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Oracle Solaris Studio 12.3: C User's Guide Oracle Solaris Studio 12.3 Information Library |
1. Introduction to the C Compiler
2. C-Compiler Implementation-Specific Information
2.3 Thread Local Storage Specifier
2.4 Floating Point, Nonstandard Mode
2.6.1 Printing long long Data Types
2.6.2 Usual Arithmetic Conversions
2.7 Case Ranges in Switch Statements
2.11.3 does_not_read_global_data
2.11.5 does_not_write_global_data
2.11.26 warn_missing_parameter_info
2.13 Preserving the Value of errno
2.14.3 __inline and __inline__
2.14.5 __FUNCTION__ and __PRETTY_FUNCTION__
2.16 How to Specify Include Files
2.16.1 Using the -I- Option to Change the Search Algorithm
2.17 Compiling in Free-Standing Environments
2.18 Compiler Support for Intel MMX and Extended x86 Platform Intrinsics
7. Converting Applications for a 64-Bit Environment
8. cscope: Interactively Examining a C Program
A. Compiler Options Grouped by Functionality
B. C Compiler Options Reference
C. Implementation-Defined ISO/IEC C99 Behavior
E. Implementation-Defined ISO/IEC C90 Behavior
H. Oracle Solaris Studio C: Differences Between K&R C and ISO C
This section lists the environment variables that enable you to control the compilation and runtime environment. See also the Oracle Solaris Studio OpenMP API User's Guide for descriptions of environment variables related to OpenMP parallelization.
Specifies the number of processors available to the program for multiprocessor execution. If the target machine has multiple processors, the threads can map to independent processors. Running the program leads to the creation of two threads that execute the parallelized portions of the program.
Controls the name of the file in which the -xprofile=collect command stores execution-frequency data.
Controls in which directory the -xprofile=collect command places the execution-frequency data file.
cc normally creates temporary files in the directory /tmp. You can specify another directory by setting the environment variable TMPDIR to the directory of your choice. However, if TMPDIR is not a valid directory, cc uses /tmp. The -xtemp option has precedence over the TMPDIR environment variable.
Bourne shell:
$ TMPDIR=dir; export TMPDIR
C shell:
% setenv TMPDIR dir