -fPIC implies -mlarge-data.

       -msmall-text
       -mlarge-text
	   When	 -msmall-text  is  used, the compiler assumes that the code of
	   the entire program (or shared library) fits in  4MB,	 and  is  thus
	   reachable  with  a  branch instruction.  When -msmall-data is used,
	   the compiler	can assume that	all local symbols share	the  same  $gp
	   value,  and	thus  reduce the number	of instructions	required for a
	   function call from 4	to 1.

	   The default is -mlarge-text.

       -mcpu=cpu_type
	   Set the instruction set and instruction scheduling  parameters  for
	   machine type	cpu_type.  You can specify either the EV style name or
	   the	corresponding chip number.  GCC	supports scheduling parameters
	   for the EV4,	EV5 and	EV6  family  of	 processors  and  chooses  the
	   default  values  for	 the  instruction  set	from the processor you
	   specify.  If	you do not specify a processor type, GCC  defaults  to
	   the processor on which the compiler was built.

	   Supported values for	cpu_type are

	   ev4
	   ev45
	   21064
	       Schedules as an EV4 and has no instruction set extensions.

	   ev5
	   21164
	       Schedules as an EV5 and has no instruction set extensions.

	   ev56
	   21164a
	       Schedules as an EV5 and supports	the BWX	extension.

	   pca56
	   21164pc
	   21164PC
	       Schedules as an EV5 and supports	the BWX	and MAX	extensions.

	   ev6
	   21264
	       Schedules  as  an  EV6  and  supports  the  BWX,	 FIX,  and MAX
	       extensions.

	   ev67
	   21264a
	       Schedules as an EV6 and supports	the BWX,  CIX,	FIX,  and  MAX
	       extensions.

	   Native  toolchains also support the value native, which selects the
	   best	architecture option for	the host processor.  -mcpu=native  has
	   no effect if	GCC does not recognize the processor.

       -mtune=cpu_type
	   Set	only  the  instruction	scheduling parameters for machine type
	   cpu_type.  The instruction set is not changed.

	   Native toolchains also support the value native, which selects  the
	   best	architecture option for	the host processor.  -mtune=native has
	   no effect if	GCC does not recognize the processor.

       -mmemory-latency=time
	   Sets	 the  latency  the  scheduler should assume for	typical	memory
	   references as seen by  the  application.   This  number  is	highly
	   dependent on	the memory access patterns used	by the application and
	   the size of the external cache on the machine.

	   Valid options for time are

	   number
	       A decimal number	representing clock cycles.

	   L1
	   L2
	   L3
	   main
	       The  compiler  contains estimates of the	number of clock	cycles
	       for "typical" EV4 & EV5 hardware	for the	Level 1, 2 & 3	caches
	       (also  called  Dcache,  Scache, and Bcache), as well as to main
	       memory.	Note that L3 is	only valid for EV5.

       eBPF Options

       -mframe-limit=bytes
	   This	 specifies  the	 hard  limit  for  frame  sizes,   in	bytes.
	   Currently,  the  value that can be specified	should be less than or
	   equal to 32767.  Defaults to	 whatever  limit  is  imposed  by  the
	   version of the Linux	kernel targeted.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a big-endian target.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code for a little-endian target.  This is the default.

       -mjmpext
       -mno-jmpext
	   Enable   or	 disable   generation	of   extra  conditional-branch
	   instructions.  Enabled for CPU v2 and above.

       -mjmp32
       -mno-jmp32
	   Enable or disable generation	of 32-bit jump instructions.   Enabled
	   for CPU v3 and above.

       -malu32
       -mno-alu32
	   Enable  or  disable generation of 32-bit ALU	instructions.  Enabled
	   for CPU v3 and above.

       -mv3-atomics
       -mno-v3-atomics
	   Enable  or  disable	instructions  for  general  atomic  operations
	   introduced in CPU v3.  Enabled for CPU v3 and above.

       -mbswap
       -mno-bswap
	   Enable  or  disable byte swap instructions.	Enabled	for CPU	v4 and
	   above.

       -msdiv
       -mno-sdiv
	   Enable  or  disable	signed	division  and  modulus	 instructions.
	   Enabled for CPU v4 and above.

       -msmov
       -mno-smov
	   Enable or disable sign-extending move and memory load instructions.
	   Enabled for CPU v4 and above.

       -mcpu=version
	   This	 specifies  which  version  of	the  eBPF ISA to target. Newer
	   versions may	not be supported by all	kernels. The default is	v4.

	   Supported values for	version	are:

	   v1  The  first  stable  eBPF	 ISA  with  no	special	 features   or
	       extensions.

	   v2  Supports	the jump extensions, as	in -mjmpext.

	   v3  All features of v2, plus:

	       -<32-bit	jump operations, as in -mjmp32>
	       -<32-bit	ALU operations,	as in -malu32>
	       -<general atomic	operations, as in -mv3-atomics>
	   v4  All features of v3, plus:

	       -<Byte swap instructions, as in -mbswap>
	       -<Signed	division and modulus instructions, as in -msdiv>
	       -<Sign-extending	move and memory	load instructions, as in
	       -msmov>
       -mco-re
	   Enable  BPF Compile Once - Run Everywhere (CO-RE) support. Requires
	   and is implied by -gbtf.

       -mno-co-re
	   Disable BPF Compile Once - Run Everywhere (CO-RE) support. BPF  CO-
	   RE  support	is  enabled  by	 default  when	generating  BTF	 debug
	   information for the BPF target.

       -mxbpf
	   Generate code for an	expanded version of BPF, which relaxes some of
	   the restrictions imposed by the BPF architecture:

	   -<Save and restore callee-saved registers at	function entry and>
	       exit, respectively.

       -masm=dialect
	   Outputs assembly instructions using	eBPF  selected	dialect.   The
	   default is pseudoc.

	   Supported values for	dialect	are:

	   normal
	       Outputs normal assembly dialect.

	   pseudoc
	       Outputs pseudo-c	assembly dialect.

       -minline-memops-threshold=bytes
	   Specifies  a	 size  threshold  in  bytes at or below	which memmove,
	   memcpy and memset shall  always  be	expanded  inline.   Operations
	   dealing  with  sizes	 larger	 than  this threshold would have to be
	   implemented using a library call instead of being expanded  inline,
	   but	since  BPF  doesn't  allow  libcalls, exceeding	this threshold
	   results in a	compile-time error.  The default is 1024 bytes.

       FR30 Options

       These options are defined specifically for the FR30 port.

       -msmall-model
	   Use the small address space model.  This can	produce	smaller	 code,
	   but	it does	assume that all	symbolic values	and addresses fit into
	   a 20-bit range.

       -mno-lsim
	   Assume that runtime support has been	provided and so	 there	is  no
	   need	 to  include  the  simulator  library (libsim.a) on the	linker
	   command line.

       FT32 Options

       These options are defined specifically for the FT32 port.

       -msim
	   Specifies that the program will be  run  on	the  simulator.	  This
	   causes  an alternate	runtime	startup	and library to be linked.  You
	   must	not use	this option when generating programs that will run  on
	   real	 hardware;  you	 must  provide	your  own  runtime library for
	   whatever I/O	functions are needed.

       -mlra
	   Enable Local	Register Allocation.  This is still  experimental  for
	   FT32, so by default the compiler uses standard reload.

       -mnodiv
	   Do not use div and mod instructions.

       -mft32b
	   Enable use of the extended instructions of the FT32B	processor.

       -mcompress
	   Compress all	code using the Ft32B code compression scheme.

       -mnopm
	   Do not generate code	that reads program memory.

       FRV Options

       -mgpr-32
	   Only	use the	first 32 general-purpose registers.

       -mgpr-64
	   Use all 64 general-purpose registers.

       -mfpr-32
	   Use only the	first 32 floating-point	registers.

       -mfpr-64
	   Use all 64 floating-point registers.

       -mhard-float
	   Use hardware	instructions for floating-point	operations.

       -msoft-float
	   Use library routines	for floating-point operations.

       -malloc-cc
	   Dynamically allocate	condition code registers.

       -mfixed-cc
	   Do  not  try	to dynamically allocate	condition code registers, only
	   use "icc0" and "fcc0".

       -mdword
	   Change ABI to use double word insns.

       -mno-dword
	   Do not use double word instructions.

       -mdouble
	   Use floating-point double instructions.

       -mno-double
	   Do not use floating-point double instructions.

       -mmedia
	   Use media instructions.

       -mno-media
	   Do not use media instructions.

       -mmuladd
	   Use multiply	and add/subtract instructions.

       -mno-muladd
	   Do not use multiply and add/subtract	instructions.

       -mfdpic
	   Select the FDPIC ABI, which uses function descriptors to  represent
	   pointers  to	 functions.   Without  any PIC/PIE-related options, it
	   implies -fPIE.  With	-fpic or -fpie,	it  assumes  GOT  entries  and
	   small  data	are  within  a 12-bit range from the GOT base address;
	   with	-fPIC or -fPIE,	GOT offsets are	computed with 32 bits.	With a
	   bfin-elf target, this option	implies	-msim.

       -minline-plt
	   Enable inlining of PLT entries in function calls to functions  that
	   are	not  known to bind locally.  It	has no effect without -mfdpic.
	   It's	enabled	by default if optimizing for speed and	compiling  for
	   shared  libraries  (i.e.,  -fPIC or -fpic), or when an optimization
	   option such as -O3 or above is present in the command line.

       -mTLS
	   Assume a large TLS segment when generating thread-local code.

       -mtls
	   Do not assume a large  TLS  segment	when  generating  thread-local
	   code.

       -mgprel-ro
	   Enable  the	use  of	 "GPREL" relocations in	the FDPIC ABI for data
	   that	is known  to  be  in  read-only	 sections.   It's  enabled  by
	   default,  except  for  -fpic	or -fpie: even though it may help make
	   the global offset table smaller, it trades  1  instruction  for  4.
	   With	 -fPIC	or -fPIE, it trades 3 instructions for 4, one of which
	   may be shared by multiple symbols, and it avoids the	need for a GOT
	   entry for the referenced symbol, so it's more likely	to be  a  win.
	   If it is not, -mno-gprel-ro can be used to disable it.

       -multilib-library-pic
	   Link	 with  the  (library,  not FD) pic libraries.  It's implied by
	   -mlibrary-pic, as well as by	-fPIC and -fpic	without	-mfdpic.   You
	   should never	have to	use it explicitly.

       -mlinked-fp
	   Follow  the	EABI  requirement  of  always creating a frame pointer
	   whenever a stack frame is allocated.	 This  option  is  enabled  by
	   default and can be disabled with -mno-linked-fp.

       -mlong-calls
	   Use	indirect  addressing  to  call	functions  outside the current
	   compilation unit.  This allows the functions	to be placed  anywhere
	   within the 32-bit address space.

       -malign-labels
	   Try	to  align  labels to an	8-byte boundary	by inserting NOPs into
	   the previous	packet.	 This option only  has	an  effect  when  VLIW
	   packing  is enabled.	 It doesn't create new packets;	it merely adds
	   NOPs	to existing ones.

       -mlibrary-pic
	   Generate position-independent EABI code.

       -macc-4
	   Use only the	first four media accumulator registers.

       -macc-8
	   Use all eight media accumulator registers.

       -mpack
	   Pack	VLIW instructions.

       -mno-pack
	   Do not pack VLIW instructions.

       -mno-eflags
	   Do not mark ABI switches in e_flags.

       -mcond-move
	   Enable the use of conditional-move instructions (default).

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mno-cond-move
	   Disable the use of conditional-move instructions.

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mscc
	   Enable the use of conditional set instructions (default).

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mno-scc
	   Disable the use of conditional set instructions.

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mcond-exec
	   Enable the use of conditional execution (default).

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mno-cond-exec
	   Disable the use of conditional execution.

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mvliw-branch
	   Run a pass to pack branches into VLIW instructions (default).

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mno-vliw-branch
	   Do not run a	pass to	pack branches into VLIW	instructions.

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mmulti-cond-exec
	   Enable optimization of  "&&"	 and  "||"  in	conditional  execution
	   (default).

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mno-multi-cond-exec
	   Disable optimization	of "&&"	and "||" in conditional	execution.

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mnested-cond-exec
	   Enable nested conditional execution optimizations (default).

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -mno-nested-cond-exec
	   Disable nested conditional execution	optimizations.

	   This	switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and	will likely be
	   removed in a	future version.

       -moptimize-membar
	   This	 switch	 removes  redundant  "membar"  instructions  from  the
	   compiler-generated code.  It	is enabled by default.

       -mno-optimize-membar
	   This	switch disables	the automatic removal  of  redundant  "membar"
	   instructions	from the generated code.

       -mtomcat-stats
	   Cause gas to	print out tomcat statistics.

       -mcpu=cpu
	   Select  the	processor  type	 for which to generate code.  Possible
	   values are frv, fr550, tomcat, fr500, fr450,	 fr405,	 fr400,	 fr300
	   and simple.

       GNU/Linux Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	GNU/Linux targets:

       -mglibc
	   Use	 the   GNU   C	 library.   This  is  the  default  except  on
	   *-*-linux-*uclibc*,	 *-*-linux-*musl*   and	   *-*-linux-*android*
	   targets.

       -muclibc
	   Use	uClibc	C  library.  This is the default on *-*-linux-*uclibc*
	   targets.

       -mmusl
	   Use the musl	C library.  This is the	 default  on  *-*-linux-*musl*
	   targets.

       -mbionic
	   Use	Bionic	C library.  This is the	default	on *-*-linux-*android*
	   targets.

       -mandroid
	   Compile code	compatible with	Android	platform.  This	is the default
	   on *-*-linux-*android* targets.

	   When	  compiling,   this   option	enables	   -mbionic,	-fPIC,
	   -fno-exceptions  and	 -fno-rtti  by	default.   When	 linking, this
	   option makes	the GCC	driver pass Android-specific  options  to  the
	   linker.    Finally,	this  option  causes  the  preprocessor	 macro
	   "__ANDROID__" to be defined.

       -tno-android-cc
	   Disable compilation effects	of  -mandroid,	i.e.,  do  not	enable
	   -mbionic, -fPIC, -fno-exceptions and	-fno-rtti by default.

       -tno-android-ld
	   Disable  linking  effects  of  -mandroid, i.e., pass	standard Linux
	   linking options to the linker.

       H8/300 Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the H8/300 implementations:

       -mrelax
	   Shorten some	address	references at link time, when  possible;  uses
	   the linker option -relax.

       -mh Generate code for the H8/300H.

       -ms Generate code for the H8S.

       -mn Generate  code  for	the  H8S and H8/300H in	the normal mode.  This
	   switch must be used either with -mh or -ms.

       -ms2600
	   Generate code for the H8S/2600.  This switch	must be	used with -ms.

       -mexr
	   Extended registers are stored on stack before execution of function
	   with	monitor	attribute. Default option is -mexr.   This  option  is
	   valid only for H8S targets.

       -mno-exr
	   Extended  registers	are  not  stored  on stack before execution of
	   function with monitor attribute. Default option is -mno-exr.	  This
	   option is valid only	for H8S	targets.

       -mint32
	   Make	"int" data 32 bits by default.

       -malign-300
	   On  the  H8/300H  and  H8S, use the same alignment rules as for the
	   H8/300.  The	default	for the	H8/300H	and H8S	is to align longs  and
	   floats on 4-byte boundaries.	 -malign-300 causes them to be aligned
	   on 2-byte boundaries.  This option has no effect on the H8/300.

       HPPA Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the HPPA family	of computers:

       -march=architecture-type
	   Generate  code  for	the  specified	architecture.  The choices for
	   architecture-type are 1.0 for PA 1.0, 1.1 for PA 1.1, and  2.0  for
	   PA  2.0  processors.	  Refer	 to  /usr/lib/sched.models on an HP-UX
	   system  to  determine  the  proper  architecture  option  for  your
	   machine.   Code  compiled  for lower	numbered architectures runs on
	   higher numbered architectures, but not the other way	around.

       -mpa-risc-1-0
       -mpa-risc-1-1
       -mpa-risc-2-0
	   Synonyms for	-march=1.0, -march=1.1,	and -march=2.0 respectively.

       -matomic-libcalls
	   Generate libcalls for atomic	loads and stores  when	sync  libcalls
	   are	disabled.  This	option is enabled by default.  It only affects
	   the generation of atomic libcalls by	the HPPA backend.

	   Both	the sync and libatomic libcall	implementations	 use  locking.
	   As  a result, processor stores are not atomic with respect to other
	   atomic operations.  Processor loads up to DImode  are  atomic  with
	   respect to other atomic operations provided they are	implemented as
	   a single access.

	   The	PA-RISC	architecture does not support any atomic operations in
	   hardware except for	the  "ldcw"  instruction.   Thus,  all	atomic
	   support  is	implemented  using  sync  and  atomic  libcalls.  Sync
	   libcall support is in  libgcc.a.   Atomic  libcall  support	is  in
	   libatomic.

	   This	 option	generates "__atomic_exchange" calls for	atomic stores.
	   It also provides special handling for  atomic  DImode  accesses  on
	   32-bit targets.

       -mbig-switch
	   Does	nothing.  Preserved for	backward compatibility.

       -mcaller-copies
	   The	caller	copies	function arguments passed by hidden reference.
	   This	option should be used with care	as it is not  compatible  with
	   the	default	 32-bit	runtime.  However, only	aggregates larger than
	   eight bytes are passed by hidden reference and the option  provides
	   better compatibility	with OpenMP.

       -mcoherent-ldcw
	   Use ldcw/ldcd coherent cache-control	hint.

       -mdisable-fpregs
	   Disable floating-point registers.  Equivalent to "-msoft-float".

       -mdisable-indexing
	   Prevent  the	 compiler  from	 using	indexing  address modes.  This
	   avoids some rather obscure problems when  compiling	MIG  generated
	   code	under MACH.

       -mfast-indirect-calls
	   Generate  code  that	 assumes  calls	 never cross space boundaries.
	   This	allows GCC to emit code	that performs faster indirect calls.

	   This	option does not	work in	the presence of	 shared	 libraries  or
	   nested functions.

       -mfixed-range=register-range
	   Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers.
	   A  fixed  register  is  one that the	register allocator cannot use.
	   This	is useful when compiling kernel	code.	A  register  range  is
	   specified  as two registers separated by a dash.  Multiple register
	   ranges can be specified separated by	a comma.

       -mgas
	   Enable the use of assembler directives only GAS understands.

       -mgnu-ld
	   Use options specific	to GNU ld.  This passes	 -shared  to  ld  when
	   building  a	shared	library.   It  is  the	default	 when  GCC  is
	   configured, explicitly or implicitly, with the  GNU	linker.	  This
	   option  does	 not  affect  which ld is called; it only changes what
	   parameters are passed to  that  ld.	 The  ld  that	is  called  is
	   determined  by the --with-ld	configure option, GCC's	program	search
	   path, and finally by	the user's PATH.  The linker used by  GCC  can
	   be  printed	using which `gcc -print-prog-name=ld`.	This option is
	   only	available on  the  64-bit  HP-UX  GCC,	i.e.  configured  with
	   hppa*64*-*-hpux*.

       -mhp-ld
	   Use	options	specific to HP ld.  This passes	-b to ld when building
	   a shared library and	passes	+Accept	 TypeMismatch  to  ld  on  all
	   links.   It	is  the	 default when GCC is configured, explicitly or
	   implicitly, with the	HP linker.  This option	does not affect	 which
	   ld  is  called;  it only changes what parameters are	passed to that
	   ld.	The ld that is called is determined by the --with-ld configure
	   option, GCC's program search	path, and finally by the user's	 PATH.
	   The	 linker	  used	 by  GCC  can  be  printed  using  which  `gcc
	   -print-prog-name=ld`.  This option is only available	on the	64-bit
	   HP-UX GCC, i.e. configured with hppa*64*-*-hpux*.

       -mlinker-opt
	   Enable  the optimization pass in the	HP-UX linker.  Note this makes
	   symbolic debugging impossible.  It also triggers a bug in the HP-UX
	   8 and HP-UX 9 linkers in which they give bogus error	messages  when
	   linking some	programs.

       -mlong-calls
	   Generate  code  that	uses long call sequences.  This	ensures	that a
	   call	is always able to reach	linker generated stubs.	  The  default
	   is to generate long calls only when the distance from the call site
	   to  the  beginning of the function or translation unit, as the case
	   may be, exceeds a predefined	limit set by  the  branch  type	 being
	   used.  The limits for normal	calls are 7,600,000 and	240,000	bytes,
	   respectively	for the	PA 2.0 and PA 1.X architectures.  Sibcalls are
	   always limited at 240,000 bytes.

	   Distances  are  measured from the beginning of functions when using
	   the	-ffunction-sections  option,  or  when	using  the  -mgas  and
	   -mno-portable-runtime  options  together  under  HP-UX with the SOM
	   linker.

	   It is normally not desirable	to use	this  option  as  it  degrades
	   performance.	  However,  it	may  be	 useful	in large applications,
	   particularly	when partial linking is	used to	build the application.

	   The types of	long calls used	depends	on  the	 capabilities  of  the
	   assembler  and  linker,  and	the type of code being generated.  The
	   impact on systems that support long absolute	calls,	and  long  pic
	   symbol-difference  or pc-relative calls should be relatively	small.
	   However, an indirect	call is	used on	32-bit ELF systems in pic code
	   and it is quite long.

       -mlong-load-store
	   Generate  3-instruction  load  and  store  sequences	 as  sometimes
	   required  by	 the  HP-UX  10	 linker.  This is equivalent to	the +k
	   option to the HP compilers.

       -mjump-in-delay
	   This	option is ignored  and	provided  for  compatibility  purposes
	   only.

       -mno-space-regs
	   Generate code that assumes the target has no	space registers.  This
	   allows GCC to generate faster indirect calls	and use	unscaled index
	   address modes.

	   Such	code is	suitable for level 0 PA	systems	and kernels.

       -mordered
	   Assume memory references are	ordered	and barriers are not needed.

       -mportable-runtime
	   Use	the  portable  calling	conventions  proposed  by  HP  for ELF
	   systems.

       -mschedule=cpu-type
	   Schedule code according to the constraints  for  the	 machine  type
	   cpu-type.   The  choices  for  cpu-type are 700 7100, 7100LC, 7200,
	   7300	and 8000.  Refer to /usr/lib/sched.models on an	 HP-UX	system
	   to  determine  the  proper scheduling option	for your machine.  The
	   default scheduling is 8000.

       -msio
	   Generate the	predefine, "_SIO", for	server	IO.   The  default  is
	   -mwsio.     This    generates   the	 predefines,   "__hp9000s700",
	   "__hp9000s700__" and	"_WSIO", for workstation  IO.	These  options
	   are available under HP-UX and HI-UX.

       -msoft-float
	   Generate  output  containing	 library  calls	 for  floating	point.
	   Warning: the	requisite libraries are	not  available	for  all  HPPA
	   targets.  Normally the facilities of	the machine's usual C compiler
	   are	used,  but  this cannot	be done	directly in cross-compilation.
	   You must make your own arrangements	to  provide  suitable  library
	   functions for cross-compilation.

	   -msoft-float	 changes  the  calling	convention in the output file;
	   therefore, it is only useful	if you compile all of a	 program  with
	   this	 option.   In  particular,  you	 need to compile libgcc.a, the
	   library that	comes with GCC,	with -msoft-float in order for this to
	   work.

       -msoft-mult
	   Use software	integer	multiplication.

	   This	disables the use of the	"xmpyu"	instruction.

       -munix=unix-std
	   Generate  compiler  predefines  and	select	a  startfile  for  the
	   specified  UNIX  standard.  The choices for unix-std	are 93,	95 and
	   98.	93 is supported	on all HP-UX versions.	95 is available	on HP-
	   UX 10.10 and	later.	98 is available	on HP-UX 11.11 and later.  The
	   default values are 93 for HP-UX 10.00, 95 for HP-UX 10.10 though to
	   11.00, and 98 for HP-UX 11.11 and later.

	   -munix=93  provides	the  same  predefines  as  GCC	3.3  and  3.4.
	   -munix=95  provides	additional  predefines	for  "XOPEN_UNIX"  and
	   "_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED", and the  startfile	 unix95.o.   -munix=98
	   provides	 additional	 predefines	for	"_XOPEN_UNIX",
	   "_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED",	  "_INCLUDE__STDC_A1_SOURCE"	   and
	   "_INCLUDE_XOPEN_SOURCE_500",	and the	startfile unix98.o.

	   It is important to note that	this option changes the	interfaces for
	   various library routines.  It also affects the operational behavior
	   of  the  C  library.	  Thus,	 extreme  care is needed in using this
	   option.

	   Library code	that is	intended to operate with more  than  one  UNIX
	   standard    must    test,	set    and    restore	the   variable
	   "__xpg4_extended_mask" as appropriate.  Most	GNU  software  doesn't
	   provide this	capability.

       -nolibdld
	   Suppress  the  generation  of link options to search	libdld.sl when
	   the -static option is specified on HP-UX 10 and later.

       -static
	   The HP-UX implementation of setlocale in libc has a	dependency  on
	   libdld.sl.	There  isn't  an  archive version of libdld.sl.	 Thus,
	   when	the -static option is  specified,  special  link  options  are
	   needed to resolve this dependency.

	   On HP-UX 10 and later, the GCC driver adds the necessary options to
	   link	 with  libdld.sl  when	the -static option is specified.  This
	   causes the resulting	binary to be dynamic.  On the 64-bit port, the
	   linkers generate dynamic binaries by	 default  in  any  case.   The
	   -nolibdld  option can be used to prevent the	GCC driver from	adding
	   these link options.

       -threads
	   Add support for multithreading with the dce	thread	library	 under
	   HP-UX.   This  option  sets	flags  for  both  the preprocessor and
	   linker.

       IA-64 Options

       These are the -m	options	defined	for the	Intel IA-64 architecture.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a big-endian target.  This	is the default for HP-
	   UX.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code for a little-endian target.  This is the default  for
	   AIX5	and GNU/Linux.

       -mgnu-as
       -mno-gnu-as
	   Generate  (or  don't)  code	for  the  GNU  assembler.  This	is the
	   default.

       -mgnu-ld
       -mno-gnu-ld
	   Generate (or	don't) code for	the GNU	linker.	 This is the default.

       -mno-pic
	   Generate code that does not use a  global  pointer  register.   The
	   result  is  not  position  independent code,	and violates the IA-64
	   ABI.

       -mvolatile-asm-stop
       -mno-volatile-asm-stop
	   Generate (or	 don't)	 a  stop  bit  immediately  before  and	 after
	   volatile asm	statements.

       -mregister-names
       -mno-register-names
	   Generate (or	don't) in, loc,	and out	register names for the stacked
	   registers.  This may	make assembler output more readable.

       -mno-sdata
       -msdata
	   Disable  (or	enable)	optimizations that use the small data section.
	   This	may be useful for working around optimizer bugs.

       -mconstant-gp
	   Generate code that uses a single  constant  global  pointer	value.
	   This	is useful when compiling kernel	code.

       -mauto-pic
	   Generate    code    that   is   self-relocatable.	This   implies
	   -mconstant-gp.  This	is useful when compiling firmware code.

       -minline-float-divide-min-latency
	   Generate code for inline divides of floating-point values using the
	   minimum latency algorithm.

       -minline-float-divide-max-throughput
	   Generate code for inline divides of floating-point values using the
	   maximum throughput algorithm.

       -mno-inline-float-divide
	   Do not generate inline code for divides of floating-point values.

       -minline-int-divide-min-latency
	   Generate code for  inline  divides  of  integer  values  using  the
	   minimum latency algorithm.

       -minline-int-divide-max-throughput
	   Generate  code  for	inline	divides	 of  integer  values using the
	   maximum throughput algorithm.

       -mno-inline-int-divide
	   Do not generate inline code for divides of integer values.

       -minline-sqrt-min-latency
	   Generate code for inline square roots  using	 the  minimum  latency
	   algorithm.

       -minline-sqrt-max-throughput
	   Generate  code for inline square roots using	the maximum throughput
	   algorithm.

       -mno-inline-sqrt
	   Do not generate inline code for "sqrt".

       -mfused-madd
       -mno-fused-madd
	   Do (don't) generate	code  that  uses  the  fused  multiply/add  or
	   multiply/subtract  instructions.   The  default  is	to  use	 these
	   instructions.

       -mno-dwarf2-asm
       -mdwarf2-asm
	   Don't (or do) generate assembler code for  the  DWARF  line	number
	   debugging  info.   This  may	 be  useful  when  not	using  the GNU
	   assembler.

       -mearly-stop-bits
       -mno-early-stop-bits
	   Allow stop bits to be placed	earlier	than immediately preceding the
	   instruction	that  triggered	 the  stop  bit.   This	 can   improve
	   instruction scheduling, but does not	always do so.

       -mfixed-range=register-range
	   Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers.
	   A  fixed  register  is  one that the	register allocator cannot use.
	   This	is useful when compiling kernel	code.	A  register  range  is
	   specified  as two registers separated by a dash.  Multiple register
	   ranges can be specified separated by	a comma.

       -mtls-size=tls-size
	   Specify bit size of immediate TLS offsets.  Valid  values  are  14,
	   22, and 64.

       -mtune=cpu-type
	   Tune	 the instruction scheduling for	a particular CPU, Valid	values
	   are itanium,	itanium1, merced, itanium2, and	mckinley.

       -milp32
       -mlp64
	   Generate code for a	32-bit	or  64-bit  environment.   The	32-bit
	   environment	sets  int,  long  and  pointer to 32 bits.  The	64-bit
	   environment sets int	to 32 bits and long and	pointer	 to  64	 bits.
	   These are HP-UX specific flags.

       -mno-sched-br-data-spec
       -msched-br-data-spec
	   (Dis/En)able	 data  speculative  scheduling	before	reload.	  This
	   results in generation of "ld.a" instructions	and the	 corresponding
	   check  instructions	("ld.c"	 /  "chk.a").	The default setting is
	   disabled.

       -msched-ar-data-spec
       -mno-sched-ar-data-spec
	   (En/Dis)able	 data  speculative  scheduling	after  reload.	  This
	   results  in generation of "ld.a" instructions and the corresponding
	   check instructions ("ld.c" /	 "chk.a").   The  default  setting  is
	   enabled.

       -mno-sched-control-spec
       -msched-control-spec
	   (Dis/En)able	 control  speculative  scheduling.   This  feature  is
	   available only during region	scheduling (i.e. before	reload).  This
	   results  in	generation  of	the  "ld.s"   instructions   and   the
	   corresponding  check	 instructions "chk.s".	The default setting is
	   disabled.

       -msched-br-in-data-spec
       -mno-sched-br-in-data-spec
	   (En/Dis)able	speculative scheduling of the  instructions  that  are
	   dependent  on  the  data  speculative loads before reload.  This is
	   effective only  with	 -msched-br-data-spec  enabled.	  The  default
	   setting is enabled.

       -msched-ar-in-data-spec
       -mno-sched-ar-in-data-spec
	   (En/Dis)able	 speculative  scheduling  of the instructions that are
	   dependent on	the data speculative  loads  after  reload.   This  is
	   effective  only  with  -msched-ar-data-spec	enabled.   The default
	   setting is enabled.

       -msched-in-control-spec
       -mno-sched-in-control-spec
	   (En/Dis)able	speculative scheduling of the  instructions  that  are
	   dependent on	the control speculative	loads.	This is	effective only
	   with	-msched-control-spec enabled.  The default setting is enabled.

       -mno-sched-prefer-non-data-spec-insns
       -msched-prefer-non-data-spec-insns
	   If  enabled,	 data-speculative instructions are chosen for schedule
	   only	if there are no	other choices at the moment.  This  makes  the
	   use	of  the	 data speculation much more conservative.  The default
	   setting is disabled.

       -mno-sched-prefer-non-control-spec-insns
       -msched-prefer-non-control-spec-insns
	   If  enabled,	 control-speculative  instructions  are	  chosen   for
	   schedule  only  if  there are no other choices at the moment.  This
	   makes the use of the	control	speculation  much  more	 conservative.
	   The default setting is disabled.

       -mno-sched-count-spec-in-critical-path
       -msched-count-spec-in-critical-path
	   If	enabled,   speculative	 dependencies  are  considered	during
	   computation of the instructions priorities.	This makes the use  of
	   the	speculation  a	bit more conservative.	The default setting is
	   disabled.

       -msched-spec-ldc
	   Use a simple	data speculation check.	 This option is	on by default.

       -msched-control-spec-ldc
	   Use a simple	check for control speculation.	This option is	on  by
	   default.

       -msched-stop-bits-after-every-cycle
	   Place a stop	bit after every	cycle when scheduling.	This option is
	   on by default.

       -msched-fp-mem-deps-zero-cost
	   Assume that floating-point stores and loads are not likely to cause
	   a  conflict	when  placed  into  the	 same instruction group.  This
	   option is disabled by default.

       -msel-sched-dont-check-control-spec
	   Generate checks for control speculation  in	selective  scheduling.
	   This	flag is	disabled by default.

       -msched-max-memory-insns=max-insns
	   Limit  on  the number of memory insns per instruction group,	giving
	   lower priority to subsequent	memory insns attempting	to schedule in
	   the same instruction	group. Frequently useful to prevent cache bank
	   conflicts.  The default value is 1.

       -msched-max-memory-insns-hard-limit
	   Makes the limit specified by	msched-max-memory-insns	a hard	limit,
	   disallowing	 more  than  that  number  in  an  instruction	group.
	   Otherwise, the limit	is "soft", meaning that	non-memory  operations
	   are	preferred when the limit is reached, but memory	operations may
	   still be scheduled.

       LM32 Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the LatticeMico32 architecture:

       -mbarrel-shift-enabled
	   Enable barrel-shift instructions.

       -mdivide-enabled
	   Enable divide and modulus instructions.

       -mmultiply-enabled
	   Enable multiply instructions.

       -msign-extend-enabled
	   Enable sign extend instructions.

       -muser-enabled
	   Enable user-defined instructions.

       LoongArch Options

       These command-line options are defined for LoongArch targets:

       -march=arch-type
	   Generate instructions for the machine type arch-type.  -march=arch-
	   type	allows GCC to generate	code  that  may	 not  run  at  all  on
	   processors other than the one indicated.

	   The choices for arch-type are:

	   native
	       Local processor type detected by	the native compiler.

	   loongarch64
	       Generic LoongArch 64-bit	processor.

	   la464
	       LoongArch LA464-based processor with LSX, LASX.

	   la664
	       LoongArch   LA664-based	 processor  with  LSX,	LASX  and  all
	       LoongArch v1.1 instructions.

	   la64v1.0
	       LoongArch64 ISA version 1.0.

	   la64v1.1
	       LoongArch64 ISA version 1.1.

	   More	information about LoongArch  ISA  versions  can	 be  found  at
	   <https://github.com/loongson/la-toolchain-conventions>.

       -mtune=tune-type
	   Optimize the	generated code for the given processor target.

	   The choices for tune-type are:

	   native
	       Local processor type detected by	the native compiler.

	   generic
	       Generic LoongArch processor.

	   loongarch64
	       Generic LoongArch 64-bit	processor.

	   la464
	       LoongArch LA464 core.

	   la664
	       LoongArch LA664 core.

       -mabi=base-abi-type
	   Generate  code for the specified calling convention.	 base-abi-type
	   can be one of:

	   lp64d
	       Uses 64-bit general purpose registers and  32/64-bit  floating-
	       point  registers	 for  parameter	 passing.  Data	model is LP64,
	       where int is 32 bits, while long	int and	pointers are 64	bits.

	   lp64f
	       Uses 64-bit general purpose registers and 32-bit	floating-point
	       registers for parameter passing.	 Data model is LP64, where int
	       is 32 bits, while long int and pointers are 64 bits.

	   lp64s
	       Uses 64-bit general purpose  registers  and  no	floating-point
	       registers for parameter passing.	 Data model is LP64, where int
	       is 32 bits, while long int and pointers are 64 bits.

       -mfpu=fpu-type
	   Generate code for the specified FPU type, which can be one of:

	   64  Allow  the  use	of  hardware  floating-point  instructions for
	       32-bit and 64-bit operations.

	   32  Allow the  use  of  hardware  floating-point  instructions  for
	       32-bit operations.

	   none
	   0   Prevent the use of hardware floating-point instructions.

       -msimd=simd-type
	   Enable  generation of LoongArch SIMD	instructions for vectorization
	   and via builtin functions.  The value can be	one of:

	   lasx
	       Enable  generating  instructions	 from  the  256-bit  LoongArch
	       Advanced	 SIMD  Extension (LASX)	and the	128-bit	LoongArch SIMD
	       Extension (LSX).

	   lsx Enable generating instructions from the 128-bit LoongArch  SIMD
	       Extension (LSX).

	   none
	       No LoongArch SIMD instruction may be generated.

       -msoft-float
	   Force  -mfpu=none  and prevents the use of floating-point registers
	   for parameter passing.  This	option may change the target ABI.

       -msingle-float
	   Force -mfpu=32 and allow the	use of 32-bit floating-point registers
	   for parameter passing.  This	option may change the target ABI.

       -mdouble-float
	   Force -mfpu=64  and	allow  the  use	 of  32/64-bit	floating-point
	   registers for parameter passing.  This option may change the	target
	   ABI.

       -mlasx
       -mno-lasx
       -mlsx
       -mno-lsx
	   Incrementally adjust	the scope of the SIMD extensions (none / LSX /
	   LASX)  that	can  be	 used  by  the	compiler  for code generation.
	   Enabling LASX with mlasx automatically enables  LSX,	 and  diabling
	   LSX	with  mno-lsx  automatically disables LASX.  These driver-only
	   options act upon the	 final	msimd  configuration  state  and  make
	   incremental	chagnes	 in  the order they appear on the GCC driver's
	   command line, deriving the final / canonicalized msimd option  that
	   is passed to	the compiler proper.

       -mbranch-cost=n
	   Set the cost	of branches to roughly n instructions.

       -mcheck-zero-division
       -mno-check-zero-divison
	   Trap	 (do  not  trap)  on integer division by zero.	The default is
	   -mcheck-zero-division for -O0 or -Og, and  -mno-check-zero-division
	   for other optimization levels.

       -mcond-move-int
       -mno-cond-move-int
	   Conditional	moves  for  integral data in general-purpose registers
	   are enabled (disabled).  The	default	is -mcond-move-int.

       -mcond-move-float
       -mno-cond-move-float
	   Conditional	moves  for  floating-point   registers	 are   enabled
	   (disabled).	The default is -mcond-move-float.

       -mmemcpy
       -mno-memcpy
	   Force  (do  not  force)  the	 use of	"memcpy" for non-trivial block
	   moves.  The default is -mno-memcpy, which allows GCC	to inline most
	   constant-sized copies.  Setting  optimization  level	 to  -Os  also
	   forces  the	use  of	 "memcpy",  but	 -mno-memcpy may override this
	   behavior if explicitly specified, regardless	 of  the  order	 these
	   options on the command line.

       -mstrict-align
       -mno-strict-align
	   Avoid  or  allow generating memory accesses that may	not be aligned
	   on a	natural	object	boundary  as  described	 in  the  architecture
	   specification. The default is -mno-strict-align.

       -msmall-data-limit=number
	   Put global and static data smaller than number bytes	into a special
	   section (on some targets).  The default value is 0.

       -mmax-inline-memcpy-size=n
	   Inline  all	block  moves  (such  as	calls to "memcpy" or structure
	   copies) less	than or	equal to n bytes.  The default value of	 n  is
	   1024.

       -mcmodel=code-model
	   Set the code	model to one of:

	   tiny-static (Not implemented	yet)
	   tiny	(Not implemented yet)
	   normal
	       The  text  segment  must	be within 128MB	addressing space.  The
	       data segment must be within 2GB addressing space.

	   medium
	       The text	segment	and data segment must be within	2GB addressing
	       space.

	   large (Not implemented yet)
	   extreme
	       This mode does not limit	the size of the	code segment and  data
	       segment.	  The  -mcmodel=extreme	 option	 is  incompatible with
	       -fplt and/or -mexplicit-relocs=none.

	   The default code model is "normal".

       -mexplicit-relocs=style
	   Set when to use assembler relocation	operators  when	 dealing  with
	   symbolic  addresses.	  The  alternative  is to use assembler	macros
	   instead, which may limit instruction	scheduling  but	 allow	linker
	   relaxation.	 with  -mexplicit-relocs=none the assembler macros are
	   always used,	with -mexplicit-relocs=always the assembler relocation
	   operators are always	used, with -mexplicit-relocs=auto the compiler
	   will	use the	relocation operators where the	linker	relaxation  is
	   impossible  to improve the code quality, and	macros elsewhere.  The
	   default value for the  option  is  determined  with	the  assembler
	   capability  detected	 during	 GCC  build-time  and  the  setting of
	   -mrelax: -mexplicit-relocs=none if the assembler does  not  support
	   relocation	operators  at  all,  -mexplicit-relocs=always  if  the
	   assembler supports relocation operators but -mrelax is not enabled,
	   -mexplicit-relocs=auto  if  the   assembler	 supports   relocation
	   operators and -mrelax is enabled.

       -mexplicit-relocs
	   An alias of -mexplicit-relocs=always	for backward compatibility.

       -mno-explicit-relocs
	   An alias of -mexplicit-relocs=none for backward compatibility.

       -mdirect-extern-access
       -mno-direct-extern-access
	   Do  not  use	or use GOT to access external symbols.	The default is
	   -mno-direct-extern-access: GOT is used for  external	 symbols  with
	   default visibility, but not used for	other external symbols.

	   With	 -mdirect-extern-access,  GOT  is  not	used  and all external
	   symbols are PC-relatively  addressed.   It  is  only	 suitable  for
	   environments	where no dynamic link is performed, like firmwares, OS
	   kernels,   executables   linked   with   -static   or  -static-pie.
	   -mdirect-extern-access is not compatible with -fPIC or -fpic.

       -mrelax
       -mno-relax
	   Take	 (do  not  take)  advantage   of   linker   relaxations.    If
	   -mpass-mrelax-to-as	is  enabled, this option is also passed	to the
	   assembler.  The default is  determined  during  GCC	build-time  by
	   detecting corresponding assembler support: -mrelax if the assembler
	   supports  both  the	-mrelax	 option	 and  the  conditional	branch
	   relaxation  (it's  required	or   the   ".align"   directives   and
	   conditional	branch	instructions in	the assembly code outputted by
	   GCC may be rejected	by  the	 assembler  because  of	 a  relocation
	   overflow), -mno-relax otherwise.

       -mpass-mrelax-to-as
       -mno-pass-mrelax-to-as
	   Pass	 (do  not  pass)  the  -mrelax	or  -mno-relax	option	to the
	   assembler.  The default is  determined  during  GCC	build-time  by
	   detecting  corresponding  assembler support:	-mpass-mrelax-to-as if
	   the assembler supports the -mrelax  option,	-mno-pass-mrelax-to-as
	   otherwise.	 This  option  is  mostly  useful  for	debugging,  or
	   interoperation with assemblers different from the build-time	one.

       -mrecip
	   This	option enables use of the reciprocal estimate  and  reciprocal
	   square  root	 estimate  instructions	with additional	Newton-Raphson
	   steps to increase precision instead of doing	 a  divide  or	square
	   root	 and  divide for floating-point	arguments.  These instructions
	   are generated  only	when  -funsafe-math-optimizations  is  enabled
	   together  with  -ffinite-math-only  and  -fno-trapping-math.	  This
	   option is off by default. Before you	can use	this option, you  must
	   sure	 the  target  CPU  supports  frecipe and frsqrte instructions.
	   Note	that while the throughput of the sequence is higher  than  the
	   throughput  of the non-reciprocal instruction, the precision	of the
	   sequence can	be decreased by	up to 2	ulp (i.e. the inverse  of  1.0
	   equals 0.99999994).

       -mrecip=opt
	   This	 option	controls which reciprocal estimate instructions	may be
	   used.  opt is a comma-separated  list  of  options,	which  may  be
	   preceded by a ! to invert the option:

	   all Enable all estimate instructions.

	   default
	       Enable the default instructions,	equivalent to -mrecip.

	   none
	       Disable all estimate instructions, equivalent to	-mno-recip.

	   div Enable the approximation	for scalar division.

	   vec-div
	       Enable the approximation	for vectorized division.

	   sqrt
	       Enable the approximation	for scalar square root.

	   vec-sqrt
	       Enable the approximation	for vectorized square root.

	   rsqrt
	       Enable the approximation	for scalar reciprocal square root.

	   vec-rsqrt
	       Enable the approximation	for vectorized reciprocal square root.

	   So,	for  example,  -mrecip=all,!sqrt enables all of	the reciprocal
	   approximations, except for scalar square root.

       -mfrecipe
       -mno-frecipe
	   Use (do not use) "frecipe.{s/d}" and	"frsqrte.{s/d}"	 instructions.
	   When	 build	with  -march=la664,  it	 is  enabled  by default.  The
	   default is -mno-frecipe.

       -mdiv32
       -mno-div32
	   Use (do not use) "div.w[u]" and "mod.w[u]" instructions with	 input
	   not	sign-extended.	When build with	-march=la664, it is enabled by
	   default.  The default is -mno-div32.

       -mlam-bh
       -mno-lam-bh
	   Use (do  not	 use)  "am{swap/add}[_db].{b/h}"  instructions.	  When
	   build  with -march=la664, it	is enabled by default.	The default is
	   -mno-lam-bh.

       -mlamcas
       -mno-lamcas
	   Use (do not use) "amcas[_db].{b/h/w/d}" instructions.   When	 build
	   with	 -march=la664,	it  is	enabled	 by  default.	The default is
	   -mno-lamcas.

       -mld-seq-sa
       -mno-ld-seq-sa
	   Whether a load-load barrier ("dbar 0x700") is needed.   When	 build
	   with	 -march=la664,	it  is	enabled	 by  default.	The default is
	   -mno-ld-seq-sa, the load-load barrier is needed.

       -mtls-dialect=opt
	   This	option controls	which tls dialect  may	be  used  for  general
	   dynamic and local dynamic TLS models.

	   trad
	       Use traditional TLS. This is the	default.

	   desc
	       Use TLS descriptors.

       --param loongarch-vect-unroll-limit=n
	   The	vectorizer  will use available tuning information to determine
	   whether it would be beneficial to unroll the	main  vectorized  loop
	   and	by how much.  This parameter set's the upper bound of how much
	   the vectorizer will unroll the main loop.   The  default  value  is
	   six.

       M32C Options

       -mcpu=name
	   Select the CPU for which code is generated.	name may be one	of r8c
	   for	the  R8C/Tiny  series,	m16c  for the M16C (up to /60) series,
	   m32cm for the M16C/80 series, or m32c for the M32C/80 series.

       -msim
	   Specifies that the program will be  run  on	the  simulator.	  This
	   causes an alternate runtime library to be linked in which supports,
	   for	example,  file	I/O.   You  must  not  use  this  option  when
	   generating programs that  will  run	on  real  hardware;  you  must
	   provide  your  own  runtime	library	for whatever I/O functions are
	   needed.

       -memregs=number
	   Specifies the number	 of  memory-based  pseudo-registers  GCC  uses
	   during  code	generation.  These pseudo-registers are	used like real
	   registers, so there is a tradeoff between GCC's ability to fit  the
	   code	into available registers, and the performance penalty of using
	   memory  instead  of	registers.  Note that all modules in a program
	   must	be compiled with the same value	for this option.   Because  of
	   that,  you  must  not  use  this  option with GCC's default runtime
	   libraries.

       M32R/D Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	Renesas	M32R/D architectures:

       -m32r2
	   Generate code for the M32R/2.

       -m32rx
	   Generate code for the M32R/X.

       -m32r
	   Generate code for the M32R.	This is	the default.

       -mmodel=small
	   Assume all objects live in the lower	16MB of	memory (so that	 their
	   addresses  can  be  loaded with the "ld24" instruction), and	assume
	   all subroutines are reachable with the "bl" instruction.   This  is
	   the default.

	   The	addressability	of  a  particular  object  can be set with the
	   "model" attribute.

       -mmodel=medium
	   Assume objects may be anywhere in the  32-bit  address  space  (the
	   compiler   generates	  "seth/add3"	instructions   to  load	 their
	   addresses), and assume all subroutines are reachable	with the  "bl"
	   instruction.

       -mmodel=large
	   Assume  objects  may	 be  anywhere in the 32-bit address space (the
	   compiler  generates	"seth/add3"   instructions   to	  load	 their
	   addresses),	and  assume  subroutines may not be reachable with the
	   "bl"	 instruction  (the  compiler   generates   the	 much	slower
	   "seth/add3/jl" instruction sequence).

       -msdata=none
	   Disable  use	of the small data area.	 Variables are put into	one of
	   ".data", ".bss", or ".rodata" (unless the "section"	attribute  has
	   been	specified).  This is the default.

	   The	small  data  area  consists  of	sections ".sdata" and ".sbss".
	   Objects may be explicitly put in  the  small	 data  area  with  the
	   "section" attribute using one of these sections.

       -msdata=sdata
	   Put small global and	static data in the small data area, but	do not
	   generate special code to reference them.

       -msdata=use
	   Put	small  global  and  static  data  in  the small	data area, and
	   generate special instructions to reference them.

       -G num
	   Put global and static objects less than or equal to num bytes  into
	   the	small  data  or	BSS sections instead of	the normal data	or BSS
	   sections.  The default value	of num is 8.  The -msdata option  must
	   be set to one of sdata or use for this option to have any effect.

	   All	modules	 should	 be  compiled  with  the  same	-G  num	value.
	   Compiling with different values of num may or may not work;	if  it
	   doesn't  the	 linker	gives an error message---incorrect code	is not
	   generated.

       -mdebug
	   Makes  the  M32R-specific  code  in	the  compiler	display	  some
	   statistics that might help in debugging programs.

       -malign-loops
	   Align all loops to a	32-byte	boundary.

       -mno-align-loops
	   Do not enforce a 32-byte alignment for loops.  This is the default.

       -missue-rate=number
	   Issue number	instructions per cycle.	 number	can only be 1 or 2.

       -mbranch-cost=number
	   number  can only be 1 or 2.	If it is 1 then	branches are preferred
	   over	conditional code, if it	is 2, then the opposite	applies.

       -mflush-trap=number
	   Specifies the trap number to	use to flush the cache.	  The  default
	   is 12.  Valid numbers are between 0 and 15 inclusive.

       -mno-flush-trap
	   Specifies that the cache cannot be flushed by using a trap.

       -mflush-func=name
	   Specifies  the  name	 of  the  operating system function to call to
	   flush the cache.  The default is _flush_cache, but a	function  call
	   is only used	if a trap is not available.

       -mno-flush-func
	   Indicates that there	is no OS function for flushing the cache.

       M680x0 Options

       These  are  the	-m options defined for M680x0 and ColdFire processors.
       The default settings depend on which architecture was selected when the
       compiler	was configured;	the defaults for the most common  choices  are
       given below.

       -march=arch
	   Generate  code  for	a  specific M680x0 or ColdFire instruction set
	   architecture.  Permissible values of	arch for M680x0	 architectures
	   are:	 68000,	68010, 68020, 68030, 68040, 68060 and cpu32.  ColdFire
	   architectures   are	 selected   according	to   Freescale's   ISA
	   classification and the permissible values are: isaa,	isaaplus, isab
	   and isac.

	   GCC	defines	 a  macro "__mcfarch__"	whenever it is generating code
	   for a ColdFire target.  The arch in this macro is one of the	-march
	   arguments given above.

	   When	used together, -march and -mtune select	code that  runs	 on  a
	   family of similar processors	but that is optimized for a particular
	   microarchitecture.

       -mcpu=cpu
	   Generate  code  for	a  specific M680x0 or ColdFire processor.  The
	   M680x0 cpus are: 68000, 68010, 68020, 68030,	68040,	68060,	68302,
	   68332  and  cpu32.  The ColdFire cpus are given by the table	below,
	   which also classifies the CPUs into families:

	   Family : -mcpu arguments
	   51 :	51 51ac	51ag 51cn 51em 51je 51jf 51jg 51jm 51mm	51qe 51qm
	   5206	: 5202 5204 5206
	   5206e : 5206e
	   5208	: 5207 5208
	   5211a : 5210a 5211a
	   5213	: 5211 5212 5213
	   5216	: 5214 5216
	   52235 : 52230 52231 52232 52233 52234 52235
	   5225	: 5224 5225
	   52259 : 52252 52254 52255 52256 52258 52259
	   5235	: 5232 5233 5234 5235 523x
	   5249	: 5249
	   5250	: 5250
	   5271	: 5270 5271
	   5272	: 5272
	   5275	: 5274 5275
	   5282	: 5280 5281 5282 528x
	   53017 : 53011 53012 53013 53014 53015 53016 53017
	   5307	: 5307
	   5329	: 5327 5328 5329 532x
	   5373	: 5372 5373 537x
	   5407	: 5407
	   5475	: 5470 5471 5472 5473 5474 5475	547x 5480 5481 5482 5483 5484
	   5485

	   -mcpu=cpu overrides -march=arch if arch  is	compatible  with  cpu.
	   Other combinations of -mcpu and -march are rejected.

	   GCC	defines	 the macro "__mcf_cpu_cpu" when	ColdFire target	cpu is
	   selected.  It also defines "__mcf_family_family", where  the	 value
	   of family is	given by the table above.

       -mtune=tune
	   Tune	 the  code  for	 a  particular	microarchitecture  within  the
	   constraints set by -march and -mcpu.	 The M680x0 microarchitectures
	   are:	68000, 68010, 68020,  68030,  68040,  68060  and  cpu32.   The
	   ColdFire microarchitectures are: cfv1, cfv2,	cfv3, cfv4 and cfv4e.

	   You	can  also  use	-mtune=68020-40	 for  code  that  needs	to run
	   relatively well on 68020, 68030 and 68040 targets.  -mtune=68020-60
	   is similar but includes 68060 targets as well.  These  two  options
	   select  the	same  tuning  decisions	 as  -m68020-40	and -m68020-60
	   respectively.

	   GCC defines the macros "__mcarch" and "__mcarch__" when tuning  for
	   680x0  architecture	arch.	It also	defines	"mcarch" unless	either
	   -ansi or a non-GNU -std option is used.  If GCC  is	tuning	for  a
	   range   of	architectures,	 as  selected  by  -mtune=68020-40  or
	   -mtune=68020-60, it defines the macros for  every  architecture  in
	   the range.

	   GCC	also  defines  the macro "__muarch__" when tuning for ColdFire
	   microarchitecture uarch, where uarch	is one of the arguments	 given
	   above.

       -m68000
       -mc68000
	   Generate output for a 68000.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	68000-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=68000.

	   Use this option for microcontrollers	with a 68000  or  EC000	 core,
	   including the 68008,	68302, 68306, 68307, 68322, 68328 and 68356.

       -m68010
	   Generate output for a 68010.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	68010-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=68010.

       -m68020
       -mc68020
	   Generate output for a 68020.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	68020-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=68020.

       -m68030
	   Generate output for a 68030.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	68030-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=68030.

       -m68040
	   Generate output for a 68040.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	68040-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=68040.

	   This	 option	inhibits the use of 68881/68882	instructions that have
	   to be emulated by software on the 68040.  Use this option  if  your
	   68040 does not have code to emulate those instructions.

       -m68060
	   Generate output for a 68060.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	68060-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=68060.

	   This	option inhibits	the use	of 68020 and 68881/68882  instructions
	   that	have to	be emulated by software	on the 68060.  Use this	option
	   if your 68060 does not have code to emulate those instructions.

       -mcpu32
	   Generate output for a CPU32.	 This is the default when the compiler
	   is  configured  for	CPU32-based  systems.	It  is	equivalent  to
	   -march=cpu32.

	   Use this option for microcontrollers	with a CPU32 or	 CPU32+	 core,
	   including  the  68330,  68331,  68332,  68333, 68334, 68336,	68340,
	   68341, 68349	and 68360.

       -m5200
	   Generate output for a 520X ColdFire CPU.  This is the default  when
	   the	 compiler   is	configured  for	 520X-based  systems.	It  is
	   equivalent to -mcpu=5206, and is now	deprecated in  favor  of  that
	   option.

	   Use this option for microcontroller with a 5200 core, including the
	   MCF5202, MCF5203, MCF5204 and MCF5206.

       -m5206e
	   Generate  output  for  a  5206e  ColdFire  CPU.   The option	is now
	   deprecated in favor of the equivalent -mcpu=5206e.

       -m528x
	   Generate output for a member	of  the	 ColdFire  528X	 family.   The
	   option is now deprecated in favor of	the equivalent -mcpu=528x.

       -m5307
	   Generate  output  for  a  ColdFire  5307  CPU.   The	 option	is now
	   deprecated in favor of the equivalent -mcpu=5307.

       -m5407
	   Generate output for	a  ColdFire  5407  CPU.	  The  option  is  now
	   deprecated in favor of the equivalent -mcpu=5407.

       -mcfv4e
	   Generate  output  for  a  ColdFire V4e family CPU (e.g. 547x/548x).
	   This	includes use of	 hardware  floating-point  instructions.   The
	   option  is equivalent to -mcpu=547x,	and is now deprecated in favor
	   of that option.

       -m68020-40
	   Generate  output  for  a  68040,  without  using  any  of  the  new
	   instructions.   This	 results  in  code  that  can  run  relatively
	   efficiently on either a 68020/68881 or a 68030  or  a  68040.   The
	   generated code does use the 68881 instructions that are emulated on
	   the 68040.

	   The option is equivalent to -march=68020 -mtune=68020-40.

       -m68020-60
	   Generate  output  for  a  68060,  without  using  any  of  the  new
	   instructions.   This	 results  in  code  that  can  run  relatively
	   efficiently	on  either  a  68020/68881 or a	68030 or a 68040.  The
	   generated code does use the 68881 instructions that are emulated on
	   the 68060.

	   The option is equivalent to -march=68020 -mtune=68020-60.

       -mhard-float
       -m68881
	   Generate floating-point instructions.   This	 is  the  default  for
	   68020  and  above,  and  for	ColdFire devices that have an FPU.  It
	   defines  the	 macro	"__HAVE_68881__"   on	M680x0	 targets   and
	   "__mcffpu__"	on ColdFire targets.

       -msoft-float
	   Do  not  generate  floating-point  instructions;  use library calls
	   instead.  This is the default for 68000, 68010, and 68832  targets.
	   It is also the default for ColdFire devices that have no FPU.

       -mdiv
       -mno-div
	   Generate  (do  not generate)	ColdFire hardware divide and remainder
	   instructions.  If -march is used without -mcpu, the default is "on"
	   for ColdFire	architectures  and  "off"  for	M680x0	architectures.
	   Otherwise,  the  default  is	 taken from the	target CPU (either the
	   default CPU,	or the one specified  by  -mcpu).   For	 example,  the
	   default is "off" for	-mcpu=5206 and "on" for	-mcpu=5206e.

	   GCC defines the macro "__mcfhwdiv__"	when this option is enabled.

       -mshort
	   Consider  type  "int"  to  be  16  bits  wide,  like	 "short	 int".
	   Additionally, parameters passed on the stack	are also aligned to  a
	   16-bit  boundary  even  on  targets whose API mandates promotion to
	   32-bit.

       -mno-short
	   Do not consider type	"int"  to  be  16  bits	 wide.	 This  is  the
	   default.

       -mnobitfield
       -mno-bitfield
	   Do  not  use	 the bit-field instructions.  The -m68000, -mcpu32 and
	   -m5200 options imply	-mnobitfield.

       -mbitfield
	   Do use the bit-field	 instructions.	 The  -m68020  option  implies
	   -mbitfield.	 This  is  the	default	 if  you  use  a configuration
	   designed for	a 68020.

       -mrtd
	   Use a different function-calling  convention,  in  which  functions
	   that	 take  a  fixed	 number	 of  arguments	return	with the "rtd"
	   instruction,	which pops  their  arguments  while  returning.	  This
	   saves  one  instruction in the caller since there is	no need	to pop
	   the arguments there.

	   This	calling	convention is incompatible with	the one	normally  used
	   on  Unix,  so  you  cannot  use  it	if  you	need to	call libraries
	   compiled with the Unix compiler.

	   Also, you must provide function prototypes for all  functions  that
	   take	 variable numbers of arguments (including "printf"); otherwise
	   incorrect code is generated for calls to those functions.

	   In addition,	 seriously  incorrect  code  results  if  you  call  a
	   function  with  too many arguments.	(Normally, extra arguments are
	   harmlessly ignored.)

	   The "rtd" instruction is supported  by  the	68010,	68020,	68030,
	   68040, 68060	and CPU32 processors, but not by the 68000 or 5200.

	   The default is -mno-rtd.

       -malign-int
       -mno-align-int
	   Control  whether  GCC  aligns  "int", "long", "long long", "float",
	   "double",  and  "long  double"  variables  on  a  32-bit   boundary
	   (-malign-int)  or  a	 16-bit	 boundary  (-mno-align-int).  Aligning
	   variables on	32-bit boundaries produces  code  that	runs  somewhat
	   faster  on  processors  with	 32-bit	 busses	at the expense of more
	   memory.

	   Warning: if you use the -malign-int switch, GCC  aligns  structures
	   containing	the   above  types  differently	 than  most  published
	   application binary interface	specifications for the m68k.

	   Use the pc-relative addressing mode of the 68000 directly,  instead
	   of  using  a	 global	offset table.  At present, this	option implies
	   -fpic, allowing at most a 16-bit offset for pc-relative addressing.
	   -fPIC is not	presently supported with -mpcrel, though this could be
	   supported for 68020 and higher processors.

       -mno-strict-align
       -mstrict-align
	   Do not (do) assume that unaligned memory references are handled  by
	   the system.

       -msep-data
	   Generate  code  that	 allows	 the  data  segment to be located in a
	   different area of memory from the text segment.   This  allows  for
	   execute-in-place   in   an	environment   without  virtual	memory
	   management.	This option implies -fPIC.

       -mno-sep-data
	   Generate code that assumes that the data segment follows  the  text
	   segment.  This is the default.

       -mid-shared-library
	   Generate  code  that	 supports  shared libraries via	the library ID
	   method.  This allows	for execute-in-place and shared	 libraries  in
	   an  environment  without  virtual  memory  management.  This	option
	   implies -fPIC.

       -mno-id-shared-library
	   Generate code that doesn't assume  ID-based	shared	libraries  are
	   being used.	This is	the default.

       -mshared-library-id=n
	   Specifies  the identification number	of the ID-based	shared library
	   being compiled.  Specifying a value of  0  generates	 more  compact
	   code;  specifying other values forces the allocation	of that	number
	   to the current library, but is no  more  space-  or	time-efficient
	   than	omitting this option.

       -mxgot
       -mno-xgot
	   When	 generating  position-independent  code	for ColdFire, generate
	   code	that works if the GOT has more than 8192 entries.   This  code
	   is  larger  and slower than code generated without this option.  On
	   M680x0 processors, this option is not needed; -fPIC suffices.

	   GCC normally	uses a single instruction to load values from the GOT.
	   While this is relatively efficient, it only works  if  the  GOT  is
	   smaller  than  about	 64k.	Anything  larger  causes the linker to
	   report an error such	as:

		   relocation truncated	to fit:	R_68K_GOT16O foobar

	   If this happens, you	should recompile your code  with  -mxgot.   It
	   should  then	 work  with  very large	GOTs.  However,	code generated
	   with	-mxgot is less efficient, since	it  takes  4  instructions  to
	   fetch the value of a	global symbol.

	   Note	that some linkers, including newer versions of the GNU linker,
	   can	create multiple	GOTs and sort GOT entries.  If you have	such a
	   linker, you should only need	to use -mxgot when compiling a	single
	   object file that accesses more than 8192 GOT	entries.  Very few do.

	   These  options  have	 no  effect unless GCC is generating position-
	   independent code.

       -mlong-jump-table-offsets
	   Use 32-bit offsets in "switch"  tables.   The  default  is  to  use
	   16-bit offsets.

       MCore Options

       These are the -m	options	defined	for the	Motorola M*Core	processors.

       -mhardlit
       -mno-hardlit
	   Inline  constants  into  the	 code  stream if it can	be done	in two
	   instructions	or less.

       -mdiv
       -mno-div
	   Use the divide instruction.	(Enabled by default).

       -mrelax-immediate
       -mno-relax-immediate
	   Allow arbitrary-sized immediates in bit operations.

       -mwide-bitfields
       -mno-wide-bitfields
	   Always treat	bit-fields as "int"-sized.

       -m4byte-functions
       -mno-4byte-functions
	   Force all functions to be aligned to	a 4-byte boundary.

       -mcallgraph-data
       -mno-callgraph-data
	   Emit	callgraph information.

       -mslow-bytes
       -mno-slow-bytes
	   Prefer word access when reading byte	quantities.

       -mlittle-endian
       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a little-endian target.

       -m210
       -m340
	   Generate code for the 210 processor.

       -mno-lsim
	   Assume that runtime support has  been  provided  and	 so  omit  the
	   simulator library (libsim.a)	from the linker	command	line.

       -mstack-increment=size
	   Set	the  maximum  amount  for  a single stack increment operation.
	   Large values	can  increase  the  speed  of  programs	 that  contain
	   functions  that  need  a  large amount of stack space, but they can
	   also	trigger	a segmentation fault if	 the  stack  is	 extended  too
	   much.  The default value is 0x1000.

       MicroBlaze Options

       -msoft-float
	   Use software	emulation for floating point (default).

       -mhard-float
	   Use hardware	floating-point instructions.

       -mmemcpy
	   Do not optimize block moves,	use "memcpy".

       -mno-clearbss
	   This	  option   is  deprecated.   Use  -fno-zero-initialized-in-bss
	   instead.

       -mcpu=cpu-type
	   Use features	of, and	schedule code for, the given  CPU.   Supported
	   values are in the format vX.YY.Z, where X is	a major	version, YY is
	   the minor version, and Z is compatibility code.  Example values are
	   v3.00.a, v4.00.b, v5.00.a, v5.00.b, v6.00.a.

       -mxl-soft-mul
	   Use software	multiply emulation (default).

       -mxl-soft-div
	   Use software	emulation for divides (default).

       -mxl-barrel-shift
	   Use the hardware barrel shifter.

       -mxl-pattern-compare
	   Use pattern compare instructions.

       -msmall-divides
	   Use table lookup optimization for small signed integer divisions.

       -mxl-stack-check
	   This	option is deprecated.  Use -fstack-check instead.

       -mxl-gp-opt
	   Use GP-relative ".sdata"/".sbss" sections.

       -mxl-multiply-high
	   Use multiply	high instructions for high part	of 32x32 multiply.

       -mxl-float-convert
	   Use hardware	floating-point conversion instructions.

       -mxl-float-sqrt
	   Use hardware	floating-point square root instruction.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code for a big-endian target.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code for a little-endian target.

       -mxl-reorder
	   Use reorder instructions (swap and byte reversed load/store).

       -mxl-mode-app-model
	   Select application model app-model.	Valid models are

	   executable
	       normal executable (default), uses startup code crt0.o.

	   xmdstub
	       for   use  with	Xilinx	Microprocessor	Debugger  (XMD)	 based
	       software	 intrusive  debug  agent  called  xmdstub.  This  uses
	       startup	file  crt1.o and sets the start	address	of the program
	       to 0x800.

	   bootstrap
	       for applications	that are  loaded  using	 a  bootloader.	  This
	       model  uses  startup  file  crt2.o  which  does	not  contain a
	       processor  reset	 vector	 handler.   This   is	suitable   for
	       transferring  control  on  a  processor reset to	the bootloader
	       rather than the application.

	   novectors
	       for applications	that do	not  require  any  of  the  MicroBlaze
	       vectors.	 This  option  may  be useful for applications running
	       within a	monitoring application.	This model uses	 crt3.o	 as  a
	       startup file.

	   Option  -xl-mode-app-model is a deprecated alias for	-mxl-mode-app-
	   model.

       -mpic-data-is-text-relative
	   Assume that the displacement	between	the text and data segments  is
	   fixed  at  static  link time.  This allows data to be referenced by
	   offset from start of	text address instead of	GOT since  PC-relative
	   addressing is not supported.

       MIPS Options

       -EB Generate big-endian code.

       -EL Generate  little-endian  code.  This	is the default for mips*el-*-*
	   configurations.

       -march=arch
	   Generate code that runs on arch, which can be the name of a generic
	   MIPS	ISA, or	the name of a particular  processor.   The  ISA	 names
	   are:	 mips1,	 mips2,	 mips3,	 mips4,	 mips32,  mips32r2,  mips32r3,
	   mips32r5,  mips32r6,	 mips64,  mips64r2,  mips64r3,	mips64r5   and
	   mips64r6.   The  processor  names  are:  4kc, 4km, 4kp, 4ksc, 4kec,
	   4kem, 4kep, 4ksd, 5kc, 5kf, 20kc, 24kc,  24kf2_1,  24kf1_1,	24kec,
	   24kef2_1,  24kef1_1,	 34kc,	34kf2_1, 34kf1_1, 34kn,	74kc, 74kf2_1,
	   74kf1_1,  74kf3_2,  1004kc,	1004kf2_1,  1004kf1_1,	i6400,	i6500,
	   interaptiv,	loongson2e,  loongson2f,  loongson3a,  gs464,  gs464e,
	   gs264e, m4k,	m14k, m14kc,  m14ke,  m14kec,  m5100,  m5101,  octeon,
	   octeon+,  octeon2,  octeon3,	 orion,	 p5600,	 p6600,	 r2000,	r3000,
	   r3900, r4000, r4400,	r4600,	r4650,	r4700,	r5900,	r6000,	r8000,
	   rm7000,  rm9000,  r10000,  r12000,  r14000,	r16000,	 sb1, sr71000,
	   vr4100, vr4111, vr4120, vr4130, vr4300, vr5000, vr5400, vr5500, xlr
	   and xlp.  The special value from-abi	selects	 the  most  compatible
	   architecture	 for  the selected ABI (that is, mips1 for 32-bit ABIs
	   and mips3 for 64-bit	ABIs).

	   The native Linux/GNU	toolchain  also	 supports  the	value  native,
	   which  selects the best architecture	option for the host processor.
	   -march=native  has  no  effect  if  GCC  does  not  recognize   the
	   processor.

	   In  processor  names,  a  final  000	 can  be abbreviated as	k (for
	   example, -march=r2k).  Prefixes are optional, and vr	may be written
	   r.

	   Names of the	form nf2_1 refer to processors with  FPUs  clocked  at
	   half	 the  rate  of	the  core,  names  of  the form	nf1_1 refer to
	   processors with FPUs	clocked	at the same  rate  as  the  core,  and
	   names  of  the  form	 nf3_2 refer to	processors with	FPUs clocked a
	   ratio of 3:2	with respect to	the core.  For compatibility  reasons,
	   nf is accepted as a synonym for nf2_1 while nx and bfx are accepted
	   as synonyms for nf1_1.

	   GCC	defines	 two  macros  based  on	the value of this option.  The
	   first is "_MIPS_ARCH", which	gives the name of target architecture,
	   as a	string.	 The second has	the form "_MIPS_ARCH_foo",  where  foo
	   is	the   capitalized   value   of	 "_MIPS_ARCH".	 For  example,
	   -march=r2000	sets "_MIPS_ARCH" to "r2000"  and  defines  the	 macro
	   "_MIPS_ARCH_R2000".

	   Note	 that  the  "_MIPS_ARCH"  macro	uses the processor names given
	   above.  In other words,  it	has  the  full	prefix	and  does  not
	   abbreviate  000 as k.  In the case of from-abi, the macro names the
	   resolved architecture (either "mips1" or "mips3").	It  names  the
	   default architecture	when no	-march option is given.

       -mtune=arch
	   Optimize  for  arch.	  Among	other things, this option controls the
	   way	instructions  are  scheduled,  and  the	 perceived   cost   of
	   arithmetic  operations.  The	list of	arch values is the same	as for
	   -march.

	   When	this option is not  used,  GCC	optimizes  for	the  processor
	   specified  by  -march.   By using -march and	-mtune together, it is
	   possible to generate	code that runs on a family of processors,  but
	   optimize the	code for one particular	member of that family.

	   -mtune  defines the macros "_MIPS_TUNE" and "_MIPS_TUNE_foo", which
	   work	in the same way	as the -march ones described above.

       -mips1
	   Equivalent to -march=mips1.

       -mips2
	   Equivalent to -march=mips2.

       -mips3
	   Equivalent to -march=mips3.

       -mips4
	   Equivalent to -march=mips4.

       -mips32
	   Equivalent to -march=mips32.

       -mips32r3
	   Equivalent to -march=mips32r3.

       -mips32r5
	   Equivalent to -march=mips32r5.

       -mips32r6
	   Equivalent to -march=mips32r6.

       -mips64
	   Equivalent to -march=mips64.

       -mips64r2
	   Equivalent to -march=mips64r2.

       -mips64r3
	   Equivalent to -march=mips64r3.

       -mips64r5
	   Equivalent to -march=mips64r5.

       -mips64r6
	   Equivalent to -march=mips64r6.

       -mips16
       -mno-mips16
	   Generate (do	not generate) MIPS16 code.   If	 GCC  is  targeting  a
	   MIPS32 or MIPS64 architecture, it makes use of the MIPS16e ASE.

	   MIPS16  code	 generation  can  also be controlled on	a per-function
	   basis by means of "mips16" and "nomips16" attributes.

       -mmips16e2
       -mno-mips16e2
	   Use (do not use)  the  MIPS16e2  ASE.   This	 option	 modifies  the
	   behavior  of	 the  -mips16 option such that it targets the MIPS16e2
	   ASE.

       -mflip-mips16
	   Generate MIPS16 code	on  alternating	 functions.   This  option  is
	   provided  for  regression  testing  of mixed	MIPS16/non-MIPS16 code
	   generation, and is not intended for ordinary	use in compiling  user
	   code.

       -minterlink-compressed
       -mno-interlink-compressed
	   Require   (do   not	 require)   that   code	  using	 the  standard
	   (uncompressed)  MIPS	 ISA  be  link-compatible  with	  MIPS16   and
	   microMIPS code, and vice versa.

	   For	example,  code	using  the  standard  ISA encoding cannot jump
	   directly to MIPS16 or microMIPS code; it must either	use a call  or
	   an indirect jump.  -minterlink-compressed therefore disables	direct
	   jumps  unless  GCC  knows  that  the	 target	 of  the  jump	is not
	   compressed.

       -minterlink-mips16
       -mno-interlink-mips16
	   Aliases of  -minterlink-compressed  and  -mno-interlink-compressed.
	   These  options  predate  the	 microMIPS  ASE	 and  are retained for
	   backwards compatibility.

       -mabi=32
       -mabi=o64
       -mabi=n32
       -mabi=64
       -mabi=eabi
	   Generate code for the given ABI.

	   Note	that the EABI has a 32-bit and a 64-bit	variant.  GCC normally
	   generates 64-bit code when you select a  64-bit  architecture,  but
	   you can use -mgp32 to get 32-bit code instead.

	   For	    information	     about	the	 O64	  ABI,	   see
	   <https://gcc.gnu.org/projects/mipso64-abi.html>.

	   GCC supports	a variant of  the  o32	ABI  in	 which	floating-point
	   registers  are  64  rather  than 32 bits wide.  You can select this
	   combination with -mabi=32 -mfp64.  This ABI relies on  the  "mthc1"
	   and	"mfhc1"	 instructions  and  is	therefore  only	 supported for
	   MIPS32R2, MIPS32R3 and MIPS32R5 processors.

	   The register	assignments for	arguments and return values remain the
	   same, but each scalar value is passed in a single  64-bit  register
	   rather  than	 a  pair  of  32-bit  registers.   For example,	scalar
	   floating-point values are returned in $f0 only, not a $f0/$f1 pair.
	   The set of call-saved registers also	remains	the same in  that  the
	   even-numbered double-precision registers are	saved.

	   Two	additional  variants  of the o32 ABI are supported to enable a
	   transition  from  32-bit  to	 64-bit	 registers.   These  are  FPXX
	   (-mfpxx)  and  FP64A	 (-mfp64  -mno-odd-spreg).  The	FPXX extension
	   mandates that all code must execute correctly when run using	32-bit
	   or 64-bit registers.	 The code can be interlinked with either  FP32
	   or  FP64, but not both.  The	FP64A extension	is similar to the FP64
	   extension but forbids  the  use  of	odd-numbered  single-precision
	   registers.	This can be used in conjunction	with the "FRE" mode of
	   FPUs	in MIPS32R5 processors and allows both FP32 and	FP64A code  to
	   interlink and run in	the same process without changing FPU modes.

       -mabicalls
       -mno-abicalls
	   Generate  (do  not  generate)  code that is suitable	for SVR4-style
	   dynamic objects.  -mabicalls	is the default for SVR4-based systems.

       -mshared
       -mno-shared
	   Generate (do	not generate) code that	is fully position-independent,
	   and that can	therefore  be  linked  into  shared  libraries.	  This
	   option only affects -mabicalls.

	   All	-mabicalls  code  has traditionally been position-independent,
	   regardless of  options  like	 -fPIC	and  -fpic.   However,	as  an
	   extension,  the  GNU	 toolchain  allows executables to use absolute
	   accesses for	locally-binding	symbols.  It can also use  shorter  GP
	   initialization  sequences  and  generate  direct  calls to locally-
	   defined functions.  This mode is selected by	-mno-shared.

	   -mno-shared depends	on  binutils  2.16  or	higher	and  generates
	   objects  that  can  only be linked by the GNU linker.  However, the
	   option does not affect the ABI of the  final	 executable;  it  only
	   affects   the   ABI	of  relocatable	 objects.   Using  -mno-shared
	   generally makes executables both smaller and	quicker.

	   -mshared is the default.

       -mplt
       -mno-plt
	   Assume (do not assume) that the static and dynamic linkers  support
	   PLTs	 and  copy  relocations.  This option only affects -mno-shared
	   -mabicalls.	For the	n64 ABI, this option  has  no  effect  without
	   -msym32.

	   You	 can   make   -mplt   the  default  by	configuring  GCC  with
	   --with-mips-plt.  The default is -mno-plt otherwise.

       -mxgot
       -mno-xgot
	   Lift	(do not	lift) the usual	restrictions on	the size of the	global
	   offset table.

	   GCC normally	uses a single instruction to load values from the GOT.
	   While this is relatively efficient, it only works  if  the  GOT  is
	   smaller  than  about	 64k.	Anything  larger  causes the linker to
	   report an error such	as:

		   relocation truncated	to fit:	R_MIPS_GOT16 foobar

	   If this happens, you	should recompile your code with	-mxgot.	  This
	   works  with	very  large  GOTs,  although  the  code	 is  also less
	   efficient, since it takes three instructions	to fetch the value  of
	   a global symbol.

	   Note	 that some linkers can create multiple GOTs.  If you have such
	   a linker, you should	only need to use -mxgot	when a	single	object
	   file	accesses more than 64k's worth of GOT entries.	Very few do.

	   These  options  have	 no  effect  unless GCC	is generating position
	   independent code.

       -mgp32
	   Assume that general-purpose registers are 32	bits wide.

       -mgp64
	   Assume that general-purpose registers are 64	bits wide.

       -mfp32
	   Assume that floating-point registers	are 32 bits wide.

       -mfp64
	   Assume that floating-point registers	are 64 bits wide.

       -mfpxx
	   Do not assume the width of floating-point registers.

       -mhard-float
	   Use floating-point coprocessor instructions.

       -msoft-float
	   Do not  use	floating-point	coprocessor  instructions.   Implement
	   floating-point calculations using library calls instead.

       -mno-float
	   Equivalent  to  -msoft-float,  but  additionally  asserts  that the
	   program  being  compiled  does  not	perform	  any	floating-point
	   operations.	 This option is	presently supported only by some bare-
	   metal MIPS configurations, where it may select  a  special  set  of
	   libraries  that  lack  all  floating-point  support (including, for
	   example, the	floating-point "printf"	formats).   If	code  compiled
	   with	-mno-float accidentally	contains floating-point	operations, it
	   is likely to	suffer a link-time or run-time failure.

       -msingle-float
	   Assume  that	 the  floating-point coprocessor only supports single-
	   precision operations.

       -mdouble-float
	   Assume  that	 the  floating-point  coprocessor   supports   double-
	   precision operations.  This is the default.

       -modd-spreg
       -mno-odd-spreg
	   Enable  the	use  of	 odd-numbered  single-precision	floating-point
	   registers for the o32 ABI.  This is the default for processors that
	   are known to	support	these registers.  When using the o32 FPXX ABI,
	   -mno-odd-spreg is set by default.

       -mabs=2008
       -mabs=legacy
	   These options control the treatment	of  the	 special  not-a-number
	   (NaN) IEEE 754 floating-point data with the "abs.fmt" and "neg.fmt"
	   machine instructions.

	   By  default	or  when  -mabs=legacy is used the legacy treatment is
	   selected.   In  this	 case  these   instructions   are   considered
	   arithmetic  and avoided where correct operation is required and the
	   input operand might be a NaN.  A longer  sequence  of  instructions
	   that	 manipulate  the  sign bit of floating-point datum manually is
	   used	instead	unless the -ffinite-math-only  option  has  also  been
	   specified.

	   The -mabs=2008 option selects the IEEE 754-2008 treatment.  In this
	   case	these instructions are considered non-arithmetic and therefore
	   operating correctly in all cases, including in particular where the
	   input  operand  is  a NaN.  These instructions are therefore	always
	   used	for the	respective operations.

       -mnan=2008
       -mnan=legacy
	   These options control the  encoding	of  the	 special  not-a-number
	   (NaN) IEEE 754 floating-point data.

	   The	-mnan=legacy option selects the	legacy encoding.  In this case
	   quiet NaNs (qNaNs) are denoted by the first bit of  their  trailing
	   significand	field  being  0,  whereas  signaling  NaNs (sNaNs) are
	   denoted by the first	bit of their trailing significand field	 being
	   1.

	   The	-mnan=2008 option selects the IEEE 754-2008 encoding.  In this
	   case	 qNaNs	are  denoted  by  the  first  bit  of  their  trailing
	   significand	field  being 1,	whereas	sNaNs are denoted by the first
	   bit of their	trailing significand field being 0.

	   The default is -mnan=legacy unless GCC  has	been  configured  with
	   --with-nan=2008.

       -mllsc
       -mno-llsc
	   Use	(do not	use) ll, sc, and sync instructions to implement	atomic
	   memory built-in functions.  When neither option is  specified,  GCC
	   uses	the instructions if the	target architecture supports them.

	   -mllsc  is  useful  if  the	runtime	 environment  can  emulate the
	   instructions	 and  -mno-llsc	 can  be  useful  when	compiling  for
	   nonstandard	ISAs.	You  can  make	either	option	the default by
	   configuring GCC with	--with-llsc and	 --without-llsc	 respectively.
	   --with-llsc	is  the	 default  for  some  configurations;  see  the
	   installation	documentation for details.

       -mdsp
       -mno-dsp
	   Use (do not use) revision 1 of the MIPS DSP ASE.
	     This option defines the preprocessor macro	"__mips_dsp".  It also
	   defines "__mips_dsp_rev" to 1.

       -mdspr2
       -mno-dspr2
	   Use (do not use) revision 2 of the MIPS DSP ASE.
	     This option defines  the  preprocessor  macros  "__mips_dsp"  and
	   "__mips_dspr2".  It also defines "__mips_dsp_rev" to	2.

       -msmartmips
       -mno-smartmips
	   Use (do not use) the	MIPS SmartMIPS ASE.

       -mpaired-single
       -mno-paired-single
	   Use (do not use) paired-single floating-point instructions.
	     This  option  requires  hardware  floating-point  support	to  be
	   enabled.

       -mdmx
       -mno-mdmx
	   Use (do not use) MIPS Digital Media Extension  instructions.	  This
	   option  can	only  be used when generating 64-bit code and requires
	   hardware floating-point support to be enabled.

       -mips3d
       -mno-mips3d
	   Use (do not use) the	 MIPS-3D  ASE.	 The  option  -mips3d  implies
	   -mpaired-single.

       -mmicromips
       -mno-micromips
	   Generate (do	not generate) microMIPS	code.

	   MicroMIPS  code generation can also be controlled on	a per-function
	   basis by means of "micromips" and "nomicromips" attributes.

       -mmt
       -mno-mt
	   Use (do not use) MT Multithreading instructions.

       -mmcu
       -mno-mcu
	   Use (do not use) the	MIPS MCU ASE instructions.

       -meva
       -mno-eva
	   Use (do not use) the	MIPS Enhanced Virtual Addressing instructions.

       -mvirt
       -mno-virt
	   Use (do not use) the	MIPS Virtualization (VZ) instructions.

       -mxpa
       -mno-xpa
	   Use	(do  not  use)	the  MIPS  eXtended  Physical  Address	 (XPA)
	   instructions.

       -mcrc
       -mno-crc
	   Use	 (do   not   use)  the	MIPS  Cyclic  Redundancy  Check	 (CRC)
	   instructions.

       -mginv
       -mno-ginv
	   Use (do not use) the	MIPS Global INValidate (GINV) instructions.

       -mloongson-mmi
       -mno-loongson-mmi
	   Use	(do  not  use)	the  MIPS   Loongson   MultiMedia   extensions
	   Instructions	(MMI).

       -mloongson-ext
       -mno-loongson-ext
	   Use (do not use) the	MIPS Loongson EXTensions (EXT) instructions.

       -mloongson-ext2
       -mno-loongson-ext2
	   Use	 (do   not   use)  the	MIPS  Loongson	EXTensions  r2	(EXT2)
	   instructions.

       -mlong64
	   Force "long"	types to  be  64  bits	wide.	See  -mlong32  for  an
	   explanation	of  the	 default  and the way that the pointer size is
	   determined.

       -mlong32
	   Force "long", "int",	and pointer types to be	32 bits	wide.

	   The default size of "int"s, "long"s and  pointers  depends  on  the
	   ABI.	  All  the supported ABIs use 32-bit "int"s.  The n64 ABI uses
	   64-bit "long"s, as does the 64-bit  EABI;  the  others  use	32-bit
	   "long"s.   Pointers	are the	same size as "long"s, or the same size
	   as integer registers, whichever is smaller.

       -msym32
       -mno-sym32
	   Assume (do  not  assume)  that  all	symbols	 have  32-bit  values,
	   regardless	of  the	 selected  ABI.	  This	option	is  useful  in
	   combination with -mabi=64 and -mno-abicalls because it  allows  GCC
	   to generate shorter and faster references to	symbolic addresses.

       -G num
	   Put	definitions of externally-visible data in a small data section
	   if that data	is no bigger than num bytes.  GCC  can	then  generate
	   more	efficient accesses to the data;	see -mgpopt for	details.

	   The default -G option depends on the	configuration.

       -mlocal-sdata
       -mno-local-sdata
	   Extend  (do	not extend) the	-G behavior to local data too, such as
	   to static variables in C.  -mlocal-sdata is	the  default  for  all
	   configurations.

	   If the linker complains that	an application is using	too much small
	   data,  you  might  want  to	try  rebuilding	 the less performance-
	   critical parts with -mno-local-sdata.  You might also want to build
	   large libraries with	-mno-local-sdata, so that the libraries	 leave
	   more	room for the main program.

       -mextern-sdata
       -mno-extern-sdata
	   Assume  (do	not assume) that externally-defined data is in a small
	   data	section	if the size of that  data  is  within  the  -G	limit.
	   -mextern-sdata is the default for all configurations.

	   If you compile a module Mod with -mextern-sdata -G num -mgpopt, and
	   Mod references a variable Var that is no bigger than	num bytes, you
	   must	 make sure that	Var is placed in a small data section.	If Var
	   is defined by another module, you must either compile  that	module
	   with	 a  high-enough	 -G setting or attach a	"section" attribute to
	   Var's definition.  If Var is	common,	you must link the  application
	   with	a high-enough -G setting.

	   The	easiest	way of satisfying these	restrictions is	to compile and
	   link	every module with the same -G option.  However,	you  may  wish
	   to  build  a	 library  that	supports  several different small data
	   limits.  You	can do this by compiling the library with the  highest
	   supported  -G  setting  and additionally using -mno-extern-sdata to
	   stop	the library from making	assumptions  about  externally-defined
	   data.

       -mgpopt
       -mno-gpopt
	   Use (do not use) GP-relative	accesses for symbols that are known to
	   be	in   a	 small	 data	section;  see  -G,  -mlocal-sdata  and
	   -mextern-sdata.  -mgpopt is the default for all configurations.

	   -mno-gpopt is useful	for cases where	the  $gp  register  might  not
	   hold	 the  value  of	 "_gp".	 For example, if the code is part of a
	   library that	might be used in a boot	monitor,  programs  that  call
	   boot	 monitor  routines  pass  an  unknown  value in	$gp.  (In such
	   situations, the boot	monitor	itself is usually compiled with	-G0.)

	   -mno-gpopt implies -mno-local-sdata and -mno-extern-sdata.

       -membedded-data
       -mno-embedded-data
	   Allocate variables to the read-only data section first if possible,
	   then	next in	the small data section if possible, otherwise in data.
	   This	gives slightly slower code than	the default, but  reduces  the
	   amount  of  RAM  required when executing, and thus may be preferred
	   for some embedded systems.

       -muninit-const-in-rodata
       -mno-uninit-const-in-rodata
	   Put uninitialized "const" variables in the read-only	data  section.
	   This	option is only meaningful in conjunction with -membedded-data.

       -mcode-readable=setting
	   Specify  whether  GCC  may generate code that reads from executable
	   sections.  There are	three possible settings:

	   -mcode-readable=yes
	       Instructions may	freely access executable  sections.   This  is
	       the default setting.

	   -mcode-readable=pcrel
	       MIPS16  PC-relative  load  instructions	can  access executable
	       sections, but other instructions	must not do so.	  This	option
	       is  useful  on 4KSc and 4KSd processors when the	code TLBs have
	       the Read	Inhibit	bit set.  It is	also useful on processors that
	       can  be	configured  to	have  a	 dual  instruction/data	  SRAM
	       interface  and  that,  like the M4K, automatically redirect PC-
	       relative	loads to the instruction RAM.

	   -mcode-readable=no
	       Instructions must not access executable sections.  This	option
	       can  be	useful	on  targets that are configured	to have	a dual
	       instruction/data	SRAM interface but that	(unlike	 the  M4K)  do
	       not automatically redirect PC-relative loads to the instruction
	       RAM.

       -msplit-addresses
       -mno-split-addresses
	   Enable   (disable)	use  of	 the  "%hi()"  and  "%lo()"  assembler
	   relocation  operators.   This  option  has	been   superseded   by
	   -mexplicit-relocs but is retained for backwards compatibility.

       -mexplicit-relocs=none
       -mexplicit-relocs=base
       -mexplicit-relocs=pcrel
       -mexplicit-relocs
       -mno-explicit-relocs
	   These options control whether explicit relocs (such as %gp_rel) are
	   used.   The	default	 value	depends	on the version of GAS when GCC
	   itself was built.

	   The "base" explicit-relocs support introdunced into	GAS  in	 2001.
	   The	"pcrel"	 explicit-relocs support introdunced into GAS in 2014,
	   which supports %pcrel_hi and	%pcrel_lo.

       -mcheck-zero-division
       -mno-check-zero-division
	   Trap	(do not	trap) on integer division by zero.

	   The default is -mcheck-zero-division.

       -mdivide-traps
       -mdivide-breaks
	   MIPS	systems	check for division by  zero  by	 generating  either  a
	   conditional	trap  or  a break instruction.	Using traps results in
	   smaller code, but is	only supported on MIPS II  and	later.	 Also,
	   some	 versions  of  the  Linux kernel have a	bug that prevents trap
	   from	generating the proper signal ("SIGFPE").   Use	-mdivide-traps
	   to  allow  conditional traps	on architectures that support them and
	   -mdivide-breaks to force the	use of breaks.

	   The default is usually -mdivide-traps, but this can	be  overridden
	   at	configure  time	 using	--with-divide=breaks.	Divide-by-zero
	   checks can be completely disabled using -mno-check-zero-division.

       -mload-store-pairs
       -mno-load-store-pairs
	   Enable (disable) an optimization that  pairs	 consecutive  load  or
	   store  instructions	to  enable load/store bonding.	This option is
	   enabled  by	default	 but  only  takes  effect  when	 the  selected
	   architecture	is known to support bonding.

       -mstrict-align
       -mno-strict-align
       -munaligned-access
       -mno-unaligned-access
	   Disable  (enable)  direct  unaligned	 access	 for  MIPS  Release 6.
	   MIPSr6 requires load/store unaligned-access support,	by hardware or
	   trap&emulate.  So -mstrict-align may	 be  needed  by	 kernel.   The
	   options -munaligned-access and -mno-unaligned-access	are obsoleted,
	   and only for	backward-compatible.

       -mmemcpy
       -mno-memcpy
	   Force  (do  not  force)  the	 use of	"memcpy" for non-trivial block
	   moves.  The default is -mno-memcpy, which allows GCC	to inline most
	   constant-sized copies.

       -mlong-calls
       -mno-long-calls
	   Disable (do not disable) use	of  the	 "jal"	instruction.   Calling
	   functions using "jal" is more efficient but requires	the caller and
	   callee to be	in the same 256	megabyte segment.

	   This	 option	 has  no  effect  on  abicalls	code.	The default is
	   -mno-long-calls.

       -mmad
       -mno-mad
	   Enable (disable) use	of the "mad", "madu" and  "mul"	 instructions,
	   as provided by the R4650 ISA.

       -mimadd
       -mno-imadd
	   Enable (disable) use	of the "madd" and "msub" integer instructions.
	   The	default	 is  -mimadd  on architectures that support "madd" and
	   "msub" except for the  74k  architecture  where  it	was  found  to
	   generate slower code.

       -mfused-madd
       -mno-fused-madd
	   Enable  (disable)  use  of  the  floating-point multiply-accumulate
	   instructions,  when	 they	are   available.    The	  default   is
	   -mfused-madd.

	   On  the  R8000  CPU when multiply-accumulate	instructions are used,
	   the intermediate product is calculated to infinite precision	and is
	   not subject to the FCSR Flush to Zero bit.  This may	be undesirable
	   in  some  circumstances.   On  other	 processors  the   result   is
	   numerically	identical to the equivalent computation	using separate
	   multiply, add, subtract and negate instructions.

       -nocpp
	   Tell	the MIPS assembler to  not  run	 its  preprocessor  over  user
	   assembler files (with a .s suffix) when assembling them.

       -mfix-24k
       -mno-fix-24k
	   Work	around the 24K E48 (lost data on stores	during refill) errata.
	   The	workarounds  are  implemented  by the assembler	rather than by
	   GCC.

       -mfix-r4000
       -mno-fix-r4000
	   Work	around certain R4000 CPU errata:

	   -   A double-word or	a variable shift may give an incorrect	result
	       if executed immediately after starting an integer division.

	   -   A  double-word or a variable shift may give an incorrect	result
	       if executed while an integer multiplication is in progress.

	   -   An integer division may give an incorrect result	if started  in
	       a delay slot of a taken branch or a jump.

       -mfix-r4400
       -mno-fix-r4400
	   Work	around certain R4400 CPU errata:

	   -   A  double-word or a variable shift may give an incorrect	result
	       if executed immediately after starting an integer division.

       -mfix-r10000
       -mno-fix-r10000
	   Work	around certain R10000 errata:

	   -   "ll"/"sc" sequences may	not  behave  atomically	 on  revisions
	       prior to	3.0.  They may deadlock	on revisions 2.6 and earlier.

	   This	 option	 can  only be used if the target architecture supports
	   branch-likely  instructions.	  -mfix-r10000	is  the	 default  when
	   -march=r10000 is used; -mno-fix-r10000 is the default otherwise.

       -mfix-r5900
       -mno-fix-r5900
	   Do not attempt to schedule the preceding instruction	into the delay
	   slot	 of  a branch instruction placed at the	end of a short loop of
	   six instructions or fewer and always	schedule a  "nop"  instruction
	   there  instead.  The	short loop bug under certain conditions	causes
	   loops to execute only once or twice,	due to a hardware bug  in  the
	   R5900  chip.	 The workaround	is implemented by the assembler	rather
	   than	by GCC.

       -mfix-rm7000
       -mno-fix-rm7000
	   Work	around the RM7000 "dmult"/"dmultu"  errata.   The  workarounds
	   are implemented by the assembler rather than	by GCC.

       -mfix-vr4120
       -mno-fix-vr4120
	   Work	around certain VR4120 errata:

	   -   "dmultu"	does not always	produce	the correct result.

	   -   "div"  and  "ddiv"  do not always produce the correct result if
	       one of the operands is negative.

	   The workarounds for the division errata rely	on  special  functions
	   in  libgcc.a.  At present, these functions are only provided	by the
	   "mips64vr*-elf" configurations.

	   Other VR4120	errata require a NOP to	be  inserted  between  certain
	   pairs  of instructions.  These errata are handled by	the assembler,
	   not by GCC itself.

       -mfix-vr4130
	   Work	around the VR4130 "mflo"/"mfhi"	errata.	 The  workarounds  are
	   implemented	by  the	 assembler  rather  than  by GCC, although GCC
	   avoids using	"mflo" and "mfhi"  if  the  VR4130  "macc",  "macchi",
	   "dmacc" and "dmacchi" instructions are available instead.

       -mfix-sb1
       -mno-fix-sb1
	   Work	 around	 certain  SB-1	CPU core errata.  (This	flag currently
	   works around	the SB-1  revision  2  "F1"  and  "F2"	floating-point
	   errata.)

       -mr10k-cache-barrier=setting
	   Specify  whether GCC	should insert cache barriers to	avoid the side
	   effects of speculation on R10K processors.

	   In common with many processors,  the	 R10K  tries  to  predict  the
	   outcome   of	  a  conditional  branch  and  speculatively  executes
	   instructions	from  the  "taken"  branch.   It  later	 aborts	 these
	   instructions	 if  the  predicted outcome is wrong.  However,	on the
	   R10K, even aborted instructions can have side effects.

	   This	problem	only affects  kernel  stores  and,  depending  on  the
	   system,  kernel  loads.   As	 an  example, a	speculatively-executed
	   store may load the target memory into cache and mark	the cache line
	   as dirty, even if the store itself is  later	 aborted.   If	a  DMA
	   operation writes to the same	area of	memory before the "dirty" line
	   is  flushed,	 the  cached data overwrites the DMA-ed	data.  See the
	   R10K	processor manual  for  a  full	description,  including	 other
	   potential problems.

	   One workaround is to	insert cache barrier instructions before every
	   memory  access  that	might be speculatively executed	and that might
	   have	side effects even  if  aborted.	  -mr10k-cache-barrier=setting
	   controls  GCC's implementation of this workaround.  It assumes that
	   aborted accesses to any byte	in the following regions does not have
	   side	effects:

	   1.  the memory occupied by the current function's stack frame;

	   2.  the memory occupied by an incoming stack	argument;

	   3.  the memory occupied by  an  object  with	 a  link-time-constant
	       address.

	   It  is  the	kernel's  responsibility  to  ensure  that speculative
	   accesses to these regions are indeed	safe.

	   If the input	program	contains a function declaration	such as:

		   void	foo (void);

	   then	the implementation of "foo" must allow "j foo" and  "jal  foo"
	   to  be  executed  speculatively.   GCC  honors this restriction for
	   functions it	compiles itself.  It expects non-GCC  functions	 (such
	   as hand-written assembly code) to do	the same.

	   The option has three	forms:

	   -mr10k-cache-barrier=load-store
	       Insert  a  cache	 barrier  before a load	or store that might be
	       speculatively executed and that might have side effects even if
	       aborted.

	   -mr10k-cache-barrier=store
	       Insert  a  cache	 barrier  before  a  store   that   might   be
	       speculatively executed and that might have side effects even if
	       aborted.

	   -mr10k-cache-barrier=none
	       Disable	the  insertion of cache	barriers.  This	is the default
	       setting.

       -mflush-func=func
       -mno-flush-func
	   Specifies the function to call to flush the I and D caches,	or  to
	   not	call any such function.	 If called, the	function must take the
	   same	arguments as the common	"_flush_func", that is,	the address of
	   the memory range for	which the cache	is being flushed, the size  of
	   the	memory	range,	and  the number	3 (to flush both caches).  The
	   default depends on the target GCC was configured for, but  commonly
	   is either "_flush_func" or "__cpu_flush".

       -mbranch-cost=num
	   Set	the  cost  of  branches	 to roughly num	"simple" instructions.
	   This	cost is	only a heuristic and  is  not  guaranteed  to  produce
	   consistent  results	across	releases.   A  zero  cost  redundantly
	   selects the default,	which is based on the -mtune setting.

       -mbranch-likely
       -mno-branch-likely
	   Enable or disable use of Branch Likely instructions,	regardless  of
	   the	default	 for  the  selected  architecture.  By default,	Branch
	   Likely instructions may be generated	if they	are supported  by  the
	   selected  architecture.   An	exception is for the MIPS32 and	MIPS64
	   architectures and processors	that  implement	 those	architectures;
	   for	those,	Branch	Likely	instructions  are  not be generated by
	   default because the MIPS32 and  MIPS64  architectures  specifically
	   deprecate their use.

       -mcompact-branches=never
       -mcompact-branches=optimal
       -mcompact-branches=always
	   These  options  control  which  form	of branches will be generated.
	   The default is -mcompact-branches=optimal.

	   The -mcompact-branches=never	option	ensures	 that  compact	branch
	   instructions	will never be generated.

	   The	-mcompact-branches=always option ensures that a	compact	branch
	   instruction will be generated  if  available	 for  MIPS  Release  6
	   onwards.   If  a  compact  branch  instruction is not available (or
	   pre-R6), a delay slot form of the branch will be used instead.

	   If it is used for MIPS16/microMIPS targets, it will be just ignored
	   now.	 The behaviour for  MIPS16/microMIPS  may  change  in  future,
	   since they do have some compact branch instructions.

	   The	-mcompact-branches=optimal  option  will  cause	 a  delay slot
	   branch to be	used if	one is available in the	current	 ISA  and  the
	   delay  slot	is  successfully  filled.   If	the  delay slot	is not
	   filled, a compact branch will be chosen if one is available.

       -mfp-exceptions
       -mno-fp-exceptions
	   Specifies whether FP	exceptions are enabled.	 This affects  how  FP
	   instructions	 are  scheduled	 for  some processors.	The default is
	   that	FP exceptions are enabled.

	   For instance, on the	SB-1, if FP exceptions are  disabled,  and  we
	   are	 emitting  64-bit  code,  then	we  can	 use  both  FP	pipes.
	   Otherwise, we can only use one FP pipe.

       -mvr4130-align
       -mno-vr4130-align
	   The VR4130 pipeline is two-way superscalar, but can only issue  two
	   instructions	 together  if  the  first one is 8-byte	aligned.  When
	   this	option is enabled, GCC aligns pairs of	instructions  that  it
	   thinks should execute in parallel.

	   This	 option	only has an effect when	optimizing for the VR4130.  It
	   normally makes code faster, but at the expense of making it bigger.
	   It is enabled by default at optimization level -O3.

       -msynci
       -mno-synci
	   Enable   (disable)	generation   of	  "synci"   instructions    on
	   architectures  that	support	 it.   The  "synci"  instructions  (if
	   enabled) are	generated when "__builtin___clear_cache" is compiled.

	   This	 option	 defaults  to  -mno-synci,  but	 the  default  can  be
	   overridden by configuring GCC with --with-synci.

	   When	 compiling  code for single processor systems, it is generally
	   safe	to use "synci".	 However, on many multi-core (SMP) systems, it
	   does	not invalidate the instruction caches on  all  cores  and  may
	   lead	to undefined behavior.

       -mrelax-pic-calls
       -mno-relax-pic-calls
	   Try to turn PIC calls that are normally dispatched via register $25
	   into	direct calls.  This is only possible if	the linker can resolve
	   the destination at link time	and if the destination is within range
	   for a direct	call.

	   -mrelax-pic-calls  is  the  default if GCC was configured to	use an
	   assembler and a linker that support the ".reloc" assembly directive
	   and -mexplicit-relocs is  in	 effect.   With	 -mno-explicit-relocs,
	   this	 optimization can be performed by the assembler	and the	linker
	   alone without help from the compiler.

       -mmcount-ra-address
       -mno-mcount-ra-address
	   Emit	(do not	emit) code that	allows "_mcount" to modify the calling
	   function's return address.  When enabled, this option  extends  the
	   usual  "_mcount"  interface	with a new ra-address parameter, which
	   has type "intptr_t *" and is	passed in register $12.	 "_mcount" can
	   then	modify the return address by doing both	of the following:

	   *   Returning the new address in register $31.

	   *   Storing the new address	in  "*ra-address",  if	ra-address  is
	       nonnull.

	   The default is -mno-mcount-ra-address.

       -mframe-header-opt
       -mno-frame-header-opt
	   Enable  (disable)  frame  header optimization in the	o32 ABI.  When
	   using the o32 ABI, calling functions	will allocate 16 bytes on  the
	   stack  for  the  called  function  to write out register arguments.
	   When	enabled, this optimization will	suppress the allocation	of the
	   frame header	if it can be determined	that it	is unused.

	   This	optimization is	off by default at all optimization levels.

       -mlxc1-sxc1
       -mno-lxc1-sxc1
	   When	 applicable,  enable  (disable)	 the  generation  of  "lwxc1",
	   "swxc1", "ldxc1", "sdxc1" instructions.  Enabled by default.

       -mmadd4
       -mno-madd4
	   When	 applicable,  enable  (disable)	 the  generation  of 4-operand
	   "madd.s", "madd.d" and related instructions.	 Enabled by default.

       MMIX Options

       These options are defined for the MMIX:

       -mlibfuncs
       -mno-libfuncs
	   Specify  that  intrinsic  library  functions	 are  being  compiled,
	   passing all values in registers, no matter the size.

       -mepsilon
       -mno-epsilon
	   Generate  floating-point  comparison	instructions that compare with
	   respect to the "rE" epsilon register.

       -mabi=mmixware
       -mabi=gnu
	   Generate code that passes function  parameters  and	return	values
	   that	 (in  the called function) are seen as registers $0 and	up, as
	   opposed to the GNU ABI which	uses global registers $231 and up.

       -mzero-extend
       -mno-zero-extend
	   When	reading	data from memory in sizes shorter than	64  bits,  use
	   (do	not  use)  zero-extending load instructions by default,	rather
	   than	sign-extending ones.

       -mknuthdiv
       -mno-knuthdiv
	   Make	the result of a	division yielding a remainder  have  the  same
	   sign	 as the	divisor.  With the default, -mno-knuthdiv, the sign of
	   the remainder follows the sign of the dividend.  Both  methods  are
	   arithmetically valid, the latter being almost exclusively used.

       -mtoplevel-symbols
       -mno-toplevel-symbols
	   Prepend (do not prepend) a :	to all global symbols, so the assembly
	   code	can be used with the "PREFIX" assembly directive.

       -melf
	   Generate  an	 executable in the ELF format, rather than the default
	   mmo format used by the mmix simulator.

       -mbranch-predict
       -mno-branch-predict
	   Use (do not use)  the  probable-branch  instructions,  when	static
	   branch prediction indicates a probable branch.

       -mbase-addresses
       -mno-base-addresses
	   Generate  (do not generate) code that uses base addresses.  Using a
	   base	address	automatically generates	 a  request  (handled  by  the
	   assembler  and  the linker) for a constant to be set	up in a	global
	   register.  The register is  used  for  one  or  more	 base  address
	   requests  within  the  range	 0  to	255 from the value held	in the
	   register.  The generally leads to short  and	 fast  code,  but  the
	   number  of  different  data items that can be addressed is limited.
	   This	means that a program that uses lots of static data may require
	   -mno-base-addresses.

       -msingle-exit
       -mno-single-exit
	   Force (do not force)	generated code to have a single	exit point  in
	   each	function.

       MN10300 Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	Matsushita MN10300 architectures:

       -mmult-bug
	   Generate  code  to  avoid bugs in the multiply instructions for the
	   MN10300 processors.	This is	the default.

       -mno-mult-bug
	   Do not generate code	to avoid bugs in the multiply instructions for
	   the MN10300 processors.

       -mam33
	   Generate code using features	specific to the	AM33 processor.

       -mno-am33
	   Do not generate code	using features specific	to the AM33 processor.
	   This	is the default.

       -mam33-2
	   Generate code using features	specific to the	AM33/2.0 processor.

       -mam34
	   Generate code using features	specific to the	AM34 processor.

       -mtune=cpu-type
	   Use the timing characteristics  of  the  indicated  CPU  type  when
	   scheduling	instructions.	This  does  not	 change	 the  targeted
	   processor type.  The	CPU type must be one of	mn10300, am33,	am33-2
	   or am34.

       -mreturn-pointer-on-d0
	   When	 generating  a	function  that	returns	 a pointer, return the
	   pointer in both "a0"	and "d0".  Otherwise, the pointer is  returned
	   only	 in  "a0",  and	 attempts  to  call  such  functions without a
	   prototype result in	errors.	  Note	that  this  option  is	on  by
	   default; use	-mno-return-pointer-on-d0 to disable it.

       -mno-crt0
	   Do not link in the C	run-time initialization	object file.

       -mrelax
	   Indicate  to	 the  linker  that  it	should	perform	 a  relaxation
	   optimization	pass to	shorten	branches, calls	 and  absolute	memory
	   addresses.  This option only	has an effect when used	on the command
	   line	for the	final link step.

	   This	option makes symbolic debugging	impossible.

       -mliw
	   Allow  the  compiler	to generate Long Instruction Word instructions
	   if the target is the	AM33 or	later.	This  is  the  default.	  This
	   option defines the preprocessor macro "__LIW__".

       -mno-liw
	   Do  not  allow  the	compiler  to  generate	Long  Instruction Word
	   instructions.   This	 option	  defines   the	  preprocessor	 macro
	   "__NO_LIW__".

       -msetlb
	   Allow  the  compiler	 to generate the SETLB and Lcc instructions if
	   the target is the AM33 or later.  This is the default.  This	option
	   defines the preprocessor macro "__SETLB__".

       -mno-setlb
	   Do not allow	the compiler to	generate SETLB	or  Lcc	 instructions.
	   This	option defines the preprocessor	macro "__NO_SETLB__".

       Moxie Options

       -meb
	   Generate  big-endian	 code.	 This  is  the	default	 for moxie-*-*
	   configurations.

       -mel
	   Generate little-endian code.

       -mmul.x
	   Generate mul.x and umul.x instructions.  This is  the  default  for
	   moxiebox-*-*	configurations.

       -mno-crt0
	   Do not link in the C	run-time initialization	object file.

       MSP430 Options

       These options are defined for the MSP430:

       -masm-hex
	   Force  assembly  output to always use hex constants.	 Normally such
	   constants are signed	decimals, but this  option  is	available  for
	   testsuite and/or aesthetic purposes.

       -mmcu=
	   Select  the MCU to target.  This is used to create a	C preprocessor
	   symbol based	upon the MCU name, converted to	upper  case  and  pre-
	   and	post-fixed  with  __.	This  in  turn is used by the msp430.h
	   header file to select an MCU-specific supplementary header file.

	   The option also sets	the ISA	to use.	 If the	MCU name is  one  that
	   is  known  to  only	support	 the  430  ISA	then that is selected,
	   otherwise the 430X ISA is selected.	A generic MCU name  of	msp430
	   can	also  be  used	to  select the 430 ISA.	 Similarly the generic
	   msp430x MCU name selects the	430X ISA.

	   In addition an MCU-specific linker script is	added  to  the	linker
	   command  line.   The	 script's name is the name of the MCU with .ld
	   appended.  Thus  specifying	-mmcu=xxx  on  the  gcc	 command  line
	   defines the C preprocessor symbol "__XXX__" and cause the linker to
	   search for a	script called xxx.ld.

	   The	ISA  and hardware multiply supported for the different MCUs is
	   hard-coded into GCC.	 However, an external devices.csv file can  be
	   used	 to  extend  device  support beyond those that have been hard-
	   coded.

	   GCC searches	for the	devices.csv file using the  following  methods
	   in  the  given  precedence  order,  where  the  first  method takes
	   precendence over the	second which takes precedence over the third.

	   Include path	specified with "-I" and	"-L"
	       devices.csv will	be searched for	in  each  of  the  directories
	       specified by include paths and linker library search paths.

	   Path	specified by the environment variable MSP430_GCC_INCLUDE_DIR
	       Define	the   value   of   the	 global	 environment  variable
	       MSP430_GCC_INCLUDE_DIR  to  the	full  path  to	the  directory
	       containing  devices.csv,	and GCC	will search this directory for
	       devices.csv.  If	devices.csv is found, this directory will also
	       be registered as	an include  path,  and	linker	library	 path.
	       Header files and	linker scripts in this directory can therefore
	       be  used	 without  manually  specifying	"-I"  and  "-L"	on the
	       command line.

	   The msp430-elf{,bare}/include/devices directory
	       Finally,	 GCC  will  examine  msp430-elf{,bare}/include/devices
	       from  the  toolchain  root  directory.  This directory does not
	       exist in	a default installation,	but if the user	has created it
	       and copied devices.csv there, then the MCU data will  be	 read.
	       As  above, this directory will also be registered as an include
	       path, and linker	library	path.

	   If none of the above	search	methods	 find  devices.csv,  then  the
	   hard-coded MCU data is used.

       -mwarn-mcu
       -mno-warn-mcu
	   This	 option	 enables  or disables warnings about conflicts between
	   the MCU name	specified by the -mmcu option and the ISA set  by  the
	   -mcpu  option  and/or  the  hardware	 multiply  support  set	by the
	   -mhwmult option.  It	also toggles warnings about  unrecognized  MCU
	   names.  This	option is on by	default.

       -mcpu=
	   Specifies  the ISA to use.  Accepted	values are msp430, msp430x and
	   msp430xv2.  This option is deprecated.  The -mmcu= option should be
	   used	to select the ISA.

       -msim
	   Link	 to  the  simulator  runtime  libraries	 and  linker   script.
	   Overrides any scripts that would be selected	by the -mmcu= option.

       -mlarge
	   Use large-model addressing (20-bit pointers,	20-bit "size_t").

       -msmall
	   Use small-model addressing (16-bit pointers,	16-bit "size_t").

       -mrelax
	   This	 option	 is passed to the assembler and	linker,	and allows the
	   linker to perform certain optimizations that	cannot be  done	 until
	   the final link.

       mhwmult=
	   Describes  the  type	 of hardware multiply supported	by the target.
	   Accepted values are none for	no hardware multiply,  16bit  for  the
	   original  16-bit-only  multiply supported by	early MCUs.  32bit for
	   the 16/32-bit multiply supported by later MCUs and f5series for the
	   16/32-bit multiply supported	by F5-series MCUs.  A  value  of  auto
	   can	also be	given.	This tells GCC to deduce the hardware multiply
	   support based upon the MCU name provided by the -mmcu  option.   If
	   no  -mmcu  option is	specified or if	the MCU	name is	not recognized
	   then	no hardware  multiply  support	is  assumed.   "auto"  is  the
	   default setting.

	   Hardware  multiplies	 are  normally	performed by calling a library
	   routine.  This saves	space in the generated code.   When  compiling
	   at -O3 or higher however the	hardware multiplier is invoked inline.
	   This	makes for bigger, but faster code.

	   The	hardware  multiply  routines disable interrupts	whilst running
	   and restore the previous interrupt state when  they	finish.	  This
	   makes  them	safe  to  use  inside interrupt	handlers as well as in
	   normal code.

       -minrt
	   Enable the use  of  a  minimum  runtime  environment	 -  no	static
	   initializers	  or  constructors.   This  is	intended  for  memory-
	   constrained devices.	 The compiler includes special symbols in some
	   objects that	tell the linker	and runtime which code	fragments  are
	   required.

       -mtiny-printf
	   Enable  reduced  code  size	"printf" and "puts" library functions.
	   The tiny implementations of these functions are not	reentrant,  so
	   must	be used	with caution in	multi-threaded applications.

	   Support  for	 streams has been removed and the string to be printed
	   will	always be sent to stdout via the "write" syscall.  The	string
	   is not buffered before it is	sent to	write.

	   This	option requires	Newlib Nano IO,	so GCC must be configured with
	   --enable-newlib-nano-formatted-io.

       -mmax-inline-shift=
	   This	 option	 takes an integer between 0 and	64 inclusive, and sets
	   the maximum number of inline	shift  instructions  which  should  be
	   emitted  to	perform	 a shift operation by a	constant amount.  When
	   this	value needs to be exceeded, an mspabi helper function is  used
	   instead.  The default value is 4.

	   This	 only affects cases where a shift by multiple positions	cannot
	   be completed	with a single instruction (e.g.	all shifts >1  on  the
	   430 ISA).

	   Shifts of a 32-bit value are	at least twice as costly, so the value
	   passed for this option is divided by	2 and the resulting value used
	   instead.

       -mcode-region=
       -mdata-region=
	   These  options  tell	the compiler where to place functions and data
	   that	do not have one	of the "lower",	"upper", "either" or "section"
	   attributes.	Possible values	 are  "lower",	"upper",  "either"  or
	   "any".   The	 first	three behave like the corresponding attribute.
	   The fourth possible value - "any" -	is  the	 default.   It	leaves
	   placement  entirely	up to the linker script	and how	it assigns the
	   standard sections (".text", ".data",	etc) to	the memory regions.

       -msilicon-errata=
	   This	option passes on a request to assembler	to  enable  the	 fixes
	   for the named silicon errata.

       -msilicon-errata-warn=
	   This	 option	passes on a request to the assembler to	enable warning
	   messages when a silicon errata might	need to	be applied.

       -mwarn-devices-csv
       -mno-warn-devices-csv
	   Warn	if devices.csv is not found or there are  problem  parsing  it
	   (default: on).

       NDS32 Options

       These options are defined for NDS32 implementations:

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate code in big-endian mode.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate code in little-endian mode.

       -mreduced-regs
	   Use reduced-set registers for register allocation.

       -mfull-regs
	   Use full-set	registers for register allocation.

       -mcmov
	   Generate conditional	move instructions.

       -mno-cmov
	   Do not generate conditional move instructions.

       -mext-perf
	   Generate performance	extension instructions.

       -mno-ext-perf
	   Do not generate performance extension instructions.

       -mext-perf2
	   Generate performance	extension 2 instructions.

       -mno-ext-perf2
	   Do not generate performance extension 2 instructions.

       -mext-string
	   Generate string extension instructions.

       -mno-ext-string
	   Do not generate string extension instructions.

       -mv3push
	   Generate v3 push25/pop25 instructions.

       -mno-v3push
	   Do not generate v3 push25/pop25 instructions.

       -m16-bit
	   Generate 16-bit instructions.

       -mno-16-bit
	   Do not generate 16-bit instructions.

       -misr-vector-size=num
	   Specify the size of each interrupt vector, which must be 4 or 16.

       -mcache-block-size=num
	   Specify  the	 size  of each cache block, which must be a power of 2
	   between 4 and 512.

       -march=arch
	   Specify the name of the target architecture.

       -mcmodel=code-model
	   Set the code	model to one of

	   small
	       All the data and	read-only data segments	must be	 within	 512KB
	       addressing  space.   The	 text  segment	must  be  within  16MB
	       addressing space.

	   medium
	       The data	segment	must be	within 512KB while the read-only  data
	       segment	can  be	within 4GB addressing space.  The text segment
	       should be still within 16MB addressing space.

	   large
	       All the text and	data segments can  be  within  4GB  addressing
	       space.

       -mctor-dtor
	   Enable constructor/destructor feature.

       -mrelax
	   Guide linker	to relax instructions.

       Nios II Options

       These are the options defined for the Altera Nios II processor.

       -G num
	   Put	global and static objects less than or equal to	num bytes into
	   the small data or BSS sections instead of the normal	 data  or  BSS
	   sections.  The default value	of num is 8.

       -mgpopt=option
       -mgpopt
       -mno-gpopt
	   Generate  (do  not  generate)  GP-relative accesses.	 The following
	   option names	are recognized:

	   none
	       Do not generate GP-relative accesses.

	   local
	       Generate	GP-relative accesses for small data objects  that  are
	       not  external, weak, or uninitialized common symbols.  Also use
	       GP-relative addressing for objects that	have  been  explicitly
	       placed in a small data section via a "section" attribute.

	   global
	       As  for local, but also generate	GP-relative accesses for small
	       data objects that are external, weak, or	common.	  If  you  use
	       this  option,  you  must	 ensure	that all parts of your program
	       (including libraries) are compiled with the same	-G setting.

	   data
	       Generate	GP-relative accesses  for  all	data  objects  in  the
	       program.	  If  you  use	this  option,  the entire data and BSS
	       segments	of your	program	must fit in 64K	of memory and you must
	       use an appropriate linker script	to allocate  them  within  the
	       addressable range of the	global pointer.

	   all Generate	GP-relative addresses for function pointers as well as
	       data  pointers.	If you use this	option,	the entire text, data,
	       and BSS segments	of your	program	must fit in 64K	of memory  and
	       you  must  use  an  appropriate	linker script to allocate them
	       within the addressable range of the global pointer.

	   -mgpopt  is	equivalent  to	-mgpopt=local,	 and   -mno-gpopt   is
	   equivalent to -mgpopt=none.

	   The	default	 is -mgpopt except when	-fpic or -fPIC is specified to
	   generate position-independent code.	Note that the Nios II ABI does
	   not permit GP-relative accesses from	shared libraries.

	   You	may  need  to  specify	-mno-gpopt  explicitly	when  building
	   programs  that include large	amounts	of small data, including large
	   GOT data sections.  In this case, the 16-bit	offset for GP-relative
	   addressing may not be large enough to allow access  to  the	entire
	   small data section.

       -mgprel-sec=regexp
	   This	option specifies additional section names that can be accessed
	   via	GP-relative addressing.	 It is most useful in conjunction with
	   "section" attributes	on variable declarations and a	custom	linker
	   script.  The	regexp is a POSIX Extended Regular Expression.

	   This	 option	does not affect	the behavior of	the -G option, and the
	   specified sections are in addition to  the  standard	 ".sdata"  and
	   ".sbss" small-data sections that are	recognized by -mgpopt.

       -mr0rel-sec=regexp
	   This	 option	specifies names	of sections that can be	accessed via a
	   16-bit offset from "r0"; that is, in	the low	32K or high 32K	of the
	   32-bit address space.   It  is  most	 useful	 in  conjunction  with
	   "section"  attributes  on variable declarations and a custom	linker
	   script.  The	regexp is a POSIX Extended Regular Expression.

	   In contrast to the use of GP-relative addressing  for  small	 data,
	   zero-based  addressing  is never generated by default and there are
	   no conventional section names used in standard linker  scripts  for
	   sections in the low or high areas of	memory.

       -mel
       -meb
	   Generate little-endian (default) or big-endian (experimental) code,
	   respectively.

       -march=arch
	   This	 specifies  the	 name of the target Nios II architecture.  GCC
	   uses	this name to determine what kind of instructions it  can  emit
	   when	generating assembly code.  Permissible names are: r1, r2.

	   The	preprocessor  macro "__nios2_arch__" is	available to programs,
	   with	value 1	or 2, indicating the targeted ISA level.

       -mbypass-cache
       -mno-bypass-cache
	   Force all load and store instructions to  always  bypass  cache  by
	   using  I/O  variants	 of  the  instructions.	 The default is	not to
	   bypass the cache.

       -mno-cache-volatile
       -mcache-volatile
	   Volatile memory access bypass the cache using the I/O  variants  of
	   the	load  and store	instructions. The default is not to bypass the
	   cache.

       -mno-fast-sw-div
       -mfast-sw-div
	   Do not use table-based fast divide for small	numbers.  The  default
	   is to use the fast divide at	-O3 and	above.

       -mno-hw-mul
       -mhw-mul
       -mno-hw-mulx
       -mhw-mulx
       -mno-hw-div
       -mhw-div
	   Enable  or  disable	emitting  "mul",  "mulx"  and  "div" family of
	   instructions	by the compiler. The default is	to emit	"mul" and  not
	   emit	"div" and "mulx".

       -mbmx
       -mno-bmx
       -mcdx
       -mno-cdx
	   Enable  or  disable generation of Nios II R2	BMX (bit manipulation)
	   and CDX (code density) instructions.	 Enabling  these  instructions
	   also	 requires  -march=r2.	Since  these instructions are optional
	   extensions to the R2	architecture, the default is not to emit them.

       -mcustom-insn=N
       -mno-custom-insn
	   Each	-mcustom-insn=N	option enables use  of	a  custom  instruction
	   with	 encoding N when generating code that uses insn.  For example,
	   -mcustom-fadds=253 generates	custom	instruction  253  for  single-
	   precision  floating-point  add  operations  instead	of the default
	   behavior of using a library call.

	   The following values	of insn	are supported.	 Except	 as  otherwise
	   noted,  floating-point  operations  are  expected to	be implemented
	   with	normal IEEE 754	semantics and correspond  directly  to	the  C
	   operators or	the equivalent GCC built-in functions.

	   Single-precision floating point:

	   fadds, fsubs, fdivs,	fmuls
	       Binary arithmetic operations.

	   fnegs
	       Unary negation.

	   fabss
	       Unary absolute value.

	   fcmpeqs, fcmpges, fcmpgts, fcmples, fcmplts,	fcmpnes
	       Comparison operations.

	   fmins, fmaxs
	       Floating-point  minimum	and  maximum.	These instructions are
	       only generated if -ffinite-math-only is specified.

	   fsqrts
	       Unary square root operation.

	   fcoss, fsins, ftans,	fatans,	fexps, flogs
	       Floating-point trigonometric and	exponential functions.	 These
	       instructions  are only generated	if -funsafe-math-optimizations
	       is also specified.

	   Double-precision floating point:

	   faddd, fsubd, fdivd,	fmuld
	       Binary arithmetic operations.

	   fnegd
	       Unary negation.

	   fabsd
	       Unary absolute value.

	   fcmpeqd, fcmpged, fcmpgtd, fcmpled, fcmpltd,	fcmpned
	       Comparison operations.

	   fmind, fmaxd
	       Double-precision	minimum	and maximum.  These  instructions  are
	       only generated if -ffinite-math-only is specified.

	   fsqrtd
	       Unary square root operation.

	   fcosd, fsind, ftand,	fatand,	fexpd, flogd
	       Double-precision	  trigonometric	  and  exponential  functions.
	       These	 instructions	  are	   only	     generated	    if
	       -funsafe-math-optimizations is also specified.

	   Conversions:

	   fextsd
	       Conversion from single precision	to double precision.

	   ftruncds
	       Conversion from double precision	to single precision.

	   fixsi, fixsu, fixdi,	fixdu
	       Conversion  from	 floating  point to signed or unsigned integer
	       types, with truncation towards zero.

	   round
	       Conversion  from	 single-precision  floating  point  to	signed
	       integer,	 rounding  to  the  nearest integer and	ties away from
	       zero.  This corresponds	to  the	 "__builtin_lroundf"  function
	       when -fno-math-errno is used.

	   floatis, floatus, floatid, floatud
	       Conversion  from	 signed	or unsigned integer types to floating-
	       point types.

	   In  addition,  all  of  the	following  transfer  instructions  for
	   internal  registers	X  and	Y  must	 be provided to	use any	of the
	   double-precision floating-point instructions.  Custom  instructions
	   taking  two	double-precision  source  operands  expect  the	 first
	   operand in the 64-bit register  X.	The  other  operand  (or  only
	   operand  of	a  unary  operation) is	given to the custom arithmetic
	   instruction with the	least significant half in source register src1
	   and the most	significant half in src2.  A custom  instruction  that
	   returns  a  double-precision	result returns the most	significant 32
	   bits	in the destination register  and  the  other  half  in	32-bit
	   register   Y.   GCC	automatically  generates  the  necessary  code
	   sequences to	write register X and/or	read register Y	 when  double-
	   precision floating-point instructions are used.

	   fwrx
	       Write  src1  into the least significant half of X and src2 into
	       the most	significant half of X.

	   fwry
	       Write src1 into Y.

	   frdxhi, frdxlo
	       Read the	most or	least (respectively) significant half of X and
	       store it	in dest.

	   frdy
	       Read the	value of Y and store it	into dest.

	   Note	that you can gain more local control over generation  of  Nios
	   II  custom  instructions by using the "target("custom-insn=N")" and
	   "target("no-custom-insn")" function attributes or pragmas.

       -mcustom-fpu-cfg=name
	   This	option enables a predefined, named set of  custom  instruction
	   encodings (see -mcustom-insn	above).	 Currently, the	following sets
	   are defined:

	   -mcustom-fpu-cfg=60-1    is	 equivalent   to:   -mcustom-fmuls=252
	   -mcustom-fadds=253 -mcustom-fsubs=254 -fsingle-precision-constant

	   -mcustom-fpu-cfg=60-2   is	equivalent   to:    -mcustom-fmuls=252
	   -mcustom-fadds=253	    -mcustom-fsubs=254	    -mcustom-fdivs=255
	   -fsingle-precision-constant

	   -mcustom-fpu-cfg=72-3  is   equivalent   to:	  -mcustom-floatus=243
	   -mcustom-fixsi=244	  -mcustom-floatis=245	  -mcustom-fcmpgts=246
	   -mcustom-fcmples=249	  -mcustom-fcmpeqs=250	  -mcustom-fcmpnes=251
	   -mcustom-fmuls=252	    -mcustom-fadds=253	    -mcustom-fsubs=254
	   -mcustom-fdivs=255 -fsingle-precision-constant

	   -mcustom-fpu-cfg=fph2   is	equivalent   to:    -mcustom-fabss=224
	   -mcustom-fnegs=225	  -mcustom-fcmpnes=226	  -mcustom-fcmpeqs=227
	   -mcustom-fcmpges=228	  -mcustom-fcmpgts=229	  -mcustom-fcmples=230
	   -mcustom-fcmplts=231	     -mcustom-fmaxs=232	    -mcustom-fmins=233
	   -mcustom-round=248	  -mcustom-fixsi=249	  -mcustom-floatis=250
	   -mcustom-fsqrts=251	    -mcustom-fmuls=252	    -mcustom-fadds=253
	   -mcustom-fsubs=254 -mcustom-fdivs=255

	   Custom instruction assignments given	by  individual	-mcustom-insn=
	   options  override  those  given by -mcustom-fpu-cfg=, regardless of
	   the order of	the options on the command line.

	   Note	that you can gain more local control over selection of	a  FPU
	   configuration by using the "target("custom-fpu-cfg=name")" function
	   attribute or	pragma.

	   The	name  fph2  is	an  abbreviation  for  Nios  II	Floating Point
	   Hardware 2 Component.  Please note  that  the  custom  instructions
	   enabled  by	-mcustom-fmins=233  and	 -mcustom-fmaxs=234  are  only
	   generated  if  -ffinite-math-only   is   specified.	  The	custom
	   instruction	enabled	 by  -mcustom-round=248	 is  only generated if
	   -fno-math-errno  is	specified.    In   contrast   to   the	 other
	   configurations, -fsingle-precision-constant is not set.

       These  additional  -m  options are available for	the Altera Nios	II ELF
       (bare-metal) target:

       -mhal
	   Link	with HAL BSP.  This suppresses linking with the	GCC-provided C
	   runtime startup and termination code,  and  is  typically  used  in
	   conjunction	with  -msys-crt0=  to  specify	the  location  of  the
	   alternate startup code provided by the HAL BSP.

       -msmallc
	   Link	with a limited version of the C	library, -lsmallc, rather than
	   Newlib.

       -msys-crt0=startfile
	   startfile is	the file name of the  startfile	 (crt0)	 to  use  when
	   linking.  This option is only useful	in conjunction with -mhal.

       -msys-lib=systemlib
	   systemlib  is  the  library	name of	the library that provides low-
	   level system	calls required by  the	C  library,  e.g.  "read"  and
	   "write".   This  option  is	typically  used	to link	with a library
	   provided by a HAL BSP.

       Nvidia PTX Options

       These options are defined for Nvidia PTX:

       -m64
	   Ignored, but	preserved for backward compatibility.  Only 64-bit ABI
	   is supported.

       -march=architecture-string
	   Generate code for the specified PTX ISA target  architecture	 (e.g.
	   sm_35).  Valid architecture strings are sm_30, sm_35, sm_53,	sm_70,
	   sm_75  and sm_80.  The default depends on how the compiler has been
	   configured, see --with-arch.

	   This	option sets the	value of the preprocessor macro	 "__PTX_SM__";
	   for instance, for sm_35, it has the value 350.

       -misa=architecture-string
	   Alias of -march=.

       -march-map=architecture-string
	   Select  the	closest	 available  -march=  value  that  is  not more
	   capable.  For instance, for -march-map=sm_50	 select	 -march=sm_35,
	   and for -march-map=sm_53 select -march=sm_53.

       -mptx=version-string
	   Generate  code for the specified PTX	ISA version (e.g. 7.0).	 Valid
	   version strings include 3.1,	6.0, 6.3, and 7.0.   The  default  PTX
	   ISA	version	 is  6.0,  unless  a  higher  version  is required for
	   specified PTX ISA target architecture via option -march=.

	   This	 option	 sets  the   values   of   the	 preprocessor	macros
	   "__PTX_ISA_VERSION_MAJOR__"	and  "__PTX_ISA_VERSION_MINOR__";  for
	   instance, for 3.1 the macros	have the values	3 and 1, respectively.

       -mmainkernel
	   Link	in code	for a __main kernel.  This is for stand-alone  instead
	   of offloading execution.

       -moptimize
	   Apply  partitioned  execution  optimizations.   This	is the default
	   when	any level of optimization is selected.

       -msoft-stack
	   Generate code that does not use ".local" memory directly for	 stack
	   storage.   Instead,	 a   per-warp	stack  pointer	is  maintained
	   explicitly. This enables  variable-length  stack  allocation	 (with
	   variable-length arrays or "alloca"),	and when global	memory is used
	   for	underlying  storage,  makes  it	 possible  to access automatic
	   variables from other	threads, or  with  atomic  instructions.  This
	   code	 generation  variant  is  used	for OpenMP offloading, but the
	   option is exposed on	 its  own  for	the  purpose  of  testing  the
	   compiler; to	generate code suitable for linking into	programs using
	   OpenMP offloading, use option -mgomp.

       -muniform-simt
	   Switch  to  code  generation	 variant  that	allows	to execute all
	   threads in each warp,  while	 maintaining  memory  state  and  side
	   effects  as	if  only one thread in each warp was active outside of
	   OpenMP SIMD regions.	 All atomic operations and  calls  to  runtime
	   (malloc,  free,  vprintf)  are  conditionally executed (iff current
	   lane	index equals the master	lane index), and  the  register	 being
	   assigned  is	copied via a shuffle instruction from the master lane.
	   Outside of SIMD regions lane	0 is the master; inside,  each	thread
	   sees	itself as the master.  Shared memory array "int	__nvptx_uni[]"
	   stores  all-zeros  or  all-ones  bitmasks for each warp, indicating
	   current mode	(0 outside of SIMD regions).  Each thread can bitwise-
	   and the bitmask at position "tid.y"	with  current  lane  index  to
	   compute the master lane index.

       -mgomp
	   Generate  code  for	use in OpenMP offloading: enables -msoft-stack
	   and -muniform-simt  options,	 and  selects  corresponding  multilib
	   variant.

       OpenRISC	Options

       These options are defined for OpenRISC:

       -mboard=name
	   Configure  a	 board	specific  runtime.  This will be passed	to the
	   linker for newlib board library linking.  The default is "or1ksim".

       -mnewlib
	   This	option is ignored; it  is  for	compatibility  purposes	 only.
	   This	 used  to  select linker and preprocessor options for use with
	   newlib.

       -msoft-div
       -mhard-div
	   Select   software   or   hardware   divide	("l.div",    "l.divu")
	   instructions.  This default is hardware divide.

       -msoft-mul
       -mhard-mul
	   Select   software   or   hardware   multiply	  ("l.mul",  "l.muli")
	   instructions.  This default is hardware multiply.

       -msoft-float
       -mhard-float
	   Select software or hardware for  floating  point  operations.   The
	   default is software.

       -mdouble-float
	   When	 -mhard-float  is  selected,  enables  generation  of  double-
	   precision floating point instructions.  By default  functions  from
	   libgcc   are	  used	to  perform  double-precision  floating	 point
	   operations.

       -munordered-float
	   When	-mhard-float is	 selected,  enables  generation	 of  unordered
	   floating  point compare and set flag	("lf.sfun*") instructions.  By
	   default  functions  from  libgcc  are  used	to  perform  unordered
	   floating point compare and set flag operations.

       -mcmov
	   Enable  generation of conditional move ("l.cmov") instructions.  By
	   default the equivalent will be generated using set and branch.

       -mror
	   Enable generation  of  rotate  right	 ("l.ror")  instructions.   By
	   default  functions  from  libgcc  are  used to perform rotate right
	   operations.

       -mrori
	   Enable  generation  of  rotate  right  with	immediate   ("l.rori")
	   instructions.  By default functions from libgcc are used to perform
	   rotate right	with immediate operations.

       -msext
	   Enable  generation  of  sign	extension ("l.ext*") instructions.  By
	   default memory loads	are used to perform sign extension.

       -msfimm
	   Enable generation of	compare	and set	flag with immediate ("l.sf*i")
	   instructions.  By default extra instructions	will be	 generated  to
	   store the immediate to a register first.

       -mshftimm
	   Enable  generation  of  shift  with	immediate ("l.srai", "l.srli",
	   "l.slli") instructions.  By	default	 extra	instructions  will  be
	   generated to	store the immediate to a register first.

       -mcmodel=small
	   Generate  OpenRISC  code for	the small model: The GOT is limited to
	   64k.	This is	the default model.

       -mcmodel=large
	   Generate OpenRISC code for the large	model: The GOT may grow	up  to
	   4G in size.

       PDP-11 Options

       These options are defined for the PDP-11:

       -mfpu
	   Use	hardware  FPP  floating	 point.	  This	is  the	default.  (FIS
	   floating point on the PDP-11/40 is not supported.)  Implies -m45.

       -msoft-float
	   Do not use hardware floating	point.

       -mac0
	   Return  floating-point  results  in	ac0  (fr0  in  Unix  assembler
	   syntax).

       -mno-ac0
	   Return floating-point results in memory.  This is the default.

       -m40
	   Generate code for a PDP-11/40.  Implies -msoft-float	-mno-split.

       -m45
	   Generate code for a PDP-11/45.  This	is the default.

       -m10
	   Generate code for a PDP-11/10.  Implies -msoft-float	-mno-split.

       -mint16
       -mno-int32
	   Use 16-bit "int".  This is the default.

       -mint32
       -mno-int16
	   Use 32-bit "int".

       -msplit
	   Target has split instruction	and data space.	 Implies -m45.

       -munix-asm
	   Use Unix assembler syntax.

       -mdec-asm
	   Use DEC assembler syntax.

       -mgnu-asm
	   Use GNU assembler syntax.  This is the default.

       -mlra
	   Use	the  new LRA register allocator.  By default, the old "reload"
	   allocator is	used.

       PowerPC Options

       These are listed	under

       PRU Options

       These command-line options are defined for PRU target:

       -minrt
	   Link	with a minimum runtime environment.   This  can	 significantly
	   reduce  the	size  of  the  final  ELF  binary, but some standard C
	   runtime features are	removed.

	   This	 option	 disables  support   for   static   initializers   and
	   constructors.   Beware  that	the compiler could still generate code
	   with	static	initializers  and  constructors.   It  is  up  to  the
	   programmer  to  ensure  that	 the source program will not use those
	   features.

	   The minimal startup code would not pass "argc" and "argv" arguments
	   to "main", so the latter must be declared  as  "int	main  (void)".
	   This	is already the norm for	most firmware projects.

       -mmcu=mcu
	   Specify  the	 PRU hardware variant to use.  A correspondingly named
	   spec	file would be loaded, passing the memory region	sizes  to  the
	   linker and defining hardware-specific C macros.

	   Newlib   provides   only  the  "sim"	 spec,	intended  for  running
	   regression tests using a simulator.	Specs for real hardware	can be
	   obtained	   by	      installing	 the	     GnuPruMcu
	   ("https://github.com/dinuxbg/gnuprumcu/") package.

       -mno-relax
	   Make	 GCC  pass  the	 --no-relax  command-line option to the	linker
	   instead of the --relax option.

       -mloop
	   Allow (or do	not allow) GCC to use the LOOP instruction.

       -mabi=variant
	   Specify the ABI variant to output code for.	-mabi=ti  selects  the
	   unmodified  TI ABI while -mabi=gnu selects a	GNU variant that copes
	   more	 naturally  with  certain  GCC	assumptions.   These  are  the
	   differences:

	   Function Pointer Size
	       TI  ABI	specifies  that	 function  (code) pointers are 16-bit,
	       whereas GNU supports only 32-bit	data and code pointers.

	   Optional Return Value Pointer
	       Function	return values larger than 64 bits are passed by	 using
	       a  hidden  pointer  as  the first argument of the function.  TI
	       ABI, though, mandates that the pointer can be NULL in case  the
	       caller  is not using the	returned value.	 GNU always passes and
	       expects a valid return value pointer.

	   The current -mabi=ti	implementation simply raises a	compile	 error
	   when	  any  of  the	above  code  constructs	 is  detected.	 As  a
	   consequence the standard C  library	cannot	be  built  and	it  is
	   omitted when	linking	with -mabi=ti.

	   Relaxation is a GNU feature and for safety reasons is disabled when
	   using  -mabi=ti.   The  TI  toolchain does not emit relocations for
	   QBBx	instructions, so  the  GNU  linker  cannot  adjust  them  when
	   shortening adjacent LDI32 pseudo instructions.

       RISC-V Options

       These command-line options are defined for RISC-V targets:

       -mbranch-cost=n
	   Set the cost	of branches to roughly n instructions.

       -mplt
       -mno-plt
	   When	 generating  PIC  code,	 do  or	 don't	allow the use of PLTs.
	   Ignored for non-PIC.	 The default is	-mplt.

       -mabi=ABI-string
	   Specify integer and floating-point calling convention.   ABI-string
	   contains  two  parts:  the  size of integer types and the registers
	   used	 for  floating-point  types.	For   example	-march=rv64ifd
	   -mabi=lp64d	means  that  long  and pointers	are 64-bit (implicitly
	   defining int	to be 32-bit), and that	floating-point values up to 64
	   bits	 wide  are  passed  in	F  registers.	Contrast   this	  with
	   -march=rv64ifd  -mabi=lp64f,	 which	still  allows  the compiler to
	   generate code that uses the F and  D	 extensions  but  only	allows
	   floating-point values up to 32 bits long to be passed in registers;
	   or  -march=rv64ifd -mabi=lp64, in which no floating-point arguments
	   will	be passed in registers.

	   The default for this	argument is system dependent, users who	want a
	   specific calling convention should  specify	one  explicitly.   The
	   valid  calling conventions are: ilp32, ilp32f, ilp32d, lp64,	lp64f,
	   and lp64d.  Some calling conventions	are impossible to implement on
	   some	ISAs:  for  example,  -march=rv32if  -mabi=ilp32d  is  invalid
	   because  the	 ABI  requires 64-bit values be	passed in F registers,
	   but F registers are only 32 bits wide.  There are also  the	ilp32e
	   ABI that can	only be	used with the rv32e architecture and the lp64e
	   ABI	that can only be used with the rv64e.  Those ABIs are not well
	   specified at	present, and are subject to change.

       -mfdiv
       -mno-fdiv
	   Do or don't use hardware  floating-point  divide  and  square  root
	   instructions.   This	 requires  the F or D extensions for floating-
	   point registers.  The default is  to	 use  them  if	the  specified
	   architecture	has these instructions.

       -mdiv
       -mno-div
	   Do  or  don't use hardware instructions for integer division.  This
	   requires the	M extension.  The  default  is	to  use	 them  if  the
	   specified architecture has these instructions.

       -misa-spec=ISA-spec-string
	   Specify  the	 version  of  the  RISC-V Unprivileged (formerly User-
	   Level) ISA  specification  to  produce  code	 conforming  to.   The
	   possibilities for ISA-spec-string are:

	   2.2 Produce code conforming to version 2.2.

	   20190608
	       Produce code conforming to version 20190608.

	   20191213
	       Produce code conforming to version 20191213.

	   The	default	 is -misa-spec=20191213	unless GCC has been configured
	   with	--with-isa-spec= specifying a different	default	version.

       -march=ISA-string
	   Generate code for given RISC-V ISA (e.g. rv64im).  ISA strings must
	   be lower-case.  Examples include rv64i, rv32g, rv32e, and rv32imaf.
	   Additionally, a special value help  (-march=help)  is  accepted  to
	   list	all supported extensions.

	   The syntax of the ISA string	is defined as follows:

	   "The	string must start with rv32 or rv64, followed by"
	       i, e, or	g, referred to as the base ISA.

	   "The	subsequent part	of the string is a list	of extension names.
	   Extension"
	       names can be categorized	as multi-letter	(e.g. zba) and single-
	       letter	(e.g.	v).   Single-letter   extensions   can	appear
	       consecutively, but multi-letter extensions must be separated by
	       underscores.

	   "An underscore can appear anywhere after the	base ISA. It has no
	   specific"
	       effect but is used to improve readability  and  can  act	 as  a
	       separator.

	   "Extension names may	include	an optional version number, following
	   the"
	       syntax <major>p<minor> or <major>, (e.g.	m2p1 or	m2).

	   Supported extension are listed below:

	   Extension Name : Supported Version :	Description
	   i   @tab 2.0, 2.1 @tab Base integer extension.

	   e   @tab 2.0	@tab Reduced base integer extension.

	   g   @tab  -	@tab  General-purpose computing	base extension,	g will
	       expand to i, m, a, f, d,	zicsr and zifencei.

	   m   @tab 2.0	@tab Integer multiplication and	division extension.

	   a   @tab 2.0, 2.1 @tab Atomic extension.

	   f   @tab 2.0, 2.2 @tab Single-precision floating-point extension.

	   d   @tab 2.0, 2.2 @tab Double-precision floating-point extension.

	   c   @tab 2.0	@tab Compressed	extension.

	   h   @tab 1.0	@tab Hypervisor	extension.

	   v   @tab 1.0	@tab Vector extension.

	   zicsr
	       @tab 2.0	@tab Control and status	register access	extension.

	   zifencei
	       @tab 2.0	@tab Instruction-fetch fence extension.

	   zicond
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Integer conditional operations extension.

	   za64rs
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Reservation set size of 64	bytes.

	   za128rs
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Reservation set size of 128 bytes.

	   zawrs
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Wait-on-reservation-set extension.

	   zba @tab 1.0	@tab Address calculation extension.

	   zbb @tab 1.0	@tab Basic bit manipulation extension.

	   zbc @tab 1.0	@tab Carry-less	multiplication extension.

	   zbs @tab 1.0	@tab Single-bit	operation extension.

	   zfinx
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	Single-precision  floating-point  in   integer
	       registers extension.

	   zdinx
	       @tab   1.0  @tab	 Double-precision  floating-point  in  integer
	       registers extension.

	   zhinx
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	Half-precision	 floating-point	  in   integer
	       registers extension.

	   zhinxmin
	       @tab  1.0 @tab Minimal half-precision floating-point in integer
	       registers extension.

	   zbkb
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cryptography bit-manipulation extension.

	   zbkc
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cryptography carry-less multiply extension.

	   zbkx
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cryptography crossbar permutation extension.

	   zkne
	       @tab 1.0	@tab AES Encryption extension.

	   zknd
	       @tab 1.0	@tab AES Decryption extension.

	   zknh
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Hash function extension.

	   zkr @tab 1.0	@tab Entropy source extension.

	   zksed
	       @tab 1.0	@tab SM4 block cipher extension.

	   zksh
	       @tab 1.0	@tab SM3 hash function extension.

	   zkt @tab 1.0	@tab Data independent execution	latency	extension.

	   zk  @tab 1.0	@tab Standard scalar cryptography extension.

	   zkn @tab 1.0	@tab NIST algorithm suite extension.

	   zks @tab 1.0	@tab ShangMi algorithm suite extension.

	   zihintntl
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Non-temporal locality hints extension.

	   zihintpause
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Pause hint	extension.

	   zicboz
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cache-block zero extension.

	   zicbom
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cache-block management extension.

	   zicbop
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cache-block prefetch extension.

	   zic64b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Cache block size isf 64 bytes.

	   ziccamoa
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Main memory supports all atomics in A.

	   ziccif
	       @tab 1.0	@tab  Main  memory  supports  instruction  fetch  with
	       atomicity requirement.

	   zicclsm
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Main memory supports misaligned loads/stores.

	   ziccrse
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	Main memory supports forward progress on LR/SC
	       sequences.

	   zicntr
	       @tab 2.0	@tab Standard extension	for base counters and timers.

	   zihpm
	       @tab 2.0	 @tab  Standard	 extension  for	 hardware  performance
	       counters.

	   ztso
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Total store ordering extension.

	   zve32x
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector extensions for embedded processors.

	   zve32f
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector extensions for embedded processors.

	   zve64x
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector extensions for embedded processors.

	   zve64f
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector extensions for embedded processors.

	   zve64d
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector extensions for embedded processors.

	   zvl32b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl64b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl128b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl256b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl512b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl1024b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl2048b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvl4096b
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimum vector length standard extensions

	   zvbb
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector basic bit-manipulation extension.

	   zvbc
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector carryless multiplication extension.

	   zvkb
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector cryptography bit-manipulation extension.

	   zvkg
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector GCM/GMAC extension.

	   zvkned
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector AES	block cipher extension.

	   zvknha
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector SHA-2 secure hash extension.

	   zvknhb
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector SHA-2 secure hash extension.

	   zvksed
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector SM4	Block Cipher extension.

	   zvksh
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector SM3	Secure Hash extension.

	   zvkn
	       @tab  1.0 @tab Vector NIST Algorithm Suite extension, zvkn will
	       expand to zvkned, zvknhb, zvkb and zvkt.

	   zvknc
	       @tab 1.0	 @tab  Vector  NIST  Algorithm	Suite  with  carryless
	       multiply	extension, zvknc will expand to	zvkn and zvbc.

	   zvkng
	       @tab  1.0  @tab Vector NIST Algorithm Suite with	GCM extension,
	       zvkng will expand to zvkn and zvkg.

	   zvks
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector ShangMi algorithm  suite  extension,  zvks
	       will expand to zvksed, zvksh, zvkb and zvkt.

	   zvksc
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	Vector	ShangMi	algorithm suite	with carryless
	       multiplication extension, zvksc will expand to zvks and zvbc.

	   zvksg
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	Vector	ShangMi	 algorithm  suite   with   GCM
	       extension, zvksg	will expand to zvks and	zvkg.

	   zvkt
	       @tab   1.0  @tab	 Vector	 data  independent  execution  latency
	       extension.

	   zfh @tab 1.0	@tab Half-precision floating-point extension.

	   zfhmin
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Minimal half-precision floating-point extension.

	   zvfh
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector half-precision floating-point extension.

	   zvfhmin
	       @tab 1.0	 @tab  Vector  minimal	half-precision	floating-point
	       extension.

	   zvfbfmin
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Vector BF16 converts extension.

	   zfa @tab 1.0	@tab Additional	floating-point extension.

	   zmmul
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Integer multiplication extension.

	   zca @tab 1.0	@tab Integer compressed	instruction extension.

	   zcf @tab  1.0 @tab Compressed single-precision floating point loads
	       and stores extension.

	   zcd @tab 1.0	@tab Compressed	double-precision floating point	 loads
	       and stores extension.

	   zcb @tab 1.0	@tab Simple compressed instruction extension.

	   zce @tab  1.0  @tab	Compressed instruction extensions for embedded
	       processors.

	   zcmp
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Compressed	push pop extension.

	   zcmt
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Table jump	instruction extension.

	   smaia
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Advanced interrupt	architecture extension.

	   smepmp
	       @tab 1.0	@tab PMP Enhancements for memory access	and  execution
	       prevention on Machine mode.

	   smstateen
	       @tab 1.0	@tab State enable extension.

	   ssaia
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	Advanced  interrupt architecture extension for
	       supervisor-mode.

	   sscofpmf
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Count overflow & filtering	extension.

	   ssstateen
	       @tab 1.0	@tab State-enable extension for	supervisor-mode.

	   sstc
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Supervisor-mode timer interrupts extension.

	   svinval
	       @tab   1.0   @tab   Fine-grained	  address-translation	 cache
	       invalidation extension.

	   svnapot
	       @tab 1.0	@tab NAPOT translation contiguity extension.

	   svpbmt
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Page-based	memory types extension.

	   xcvmac
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Core-V multiply-accumulate	extension.

	   xcvalu
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Core-V miscellaneous ALU extension.

	   xcvelw
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Core-V event load word extension.

	   xtheadba
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head address calculation	extension.

	   xtheadbb
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head basic bit-manipulation extension.

	   xtheadbs
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head single-bit instructions extension.

	   xtheadcmo
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head cache management operations	extension.

	   xtheadcondmov
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head conditional	move extension.

	   xtheadfmemidx
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	T-head indexed memory operations for floating-
	       point registers extension.

	   xtheadfmv
	       @tab  1.0  @tab	T-head	double	floating-point	high-bit  data
	       transmission extension.

	   xtheadint
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head acceleration interruption extension.

	   xtheadmac
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head multiply-accumulate	extension.

	   xtheadmemidx
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head indexed memory operation extension.

	   xtheadmempair
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head two-GPR memory operation extension.

	   xtheadsync
	       @tab 1.0	@tab T-head multi-core synchronization extension.

	   xventanacondops
	       @tab 1.0	@tab Ventana integer conditional operations extension.

	   When	-march=	is not specified, use the setting from -mcpu.

	   If  both  -march and	-mcpu= are not specified, the default for this
	   argument  is	 system	 dependent,  users   who   want	  a   specific
	   architecture	extensions should specify one explicitly.

       -mcpu=processor-string
	   Use	 architecture  of  and	optimize  the  output  for  the	 given
	   processor, specified	by particular CPU  name.   Permissible	values
	   for	 this	option	 are:	sifive-e20,   sifive-e21,  sifive-e24,
	   sifive-e31,	 sifive-e34,   sifive-e76,   sifive-s21,   sifive-s51,
	   sifive-s54,	 sifive-s76,   sifive-u54,   sifive-u74,  sifive-x280,
	   sifive-xp450, sifive-x670.

	   Note	that -mcpu does	not override -march or -mtune.

       -mtune=processor-string
	   Optimize  the  output  for  the  given  processor,	specified   by
	   microarchitecture  or  particular CPU name.	Permissible values for
	   this	 option	  are:	 rocket,   sifive-3-series,   sifive-5-series,
	   sifive-7-series,	 thead-c906,	 size,	   sifive-p400-series,
	   sifive-p600-series, and all valid options for -mcpu=.

	   When	-mtune=	is not specified, use  the  setting  from  -mcpu,  the
	   default is rocket if	both are not specified.

	   The size choice is not intended for use by end-users.  This is used
	   when	 -Os  is  specified.   It  overrides the instruction cost info
	   provided by -mtune=,	but does not override the pipeline info.  This
	   helps reduce	code size while	still giving good performance.

       -mpreferred-stack-boundary=num
	   Attempt to keep the stack boundary aligned to a  2  raised  to  num
	   byte	boundary.  If -mpreferred-stack-boundary is not	specified, the
	   default is 4	(16 bytes or 128-bits).

	   Warning:  If	 you  use this switch, then you	must build all modules
	   with	the same value,	including any libraries.   This	 includes  the
	   system libraries and	startup	modules.

       -msmall-data-limit=n
	   Put	global	and  static  data  smaller than	n bytes	into a special
	   section (on some targets).

       -msave-restore
       -mno-save-restore
	   Do or don't use smaller but slower prologue and epilogue code  that
	   uses	 library  function  calls.   The default is to use fast	inline
	   prologues and epilogues.

       -mmovcc
       -mno-movcc
	   Do or don't produce branchless conditional-move code	sequences even
	   with	targets	that do	not have specific instructions for conditional
	   operations.	If enabled, sequences of ALU operations	 are  produced
	   using base integer ISA instructions where profitable.

       -minline-atomics
       -mno-inline-atomics
	   Do  or  don't  use smaller but slower subword atomic	emulation code
	   that	uses libatomic function	calls.	The default  is	 to  use  fast
	   inline subword atomics that do not require libatomic.

       -minline-strlen
       -mno-inline-strlen
	   Do  or do not attempt to inline strlen calls	if possible.  Inlining
	   will	 only  be  done	 if  the  string  is  properly	 aligned   and
	   instructions	for accelerated	processing are available.  The default
	   is to not inline strlen calls.

       -minline-strcmp
       -mno-inline-strcmp
	   Do  or do not attempt to inline strcmp calls	if possible.  Inlining
	   will	 only  be  done	 if  the  strings  are	properly  aligned  and
	   instructions	for accelerated	processing are available.  The default
	   is to not inline strcmp calls.

	   The	--param	 riscv-strcmp-inline-limit=n  parameter	 controls  the
	   maximum number of bytes compared by the inlined code.  The  default
	   value is 64.

       -minline-strncmp
       -mno-inline-strncmp
	   Do or do not	attempt	to inline strncmp calls	if possible.  Inlining
	   will	 only  be  done	 if  the  strings  are	properly  aligned  and
	   instructions	for accelerated	processing are available.  The default
	   is to not inline strncmp calls.

	   The	--param	 riscv-strcmp-inline-limit=n  parameter	 controls  the
	   maximum  number of bytes compared by	the inlined code.  The default
	   value is 64.

       -mshorten-memrefs
       -mno-shorten-memrefs
	   Do or do not	attempt	to make	 more  use  of	compressed  load/store
	   instructions	 by  replacing	a load/store of	'base register + large
	   offset' with	a new load/store of 'new base +	small offset'.	If the
	   new base gets  stored  in  a	 compressed  register,	then  the  new
	   load/store  can  be	compressed.   Currently	targets	32-bit integer
	   load/stores only.

       -mstrict-align
       -mno-strict-align
	   Do not or do	generate unaligned memory accesses.   The  default  is
	   set	depending  on  whether	the  processor	we  are	optimizing for
	   supports fast unaligned access or not.

       -mcmodel=medlow
	   Generate code for the medium-low code model.	The  program  and  its
	   statically  defined	symbols	must lie within	a single 2 GiB address
	   range and must lie between absolute addresses -2 GiB	 and  +2  GiB.
	   Programs  can  be  statically  or  dynamically  linked. This	is the
	   default code	model.

       -mcmodel=medany
	   Generate code for the medium-any code model.	The  program  and  its
	   statically  defined symbols must be within any single 2 GiB address
	   range. Programs can be statically or	dynamically linked.

	   The code generated  by  the	medium-any  code  model	 is  position-
	   independent,	 but  is  not  guaranteed  to  function	correctly when
	   linked into position-independent executables	or libraries.

       -mexplicit-relocs
       -mno-exlicit-relocs
	   Use or do not use assembler relocation operators when dealing  with
	   symbolic  addresses.	  The  alternative  is to use assembler	macros
	   instead, which may limit optimization.

       -mrelax
       -mno-relax
	   Take	advantage of  linker  relaxations  to  reduce  the  number  of
	   instructions	 required to materialize symbol	addresses. The default
	   is to take advantage	of linker relaxations.

       -mriscv-attribute
       -mno-riscv-attribute
	   Emit	(do not	emit) RISC-V attribute	to  record  extra  information
	   into	ELF objects.  This feature requires at least binutils 2.32.

       -mcsr-check
       -mno-csr-check
	   Enables or disables the CSR checking.

       -malign-data=type
	   Control how GCC aligns variables and	constants of array, structure,
	   or  union  types.   Supported values	for type are xlen which	uses x
	   register width as the  alignment  value,  and  natural  which  uses
	   natural alignment.  xlen is the default.

       -mbig-endian
	   Generate  big-endian	 code.	 This  is  the	default	 when  GCC  is
	   configured for a riscv64be-*-* or riscv32be-*-* target.

       -mlittle-endian
	   Generate little-endian code.	 This  is  the	default	 when  GCC  is
	   configured for a riscv64-*-*	or riscv32-*-* but not a riscv64be-*-*
	   or riscv32be-*-* target.

       -mstack-protector-guard=guard
       -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
       -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset
	   Generate  stack  protection	code using canary at guard.  Supported
	   locations are global	for a global  canary  or  tls  for  per-thread
	   canary in the TLS block.

	   With	 the latter choice the options -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   and -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset furthermore specify which
	   register to use as base register for	reading	the canary,  and  from
	   what	 offset	 from that base	register. There	is no default register
	   or offset as	this is	entirely for use within	the Linux kernel.

       -mtls-dialect=desc
	   Use TLS descriptors	as  the	 thread-local  storage	mechanism  for
	   dynamic accesses of TLS variables.

       -mtls-dialect=trad
	   Use	traditional  TLS  as  the  thread-local	 storage mechanism for
	   dynamic accesses of TLS variables.  This is the default.

       RL78 Options

       -msim
	   Links in additional target libraries	to support operation within  a
	   simulator.

       -mmul=none
       -mmul=g10
       -mmul=g13
       -mmul=g14
       -mmul=rl78
	   Specifies  the type of hardware multiplication and division support
	   to be used.	The simplest is	"none",	which uses software  for  both
	   multiplication and division.	 This is the default.  The "g13" value
	   is  for  the	 hardware  multiply/divide  peripheral	found  on  the
	   RL78/G13 (S2	core) targets.	The "g14" value	selects	the use	of the
	   multiplication and division instructions supported by the  RL78/G14
	   (S3	core)  parts.	The value "rl78" is an alias for "g14" and the
	   value "mg10"	is an alias for	"none".

	   In addition a C preprocessor	 macro	is  defined,  based  upon  the
	   setting  of this option.  Possible values are: "__RL78_MUL_NONE__",
	   "__RL78_MUL_G13__" or "__RL78_MUL_G14__".

       -mcpu=g10
       -mcpu=g13
       -mcpu=g14
       -mcpu=rl78
	   Specifies the RL78 core to target.  The default is  the  G14	 core,
	   also	known as an S3 core or just RL78.  The G13 or S2 core does not
	   have	 multiply  or  divide instructions, instead it uses a hardware
	   peripheral for these	operations.  The G10 or	S1 core	does not  have
	   register banks, so it uses a	different calling convention.

	   If this option is set it also selects the type of hardware multiply
	   support to use, unless this is overridden by	an explicit -mmul=none
	   option  on the command line.	 Thus specifying -mcpu=g13 enables the
	   use	of  the	 G13  hardware	multiply  peripheral  and   specifying
	   -mcpu=g10 disables the use of hardware multiplications altogether.

	   Note,  although the RL78/G14	core is	the default target, specifying
	   -mcpu=g14 or	 -mcpu=rl78  on	 the  command  line  does  change  the
	   behavior  of	 the  toolchain	 since	it  also  enables G14 hardware
	   multiply support.  If  these	 options  are  not  specified  on  the
	   command  line  then	software  multiplication routines will be used
	   even	though the code	targets	the RL78 core.	This is	for  backwards
	   compatibility  with	older  toolchains  which did not have hardware
	   multiply and	divide support.

	   In addition a C preprocessor	 macro	is  defined,  based  upon  the
	   setting  of	this  option.	Possible  values  are: "__RL78_G10__",
	   "__RL78_G13__" or "__RL78_G14__".

       -mg10
       -mg13
       -mg14
       -mrl78
	   These are aliases for the corresponding -mcpu=  option.   They  are
	   provided for	backwards compatibility.

       -mallregs
	   Allow  the  compiler	 to  use  all  of the available	registers.  By
	   default registers "r24..r31"	are  reserved  for  use	 in  interrupt
	   handlers.   With this option	enabled	these registers	can be used in
	   ordinary functions as well.

       -m64bit-doubles
       -m32bit-doubles
	   Make	the "double" data type be 64 bits (-m64bit-doubles) or 32 bits
	   (-m32bit-doubles) in	size.  The default is -m32bit-doubles.

       -msave-mduc-in-interrupts
       -mno-save-mduc-in-interrupts
	   Specifies that interrupt handler functions should preserve the MDUC
	   registers.  This is only necessary if normal	 code  might  use  the
	   MDUC	 registers, for	example	because	it performs multiplication and
	   division operations.	 The default is	to ignore the  MDUC  registers
	   as  this  makes  the	 interrupt handlers faster.  The target	option
	   -mg13 needs to be passed for	this to	work as	this feature  is  only
	   available  on  the  G13  target (S2 core).  The MDUC	registers will
	   only	be saved if the	interrupt handler performs a multiplication or
	   division operation or it calls another function.

       IBM RS/6000 and PowerPC Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the IBM	RS/6000	and PowerPC:

       -mpowerpc-gpopt
       -mno-powerpc-gpopt
       -mpowerpc-gfxopt
       -mno-powerpc-gfxopt
       -mpowerpc64
       -mno-powerpc64
       -mmfcrf
       -mno-mfcrf
       -mpopcntb
       -mno-popcntb
       -mpopcntd
       -mno-popcntd
       -mfprnd
       -mno-fprnd
       -mcmpb
       -mno-cmpb
       -mhard-dfp
       -mno-hard-dfp
	   You use these options to specify which instructions	are  available
	   on the processor you	are using.  The	default	value of these options
	   is  determined when configuring GCC.	 Specifying the	-mcpu=cpu_type
	   overrides the specification of these	options.  We recommend you use
	   the -mcpu=cpu_type option rather than the options listed above.

	   Specifying -mpowerpc-gpopt allows GCC to use	the  optional  PowerPC
	   architecture	 instructions  in the General Purpose group, including
	   floating-point square root.	Specifying -mpowerpc-gfxopt allows GCC
	   to use  the	optional  PowerPC  architecture	 instructions  in  the
	   Graphics group, including floating-point select.

	   The	-mmfcrf	 option	allows GCC to generate the move	from condition
	   register field instruction implemented on the POWER4	processor  and
	   other  processors that support the PowerPC V2.01 architecture.  The
	   -mpopcntb option allows GCC to generate the	popcount  and  double-
	   precision  FP  reciprocal  estimate	instruction implemented	on the
	   POWER5 processor and	other  processors  that	 support  the  PowerPC
	   V2.02  architecture.	  The  -mpopcntd option	allows GCC to generate
	   the popcount	instruction implemented	on the	POWER7	processor  and
	   other  processors that support the PowerPC V2.06 architecture.  The
	   -mfprnd option allows GCC to	 generate  the	FP  round  to  integer
	   instructions	  implemented  on  the	POWER5+	 processor  and	 other
	   processors that support the PowerPC V2.03 architecture.  The	-mcmpb
	   option  allows  GCC	to  generate  the  compare  bytes  instruction
	   implemented	on  the	 POWER6	 processor  and	 other processors that
	   support the PowerPC	V2.05  architecture.   The  -mhard-dfp	option
	   allows  GCC	to  generate  the  decimal floating-point instructions
	   implemented on some POWER processors.

	   The -mpowerpc64 option allows GCC to	generate the additional	64-bit
	   instructions	that are found in the full PowerPC64 architecture  and
	   to  treat  GPRs  as 64-bit, doubleword quantities.  GCC defaults to
	   -mno-powerpc64.

       -mcpu=cpu_type
	   Set architecture type, register usage, and  instruction  scheduling
	   parameters	for  machine  type  cpu_type.	Supported  values  for
	   cpu_type are	401, 403, 405, 405fp, 440,  440fp,  464,  464fp,  476,
	   476fp,  505,	 601,  602, 603, 603e, 604, 604e, 620, 630, 740, 7400,
	   7450, 750, 801, 821,	823,  860,  970,  8540,	 a2,  e300c2,  e300c3,
	   e500mc,  e500mc64, e5500, e6500, ec603e, G3,	G4, G5,	titan, power3,
	   power4, power5, power5+, power6, power6x, power7,  power8,  power9,
	   power10,   power11,	powerpc,  powerpc64,  powerpc64le,  rs64,  and
	   native.

	   -mcpu=powerpc, -mcpu=powerpc64, and -mcpu=powerpc64le specify  pure
	   32-bit  PowerPC  (either  endian),  64-bit  big  endian PowerPC and
	   64-bit little endian	PowerPC	architecture machine  types,  with  an
	   appropriate,	  generic   processor  model  assumed  for  scheduling
	   purposes.

	   Specifying native as	cpu type detects and selects the  architecture
	   option  that	 corresponds  to  the  host  processor	of  the	system
	   performing the compilation.	-mcpu=native has no effect if GCC does
	   not recognize the processor.

	   The other options specify a	specific  processor.   Code  generated
	   under those options runs best on that processor, and	may not	run at
	   all on others.

	   The	-mcpu  options	automatically  enable or disable the following
	   options:

	   -maltivec  -mfprnd	-mhard-float   -mmfcrf	 -mmultiple  -mpopcntb
	   -mpopcntd   -mpowerpc64  -mpowerpc-gpopt   -mpowerpc-gfxopt -mmulhw
	   -mdlmzb    -mmfpgpr	  -mvsx	  -mcrypto    -mhtm    -mpower8-fusion
	   -mquad-memory  -mquad-memory-atomic	-mfloat128 -mfloat128-hardware
	   -mprefixed -mpcrel -mmma -mrop-protect

	   The	particular  options  set for any particular CPU	varies between
	   compiler versions, depending	 on  what  setting  seems  to  produce
	   optimal  code  for  that  CPU;  it  doesn't necessarily reflect the
	   actual hardware's capabilities.  If you wish	to set	an  individual
	   option  to  a  particular value, you	may specify it after the -mcpu
	   option, like	-mcpu=970 -mno-altivec.

	   On AIX, the -maltivec and -mpowerpc64 options are  not  enabled  or
	   disabled  by	 the -mcpu option at present because AIX does not have
	   full	support	for these options.  You	may still  enable  or  disable
	   them	individually if	you're sure it'll work in your environment.

       -mtune=cpu_type
	   Set	 the   instruction  scheduling	parameters  for	 machine  type
	   cpu_type, but do not	set the	architecture type or  register	usage,
	   as  -mcpu=cpu_type does.  The same values for cpu_type are used for
	   -mtune as for -mcpu.	 If both are  specified,  the  code  generated
	   uses	  the  architecture  and  registers  set  by  -mcpu,  but  the
	   scheduling parameters set by	-mtune.

       -mcmodel=small
	   Generate PowerPC64 code for the small model:	The TOC	is limited  to
	   64k.

       -mcmodel=medium
	   Generate  PowerPC64	code  for  the medium model: The TOC and other
	   static data may be up to a total  of	 4G  in	 size.	 This  is  the
	   default for 64-bit Linux.

       -mcmodel=large
	   Generate  PowerPC64	code for the large model: The TOC may be up to
	   4G in size.	Other data and code is	only  limited  by  the	64-bit
	   address space.

       -maltivec
       -mno-altivec
	   Generate  code  that	 uses (does not	use) AltiVec instructions, and
	   also	enable the use of built-in functions that  allow  more	direct
	   access  to  the  AltiVec instruction	set.  You may also need	to set
	   -mabi=altivec  to  adjust  the  current  ABI	  with	 AltiVec   ABI
	   enhancements.

	   When	 -maltivec  is	used, the element order	for AltiVec intrinsics
	   such	as "vec_splat",	"vec_extract", and  "vec_insert"  match	 array
	   element  order corresponding	to the endianness of the target.  That
	   is, element zero  identifies	 the  leftmost	element	 in  a	vector
	   register  when  targeting a big-endian platform, and	identifies the
	   rightmost element in	a vector register  when	 targeting  a  little-
	   endian platform.

       -mvrsave
       -mno-vrsave
	   Generate VRSAVE instructions	when generating	AltiVec	code.

       -msecure-plt
	   Generate  code  that	 allows	 ld and	ld.so to build executables and
	   shared libraries with non-executable	".plt"	and  ".got"  sections.
	   This	is a PowerPC 32-bit SYSV ABI option.

       -mbss-plt
	   Generate  code  that	uses a BSS ".plt" section that ld.so fills in,
	   and requires	".plt" and ".got" sections that	are both writable  and
	   executable.	This is	a PowerPC 32-bit SYSV ABI option.

       -misel
       -mno-isel
	   This	  switch   enables   or	  disables   the  generation  of  ISEL
	   instructions.

       -mvsx
       -mno-vsx
	   Generate  code  that	 uses  (does  not  use)	 vector/scalar	 (VSX)
	   instructions,  and  also  enable the	use of built-in	functions that
	   allow more direct access to the VSX instruction set.

       -mcrypto
       -mno-crypto
	   Enable the use (disable)  of	 the  built-in	functions  that	 allow
	   direct  access to the cryptographic instructions that were added in
	   version 2.07	of the PowerPC ISA.

       -mhtm
       -mno-htm
	   Enable (disable) the	use  of	 the  built-in	functions  that	 allow
	   direct   access   to	  the	Hardware  Transactional	 Memory	 (HTM)
	   instructions	that were added	in version 2.07	of the PowerPC ISA.

       -mpower8-fusion
       -mno-power8-fusion
	   Generate code that keeps (does not keeps) some  integer  operations
	   adjacent  so	 that the instructions can be fused together on	power8
	   and later processors.

       -mquad-memory
       -mno-quad-memory
	   Generate code that uses (does not use)  the	non-atomic  quad  word
	   memory  instructions.   The	-mquad-memory  option  requires	use of
	   64-bit mode.

       -mquad-memory-atomic
       -mno-quad-memory-atomic
	   Generate code that uses (does not use) the atomic quad word	memory
	   instructions.   The	-mquad-memory-atomic  option  requires	use of
	   64-bit mode.

       -mfloat128
       -mno-float128
	   Enable/disable the __float128 keyword  for  IEEE  128-bit  floating
	   point  and  use either software emulation for IEEE 128-bit floating
	   point or hardware instructions.

	   The VSX instruction set (-mvsx) must	be enabled  to	use  the  IEEE
	   128-bit floating point support.  The	IEEE 128-bit floating point is
	   only	supported on Linux.

	   The	default	 for  -mfloat128  is  enabled on PowerPC Linux systems
	   using the VSX instruction set, and disabled on other	systems.

	   If you use the ISA 3.0 instruction set (-mcpu=power9) on  a	64-bit
	   system,  the	 IEEE  128-bit floating	point support will also	enable
	   the generation of ISA 3.0 IEEE 128-bit floating point instructions.
	   Otherwise, if you do	not specify to generate	ISA  3.0  instructions
	   or  you  are	 targeting  a  32-bit  big endian system, IEEE 128-bit
	   floating point will be done with software emulation.

       -mfloat128-hardware
       -mno-float128-hardware
	   Enable/disable using	ISA 3.0	hardware instructions to  support  the
	   __float128 data type.

	   The	default	 for  -mfloat128-hardware  is enabled on PowerPC Linux
	   systems using the ISA 3.0 instruction set, and  disabled  on	 other
	   systems.

       -m32
       -m64
	   Generate  code for 32-bit or	64-bit environments of Darwin and SVR4
	   targets (including GNU/Linux).  The 32-bit  environment  sets  int,
	   long	 and  pointer  to  32 bits and generates code that runs	on any
	   PowerPC variant.  The 64-bit	environment sets int to	 32  bits  and
	   long	 and  pointer to 64 bits, and generates	code for PowerPC64, as
	   for -mpowerpc64.

       -mfull-toc
       -mno-fp-in-toc
       -mno-sum-in-toc
       -mminimal-toc
	   Modify generation of	the TOC	(Table Of Contents), which is  created
	   for	every  executable  file.  The -mfull-toc option	is selected by
	   default.  In	that case, GCC allocates at least one  TOC  entry  for
	   each	 unique	non-automatic variable reference in your program.  GCC
	   also	places floating-point constants	in  the	 TOC.	However,  only
	   16,384 entries are available	in the TOC.

	   If  you  receive  a	linker	error  message	that  saying  you have
	   overflowed the available TOC	space, you can reduce  the  amount  of
	   TOC space used with the -mno-fp-in-toc and -mno-sum-in-toc options.
	   -mno-fp-in-toc  prevents  GCC from putting floating-point constants
	   in the TOC and -mno-sum-in-toc  forces  GCC	to  generate  code  to
	   calculate  the sum of an address and	a constant at run time instead
	   of putting that sum into the	TOC.  You may specify one or  both  of
	   these options.  Each	causes GCC to produce very slightly slower and
	   larger code at the expense of conserving TOC	space.

	   If you still	run out	of space in the	TOC even when you specify both
	   of  these  options,	specify	 -mminimal-toc	instead.   This	option
	   causes GCC to make only one TOC entry for  every  file.   When  you
	   specify  this  option,  GCC produces	code that is slower and	larger
	   but which uses extremely little TOC space.  You  may	 wish  to  use
	   this	 option	 only  on  files that contain less frequently-executed
	   code.

       -maix64
       -maix32
	   Enable 64-bit AIX ABI  and  calling	convention:  64-bit  pointers,
	   64-bit  "long" type,	and the	infrastructure needed to support them.
	   Specifying -maix64 implies -mpowerpc64, while -maix32 disables  the
	   64-bit ABI and implies -mno-powerpc64.  GCC defaults	to -maix32.

       -mxl-compat
       -mno-xl-compat
	   Produce  code  that	conforms  more	closely	 to  IBM  XL  compiler
	   semantics  when  using  AIX-compatible  ABI.	  Pass	floating-point
	   arguments  to  prototyped  functions	 beyond	the register save area
	   (RSA) on the	stack in addition to argument  FPRs.   Do  not	assume
	   that	 most  significant  double  in	128-bit	 long  double value is
	   properly rounded when comparing values and  converting  to  double.
	   Use XL symbol names for long	double support routines.

	   The	 AIX   calling	convention  was	 extended  but	not  initially
	   documented to handle	an obscure K&R C case of  calling  a  function
	   that	 takes	the address of its arguments with fewer	arguments than
	   declared.  IBM XL compilers access floating-point arguments that do
	   not fit in the RSA from the stack when  a  subroutine  is  compiled
	   without   optimization.    Because  always  storing	floating-point
	   arguments on	the stack  is  inefficient  and	 rarely	 needed,  this
	   option is not enabled by default and	only is	necessary when calling
	   subroutines compiled	by IBM XL compilers without optimization.

       -mpe
	   Support   IBM  RS/6000  SP  Parallel	 Environment  (PE).   Link  an
	   application written to use message  passing	with  special  startup
	   code	 to  enable  the  application to run.  The system must have PE
	   installed in	the  standard  location	 (/usr/lpp/ppe.poe/),  or  the
	   specs  file	must  be overridden with the -specs= option to specify
	   the appropriate directory location.	The Parallel Environment  does
	   not support threads,	so the -mpe option and the -pthread option are
	   incompatible.

       -malign-natural
       -malign-power
	   On  AIX,  32-bit  Darwin,  and 64-bit PowerPC GNU/Linux, the	option
	   -malign-natural  overrides  the  ABI-defined	 alignment  of	larger
	   types,  such	as floating-point doubles, on their natural size-based
	   boundary.  The option -malign-power instructs  GCC  to  follow  the
	   ABI-specified  alignment  rules.   GCC  defaults  to	 the  standard
	   alignment defined in	the ABI.

	   On  64-bit  Darwin,	natural	 alignment   is	  the	default,   and
	   -malign-power is not	supported.

       -msoft-float
       -mhard-float
	   Generate  code that does not	use (uses) the floating-point register
	   set.	 Software floating-point emulation is provided if you use  the
	   -msoft-float	option,	and pass the option to GCC when	linking.

       -mmultiple
       -mno-multiple
	   Generate  code  that	 uses  (does  not  use)	the load multiple word
	   instructions	and  the  store	 multiple  word	 instructions.	 These
	   instructions	 are  generated	 by  default on	POWER systems, and not
	   generated on	PowerPC	systems.  Do not  use  -mmultiple  on  little-
	   endian  PowerPC  systems, since those instructions do not work when
	   the processor is in little-endian mode.  The	exceptions are	PPC740
	   and PPC750 which permit these instructions in little-endian mode.

       -mupdate
       -mno-update
	   Generate   code  that  uses	(does  not  use)  the  load  or	 store
	   instructions	that update the	base register to the  address  of  the
	   calculated  memory  location.   These instructions are generated by
	   default.  If	you use	-mno-update, there is a	small  window  between
	   the	time  that the stack pointer is	updated	and the	address	of the
	   previous frame is stored, which means code  that  walks  the	 stack
	   frame across	interrupts or signals may get corrupted	data.

       -mavoid-indexed-addresses
       -mno-avoid-indexed-addresses
	   Generate  code  that	 tries to avoid	(not avoid) the	use of indexed
	   load	 or  store  instructions.  These  instructions	can  incur   a
	   performance	penalty	 on  Power6  processors	in certain situations,
	   such	as when	 stepping  through  large  arrays  that	 cross	a  16M
	   boundary.   This option is enabled by default when targeting	Power6
	   and disabled	otherwise.

       -mfused-madd
       -mno-fused-madd
	   Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point  multiply
	   and	accumulate  instructions.  These instructions are generated by
	   default if hardware floating	point is used.	The  machine-dependent
	   -mfused-madd	 option	 is  now  mapped  to  the  machine-independent
	   -ffp-contract=fast  option,	and  -mno-fused-madd  is   mapped   to
	   -ffp-contract=off.

       -mmulhw
       -mno-mulhw
	   Generate  code  that	uses (does not use) the	half-word multiply and
	   multiply-accumulate instructions on the IBM 405, 440, 464  and  476
	   processors.	 These	instructions  are  generated  by  default when
	   targeting those processors.

       -mdlmzb
       -mno-dlmzb
	   Generate code that uses (does  not  use)  the  string-search	 dlmzb
	   instruction	on  the	 IBM  405,  440, 464 and 476 processors.  This
	   instruction	is  generated  by   default   when   targeting	 those
	   processors.

       -mno-bit-align
       -mbit-align
	   On  System  V.4  and	 embedded  PowerPC  systems  do	not (do) force
	   structures and unions that contain bit-fields to be aligned to  the
	   base	type of	the bit-field.

	   For	example,  by  default  a  structure  containing	 nothing but 8
	   "unsigned" bit-fields of length 1 is	aligned	to a  4-byte  boundary
	   and	has a size of 4	bytes.	By using -mno-bit-align, the structure
	   is aligned to a 1-byte boundary and is 1 byte in size.

       -mno-strict-align
       -mstrict-align
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do not (do) assume  that
	   unaligned memory references are handled by the system.

       -mrelocatable
       -mno-relocatable
	   Generate  code  that	allows (does not allow)	a static executable to
	   be relocated	to a different address at run time.  A simple embedded
	   PowerPC system  loader  should  relocate  the  entire  contents  of
	   ".got2"  and	 4-byte	 locations  listed  in the ".fixup" section, a
	   table of 32-bit addresses generated by this option.	 For  this  to
	   work,   all	 objects   linked   together  must  be	compiled  with
	   -mrelocatable or -mrelocatable-lib.	-mrelocatable code aligns  the
	   stack to an 8-byte boundary.

       -mrelocatable-lib
       -mno-relocatable-lib
	   Like	 -mrelocatable,	-mrelocatable-lib generates a ".fixup" section
	   to allow static executables	to  be	relocated  at  run  time,  but
	   -mrelocatable-lib  does  not	 use  the  smaller  stack alignment of
	   -mrelocatable.  Objects  compiled  with  -mrelocatable-lib  may  be
	   linked   with   objects   compiled  with  any  combination  of  the
	   -mrelocatable options.

       -mno-toc
       -mtoc
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do not (do) assume  that
	   register  2	contains  a  pointer  to a global area pointing	to the
	   addresses used in the program.

       -mlittle
       -mlittle-endian
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems  compile	code  for  the
	   processor in	little-endian mode.  The -mlittle-endian option	is the
	   same	as -mlittle.

       -mbig
       -mbig-endian
	   On  System  V.4  and	 embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the
	   processor in	big-endian mode.  The -mbig-endian option is the  same
	   as -mbig.

       -mdynamic-no-pic
	   On  Darwin  /  macOS	 systems,  compile  code  so  that  it	is not
	   relocatable,	but that its external references are relocatable.  The
	   resulting  code  is	suitable  for  applications,  but  not	shared
	   libraries.

       -msingle-pic-base
	   Treat  the  register	 used  for PIC addressing as read-only,	rather
	   than	loading	it in the prologue for	each  function.	  The  runtime
	   system  is  responsible  for	 initializing  this  register  with an
	   appropriate value before execution begins.

       -mprioritize-restricted-insns=priority
	   This	option controls	the priority that is assigned to dispatch-slot
	   restricted instructions during the  second  scheduling  pass.   The
	   argument priority takes the value 0,	1, or 2	to assign no, highest,
	   or	second-highest	 (respectively)	  priority   to	 dispatch-slot
	   restricted instructions.

       -msched-costly-dep=dependence_type
	   This	option controls	which dependences are considered costly	by the
	   target during instruction scheduling.  The argument dependence_type
	   takes one of	the following values:

	   no  No dependence is	costly.

	   all All dependences are costly.

	   true_store_to_load
	       A true dependence from store to load is costly.

	   store_to_load
	       Any dependence from store to load is costly.

	   number
	       Any dependence for which	the latency is greater than  or	 equal
	       to number is costly.

       -minsert-sched-nops=scheme
	   This	 option	controls which NOP insertion scheme is used during the
	   second scheduling pass.  The	 argument  scheme  takes  one  of  the
	   following values:

	   no  Don't insert NOPs.

	   pad Pad  with  NOPs any dispatch group that has vacant issue	slots,
	       according to the	scheduler's grouping.

	   regroup_exact
	       Insert NOPs to  force  costly  dependent	 insns	into  separate
	       groups.	Insert exactly as many NOPs as needed to force an insn
	       to a new	group, according to the	estimated processor grouping.

	   number
	       Insert  NOPs  to	 force	costly	dependent  insns into separate
	       groups.	Insert number NOPs to force an insn to a new group.

       -mcall-sysv
	   On System V.4 and  embedded	PowerPC	 systems  compile  code	 using
	   calling  conventions	 that  adhere  to  the March 1995 draft	of the
	   System  V   Application   Binary   Interface,   PowerPC   processor
	   supplement.	 This  is  the default unless you configured GCC using
	   powerpc-*-eabiaix.

       -mcall-sysv-eabi
       -mcall-eabi
	   Specify both	-mcall-sysv and	-meabi options.

       -mcall-sysv-noeabi
	   Specify both	-mcall-sysv and	-mno-eabi options.

       -mcall-aixdesc
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the AIX
	   operating system.

       -mcall-linux
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems  compile	code  for  the
	   Linux-based GNU system.

       -mcall-freebsd
	   On  System  V.4  and	 embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the
	   FreeBSD operating system.

       -mcall-netbsd
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems  compile	code  for  the
	   NetBSD operating system.

       -mcall-openbsd
	   On  System  V.4  and	 embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the
	   OpenBSD operating system.

       -mtraceback=traceback_type
	   Select the type of traceback	table. Valid values for	traceback_type
	   are full, part, and no.

       -maix-struct-return
	   Return all structures in memory (as specified by the	AIX ABI).

       -msvr4-struct-return
	   Return structures smaller than 8 bytes in registers	(as  specified
	   by the SVR4 ABI).

       -mabi=abi-type
	   Extend  the current ABI with	a particular extension,	or remove such
	   extension.  Valid values are: altivec,  no-altivec,	ibmlongdouble,
	   ieeelongdouble, elfv1, elfv2, and for AIX: vec-extabi, vec-default.

       -mabi=ibmlongdouble
	   Change  the	current	ABI to use IBM extended-precision long double.
	   This	is not likely to work if your system defaults  to  using  IEEE
	   extended-precision long double.  If you change the long double type
	   from	 IEEE  extended-precision,  the	 compiler will issue a warning
	   unless you use the -Wno-psabi option.   Requires  -mlong-double-128
	   to be enabled.

       -mabi=ieeelongdouble
	   Change  the current ABI to use IEEE extended-precision long double.
	   This	is not likely to work if your system  defaults	to  using  IBM
	   extended-precision long double.  If you change the long double type
	   from	 IBM  extended-precision,  the	compiler  will issue a warning
	   unless you use the -Wno-psabi option.   Requires  -mlong-double-128
	   to be enabled.

       -mabi=elfv1
	   Change  the	current	ABI to use the ELFv1 ABI.  This	is the default
	   ABI for big-endian PowerPC 64-bit Linux.   Overriding  the  default
	   ABI	requires  special  system  support  and	 is  likely to fail in
	   spectacular ways.

       -mabi=elfv2
	   Change the current ABI to use the ELFv2 ABI.	 This is  the  default
	   ABI for little-endian PowerPC 64-bit	Linux.	Overriding the default
	   ABI	requires  special  system  support  and	 is  likely to fail in
	   spectacular ways.

       -mgnu-attribute
       -mno-gnu-attribute
	   Emit	.gnu_attribute assembly	directives to set tag/value pairs in a
	   .gnu.attributes section that	specify	 ABI  variations  in  function
	   parameters or return	values.

       -mprototype
       -mno-prototype
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems assume that all calls to
	   variable  argument  functions  are properly prototyped.  Otherwise,
	   the compiler	must insert an instruction before every	non-prototyped
	   call	to set or clear	bit 6 of the condition code register ("CR") to
	   indicate whether floating-point values are passed in	the  floating-
	   point  registers  in	 case  the  function takes variable arguments.
	   With	 -mprototype,  only  calls  to	prototyped  variable  argument
	   functions set or clear the bit.

       -msim
	   On  embedded	 PowerPC  systems,  assume  that the startup module is
	   called sim-crt0.o and that the standard C  libraries	 are  libsim.a
	   and	 libc.a.    This   is	the   default	for  powerpc-*-eabisim
	   configurations.

       -mmvme
	   On embedded PowerPC systems,	assume	that  the  startup  module  is
	   called  crt0.o  and	the  standard  C  libraries  are libmvme.a and
	   libc.a.

       -mads
	   On embedded PowerPC systems,	assume	that  the  startup  module  is
	   called crt0.o and the standard C libraries are libads.a and libc.a.

       -myellowknife
	   On  embedded	 PowerPC  systems,  assume  that the startup module is
	   called crt0.o and the standard C libraries are libyk.a and libc.a.

       -mvxworks
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, specify	that  you  are
	   compiling for a VxWorks system.

       -memb
	   On embedded PowerPC systems,	set the	"PPC_EMB" bit in the ELF flags
	   header to indicate that eabi	extended relocations are used.

       -meabi
       -mno-eabi
	   On  System  V.4  and	embedded PowerPC systems do (do	not) adhere to
	   the Embedded	Applications Binary Interface (EABI), which is	a  set
	   of  modifications  to  the  System  V.4  specifications.  Selecting
	   -meabi means	that the stack is aligned to  an  8-byte  boundary,  a
	   function  "__eabi"  is  called  from	 "main"	 to  set  up  the EABI
	   environment,	and the	-msdata	option can use both "r2" and "r13"  to
	   point  to two separate small	data areas.  Selecting -mno-eabi means
	   that	 the  stack  is	 aligned  to  a	 16-byte  boundary,  no	  EABI
	   initialization  function  is	 called	 from  "main", and the -msdata
	   option only uses "r13" to point to a	single small data  area.   The
	   -meabi  option  is on by default if you configured GCC using	one of
	   the powerpc*-*-eabi*	options.

       -msdata=eabi
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, put  small  initialized
	   "const"  global  and	static data in the ".sdata2" section, which is
	   pointed to by register "r2".	  Put  small  initialized  non-"const"
	   global and static data in the ".sdata" section, which is pointed to
	   by  register	"r13".	Put small uninitialized	global and static data
	   in the ".sbss" section, which is adjacent to	the ".sdata"  section.
	   The	-msdata=eabi  option  is  incompatible	with the -mrelocatable
	   option.  The	-msdata=eabi option also sets the -memb	option.

       -msdata=sysv
	   On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, put  small  global  and
	   static  data	 in  the  ".sdata"  section,  which  is	 pointed to by
	   register "r13".  Put	small uninitialized global and static data  in
	   the	".sbss"	 section,  which  is adjacent to the ".sdata" section.
	   The -msdata=sysv option  is	incompatible  with  the	 -mrelocatable
	   option.

       -msdata=default
       -msdata
	   On  System  V.4  and	 embedded  PowerPC systems, if -meabi is used,
	   compile code	the same as -msdata=eabi, otherwise compile  code  the
	   same	as -msdata=sysv.

       -msdata=data
	   On  System  V.4 and embedded	PowerPC	systems, put small global data
	   in the ".sdata" section.  Put small uninitialized  global  data  in
	   the	".sbss"	 section.   Do not use register	"r13" to address small
	   data	however.  This is the default behavior	unless	other  -msdata
	   options are used.

       -msdata=none
       -mno-sdata
	   On  embedded	PowerPC	systems, put all initialized global and	static
	   data	in the ".data" section,	and  all  uninitialized	 data  in  the
	   ".bss" section.

       -mreadonly-in-sdata
	   Put read-only objects in the	".sdata" section as well.  This	is the
	   default.

       -mblock-move-inline-limit=num
	   Inline  all	block  moves  (such  as	calls to "memcpy" or structure
	   copies) less	than or	equal to num bytes.  The minimum value for num
	   is 32 bytes on 32-bit targets and 64	bytes on 64-bit	targets.   The
	   default value is target-specific.

       -mblock-compare-inline-limit=num
	   Generate  non-looping  inline  code for all block compares (such as
	   calls to "memcmp" or	structure compares) less than or equal to  num
	   bytes.  If  num  is	0, all inline expansion	(non-loop and loop) of
	   block compare is disabled. The default value	is target-specific.

       -mblock-compare-inline-loop-limit=num
	   Generate an inline expansion	using loop code	for all	block compares
	   that	are less than or equal to num  bytes,  but  greater  than  the
	   limit  for  non-loop	 inline	 block compare expansion. If the block
	   length is not constant, at most num bytes will be  compared	before
	   "memcmp"  is	 called	 to  compare  the  remainder of	the block. The
	   default value is target-specific.

       -mstring-compare-inline-limit=num
	   Compare at  most  num  string  bytes	 with  inline  code.   If  the
	   difference  or  end of string is not	found at the end of the	inline
	   compare a call to "strcmp" or "strncmp" will	take care of the  rest
	   of the comparison. The default is 64	bytes.

       -G num
	   On  embedded	PowerPC	systems, put global and	static items less than
	   or equal to num bytes into the small	data or	BSS  sections  instead
	   of  the  normal data	or BSS section.	 By default, num is 8.	The -G
	   num switch is also passed to	the linker.   All  modules  should  be
	   compiled with the same -G num value.

       -mregnames
       -mno-regnames
	   On  System  V.4  and	 embedded  PowerPC  systems  do	 (do not) emit
	   register names in  the  assembly  language  output  using  symbolic
	   forms.

       -mlongcall
       -mno-longcall
	   By  default assume that all calls are far away so that a longer and
	   more	expensive calling sequence is required.	 This is required  for
	   calls farther than 32 megabytes (33,554,432 bytes) from the current
	   location.  A	short call is generated	if the compiler	knows the call
	   cannot  be  that  far  away.	 This setting can be overridden	by the
	   "shortcall" function	attribute, or by "#pragma longcall(0)".

	   Some	linkers	 are  capable  of  detecting  out-of-range  calls  and
	   generating  glue code on the	fly.  On these systems,	long calls are
	   unnecessary and generate slower code.  As of	this writing, the  AIX
	   linker  can	do  this, as can the GNU linker	for PowerPC/64.	 It is
	   planned to add this feature to the GNU linker  for  32-bit  PowerPC
	   systems as well.

	   On  PowerPC64  ELFv2	 and  32-bit  PowerPC  systems	with newer GNU
	   linkers, GCC	can generate long  calls  using	 an  inline  PLT  call
	   sequence  (see  -mpltseq).	PowerPC	 with  -mbss-plt and PowerPC64
	   ELFv1 (big-endian) do not support inline PLT	calls.

	   On Darwin/PPC systems, "#pragma longcall" generates	"jbsr  callee,
	   L42",  plus	a branch island	(glue code).  The two target addresses
	   represent the callee	and the	branch island.	The Darwin/PPC	linker
	   prefers  the	 first	address	and generates a	"bl callee" if the PPC
	   "bl"	instruction reaches the	callee directly; otherwise, the	linker
	   generates "bl L42" to call the branch island.  The branch island is
	   appended to the body	of the calling function; it computes the  full
	   32-bit address of the callee	and jumps to it.

	   On  Mach-O  (Darwin)	systems, this option directs the compiler emit
	   to the glue for every direct	call, and the  Darwin  linker  decides
	   whether to use or discard it.

	   In  the future, GCC may ignore all longcall specifications when the
	   linker is known to generate glue.

       -mpltseq
       -mno-pltseq
	   Implement (do not implement)	 -fno-plt  and	long  calls  using  an
	   inline  PLT call sequence that supports lazy	linking	and long calls
	   to functions	in dlopen'd shared libraries.  Inline  PLT  calls  are
	   only	 supported  on PowerPC64 ELFv2 and 32-bit PowerPC systems with
	   newer GNU linkers, and are enabled by default  if  the  support  is
	   detected  when configuring GCC, and,	in the case of 32-bit PowerPC,
	   if GCC is configured	with --enable-secureplt.   -mpltseq  code  and
	   -mbss-plt  32-bit  PowerPC  relocatable  objects  may not be	linked
	   together.

       -mtls-markers
       -mno-tls-markers
	   Mark	(do not	mark) calls  to	 "__tls_get_addr"  with	 a  relocation
	   specifying the function argument.  The relocation allows the	linker
	   to	reliably   associate   function	  call	 with  argument	 setup
	   instructions	for TLS	optimization, which  in	 turn  allows  GCC  to
	   better schedule the sequence.

       -mrecip
       -mno-recip
	   This	 option	 enables use of	the reciprocal estimate	and reciprocal
	   square root estimate	instructions  with  additional	Newton-Raphson
	   steps  to  increase	precision  instead of doing a divide or	square
	   root	and divide for floating-point arguments.  You should  use  the
	   -ffast-math	  option    when    using   -mrecip   (or   at	 least
	   -funsafe-math-optimizations,	-ffinite-math-only,  -freciprocal-math
	   and	-fno-trapping-math).   Note  that  while the throughput	of the
	   sequence is generally  higher  than	the  throughput	 of  the  non-
	   reciprocal  instruction,  the  precision  of	 the  sequence	can be
	   decreased  by  up  to  2  ulp  (i.e.	 the  inverse  of  1.0	equals
	   0.99999994) for reciprocal square roots.

       -mrecip=opt
	   This	 option	controls which reciprocal estimate instructions	may be
	   used.  opt is a comma-separated  list  of  options,	which  may  be
	   preceded by a "!" to	invert the option:

	   all Enable all estimate instructions.

	   default
	       Enable the default instructions,	equivalent to -mrecip.

	   none
	       Disable all estimate instructions, equivalent to	-mno-recip.

	   div Enable  the  reciprocal	approximation  instructions  for  both
	       single and double precision.

	   divf
	       Enable	the    single-precision	   reciprocal	 approximation
	       instructions.

	   divd
	       Enable	 the	double-precision    reciprocal	 approximation
	       instructions.

	   rsqrt
	       Enable the reciprocal square  root  approximation  instructions
	       for both	single and double precision.

	   rsqrtf
	       Enable	 the	single-precision    reciprocal	 square	  root
	       approximation instructions.

	   rsqrtd
	       Enable	the   double-precision	  reciprocal	square	  root
	       approximation instructions.

	   So,	for example, -mrecip=all,!rsqrtd enables all of	the reciprocal
	   estimate instructions, except for the "FRSQRTE", "XSRSQRTEDP",  and
	   "XVRSQRTEDP"	  instructions	 which	 handle	 the  double-precision
	   reciprocal square root calculations.

       -mrecip-precision
       -mno-recip-precision
	   Assume (do not assume) that the  reciprocal	estimate  instructions
	   provide  higher-precision estimates than is mandated	by the PowerPC
	   ABI.	  Selecting   -mcpu=power6,   -mcpu=power7   or	  -mcpu=power8
	   automatically   selects  -mrecip-precision.	 The  double-precision
	   square root estimate	instructions are not generated by  default  on
	   low-precision  machines, since they do not provide an estimate that
	   converges after three steps.

       -mveclibabi=type
	   Specifies the ABI type to use for vectorizing intrinsics  using  an
	   external  library.	The  only  type	 supported at present is mass,
	   which specifies to use IBM's	 Mathematical  Acceleration  Subsystem
	   (MASS)   libraries	for   vectorizing  intrinsics  using  external
	   libraries.	GCC  currently	emits  calls  to  "acosd2",  "acosf4",
	   "acoshd2",  "acoshf4",  "asind2",  "asinf4",	 "asinhd2", "asinhf4",
	   "atan2d2", "atan2f4",  "atand2",  "atanf4",	"atanhd2",  "atanhf4",
	   "cbrtd2", "cbrtf4", "cosd2",	"cosf4", "coshd2", "coshf4", "erfcd2",
	   "erfcf4",  "erfd2",	"erff4", "exp2d2", "exp2f4", "expd2", "expf4",
	   "expm1d2", "expm1f4", "hypotd2", "hypotf4", "lgammad2", "lgammaf4",
	   "log10d2", "log10f4",  "log1pd2",  "log1pf4",  "log2d2",  "log2f4",
	   "logd2",  "logf4",  "powd2",	 "powf4",  "sind2", "sinf4", "sinhd2",
	   "sinhf4",  "sqrtd2",	 "sqrtf4",  "tand2",  "tanf4",	"tanhd2",  and
	   "tanhf4"  when  generating  code for	power7.	 Both -ftree-vectorize
	   and -funsafe-math-optimizations must	also  be  enabled.   The  MASS
	   libraries must be specified at link time.

       -mfriz
       -mno-friz
	   Generate   (do  not	generate)  the	"friz"	instruction  when  the
	   -funsafe-math-optimizations option is used to optimize rounding  of
	   floating-point values to 64-bit integer and back to floating	point.
	   The	"friz"	instruction  does  not	return	the  same value	if the
	   floating-point number is too	large to fit in	an integer.

       -mpointers-to-nested-functions
       -mno-pointers-to-nested-functions
	   Generate (do	not  generate)	code  to  load	up  the	 static	 chain
	   register  ("r11")  when calling through a pointer on	AIX and	64-bit
	   Linux  systems  where  a  function  pointer	points	to  a	3-word
	   descriptor  giving  the function address, TOC value to be loaded in
	   register "r2", and static chain value  to  be  loaded  in  register
	   "r11".   The	 -mpointers-to-nested-functions	is on by default.  You
	   cannot call through pointers	to nested  functions  or  pointers  to
	   functions  compiled in other	languages that use the static chain if
	   you use -mno-pointers-to-nested-functions.

       -msave-toc-indirect
       -mno-save-toc-indirect
	   Generate (do	not generate) code  to	save  the  TOC	value  in  the
	   reserved  stack  location  in the function prologue if the function
	   calls through a pointer on AIX and 64-bit Linux  systems.   If  the
	   TOC value is	not saved in the prologue, it is saved just before the
	   call	through	the pointer.  The -mno-save-toc-indirect option	is the
	   default.

       -mcompat-align-parm
       -mno-compat-align-parm
	   Generate (do	not generate) code to pass structure parameters	with a
	   maximum alignment of	64 bits, for compatibility with	older versions
	   of GCC.

	   Older  versions of GCC (prior to 4.9.0) incorrectly did not align a
	   structure parameter on  a  128-bit  boundary	 when  that  structure
	   contained  a	member requiring 128-bit alignment.  This is corrected
	   in more recent versions  of	GCC.   This  option  may  be  used  to
	   generate code that is compatible with functions compiled with older
	   versions of GCC.

	   The -mno-compat-align-parm option is	the default.

       -mstack-protector-guard=guard
       -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
       -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset
       -mstack-protector-guard-symbol=symbol
	   Generate  stack  protection	code using canary at guard.  Supported
	   locations are global	for global canary or tls for per-thread	canary
	   in the TLS block (the default with GNU libc version 2.4 or later).

	   With	the latter choice the options  -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   and -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset furthermore specify which
	   register  to	 use as	base register for reading the canary, and from
	   what	offset from that base register.	The default for	 those	is  as
	   specified	       in	   the		relevant	  ABI.
	   -mstack-protector-guard-symbol=symbol overrides the offset  with  a
	   symbol reference to a canary	in the TLS block.

       -mpcrel
       -mno-pcrel
	   Generate  (do  not  generate)  pc-relative addressing.  The -mpcrel
	   option requires that	the medium code	 model	(-mcmodel=medium)  and
	   prefixed addressing (-mprefixed) options are	enabled.

       -mprefixed
       -mno-prefixed
	   Generate (do	not generate) addressing modes using prefixed load and
	   store instructions.	The -mprefixed option requires that the	option
	   -mcpu=power10 (or later) is enabled.

       -mmma
       -mno-mma
	   Generate  (do  not generate)	the MMA	instructions.  The -mma	option
	   requires that the option -mcpu=power10 (or later) is	enabled.

       -mrop-protect
       -mno-rop-protect
	   Generate (do	not generate) ROP  protection  instructions  when  the
	   target processor supports them.  Currently this option disables the
	   shrink-wrap optimization (-fshrink-wrap).

       -mprivileged
       -mno-privileged
	   Generate (do	not generate) code that	will run in privileged state.

       -mblock-ops-unaligned-vsx
       -mno-block-ops-unaligned-vsx
	   Generate  (do  not  generate)  unaligned  vsx  loads	and stores for
	   inline expansion of "memcpy"	and "memmove".

       --param rs6000-vect-unroll-limit=
	   The vectorizer will check  with  target  information	 to  determine
	   whether  it	would be beneficial to unroll the main vectorized loop
	   and by how much.  This parameter sets the upper bound of  how  much
	   the	vectorizer  will  unroll  the main loop.  The default value is
	   four.

       RX Options

       These command-line options are defined for RX targets:

       -m64bit-doubles
       -m32bit-doubles
	   Make	the "double" data type be 64 bits (-m64bit-doubles) or 32 bits
	   (-m32bit-doubles) in	size.  The default is  -m32bit-doubles.	  Note
	   RX  floating-point  hardware	 only works on 32-bit values, which is
	   why the default is -m32bit-doubles.

       -fpu
       -nofpu
	   Enables (-fpu) or disables (-nofpu) the use	of  RX	floating-point
	   hardware.  The default is enabled for the RX600 series and disabled
	   for the RX200 series.

	   Floating-point instructions are only	generated for 32-bit floating-
	   point  values, however, so the FPU hardware is not used for doubles
	   if the -m64bit-doubles option is used.

	   Note	If the -fpu option is enabled then -funsafe-math-optimizations
	   is  also  enabled  automatically.   This  is	 because  the  RX  FPU
	   instructions	are themselves unsafe.

       -mcpu=name
	   Selects  the	 type of RX CPU	to be targeted.	 Currently three types
	   are supported, the generic RX600 and	RX200 series hardware and  the
	   specific RX610 CPU.	The default is RX600.

	   The	only difference	between	RX600 and RX610	is that	the RX610 does
	   not support the "MVTIPL" instruction.

	   The RX200 series does not have a hardware floating-point  unit  and
	   so -nofpu is	enabled	by default when	this type is selected.

       -mbig-endian-data
       -mlittle-endian-data
	   Store data (but not code) in	the big-endian format.	The default is
	   -mlittle-endian-data,  i.e.	to  store  data	 in  the little-endian
	   format.

       -msmall-data-limit=N
	   Specifies the maximum size in bytes of global and static  variables
	   which can be	placed into the	small data area.  Using	the small data
	   area	 can  lead to smaller and faster code, but the size of area is
	   limited and it is up	to the programmer to ensure that the area does
	   not overflow.  Also when the	small data area	is  used  one  of  the
	   RX's	registers (usually "r13") is reserved for use pointing to this
	   area,  so  it is no longer available	for use	by the compiler.  This
	   could result	in slower and/or larger	code if	variables  are	pushed
	   onto	the stack instead of being held	in this	register.

	   Note,  common  variables (variables that have not been initialized)
	   and constants are not placed	into the small data area as  they  are
	   assigned to other sections in the output executable.

	   The default value is	zero, which disables this feature.  Note, this
	   feature  is	not enabled by default with higher optimization	levels
	   (-O2	 etc)  because	of  the	 potentially  detrimental  effects  of
	   reserving a register.  It is	up to the programmer to	experiment and
	   discover  whether this feature is of	benefit	to their program.  See
	   the description of the -mpid	option for a description  of  how  the
	   actual register to hold the small data area pointer is chosen.

       -msim
       -mno-sim
	   Use	the  simulator	runtime.   The	default	is to use the libgloss
	   board-specific runtime.

       -mas100-syntax
       -mno-as100-syntax
	   When	generating assembler output use	a syntax  that	is  compatible
	   with	Renesas's AS100	assembler.  This syntax	can also be handled by
	   the	GAS  assembler,	 but  it  has  some  restrictions so it	is not
	   generated by	default.

       -mmax-constant-size=N
	   Specifies the maximum size, in bytes, of a  constant	 that  can  be
	   used	  as  an  operand  in  a  RX  instruction.   Although  the  RX
	   instruction set does	allow constants	of up to 4 bytes in length  to
	   be  used  in	 instructions,	a  longer  value  equates  to a	longer
	   instruction.	 Thus in some circumstances it can  be	beneficial  to
	   restrict  the  size	of  constants  that  are used in instructions.
	   Constants that are too big are instead placed into a	constant  pool
	   and referenced via register indirection.

	   The	value N	can be between 0 and 4.	 A value of 0 (the default) or
	   4 means that	constants of any size are allowed.

       -mrelax
	   Enable linker relaxation.  Linker relaxation	is a  process  whereby
	   the	linker	attempts  to  reduce  the size of a program by finding
	   shorter versions of various instructions.  Disabled by default.

       -mint-register=N
	   Specify the number of  registers  to	 reserve  for  fast  interrupt
	   handler functions.  The value N can be between 0 and	4.  A value of
	   1  means  that  register "r13" is reserved for the exclusive	use of
	   fast	interrupt handlers.  A value of	2 reserves "r13" and "r12".  A
	   value of 3 reserves "r13", "r12"  and  "r11",  and  a  value	 of  4
	   reserves  "r13" through "r10".  A value of 0, the default, does not
	   reserve any registers.

       -msave-acc-in-interrupts
	   Specifies that interrupt  handler  functions	 should	 preserve  the
	   accumulator	register.  This	is only	necessary if normal code might
	   use the accumulator	register,  for	example	 because  it  performs
	   64-bit  multiplications.   The default is to	ignore the accumulator
	   as this makes the interrupt handlers	faster.

       -mpid
       -mno-pid
	   Enables the generation of position independent data.	 When  enabled
	   any	access	to  constant  data  is	done via an offset from	a base
	   address held	in a register.	This allows the	location  of  constant
	   data	 to be determined at run time without requiring	the executable
	   to be relocated, which is a benefit to embedded  applications  with
	   tight  memory  constraints.	 Data  that  can  be  modified	is not
	   affected by this option.

	   Note, using this feature reserves a register,  usually  "r13",  for
	   the	constant  data base address.  This can result in slower	and/or
	   larger code,	especially in complicated functions.

	   The actual register chosen to hold the constant data	 base  address
	   depends    upon   whether   the   -msmall-data-limit	  and/or   the
	   -mint-register command-line options	are  enabled.	Starting  with
	   register  "r13"  and	 proceeding downwards, registers are allocated
	   first to satisfy the	requirements of	-mint-register,	then -mpid and
	   finally -msmall-data-limit.	Thus it	is possible for	the small data
	   area	register to be "r8" if both  -mint-register=4  and  -mpid  are
	   specified on	the command line.

	   By  default	this  feature  is  not	enabled.   The	default	can be
	   restored via	the -mno-pid command-line option.

       -mno-warn-multiple-fast-interrupts
       -mwarn-multiple-fast-interrupts
	   Prevents GCC	from issuing a warning message if it finds  more  than
	   one	fast  interrupt	 handler  when	it  is	compiling a file.  The
	   default is to issue a warning for each extra	fast interrupt handler
	   found, as the RX only supports one such interrupt.

       -mallow-string-insns
       -mno-allow-string-insns
	   Enables or disables the use of the string manipulation instructions
	   "SMOVF", "SCMPU", "SMOVB", "SMOVU", "SUNTIL"	"SWHILE" and also  the
	   "RMPA" instruction.	These instructions may prefetch	data, which is
	   not	safe  to do if accessing an I/O	register.  (See	section	12.2.7
	   of the RX62N	Group User's Manual for	more information).

	   The default is to allow these instructions, but it is not  possible
	   for	GCC  to	 reliably  detect  all	circumstances  where  a	string
	   instruction might be	used to	access an I/O register,	so  their  use
	   cannot  be  disabled	automatically.	Instead	it is reliant upon the
	   programmer to  use  the  -mno-allow-string-insns  option  if	 their
	   program accesses I/O	space.

	   When	 the  instructions  are	enabled	GCC defines the	C preprocessor
	   symbol "__RX_ALLOW_STRING_INSNS__", otherwise it defines the	symbol
	   "__RX_DISALLOW_STRING_INSNS__".

       -mjsr
       -mno-jsr
	   Use only (or	not only)  "JSR"  instructions	to  access  functions.
	   This	 option	 can be	used when code size exceeds the	range of "BSR"
	   instructions.  Note that -mno-jsr does not mean to  not  use	 "JSR"
	   but instead means that any type of branch may be used.

       Note:  The  generic  GCC	 command-line  option  -ffixed-reg has special
       significance to the RX port when	used  with  the	 "interrupt"  function
       attribute.   This  attribute  indicates	a function intended to process
       fast interrupts.	 GCC ensures that it only uses	the  registers	"r10",
       "r11",  "r12" and/or "r13" and only provided that the normal use	of the
       corresponding registers have been restricted  via  the  -ffixed-reg  or
       -mint-register command-line options.

       S/390 and zSeries Options

       These   are   the   -m  options	defined	 for  the  S/390  and  zSeries
       architecture.

       -mhard-float
       -msoft-float
	   Use (do not	use)  the  hardware  floating-point  instructions  and
	   registers  for  floating-point  operations.	 When  -msoft-float is
	   specified, functions	in libgcc.a are	used to	perform	floating-point
	   operations.	When -mhard-float is specified,	the compiler generates
	   IEEE	floating-point instructions.  This is the default.

       -mhard-dfp
       -mno-hard-dfp
	   Use (do not use) the	hardware  decimal-floating-point  instructions
	   for	 decimal-floating-point	 operations.   When  -mno-hard-dfp  is
	   specified, functions	in  libgcc.a  are  used	 to  perform  decimal-
	   floating-point  operations.	 When  -mhard-dfp  is  specified,  the
	   compiler generates  decimal-floating-point  hardware	 instructions.
	   This	is the default for -march=z9-ec	or higher.

       -mlong-double-64
       -mlong-double-128
	   These switches control the size of "long double" type. A size of 64
	   bits	 makes the "long double" type equivalent to the	"double" type.
	   This	is the default.

       -mbackchain
       -mno-backchain
	   Store (do not store)	the address of the caller's frame as backchain
	   pointer into	the callee's stack frame.  A backchain may  be	needed
	   to  allow  debugging	 using tools that do not understand DWARF call
	   frame  information.	 When  -mno-packed-stack  is  in  effect,  the
	   backchain  pointer is stored	at the bottom of the stack frame; when
	   -mpacked-stack is in	effect,	 the  backchain	 is  placed  into  the
	   topmost word	of the 96/160 byte register save area.

	   In  general,	code compiled with -mbackchain is call-compatible with
	   code	compiled with -mno-backchain; however, use  of	the  backchain
	   for	debugging  purposes  usually requires that the whole binary is
	   built with -mbackchain.  Note that the combination of  -mbackchain,
	   -mpacked-stack  and	-mhard-float  is  not  supported.  In order to
	   build a linux kernel	use -msoft-float.

	   The default is to not maintain the backchain.

       -mpacked-stack
       -mno-packed-stack
	   Use (do not use) the	packed stack layout.   When  -mno-packed-stack
	   is  specified,  the compiler	uses the all fields of the 96/160 byte
	   register save area only for their default  purpose;	unused	fields
	   still  take	up  stack  space.   When  -mpacked-stack is specified,
	   register save slots are densely packed at the top of	 the  register
	   save	 area; unused space is reused for other	purposes, allowing for
	   more	efficient use of the available	stack  space.	However,  when
	   -mbackchain is also in effect, the topmost word of the save area is
	   always used to store	the backchain, and the return address register
	   is always saved two words below the backchain.

	   As  long  as	 the stack frame backchain is not used,	code generated
	   with	-mpacked-stack is call-compatible  with	 code  generated  with
	   -mno-packed-stack.  Note that some non-FSF releases of GCC 2.95 for
	   S/390 or zSeries generated code that	uses the stack frame backchain
	   at  run  time,  not	just for debugging purposes.  Such code	is not
	   call-compatible with	code compiled with -mpacked-stack.  Also, note
	   that	  the	combination   of   -mbackchain,	  -mpacked-stack   and
	   -mhard-float	 is  not  supported.  In order to build	a linux	kernel
	   use -msoft-float.

	   The default is to not use the packed	stack layout.

       -msmall-exec
       -mno-small-exec
	   Generate (or	do not generate) code using the	"bras" instruction  to
	   do  subroutine  calls.   This  only	works  reliably	 if  the total
	   executable size does	not exceed 64k.	 The default  is  to  use  the
	   "basr" instruction instead, which does not have this	limitation.

       -m64
       -m31
	   When	 -m31  is  specified, generate code compliant to the GNU/Linux
	   for S/390 ABI.  When	-m64 is	specified, generate code compliant  to
	   the	GNU/Linux  for	zSeries	ABI.  This allows GCC in particular to
	   generate 64-bit instructions.  For the s390 targets,	the default is
	   -m31, while the s390x targets default to -m64.

       -mzarch
       -mesa
	   When	-mzarch	is specified, generate	code  using  the  instructions
	   available  on  z/Architecture.   When  -mesa	is specified, generate
	   code	using the instructions available on ESA/390.  Note that	 -mesa
	   is  not  possible with -m64.	 When generating code compliant	to the
	   GNU/Linux for S/390 ABI, the	default	 is  -mesa.   When  generating
	   code	 compliant  to	the  GNU/Linux for zSeries ABI,	the default is
	   -mzarch.

       -mhtm
       -mno-htm
	   The	-mhtm  option  enables	a  set	of  builtins  making  use   of
	   instructions	 available  with  the transactional execution facility
	   introduced with the IBM zEnterprise EC12 machine  generation	 S/390
	   System  z  Built-in	Functions.   -mhtm  is enabled by default when
	   using -march=zEC12.

       -mvx
       -mno-vx
	   When	-mvx  is  specified,  generate	code  using  the  instructions
	   available  with  the	 vector	extension facility introduced with the
	   IBM z13 machine generation.	This option changes the	ABI  for  some
	   vector   type   values   with   regard  to  alignment  and  calling
	   conventions.	 In case vector	type values are	being used in an  ABI-
	   relevant context a GAS .gnu_attribute command will be added to mark
	   the resulting binary	with the ABI used.  -mvx is enabled by default
	   when	using -march=z13.

       -mzvector
       -mno-zvector
	   The	 -mzvector  option  enables  vector  language  extensions  and
	   builtins using instructions available  with	the  vector  extension
	   facility  introduced	 with  the  IBM	 z13 machine generation.  This
	   option adds support for vector to be	used as	a  keyword  to	define
	   vector type variables and arguments.	 vector	is only	available when
	   GNU	 extensions  are  enabled.   It	 will  not  be	expanded  when
	   requesting strict  standard	compliance  e.g.  with	-std=c99.   In
	   addition  to	 the GCC low-level builtins -mzvector enables a	set of
	   builtins added for compatibility with AltiVec-style implementations
	   like	Power and Cell.	 In order to make use of  these	 builtins  the
	   header  file	 vecintrin.h  needs  to	 be  included.	 -mzvector  is
	   disabled by default.

       -mmvcle
       -mno-mvcle
	   Generate (or	do not generate) code using the	"mvcle"	instruction to
	   perform block moves.	 When -mno-mvcle is  specified,	 use  a	 "mvc"
	   loop	instead.  This is the default unless optimizing	for size.

       -mdebug
       -mno-debug
	   Print   (or	 do  not  print)  additional  debug  information  when
	   compiling.  The default is to not print debug information.

       -march=cpu-type
	   Generate code that runs on cpu-type,	which is the name of a	system
	   representing	 a  certain  processor type.  Possible values for cpu-
	   type	are z900/arch5,	z990/arch6,  z9-109,  z9-ec/arch7,  z10/arch8,
	   z196/arch9,	zEC12, z13/arch11, z14/arch12, z15/arch13, z16/arch14,
	   and native.

	   The default is -march=z900.

	   Specifying native as	cpu type  can  be  used	 to  select  the  best
	   architecture	 option	 for the host processor.  -march=native	has no
	   effect if GCC does not recognize the	processor.

       -mtune=cpu-type
	   Tune	to cpu-type everything applicable about	 the  generated	 code,
	   except for the ABI and the set of available instructions.  The list
	   of  cpu-type	 values	is the same as for -march.  The	default	is the
	   value used for -march.

       -mtpf-trace
       -mno-tpf-trace
	   Generate code that adds (does not add) in TPF OS specific  branches
	   to  trace  routines in the operating	system.	 This option is	off by
	   default, even when compiling	for the	TPF OS.

       -mtpf-trace-skip
       -mno-tpf-trace-skip
	   Generate code that changes (does not	 change)  the  default	branch
	   targets  enabled  by	 -mtpf-trace  to  point	 to  specialized trace
	   routines providing the ability  of  selectively  skipping  function
	   trace  entries for the TPF OS.  This	option is off by default, even
	   when	compiling for the TPF OS and specifying	-mtpf-trace.

       -mfused-madd
       -mno-fused-madd
	   Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point  multiply
	   and	accumulate  instructions.  These instructions are generated by
	   default if hardware floating	point is used.

       -mwarn-framesize=framesize
	   Emit	a warning if the current  function  exceeds  the  given	 frame
	   size.  Because this is a compile-time check it doesn't need to be a
	   real	 problem  when	the  program runs.  It is intended to identify
	   functions that most probably	cause a	stack overflow.	 It is	useful
	   to be used in an environment	with limited stack size	e.g. the linux
	   kernel.

       -mwarn-dynamicstack
	   Emit	 a warning if the function calls "alloca" or uses dynamically-
	   sized arrays.  This is generally a bad idea with  a	limited	 stack
	   size.

       -mstack-guard=stack-guard
       -mstack-size=stack-size
	   If  these  options are provided the S/390 back end emits additional
	   instructions	in the function	prologue that trigger a	 trap  if  the
	   stack size is stack-guard bytes above the stack-size	(remember that
	   the	stack  on S/390	grows downward).  If the stack-guard option is
	   omitted the smallest	power of 2 larger than the frame size  of  the
	   compiled function is	chosen.	 These options are intended to be used
	   to  help  debugging	stack  overflow	 problems.   The  additionally
	   emitted code	causes only little overhead and	hence can also be used
	   in production-like systems without greater performance degradation.
	   The given values have to be exact powers of 2 and stack-size	has to
	   be greater than stack-guard without exceeding 64k.  In order	to  be
	   efficient the extra code makes the assumption that the stack	starts
	   at an address aligned to the	value given by stack-size.  The	stack-
	   guard option	can only be used in conjunction	with stack-size.

       -mhotpatch=pre-halfwords,post-halfwords
	   If  the  hotpatch  option  is  enabled,  a  "hot-patching" function
	   prologue is generated for all functions in  the  compilation	 unit.
	   The	funtion	 label	is prepended with the given number of two-byte
	   NOP	instructions  (pre-halfwords,  maximum	1000000).   After  the
	   label, 2 * post-halfwords bytes are appended, using the largest NOP
	   like	instructions the architecture allows (maximum 1000000).

	   If both arguments are zero, hotpatching is disabled.

	   This	 option	 can  be  overridden for individual functions with the
	   "hotpatch" attribute.

       SH Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the SH implementations:

       -m1 Generate code for the SH1.

       -m2 Generate code for the SH2.

       -m2e
	   Generate code for the SH2e.

       -m2a-nofpu
	   Generate code for the SH2a without FPU, or for a SH2a-FPU in	such a
	   way that the	floating-point unit is not used.

       -m2a-single-only
	   Generate code for the SH2a-FPU, in  such  a	way  that  no  double-
	   precision floating-point operations are used.

       -m2a-single
	   Generate  code for the SH2a-FPU assuming the	floating-point unit is
	   in single-precision mode by default.

       -m2a
	   Generate code for the SH2a-FPU assuming the floating-point unit  is
	   in double-precision mode by default.

       -m3 Generate code for the SH3.

       -m3e
	   Generate code for the SH3e.

       -m4-nofpu
	   Generate code for the SH4 without a floating-point unit.

       -m4-single-only
	   Generate  code  for	the  SH4  with a floating-point	unit that only
	   supports single-precision arithmetic.

       -m4-single
	   Generate code for the SH4 assuming the floating-point  unit	is  in
	   single-precision mode by default.

       -m4 Generate code for the SH4.

       -m4-100
	   Generate code for SH4-100.

       -m4-100-nofpu
	   Generate  code  for	SH4-100	 in such a way that the	floating-point
	   unit	is not used.

       -m4-100-single
	   Generate code for SH4-100 assuming the floating-point  unit	is  in
	   single-precision mode by default.

       -m4-100-single-only
	   Generate  code  for	SH4-100	in such	a way that no double-precision
	   floating-point operations are used.

       -m4-200
	   Generate code for SH4-200.

       -m4-200-nofpu
	   Generate code for SH4-200 without in	such a way that	the  floating-
	   point unit is not used.

       -m4-200-single
	   Generate  code  for	SH4-200	assuming the floating-point unit is in
	   single-precision mode by default.

       -m4-200-single-only
	   Generate code for SH4-200 in	such a way  that  no  double-precision
	   floating-point operations are used.

       -m4-300
	   Generate code for SH4-300.

       -m4-300-nofpu
	   Generate  code for SH4-300 without in such a	way that the floating-
	   point unit is not used.

       -m4-300-single
	   Generate code for SH4-300 in	such a way  that  no  double-precision
	   floating-point operations are used.

       -m4-300-single-only
	   Generate  code  for	SH4-300	in such	a way that no double-precision
	   floating-point operations are used.

       -m4-340
	   Generate code for SH4-340 (no MMU, no FPU).

       -m4-500
	   Generate code for SH4-500 (no FPU).	Passes -isa=sh4-nofpu  to  the
	   assembler.

       -m4a-nofpu
	   Generate  code  for the SH4al-dsp, or for a SH4a in such a way that
	   the floating-point unit is not used.

       -m4a-single-only
	   Generate code for the SH4a, in such a way that no  double-precision
	   floating-point operations are used.

       -m4a-single
	   Generate  code  for the SH4a	assuming the floating-point unit is in
	   single-precision mode by default.

       -m4a
	   Generate code for the SH4a.

       -m4al
	   Same	as -m4a-nofpu, except that it implicitly passes	 -dsp  to  the
	   assembler.	GCC  doesn't  generate	any  DSP  instructions	at the
	   moment.

       -mb Compile code	for the	processor in big-endian	mode.

       -ml Compile code	for the	processor in little-endian mode.

       -mdalign
	   Align doubles at 64-bit boundaries.	Note  that  this  changes  the
	   calling  conventions,  and  thus some functions from	the standard C
	   library do not work unless you recompile it first with -mdalign.

       -mrelax
	   Shorten some	address	references at link time, when  possible;  uses
	   the linker option -relax.

       -mbigtable
	   Use	32-bit	offsets	 in  "switch"  tables.	 The default is	to use
	   16-bit offsets.

       -mbitops
	   Enable the use of bit manipulation instructions on SH2A.

       -mfmovd
	   Enable the use of the  instruction  "fmovd".	  Check	 -mdalign  for
	   alignment constraints.

       -mrenesas
	   Comply with the calling conventions defined by Renesas.

       -mno-renesas
	   Comply  with	 the  calling  conventions  defined for	GCC before the
	   Renesas conventions were available.	This option is the default for
	   all targets of the SH toolchain.

       -mnomacsave
	   Mark	the "MAC" register as call-clobbered,  even  if	 -mrenesas  is
	   given.

       -mieee
       -mno-ieee
	   Control  the	 IEEE  compliance of floating-point comparisons, which
	   affects the handling	of cases where the result of a	comparison  is
	   unordered.	 By   default	-mieee	 is  implicitly	 enabled.   If
	   -ffinite-math-only is enabled -mno-ieee is  implicitly  set,	 which
	   results  in	faster	floating-point	greater-equal  and  less-equal
	   comparisons.	 The implicit settings can be overridden by specifying
	   either -mieee or -mno-ieee.

       -minline-ic_invalidate
	   Inline code to invalidate instruction cache entries	after  setting
	   up  nested  function	 trampolines.	This  option  has no effect if
	   -musermode is in effect and the  selected  code  generation	option
	   (e.g.  -m4)	does  not allow	the use	of the "icbi" instruction.  If
	   the selected	code generation	option does not	allow the use  of  the
	   "icbi"  instruction,	 and  -musermode is not	in effect, the inlined
	   code	manipulates the	instruction cache address array	directly  with
	   an  associative  write.   This not only requires privileged mode at
	   run time, but it also fails if the cache line had been  mapped  via
	   the TLB and has become unmapped.

       -misize
	   Dump	instruction size and location in the assembly code.

       -mpadstruct
	   This	 option	 is  deprecated.   It pads structures to multiple of 4
	   bytes, which	is incompatible	with the SH ABI.

       -matomic-model=model
	   Sets	the model of atomic operations and additional parameters as  a
	   comma separated list.  For details on the atomic built-in functions
	   see	__atomic  Builtins.   The  following models and	parameters are
	   supported:

	   none
	       Disable compiler	generated atomic sequences  and	 emit  library
	       calls for atomic	operations.  This is the default if the	target
	       is not "sh*-*-linux*".

	   soft-gusa
	       Generate	 GNU/Linux  compatible	gUSA software atomic sequences
	       for  the	 atomic	 built-in  functions.	The  generated	atomic
	       sequences     require	 additional	support	   from	   the
	       interrupt/exception handling code of the	system	and  are  only
	       suitable	for SH3* and SH4* single-core systems.	This option is
	       enabled	by  default when the target is "sh*-*-linux*" and SH3*
	       or SH4*.	 When the target is SH4A, this option  also  partially
	       utilizes	  the	hardware  atomic  instructions	"movli.l"  and
	       "movco.l" to create  more  efficient  code,  unless  strict  is
	       specified.

	   soft-tcb
	       Generate	 software  atomic sequences that use a variable	in the
	       thread  control	block.	 This  is  a  variation	 of  the  gUSA
	       sequences which can also	be used	on SH1*	and SH2* targets.  The
	       generated  atomic sequences require additional support from the
	       interrupt/exception handling code of the	system	and  are  only
	       suitable	 for  single-core systems.  When using this model, the
	       gbr-offset= parameter has to be specified as well.

	   soft-imask
	       Generate	software atomic	 sequences  that  temporarily  disable
	       interrupts by setting "SR.IMASK = 1111".	 This model works only
	       when  the  program runs in privileged mode and is only suitable
	       for  single-core	 systems.    Additional	  support   from   the
	       interrupt/exception   handling	code  of  the  system  is  not
	       required.  This model is	enabled	by default when	the target  is
	       "sh*-*-linux*" and SH1* or SH2*.

	   hard-llcs
	       Generate	 hardware  atomic  sequences  using  the "movli.l" and
	       "movco.l" instructions only.  This is only  available  on  SH4A
	       and  is	suitable  for  multi-core systems.  Since the hardware
	       instructions support only 32 bit	atomic variables access	 to  8
	       or  16  bit  variables  is emulated with	32 bit accesses.  Code
	       compiled	 with  this  option  is	 also  compatible  with	 other
	       software	 atomic	 model interrupt/exception handling systems if
	       executed	on  an	SH4A  system.	Additional  support  from  the
	       interrupt/exception handling code of the	system is not required
	       for this	model.

	   gbr-offset=
	       This parameter specifies	the offset in bytes of the variable in
	       the  thread  control block structure that should	be used	by the
	       generated atomic	sequences when the  soft-tcb  model  has  been
	       selected.   For	other  models  this parameter is ignored.  The
	       specified value must be an integer multiple of four and in  the
	       range 0-1020.

	   strict
	       This  parameter prevents	mixed usage of multiple	atomic models,
	       even if they are	compatible, and	makes  the  compiler  generate
	       atomic sequences	of the specified model only.

       -mtas
	   Generate  the  "tas.b"  opcode for "__atomic_test_and_set".	Notice
	   that	 depending   on	  the	particular   hardware	and   software
	   configuration  this	can  degrade  overall  performance  due	to the
	   operand  cache  line	 flushes  that	are  implied  by  the  "tas.b"
	   instruction.	 On multi-core SH4A processors the "tas.b" instruction
	   must	 be  used  with	caution	since it can result in data corruption
	   for certain cache configurations.

       -mprefergot
	   When	generating  position-independent  code,	 emit  function	 calls
	   using  the  Global  Offset  Table  instead of the Procedure Linkage
	   Table.

       -musermode
       -mno-usermode
	   Don't allow (allow) the compiler generating privileged  mode	 code.
	   Specifying -musermode also implies -mno-inline-ic_invalidate	if the
	   inlined  code  would	 not  work  in	user  mode.  -musermode	is the
	   default when	the target is "sh*-*-linux*".  If the target  is  SH1*
	   or SH2* -musermode has no effect, since there is no user mode.

       -multcost=number
	   Set the cost	to assume for a	multiply insn.

       -mdiv=strategy
	   Set	 the  division	strategy  to  be  used	for  integer  division
	   operations.	strategy can be	one of:

	   call-div1
	       Calls a library function	that  uses  the	 single-step  division
	       instruction  "div1" to perform the operation.  Division by zero
	       calculates an unspecified result	and does not  trap.   This  is
	       the default except for SH4, SH2A	and SHcompact.

	   call-fp
	       Calls  a	library	function that performs the operation in	double
	       precision floating point.  Division by zero causes a  floating-
	       point  exception.   This	is the default for SHcompact with FPU.
	       Specifying this for targets that	do not have a double precision
	       FPU defaults to "call-div1".

	   call-table
	       Calls a library function	that uses a  lookup  table  for	 small
	       divisors	 and  the "div1" instruction with case distinction for
	       larger divisors.	 Division by zero  calculates  an  unspecified
	       result  and  does  not  trap.   This  is	 the  default for SH4.
	       Specifying this for targets that	 do  not  have	dynamic	 shift
	       instructions defaults to	"call-div1".

	   When	 a  division  strategy	has  not  been	specified  the default
	   strategy is selected	based on the current  target.	For  SH2A  the
	   default  strategy  is  to  use  the	"divs" and "divu" instructions
	   instead of library function calls.

       -maccumulate-outgoing-args
	   Reserve space once for outgoing arguments in	the function  prologue
	   rather than around each call.  Generally beneficial for performance
	   and	size.	Also  needed for unwinding to avoid changing the stack
	   frame around	conditional code.

       -mdivsi3_libfunc=name
	   Set the name	 of  the  library  function  used  for	32-bit	signed
	   division  to	 name.	 This  only  affects the name used in the call
	   division strategies,	and the	compiler still expects the  same  sets
	   of  input/output/clobbered  registers  as  if  this option were not
	   present.

       -mfixed-range=register-range
	   Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers.
	   A fixed register is one that	the  register  allocator  cannot  use.
	   This	 is  useful  when  compiling kernel code.  A register range is
	   specified as	two registers separated	by a dash.  Multiple  register
	   ranges can be specified separated by	a comma.

       -mbranch-cost=num
	   Assume num to be the	cost for a branch instruction.	Higher numbers
	   make	 the  compiler	try  to	 generate  more	 branch-free  code  if
	   possible.  If not specified the value is selected depending on  the
	   processor type that is being	compiled for.

       -mzdcbranch
       -mno-zdcbranch
	   Assume  (do	not  assume) that zero displacement conditional	branch
	   instructions	"bt" and "bf" are fast.	 If -mzdcbranch	is  specified,
	   the compiler	prefers	zero displacement branch code sequences.  This
	   is  enabled	by  default when generating code for SH4 and SH4A.  It
	   can be explicitly disabled by specifying -mno-zdcbranch.

       -mcbranch-force-delay-slot
	   Force the usage of delay  slots  for	 conditional  branches,	 which
	   stuffs the delay slot with a	"nop" if a suitable instruction	cannot
	   be  found.	By default this	option is disabled.  It	can be enabled
	   to work around hardware bugs	as found in the	original SH7055.

       -mfused-madd
       -mno-fused-madd
	   Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point  multiply
	   and	accumulate  instructions.  These instructions are generated by
	   default if hardware floating	point is used.	The  machine-dependent
	   -mfused-madd	 option	 is  now  mapped  to  the  machine-independent
	   -ffp-contract=fast  option,	and  -mno-fused-madd  is   mapped   to
	   -ffp-contract=off.

       -mfsca
       -mno-fsca
	   Allow  or  disallow the compiler to emit the	"fsca" instruction for
	   sine	and cosine approximations.  The	option -mfsca must be used  in
	   combination	with  -funsafe-math-optimizations.   It	 is enabled by
	   default when	generating code	for SH4A.   Using  -mno-fsca  disables
	   sine	 and cosine approximations even	if -funsafe-math-optimizations
	   is in effect.

       -mfsrra
       -mno-fsrra
	   Allow or disallow the compiler to emit the "fsrra" instruction  for
	   reciprocal  square root approximations.  The	option -mfsrra must be
	   used	  in   combination   with   -funsafe-math-optimizations	   and
	   -ffinite-math-only.	 It is enabled by default when generating code
	   for	SH4A.	Using  -mno-fsrra  disables  reciprocal	 square	  root
	   approximations     even    if    -funsafe-math-optimizations	   and
	   -ffinite-math-only are in effect.

       -mpretend-cmove
	   Prefer zero-displacement conditional	branches for conditional  move
	   instruction	patterns.   This  can result in	faster code on the SH4
	   processor.

       -mfdpic
	   Generate code using the FDPIC ABI.

       Solaris 2 Options

       These -m	options	are supported on Solaris 2:

       -mclear-hwcap
	   -mclear-hwcap  tells	 the   compiler	  to   remove	the   hardware
	   capabilities	 generated  by	the  Solaris  assembler.  This is only
	   necessary when object files use ISA extensions not supported	by the
	   current machine, but	check at runtime whether or not	to use them.

       -mimpure-text
	   -mimpure-text, used in addition to -shared, tells the  compiler  to
	   not pass -z text to the linker when linking a shared	object.	 Using
	   this	 option,  you  can  link position-dependent code into a	shared
	   object.

	   -mimpure-text   suppresses	the   "relocations   remain    against
	   allocatable	 but  non-writable  sections"  linker  error  message.
	   However, the	necessary relocations trigger copy-on-write,  and  the
	   shared  object is not actually shared across	processes.  Instead of
	   using -mimpure-text,	you should compile all source code with	 -fpic
	   or -fPIC.

       These switches are supported in addition	to the above on	Solaris	2:

       -pthreads
	   This	is a synonym for -pthread.

       SPARC Options

       These -m	options	are supported on the SPARC:

       -mno-app-regs
       -mapp-regs
	   Specify  -mapp-regs to generate output using	the global registers 2
	   through 4, which the	SPARC  SVR4  ABI  reserves  for	 applications.
	   Like	 the  global  register	1, each	global register	2 through 4 is
	   then	treated	as an allocable	register that is clobbered by function
	   calls.  This	is the default.

	   To be fully SVR4 ABI-compliant at  the  cost	 of  some  performance
	   loss,  specify  -mno-app-regs.   You	 should	 compile libraries and
	   system software with	this option.

       -mflat
       -mno-flat
	   With	 -mflat,  the  compiler	  does	 not   generate	  save/restore
	   instructions	 and  uses  a  "flat" or single	register window	model.
	   This	model is compatible with the regular  register	window	model.
	   The	local  registers  and  the  input  registers  (0--5) are still
	   treated as "call-saved" registers and are saved  on	the  stack  as
	   needed.

	   With	 -mno-flat  (the default), the compiler	generates save/restore
	   instructions	(except	for  leaf  functions).	 This  is  the	normal
	   operating mode.

       -mfpu
       -mhard-float
	   Generate  output  containing	 floating-point	instructions.  This is
	   the default.

       -mno-fpu
       -msoft-float
	   Generate  output  containing	 library  calls	 for  floating	point.
	   Warning:  the  requisite  libraries are not available for all SPARC
	   targets.  Normally the facilities of	the machine's usual C compiler
	   are used, but this cannot be	done  directly	in  cross-compilation.
	   You	must  make  your  own arrangements to provide suitable library
	   functions for cross-compilation.  The embedded targets sparc-*-aout
	   and sparclite-*-* do	provide	software floating-point	support.

	   -msoft-float	changes	the calling convention	in  the	 output	 file;
	   therefore,  it  is only useful if you compile all of	a program with
	   this	option.	 In particular,	you  need  to  compile	libgcc.a,  the
	   library that	comes with GCC,	with -msoft-float in order for this to
	   work.

       -mhard-quad-float
	   Generate  output  containing	quad-word (long	double)	floating-point
	   instructions.

       -msoft-quad-float
	   Generate  output  containing	 library  calls	 for  quad-word	 (long
	   double)  floating-point  instructions.   The	 functions  called are
	   those specified in the SPARC	ABI.  This is the default.

	   As of this writing, there are no SPARC  implementations  that  have
	   hardware  support  for  the	quad-word floating-point instructions.
	   They	all invoke a trap handler for one of these  instructions,  and
	   then	 the  trap  handler  emulates  the  effect of the instruction.
	   Because of the trap handler overhead,  this	is  much  slower  than
	   calling  the	 ABI  library  routines.   Thus	 the -msoft-quad-float
	   option is the default.

       -mno-unaligned-doubles
       -munaligned-doubles
	   Assume that doubles have 8-byte alignment.  This is the default.

	   With	-munaligned-doubles, GCC  assumes  that	 doubles  have	8-byte
	   alignment  only  if	they are contained in another type, or if they
	   have	an absolute address.  Otherwise, it assumes they  have	4-byte
	   alignment.	Specifying  this option	avoids some rare compatibility
	   problems with code generated	by other compilers.   It  is  not  the
	   default  because  it	 results in a performance loss,	especially for
	   floating-point code.

       -muser-mode
       -mno-user-mode
	   Do not generate code	that can only run in supervisor	mode.  This is
	   relevant only for the "casa"	 instruction  emitted  for  the	 LEON3
	   processor.  This is the default.

       -mfaster-structs
       -mno-faster-structs
	   With	 -mfaster-structs, the compiler	assumes	that structures	should
	   have	8-byte alignment.  This	enables	the use	of pairs of "ldd"  and
	   "std"  instructions for copies in structure assignment, in place of
	   twice as many "ld" and  "st"	 pairs.	  However,  the	 use  of  this
	   changed  alignment  directly	 violates  the	SPARC ABI.  Thus, it's
	   intended only for use on targets where the  developer  acknowledges
	   that	their resulting	code is	not directly in	line with the rules of
	   the ABI.

       -mstd-struct-return
       -mno-std-struct-return
	   With	 -mstd-struct-return,  the compiler generates checking code in
	   functions returning structures or unions to detect size  mismatches
	   between the two sides of function calls, as per the 32-bit ABI.

	   The	default	 is -mno-std-struct-return.  This option has no	effect
	   in 64-bit mode.

       -mlra
       -mno-lra
	   Enable Local	Register Allocation.  This is the  default  for	 SPARC
	   since GCC 7 so -mno-lra needs to be passed to get old Reload.

       -mcpu=cpu_type
	   Set	the  instruction set, register set, and	instruction scheduling
	   parameters  for  machine  type  cpu_type.   Supported  values   for
	   cpu_type  are v7, cypress, v8, supersparc, hypersparc, leon,	leon3,
	   leon3v7, leon5,  sparclite,	f930,  f934,  sparclite86x,  sparclet,
	   tsc701,  v9,	 ultrasparc, ultrasparc3, niagara, niagara2, niagara3,
	   niagara4, niagara7 and m8.

	   Native Solaris and GNU/Linux	 toolchains  also  support  the	 value
	   native,  which  selects  the	 best architecture option for the host
	   processor.  -mcpu=native has	no effect if GCC  does	not  recognize
	   the processor.

	   Default  instruction	scheduling parameters are used for values that
	   select an architecture and not an implementation.   These  are  v7,
	   v8, sparclite, sparclet, v9.

	   Here	 is  a list of each supported architecture and their supported
	   implementations.

	   v7  cypress,	leon3v7

	   v8  supersparc, hypersparc, leon, leon3, leon5

	   sparclite
	       f930, f934, sparclite86x

	   sparclet
	       tsc701

	   v9  ultrasparc, ultrasparc3,	niagara, niagara2, niagara3, niagara4,
	       niagara7, m8

	   By default (unless configured otherwise), GCC  generates  code  for
	   the	V7 variant of the SPARC	architecture.  With -mcpu=cypress, the
	   compiler additionally optimizes it for the Cypress CY7C602 chip, as
	   used	in the SPARCStation/SPARCServer	 3xx  series.	This  is  also
	   appropriate for the older SPARCStation 1, 2,	IPX etc.

	   With	 -mcpu=v8,  GCC	generates code for the V8 variant of the SPARC
	   architecture.  The  only  difference	 from  V7  code	 is  that  the
	   compiler emits the integer multiply and integer divide instructions
	   which    exist   in	 SPARC-V8   but	  not	in   SPARC-V7.	  With
	   -mcpu=supersparc, the compiler additionally optimizes  it  for  the
	   SuperSPARC  chip,  as  used	in  the	SPARCStation 10, 1000 and 2000
	   series.

	   With	-mcpu=sparclite, GCC generates code for	the SPARClite  variant
	   of the SPARC	architecture.  This adds the integer multiply, integer
	   divide  step	and scan ("ffs") instructions which exist in SPARClite
	   but not in SPARC-V7.	 With -mcpu=f930,  the	compiler  additionally
	   optimizes  it  for  the Fujitsu MB86930 chip, which is the original
	   SPARClite, with no FPU.  With -mcpu=f934, the compiler additionally
	   optimizes it	for the	Fujitsu	MB86934	chip, which is the more	recent
	   SPARClite with FPU.

	   With	-mcpu=sparclet,	GCC generates code for the SPARClet variant of
	   the	SPARC  architecture.   This   adds   the   integer   multiply,
	   multiply/accumulate,	  integer   divide   step   and	 scan  ("ffs")
	   instructions	which exist in SPARClet	but  not  in  SPARC-V7.	  With
	   -mcpu=tsc701,  the compiler additionally optimizes it for the TEMIC
	   SPARClet chip.

	   With	-mcpu=v9, GCC generates	code for the V9	variant	of  the	 SPARC
	   architecture.   This	 adds  64-bit  integer and floating-point move
	   instructions, 3 additional floating-point condition code  registers
	   and	conditional  move  instructions.   With	 -mcpu=ultrasparc, the
	   compiler additionally optimizes it for the Sun UltraSPARC  I/II/IIi
	   chips.  With	-mcpu=ultrasparc3, the compiler	additionally optimizes
	   it  for  the	Sun UltraSPARC III/III+/IIIi/IIIi+/IV/IV+ chips.  With
	   -mcpu=niagara, the  compiler	 additionally  optimizes  it  for  Sun
	   UltraSPARC	T1   chips.    With   -mcpu=niagara2,	the   compiler
	   additionally	 optimizes  it	for  Sun  UltraSPARC  T2  chips.  With
	   -mcpu=niagara3,  the	 compiler  additionally	 optimizes  it for Sun
	   UltraSPARC	T3   chips.    With   -mcpu=niagara4,	the   compiler
	   additionally	 optimizes  it	for  Sun  UltraSPARC  T4  chips.  With
	   -mcpu=niagara7, the compiler	additionally optimizes it  for	Oracle
	   SPARC M7 chips.  With -mcpu=m8, the compiler	additionally optimizes
	   it for Oracle M8 chips.

       -mtune=cpu_type
	   Set	 the   instruction  scheduling	parameters  for	 machine  type
	   cpu_type, but do not	set the	instruction set	or register  set  that
	   the option -mcpu=cpu_type does.

	   The same values for -mcpu=cpu_type can be used for -mtune=cpu_type,
	   but	the  only useful values	are those that select a	particular CPU
	   implementation.  Those are cypress, supersparc,  hypersparc,	 leon,
	   leon3,   leon3v7,   leon5,	f930,	f934,	sparclite86x,  tsc701,
	   ultrasparc, ultrasparc3,  niagara,  niagara2,  niagara3,  niagara4,
	   niagara7  and  m8.	With  native Solaris and GNU/Linux toolchains,
	   native can also be used.

       -mv8plus
       -mno-v8plus
	   With	-mv8plus, GCC generates	 code  for  the	 SPARC-V8+  ABI.   The
	   difference from the V8 ABI is that the global and out registers are
	   considered  64 bits wide.  This is enabled by default on Solaris in
	   32-bit mode for all SPARC-V9	processors.

       -mvis
       -mno-vis
	   With	 -mvis,	 GCC  generates	 code  that  takes  advantage  of  the
	   UltraSPARC  Visual  Instruction  Set	 extensions.   The  default is
	   -mno-vis.

       -mvis2
       -mno-vis2
	   With	-mvis2,	GCC generates code that	takes advantage	of version 2.0
	   of the UltraSPARC Visual Instruction	Set extensions.	  The  default
	   is  -mvis2  when  targeting	a cpu that supports such instructions,
	   such	as UltraSPARC-III and later.  Setting -mvis2 also sets -mvis.

       -mvis3
       -mno-vis3
	   With	-mvis3,	GCC generates code that	takes advantage	of version 3.0
	   of the UltraSPARC Visual Instruction	Set extensions.	  The  default
	   is  -mvis3  when  targeting	a cpu that supports such instructions,
	   such	as niagara-3 and later.	 Setting -mvis3	also sets  -mvis2  and
	   -mvis.

       -mvis4
       -mno-vis4
	   With	-mvis4,	GCC generates code that	takes advantage	of version 4.0
	   of  the  UltraSPARC Visual Instruction Set extensions.  The default
	   is -mvis4 when targeting a cpu  that	 supports  such	 instructions,
	   such	 as  niagara-7	and  later.   Setting -mvis4 also sets -mvis3,
	   -mvis2 and -mvis.

       -mvis4b
       -mno-vis4b
	   With	-mvis4b, GCC generates code that takes	advantage  of  version
	   4.0	of  the	UltraSPARC Visual Instruction Set extensions, plus the
	   additional  VIS  instructions  introduced  in  the	Oracle	 SPARC
	   Architecture	 2017.	 The  default  is -mvis4b when targeting a cpu
	   that	supports such instructions, such as  m8	 and  later.   Setting
	   -mvis4b also	sets -mvis4, -mvis3, -mvis2 and	-mvis.

       -mcbcond
       -mno-cbcond
	   With	 -mcbcond,  GCC	 generates  code  that	takes advantage	of the
	   UltraSPARC	Compare-and-Branch-on-Condition	  instructions.	   The
	   default  is	-mcbcond  when	targeting  a  CPU  that	 supports such
	   instructions, such as Niagara-4 and later.

       -mfmaf
       -mno-fmaf
	   With	-mfmaf,	 GCC  generates	 code  that  takes  advantage  of  the
	   UltraSPARC  Fused  Multiply-Add  Floating-point  instructions.  The
	   default  is	-mfmaf	when  targeting	 a  CPU	 that  supports	  such
	   instructions, such as Niagara-3 and later.

       -mfsmuld
       -mno-fsmuld
	   With	 -mfsmuld,  GCC	 generates  code  that	takes advantage	of the
	   Floating-point Multiply Single to Double (FsMULd) instruction.  The
	   default  is	-mfsmuld  when	targeting   a	CPU   supporting   the
	   architecture	versions V8 or V9 with FPU except -mcpu=leon.

       -mpopc
       -mno-popc
	   With	 -mpopc,  GCC  generates  code	that  takes  advantage	of the
	   UltraSPARC Population Count instruction.   The  default  is	-mpopc
	   when	 targeting  a  CPU  that supports such an instruction, such as
	   Niagara-2 and later.

       -msubxc
       -mno-subxc
	   With	-msubxc, GCC  generates	 code  that  takes  advantage  of  the
	   UltraSPARC  Subtract-Extended-with-Carry  instruction.  The default
	   is -msubxc when targeting a CPU that	supports such an  instruction,
	   such	as Niagara-7 and later.

       -mfix-at697f
	   Enable  the	documented  workaround	for  the single	erratum	of the
	   Atmel AT697F	processor (which corresponds to	 erratum  #13  of  the
	   AT697E processor).

       -mfix-ut699
	   Enable the documented workarounds for the floating-point errata and
	   the data cache nullify errata of the	UT699 processor.

       -mfix-ut700
	   Enable  the documented workaround for the back-to-back store	errata
	   of the UT699E/UT700 processor.

       -mfix-gr712rc
	   Enable the documented workaround for	the back-to-back store	errata
	   of the GR712RC processor.

       These  -m  options  are	supported in addition to the above on SPARC-V9
       processors in 64-bit environments:

       -m32
       -m64
	   Generate code for a	32-bit	or  64-bit  environment.   The	32-bit
	   environment	sets  int,  long  and  pointer to 32 bits.  The	64-bit
	   environment sets int	to 32 bits and long and	pointer	to 64 bits.

       -mcmodel=which
	   Set the code	model to one of

	   medlow
	       The Medium/Low code model: 64-bit addresses, programs  must  be
	       linked  in  the	low  32	 bits  of  memory.   Programs  can  be
	       statically or dynamically linked.

	   medmid
	       The Medium/Middle code model: 64-bit addresses,	programs  must
	       be  linked  in  the  low	 44  bits of memory, the text and data
	       segments	must be	less than 2GB in size  and  the	 data  segment
	       must be located within 2GB of the text segment.

	   medany
	       The  Medium/Anywhere code model:	64-bit addresses, programs may
	       be linked anywhere in memory, the text and data	segments  must
	       be  less	 than 2GB in size and the data segment must be located
	       within 2GB of the text segment.

	   embmedany
	       The Medium/Anywhere code	model  for  embedded  systems:	64-bit
	       addresses,  the text and	data segments must be less than	2GB in
	       size, both starting anywhere  in	 memory	 (determined  at  link
	       time).	The global register %g4	points to the base of the data
	       segment.	  Programs  are	 statically  linked  and  PIC  is  not
	       supported.

       -mmemory-model=mem-model
	   Set the memory model	in force on the	processor to one of

	   default
	       The  default  memory  model  for	 the  processor	 and operating
	       system.

	   rmo Relaxed Memory Order

	   pso Partial Store Order

	   tso Total Store Order

	   sc  Sequential Consistency

	   These memory	models are formally  defined  in  Appendix  D  of  the
	   SPARC-V9 architecture manual, as set	in the processor's "PSTATE.MM"
	   field.

       -mstack-bias
       -mno-stack-bias
	   With	 -mstack-bias,	GCC  assumes that the stack pointer, and frame
	   pointer if present, are offset by -2047 which must  be  added  back
	   when	 making	stack frame references.	 This is the default in	64-bit
	   mode.  Otherwise, assume no such offset is present.

       Options for System V

       These additional	options	are  available	on  System  V  Release	4  for
       compatibility with other	compilers on those systems:

       -G  Create  a  shared  object.	It  is	recommended  that -symbolic or
	   -shared be used instead.

       -Qy Identify the	versions of each tool  used  by	 the  compiler,	 in  a
	   ".ident" assembler directive	in the output.

       -Qn Refrain from	adding ".ident"	directives to the output file (this is
	   the default).

       -YP,dirs
	   Search the directories dirs,	and no others, for libraries specified
	   with	-l.

       -Ym,dir
	   Look	 in  the  directory  dir  to  find  the	 M4 preprocessor.  The
	   assembler uses this option.

       V850 Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	V850 implementations:

       -mlong-calls
       -mno-long-calls
	   Treat all calls as being far	away (near).  If calls are assumed  to
	   be  far away, the compiler always loads the function's address into
	   a register, and calls indirect through the pointer.

       -mno-ep
       -mep
	   Do not optimize (do optimize) basic blocks that use the same	 index
	   pointer 4 or	more times to copy pointer into	the "ep" register, and
	   use	the  shorter "sld" and "sst" instructions.  The	-mep option is
	   on by default if you	optimize.

       -mno-prolog-function
       -mprolog-function
	   Do not  use	(do  use)  external  functions	to  save  and  restore
	   registers at	the prologue and epilogue of a function.  The external
	   functions  are  slower,  but	 use  less code	space if more than one
	   function saves the same number of registers.	 The -mprolog-function
	   option is on	by default if you optimize.

       -mspace
	   Try to make the code	as small as possible.  At present,  this  just
	   turns on the	-mep and -mprolog-function options.

       -mtda=n
	   Put	static	or global variables whose size is n bytes or less into
	   the tiny data area that register "ep" points	 to.   The  tiny  data
	   area	 can  hold  up	to  256	 bytes	in  total  (128	bytes for byte
	   references).

       -msda=n
	   Put static or global	variables whose	size is	n bytes	or  less  into
	   the	small  data area that register "gp" points to.	The small data
	   area	can hold up to 64 kilobytes.

       -mzda=n
	   Put static or global	variables whose	size is	n bytes	or  less  into
	   the first 32	kilobytes of memory.

       -mv850
	   Specify that	the target processor is	the V850.

       -mv850e3v5
	   Specify   that   the	  target   processor  is  the  V850E3V5.   The
	   preprocessor	constant "__v850e3v5__"	is defined if this  option  is
	   used.

       -mv850e2v4
	   Specify  that  the  target  processor  is the V850E3V5.  This is an
	   alias for the -mv850e3v5 option.

       -mv850e2v3
	   Specify  that  the  target  processor   is	the   V850E2V3.	   The
	   preprocessor	 constant  "__v850e2v3__" is defined if	this option is
	   used.

       -mv850e2
	   Specify that	the target processor is	the V850E2.  The  preprocessor
	   constant "__v850e2__" is defined if this option is used.

       -mv850e1
	   Specify  that the target processor is the V850E1.  The preprocessor
	   constants "__v850e1__" and "__v850e__" are defined if  this	option
	   is used.

       -mv850es
	   Specify  that the target processor is the V850ES.  This is an alias
	   for the -mv850e1 option.

       -mv850e
	   Specify that	the target processor is	the V850E.   The  preprocessor
	   constant "__v850e__"	is defined if this option is used.

	   If  neither	-mv850	nor  -mv850e  nor  -mv850e1  nor  -mv850e2 nor
	   -mv850e2v3  nor  -mv850e3v5	are  defined  then  a  default	target
	   processor   is  chosen  and	the  relevant  __v850*__  preprocessor
	   constant is defined.

	   The preprocessor  constants	"__v850"  and  "__v851__"  are	always
	   defined, regardless of which	processor variant is the target.

       -mdisable-callt
       -mno-disable-callt
	   This	 option	 suppresses  generation	of the "CALLT" instruction for
	   the v850e, v850e1, v850e2, v850e2v3 and  v850e3v5  flavors  of  the
	   v850	architecture.

	   This	option is enabled by default when the RH850 ABI	is in use (see
	   -mrh850-abi),  and  disabled	by default when	the GCC	ABI is in use.
	   If "CALLT" instructions are being generated then the	C preprocessor
	   symbol "__V850_CALLT__" is defined.

       -mrelax
       -mno-relax
	   Pass	on (or do not pass on) the -mrelax command-line	option to  the
	   assembler.

       -mlong-jumps
       -mno-long-jumps
	   Disable   (or   re-enable)	the  generation	 of  PC-relative  jump
	   instructions.

       -msoft-float
       -mhard-float
	   Disable (or re-enable) the generation of  hardware  floating	 point
	   instructions.   This	 option	 is  only  significant when the	target
	   architecture	is V850E2V3 or higher.	 If  hardware  floating	 point
	   instructions	 are  being  generated	then the C preprocessor	symbol
	   "__FPU_OK__"	is  defined,  otherwise	 the  symbol  "__NO_FPU__"  is
	   defined.

       -mloop
	   Enables  the	 use  of  the  e3v5 LOOP instruction.  The use of this
	   instruction is not enabled by default when the e3v5 architecture is
	   selected because its	use is still experimental.

       -mrh850-abi
       -mghs
	   Enables support for the RH850 version of the	V850 ABI.  This	is the
	   default.  With this version of the ABI the following	rules apply:

	   *   Integer sized structures	and unions are returned	via  a	memory
	       pointer rather than a register.

	   *   Large  structures  and  unions  (more than 8 bytes in size) are
	       passed by value.

	   *   Functions are aligned to	16-bit boundaries.

	   *   The -m8byte-align command-line option is	supported.

	   *   The -mdisable-callt command-line	option is enabled by  default.
	       The -mno-disable-callt command-line option is not supported.

	   When	 this  version of the ABI is enabled the C preprocessor	symbol
	   "__V850_RH850_ABI__"	is defined.

       -mgcc-abi
	   Enables support for the old GCC version of the V850 ABI.  With this
	   version of the ABI the following rules apply:

	   *   Integer sized structures	and unions are	returned  in  register
	       "r10".

	   *   Large  structures  and  unions  (more than 8 bytes in size) are
	       passed by reference.

	   *   Functions are aligned to	32-bit boundaries,  unless  optimizing
	       for size.

	   *   The -m8byte-align command-line option is	not supported.

	   *   The  -mdisable-callt  command-line  option is supported but not
	       enabled by default.

	   When	this version of	the ABI	is enabled the C  preprocessor	symbol
	   "__V850_GCC_ABI__" is defined.

       -m8byte-align
       -mno-8byte-align
	   Enables support for "double"	and "long long"	types to be aligned on
	   8-byte boundaries.  The default is to restrict the alignment	of all
	   objects  to at most 4-bytes.	 When -m8byte-align is in effect the C
	   preprocessor	symbol "__V850_8BYTE_ALIGN__" is defined.

       -mbig-switch
	   Generate code suitable for big switch tables.  Use this option only
	   if the assembler/linker complain about out of range branches	within
	   a switch table.

       -mapp-regs
	   This	option causes r2 and r5	to be used in the  code	 generated  by
	   the compiler.  This setting is the default.

       -mno-app-regs
	   This	option causes r2 and r5	to be treated as fixed registers.

       VAX Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the VAX:

       -munix
	   Do  not  output certain jump	instructions ("aobleq" and so on) that
	   the Unix assembler for the VAX cannot handle	across long ranges.

       -mgnu
	   Do output those jump	instructions, on the assumption	that  the  GNU
	   assembler is	being used.

       -mg Output   code   for	G-format  floating-point  numbers  instead  of
	   D-format.

       -mlra
       -mno-lra
	   Enable Local	Register Allocation.  This is still  experimental  for
	   the VAX, so by default the compiler uses standard reload.

       Visium Options

       -mdebug
	   A  program which performs file I/O and is destined to run on	an MCM
	   target should be linked with	this option.  It causes	the  libraries
	   libc.a  and	libdebug.a to be linked.  The program should be	run on
	   the target under the	control	of the GDB remote debugging stub.

       -msim
	   A program which performs file I/O and is destined  to  run  on  the
	   simulator  should  be  linked  with	option.	 This causes libraries
	   libc.a and libsim.a to be linked.

       -mfpu
       -mhard-float
	   Generate code containing floating-point instructions.  This is  the
	   default.

       -mno-fpu
       -msoft-float
	   Generate code containing library calls for floating-point.

	   -msoft-float	 changes  the  calling	convention in the output file;
	   therefore, it is only useful	if you compile all of a	 program  with
	   this	 option.   In  particular,  you	 need to compile libgcc.a, the
	   library that	comes with GCC,	with -msoft-float in order for this to
	   work.

       -mcpu=cpu_type
	   Set the instruction set, register set, and  instruction  scheduling
	   parameters	for  machine  type  cpu_type.	Supported  values  for
	   cpu_type are	mcm, gr5 and gr6.

	   mcm is a synonym of gr5 present for backward	compatibility.

	   By default (unless configured otherwise), GCC  generates  code  for
	   the GR5 variant of the Visium architecture.

	   With	 -mcpu=gr6,  GCC  generates  code  for	the GR6	variant	of the
	   Visium architecture.	 The only difference from GR5 code is that the
	   compiler will generate block	move instructions.

       -mtune=cpu_type
	   Set	the  instruction  scheduling  parameters  for	machine	  type
	   cpu_type,  but  do not set the instruction set or register set that
	   the option -mcpu=cpu_type would.

       -msv-mode
	   Generate  code  for	the  supervisor	 mode,	where  there  are   no
	   restrictions	 on  the  access  to  general  registers.  This	is the
	   default.

       -muser-mode
	   Generate code for the user mode, where the access to	 some  general
	   registers  is forbidden: on the GR5,	registers r24 to r31 cannot be
	   accessed in this mode; on the GR6, only registers r29  to  r31  are
	   affected.

       VMS Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the VMS	implementations:

       -mvms-return-codes
	   Return  VMS	condition  codes from "main". The default is to	return
	   POSIX-style condition (e.g. error) codes.

       -mdebug-main=prefix
	   Flag	the first routine whose	name starts with prefix	 as  the  main
	   routine for the debugger.

       -mmalloc64
	   Default to 64-bit memory allocation routines.

       -mpointer-size=size
	   Set	the default size of pointers. Possible options for size	are 32
	   or short for	32 bit pointers, 64 or long for	64 bit	pointers,  and
	   no  for supporting only 32 bit pointers.  The later option disables
	   "pragma pointer_size".

       VxWorks Options

       The options in this  section  are  defined  for	all  VxWorks  targets.
       Options	specific  to  the  target  hardware  are listed	with the other
       options for that	target.

       -mrtp
	   GCC can generate code  for  both  VxWorks  kernels  and  real  time
	   processes  (RTPs).	This  option  switches	from the former	to the
	   latter.  It also defines the	preprocessor macro "__RTP__".

       -msmp
	   Select SMP runtimes for linking.  Not  available  on	 architectures
	   other than PowerPC, nor on VxWorks version 7	or later, in which the
	   selection  is  part	of  the	 VxWorks  build	 configuration and the
	   library paths are the same for either choice.

       -non-static
	   Link	an RTP executable against shared libraries rather than	static
	   libraries.	The  options  -static and -shared can also be used for
	   RTPs; -static is the	default.

       -Bstatic
       -Bdynamic
	   These options are passed down to the	linker.	 They are defined  for
	   compatibility with Diab.

       -Xbind-lazy
	   Enable  lazy	 binding of function calls.  This option is equivalent
	   to -Wl,-z,now and is	defined	for compatibility with Diab.

       -Xbind-now
	   Disable lazy	binding	of function calls.  This option	is the default
	   and is defined for compatibility with Diab.

       x86 Options

       These -m	options	are defined for	the x86	family of computers.

       -march=cpu-type
	   Generate instructions for the machine type cpu-type.	  In  contrast
	   to  -mtune=cpu-type,	 which merely tunes the	generated code for the
	   specified cpu-type, -march=cpu-type allows  GCC  to	generate  code
	   that	may not	run at all on processors other than the	one indicated.
	   Specifying  -march=cpu-type	implies	 -mtune=cpu-type, except where
	   noted otherwise.

	   The choices for cpu-type are:

	   native
	       This selects the	CPU to generate	code for at  compilation  time
	       by  determining	the  processor	type of	the compiling machine.
	       Using -march=native enables all instruction  subsets  supported
	       by  the	local  machine	(hence	the  result  might  not	run on
	       different  machines).   Using   -mtune=native   produces	  code
	       optimized  for  the  local machine under	the constraints	of the
	       selected	instruction set.

	   x86-64
	       A generic CPU with 64-bit extensions.

	   x86-64-v2
	   x86-64-v3
	   x86-64-v4
	       These choices for  cpu-type  select  the	 corresponding	micro-
	       architecture  level  from the x86-64 psABI.  On ABIs other than
	       the x86-64 psABI	they select  the  same	CPU  features  as  the
	       x86-64  psABI  documents	 for the particular micro-architecture
	       level.

	       Since these cpu-type values do not have a corresponding	-mtune
	       setting,	using -march with these	values enables generic tuning.
	       Specific	 tuning	can be enabled using the -mtune=other-cpu-type
	       option with an appropriate other-cpu-type value.

	   i386
	       Original	Intel i386 CPU.

	   i486
	       Intel i486 CPU.	(No scheduling is implemented for this chip.)

	   i586
	   pentium
	       Intel Pentium CPU with no MMX support.

	   lakemont
	       Intel Lakemont MCU, based on Intel Pentium CPU.

	   pentium-mmx
	       Intel  Pentium  MMX  CPU,  based	 on  Pentium  core  with   MMX
	       instruction set support.

	   pentiumpro
	       Intel Pentium Pro CPU.

	   i686
	       When used with -march, the Pentium Pro instruction set is used,
	       so  the	code  runs  on	all i686 family	chips.	When used with
	       -mtune, it has the same meaning as generic.

	   pentium2
	       Intel Pentium II	CPU, based on Pentium Pro core	with  MMX  and
	       FXSR instruction	set support.

	   pentium3
	   pentium3m
	       Intel Pentium III CPU, based on Pentium Pro core	with MMX, FXSR
	       and SSE instruction set support.

	   pentium-m
	       Intel  Pentium  M;  low-power  version of Intel Pentium III CPU
	       with MMX, SSE, SSE2 and FXSR instruction	set support.  Used  by
	       Centrino	notebooks.

	   pentium4
	   pentium4m
	       Intel  Pentium  4  CPU with MMX,	SSE, SSE2 and FXSR instruction
	       set support.

	   prescott
	       Improved	version	of Intel Pentium 4 CPU with  MMX,  SSE,	 SSE2,
	       SSE3 and	FXSR instruction set support.

	   nocona
	       Improved	version	of Intel Pentium 4 CPU with 64-bit extensions,
	       MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3 and	FXSR instruction set support.

	   core2
	       Intel  Core 2 CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,
	       SSSE3, CX16, SAHF and FXSR instruction set support.

	   nehalem
	   corei7
	       Intel Nehalem CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,
	       SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF and FXSR  instruction
	       set support.

	   westmere
	       Intel  Westmere	CPU  with  64-bit  extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2,
	       SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,  POPCNT,  CX16,  SAHF,  FXSR  and
	       PCLMUL instruction set support.

	   sandybridge
	   corei7-avx
	       Intel  Sandy Bridge CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2,
	       SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT,  CX16,  SAHF,  FXSR,  AVX,
	       XSAVE and PCLMUL	instruction set	support.

	   ivybridge
	   core-avx-i
	       Intel  Ivy  Bridge  CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2,
	       SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT,  CX16,  SAHF,  FXSR,  AVX,
	       XSAVE,	PCLMUL,	 FSGSBASE,  RDRND  and	F16C  instruction  set
	       support.

	   haswell
	   core-avx2
	       Intel Haswell CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,
	       SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF,  FXSR,  AVX,	XSAVE,
	       PCLMUL,	FSGSBASE,  RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,	BMI, BMI2, LZCNT, FMA,
	       MOVBE and HLE instruction set support.

	   broadwell
	       Intel Broadwell CPU with	64-bit extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,  FMA, MOVBE, HLE,	RDSEED,	ADCX and PREFETCHW instruction
	       set support.

	   skylake
	       Intel Skylake CPU with  64-bit  extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,	FMA,   MOVBE,	HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,  AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT, XSAVEC, XSAVES and SGX instruction set support.

	   skylake-avx512
	       Intel Skylake Server CPU	with 64-bit  extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,
	       SSE,  SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF,
	       FXSR, AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE,  RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,
	       BMI2,  LZCNT,  FMA,  MOVBE,  HLE, RDSEED, ADCX, PREFETCHW, AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT,  XSAVEC,  XSAVES,  SGX,  AVX512F,  CLWB,  AVX512VL,
	       AVX512BW, AVX512DQ and AVX512CD instruction set support.

	   cascadelake
	       Intel  Cascade Lake CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2,
	       SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT,  CX16,  SAHF,  FXSR,  AVX,
	       XSAVE,  PCLMUL,	FSGSBASE, RDRND, F16C, AVX2, BMI, BMI2,	LZCNT,
	       FMA, MOVBE, HLE,	 RDSEED,  ADCX,	 PREFETCHW,  AES,  CLFLUSHOPT,
	       XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,   SGX,	 AVX512F,  CLWB,  AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ, AVX512CD and AVX512VNNI instruction set support.

	   cannonlake
	       Intel Cannon Lake Server	CPU with 64-bit	extensions, MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,	FMA,   MOVBE,	HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,  AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT, XSAVEC, XSAVES, SGX,	AVX512F,  AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ,   AVX512CD,   PKU,  AVX512VBMI,  AVX512IFMA  and  SHA
	       instruction set support.

	   cooperlake
	       Intel Cooper Lake CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX,  SSE,	 SSE2,
	       SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,	POPCNT,	CX16, SAHF, FXSR, AVX,
	       XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE,	RDRND, F16C, AVX2, BMI,	 BMI2,	LZCNT,
	       FMA,  MOVBE,  HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW, AES, CLFLUSHOPT,
	       XSAVEC,	XSAVES,	 SGX,  AVX512F,	 CLWB,	 AVX512VL,   AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ,  AVX512CD,  AVX512VNNI	and AVX512BF16 instruction set
	       support.

	   icelake-client
	       Intel Ice Lake Client CPU with  64-bit  extensions,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,	FMA,   MOVBE,	HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,  AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT, XSAVEC, XSAVES, SGX,	AVX512F,  AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ,   AVX512CD,   PKU,   AVX512VBMI,   AVX512IFMA,	  SHA,
	       AVX512VNNI, GFNI, VAES, AVX512VBMI2 , VPCLMULQDQ, AVX512BITALG,
	       RDPID and AVX512VPOPCNTDQ instruction set support.

	   icelake-server
	       Intel Ice Lake Server CPU with  64-bit  extensions,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,	FMA,   MOVBE,	HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,  AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT, XSAVEC, XSAVES, SGX,	AVX512F,  AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ,   AVX512CD,   PKU,   AVX512VBMI,   AVX512IFMA,	  SHA,
	       AVX512VNNI, GFNI, VAES, AVX512VBMI2 , VPCLMULQDQ, AVX512BITALG,
	       RDPID, AVX512VPOPCNTDQ, PCONFIG,	WBNOINVD and CLWB  instruction
	       set support.

	   tigerlake
	       Intel  Tiger  Lake  CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2,
	       SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT,  CX16,  SAHF,  FXSR,  AVX,
	       XSAVE,  PCLMUL,	FSGSBASE, RDRND, F16C, AVX2, BMI, BMI2,	LZCNT,
	       FMA, MOVBE, HLE,	 RDSEED,  ADCX,	 PREFETCHW,  AES,  CLFLUSHOPT,
	       XSAVEC,	XSAVES,	 SGX,  AVX512F,	 AVX512VL, AVX512BW, AVX512DQ,
	       AVX512CD	PKU, AVX512VBMI, AVX512IFMA,  SHA,  AVX512VNNI,	 GFNI,
	       VAES,	AVX512VBMI2,	VPCLMULQDQ,    AVX512BITALG,	RDPID,
	       AVX512VPOPCNTDQ,	MOVDIRI, MOVDIR64B,  CLWB,  AVX512VP2INTERSECT
	       and KEYLOCKER instruction set support.

	   rocketlake
	       Intel  Rocket  Lake CPU with 64-bit extensions, MMX, SSE, SSE2,
	       SSE3, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT,  CX16,  SAHF,  FXSR,  AVX,
	       XSAVE,  PCLMUL,	FSGSBASE, RDRND, F16C, AVX2, BMI, BMI2,	LZCNT,
	       FMA, MOVBE, HLE,	 RDSEED,  ADCX,	 PREFETCHW,  AES,  CLFLUSHOPT,
	       XSAVEC, XSAVES, AVX512F,	AVX512VL, AVX512BW, AVX512DQ, AVX512CD
	       PKU,  AVX512VBMI,  AVX512IFMA,  SHA,  AVX512VNNI,  GFNI,	 VAES,
	       AVX512VBMI2,    VPCLMULQDQ,     AVX512BITALG,	 RDPID	   and
	       AVX512VPOPCNTDQ instruction set support.

	   alderlake
	   raptorlake
	   meteorlake
	   gracemont
	       Intel  Alder  Lake/Raptor  Lake/Meteor  Lake/Gracemont CPU with
	       64-bit extensions, MOVBE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3,  SSE4.1,
	       SSE4.2,	POPCNT,	 AES, PREFETCHW, PCLMUL, RDRND,	XSAVE, XSAVEC,
	       XSAVES, XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,  PTWRITE,  RDPID,  SGX,  GFNI-SSE,
	       CLWB,  MOVDIRI,	MOVDIR64B, CLDEMOTE, WAITPKG, ADCX, AVX, AVX2,
	       BMI, BMI2, F16C,	FMA, LZCNT, PCONFIG,  PKU,  VAES,  VPCLMULQDQ,
	       SERIALIZE,  HRESET,  KL,	 WIDEKL	 and  AVX-VNNI instruction set
	       support.

	   arrowlake
	       Intel Arrow Lake	CPU with 64-bit	extensions, MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,  POPCNT, AES, PREFETCHW,
	       PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,
	       PTWRITE,	  RDPID,  SGX,	GFNI-SSE,  CLWB,  MOVDIRI,  MOVDIR64B,
	       CLDEMOTE, WAITPKG, ADCX,	 AVX,  AVX2,  BMI,  BMI2,  F16C,  FMA,
	       LZCNT,  PCONFIG,	 PKU, VAES, VPCLMULQDQ,	SERIALIZE, HRESET, KL,
	       WIDEKL, AVX-VNNI, UINTR,	AVXIFMA, AVXVNNIINT8, AVXNECONVERT and
	       CMPCCXADD instruction set support.

	   arrowlake-s
	   lunarlake
	       Intel Arrow Lake	 S/Lunar  Lake	CPU  with  64-bit  extensions,
	       MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,  SSE2,  SSE3,	SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT,
	       AES, PREFETCHW, PCLMUL, RDRND, XSAVE, XSAVEC, XSAVES, XSAVEOPT,
	       FSGSBASE,  PTWRITE,  RDPID,  SGX,  GFNI-SSE,   CLWB,   MOVDIRI,
	       MOVDIR64B, CLDEMOTE, WAITPKG, ADCX, AVX,	AVX2, BMI, BMI2, F16C,
	       FMA,  LZCNT, PCONFIG, PKU, VAES,	VPCLMULQDQ, SERIALIZE, HRESET,
	       KL,   WIDEKL,   AVX-VNNI,    UINTR,    AVXIFMA,	  AVXVNNIINT8,
	       AVXNECONVERT,  CMPCCXADD,  AVXVNNIINT16,	 SHA512,  SM3  and SM4
	       instruction set support.

	   pantherlake
	       Intel Panther Lake CPU with 64-bit extensions, MOVBE, MMX, SSE,
	       SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3,  SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,  POPCNT,  AES,  PREFETCHW,
	       PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,
	       PTWRITE,	 RDPID,	 SGX,  GFNI-SSE,  CLWB,	 MOVDIRI,   MOVDIR64B,
	       CLDEMOTE,  WAITPKG,  ADCX,  AVX,	 AVX2,	BMI,  BMI2, F16C, FMA,
	       LZCNT, PCONFIG, PKU, VAES, VPCLMULQDQ, SERIALIZE,  HRESET,  KL,
	       WIDEKL,	AVX-VNNI,  UINTR,  AVXIFMA, AVXVNNIINT8, AVXNECONVERT,
	       CMPCCXADD,  AVXVNNIINT16,  SHA512,  SM3,	 SM4   and   PREFETCHI
	       instruction set support.

	   sapphirerapids
	   emeraldrapids
	       Intel   Sapphire	  Rapids/Emerald   Rapids   CPU	  with	64-bit
	       extensions,  MMX,  SSE,	SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,
	       POPCNT,	CX16, SAHF, FXSR, AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE,	RDRND,
	       F16C, AVX2, BMI,	BMI2, LZCNT, FMA, MOVBE,  HLE,	RDSEED,	 ADCX,
	       PREFETCHW,  AES,	 CLFLUSHOPT,  XSAVEC,  XSAVES,	SGX,  AVX512F,
	       AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,  AVX512DQ,	AVX512CD,   PKU,   AVX512VBMI,
	       AVX512IFMA,   SHA,   AVX512VNNI,	  GFNI,	  VAES,	  AVX512VBMI2,
	       VPCLMULQDQ,  AVX512BITALG,  RDPID,  AVX512VPOPCNTDQ,   PCONFIG,
	       WBNOINVD,  CLWB,	MOVDIRI, MOVDIR64B, ENQCMD, CLDEMOTE, PTWRITE,
	       WAITPKG,	 SERIALIZE,  TSXLDTRK,	UINTR,	 AMX-BF16,   AMX-TILE,
	       AMX-INT8,  AVX-VNNI, AVX512-FP16	and AVX512BF16 instruction set
	       support.

	   graniterapids
	       Intel Granite Rapids CPU	 with  64-bit  extensions,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,	FMA,   MOVBE,	HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,  AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT, XSAVEC, XSAVES, SGX,	AVX512F,  AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ,   AVX512CD,   PKU,   AVX512VBMI,   AVX512IFMA,	  SHA,
	       AVX512VNNI, GFNI, VAES, AVX512VBMI2, VPCLMULQDQ,	 AVX512BITALG,
	       RDPID,	AVX512VPOPCNTDQ,  PCONFIG,  WBNOINVD,  CLWB,  MOVDIRI,
	       MOVDIR64B,  ENQCMD,  CLDEMOTE,  PTWRITE,	 WAITPKG,   SERIALIZE,
	       TSXLDTRK,   UINTR,   AMX-BF16,  AMX-TILE,  AMX-INT8,  AVX-VNNI,
	       AVX512-FP16, AVX512BF16,	AMX-FP16 and PREFETCHI instruction set
	       support.

	   graniterapids-d
	       Intel Granite Rapids D CPU with 64-bit  extensions,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,	FMA,   MOVBE,	HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,  AES,
	       CLFLUSHOPT, XSAVEC, XSAVES, SGX,	AVX512F,  AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,
	       AVX512DQ,   AVX512CD,   PKU,   AVX512VBMI,   AVX512IFMA,	  SHA,
	       AVX512VNNI, GFNI, VAES, AVX512VBMI2, VPCLMULQDQ,	 AVX512BITALG,
	       RDPID,	AVX512VPOPCNTDQ,  PCONFIG,  WBNOINVD,  CLWB,  MOVDIRI,
	       MOVDIR64B,  ENQCMD,  CLDEMOTE,  PTWRITE,	 WAITPKG,   SERIALIZE,
	       TSXLDTRK,   UINTR,   AMX-BF16,  AMX-TILE,  AMX-INT8,  AVX-VNNI,
	       AVX512FP16, AVX512BF16,	AMX-FP16,  PREFETCHI  and  AMX-COMPLEX
	       instruction set support.

	   bonnell
	   atom
	       Intel  Bonnell  CPU  with  64-bit  extensions, MOVBE, MMX, SSE,
	       SSE2, SSE3 and SSSE3 instruction	set support.

	   silvermont
	   slm Intel Silvermont	CPU with 64-bit	extensions, MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       PCLMUL, PREFETCHW and RDRND instruction set support.

	   goldmont
	       Intel Goldmont CPU with 64-bit  extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       PCLMUL, PREFETCHW, RDRND,  AES,	SHA,  RDSEED,  XSAVE,  XSAVEC,
	       XSAVES,	XSAVEOPT,  CLFLUSHOPT  and  FSGSBASE  instruction  set
	       support.

	   goldmont-plus
	       Intel Goldmont Plus CPU with  64-bit  extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,
	       SSE,  SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF,
	       FXSR,  PCLMUL,  PREFETCHW,  RDRND,  AES,	 SHA,  RDSEED,	XSAVE,
	       XSAVEC,	XSAVES,	XSAVEOPT, CLFLUSHOPT, FSGSBASE,	PTWRITE, RDPID
	       and SGX instruction set support.

	   tremont
	       Intel Tremont CPU with  64-bit  extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       PCLMUL, PREFETCHW, RDRND,  AES,	SHA,  RDSEED,  XSAVE,  XSAVEC,
	       XSAVES,	XSAVEOPT,  CLFLUSHOPT,	FSGSBASE, PTWRITE, RDPID, SGX,
	       CLWB,  GFNI-SSE,	 MOVDIRI,  MOVDIR64B,  CLDEMOTE	 and   WAITPKG
	       instruction set support.

	   sierraforest
	       Intel  Sierra  Forest  CPU  with	64-bit extensions, MOVBE, MMX,
	       SSE, SSE2, SSE3,	SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, AES, PREFETCHW,
	       PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,
	       PTWRITE,	  RDPID,  SGX,	GFNI-SSE,  CLWB,  MOVDIRI,  MOVDIR64B,
	       CLDEMOTE, WAITPKG, ADCX,	 AVX,  AVX2,  BMI,  BMI2,  F16C,  FMA,
	       LZCNT,  PCONFIG,	 PKU, VAES, VPCLMULQDQ,	SERIALIZE, HRESET, KL,
	       WIDEKL,	 AVX-VNNI,   AVXIFMA,	 AVXVNNIINT8,	 AVXNECONVERT,
	       CMPCCXADD, ENQCMD and UINTR instruction set support.

	   grandridge
	       Intel  Grand Ridge CPU with 64-bit extensions, MOVBE, MMX, SSE,
	       SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3,  SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,  POPCNT,  AES,  PREFETCHW,
	       PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,
	       PTWRITE,	 RDPID,	 SGX,  GFNI-SSE,  CLWB,	 MOVDIRI,   MOVDIR64B,
	       CLDEMOTE,  WAITPKG,  ADCX,  AVX,	 AVX2,	BMI,  BMI2, F16C, FMA,
	       LZCNT, PCONFIG, PKU, VAES, VPCLMULQDQ, SERIALIZE,  HRESET,  KL,
	       WIDEKL,	  AVX-VNNI,    AVXIFMA,	  AVXVNNIINT8,	 AVXNECONVERT,
	       CMPCCXADD, ENQCMD and UINTR instruction set support.

	   clearwaterforest
	       Intel Clearwater	Forest CPU with	64-bit extensions, MOVBE, MMX,
	       SSE, SSE2, SSE3,	SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, AES, PREFETCHW,
	       PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,
	       PTWRITE,	  RDPID,  SGX,	GFNI-SSE,  CLWB,  MOVDIRI,  MOVDIR64B,
	       CLDEMOTE, WAITPKG, ADCX,	 AVX,  AVX2,  BMI,  BMI2,  F16C,  FMA,
	       LZCNT,  PCONFIG,	 PKU, VAES, VPCLMULQDQ,	SERIALIZE, HRESET, KL,
	       WIDEKL,	AVX-VNNI,   ENQCMD,   UINTR,   AVXIFMA,	  AVXVNNIINT8,
	       AVXNECONVERT,   CMPCCXADD,   AVXVNNIINT16,  SHA512,  SM3,  SM4,
	       USER_MSR	and PREFETCHI instruction set support.

	   knl Intel Knights Landing CPU with 64-bit extensions,  MOVBE,  MMX,
	       SSE,  SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF,
	       FXSR, AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE,  RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,
	       BMI2,   LZCNT,	FMA,  MOVBE,  HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX,  PREFETCHW,
	       AVX512PF,   AVX512ER,   AVX512F,	  AVX512CD   and   PREFETCHWT1
	       instruction set support.

	   knm Intel Knights Mill CPU with 64-bit extensions, MOVBE, MMX, SSE,
	       SSE2,  SSE3,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1, SSE4.2, POPCNT, CX16, SAHF, FXSR,
	       AVX, XSAVE, PCLMUL, FSGSBASE, RDRND,  F16C,  AVX2,  BMI,	 BMI2,
	       LZCNT,  FMA,  MOVBE,  HLE,  RDSEED,  ADCX, PREFETCHW, AVX512PF,
	       AVX512ER,  AVX512F,  AVX512CD  and  PREFETCHWT1,	 AVX5124VNNIW,
	       AVX5124FMAPS and	AVX512VPOPCNTDQ	instruction set	support.

	   k6  AMD K6 CPU with MMX instruction set support.

	   k6-2
	   k6-3
	       Improved	versions of AMD	K6 CPU with MMX	and 3DNow! instruction
	       set support.

	   athlon
	   athlon-tbird
	       AMD  Athlon  CPU	 with  MMX,  3dNOW!,  enhanced	3DNow! and SSE
	       prefetch	instructions support.

	   athlon-4
	   athlon-xp
	   athlon-mp
	       Improved	AMD Athlon CPU with MMX, 3DNow!, enhanced  3DNow!  and
	       full SSE	instruction set	support.

	   k8
	   opteron
	   athlon64
	   athlon-fx
	       Processors based	on the AMD K8 core with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support,	including the AMD Opteron, Athlon 64, and Athlon 64 FX
	       processors.   (This  supersets MMX, SSE,	SSE2, 3DNow!, enhanced
	       3DNow! and 64-bit instruction set extensions.)

	   k8-sse3
	   opteron-sse3
	   athlon64-sse3
	       Improved	versions of AMD	K8 cores  with	SSE3  instruction  set
	       support.

	   amdfam10
	   barcelona
	       CPUs  based on AMD Family 10h cores with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	 (This supersets MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4A,  3DNow!,
	       enhanced	3DNow!,	ABM and	64-bit instruction set extensions.)

	   bdver1
	       CPUs  based on AMD Family 15h cores with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	 (This supersets FMA4, AVX,  XOP,  LWP,	 AES,  PCLMUL,
	       CX16,  MMX,  SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSE4A, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, ABM
	       and 64-bit instruction set extensions.)

	   bdver2
	       AMD Family 15h core based  CPUs	with  x86-64  instruction  set
	       support.	  (This	supersets BMI, TBM, F16C, FMA, FMA4, AVX, XOP,
	       LWP, AES, PCLMUL, CX16, MMX, SSE,  SSE2,	 SSE3,	SSE4A,	SSSE3,
	       SSE4.1, SSE4.2, ABM and 64-bit instruction set extensions.)

	   bdver3
	       AMD  Family  15h	 core  based  CPUs with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	 (This supersets BMI, TBM, F16C, FMA, FMA4,  FSGSBASE,
	       AVX,  XOP, LWP, AES, PCLMUL, CX16, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,	SSE4A,
	       SSSE3,  SSE4.1,	SSE4.2,	 ABM  and   64-bit   instruction   set
	       extensions.)

	   bdver4
	       AMD  Family  15h	 core  based  CPUs with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	 (This supersets BMI,  BMI2,  TBM,  F16C,  FMA,	 FMA4,
	       FSGSBASE,  AVX,	AVX2, XOP, LWP,	AES, PCLMUL, CX16, MOVBE, MMX,
	       SSE, SSE2, SSE3,	SSE4A, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, ABM  and	64-bit
	       instruction set extensions.)

	   znver1
	       AMD  Family  17h	 core  based  CPUs with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	 (This supersets BMI, BMI2, F16C, FMA, FSGSBASE,  AVX,
	       AVX2,  ADCX,  RDSEED,  MWAITX,  SHA, CLZERO, AES, PCLMUL, CX16,
	       MOVBE, MMX, SSE,	SSE2, SSE3, SSE4A, SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, ABM,
	       XSAVEC, XSAVES, CLFLUSHOPT, POPCNT, and 64-bit instruction  set
	       extensions.)

	   znver2
	       AMD  Family  17h	 core  based  CPUs with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	(This supersets	BMI, BMI2, CLWB, F16C, FMA,  FSGSBASE,
	       AVX,  AVX2,  ADCX,  RDSEED,  MWAITX,  SHA, CLZERO, AES, PCLMUL,
	       CX16, MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,	 SSE2,	SSE3,  SSE4A,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1,
	       SSE4.2,	 ABM,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  CLFLUSHOPT,  POPCNT,	RDPID,
	       WBNOINVD, and 64-bit instruction	set extensions.)

	   znver3
	       AMD Family 19h core based  CPUs	with  x86-64  instruction  set
	       support.	 (This supersets BMI, BMI2, CLWB, F16C,	FMA, FSGSBASE,
	       AVX, AVX2, ADCX,	RDSEED,	 MWAITX,  SHA,	CLZERO,	 AES,  PCLMUL,
	       CX16,  MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,  SSE2,	 SSE3,	SSE4A,	SSSE3, SSE4.1,
	       SSE4.2,	ABM,  XSAVEC,  XSAVES,	CLFLUSHOPT,   POPCNT,	RDPID,
	       WBNOINVD,  PKU,	VPCLMULQDQ,  VAES,  and	64-bit instruction set
	       extensions.)

	   znver4
	       AMD Family 19h core based  CPUs	with  x86-64  instruction  set
	       support.	 (This supersets BMI, BMI2, CLWB, F16C,	FMA, FSGSBASE,
	       AVX, AVX2, ADCX,	RDSEED,	 MWAITX,  SHA,	CLZERO,	 AES,  PCLMUL,
	       CX16,  MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,  SSE2,	 SSE3,	SSE4A,	SSSE3, SSE4.1,
	       SSE4.2,	ABM,  XSAVEC,  XSAVES,	CLFLUSHOPT,   POPCNT,	RDPID,
	       WBNOINVD, PKU, VPCLMULQDQ, VAES,	AVX512F, AVX512DQ, AVX512IFMA,
	       AVX512CD,    AVX512BW,	 AVX512VL,   AVX512BF16,   AVX512VBMI,
	       AVX512VBMI2, AVX512VNNI,	 AVX512BITALG,	AVX512VPOPCNTDQ,  GFNI
	       and 64-bit instruction set extensions.)

	   znver5
	       AMD  Family  1ah	 core  based  CPUs with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	(This supersets	BMI, BMI2, CLWB, F16C, FMA,  FSGSBASE,
	       AVX,  AVX2,  ADCX,  RDSEED,  MWAITX,  SHA, CLZERO, AES, PCLMUL,
	       CX16, MOVBE,  MMX,  SSE,	 SSE2,	SSE3,  SSE4A,  SSSE3,  SSE4.1,
	       SSE4.2,	 ABM,	XSAVEC,	 XSAVES,  CLFLUSHOPT,  POPCNT,	RDPID,
	       WBNOINVD, PKU, VPCLMULQDQ, VAES,	AVX512F, AVX512DQ, AVX512IFMA,
	       AVX512CD,   AVX512BW,   AVX512VL,    AVX512BF16,	   AVX512VBMI,
	       AVX512VBMI2,  AVX512VNNI,  AVX512BITALG,	AVX512VPOPCNTDQ, GFNI,
	       AVXVNNI,	MOVDIRI, MOVDIR64B, AVX512VP2INTERSECT,	PREFETCHI  and
	       64-bit instruction set extensions.)

	   btver1
	       CPUs  based on AMD Family 14h cores with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	 (This supersets MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,	SSSE3,	SSE4A,
	       CX16, ABM and 64-bit instruction	set extensions.)

	   btver2
	       CPUs  based on AMD Family 16h cores with	x86-64 instruction set
	       support.	This includes MOVBE,  F16C,  BMI,  AVX,	 PCLMUL,  AES,
	       SSE4.2,	SSE4.1,	 CX16, ABM, SSE4A, SSSE3, SSE3,	SSE2, SSE, MMX
	       and 64-bit instruction set extensions.

	   winchip-c6
	       IDT WinChip C6 CPU, dealt in same way as	i486  with  additional
	       MMX instruction set support.

	   winchip2
	       IDT  WinChip  2	CPU, dealt in same way as i486 with additional
	       MMX and 3DNow!  instruction set support.

	   c3  VIA C3 CPU with MMX and 3DNow! instruction  set	support.   (No
	       scheduling is implemented for this chip.)

	   c3-2
	       VIA  C3-2  (Nehemiah/C5XL) CPU with MMX and SSE instruction set
	       support.	 (No scheduling	is implemented for this	chip.)

	   c7  VIA C7 (Esther) CPU with	MMX, SSE, SSE2	and  SSE3  instruction
	       set support.  (No scheduling is implemented for this chip.)

	   samuel-2
	       VIA  Eden  Samuel  2  CPU  with	MMX and	3DNow! instruction set
	       support.	 (No scheduling	is implemented for this	chip.)

	   nehemiah
	       VIA Eden	Nehemiah CPU with MMX and SSE instruction set support.
	       (No scheduling is implemented for this chip.)

	   esther
	       VIA Eden	Esther CPU with	MMX, SSE, SSE2	and  SSE3  instruction
	       set support.  (No scheduling is implemented for this chip.)

	   eden-x2
	       VIA   Eden  X2  CPU  with  x86-64,  MMX,	 SSE,  SSE2  and  SSE3
	       instruction set support.	 (No  scheduling  is  implemented  for
	       this chip.)

	   eden-x4
	       VIA  Eden  X4  CPU  with	 x86-64,  MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,	SSSE3,
	       SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX and	AVX2  instruction  set	support.   (No
	       scheduling is implemented for this chip.)

	   nano
	       Generic	VIA  Nano  CPU	with  x86-64, MMX, SSE,	SSE2, SSE3 and
	       SSSE3 instruction set support.  (No scheduling  is  implemented
	       for this	chip.)

	   nano-1000
	       VIA  Nano  1xxx CPU with	x86-64,	MMX, SSE, SSE2,	SSE3 and SSSE3
	       instruction set support.	 (No  scheduling  is  implemented  for
	       this chip.)

	   nano-2000
	       VIA  Nano  2xxx CPU with	x86-64,	MMX, SSE, SSE2,	SSE3 and SSSE3
	       instruction set support.	 (No  scheduling  is  implemented  for
	       this chip.)

	   nano-3000
	       VIA  Nano 3xxx CPU with x86-64, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3 and
	       SSE4.1 instruction set support.	(No scheduling is  implemented
	       for this	chip.)

	   nano-x2
	       VIA Nano	Dual Core CPU with x86-64, MMX,	SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3
	       and   SSE4.1   instruction  set	support.   (No	scheduling  is
	       implemented for this chip.)

	   nano-x4
	       VIA Nano	Quad Core CPU with x86-64, MMX,	SSE, SSE2, SSE3, SSSE3
	       and  SSE4.1  instruction	 set  support.	 (No   scheduling   is
	       implemented for this chip.)

	   lujiazui
	       ZHAOXIN	lujiazui CPU with x86-64, MOVBE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,
	       SSSE3, SSE4.1,  SSE4.2,	POPCNT,	 AES,  PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,
	       XSAVEOPT,   FSGSBASE,   CX16,  ABM,  BMI,  BMI2,	 FXSR,	RDSEED
	       instruction set support.	 While the CPUs	 do  support  AVX  and
	       F16C, these aren't enabled by "-march=lujiazui" for performance
	       reasons.

	   yongfeng
	       ZHAOXIN	yongfeng CPU with x86-64, MOVBE, MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3,
	       SSSE3, SSE4.1, SSE4.2, AVX, POPCNT, AES,	PCLMUL,	RDRND,	XSAVE,
	       XSAVEOPT,  FSGSBASE,  CX16, ABM,	BMI, BMI2, F16C, FXSR, RDSEED,
	       AVX2, FMA, SHA, LZCNT instruction set support.

	   geode
	       AMD Geode embedded processor with MMX  and  3DNow!  instruction
	       set support.

       -mtune=cpu-type
	   Tune	 to  cpu-type  everything applicable about the generated code,
	   except for the ABI and the set of  available	 instructions.	 While
	   picking a specific cpu-type schedules things	appropriately for that
	   particular  chip,  the  compiler  does  not	generate any code that
	   cannot run on the default machine type unless you use a -march=cpu-
	   type	  option.    For   example,   if   GCC	 is   configured   for
	   i686-pc-linux-gnu then -mtune=pentium4 generates code that is tuned
	   for Pentium 4 but still runs	on i686	machines.

	   The	choices	for cpu-type are the same as for -march.  In addition,
	   -mtune supports 2 extra choices for cpu-type:

	   generic
	       Produce code optimized for  the	most  common  IA32/AMD64/EM64T
	       processors.   If	 you know the CPU on which your	code will run,
	       then you	should use the corresponding -mtune or	-march	option
	       instead	of  -mtune=generic.   But,  if you do not know exactly
	       what CPU	users of your application will have, then  you	should
	       use this	option.

	       As new processors are deployed in the marketplace, the behavior
	       of  this	 option	 will  change.	Therefore, if you upgrade to a
	       newer version of	GCC, code generation controlled	by this	option
	       will change to reflect the processors that are most  common  at
	       the time	that version of	GCC is released.

	       There  is no -march=generic option because -march indicates the
	       instruction set the compiler can	use, and there is  no  generic
	       instruction  set	 applicable  to	 all processors.  In contrast,
	       -mtune indicates	the processor (or, in this case, collection of
	       processors) for which the code is optimized.

	   intel
	       Produce code optimized for the most current  Intel  processors,
	       which  are  Haswell and Silvermont for this version of GCC.  If
	       you know	the CPU	on which your code will	run, then  you	should
	       use  the	 corresponding	-mtune	or  -march  option  instead of
	       -mtune=intel.  But,  if	you  want  your	 application  performs
	       better on both Haswell and Silvermont, then you should use this
	       option.

	       As  new	Intel  processors are deployed in the marketplace, the
	       behavior	of this	option will change.  Therefore,	if you upgrade
	       to a newer version of GCC, code generation controlled  by  this
	       option will change to reflect the most current Intel processors
	       at the time that	version	of GCC is released.

	       There  is  no  -march=intel option because -march indicates the
	       instruction set the compiler can	use, and there	is  no	common
	       instruction  set	 applicable  to	 all processors.  In contrast,
	       -mtune indicates	the processor (or, in this case, collection of
	       processors) for which the code is optimized.

       -mcpu=cpu-type
	   A deprecated	synonym	for -mtune.

       -mfpmath=unit
	   Generate floating-point arithmetic for  selected  unit  unit.   The
	   choices for unit are:

	   387 Use  the	standard 387 floating-point coprocessor	present	on the
	       majority	of chips and emulated otherwise.  Code	compiled  with
	       this  option runs almost	everywhere.  The temporary results are
	       computed	in 80-bit precision instead of the precision specified
	       by the type, resulting in slightly different  results  compared
	       to  most	 of  other chips.  See -ffloat-store for more detailed
	       description.

	       This is the default choice for non-Darwin x86-32	targets.

	   sse Use scalar  floating-point  instructions	 present  in  the  SSE
	       instruction  set.  This instruction set is supported by Pentium
	       III and newer chips, and	in the AMD line	by Athlon-4, Athlon XP
	       and  Athlon  MP	chips.	 The  earlier  version	of   the   SSE
	       instruction set supports	only single-precision arithmetic, thus
	       the  double  and	 extended-precision  arithmetic	are still done
	       using 387.  A later version, present only in Pentium 4 and  AMD
	       x86-64 chips, supports double-precision arithmetic too.

	       For the x86-32 compiler,	you must use -march=cpu-type, -msse or
	       -msse2  switches	 to enable SSE extensions and make this	option
	       effective.  For	the  x86-64  compiler,	these  extensions  are
	       enabled by default.

	       The  resulting  code  should  be	 considerably  faster  in  the
	       majority	of cases and avoid the numerical instability  problems
	       of  387	code,  but  may	 break some existing code that expects
	       temporaries to be 80 bits.

	       This is the default choice  for	the  x86-64  compiler,	Darwin
	       x86-32  targets,	and the	default	choice for x86-32 targets with
	       the SSE2	instruction set	when -ffast-math is enabled.

	   sse,387
	   sse+387
	   both
	       Attempt	to  utilize  both  instruction	sets  at  once.	  This
	       effectively  doubles  the amount	of available registers,	and on
	       chips with  separate  execution	units  for  387	 and  SSE  the
	       execution  resources  too.  Use this option with	care, as it is
	       still experimental, because the GCC register allocator does not
	       model separate functional units	well,  resulting  in  unstable
	       performance.

       -masm=dialect
	   Output  assembly instructions using selected	dialect.  Also affects
	   which dialect is used for basic "asm" and extended "asm". Supported
	   choices (in dialect order) are att or intel.	The  default  is  att.
	   Darwin does not support intel.

       -mieee-fp
       -mno-ieee-fp
	   Control  whether  or	 not  the  compiler  uses  IEEE	floating-point
	   comparisons.	 These correctly handle	the case where the result of a
	   comparison is unordered.

       -m80387
       -mhard-float
	   Generate output containing 80387 instructions for floating point.

       -mno-80387
       -msoft-float
	   Generate output containing library calls for	floating point.

	   Warning: the	requisite libraries are	not part of GCC.  Normally the
	   facilities of the machine's usual C compiler	 are  used,  but  this
	   cannot  be  done directly in	cross-compilation.  You	must make your
	   own arrangements to provide suitable	library	functions  for	cross-
	   compilation.

	   On  machines	where a	function returns floating-point	results	in the
	   80387 register stack, some floating-point opcodes  may  be  emitted
	   even	if -msoft-float	is used.

       -mno-fp-ret-in-387
	   Do not use the FPU registers	for return values of functions.

	   The	usual  calling convention has functions	return values of types
	   "float" and "double"	in an FPU register, even if there is  no  FPU.
	   The idea is that the	operating system should	emulate	an FPU.

	   The	option -mno-fp-ret-in-387 causes such values to	be returned in
	   ordinary CPU	registers instead.

       -mno-fancy-math-387
	   Some	387 emulators do not  support  the  "sin",  "cos"  and	"sqrt"
	   instructions	 for the 387.  Specify this option to avoid generating
	   those  instructions.	  This	option	is  overridden	 when	-march
	   indicates  that  the	 target	 CPU  always  has  an  FPU  and	so the
	   instruction does not	need emulation.	 These	instructions  are  not
	   generated  unless  you  also	 use  the  -funsafe-math-optimizations
	   switch.

       -malign-double
       -mno-align-double
	   Control whether GCC aligns "double",	"long double", and "long long"
	   variables on	a two-word boundary or a one-word boundary.   Aligning
	   "double"  variables	on a two-word boundary produces	code that runs
	   somewhat faster on a	Pentium	at the expense of more memory.

	   On x86-64, -malign-double is	enabled	by default.

	   Warning:  if	 you  use  the	 -malign-double	  switch,   structures
	   containing  the  above  types  are  aligned	differently  than  the
	   published  application  binary  interface  specifications  for  the
	   x86-32  and	are  not  binary  compatible  with  structures in code
	   compiled without that switch.

       -m96bit-long-double
       -m128bit-long-double
	   These switches control the size of "long double" type.  The	x86-32
	   application	binary	interface specifies the	size to	be 96 bits, so
	   -m96bit-long-double is the default in 32-bit	mode.

	   Modern architectures	(Pentium and newer) prefer "long double" to be
	   aligned to an 8- or 16-byte	boundary.   In	arrays	or  structures
	   conforming  to  the	ABI,  this  is	not  possible.	 So specifying
	   -m128bit-long-double	aligns "long double" to	a 16-byte boundary  by
	   padding the "long double" with an additional	32-bit zero.

	   In  the x86-64 compiler, -m128bit-long-double is the	default	choice
	   as its ABI specifies	that  "long  double"  is  aligned  on  16-byte
	   boundary.

	   Notice  that	 neither  of  these options enable any extra precision
	   over	the x87	standard of 80 bits for	a "long	double".

	   Warning: if you override the	default	value  for  your  target  ABI,
	   this	 changes  the  size  of	structures and arrays containing "long
	   double" variables,  as  well	 as  modifying	the  function  calling
	   convention  for functions taking "long double".  Hence they are not
	   binary-compatible with code compiled	without	that switch.

       -mlong-double-64
       -mlong-double-80
       -mlong-double-128
	   These switches control the size of "long double" type. A size of 64
	   bits	makes the "long	double"	type equivalent	to the "double"	 type.
	   This	 is  the  default  for 32-bit Bionic C library.	 A size	of 128
	   bits	makes the "long	double"	type equivalent	 to  the  "__float128"
	   type. This is the default for 64-bit	Bionic C library.

	   Warning:  if	 you  override	the default value for your target ABI,
	   this	changes	the size of structures	and  arrays  containing	 "long
	   double"  variables,	as  well  as  modifying	 the  function calling
	   convention for functions taking "long double".  Hence they are  not
	   binary-compatible with code compiled	without	that switch.

       -malign-data=type
	   Control  how	 GCC  aligns variables.	 Supported values for type are
	   compat uses increased alignment value compatible uses GCC  4.8  and
	   earlier,  abi  uses	alignment value	as specified by	the psABI, and
	   cacheline uses increased alignment value to match  the  cache  line
	   size.  compat is the	default.

       -mlarge-data-threshold=threshold
	   When	 -mcmodel=medium  or -mcmodel=large is specified, data objects
	   larger than threshold are  placed  in  large	 data  sections.   The
	   default is 65535.

       -mrtd
	   Use	a  different  function-calling	convention, in which functions
	   that	take a fixed number of arguments return	 with  the  "ret  num"
	   instruction,	 which	pops  their  arguments	while returning.  This
	   saves one instruction in the	caller since there is no need  to  pop
	   the arguments there.

	   You	can  specify  that  an individual function is called with this
	   calling sequence with the function attribute	 "stdcall".   You  can
	   also	 override  the	-mrtd  option  by using	the function attribute
	   "cdecl".

	   Warning: this calling  convention  is  incompatible	with  the  one
	   normally  used  on  Unix,  so you cannot use	it if you need to call
	   libraries compiled with the Unix compiler.

	   Also, you must provide function prototypes for all  functions  that
	   take	 variable numbers of arguments (including "printf"); otherwise
	   incorrect code is generated for calls to those functions.

	   In addition,	 seriously  incorrect  code  results  if  you  call  a
	   function  with  too many arguments.	(Normally, extra arguments are
	   harmlessly ignored.)

       -mregparm=num
	   Control how many registers are used to pass integer arguments.   By
	   default,  no	 registers  are	 used to pass arguments, and at	most 3
	   registers can be  used.   You  can  control	this  behavior	for  a
	   specific function by	using the function attribute "regparm".

	   Warning:  if	you use	this switch, and num is	nonzero, then you must
	   build all modules with the same  value,  including  any  libraries.
	   This	includes the system libraries and startup modules.

       -msseregparm
	   Use SSE register passing conventions	for float and double arguments
	   and	return	values.	  You can control this behavior	for a specific
	   function by using the function attribute "sseregparm".

	   Warning: if you use this switch then	you  must  build  all  modules
	   with	 the  same  value, including any libraries.  This includes the
	   system libraries and	startup	modules.

       -mvect8-ret-in-mem
	   Return 8-byte vectors in memory instead of MMX registers.  This  is
	   the default on VxWorks to match the ABI of the Sun Studio compilers
	   until  version  12.	 Only  use  this  option if you	need to	remain
	   compatible with existing code produced by those  previous  compiler
	   versions or older versions of GCC.

       -mpc32
       -mpc64
       -mpc80
	   Set	80387  floating-point  precision  to  32, 64 or	80 bits.  When
	   -mpc32 is specified,	the significands of results of	floating-point
	   operations are rounded to 24	bits (single precision); -mpc64	rounds
	   the significands of results of floating-point operations to 53 bits
	   (double precision) and -mpc80 rounds	the significands of results of
	   floating-point  operations  to 64 bits (extended double precision),
	   which is the	default.  When this  option  is	 used,	floating-point
	   operations in higher	precisions are not available to	the programmer
	   without setting the FPU control word	explicitly.

	   Setting  the	rounding of floating-point operations to less than the
	   default 80 bits can speed some programs by 2% or more.   Note  that
	   some	mathematical libraries assume that extended-precision (80-bit)
	   floating-point  operations are enabled by default; routines in such
	   libraries could suffer  significant	loss  of  accuracy,  typically
	   through  so-called "catastrophic cancellation", when	this option is
	   used	to set the precision to	less than extended precision.

       -mdaz-ftz
	   The flush-to-zero (FTZ) and denormals-are-zero (DAZ)	flags  in  the
	   MXCSR  register are used to control floating-point calculations.SSE
	   and AVX instructions	including scalar and vector instructions could
	   benefit from	enabling the FTZ  and  DAZ  flags  when	 -mdaz-ftz  is
	   specified.  Don't set FTZ/DAZ flags when -mno-daz-ftz or -shared is
	   specified, -mdaz-ftz	will set FTZ/DAZ flags even with -shared.

       -mstackrealign
	   Realign the stack at	entry.	On the x86, the	-mstackrealign	option
	   generates an	alternate prologue and epilogue	that realigns the run-
	   time	 stack	if  necessary.	This supports mixing legacy codes that
	   keep	4-byte stack alignment with modern  codes  that	 keep  16-byte
	   stack  alignment  for  SSE  compatibility.	See also the attribute
	   "force_align_arg_pointer", applicable to individual functions.

       -mpreferred-stack-boundary=num
	   Attempt to keep the stack boundary aligned to a  2  raised  to  num
	   byte	boundary.  If -mpreferred-stack-boundary is not	specified, the
	   default is 4	(16 bytes or 128 bits).

	   Warning:  When generating code for the x86-64 architecture with SSE
	   extensions disabled,	-mpreferred-stack-boundary=3 can  be  used  to
	   keep	 the  stack boundary aligned to	8 byte boundary.  Since	x86-64
	   ABI require 16 byte stack alignment,	this is	ABI  incompatible  and
	   intended  to	be used	in controlled environment where	stack space is
	   important  limitation.   This  option  leads	 to  wrong  code  when
	   functions  compiled with 16 byte stack alignment (such as functions
	   from	a standard library) are	called with misaligned stack.  In this
	   case, SSE instructions may lead to misaligned memory	access	traps.
	   In addition,	variable arguments are handled incorrectly for 16 byte
	   aligned  objects  (including	x87 long double	and __int128), leading
	   to	wrong	results.    You	  must	 build	 all   modules	  with
	   -mpreferred-stack-boundary=3,   including   any   libraries.	  This
	   includes the	system libraries and startup modules.

       -mincoming-stack-boundary=num
	   Assume the incoming stack is	aligned	to a  2	 raised	 to  num  byte
	   boundary.   If  -mincoming-stack-boundary is	not specified, the one
	   specified by	-mpreferred-stack-boundary is used.

	   On Pentium and Pentium  Pro,	 "double"  and	"long  double"	values
	   should  be  aligned	to  an 8-byte boundary (see -malign-double) or
	   suffer significant run time performance penalties.  On Pentium III,
	   the Streaming SIMD Extension	(SSE) data type	"__m128" may not  work
	   properly if it is not 16-byte aligned.

	   To  ensure  proper alignment	of this	values on the stack, the stack
	   boundary must be as aligned as that required	by any value stored on
	   the stack.  Further,	every function must be generated such that  it
	   keeps  the  stack aligned.  Thus calling a function compiled	with a
	   higher preferred stack boundary from	a  function  compiled  with  a
	   lower preferred stack boundary most likely misaligns	the stack.  It
	   is  recommended  that  libraries  that use callbacks	always use the
	   default setting.

	   This	extra alignment	does consume extra stack space,	and  generally
	   increases  code size.  Code that is sensitive to stack space	usage,
	   such	as embedded systems and	operating system kernels, may want  to
	   reduce the preferred	alignment to -mpreferred-stack-boundary=2.

       -mmmx
       -msse
       -msse2
       -msse3
       -mssse3
       -msse4
       -msse4a
       -msse4.1
       -msse4.2
       -mavx
       -mavx2
       -mavx512f
       -mavx512pf
       -mavx512er
       -mavx512cd
       -mavx512vl
       -mavx512bw
       -mavx512dq
       -mavx512ifma
       -mavx512vbmi
       -msha
       -maes
       -mpclmul
       -mclflushopt
       -mclwb
       -mfsgsbase
       -mptwrite
       -mrdrnd
       -mf16c
       -mfma
       -mpconfig
       -mwbnoinvd
       -mfma4
       -mprfchw
       -mrdpid
       -mprefetchwt1
       -mrdseed
       -msgx
       -mxop
       -mlwp
       -m3dnow
       -m3dnowa
       -mpopcnt
       -mabm
       -madx
       -mbmi
       -mbmi2
       -mlzcnt
       -mfxsr
       -mxsave
       -mxsaveopt
       -mxsavec
       -mxsaves
       -mrtm
       -mhle
       -mtbm
       -mmwaitx
       -mclzero
       -mpku
       -mavx512vbmi2
       -mavx512bf16
       -mavx512fp16
       -mgfni
       -mvaes
       -mwaitpkg
       -mvpclmulqdq
       -mavx512bitalg
       -mmovdiri
       -mmovdir64b
       -menqcmd
       -muintr
       -mtsxldtrk
       -mavx512vpopcntdq
       -mavx512vp2intersect
       -mavx5124fmaps
       -mavx512vnni
       -mavxvnni
       -mavx5124vnniw
       -mcldemote
       -mserialize
       -mamx-tile
       -mamx-int8
       -mamx-bf16
       -mhreset
       -mkl
       -mwidekl
       -mavxifma
       -mavxvnniint8
       -mavxneconvert
       -mcmpccxadd
       -mamx-fp16
       -mprefetchi
       -mraoint
       -mamx-complex
       -mavxvnniint16
       -msm3
       -msha512
       -msm4
       -mapxf
       -musermsr
       -mavx10.1
       -mavx10.1-256
       -mavx10.1-512
	   These  switches  enable  the	 use  of instructions in the MMX, SSE,
	   AVX512ER,  AVX512CD,	 AVX512VL,  AVX512BW,  AVX512DQ,   AVX512IFMA,
	   AVX512VBMI,	SHA, AES, PCLMUL, CLFLUSHOPT, CLWB, FSGSBASE, PTWRITE,
	   RDRND,  F16C,  FMA,	PCONFIG,  WBNOINVD,  FMA4,  PREFETCHW,	RDPID,
	   PREFETCHWT1,	 RDSEED,  SGX,	XOP,  LWP,  3DNow!,  enhanced  3DNow!,
	   POPCNT, ABM,	ADX, BMI, BMI2,	LZCNT, FXSR, XSAVE, XSAVEOPT,  XSAVEC,
	   XSAVES,  RTM,  HLE,	TBM,  MWAITX,  CLZERO, PKU, AVX512VBMI2, GFNI,
	   VAES,  WAITPKG,  VPCLMULQDQ,	 AVX512BITALG,	 MOVDIRI,   MOVDIR64B,
	   AVX512BF16,	 ENQCMD,  AVX512VPOPCNTDQ,  AVX5124FMAPS,  AVX512VNNI,
	   AVX5124VNNIW, SERIALIZE, UINTR, HRESET, AMXTILE, AMXINT8,  AMXBF16,
	   KL,	  WIDEKL,    AVXVNNI,	AVX512-FP16,   AVXIFMA,	  AVXVNNIINT8,
	   AVXNECONVERT, CMPCCXADD, AMX-FP16, PREFETCHI, RAOINT,  AMX-COMPLEX,
	   AVXVNNIINT16,   SM3,	 SHA512,  SM4,	APX_F,	USER_MSR,  AVX10.1  or
	   CLDEMOTE extended instruction sets.	Each has a corresponding -mno-
	   option to disable use of these instructions.

	   These extensions are	also available as built-in functions: see  x86
	   Built-in  Functions,	 for  details  of  the	functions  enabled and
	   disabled by these switches.

	   To generate SSE/SSE2	instructions automatically from	floating-point
	   code	(as opposed to 387 instructions), see -mfpmath=sse.

	   GCC depresses SSEx instructions when	-mavx  is  used.  Instead,  it
	   generates  new  AVX	instructions  or  AVX equivalence for all SSEx
	   instructions	when needed.

	   These options enable	GCC to	use  these  extended  instructions  in
	   generated  code,  even  without  -mfpmath=sse.   Applications  that
	   perform run-time CPU	detection must compile separate	files for each
	   supported  architecture,   using   the   appropriate	  flags.    In
	   particular,	the  file  containing the CPU detection	code should be
	   compiled without these options.

       -mdump-tune-features
	   This	option instructs GCC to	dump the names of the x86  performance
	   tuning  features  and  default  settings.  The names	can be used in
	   -mtune-ctrl=feature-list.

       -mtune-ctrl=feature-list
	   This	option is used to do fine grain	control	of x86 code generation
	   features.  feature-list is a	comma separated	list of	feature	names.
	   See also  -mdump-tune-features.  When  specified,  the  feature  is
	   turned  on  if  it  is not preceded with ^, otherwise, it is	turned
	   off.	 -mtune-ctrl=feature-list  is  intended	 to  be	 used  by  GCC
	   developers.	Using it may lead to code paths	not covered by testing
	   and can potentially result in compiler ICEs or runtime errors.

       -mno-default
	   This	option instructs GCC to	turn off  all  tunable	features.  See
	   also	-mtune-ctrl=feature-list and -mdump-tune-features.

       -mcld
	   This	 option	 instructs  GCC	 to  emit  a  "cld" instruction	in the
	   prologue  of	 functions  that  use  string  instructions.	String
	   instructions	 depend	on the DF flag to select between autoincrement
	   or autodecrement mode.  While the ABI specifies the DF flag	to  be
	   cleared  on	function  entry,  some	operating systems violate this
	   specification by not	 clearing  the	DF  flag  in  their  exception
	   dispatchers.	 The exception handler can be invoked with the DF flag
	   set,	 which	leads to wrong direction mode when string instructions
	   are used.  This option can be enabled  by  default  on  32-bit  x86
	   targets  by configuring GCC with the	--enable-cld configure option.
	   Generation  of  "cld"  instructions	can  be	 suppressed  with  the
	   -mno-cld compiler option in this case.

       -mvzeroupper
	   This	option instructs GCC to	emit a "vzeroupper" instruction	before
	   a  transfer of control flow out of the function to minimize the AVX
	   to SSE transition penalty as	well as	remove unnecessary "zeroupper"
	   intrinsics.

       -mprefer-avx128
	   This	option instructs GCC to	use 128-bit AVX	 instructions  instead
	   of 256-bit AVX instructions in the auto-vectorizer.

       -mprefer-vector-width=opt
	   This	  option   instructs  GCC  to  use  opt-bit  vector  width  in
	   instructions	instead	of default on the selected platform.

       -mpartial-vector-fp-math
	   This	option enables GCC to generate floating-point operations  that
	   might  affect  the  set  of	floating-point status flags on partial
	   vectors, where vector elements  reside  in  the  low	 part  of  the
	   128-bit  SSE	register.  Unless -fno-trapping-math is	specified, the
	   compiler  guarantees	 correct  behavior  by	sanitizing  all	 input
	   operands  to	 have  zeroes  in  the unused upper part of the	vector
	   register.  Note that	by using built-in functions or inline assembly
	   with	partial	vector arguments, NaNs,	denormal or invalid values can
	   leak	 into  the  upper  part	 of  the  vector,   causing   possible
	   performance	issues	when  -fno-trapping-math  is in	effect.	 These
	   issues can be mitigated by manually sanitizing the  upper  part  of
	   the	partial	 vector	argument register or by	using -mdaz-ftz	to set
	   denormals-are-zero (DAZ) flag in the	MXCSR register.

	   This	option is enabled by default.

       -mmove-max=bits
	   This	option instructs GCC to	set the	maximum	number of bits can  be
	   moved  from	memory	to memory efficiently to bits.	The valid bits
	   are 128, 256	and 512.

       -mstore-max=bits
	   This	option instructs GCC to	set the	maximum	number of bits can  be
	   stored  to memory efficiently to bits.  The valid bits are 128, 256
	   and 512.

	   none
	       No extra	limitations applied to GCC other than defined  by  the
	       selected	platform.

	   128 Prefer 128-bit vector width for instructions.

	   256 Prefer 256-bit vector width for instructions.

	   512 Prefer 512-bit vector width for instructions.

       -mnoreturn-no-callee-saved-registers
	   This	 option	 optimizes  functions  with  "noreturn"	 attribute  or
	   "_Noreturn" specifier  by  not  saving  in  the  function  prologue
	   callee-saved	 registers  which are used in the function (except for
	   the "BP" register).	This option can	interfere  with	 debugging  of
	   the caller of the "noreturn"	function or any	function further up in
	   the call stack, so it is not	enabled	by default.

       -mcx16
	   This	 option	 enables  GCC to generate "CMPXCHG16B" instructions in
	   64-bit code to implement compare-and-exchange operations on 16-byte
	   aligned 128-bit objects.  This is useful for	atomic updates of data
	   structures exceeding	one machine word in size.  The	compiler  uses
	   this	 instruction  to  implement  __sync  Builtins.	 However,  for
	   __atomic Builtins operating on 128-bit integers, a library call  is
	   always used.

       -msahf
	   This	 option	 enables  generation  of "SAHF"	instructions in	64-bit
	   code.  Early	Intel Pentium 4	CPUs with Intel	64 support,  prior  to
	   the	introduction of	Pentium	4 G1 step in December 2005, lacked the
	   "LAHF" and "SAHF" instructions which	are supported by AMD64.	 These
	   are load and	store instructions, respectively, for  certain	status
	   flags.   In 64-bit mode, the	"SAHF" instruction is used to optimize
	   "fmod", "drem",  and	 "remainder"  built-in	functions;  see	 Other
	   Builtins for	details.

       -mmovbe
	   This	option enables use of the "movbe" instruction to optimize byte
	   swapping of four and	eight byte entities.

       -mshstk
	   The -mshstk option enables shadow stack built-in functions from x86
	   Control-flow	Enforcement Technology (CET).

       -mcrc32
	   This	 option	 enables  built-in functions "__builtin_ia32_crc32qi",
	   "__builtin_ia32_crc32hi",	   "__builtin_ia32_crc32si"	   and
	   "__builtin_ia32_crc32di"    to   generate   the   "crc32"   machine
	   instruction.

       -mmwait
	   This	option enables	built-in  functions  "__builtin_ia32_monitor",
	   and	"__builtin_ia32_mwait"	to  generate the "monitor" and "mwait"
	   machine instructions.

       -mrecip
	   This	option enables use of "RCPSS" and "RSQRTSS" instructions  (and
	   their vectorized variants "RCPPS" and "RSQRTPS") with an additional
	   Newton-Raphson  step	 to  increase precision	instead	of "DIVSS" and
	   "SQRTSS"  (and  their  vectorized  variants)	 for  single-precision
	   floating-point  arguments.	These  instructions are	generated only
	   when	  -funsafe-math-optimizations	is   enabled   together	  with
	   -ffinite-math-only  and  -fno-trapping-math.	  Note	that while the
	   throughput of the sequence is higher	than  the  throughput  of  the
	   non-reciprocal  instruction,	 the  precision	of the sequence	can be
	   decreased  by  up  to  2  ulp  (i.e.	 the  inverse  of  1.0	equals
	   0.99999994).

	   Note	 that GCC implements "1.0f/sqrtf(x)" in	terms of "RSQRTSS" (or
	   "RSQRTPS")  already	with  -ffast-math   (or	  the	above	option
	   combination), and doesn't need -mrecip.

	   Also	note that GCC emits the	above sequence with additional Newton-
	   Raphson  step  for  vectorized single-float division	and vectorized
	   "sqrtf(x)"  already	with  -ffast-math   (or	  the	above	option
	   combination), and doesn't need -mrecip.

       -mrecip=opt
	   This	 option	controls which reciprocal estimate instructions	may be
	   used.  opt is a comma-separated  list  of  options,	which  may  be
	   preceded by a ! to invert the option:

	   all Enable all estimate instructions.

	   default
	       Enable the default instructions,	equivalent to -mrecip.

	   none
	       Disable all estimate instructions, equivalent to	-mno-recip.

	   div Enable the approximation	for scalar division.

	   vec-div
	       Enable the approximation	for vectorized division.

	   sqrt
	       Enable the approximation	for scalar square root.

	   vec-sqrt
	       Enable the approximation	for vectorized square root.

	   So,	for  example,  -mrecip=all,!sqrt enables all of	the reciprocal
	   approximations, except for square root.

       -mveclibabi=type
	   Specifies the ABI type to use for vectorizing intrinsics  using  an
	   external library.  Supported	values for type	are svml for the Intel
	   short  vector  math library and acml	for the	AMD math core library.
	   To	 use	this	 option,     both     -ftree-vectorize	   and
	   -funsafe-math-optimizations have to be enabled, and an SVML or ACML
	   ABI-compatible library must be specified at link time.

	   GCC	currently  emits calls to "vmldExp2", "vmldLn2", "vmldLog102",
	   "vmldPow2",	"vmldTanh2",  "vmldTan2",  "vmldAtan2",	 "vmldAtanh2",
	   "vmldCbrt2",	 "vmldSinh2",  "vmldSin2",  "vmldAsinh2", "vmldAsin2",
	   "vmldCosh2",	 "vmldCos2",  "vmldAcosh2",  "vmldAcos2",  "vmlsExp4",
	   "vmlsLn4",	"vmlsLog104",	"vmlsPow4",  "vmlsTanh4",  "vmlsTan4",
	   "vmlsAtan4",	"vmlsAtanh4",  "vmlsCbrt4",  "vmlsSinh4",  "vmlsSin4",
	   "vmlsAsinh4",  "vmlsAsin4",	"vmlsCosh4",  "vmlsCos4", "vmlsAcosh4"
	   and	 "vmlsAcos4"   for   corresponding    function	  type	  when
	   -mveclibabi=svml   is   used,   and	 "__vrd2_sin",	 "__vrd2_cos",
	   "__vrd2_exp",    "__vrd2_log",    "__vrd2_log2",    "__vrd2_log10",
	   "__vrs4_sinf",    "__vrs4_cosf",    "__vrs4_expf",	"__vrs4_logf",
	   "__vrs4_log2f",   "__vrs4_log10f"   and   "__vrs4_powf"   for   the
	   corresponding function type when -mveclibabi=acml is	used.

       -mabi=name
	   Generate  code  for	the specified calling convention.  Permissible
	   values are sysv for the ABI used on GNU/Linux  and  other  systems,
	   and	ms for the Microsoft ABI.  The default is to use the Microsoft
	   ABI when targeting Microsoft	Windows	and the	SysV ABI on all	 other
	   systems.   You  can control this behavior for specific functions by
	   using the function attributes "ms_abi" and "sysv_abi".

       -mforce-indirect-call
	   Force all calls to functions	to be indirect.	This  is  useful  when
	   using  Intel	Processor Trace	where it generates more	precise	timing
	   information for function calls.

       -mmanual-endbr
	   Insert ENDBR	instruction at function	entry only via the  "cf_check"
	   function  attribute.	 This  is  useful  when	 used  with the	option
	   -fcf-protection=branch to control ENDBR insertion at	 the  function
	   entry.

       -mcet-switch
	   By  default,	CET instrumentation is turned off on switch statements
	   that	use a jump table and indirect branch track is disabled.	 Since
	   jump	tables are stored in read-only memory, this does not result in
	   a direct loss of  hardening.	  But  if  the	jump  table  index  is
	   attacker-controlled,	 the  indirect	jump may not be	constrained by
	   CET.	 This option turns on CET instrumentation to  enable  indirect
	   branch  track for switch statements with jump tables	which leads to
	   the jump targets reachable via any indirect jumps.

       -mcall-ms2sysv-xlogues
	   Due to differences in 64-bit	ABIs, any Microsoft ABI	function  that
	   calls a System V ABI	function must consider RSI, RDI	and XMM6-15 as
	   clobbered.	By  default,  the  code	for saving and restoring these
	   registers is	emitted	inline,	resulting in fairly lengthy  prologues
	   and	epilogues.   Using  -mcall-ms2sysv-xlogues emits prologues and
	   epilogues that use stubs in the static portion of libgcc to perform
	   these saves and restores, thus reducing function size at  the  cost
	   of a	few extra instructions.

       -mtls-dialect=type
	   Generate  code to access thread-local storage using the gnu or gnu2
	   conventions.	  gnu  is  the	conservative  default;	gnu2  is  more
	   efficient,  but  it may add compile-	and run-time requirements that
	   cannot be satisfied on all systems.

       -mpush-args
       -mno-push-args
	   Use PUSH operations to store	outgoing parameters.  This  method  is
	   shorter and usually equally fast as method using SUB/MOV operations
	   and	is enabled by default.	In some	cases disabling	it may improve
	   performance	 because   of	improved   scheduling	and    reduced
	   dependencies.

       -maccumulate-outgoing-args
	   If  enabled,	 the  maximum  amount  of  space required for outgoing
	   arguments is	computed in the	function prologue.  This is faster  on
	   most	  modern   CPUs	 because  of  reduced  dependencies,  improved
	   scheduling  and  reduced  stack  usage  when	 the  preferred	 stack
	   boundary  is	not equal to 2.	 The drawback is a notable increase in
	   code	size.  This switch implies -mno-push-args.

       -mthreads
	   Support thread-safe exception handling  on  MinGW.	Programs  that
	   rely	 on  thread-safe  exception handling must compile and link all
	   code	with the -mthreads option.  When compiling, -mthreads  defines
	   -D_MT;  when	 linking,  it links in a special thread	helper library
	   -lmingwthrd which cleans up per-thread exception-handling data.

       -mms-bitfields
       -mno-ms-bitfields
	   Enable/disable  bit-field  layout  compatible   with	  the	native
	   Microsoft Windows compiler.

	   If  "packed"	 is used on a structure, or if bit-fields are used, it
	   may be that the Microsoft ABI lays out  the	structure  differently
	   than	 the  way  GCC normally	does.  Particularly when moving	packed
	   data	between	functions compiled with	GCC and	the  native  Microsoft
	   compiler (either via	function call or as data in a file), it	may be
	   necessary to	access either format.

	   This	 option	 is  enabled by	default	for Microsoft Windows targets.
	   This	behavior can also be controlled	locally	by use of variable  or
	   type	attributes.  For more information, see x86 Variable Attributes
	   and x86 Type	Attributes.

	   The	Microsoft structure layout algorithm is	fairly simple with the
	   exception of	the bit-field packing.	The padding and	 alignment  of
	   members  of	structures  and	 whether  a  bit-field	can straddle a
	   storage-unit	boundary are determine by these	rules:

	   1. Structure	members	are stored sequentially	in the order in	which
	   they	are
	       declared: the first member has the lowest  memory  address  and
	       the last	member the highest.

	   2. Every data object	has an alignment requirement.  The alignment
	   requirement
	       for  all	 data  except structures, unions, and arrays is	either
	       the size	of the object or the current packing  size  (specified
	       with  either  the  "aligned"  attribute	or the "pack" pragma),
	       whichever is less.  For structures,  unions,  and  arrays,  the
	       alignment  requirement  is the largest alignment	requirement of
	       its members.  Every object is allocated an offset so that:

		       offset %	alignment_requirement == 0

	   3. Adjacent bit-fields are packed into the same 1-, 2-, or 4-byte
	   allocation
	       unit if the integral types are the same size and	 if  the  next
	       bit-field   fits	 into  the  current  allocation	 unit  without
	       crossing	 the  boundary	imposed	 by   the   common   alignment
	       requirements of the bit-fields.

	   MSVC	interprets zero-length bit-fields in the following ways:

	   1. If a zero-length bit-field is inserted between two bit-fields
	   that
	       are normally coalesced, the bit-fields are not coalesced.

	       For example:

		       struct
			{
			  unsigned long	bf_1 : 12;
			  unsigned long	: 0;
			  unsigned long	bf_2 : 12;
			} t1;

	       The size	of "t1"	is 8 bytes with	the zero-length	bit-field.  If
	       the  zero-length	bit-field were removed,	"t1"'s size would be 4
	       bytes.

	   2. If a zero-length bit-field is inserted after a bit-field,	"foo",
	   and the
	       alignment of the	zero-length  bit-field	is  greater  than  the
	       member  that follows it,	"bar", "bar" is	aligned	as the type of
	       the zero-length bit-field.

	       For example:

		       struct
			{
			  char foo : 4;
			  short	: 0;
			  char bar;
			} t2;

		       struct
			{
			  char foo : 4;
			  short	: 0;
			  double bar;
			} t3;

	       For "t2", "bar" is placed at offset 2, rather  than  offset  1.
	       Accordingly,  the size of "t2" is 4.  For "t3", the zero-length
	       bit-field does not affect the  alignment	 of  "bar"  or,	 as  a
	       result, the size	of the structure.

	       Taking	this  into  account,  it  is  important	 to  note  the
	       following:

	       1. If a zero-length bit-field follows a normal bit-field, the
	       type of the
		   zero-length bit-field  may  affect  the  alignment  of  the
		   structure  as  whole.  For  example,	 "t2"  has a size of 4
		   bytes, since	the zero-length	 bit-field  follows  a	normal
		   bit-field, and is of	type short.

	       2. Even if a zero-length	bit-field is not followed by a normal
	       bit-field, it may
		   still affect	the alignment of the structure:

			   struct
			    {
			      char foo : 6;
			      long : 0;
			    } t4;

		   Here, "t4" takes up 4 bytes.

	   3. Zero-length bit-fields following non-bit-field members are
	   ignored:
		       struct
			{
			  char foo;
			  long : 0;
			  char bar;
			} t5;

	       Here, "t5" takes	up 2 bytes.

       -mno-align-stringops
	   Do  not  align  the destination of inlined string operations.  This
	   switch reduces code size  and  improves  performance	 in  case  the
	   destination is already aligned, but GCC doesn't know	about it.

       -minline-all-stringops
	   By  default GCC inlines string operations only when the destination
	   is known to be aligned to least a 4-byte  boundary.	 This  enables
	   more	 inlining and increases	code size, but may improve performance
	   of code that	depends	 on  fast  "memcpy"  and  "memset"  for	 short
	   lengths.   The  option enables inline expansion of "strlen" for all
	   pointer alignments.

       -minline-stringops-dynamically
	   For string operations of unknown size,  use	run-time  checks  with
	   inline code for small blocks	and a library call for large blocks.

       -mstringop-strategy=alg
	   Override   the  internal  decision  heuristic  for  the  particular
	   algorithm to	use  for  inlining  string  operations.	  The  allowed
	   values for alg are:

	   rep_byte
	   rep_4byte
	   rep_8byte
	       Expand using i386 "rep" prefix of the specified size.

	   byte_loop
	   loop
	   unrolled_loop
	       Expand into an inline loop.

	   libcall
	       Always use a library call.

       -mmemcpy-strategy=strategy
	   Override   the   internal   decision	  heuristic   to   decide   if
	   "__builtin_memcpy" should be	inlined	and what inline	 algorithm  to
	   use when the	expected size of the copy operation is known. strategy
	   is a	comma-separated	list of	alg:max_size:dest_align	triplets.  alg
	   is  specified  in  -mstringop-strategy,  max_size specifies the max
	   byte	size with which	inline algorithm alg is	allowed.  For the last
	   triplet, the	max_size must be "-1". The max_size of the triplets in
	   the list must be specified in increasing order.  The	 minimal  byte
	   size	 for  alg is 0 for the first triplet and "max_size + 1"	of the
	   preceding range.

       -mmemset-strategy=strategy
	   The option is similar to -mmemcpy-strategy= except that  it	is  to
	   control "__builtin_memset" expansion.

       -momit-leaf-frame-pointer
	   Don't  keep	the  frame  pointer  in	a register for leaf functions.
	   This	avoids the instructions	to save, set  up,  and	restore	 frame
	   pointers  and  makes	an extra register available in leaf functions.
	   The option -fomit-leaf-frame-pointer	removes	the frame pointer  for
	   leaf	functions, which might make debugging harder.

       -mtls-direct-seg-refs
       -mno-tls-direct-seg-refs
	   Controls  whether  TLS  variables may be accessed with offsets from
	   the TLS segment register (%gs  for  32-bit,	%fs  for  64-bit),  or
	   whether the thread base pointer must	be added.  Whether or not this
	   is  valid  depends on the operating system, and whether it maps the
	   segment to cover the	entire TLS area.

	   For systems that use	the GNU	C Library, the default is on.

       -msse2avx
       -mno-sse2avx
	   Specify that	the assembler should encode SSE	instructions with  VEX
	   prefix.  The	option -mavx turns this	on by default.

       -mfentry
       -mno-fentry
	   If profiling	is active (-pg), put the profiling counter call	before
	   the	 prologue.    Note:   On   x86	 architectures	the  attribute
	   "ms_hook_prologue" isn't possible at	the moment  for	 -mfentry  and
	   -pg.

       -mrecord-mcount
       -mno-record-mcount
	   If  profiling is active (-pg), generate a __mcount_loc section that
	   contains pointers to	 each  profiling  call.	 This  is  useful  for
	   automatically patching and out calls.

       -mnop-mcount
       -mno-nop-mcount
	   If  profiling  is active (-pg), generate the	calls to the profiling
	   functions as	NOPs. This is useful when they should  be  patched  in
	   later  dynamically.	This  is  likely  only	useful	together  with
	   -mrecord-mcount.

       -minstrument-return=type
	   Instrument function exit in	-pg  -mfentry  instrumented  functions
	   with	call to	specified function. This only instruments true returns
	   ending  with	 ret,  but  not	 sibling calls ending with jump. Valid
	   types are none to not  instrument,  call  to	 generate  a  call  to
	   __return__, or nop5 to generate a 5 byte nop.

       -mrecord-return
       -mno-record-return
	   Generate   a	  __return_loc	 section   pointing   to   all	return
	   instrumentation code.

       -mfentry-name=name
	   Set name of __fentry__ symbol called	 at  function  entry  for  -pg
	   -mfentry functions.

       -mfentry-section=name
	   Set	name  of  section  to  record  -mrecord-mcount	calls (default
	   __mcount_loc).

       -mskip-rax-setup
       -mno-skip-rax-setup
	   When	 generating  code  for	the  x86-64  architecture   with   SSE
	   extensions  disabled,  -mskip-rax-setup can be used to skip setting
	   up RAX register when	there are  no  variable	 arguments  passed  in
	   vector registers.

	   Warning:  Since  RAX	register is used to avoid unnecessarily	saving
	   vector registers on stack  when  passing  variable  arguments,  the
	   impacts  of	this  option  are  callees may waste some stack	space,
	   misbehave or	jump to	a random location.  GCC	 4.4  or  newer	 don't
	   have	those issues, regardless the RAX register value.

       -m8bit-idiv
       -mno-8bit-idiv
	   On  some processors,	like Intel Atom, 8-bit unsigned	integer	divide
	   is much faster than	32-bit/64-bit  integer	divide.	  This	option
	   generates  a	 run-time  check.   If	both  dividend and divisor are
	   within range	of 0 to	255, 8-bit unsigned  integer  divide  is  used
	   instead of 32-bit/64-bit integer divide.

       -mavx256-split-unaligned-load
       -mavx256-split-unaligned-store
	   Split 32-byte AVX unaligned load and	store.

       -mstack-protector-guard=guard
       -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
       -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset
	   Generate  stack  protection	code using canary at guard.  Supported
	   locations are global	for global canary or tls for per-thread	canary
	   in the TLS block (the default).  This option	has effect  only  when
	   -fstack-protector or	-fstack-protector-all is specified.

	   With	 the latter choice the options -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg
	   and -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset furthermore specify which
	   segment register (%fs or %gs) to use	as base	register  for  reading
	   the	canary,	 and  from  what  offset from that base	register.  The
	   default for those is	as specified in	the relevant ABI.

       -mgeneral-regs-only
	   Generate code that uses only	the general-purpose  registers.	  This
	   prevents  the  compiler from	using floating-point, vector, mask and
	   bound registers.

       -mrelax-cmpxchg-loop
	   When	emitting a  compare-and-swap  loop  for	 __sync	 Builtins  and
	   __atomic  Builtins  lacking	a native instruction, optimize for the
	   highly  contended  case  by	issuing	 an  atomic  load  before  the
	   "CMPXCHG"  instruction,  and	 using the "PAUSE" instruction to save
	   CPU power when restarting the loop.

       -mindirect-branch=choice
	   Convert indirect call and jump with choice.	The default  is	 keep,
	   which  keeps	 indirect  call	 and  jump unmodified.	thunk converts
	   indirect call and jump to  call  and	 return	 thunk.	  thunk-inline
	   converts  indirect  call and	jump to	inlined	call and return	thunk.
	   thunk-extern	converts indirect call and jump	to external  call  and
	   return  thunk  provided in a	separate object	file.  You can control
	   this	behavior  for  a  specific  function  by  using	 the  function
	   attribute "indirect_branch".

	   Note	     that      -mcmodel=large	  is	 incompatible	  with
	   -mindirect-branch=thunk  and	 -mindirect-branch=thunk-extern	 since
	   the thunk function may not be reachable in the large	code model.

	   Note	  that	 -mindirect-branch=thunk-extern	  is  compatible  with
	   -fcf-protection=branch since	the external  thunk  can  be  made  to
	   enable control-flow check.

       -mfunction-return=choice
	   Convert  function  return  with choice.  The	default	is keep, which
	   keeps function return unmodified.  thunk converts  function	return
	   to call and return thunk.  thunk-inline converts function return to
	   inlined  call  and  return  thunk.	thunk-extern converts function
	   return to external call and return thunk  provided  in  a  separate
	   object file.	 You can control this behavior for a specific function
	   by using the	function attribute "function_return".

	   Note	  that	 -mindirect-return=thunk-extern	  is  compatible  with
	   -fcf-protection=branch since	the external  thunk  can  be  made  to
	   enable control-flow check.

	   Note	     that      -mcmodel=large	  is	 incompatible	  with
	   -mfunction-return=thunk  and	 -mfunction-return=thunk-extern	 since
	   the thunk function may not be reachable in the large	code model.

       -mindirect-branch-register
	   Force indirect call and jump	via register.

       -mharden-sls=choice
	   Generate  code  to mitigate against straight	line speculation (SLS)
	   with	choice.	 The default is	none which disables all	SLS hardening.
	   return enables SLS hardening	for  function  returns.	  indirect-jmp
	   enables  SLS	 hardening  for	 indirect  jumps.  all enables all SLS
	   hardening.

       -mindirect-branch-cs-prefix
	   Add CS prefix to call and jmp to indirect thunk with	branch	target
	   in  r8-r15 registers	so that	the call and jmp instruction length is
	   6 bytes to allow them to be replaced	with lfence; call *%r8-r15  or
	   lfence; jmp *%r8-r15	at run-time.

       -mapx-inline-asm-use-gpr32
	   For	inline	asm  support with APX, by default the EGPR feature was
	   disabled to prevent potential illegal instruction with EGPR occurs.
	   To invoke egpr  usage  in  inline  asm,  use	 new  compiler	option
	   -mapx-inline-asm-use-gpr32  and  user should	ensure the instruction
	   supports EGPR.

       -mevex512
       -mno-evex512
	   Enables/disables 512-bit vector. It will be default on  if  AVX512F
	   is enabled.

       These  -m  switches  are	 supported  in addition	to the above on	x86-64
       processors in 64-bit environments.

       -m32
       -m64
       -mx32
       -m16
       -miamcu
	   Generate code for a 16-bit, 32-bit or 64-bit	environment.  The -m32
	   option sets "int", "long",  and  pointer  types  to	32  bits,  and
	   generates code that runs in 32-bit mode.

	   The	-m64 option sets "int" to 32 bits and "long" and pointer types
	   to 64 bits, and generates code for the  x86-64  architecture.   For
	   Darwin  only	 the  -m64  option  also  turns	 off  the -fno-pic and
	   -mdynamic-no-pic options.

	   The -mx32 option sets "int",	"long",	and pointer types to 32	 bits,
	   and generates code for the x86-64 architecture.

	   The -m16 option is the same as -m32,	except for that	it outputs the
	   ".code16gcc"	 assembly  directive  at the beginning of the assembly
	   output so that the binary can run in	16-bit mode.

	   The -miamcu option generates	 code  which  conforms	to  Intel  MCU
	   psABI.  It requires the -m32	option to be turned on.

       -mno-red-zone
	   Do not use a	so-called "red zone" for x86-64	code.  The red zone is
	   mandated  by	 the  x86-64  ABI;  it	is  a 128-byte area beyond the
	   location of the stack pointer that is not  modified	by  signal  or
	   interrupt  handlers	and  therefore	can be used for	temporary data
	   without  adjusting  the  stack  pointer.   The  flag	 -mno-red-zone
	   disables this red zone.

       -mcmodel=small
	   Generate code for the small code model: the program and its symbols
	   must	 be  linked  in	the lower 2 GB of the address space.  Pointers
	   are 64 bits.	 Programs can be  statically  or  dynamically  linked.
	   This	is the default code model.

       -mcmodel=kernel
	   Generate  code  for	the kernel code	model.	The kernel runs	in the
	   negative 2 GB of the	address	space.	This model has to be used  for
	   Linux kernel	code.

       -mcmodel=medium
	   Generate  code  for	the medium model: the program is linked	in the
	   lower 2 GB of the address space.  Small  symbols  are  also	placed
	   there.   Symbols  with sizes	larger than -mlarge-data-threshold are
	   put into large data or BSS sections and can be located  above  2GB.
	   Programs can	be statically or dynamically linked.

       -mcmodel=large
	   Generate code for the large model.  This model makes	no assumptions
	   about addresses and sizes of	sections.

       -maddress-mode=long
	   Generate  code  for	long address mode.  This is only supported for
	   64-bit and x32 environments.	 It is the default  address  mode  for
	   64-bit environments.

       -maddress-mode=short
	   Generate  code  for short address mode.  This is only supported for
	   32-bit and x32 environments.	 It is the default  address  mode  for
	   32-bit and x32 environments.

       -mneeded
       -mno-needed
	   Emit	GNU_PROPERTY_X86_ISA_1_NEEDED GNU property for Linux target to
	   indicate  the  micro-architecture ISA level required	to execute the
	   binary.

       -mno-direct-extern-access
	   Without -fpic nor -fPIC, always  use	 the  GOT  pointer  to	access
	   external  symbols.	With -fpic or -fPIC, treat access to protected
	   symbols as local symbols.  The default is -mdirect-extern-access.

	   Warning: shared libraries compiled  with  -mno-direct-extern-access
	   and	executable  compiled  with  -mdirect-extern-access  may	not be
	   binary compatible if	protected symbols are used in shared libraries
	   and executable.

       -munroll-only-small-loops
	   Controls conservative small loop unrolling. It is  default  enabled
	   by  O2, and unrolls loop with less than 4 insns by 1	time. Explicit
	   -f[no-]unroll-[all-]loops would disable  this  flag	to  avoid  any
	   unintended unrolling	behavior that user does	not want.

       -mlam=choice
	   LAM(linear-address  masking)	 allows	special	bits in	the pointer to
	   be used for metadata. The default is	none. With u48,	 pointer  bits
	   in positions	62:48 can be used for metadata;	With u57, pointer bits
	   in positions	62:57 can be used for metadata.

       x86 Windows Options

       These additional	options	are available for Microsoft Windows targets:

       -mconsole
	   This	  option  specifies  that  a  console  application  is	to  be
	   generated, by instructing the linker	to set the PE header subsystem
	   type	required for console applications.  This option	 is  available
	   for	Cygwin	and  MinGW  targets and	is enabled by default on those
	   targets.

       -mcrtdll=library
	   Preprocess, compile or link with specified C	RunTime	 DLL  library.
	   This	 option	 adjust	 predefined macros "__CRTDLL__", "__MSVCRT__",
	   "_UCRT" and "__MSVCRT_VERSION__" for	specified CRT library,	choose
	   start  file	for CRT	library	and link with CRT library.  Recognized
	   CRT library names for  proprocessor	are:  "crtdll*",  "msvcrt10*",
	   "msvcrt20*",	 "msvcrt40*",  "msvcr40*",  "msvcrtd*",	 "msvcrt-os*",
	   "msvcr70*",	"msvcr71*",   "msvcr80*",   "msvcr90*",	  "msvcr100*",
	   "msvcr110*",	 "msvcr120*"  and  "ucrt*".   If  this	options	is not
	   specified then the default MinGW import library  "msvcrt"  is  used
	   for linking and no other adjustment for preprocessor	is done. MinGW
	   import library "msvcrt" is just a symlink to	(or a copy of) another
	   MinGW  CRT  import  library	chosen during MinGW compilation. MinGW
	   import library "msvcrt-os" is for Windows system  CRT  DLL  library
	   "msvcrt.dll"	and in most cases is the default MinGW import library.
	   Generally  speaking,	 changing the CRT DLL requires recompiling the
	   entire MinGW	CRT. This  option  is  for  experimental  and  testing
	   purposes only.  This	option is available for	MinGW targets.

       -mdll
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  Cygwin  and  MinGW	 targets.   It
	   specifies that a DLL---a dynamic link library---is to be generated,
	   enabling the	selection of the required runtime startup  object  and
	   entry point.

       -mnop-fun-dllimport
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  Cygwin  and  MinGW	 targets.   It
	   specifies that the "dllimport" attribute should be ignored.

       -mthreads
	   This	option is available  for  MinGW	 targets.  It  specifies  that
	   MinGW-specific thread support is to be used.

       -municode
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  MinGW-w64 targets.	 It causes the
	   "UNICODE" preprocessor macro	to be predefined, and chooses Unicode-
	   capable runtime startup code.

       -mwin32
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  Cygwin  and  MinGW	 targets.   It
	   specifies  that the typical Microsoft Windows predefined macros are
	   to be set in	the pre-processor, but does not	influence  the	choice
	   of runtime library/startup code.

       -mwindows
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  Cygwin  and  MinGW	 targets.   It
	   specifies that a GUI	application is to be generated by  instructing
	   the linker to set the PE header subsystem type appropriately.

       -fno-set-stack-executable
	   This	 option	 is available for MinGW	targets. It specifies that the
	   executable flag for the stack used by nested	functions  isn't  set.
	   This	 is necessary for binaries running in kernel mode of Microsoft
	   Windows, as there the User32	API, which is used to  set  executable
	   privileges, isn't available.

       -fwritable-relocated-rdata
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  MinGW  and	 Cygwin	 targets.   It
	   specifies that relocated-data in read-only section is put into  the
	   ".data"  section.   This  is	 a  necessary  for  older runtimes not
	   supporting modification of ".rdata" sections	for pseudo-relocation.

       -mpe-aligned-commons
	   This	 option	 is  available	for  Cygwin  and  MinGW	 targets.   It
	   specifies that the GNU extension to the PE file format that permits
	   the	correct	 alignment  of	COMMON	variables  should be used when
	   generating code.  It	is enabled by default if GCC detects that  the
	   target assembler found during configuration supports	the feature.

       See also	under x86 Options for standard options.

       Xstormy16 Options

       These options are defined for Xstormy16:

       -msim
	   Choose startup files	and linker script suitable for the simulator.

       Xtensa Options

       These options are supported for Xtensa targets:

       -mconst16
       -mno-const16
	   Enable  or  disable	use  of	 "CONST16"  instructions  for  loading
	   constant values.  The "CONST16"  instruction	 is  currently	not  a
	   standard   option   from   Tensilica.    When   enabled,  "CONST16"
	   instructions	are always  used  in  place  of	 the  standard	"L32R"
	   instructions.   The	use of "CONST16" is enabled by default only if
	   the "L32R" instruction is not available.

       -mfused-madd
       -mno-fused-madd
	   Enable or disable use of fused multiply/add	and  multiply/subtract
	   instructions	 in  the floating-point	option.	 This has no effect if
	   the floating-point option is	not  also  enabled.   Disabling	 fused
	   multiply/add	and multiply/subtract instructions forces the compiler
	   to  use  separate  instructions  for	 the multiply and add/subtract
	   operations.	This may be desirable in some cases where strict  IEEE
	   754-compliant results are required: the fused multiply add/subtract
	   instructions	  do   not  round  the	intermediate  result,  thereby
	   producing results with more bits of precision than specified	by the
	   IEEE	standard.  Disabling fused multiply add/subtract  instructions
	   also	 ensures  that	the  program  output  is  not sensitive	to the
	   compiler's ability to combine multiply and add/subtract operations.

       -mserialize-volatile
       -mno-serialize-volatile
	   When	this option is enabled,	GCC inserts "MEMW" instructions	before
	   "volatile" memory references	to guarantee  sequential  consistency.
	   The	default	 is -mserialize-volatile.  Use -mno-serialize-volatile
	   to omit the "MEMW" instructions.

       -mforce-no-pic
	   For targets,	like GNU/Linux,	where all user-mode Xtensa  code  must
	   be  position-independent  code  (PIC), this option disables PIC for
	   compiling kernel code.

       -mtext-section-literals
       -mno-text-section-literals
	   These options control the treatment of literal pools.  The  default
	   is  -mno-text-section-literals, which places	literals in a separate
	   section in the output file.	This allows the	 literal  pool	to  be
	   placed  in a	data RAM/ROM, and it also allows the linker to combine
	   literal pools  from	separate  object  files	 to  remove  redundant
	   literals  and improve code size.  With -mtext-section-literals, the
	   literals are	interspersed in	the text section in order to keep them
	   as close as possible	to their references.  This  may	 be  necessary
	   for	large  assembly	 files.	 Literals for each function are	placed
	   right before	that function.

       -mauto-litpools
       -mno-auto-litpools
	   These options control the treatment of literal pools.  The  default
	   is  -mno-auto-litpools, which places	literals in a separate section
	   in the output file unless -mtext-section-literals  is  used.	  With
	   -mauto-litpools  the	 literals are interspersed in the text section
	   by the assembler.  Compiler does not	 produce  explicit  ".literal"
	   directives	and   loads   literals	 into  registers  with	"MOVI"
	   instructions	instead	of "L32R" to let the assembler	do  relaxation
	   and	place  literals	as necessary.  This option allows assembler to
	   create several literal pools	per function  and  assemble  very  big
	   functions, which may	not be possible	with -mtext-section-literals.

       -mtarget-align
       -mno-target-align
	   When	 this  option  is  enabled,  GCC  instructs  the  assembler to
	   automatically align instructions to reduce branch penalties at  the
	   expense  of	some  code  density.   The assembler attempts to widen
	   density instructions	to align branch	targets	and  the  instructions
	   following  call  instructions.   If	there are not enough preceding
	   safe	density	 instructions  to  align  a  target,  no  widening  is
	   performed.	The  default  is -mtarget-align.  These	options	do not
	   affect the treatment	 of  auto-aligned  instructions	 like  "LOOP",
	   which  the  assembler  always  aligns,  either  by widening density
	   instructions	or by inserting	NOP instructions.

       -mlongcalls
       -mno-longcalls
	   When	this  option  is  enabled,  GCC	 instructs  the	 assembler  to
	   translate  direct  calls  to	indirect calls unless it can determine
	   that	the target of a	direct call is in the  range  allowed  by  the
	   call	 instruction.	This translation typically occurs for calls to
	   functions in	 other	source	files.	 Specifically,	the  assembler
	   translates a	direct "CALL" instruction into an "L32R" followed by a
	   "CALLX"  instruction.   The default is -mno-longcalls.  This	option
	   should be used in programs where the	call target can	potentially be
	   out of range.  This option is implemented in	the assembler, not the
	   compiler, so	the assembly code generated by GCC still shows	direct
	   call	instructions---look at the disassembled	object code to see the
	   actual instructions.	 Note that the assembler uses an indirect call
	   for	every  cross-file  call, not just those	that really are	out of
	   range.

       -mabi=name
	   Generate code for  the  specified  ABI.   Permissible  values  are:
	   call0,  windowed.   Default	ABI  is	 chosen	 by  the  Xtensa  core
	   configuration.

       -mabi=call0
	   When	this option is	enabled	 function  parameters  are  passed  in
	   registers  "a2"  through  "a7",  registers  "a12" through "a15" are
	   caller-saved, and register "a15" may	be used	as  a  frame  pointer.
	   When	 this  version of the ABI is enabled the C preprocessor	symbol
	   "__XTENSA_CALL0_ABI__" is defined.

       -mabi=windowed
	   When	this option is	enabled	 function  parameters  are  passed  in
	   registers "a10" through "a15", and called function rotates register
	   window  by  8 registers on entry so that its	arguments are found in
	   registers "a2" through "a7".	 Register "a7" may be used as a	 frame
	   pointer.   Register window is rotated 8 registers back upon return.
	   When	this version of	the ABI	is enabled the C  preprocessor	symbol
	   "__XTENSA_WINDOWED_ABI__" is	defined.

       -mextra-l32r-costs=n
	   Specify  an	extra  cost  of	 instruction RAM/ROM access for	"L32R"
	   instructions, in clock cycles.  This	affects, when  optimizing  for
	   speed, whether loading a constant from literal pool using "L32R" or
	   synthesizing	 the  constant	from  a	 small	one  with  a couple of
	   arithmetic instructions.  The default value is 0.

       -mstrict-align
       -mno-strict-align
	   Avoid or allow generating memory accesses that may not  be  aligned
	   on  a  natural  object  boundary  as	 described in the architecture
	   specification.  The default is  -mno-strict-align  for  cores  that
	   support   both   unaligned	loads	and  stores  in	 hardware  and
	   -mstrict-align for all other	cores.

       zSeries Options

       These are listed	under

ENVIRONMENT
       This section describes several environment variables  that  affect  how
       GCC  operates.  Some of them work by specifying directories or prefixes
       to use when searching for various kinds of files.   Some	 are  used  to
       specify other aspects of	the compilation	environment.

       Note  that  you can also	specify	places to search using options such as
       -B, -I and -L.  These  take  precedence	over  places  specified	 using
       environment  variables,	which  in  turn	 take  precedence  over	 those
       specified by the	configuration of GCC.

       LANG
       LC_CTYPE
       LC_MESSAGES
       LC_ALL
	   These  environment  variables  control  the	way  that   GCC	  uses
	   localization	 information  which  allows GCC	to work	with different
	   national conventions.  GCC inspects the locale categories  LC_CTYPE
	   and	LC_MESSAGES  if	it has been configured to do so.  These	locale
	   categories can be set to any	value supported	by your	 installation.
	   A  typical  value  is en_GB.UTF-8 for English in the	United Kingdom
	   encoded in UTF-8.

	   The	 LC_CTYPE    environment    variable	specifies    character
	   classification.   GCC uses it to determine the character boundaries
	   in a	string;	this is	 needed	 for  some  multibyte  encodings  that
	   contain  quote and escape characters	that are otherwise interpreted
	   as a	string end or escape.

	   The LC_MESSAGES environment variable	specifies the language to  use
	   in diagnostic messages.

	   If  the  LC_ALL environment variable	is set,	it overrides the value
	   of LC_CTYPE and LC_MESSAGES;	otherwise,  LC_CTYPE  and  LC_MESSAGES
	   default  to the value of the	LANG environment variable.  If none of
	   these variables are set, GCC	 defaults  to  traditional  C  English
	   behavior.

       TMPDIR
	   If  TMPDIR  is set, it specifies the	directory to use for temporary
	   files.  GCC uses temporary files to hold the	output of one stage of
	   compilation which is	to be used as input to	the  next  stage:  for
	   example,  the output	of the preprocessor, which is the input	to the
	   compiler proper.

       GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG
	   Setting  GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG  is   nearly   equivalent	  to   passing
	   -fcompare-debug  to	the compiler driver.  See the documentation of
	   this	option for more	details.

       GCC_EXEC_PREFIX
	   If GCC_EXEC_PREFIX is set, it specifies a  prefix  to  use  in  the
	   names  of  the  subprograms	executed by the	compiler.  No slash is
	   added when this prefix is combined with the name of	a  subprogram,
	   but you can specify a prefix	that ends with a slash if you wish.

	   If  GCC_EXEC_PREFIX	is  not	 set,  GCC  attempts  to figure	out an
	   appropriate prefix to use based on the pathname it is invoked with.

	   If GCC cannot find the subprogram using the	specified  prefix,  it
	   tries looking in the	usual places for the subprogram.

	   The	default	 value	of  GCC_EXEC_PREFIX  is	 prefix/lib/gcc/ where
	   prefix is the prefix	to  the	 installed  compiler.  In  many	 cases
	   prefix is the value of "prefix" when	you ran	the configure script.

	   Other prefixes specified with -B take precedence over this prefix.

	   This	 prefix	is also	used for finding files such as crt0.o that are
	   used	for linking.

	   In addition,	the prefix is used in an unusual way  in  finding  the
	   directories	to  search for header files.  For each of the standard
	   directories whose  name  normally  begins  with  /usr/local/lib/gcc
	   (more  precisely,  with  the	 value	of GCC_INCLUDE_DIR), GCC tries
	   replacing that beginning with the specified prefix  to  produce  an
	   alternate  directory	name.  Thus, with -Bfoo/, GCC searches foo/bar
	   just	before it searches the standard	directory  /usr/local/lib/bar.
	   If  a standard directory begins with	the configured prefix then the
	   value of prefix is replaced by  GCC_EXEC_PREFIX  when  looking  for
	   header files.

       COMPILER_PATH
	   The	 value	 of   COMPILER_PATH   is  a  colon-separated  list  of
	   directories,	much  like  PATH.   GCC	 tries	the  directories  thus
	   specified  when  searching  for  subprograms, if it cannot find the
	   subprograms using GCC_EXEC_PREFIX.

       LIBRARY_PATH
	   The value of	LIBRARY_PATH is	a colon-separated list of directories,
	   much	like PATH.  When configured as a native	 compiler,  GCC	 tries
	   the	directories  thus  specified when searching for	special	linker
	   files, if it	cannot find them using GCC_EXEC_PREFIX.	 Linking using
	   GCC	also  uses  these  directories	when  searching	 for  ordinary
	   libraries for the -l	option (but directories	specified with -L come
	   first).

       LANG
	   This	 variable  is used to pass locale information to the compiler.
	   One way in which this information  is  used	is  to	determine  the
	   character  set  to be used when character literals, string literals
	   and comments	are parsed  in	C  and	C++.   When  the  compiler  is
	   configured  to allow	multibyte characters, the following values for
	   LANG	are recognized:

	   C-JIS
	       Recognize JIS characters.

	   C-SJIS
	       Recognize SJIS characters.

	   C-EUCJP
	       Recognize EUCJP characters.

	   If LANG is not defined, or if it has	some  other  value,  then  the
	   compiler uses "mblen" and "mbtowc" as defined by the	default	locale
	   to recognize	and translate multibyte	characters.

       GCC_EXTRA_DIAGNOSTIC_OUTPUT
	   If  GCC_EXTRA_DIAGNOSTIC_OUTPUT  is	set  to	 one  of the following
	   values, then	additional text	will be	emitted	to stderr when	fix-it
	   hints     are    emitted.	 -fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits	   and
	   -fno-diagnostics-parseable-fixits   take   precedence   over	  this
	   environment variable.

	   fixits-v1
	       Emit	 parseable     fix-it	  hints,     equivalent	    to
	       -fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits.	 In  particular,  columns  are
	       expressed  as  a	 count	of  bytes,  starting at	byte 1 for the
	       initial column.

	   fixits-v2
	       As "fixits-v1", but columns are expressed as  display  columns,
	       as per -fdiagnostics-column-unit=display.

       Some  additional	 environment  variables	 affect	 the  behavior	of the
       preprocessor.

       CPATH
       C_INCLUDE_PATH
       CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH
       OBJC_INCLUDE_PATH
	   Each	variable's value is a  list  of	 directories  separated	 by  a
	   special  character,	much  like  PATH,  in which to look for	header
	   files.   The	 special  character,  "PATH_SEPARATOR",	  is   target-
	   dependent and determined at GCC build time.	For Microsoft Windows-
	   based  targets  it is a semicolon, and for almost all other targets
	   it is a colon.

	   CPATH specifies  a  list  of	 directories  to  be  searched	as  if
	   specified with -I, but after	any paths given	with -I	options	on the
	   command  line.   This  environment  variable	 is used regardless of
	   which language is being preprocessed.

	   The remaining environment variables apply only  when	 preprocessing
	   the	particular  language  indicated.   Each	 specifies  a  list of
	   directories to be searched as if specified with -isystem, but after
	   any paths given with	-isystem options on the	command	line.

	   In all these	variables, an empty element instructs the compiler  to
	   search its current working directory.  Empty	elements can appear at
	   the	beginning  or  end  of	a path.	 For instance, if the value of
	   CPATH  is  ":/special/include",  that  has  the  same   effect   as
	   -I. -I/special/include.

       DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT
	   If  this  variable  is  set,	 its  value  specifies	how  to	output
	   dependencies	 for  Make  based  on  the  non-system	header	 files
	   processed  by the compiler.	System header files are	ignored	in the
	   dependency output.

	   The value of	DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT can	be just	a file name, in	 which
	   case	 the  Make rules are written to	that file, guessing the	target
	   name	from the source	file name.  Or the value  can  have  the  form
	   file	target,	in which case the rules	are written to file file using
	   target as the target	name.

	   In	other  words,  this  environment  variable  is	equivalent  to
	   combining the options -MM and -MF, with an optional -MT switch too.

       SUNPRO_DEPENDENCIES
	   This	variable is  the  same	as  DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT	 (see  above),
	   except  that	 system	header files are not ignored, so it implies -M
	   rather than -MM.  However, the dependence on	the main input file is
	   omitted.

       SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
	   If this variable is set, its	value specifies	a UNIX timestamp to be
	   used	in replacement of the current date and time in the  "__DATE__"
	   and	"__TIME__"  macros,  so	 that  the  embedded timestamps	become
	   reproducible.

	   The value of	SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH must be a UNIX timestamp, defined as
	   the number of seconds (excluding leap seconds) since	 01  Jan  1970
	   00:00:00  represented  in  ASCII;  identical	to the output of "date
	   +%s"	on GNU/Linux and other systems that support the	 %s  extension
	   in the "date" command.

	   The value should be a known timestamp such as the last modification
	   time	 of  the  source  or package and it should be set by the build
	   process.

BUGS
       For instructions	on reporting bugs, see <https://gcc.gnu.org/bugs/>.

FOOTNOTES
       1.  On some systems, gcc	-shared	needs to build supplementary stub code
	   for constructors to work.  On  multi-libbed	systems,  gcc  -shared
	   must	select the correct support libraries to	link against.  Failing
	   to  supply the correct flags	may lead to subtle defects.  Supplying
	   them	in cases where they are	not necessary is  innocuous.   -shared
	   suppresses the addition of startup code to alter the	floating-point
	   environment	   as	  done	  with	  -ffast-math,	  -Ofast    or
	   -funsafe-math-optimizations on some targets.

SEE ALSO
       gpl(7), gfdl(7),	fsf-funding(7),	cpp(1),	gcov(1), as(1),	ld(1),	gdb(1)
       and the Info entries for	gcc, cpp, as, ld, binutils and gdb.

AUTHOR
       See	  the	     Info	 entry	      for	 gcc,	    or
       <https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html>,		   for
       contributors to GCC.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 1988-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

       Permission  is  granted to copy,	distribute and/or modify this document
       under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version  1.3  or
       any  later  version published by	the Free Software Foundation; with the
       Invariant Sections being	"GNU General Public License" and "Funding Free
       Software", the Front-Cover texts	being (a) (see below),	and  with  the
       Back-Cover  Texts  being	 (b)  (see  below).   A	copy of	the license is
       included	in the gfdl(7) man page.

       (a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:

	    A GNU Manual

       (b) The FSF's Back-Cover	Text is:

	    You	have freedom to	copy and modify	this GNU Manual, like GNU
	    software.  Copies published	by the Free Software Foundation	raise
	    funds for GNU development.

gcc-14.2.1			  2025-03-29				GCC(1)

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