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GCC 15.1

(gcc.gnu.org)
270 points jrepinc | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.217s | source
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Calavar ◴[] No.43792948[source]
> {0} initializer in C or C++ for unions no longer guarantees clearing of the whole union (except for static storage duration initialization), it just initializes the first union member to zero. If initialization of the whole union including padding bits is desirable, use {} (valid in C23 or C++) or use -fzero-init-padding-bits=unions option to restore old GCC behavior.

This is going to silently break so much existing code, especially union based type punning in C code. {0} used to guarantee full zeroing and {} did not, and step by step we've flipped the situation to the reverse. The only sensible thing, in terms of not breaking old code, would be to have both {0} and {} zero initialize the whole union.

I'm sure this change was discussed in depth on the mailing list, but it's absolutely mind boggling to me

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ogoffart ◴[] No.43793121[source]
> This is going to silently break so much existing code

The code was already broken. It was an undefined behavior.

That's a problem with C and it's undefined behavior minefields.

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ryao ◴[] No.43793132[source]
GCC has long been known to define undefined behavior in C unions. In particular, type punning in unions is undefined behavior under the C and C++ standards, but GCC (and Clang) define it.
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mtklein ◴[] No.43793225[source]
I have always thought that punning through a union was legal in C but UB in C++, and that punning through incompatible pointer casting was UB in both.

I am basing this entirely on memory and the wikipedia article on type punning. I welcome extremely pedantic feedback.

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1. jotux ◴[] No.43794008[source]
Saw this recently and thought it was good: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRV_bgN92DI