Provided by: gcc-12_12.2.0-3ubuntu1_amd64 bug

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 -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 -fallow-parameterless-variadic-functions
           -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 -fpermitted-flt-eval-methods=standard -fplan9-extensions
           -fsigned-bitfields  -funsigned-bitfields -fsigned-char  -funsigned-char
           -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-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
           -fpermissive -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
           -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-exceptions -Wextra-semi
           -Wno-inaccessible-base -Wno-inherited-variadic-ctor  -Wno-init-list-lifetime
           -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 -Wsign-promo -Wsized-deallocation  -Wsuggest-final-methods
           -Wsuggest-final-types  -Wsuggest-override -Wno-terminate  -Wuseless-cast
           -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|json] -fno-diagnostics-show-option
           -fno-diagnostics-show-caret -fno-diagnostics-show-labels
           -fno-diagnostics-show-line-numbers -fno-diagnostics-show-cwe
           -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]

       Warning Options
           -fsyntax-only  -fmax-errors=n  -Wpedantic -pedantic-errors -w  -Wextra  -Wall  -Wabi=n
           -Waddress  -Wno-address-of-packed-member  -Waggregate-return
           -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 -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-c2x-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 -Wcast-align  -Wcast-align=strict
           -Wcast-function-type  -Wcast-qual -Wchar-subscripts -Wclobbered  -Wcomment
           -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
           -Werror  -Werror=*  -Wexpansion-to-defined  -Wfatal-errors -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 -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  -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-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 -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 -Wtsan -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 -Wno-varargs  -Wvariadic-macros -Wvector-operation-performance -Wvla
           -Wvla-larger-than=byte-size  -Wno-vla-larger-than -Wvolatile-register-var
           -Wwrite-strings -Wzero-length-bounds

       Static Analyzer Options
           -fanalyzer -fanalyzer-call-summaries -fanalyzer-checker=name -fno-analyzer-feasibility
           -fanalyzer-fine-grained -fno-analyzer-state-merge -fno-analyzer-state-purge
           -fanalyzer-transitivity -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-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-file-leak
           -Wno-analyzer-free-of-non-heap -Wno-analyzer-malloc-leak
           -Wno-analyzer-mismatching-deallocation -Wno-analyzer-null-argument
           -Wno-analyzer-null-dereference -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-argument
           -Wno-analyzer-possible-null-dereference -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-negative
           -Wno-analyzer-shift-count-overflow -Wno-analyzer-stale-setjmp-buffer
           -Wno-analyzer-tainted-allocation-size -Wno-analyzer-tainted-array-index
           -Wno-analyzer-tainted-divisor -Wno-analyzer-tainted-offset -Wno-analyzer-tainted-size
           -Wanalyzer-too-complex -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-write-to-const
           -Wno-analyzer-write-to-string-literal

       C and Objective-C-only Warning Options
           -Wbad-function-cast  -Wmissing-declarations -Wmissing-parameter-type
           -Wmissing-prototypes  -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 -gstabs  -gstabs+  -gstrict-dwarf
           -gno-strict-dwarf -gas-loc-support  -gno-as-loc-support -gas-locview-support
           -gno-as-locview-support -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  -gxcoff
           -gxcoff+  -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]]]] -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
           -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-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 -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 -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 -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
           -fvtable-verify=[std|preinit|none] -fvtv-counts  -fvtv-debug -finstrument-functions
           -finstrument-functions-exclude-function-list=sym,sym,...
           -finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list=file,file,...  -fprofile-prefix-map=old=new

       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 -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
           -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]
           -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

           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

           AVR Options -mmcu=mcu  -mabsdata  -maccumulate-args -mbranch-cost=cost
           -mcall-prologues  -mgas-isr-prologues  -mint8 -mdouble=bits -mlong-double=bits
           -mn_flash=size  -mno-interrupts -mmain-is-OS_task  -mrelax  -mrmw  -mstrict-X
           -mtiny-stack -mfract-convert-truncate -mshort-calls  -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

           CR16 Options -mmac -mcr16cplus  -mcr16c -msim  -mint32  -mbit-ops -mdata-model=model

           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 -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 -mkernel=version -mframe-limit=bytes -mxbpf
           -mco-re -mno-co-re -mjmpext -mjmp32 -malu32 -mcpu=version

           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 -mcaller-copies  -mdisable-fpregs
           -mdisable-indexing -mfast-indirect-calls  -mgas  -mgnu-ld   -mhp-ld
           -mfixed-range=register-range -mjump-in-delay  -mlinker-opt  -mlong-calls
           -mlong-load-store  -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  -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=cpu-type  -mtune=cpu-type -mabi=base-abi-type -mfpu=fpu-type
           -msoft-float -msingle-float -mdouble-float -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 -mcmodel=code-model

           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

           MeP Options -mabsdiff  -mall-opts  -maverage  -mbased=n  -mbitops -mc=n  -mclip
           -mconfig=name  -mcop  -mcop32  -mcop64  -mivc2 -mdc  -mdiv  -meb  -mel  -mio-volatile
           -ml  -mleadz  -mm  -mminmax -mmult  -mno-opts  -mrepeat  -ms  -msatur  -msdram  -msim
           -msimnovec  -mtf -mtiny=n

           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 -mcheck-zero-division
           -mno-check-zero-division -mdivide-traps  -mdivide-breaks -mload-store-pairs
           -mno-load-store-pairs -munaligned-access  -mno-unaligned-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

           picoChip Options -mae=ae_type  -mvliw-lookahead=N -msymbol-as-address
           -mno-inefficient-warnings

           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  -mmo-riscv-attribute
           -malign-data=type -mbig-endian  -mlittle-endian -mstack-protector-guard=guard
           -mstack-protector-guard-reg=reg -mstack-protector-guard-offset=offset

           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  -mpower8-vector  -mno-power8-vector -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

           Score Options -meb  -mel -mnhwloop -muls -mmac -mscore5  -mscore5u  -mscore7
           -mscore7d

           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

           TILE-Gx Options -mcpu=CPU  -m32  -m64  -mbig-endian  -mlittle-endian -mcmodel=code-
           model

           TILEPro Options -mcpu=cpu  -m32

           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  -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 -mmove-max=bits -mstore-max=bits -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 -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 -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  -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

           x86 Windows Options -mconsole  -mcygwin  -mno-cygwin  -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

           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
           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
           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.
           See also -fmacro-prefix-map, -fdebug-prefix-map and -fprofile-prefix-map.

       -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.

           c2x The next version of the ISO C standard, still under development.  The support for
               this version is experimental and incomplete.

           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.

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

           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.

       -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.

       -fallow-parameterless-variadic-functions
           Accept variadic functions without named parameters.

           Although it is possible to define such a function, this is not very useful as it is
           not possible to read the arguments.  This is only supported for C as this construct is
           allowed by C++.

       -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.

       -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=-lgfortran -foffload-options=-lm
                   -foffload-options="-lgfortran -lm" -foffload-options=nvptx-none=-latomic
                   -foffload-options=amdgcn-amdhsa=-march=gfx906 -foffload-options=-lm

       -fopenacc
           Enable handling of OpenACC directives "#pragma acc" in C/C++ and "!$acc" in 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" in C/C++ and "!$omp" in Fortran.
           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 directives with "#pragma omp" in C/C++ and "!$omp" in
           Fortran. Other OpenMP directives are ignored.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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++ 11, changes the mangling of "__alignof__" to
           be distinct from that of "alignof", and dependent operator names.

           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 11 (GCC 7 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.

                   char ca[] = u8"xx";     // error: char-array initialized from wide
                                           //        string
                   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
           Below -std=c++20, -fconcepts enables support for the C++ Extensions for Concepts
           Technical Specification, ISO 19217 (2015).

           With -std=c++20 and above, Concepts are part of the language standard, so -fconcepts
           defaults to on.  But the standard specification of Concepts differs significantly from
           the TS, so some constructs that were allowed in the TS but didn't make it into the
           standard can still be enabled by -fconcepts-ts.

       -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).

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

       -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.

       -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.

       -fpermissive
           Downgrade some diagnostics about nonconformant code from errors to warnings.  Thus,
           using -fpermissive allows some nonconforming code to compile.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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) { }
                   };
                   S(allow_ctad_t) -> S<void>; // guide with incomplete parameter type will never be considered

       -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.

       -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-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-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.

       -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)
           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);
                   };

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

                   B* b;
                   b->f();

           fails to compile.

       -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-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-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.

       -Wuse-after-free
       -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 reallocatio 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 legacy code gradually transition 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++ and Objective-C++ only)
           Warn when an expression is casted to its own type.

       -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).  The -fconstant-cfstrings option, if also present, overrides the
           -fconstant-string-class setting and cause "@"..."" literals to be laid out as constant
           CoreFoundation strings.

       -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 and Mac OS X.  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 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

           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.

           "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.

       -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
           @url{https://cwe.mitre.org/index.html, CWE} 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-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=separate-events.

           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-format=FORMAT
           Select a different format for printing diagnostics.  FORMAT is text or json.  The
           default is text.

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

           The JSON is emitted as one line, without formatting; the examples below have been
           formatted for clarity.

           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).

   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++; reject all programs that
           use forbidden extensions, and some other programs that do not follow ISO C and ISO
           C++.  For ISO C, follows the version of the ISO 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 required version of
           ISO C).  However, without this option, certain GNU extensions and traditional C and
           C++ features are supported as well.  With this option, they are rejected.

           -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 users try to use -Wpedantic to check programs for strict ISO C conformance.  They
           soon find that it does not do quite what they want: it finds some non-ISO practices,
           but not all---only those for which ISO C requires a diagnostic, and some others for
           which diagnostics have been added.

           A feature to report any failure to conform to ISO C might be useful in some instances,
           but would require considerable additional work and would be quite different from
           -Wpedantic.  We don't have plans to support such a feature in the near future.

           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, since there are errors enabled by this
           option and not enabled by the latter and vice versa.

       -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 -Warray-bounds=1 (only with -O2) -Warray-compare -Warray-parameter=2 (C and
           Objective-C only) -Wbool-compare -Wbool-operation -Wc++11-compat  -Wc++14-compat
           -Wcatch-value (C++ and Objective-C++ only) -Wchar-subscripts -Wcomment
           -Wdangling-pointer=2 -Wduplicate-decl-specifier (C and Objective-C only)
           -Wenum-compare (in C/ObjC; this is on by default in C++) -Wformat -Wformat-overflow
           -Wformat-truncation -Wint-in-bool-context -Wimplicit (C and Objective-C only)
           -Wimplicit-int (C and Objective-C only) -Wimplicit-function-declaration (C and
           Objective-C only) -Winit-self (only for C++) -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 (only for C/C++) -Wmissing-attributes
           -Wmissing-braces (only for C/ObjC) -Wmultistatement-macros -Wnarrowing (only for C++)
           -Wnonnull -Wnonnull-compare -Wopenmp-simd -Wparentheses -Wpessimizing-move (only for
           C++) -Wpointer-sign -Wrange-loop-construct (only for C++) -Wreorder -Wrestrict
           -Wreturn-type -Wsequence-point -Wsign-compare (only in C++) -Wsizeof-array-div
           -Wsizeof-pointer-div -Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess -Wstrict-aliasing -Wstrict-overflow=1
           -Wswitch -Wtautological-compare -Wtrigraphs -Wuninitialized -Wunknown-pragmas
           -Wunused-function -Wunused-label -Wunused-value -Wunused-variable -Wuse-after-free=3
           -Wvla-parameter (C and Objective-C only) -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.)

           -Wclobbered -Wcast-function-type -Wdeprecated-copy (C++ only) -Wempty-body
           -Wenum-conversion (C only) -Wignored-qualifiers -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3
           -Wmissing-field-initializers -Wmissing-parameter-type (C only) -Wold-style-declaration
           (C only) -Woverride-init -Wsign-compare (C only) -Wstring-compare -Wredundant-move
           (only for C++) -Wtype-limits -Wuninitialized -Wshift-negative-value (in C++11 to C++17
           and in C99 and newer) -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.

       -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-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.

       -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.

       -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 in C99 and later dialects of C, and also by -Wall.

       -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 in C99 and later dialects of C, and also by -Wall.  The
           warning is made into 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.

       -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.

       -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 opions 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 from
           allocations 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.

       -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-type
           Warn whenever a function is defined with a return type that defaults to "int".  Also
           warn about any "return" statement with no return value in a function whose return type
           is not "void" (falling off the end of the function body is considered returning
           without a value).

           For C only, 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.

           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.

           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.
           -Wunused-const-variable=1 is enabled by -Wunused-variable 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.

           To suppress this warning use the "unused" attribute.

           -Wunused-const-variable=1
               This is the warning level that is enabled by -Wunused-variable for C.  It warns
               only 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=2
               This warning level also warns for unused constant static variables in headers
               (excluding system headers).  This is the warning level of -Wunused-const-variable
               and must be explicitly requested since in C++ this isn't an error and in C it
               might be harder 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.

           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.

       -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.

       -Wsuggest-attribute=[pure|const|noreturn|format|cold|malloc]
           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
               Warn about functions that might be candidates for attributes "pure", "const" or
               "noreturn" or "malloc". 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-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.

       -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.

           -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 out of bounds accesses to trailing struct
               members of one-element array types and 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 arguments 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 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.  At level 1 the warning diagnoses
           inconsistencies involving array parameters declared using the "T[static N]" form.

           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 with the
           keyword "static" specifies that the array argument must have at least four elements.

                   void f (int[static 4]);
                   void f (int[]);           // warning (inconsistent array form)

                   void g (void)
                   {
                     int *p = (int *)malloc (4);
                     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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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.  See

           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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -Wtsan
           Warn about unsupported features in ThreadSanitizer.

           ThreadSanitizer does not support "std::atomic_thread_fence" and can report false
           positives.

           This warning is enabled by default.

       -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-c2x-compat (C and Objective-C only)
           Warn about features not present in ISO C11, but present in ISO C2X.  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__".

       -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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -Wclobbered
           Warn for variables that might be changed by "longjmp" or "vfork".  This warning is
           also enabled by -Wextra.

       -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.
               For example

                       int f (int c1, int c2, x)
                       {
                         char *p = strchr ((char[]){ c1, c2 }, c3);
                         return p ? *p : 'x';   // warning: dangling pointer to a compound literal
                       }

               In the following function the store of the address of the local variable "x" in
               the escaped pointer *p also triggers the warning.

                       void g (int **p)
                       {
                         int x = 7;
                         *p = &x;   // warning: storing the address of a local variable in *p
                       }

           -Wdangling-pointer=2
               At level 2, in addition to unconditional uses the warning also diagnoses
               conditional uses of dangling pointers.

               For example, because the array a in the following function is out of scope when
               the pointer s that was set to point is used, the warning triggers at this level.

                       void f (char *s)
                       {
                         if (!s)
                           {
                             char a[12] = "tmpname";
                             s = a;
                           }
                         strcat (s, ".tmp");   // warning: dangling pointer to a may be used
                         ...
                       }

           -Wdangling-pointer=2 is included in -Wall.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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 (!func)   // 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 "inptr_t" or
           "uinptr_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.

           Additionally, using -Wno-attributes=, it is possible to suppress warnings about
           unknown scoped attributes (in C++11 and C2X).  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 C2X 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.

       -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-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 };

           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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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]);
                   void f (int, int[]);     // warning: argument 2 previously declared as a VLA

                   void g (int n)
                   {
                       if (n > 4)
                         return;
                       int a[n];
                       f (sizeof a, a);     // warning: access to a by f may be out of bounds
                     ...
                   }

           -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.

       -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.

       -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.

           Enabling this option effectively enables the following warnings:

           -Wanalyzer-double-fclose -Wanalyzer-double-free
           -Wanalyzer-exposure-through-output-file -Wanalyzer-file-leak
           -Wanalyzer-free-of-non-heap -Wanalyzer-malloc-leak -Wanalyzer-mismatching-deallocation
           -Wanalyzer-null-argument -Wanalyzer-null-dereference -Wanalyzer-possible-null-argument
           -Wanalyzer-possible-null-dereference -Wanalyzer-shift-count-negative
           -Wanalyzer-shift-count-overflow -Wanalyzer-stale-setjmp-buffer
           -Wanalyzer-unsafe-call-within-signal-handler -Wanalyzer-use-after-free
           -Wanalyzer-use-of-pointer-in-stale-stack-frame -Wanalyzer-use-of-uninitialized-value
           -Wanalyzer-write-to-const -Wanalyzer-write-to-string-literal

           This option is only available if GCC was configured with analyzer support enabled.

       -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-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.

       -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".

       -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).

       -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.

       -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).

       -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".

       -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".

       -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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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 both -fanalyzer and -fanalyzer-checker=taint to enable 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 @url{https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/789.html, CWE-789: Memory Allocation
           with Excessive Size Value}.

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-array-index
           This warning requires both -fanalyzer and -fanalyzer-checker=taint to enable 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 @url{https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/129.html, CWE-129: Improper Validation
           of Array Index}.

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-divisor
           This warning requires both -fanalyzer and -fanalyzer-checker=taint to enable 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.

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-offset
           This warning requires both -fanalyzer and -fanalyzer-checker=taint to enable 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 @url{https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/823.html, CWE-823: Use of Out-of-range
           Pointer Offset}.

       -Wno-analyzer-tainted-size
           This warning requires both -fanalyzer and -fanalyzer-checker=taint to enable 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.

       -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.

       -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".

       -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-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.

       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, and --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.

           Some checkers are disabled by default (even with -fanalyzer), such as the "taint"
           checker that implements -Wanalyzer-tainted-array-index, and this option is required to
           enable them.

           Note: currently, -fanalyzer-checker=taint disables the following warnings from
           -fanalyzer:

           -Wanalyzer-double-fclose -Wanalyzer-double-free
           -Wanalyzer-exposure-through-output-file -Wanalyzer-file-leak
           -Wanalyzer-free-of-non-heap -Wanalyzer-malloc-leak -Wanalyzer-mismatching-deallocation
           -Wanalyzer-null-argument -Wanalyzer-null-dereference -Wanalyzer-possible-null-argument
           -Wanalyzer-possible-null-dereference -Wanalyzer-unsafe-call-within-signal-handler
           -Wanalyzer-use-after-free

       -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.

       -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.

       -fanalyzer-transitivity
           This option enables transitivity of constraints within 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.  This
           option is overridden by -fdump-analyzer-stderr.

       -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-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 -gstabs+, -gstabs,
           -gxcoff+, -gxcoff, or -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/Mac OS X, 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.

       -gstabs
           Produce debugging information in stabs format (if that is supported), without GDB
           extensions.  This is the format used by DBX on most BSD systems.  On MIPS, Alpha and
           System V Release 4 systems this option produces stabs debugging output that is not
           understood by DBX.  On System V Release 4 systems this option requires the GNU
           assembler.

       -gstabs+
           Produce debugging information in stabs format (if that is supported), using GNU
           extensions understood only by the GNU debugger (GDB).  The use of these extensions is
           likely to make other debuggers crash or refuse to read the program.

       -gxcoff
           Produce debugging information in XCOFF format (if that is supported).  This is the
           format used by the DBX debugger on IBM RS/6000 systems.

       -gxcoff+
           Produce debugging information in XCOFF format (if that is supported), using GNU
           extensions understood only by the GNU debugger (GDB).  The use of these extensions is
           likely to make other debuggers crash or refuse to read the program, and may cause
           assemblers other than the GNU assembler (GAS) to fail with an error.

       -gvms
           Produce debugging information in Alpha/VMS debug format (if that is supported).  This
           is the format used by DEBUG on Alpha/VMS systems.

       -glevel
       -ggdblevel
       -gstabslevel
       -gxcofflevel
       -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.

       -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), zlib (use zlib
           compression in ELF gABI format), or zlib-gnu (use zlib compression in traditional GNU
           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
           currently not implemented and treated equal to -ffp-contract=off.

           The default is -ffp-contract=fast.

       -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.

       -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, CR16, 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 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.  This flag is
           enabled by default at -O3.  It is also enabled by -fprofile-use and -fauto-profile.

       -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.  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.

           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.

           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.

           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.

           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.

       -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.

       -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.

           This option should not be used in combination with -flto.  Instead relying on a linker
           plugin should provide safer and more precise information.

       -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.

       -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, if -fexcess-precision=standard is specified then excess precision
           follows the rules specified in ISO C99; 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 if a strict conformance option
           such as -std=c99 is used.  -ffast-math enables -fexcess-precision=fast by default
           regardless of whether a strict conformance option is used.

           -fexcess-precision=standard is not implemented for languages other than 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.

       -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 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 C2X, does not allow these functions
           to do so.

           The default is -ffp-int-builtin-inexact, allowing the exception to be raised, unless
           C2X 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 minimal, maximal and default value of a parameter, one can use
           --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-level
               The maximum number of branches unswitched in a single loop.

           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-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-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.

           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-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-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.

           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.

           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.

           max-fsm-thread-length
               Maximum number of basic blocks on a 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.

           max-vrp-switch-assertions
               The maximum number of assertions to add along the default edge of a switch
               statement during VRP.

           evrp-sparse-threshold
               Maximum number of basic blocks before EVRP uses a sparse cache.

           evrp-mode
               Specifies the mode Early VRP should operate in.

           vrp1-mode
               Specifies the mode VRP pass 1 should operate in.

           vrp2-mode
               Specifies the mode VRP pass 2 should operate in.

           ranger-debug
               Specifies the type of debug output to be issued for ranges.

           evrp-switch-limit
               Specifies the maximum number of switch cases before EVRP ignores a switch.

           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.

           avoid-fma-max-bits
               Maximum number of bits for which we avoid creating FMAs.

           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 when
               comparing to the number of (scaled) blocks.

           uninit-control-dep-attempts
               Maximum number of nested calls to search for control dependencies during
               uninitialized variable analysis.

           fsm-scale-path-blocks
               Scale factor to apply to the number of blocks in a threading path when comparing
               to the number of (scaled) statements.

           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.

           ranger-logical-depth
               Maximum depth of logical expression evaluation ranger will look through when
               evaluating outgoing edge ranges.

           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
               Specify mode of OpenACC privatization diagnostics for -fopt-info-omp-note and
               applicable -fdump-tree-*-details.  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-sve-compare-costs
               When vectorizing for SVE, consider using "unpacked" vectors for smaller elements
               and use the cost model to pick the cheapest approach.  Also use the cost model to
               choose between SVE and Advanced SIMD vectorization.

               Using unpacked vectors 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-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 i386 and x86_64 targets:

           x86-stlf-window-ninsns
               Instructions number above which STFL stall penalty can be compensated.

   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.

       --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.

       -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 free-
           standing 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 *__gcov_info_start[];
                   extern const struct gcov_info *__gcov_info_end[];

                   static void
                   filename (const char *f, void *arg)
                   {
                     puts (f);
                   }

                   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 *
                   allocate (unsigned length, void *arg)
                   {
                     return malloc (length);
                   }

                   static void
                   dump_gcov_info (void)
                   {
                     const struct gcov_info **info = __gcov_info_start;
                     const struct gcov_info **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()
                   {
                     dump_gcov_info();
                     return 0;
                   }

       -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.

       -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.

       -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 target -fsanitize=hwaddress is currently
           supported on is AArch64.

       -fsanitize=kernel-address
           Enable AddressSanitizer for Linux kernel.  See <https://github.com/google/kasan> 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 and 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.

           -fsanitize=bounds-strict
               This option enables strict instrumentation of array bounds.  Most out of bounds
               accesses are detected, including flexible array members and 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_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.

           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-undefined-trap-on-error
           The -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error option instructs the compiler to report
           undefined behavior using "__builtin_trap" rather than a "libubsan" library routine.
           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.

       -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.

           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.

       -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.

       -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-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.

           The maximum value of N and M is 65535.

   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.

       -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.

       -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 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.

           -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.)

       -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.

           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.

       -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.

           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 about the time consumed by each pass when it
           finishes.

       -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.

       -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.

       -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
           armv9-a : Armv9-A : armv8.5-a, +sve, +sve2
           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-v1, qdf24xx, saphira, phecda, xgene1, vulcan, octeontx,
           octeontx81,  octeontx83, octeontx2, octeontx2t98, octeontx2t96 octeontx2t93,
           octeontx2f95, octeontx2f95n, octeontx2f95mm, a64fx, 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-x2, cortex-a510, cortex-a710, ampere1, 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.

       -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 does not change code generation from GCC, but is
           passed 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.

       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).

           gfx900
               Compile for GCN5 Vega 10 devices (gfx900).

           gfx906
               Compile for GCN5 Vega 20 devices (gfx906).

       -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
           Compile binaries suitable for devices with the XNACK feature enabled.  Some devices
           always require XNACK and some allow the user to configure XNACK.  The compiled code
           must match the device mode.  The default is -mno-xnack.  At present this option is a
           placeholder for support that is not yet implemented.

       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.

           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
           Explain what alignment considerations lead to the decision to make an instruction
           short or long.

       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
           Enable bbit peephole2.

       -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
           Enable Rcq constraint handling.  Most short code generation depends on this.  This is
           the default.

       -mRcw
           Enable Rcw constraint handling.  Most ccfsm condexec mostly depends on this.  This is
           the default.

       -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.

       -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.

           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-m55,
           cortex-x1, 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, 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.

           +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 and cortex-m35p.  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 valid models are
           soft, which generates calls to "__aeabi_read_tp", cp15, which fetches the thread
           pointer from "cp15" directly (supported in the arm6k architecture), and auto, which
           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" or
           "cortex-m55".  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.

       AVR Options

       These options are defined for AVR implementations:

       -mmcu=mcu
           Specify Atmel AVR instruction set architectures (ISA) or MCU type.

           The default for this option is avr2.

           GCC supports the following AVR devices and ISAs:

           "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", "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",
               "ata5795", "ata5790", "ata5790n", "ata5791", "ata6613c", "ata6614q", "ata5782",
               "ata5831", "ata8210", "ata8510", "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".

           "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", "attiny417", "attiny804", "attiny806", "attiny807",
               "attiny814", "attiny816", "attiny817", "attiny1604", "attiny1606", "attiny1607",
               "attiny1614", "attiny1616", "attiny1617", "attiny3214", "attiny3216",
               "attiny3217", "atmega808", "atmega809", "atmega1608", "atmega1609", "atmega3208",
               "atmega3209", "atmega4808", "atmega4809".

           "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".

           "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"
               "TINY" Tiny core devices with 512 B up to 4 KiB of program memory.  mcu =
               "attiny4", "attiny5", "attiny9", "attiny10", "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.

       -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.

       -mn-flash=num
           Assume that the flash memory has a size of num times 64 KiB.

       -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.

       -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 internally for multilib selection.  It is not an optimization
           option, and you don't need to set it by hand.

       -msp8
           Treat the stack pointer register as an 8-bit register, i.e. assume the high byte of
           the stack pointer is zero.  In general, you don't need to set this option by hand.

           This option is used internally by the compiler to select and build multilibs for
           architectures "avr2" and "avr25".  These architectures mix devices with and without
           "SPH".  For any setting other than -mmcu=avr2 or -mmcu=avr25 the compiler driver adds
           or removes this option from the compiler proper's command line, because the compiler
           then knows if the device or architecture has an 8-bit stack pointer and thus no "SPH"
           register or not.

       -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 ("http://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_ELPM__"
           The device has the "ELPM" instruction.

       "__AVR_HAVE_ELPMX__"
           The device has the "ELPM Rn,Z" and "ELPM Rn,Z+" instructions.

       "__AVR_HAVE_MOVW__"
           The device has the "MOVW" instruction to perform 16-bit register-register moves.

       "__AVR_HAVE_LPMX__"
           The device has the "LPM Rn,Z" and "LPM Rn,Z+" instructions.

       "__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_*".

       "__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").

       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.

       CR16 Options

       These options are defined specifically for the CR16 ports.

       -mmac
           Enable the use of multiply-accumulate instructions. Disabled by default.

       -mcr16cplus
       -mcr16c
           Generate code for CR16C or CR16C+ architecture. CR16C+ architecture is default.

       -msim
           Links the library libsim.a which is in compatible with simulator. Applicable to ELF
           compiler only.

       -mint32
           Choose integer type as 32-bit wide.

       -mbit-ops
           Generates "sbit"/"cbit" instructions for bit manipulations.

       -mdata-model=model
           Choose a data model. The choices for model are near, far or medium. medium is default.
           However, far is not valid with -mcr16c, as the CR16C architecture does not support the
           far data model.

       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.

       -mmacosx-version-min=version
           The earliest version of MacOS X that this executable will run on is version.  Typical
           values of version include 10.1, 10.2, and 10.3.9.

           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.

       -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.

           DEBIAN SPECIFIC: This option is on by default for alpha-linux-gnu, unless
           -ffinite-math-only (which is part of the -ffast-math set) is specified, because the
           software functions in the GNU libc math libraries generate denormalized numbers, NaNs,
           and infs (all of which will cause a programs to SIGFPE when it attempts to use the
           results without -mieee).

       -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