>Submitter-Id:  net
>Originator:    Christian Haggstrom
>Confidential:  no
>Synopsis:      Internal error when mixing inline, extern and static.
>Severity:      non-critical
>Priority:      low
>Category:      c
>Class:         ice-on-illegal-code
>Release:       3.2.1 (Debian testing/unstable)
>Environment:
System: Linux saturn 2.4.19 #9 Thu Nov 7 16:53:49 CET 2002 i586 unknown unknown 
GNU/Linux
Architecture: i586

host: i386-pc-linux-gnu
build: i386-pc-linux-gnu
target: i386-pc-linux-gnu
configured with: ../src/configure -v 
--enable-languages=c,c++,java,f77,proto,pascal,objc,ada --prefix=/usr 
--mandir=/usr/share/man --infodir=/usr/share/info 
--with-gxx-include-dir=/usr/include/c++/3.2 --enable-shared --with-system-zlib 
--enable-nls --without-included-gettext --enable-__cxa_atexit 
--enable-clocale=gnu --enable-java-gc=boehm --enable-objc-gc i386-linux
>Description:
        gcc-3.2 segfaults when I try to compile this code with optimization 
enabled
>How-To-Repeat:
        $ cat > test.c
        inline int a(int x) { return 0; }
        extern inline void b(void) { }
        static void b(void) { a(0); }

        $ gcc-3.2 -O test.c
        test.c:3: warning: static declaration for `b' follows non-static
        test.c: In function `b':
        test.c:3: internal error: Segmentation fault
        Please submit a full bug report,
        with preprocessed source if appropriate.
        See <URL:http://www.gnu.org/software/gcc/bugs.html> for instructions.
>Fix:
        The problem can be solved by correcting the code. However, gcc should 
not
        crash due to bad input.
        I have not tried to compile it with the latest snapshot of gcc.


Reply via email to