NAME
cpp - The C Preprocessor
SYNOPSIS
cpp
[-Dmacro[=defn]...]
[-Umacro]
[-Idir...] [-iquote
dir...]
[-Wwarn...]
[-M|-MM] [-MG] [
-MF filename]
[-MP] [-MQ target...]
[-MT target...]
[-P] [-fno-working-directory]
[-x language] [-std=
standard]
infile outfile
Only the most useful options are listed here; see below for the
remainder.
DESCRIPTION
The C preprocessor, often
known as cpp, is a macro processor that is used
automatically by the C compiler to transform your program before
compilation. It is called a macro processor because it allows you
to define macros, which are brief abbreviations for longer
constructs.
The C preprocessor is intended to be used only with C,
C++, and Objective-C source code. In the
past, it has been abused as a general text processor. It will choke
on input which does not obey C's lexical rules. For example,
apostrophes will be interpreted as the beginning of character
constants, and cause errors. Also, you cannot rely on it preserving
characteristics of the input which are not significant to C-family
languages. If a Makefile is preprocessed, all the hard tabs will be
removed, and the Makefile will not work.
Having said that, you can often get away with using cpp on
things which are not C. Other Algol-ish programming languages are
often safe (Pascal, Ada, etc.) So is assembly, with caution.
-traditional-cpp mode preserves more white space, and is
otherwise more permissive. Many of the problems can be avoided by
writing C or C++ style comments instead of
native language comments, and keeping macros simple.
Wherever possible, you should use a preprocessor geared to the
language you are writing in. Modern versions of the GNU assembler have macro facilities. Most high level
programming languages have their own conditional compilation and
inclusion mechanism. If all else fails, try a true general text
processor, such as GNU M4.
C preprocessors vary in some details. This manual discusses the
GNU C preprocessor, which provides a small
superset of the features of ISO Standard C.
In its default mode, the GNU C preprocessor
does not do a few things required by the standard. These are
features which are rarely, if ever, used, and may cause surprising
changes to the meaning of a program which does not expect them. To
get strict ISO Standard C, you should use
the -std=c89 or -std=c99 options, depending on which
version of the standard you want. To get all the mandatory
diagnostics, you must also use -pedantic.
This manual describes the behavior of the ISO preprocessor. To minimize gratuitous differences,
where the ISO preprocessor's behavior does
not conflict with traditional semantics, the traditional
preprocessor should behave the same way. The various differences
that do exist are detailed in the section Traditional Mode.
For clarity, unless noted otherwise, references to CPP in this manual refer to GNU CPP.
OPTIONS
The C preprocessor expects two
file names as arguments, infile and outfile. The
preprocessor reads infile together with any other files it
specifies with #include. All the output generated by the
combined input files is written in outfile.
Either infile or outfile may be -, which as
infile means to read from standard input and as
outfile means to write to standard output. Also, if either
file is omitted, it means the same as if - had been
specified for that file.
Unless otherwise noted, or the option ends in =, all
options which take an argument may have that argument appear either
immediately after the option, or with a space between option and
argument: -Ifoo and -I foo have the same effect.
Many options have multi-letter names; therefore multiple
single-letter options may not be grouped: -dM is very
different from -d -M.
- -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 will be 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 will need to 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.
- -undef
- Do not predefine any system-specific or
GCC-specific macros. The standard predefined macros remain defined.
- -I dir
- Add the directory dir to the list
of directories to be searched for header files.
Directories named by -I are searched before the standard
system include directories. If the directory dir is a
standard system include directory, the option is ignored to ensure
that the default search order for system directories and the
special treatment of system headers are not defeated .
- -o file
- Write output to file. This is the
same as specifying file as the second non-option argument to
cpp. gcc has a different interpretation of a second
non-option argument, so you must use -o to specify the
output file.
- -Wall
- Turns on all optional warnings which are
desirable for normal code. At present this is -Wcomment,
-Wtrigraphs, -Wmultichar and a warning about integer
promotion causing a change of sign in "#if" expressions.
Note that many of the preprocessor's warnings are on by default and
have no options to control them.
- -Wcomment
-
- -Wcomments
- Warn whenever a comment-start sequence
/* appears in a /* comment, or whenever a
backslash-newline appears in a // comment. (Both forms have
the same effect.)
- -Wtrigraphs
- @anchor{Wtrigraphs} Most trigraphs in
comments cannot affect the meaning of the program. However, a
trigraph that would form an escaped newline (??/ at the end
of a line) can, by changing where the comment begins or ends.
Therefore, only trigraphs that would form escaped newlines produce
warnings inside a comment.
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.
- -Wtraditional
- 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 problematic constructs which should
be avoided.
- -Wimport
- Warn the first time #import is
used.
- -Wundef
- Warn whenever an identifier which is not a
macro is encountered in an #if directive, outside of
defined. Such identifiers are replaced with zero.
- -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 will also warn 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 CPP will
report 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
- -Wendif-labels
- Warn whenever an #else or an
#endif are followed by text. This usually happens in code of
the form
#if FOO
...
#else FOO
...
#endif FOO
The second and third "FOO" should be in comments, but
often are not in older programs. This warning is on by default.
- -Werror
- Make all warnings into hard errors. Source
code which triggers warnings will be rejected.
- -Wsystem-headers
- Issue warnings for code in system headers.
These are normally unhelpful in finding bugs in your own code,
therefore suppressed. If you are responsible for the system
library, you may want to see them.
- -w
- Suppress all warnings, including those
which GNU CPP issues
by default.
- -pedantic
- Issue all the mandatory diagnostics listed
in the C standard. Some of them are left out by default, since they
trigger frequently on harmless code.
- -pedantic-errors
- Issue all the mandatory diagnostics, and
make all mandatory diagnostics into errors. This includes mandatory
diagnostics that GCC issues without
-pedantic but treats as warnings.
- -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 basename of the source file with
any suffix replaced with object file suffix. 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
will still be 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 will appear in -MM dependency output.
This is a slight change in semantics from GCC versions 3.0 and earlier.
@anchor{dashMF}
- -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 have sent preprocessed output.
When used with the driver options -MD or -MMD,
-MF overrides the default dependency output file.
- -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.
- -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, including any path, deletes any
file suffix such as .c, and appends the platform's usual
object suffix. The result is the target.
An -MT option will set 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 take the basename of the input file 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 @pxref{dashMF,,-MF}), 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.
- -x c
-
- -x c++
-
- -x objective-c
-
- -x assembler-with-cpp
- Specify the source language: C,
C++, Objective-C, or assembly. This has
nothing to do with standards conformance or extensions; it merely
selects which base syntax to expect. If you give none of these
options, cpp will deduce the language from the extension of the
source file: .c, .cc, .m, or .S. Some
other common extensions for C++ and assembly
are also recognized. If cpp does not recognize the extension, it
will treat the file as C; this is the most generic mode.
Note: Previous versions of cpp accepted a -lang
option which selected both the language and the standards
conformance level. This option has been removed, because it
conflicts with the -l option.
- -std=standard
-
- -ansi
- Specify the standard to which the code
should conform. Currently CPP knows about C
and C++ standards; others may be added in
the future.
standard may be one of:
-
- iso9899:1990
-
- c89
- The ISO C standard
from 1990. c89 is the customary shorthand for this version
of the standard.
The -ansi option is equivalent to -std=c89.
- iso9899:199409
- The 1990 C standard, as amended in 1994.
- iso9899:1999
-
- c99
-
- iso9899:199x
-
- c9x
- The revised ISO C
standard, published in December 1999. Before publication, this was
known as C9X.
- gnu89
- The 1990 C standard plus GNU extensions. This is the default.
- gnu99
-
- gnu9x
- The 1999 C standard plus GNU extensions.
- c++98
- The 1998 ISO
C++ standard plus amendments.
- gnu++98
- The same as -std=c++98 plus
GNU extensions. This is the default for
C++ code.
- -I-
- Split the include path. 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"".
This option has been deprecated.
- -nostdinc
- Do not search the standard system
directories for header files. Only the directories you have
specified with -I 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.)
- -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.
- -idirafter dir
- Search dir for header files, but do
it after all directories specified with -I and the
standard system directories have been exhausted. dir is
treated as a system include directory.
- -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. See the --sysroot
option for more information.
- -isystem dir
- Search dir for header files, after
all directories specified by -I but before the standard
system directories. Mark it as a system directory, so that it gets
the same special treatment as is applied to the standard system
directories.
- -iquote dir
- Search dir only for header files
requested with "#include "file""; they are
not searched for "#include <file>",
before all directories specified by -I and before the
standard system directories.
- -fdollars-in-identifiers
- @anchor{fdollars-in-identifiers} Accept
$ in identifiers.
- -fextended-identifiers
- Accept universal character names in
identifiers. This option is experimental; in a future version of
GCC, it will be enabled by default for C99
and C++.
- -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.
- -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.
- -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 UTF-32 or UTF-16, whichever
corresponds to the width of "wchar_t". 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.
- -fworking-directory
- Enable generation of linemarkers in the
preprocessor output that will let the compiler know the current
working directory at the time of preprocessing. When this option is
enabled, the preprocessor will emit, after the initial linemarker,
a second linemarker with the current working directory followed by
two slashes. GCC will use 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.
- -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.
- -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.
- -dCHARS
- CHARS is a
sequence of one or more of the following characters, and must not
be preceded by a space. Other characters are interpreted by the
compiler proper, or reserved for future versions of GCC, and so are silently ignored. If you specify
characters whose behavior conflicts, the result is undefined.
-
- M
- 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
will show all the predefined macros.
- D
- Like M except in two respects: it
does not include the predefined macros, and it outputs
both the #define directives and the result of
preprocessing. Both kinds of output go to the standard output file.
- N
- Like D, but emit only the macro
names, not their expansions.
- I
- Output #include directives in
addition to the result of preprocessing.
- -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.
- -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.
- -traditional-cpp
- Try to imitate the behavior of
old-fashioned C preprocessors, as opposed to ISO C preprocessors.
- -trigraphs
- Process trigraph sequences.
- -remap
- Enable special code to work around file
systems which only permit very short file names, such as
MS-DOS.
- --help
-
- --target-help
- Print text describing all the command line
options instead of preprocessing anything.
- -v
- Verbose mode. Print out GNU CPP's version number at the
beginning of execution, and report the final form of the include
path.
- -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 ...! .
- -version
-
- --version
- Print out GNU
CPP's version number. With one dash, proceed
to preprocess as normal. With two dashes, exit
immediately.
ENVIRONMENT
This section describes the
environment variables that affect how CPP
operates. You can use them to specify directories or prefixes to
use when searching for include files, or to control dependency
output.
Note that you can also specify places to search using options
such as -I, and control dependency output with options like
-M. These take precedence over environment variables, which
in turn take precedence over the configuration of GCC.
- 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.
SEE ALSO
gpl(7),
gfdl(7),
fsf-funding(7),
gcc(1),
as(1),
ld(1), and the
Info entries for cpp, gcc, and binutils.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1987, 1989,
1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 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 1.1 or any later version published
by the Free Software Foundation. A copy of the license is included
in the man page gfdl(7).
This manual contains no Invariant Sections. The Front-Cover Texts
are (a) (see below), and the Back-Cover Texts are (b) (see below).
(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.