On 7/9/07, Rajat Jain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, >> >> Can we always rely on the fact that gcc will pad the following structure? >> >> typedef struct { >> int descrp; SYSCALL64_STRUCT_ATTR; >> (Automatic padding here?) >> long long pos; SYSCALL64_STRUCT_ATTR; >> int mode; SYSCALL64_STRUCT_ATTR; >> } lseek64_t; >> >> What is the correct way to make it portable? Explicitly added padding fields? >may be i am missing something but why is this not portable? And how >does padding makes this portable? Hi ... sorry I could not ask very well, what I wanted to. I have a piece of code that ASSUMES that the above structure is padded (and I do not want to change that code). So how can I make sure that this structure is always padded (Is there any other way apart from adding explicit padding field?) So like we have a "packed" gcc attribute, do we have a "padded" gcc attribute or something like that (that ensures that gcc will always pad this structure.).
GCC will always pad it for best alignment depending on the architecture. There is attribute to avoid this padding though. But padding is done by default depending on architecture for which you compile your program. So as long as cross compiliation process is correct, it should work i guess. OTOH do you want to add just a fixed number of bytes irrespective of the architecture? Thanks [PS : psbl has blacklisted me ,please CC to newbies too, just in case]
Thanks, Rajat
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