Greetings, David, community, I'd like to get your input on how GCC command line interface should support making a "tiered" warning like -Warray-bounds={1,2} an error for "tier 1" where fewer false positives are expected, and a plain warning otherwise.
There was a recent thread mentioning the current limitation [1]: > This also shows nicely why I don't like warnings with levels, what if I want > -Werror=array-bounds=2 + -Warray-bounds=1? Also in PR 48088 [2] there was a request to make it work for stack size usage: > Stumbled on this bug today. I tried to use it in more intricate way: > > -Wframe-larger-than=4096 -Werror=frame-larger-than=32768 > > which would only warn about any stack more than 4096+, but would fail on > 32768+. > > Does it make sense to implement desired behaviour? > I guess it's not many '>=number' style options in gcc. A problem with implementing DWIM semantics like above for -Wfoo=k -Werror=foo=n combination is that technically it changes its current meaning. If we don't want to risk that, an alternative is to introduce a new option for selecting error threshold for a tiered warning, for example: -Warray-bounds=2 -Werror-level=array-bounds=1 Implementation-wise, we would need to extend common.opt language to annotate which tier is more inclusive (generally smaller 'n' means fewer warnings, but for -Wstack-usage and -Wstrict-aliasing it's the other way around). Opinions? Does anybody envision problems with going the DWIM way? Thanks. Alexander [1] https://inbox.sourceware.org/gcc-patches/2552ab22-916f-d0fe-2c78-d482f6ad8...@lauterbach.com/ [2] https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=48088#c5