How to Use the Plan 9 C Compiler*
Rob Pike
Introduction
The C compiler on Plan 9 is a wholly new program; in fact it was the first piece of software written for what would eventually become Plan 9 from Bell Labs. Programmers familiar with existing C compilers will find a number of differences in both the language the Plan 9 compiler accepts and in how the compiler is used.
The compiler is really a set of compilers, one for each architecture — MIPS, SPARC, Intel 386, Power PC, ARM, etc. — that accept a dialect of ANSI C and efficiently produce fairly good code for the target machine. There is a packaging of the compiler that accepts strict ANSI C for a POSIX environment, but this document focuses on the native Plan 9 environment, that in which all the system source and almost all the utilities are written.
Source
The language accepted by the compilers is the core 1989 ANSI C language with some modest extensions, a greatly simplified preprocessor, a smaller library that includes system calls and related facilities, and a completely different structure for include files.
Official ANSI C accepts the old (K&R) style of declarations for functions; the Plan 9 compilers are more demanding. Without an explicit run-time flag (-B) whose use is discouraged, the compilers insist on new-style function declarations, that is, prototypes for function arguments. The function declarations in the libraries’ include files are all in the new style so the interfaces are checked at compile time. For C programmers who have not yet switched to function prototypes the clumsy syntax may seem repellent but the payoff in stronger typing is substantial. Those who wish to import existing software to Plan 9 are urged to use the opportunity to update their code.
The compilers include an integrated preprocessor that accepts the familiar #include, #define for macros both with and without arguments, #undef, #line, #ifdef, #ifndef, and #endif. It supports neither #if nor ##, although it does honor a few #pragmas. The #if directive was omitted because it greatly complicates the preprocessor, is never necessary, and is usually abused. Conditional compilation in general makes code hard to understand; the Plan 9 source uses it sparingly. Also, because the compilers remove dead code, regular if statements with constant conditions are more readable equivalents to many #ifs. To compile imported code ineluctably fouled by #if there is a separate command, /bin/cpp, that implements the complete ANSI C preprocessor specification.
Include files fall into two groups: machine-dependent and machine-independent. The machine-independent files occupy the directory /sys/include; the others are placed in a directory appropriate to the machine, such as /mips/include. The compiler searches for include files first in the machine-dependent directory and then in the machine-independent directory. At the time of writing there are thirty-one machine-independent include files and two (per machine) machine-dependent ones: <ureg.h> and <u.h>. The first describes the layout of registers on the system stack, for use by the debugger. The second defines some architecture-dependent types such as jmp_buf for setjmp and the va_arg and va_list macros for handling arguments to variadic functions, as well as a set of typedef abbreviations for unsigned short and so on.
Here is an excerpt from /386/include/u.h:
#define nil ((void*)0)
typedef unsigned short ushort;
typedef unsigned char uchar;
typedef unsigned long ulong;
typedef unsigned int uint;
typedef signed char schar;
typedef long long vlong;
typedef long jmp_buf[2];
#define JMPBUFSP 0
#define JMPBUFPC 1
#define JMPBUFDPC 0
Plan 9 programs use nil for the name of the zero-valued pointer. The type vlong is the largest integer type available; on most architectures it is a 64-bit value. A couple of other types in <u.h> are u32int, which is guaranteed to have exactly 32 bits (a possibility on all the supported architectures) and mpdigit, which is used by the multiprecision math package <mp.h>. The #define constants permit an architecture-independent (but compiler-dependent) implementation of stack-switching using setjmp and longjmp.
Every Plan 9 C program begins
#include <u.h>
because all the other installed header files use the typedefs declared in <u.h>.
In strict ANSI C, include files are grouped to collect related functions in a single file: one for string functions, one for memory functions, one for I/O, and none for system calls. Each include file is protected by an #ifdef to guarantee its contents are seen by the compiler only once. Plan 9 takes a different approach. Other than a few include files that define external formats such as archives, the files in /sys/include correspond to libraries. If a program is using a library, it includes the corresponding header. The default C library comprises string functions, memory functions, and so on, largely as in ANSI C, some formatted I/O routines, plus all the system calls and related functions. To use these functions, one must #include the file <libc.h>, which in turn must follow <u.h>, to define their prototypes for the compiler. Here is the complete source to the traditional first C program:
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
void
main(void)
{
print("hello world\n");
exits(0);
}
The print routine and its relatives fprint and sprint resemble the similarly-named functions in Standard I/O but are not attached to a specific I/O library. In Plan 9 main is not integer-valued; it should call exits, which takes a string argument (or null; here ANSI C promotes the 0 to a char*). All these functions are, of course, documented in the Programmer’s Manual.
To use printf, <stdio.h> must be included to define the function prototype for printf:
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
void
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
printf("%s: hello world; argc = %d\n", argv[0], argc);
exits(0);
}
In practice, Standard I/O is not used much in Plan 9. I/O libraries are discussed in a later section of this document.
There are libraries for handling regular expressions, raster graphics, windows, and so on, and each has an associated include file. The manual for each library states which include files are needed. The files are not protected against multiple inclusion and themselves contain no nested #includes. Instead the programmer is expected to sort out the requirements and to #include the necessary files once at the top of each source file. In practice this is trivial: this way of handling include files is so straightforward that it is rare for a source file to contain more than half a dozen #includes.
The compilers do their own register allocation so the register keyword is ignored. For different reasons, volatile and const are also ignored.
To make it easier to share code with other systems, Plan 9 has a version of the compiler, pcc, that provides the standard ANSI C preprocessor, headers, and libraries with POSIX extensions. Pcc is recommended only when broad external portability is mandated. It compiles slower, produces slower code (it takes extra work to simulate POSIX on Plan 9), eliminates those parts of the Plan 9 interface not related to POSIX, and illustrates the clumsiness of an environment designed by committee. Pcc is described in more detail in APE—The ANSI/POSIX Environment, by Howard Trickey.
Process
Each CPU architecture supported by Plan 9 is identified by a single, arbitrary, alphanumeric character: k for SPARC, q for 32-bit Power PC, v for MIPS, 0 for little-endian MIPS, 5 for ARM v5 and later 32-bit architectures, 6 for AMD64, 8 for Intel 386, and 9 for 64-bit Power PC. The character labels the support tools and files for that architecture. For instance, for the 386 the compiler is 8c, the assembler is 8a, the link editor/loader is 8l, the object files are suffixed .8, and the default name for an executable file is 8.out. Before we can use the compiler we therefore need to know which machine we are compiling for. The next section explains how this decision is made; for the moment assume we are building 386 binaries and make the mental substitution for 8 appropriate to the machine you are actually using.
To convert source to an executable binary is a two-step process. First run the compiler, 8c, on the source, say file.c, to generate an object file file.8. Then run the loader, 8l, to generate an executable 8.out that may be run (on a 386 machine):
8c file.c
8l file.8
8.out
The loader automatically links with whatever libraries the program needs, usually including the standard C library as defined by <libc.h>. Of course the compiler and loader have lots of options, both familiar and new; see the manual for details. The compiler does not generate an executable automatically; the output of the compiler must be given to the loader. Since most compilation is done under the control of mk (see below), this is rarely an inconvenience.
The distribution of work between the compiler and loader is unusual. The compiler integrates preprocessing, parsing, register allocation, code generation and some assembly. Combining these tasks in a single program is part of the reason for the compiler’s efficiency. The loader does instruction selection, branch folding, instruction scheduling, and writes the final executable. There is no separate C preprocessor and no assembler in the usual pipeline. Instead the intermediate object file (here a .8 file) is a type of binary assembly language. The instructions in the intermediate format are not exactly those in the machine. For example, on the 68020 the object file may specify a MOVE instruction but the loader will decide just which variant of the MOVE instruction — MOVE immediate, MOVE quick, MOVE address, etc. — is most efficient.
The assembler, 8a, is just a translator between the textual and binary representations of the object file format. It is not an assembler in the traditional sense. It has limited macro capabilities (the same as the integral C preprocessor in the compiler), clumsy syntax, and minimal error checking. For instance, the assembler will accept an instruction (such as memory-to-memory MOVE on the MIPS) that the machine does not actually support; only when the output of the assembler is passed to the loader will the error be discovered. The assembler is intended only for writing things that need access to instructions invisible from C, such as the machine-dependent part of an operating system; very little code in Plan 9 is in assembly language.
The compilers take an option -S that causes them to print on their standard output the generated code in a format acceptable as input to the assemblers. This is of course merely a formatting of the data in the object file; therefore the assembler is just an ASCII-to-binary converter for this format. Other than the specific instructions, the input to the assemblers is largely architecture-independent; see ‘‘A Manual for the Plan 9 Assembler’’, by Rob Pike, for more information.
The loader is an integral part of the compilation process. Each library header file contains a #pragma that tells the loader the name of the associated archive; it is not necessary to tell the loader which libraries a program uses. The C run-time startup is found, by default, in the C library. The loader starts with an undefined symbol, _main, that is resolved by pulling in the run-time startup code from the library. (The loader undefines _mainp when profiling is enabled, to force loading of the profiling start-up instead.)
Unlike its counterpart on other systems, the Plan 9 loader rearranges data to optimize access. This means the order of variables in the loaded program is unrelated to its order in the source. Most programs don’t care, but some assume that, for example, the variables declared by
int a;
int b;
will appear at adjacent addresses in memory. On Plan 9, they won’t.
Heterogeneity
When the system starts or a user logs in the environment is configured so the appropriate binaries are available in /bin. The configuration process is controlled by an environment variable, $cputype, with value such as mips, 386, arm, or sparc. For each architecture there is a directory in the root, with the appropriate name, that holds the binary and library files for that architecture. Thus /mips/lib contains the object code libraries for MIPS programs, /mips/include holds MIPS-specific include files, and /mips/bin has the MIPS binaries. These binaries are attached to /bin at boot time by binding /$cputype/bin to /bin, so /bin always contains the correct files.
The MIPS compiler, vc, by definition produces object files for the MIPS architecture, regardless of the architecture of the machine on which the compiler is running. There is a version of vc compiled for each architecture: /mips/bin/vc, /arm/bin/vc, /sparc/bin/vc, and so on, each capable of producing MIPS object files regardless of the native instruction set. If one is running on a SPARC, /sparc/bin/vc will compile programs for the MIPS; if one is running on machine $cputype, /$cputype/bin/vc will compile programs for the MIPS.
Because of the bindings that assemble /bin, the shell always looks for a command, say date, in /bin and automatically finds the file /$cputype/bin/date. Therefore the MIPS compiler is known as just vc; the shell will invoke /bin/vc and that is guaranteed to be the version of the MIPS compiler appropriate for the machine running the command. Regardless of the architecture of the compiling machine, /bin/vc is always the MIPS compiler.
Also, the output of vc and vl is completely independent of the machine type on which they are executed: .v files compiled (with vc) on a SPARC may be linked (with vl) on a 386. (The resulting v.out will run, of course, only on a MIPS.) Similarly, the MIPS libraries in /mips/lib are suitable for loading with vl on any machine; there is only one set of MIPS libraries, not one set for each architecture that supports the MIPS compiler.
Heterogeneity and mk
Most software on Plan 9 is compiled under the control of mk, a descendant of make that is documented in the Programmer’s Manual. A convention used throughout the mkfiles makes it easy to compile the source into binary suitable for any architecture.
The variable $cputype is advisory: it reports the architecture of the current environment, and should not be modified. A second variable, $objtype, is used to set which architecture is being compiled for. The value of $objtype can be used by a mkfile to configure the compilation environment.
In each machine’s root directory there is a short mkfile that defines a set of macros for the compiler, loader, etc. Here is /mips/mkfile:
</sys/src/mkfile.proto
CC=vc
LD=vl
O=v
AS=va
The line
</sys/src/mkfile.proto
causes mk to include the file /sys/src/mkfile.proto, which contains general definitions:
#
# common mkfile parameters shared by all architectures
#
OS=5689qv
CPUS=arm amd64 386 power mips
CFLAGS=-FTVw
LEX=lex
YACC=yacc
MK=/bin/mk
CC is obviously the compiler, AS the assembler, and LD the loader. O is the suffix for the object files and CPUS and OS are used in special rules described below.
Here is a mkfile to build the installed source for sam:
</$objtype/mkfile
OBJ=sam.$O address.$O buffer.$O cmd.$O disc.$O error.$O \
file.$O io.$O list.$O mesg.$O moveto.$O multi.$O \
plan9.$O rasp.$O regexp.$O string.$O sys.$O xec.$O
$O.out: $OBJ
$LD $OBJ
install: $O.out
cp $O.out /$objtype/bin/sam
installall:
for(objtype in $CPUS) mk install
%.$O: %.c
$CC $CFLAGS $stem.c
$OBJ: sam.h errors.h mesg.h
address.$O cmd.$O parse.$O xec.$O unix.$O: parse.h
clean:V:
rm -f [$OS].out *.[$OS] y.tab.?
(The actual mkfile imports most of its rules from other secondary files, but this example works and is not misleading.) The first line causes mk to include the contents of /$objtype/mkfile in the current mkfile. If $objtype is mips, this inserts the MIPS macro definitions into the mkfile. In this case the rule for $O.out uses the MIPS tools to build v.out. The %.$O rule in the file uses mk’s pattern matching facilities to convert the source files to the object files through the compiler. (The text of the rules is passed directly to the shell, rc, without further translation. See the mk manual if any of this is unfamiliar.) Because the default rule builds $O.out rather than sam, it is possible to maintain binaries for multiple machines in the same source directory without conflict. This is also, of course, why the output files from the various compilers and loaders have distinct names.
The rest of the mkfile should be easy to follow; notice how the rules for clean and installall (that is, install versions for all architectures) use other macros defined in /$objtype/mkfile. In Plan 9, mkfiles for commands conventionally contain rules to install (compile and install the version for $objtype), installall (compile and install for all $objtypes), and clean (remove all object files, binaries, etc.).
The mkfile is easy to use. To build a MIPS binary, v.out:
% objtype=mips
% mk
To build and install a MIPS binary:
% objtype=mips
% mk install
To build and install all versions:
% mk installall
These conventions make cross-compilation as easy to manage as traditional native compilation. Plan 9 programs compile and run without change on machines from large multiprocessors to laptops. For more information about this process, see ‘‘Plan 9 Mkfiles’’, by Bob Flandrena.
Portability
Within Plan 9, it is painless to write portable programs, programs whose source is independent of the machine on which they execute. The operating system is fixed and the compiler, headers and libraries are constant so most of the stumbling blocks to portability are removed. Attention to a few details can avoid those that remain.
Plan 9 is a heterogeneous environment, so programs must expect that external files will be written by programs on machines of different architectures. The compilers, for instance, must handle without confusion object files written by other machines. The traditional approach to this problem is to pepper the source with #ifdefs to turn byte-swapping on and off. Plan 9 takes a different approach: of the handful of machine-dependent #ifdefs in all the source, almost all are deep in the libraries. Instead programs read and write files in a defined format, either (for low volume applications) as formatted text, or (for high volume applications) as binary in a known byte order. If the external data were written with the most significant byte first, the following code reads a 4-byte integer correctly regardless of the architecture of the executing machine (assuming an unsigned long holds 4 bytes):
ulong
getlong(void)
{
ulong l;
l = (getchar()&0xFF)<<24;
l |= (getchar()&0xFF)<<16;
l |= (getchar()&0xFF)<<8;
l |= (getchar()&0xFF)<<0;
return l;
}
Note that this code does not ‘swap’ the bytes; instead it just reads them in the correct order. Variations of this code will handle any binary format and also avoid problems involving how structures are padded, how words are aligned, and other impediments to portability. Be aware, though, that extra care is needed to handle floating point data.
Efficiency hounds will argue that this method is unnecessarily slow and clumsy when the executing machine has the same byte order (and padding and alignment) as the data. The CPU cost of I/O processing is rarely the bottleneck for an application, however, and the gain in simplicity of porting and maintaining the code greatly outweighs the minor speed loss from handling data in this general way. This method is how the Plan 9 compilers, the window system, and even the file servers transmit data between programs.
To port programs beyond Plan 9, where the system interface is more variable, it is probably necessary to use pcc and hope that the target machine supports ANSI C and POSIX.
I/O
The default C library, defined by the include file <libc.h>, contains no buffered I/O package. It does have several entry points for printing formatted text: print outputs text to the standard output, fprint outputs text to a specified integer file descriptor, and sprint places text in a character array. To access library routines for buffered I/O, a program must explicitly include the header file associated with an appropriate library.
The recommended I/O library, used by most Plan 9 utilities, is bio (buffered I/O), defined by <bio.h>. There also exists an implementation of ANSI Standard I/O, stdio.
Bio is small and efficient, particularly for buffer-at-a-time or line-at-a-time I/O. Even for character-at-a-time I/O, however, it is significantly faster than the Standard I/O library, stdio. Its interface is compact and regular, although it lacks a few conveniences. The most noticeable is that one must explicitly define buffers for standard input and output; bio does not predefine them. Here is a program to copy input to output a byte at a time using bio:
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
#include <bio.h>
Biobuf bin;
Biobuf bout;
main(void)
{
int c;
Binit(&bin, 0, OREAD);
Binit(&bout, 1, OWRITE);
while((c=Bgetc(&bin)) != Beof)
Bputc(&bout, c);
exits(0);
}
For peak performance, we could replace Bgetc and Bputc by their equivalent in-line macros BGETC and BPUTC but the performance gain would be modest. For more information on bio, see the Programmer’s Manual.
Perhaps the most dramatic difference in the I/O interface of Plan 9 from other systems’ is that text is not ASCII. The format for text in Plan 9 is a byte-stream encoding of 21-bit characters. The character set is based on the Unicode Standard and is backward compatible with ASCII: characters with value 0 through 127 are the same in both sets. The 21-bit characters, called runes in Plan 9, are encoded using a representation called UTF, an encoding that is becoming accepted as a standard. (ISO calls it UTF-8; throughout Plan 9 it’s just called UTF.) UTF defines multibyte sequences to represent character values from 0 to 1,114,111. In UTF, character values up to 127 decimal, 7F hexadecimal, represent themselves, so straight ASCII files are also valid UTF. Also, UTF guarantees that bytes with values 0 to 127 (NUL to DEL, inclusive) will appear only when they represent themselves, so programs that read bytes looking for plain ASCII characters will continue to work. Any program that expects a one-to-one correspondence between bytes and characters will, however, need to be modified. An example is parsing file names. File names, like all text, are in UTF, so it is incorrect to search for a character in a string by strchr(filename, c) because the character might have a multi-byte encoding. The correct method is to call utfrune(filename, c), defined in rune(2), which interprets the file name as a sequence of encoded characters rather than bytes. In fact, even when you know the character is a single byte that can represent only itself, it is safer to use utfrune because that assumes nothing about the character set and its representation.
The library defines several symbols relevant to the representation of characters. Any byte with unsigned value less than Runesync will not appear in any multi-byte encoding of a character. Utfrune compares the character being searched against Runesync to see if it is sufficient to call strchr or if the byte stream must be interpreted. Any byte with unsigned value less than Runeself is represented by a single byte with the same value. Finally, when errors are encountered converting to runes from a byte stream, the library returns the rune value Runeerror and advances a single byte. This permits programs to find runes embedded in binary data.
Bio includes routines Bgetrune and Bputrune to transform the external byte stream UTF format to and from internal 21-bit runes. Also, the %s format to print accepts UTF; %c prints a character after narrowing it to 8 bits. The %S format prints a null-terminated sequence of runes; %C prints a character after narrowing it to 21 bits. For more information, see the Programmer’s Manual, in particular utf(6) and rune(2), and the paper, ‘‘Hello world, or Καλημέρα κόσμε, or こんにちは 世界’’, by Rob Pike and Ken Thompson; there is not room for the full story here.
These issues affect the compiler in several ways. First, the C source is in UTF. ANSI says C variables are formed from ASCII alphanumerics, but comments and literal strings may contain any characters encoded in the native encoding, here UTF. The declaration
char *cp = "abcÿ";
initializes the variable cp to point to an array of bytes holding the UTF representation of the characters abcÿ. The type Rune is defined in <u.h> to be ushort, which is also the ‘wide character’ type in the compiler. Therefore the declaration
Rune *rp = L"abcÿ";
initializes the variable rp to point to an array of unsigned long integers holding the 21-bit values of the characters abcÿ. Note that in both these declarations the characters in the source that represent abcÿ are the same; what changes is how those characters are represented in memory in the program. The following two lines:
print("%s\n", "abcÿ");
print("%S\n", L"abcÿ");
produce the same UTF string on their output, the first by copying the bytes, the second by converting from runes to bytes.
In C, character constants are integers but narrowed through the char type. The Unicode character ÿ has value 255, so if the char type is signed, the constant ’ÿ’ has value -1 (which is equal to EOF). On the other hand, L’ÿ’ narrows through the wide character type, ushort, and therefore has value 255.
Finally, although it’s not ANSI C, the Plan 9 C compilers assume any character with value above Runeself is an alphanumeric, so α is a legal, if non-portable, variable name.
Arguments
Some macros are defined in <libc.h> for parsing the arguments to main(). They are described in ARG(2) but are fairly self-explanatory. There are four macros: ARGBEGIN and ARGEND are used to bracket a hidden switch statement within which ARGC returns the current option character (rune) being processed and ARGF returns the argument to the option, as in the loader option -o file. Here, for example, is the code at the beginning of main() in ramfs.c (see ramfs(1)) that cracks its arguments:
void
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
char *defmnt;
int p[2];
int mfd[2];
int stdio = 0;
defmnt = "/tmp";
ARGBEGIN{
case ’i’:
defmnt = 0;
stdio = 1;
mfd[0] = 0;
mfd[1] = 1;
break;
case ’s’:
defmnt = 0;
break;
case ’m’:
defmnt = ARGF();
break;
default:
usage();
}ARGEND
Extensions
The compiler has several extensions to 1989 ANSI C, all of which are used extensively in the system source. Some of these have been adopted in later ANSI C standards. First, structure displays permit struct expressions to be formed dynamically. Given these declarations:
typedef struct Point Point;
typedef struct Rectangle Rectangle;
struct Point
{
int x, y;
};
struct Rectangle
{
Point min, max;
};
Point p, q, add(Point, Point);
Rectangle r;
int x, y;
this assignment may appear anywhere an assignment is legal:
r = (Rectangle){add(p, q), (Point){x, y+3}};
The syntax is the same as for initializing a structure but with a leading cast.
If an anonymous structure or union is declared within another structure or union, the members of the internal structure or union are addressable without prefix in the outer structure. This feature eliminates the clumsy naming of nested structures and, particularly, unions. For example, after these declarations,
struct Lock
{
int locked;
};
struct Node
{
int type;
union{
double dval;
double fval;
long lval;
}; /* anonymous union */
struct Lock; /* anonymous structure */
} *node;
void lock(struct Lock*);
one may refer to node->type, node->dval, node->fval, node->lval, and node->locked. Moreover, the address of a struct Node may be used without a cast anywhere that the address of a struct Lock is used, such as in argument lists. The compiler automatically promotes the type and adjusts the address. Thus one may invoke lock(node).
Anonymous structures and unions may be accessed by type name if (and only if) they are declared using a typedef name. For example, using the above declaration for Point, one may declare
struct
{
int type;
Point;
} p;
and refer to p.Point.
In the initialization of arrays, a number in square brackets before an element sets the index for the initialization. For example, to initialize some elements in a table of function pointers indexed by ASCII character,
void percent(void), slash(void);
void (*func[128])(void) =
{
[’%’] percent,
[’/’] slash,
};
A similar syntax allows one to initialize structure elements:
Point p =
{
.y 100,
.x 200
};
These initialization syntaxes were later added to ANSI C, with the addition of an equals sign between the index or tag and the value. The Plan 9 compiler accepts either form.
Finally, the declaration
extern register reg;
(this appearance of the register keyword is not ignored) allocates a global register to hold the variable reg. External registers must be used carefully: they need to be declared in all source files and libraries in the program to guarantee the register is not allocated temporarily for other purposes. Especially on machines with few registers, such as the i386, it is easy to link accidentally with code that has already usurped the global registers and there is no diagnostic when this happens. Used wisely, though, external registers are powerful. The Plan 9 operating system uses them to access per-process and per-machine data structures on a multiprocessor. The storage class they provide is hard to create in other ways.
The compile-time environment
The code generated by the compilers is ‘optimized’ by default: variables are placed in registers and peephole optimizations are performed. The compiler flag -N disables these optimizations. Registerization is done locally rather than throughout a function: whether a variable occupies a register or the memory location identified in the symbol table depends on the activity of the variable and may change throughout the life of the variable. The -N flag is rarely needed; its main use is to simplify debugging. There is no information in the symbol table to identify the registerization of a variable, so -N guarantees the variable is always where the symbol table says it is.
Another flag, -w, turns on warnings about portability and problems detected in flow analysis. Most code in Plan 9 is compiled with warnings enabled; these warnings plus the type checking offered by function prototypes provide most of the support of the Unix tool lint more accurately and with less chatter. Two of the warnings, ‘used and not set’ and ‘set and not used’, are almost always accurate but may be triggered spuriously by code with invisible control flow, such as in routines that call longjmp. The compiler statements
SET(v1);
USED(v2);
decorate the flow graph to silence the compiler. Either statement accepts a comma-separated list of variables. Use them carefully: they may silence real errors. For the common case of unused parameters to a function, leaving the name off the declaration silences the warnings. That is, listing the type of a parameter but giving it no associated variable name does the trick.
Debugging
There are two debuggers available on Plan 9. The first, and older, is db, a revision of Unix adb. The other, acid, is a source-level debugger whose commands are statements in a true programming language. Acid is the preferred debugger, but since it borrows some elements of db, notably the formats for displaying values, it is worth knowing a little bit about db.
Both debuggers support multiple architectures in a single program; that is, the programs are db and acid, not for example vdb and vacid. They also support cross-architecture debugging comfortably: one may debug a 386 binary on a MIPS.
Imagine a program has crashed mysteriously:
% X11/X
Fatal server bug!
failed to create default stipple
X 106: suicide: sys: trap: fault read addr=0x0 pc=0x00105fb8
%
When a process dies on Plan 9 it hangs in the ‘broken’ state for debugging. Attach a debugger to the process by naming its process id:
% acid 106
/proc/106/text:mips plan 9 executable
/sys/lib/acid/port
/sys/lib/acid/mips
acid:
The acid function stk() reports the stack traceback:
acid: stk()
At pc:0x105fb8:abort+0x24 /sys/src/ape/lib/ap/stdio/abort.c:6
abort() /sys/src/ape/lib/ap/stdio/abort.c:4
called from FatalError+#4e
/sys/src/X/mit/server/dix/misc.c:421
FatalError(s9=#e02, s8=#4901d200, s7=#2, s6=#72701, s5=#1,
s4=#7270d, s3=#6, s2=#12, s1=#ff37f1c, s0=#6, f=#7270f)
/sys/src/X/mit/server/dix/misc.c:416
called from gnotscreeninit+#4ce
/sys/src/X/mit/server/ddx/gnot/gnot.c:792
gnotscreeninit(snum=#0, sc=#80db0)
/sys/src/X/mit/server/ddx/gnot/gnot.c:766
called from AddScreen+#16e
/n/bootes/sys/src/X/mit/server/dix/main.c:610
AddScreen(pfnInit=0x0000129c,argc=0x00000001,argv=0x7fffffe4)
/sys/src/X/mit/server/dix/main.c:530
called from InitOutput+0x80
/sys/src/X/mit/server/ddx/brazil/brddx.c:522
InitOutput(argc=0x00000001,argv=0x7fffffe4)
/sys/src/X/mit/server/ddx/brazil/brddx.c:511
called from main+0x294
/sys/src/X/mit/server/dix/main.c:225
main(argc=0x00000001,argv=0x7fffffe4)
/sys/src/X/mit/server/dix/main.c:136
called from _main+0x24
/sys/src/ape/lib/ap/mips/main9.s:8
The function lstk() is similar but also reports the values of local variables. Note that the traceback includes full file names; this is a boon to debugging, although it makes the output much noisier.
To use acid well you will need to learn its input language; see the ‘‘Acid Manual’’, by Phil Winterbottom, for details. For simple debugging, however, the information in the manual page is sufficient. In particular, it describes the most useful functions for examining a process.
The compiler does not place information describing the types of variables in the executable, but a compile-time flag provides crude support for symbolic debugging. The -a flag to the compiler suppresses code generation and instead emits source text in the acid language to format and display data structure types defined in the program. The easiest way to use this feature is to put a rule in the mkfile:
syms: main.$O
$CC -a main.c > syms
Then from within acid,
acid: include("sourcedirectory/syms")
to read in the relevant definitions. (For multi-file source, you need to be a little fancier; see 8c(1)). This text includes, for each defined compound type, a function with that name that may be called with the address of a structure of that type to display its contents. For example, if rect is a global variable of type Rectangle, one may execute
Rectangle(*rect)
to display it. The * (indirection) operator is necessary because of the way acid works: each global symbol in the program is defined as a variable by acid, with value equal to the address of the symbol.
Another common technique is to write by hand special acid code to define functions to aid debugging, initialize the debugger, and so on. Conventionally, this is placed in a file called acid in the source directory; it has a line
include("sourcedirectory/syms");
to load the compiler-produced symbols. One may edit the compiler output directly but it is wiser to keep the hand-generated acid separate from the machine-generated.
To make things simple, the default rules in the system mkfiles include entries to make foo.acid from foo.c, so one may use mk to automate the production of acid definitions for a given C source file.
There is much more to say here. See acid manual page, the reference manual, or the paper ‘‘Acid: A Debugger Built From A Language’’, also by Phil Winterbottom.