Provided by: gdc-15-x86-64-linux-gnu_15.1.0-8ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       gdc - A GCC-based compiler for the D language

SYNOPSIS

       gdc [-c|-S] [-g] [-pg]
           [-Olevel] [-Wwarn...]
           [-Idir...] [-Ldir...]
           [-foption...] [-mmachine-option...]
           [-o outfile] [@file] infile...

       Only the most useful options are listed here; see below for the remainder.

DESCRIPTION

       The gdc command is the GNU compiler for the D language and supports many of the same options as gcc.
       This manual only documents the options specific to gdc.

OPTIONS

   Input and Output files
       For any given input file, the file name suffix determines what kind of compilation is done.  The
       following kinds of input file names are supported:

       file.d
           D source files.

       file.dd
           Ddoc source files.

       file.di
           D interface files.

       You  can  specify more than one input file on the gdc command line, each being compiled separately in the
       compilation process.  If you specify a "-o file" option, all  the  input  files  are  compiled  together,
       producing a single output file, named file.  This is allowed even when using "-S" or "-c".

       A D interface file contains only what an import of the module needs, rather than the whole implementation
       of  that  module.   They  can  be created by gdc from a D source file by using the "-H" option.  When the
       compiler resolves an import declaration, it searches for matching .di files first, then for .d.

       A Ddoc source file contains code in the D macro processor language.  It is primarily designed for use  in
       producing  user documentation from embedded comments, with a slight affinity towards HTML generation.  If
       a .d source file starts with the string "Ddoc" then it is treated as general purpose  documentation,  not
       as a D source file.

   Runtime Options
       These options affect the runtime behavior of programs compiled with gdc.

       -fall-instantiations
           Generate  code  for  all  template  instantiations.  The default template emission strategy is to not
           generate  code  for  declarations  that  were  either  instantiated  speculatively,  such   as   from
           "__traits(compiles, ...)", or that come from an imported module not being compiled.

       -fno-assert
           Turn off code generation for "assert" contracts.

       -fno-bounds-check
           Turns  off  array bounds checking for all functions, which can improve performance for code that uses
           arrays extensively.  Note that this can result in unpredictable behavior  if  the  code  in  question
           actually  does  violate array bounds constraints.  It is safe to use this option if you are sure that
           your code never throws a "RangeError".

       -fbounds-check=value
           An alternative to -fbounds-check that allows more control as to where bounds checking is turned on or
           off.  The following values are supported:

           on  Turns on array bounds checking for all functions.

           safeonly
               Turns on array bounds checking only for @safe functions.

           off Turns off array bounds checking completely.

       -fno-builtin
           Don't recognize built-in functions unless they begin with the prefix  __builtin_.   By  default,  the
           compiler will recognize when a function in the "core.stdc" package is a built-in function.

       -fcheckaction=value
           This  option  controls what code is generated on an assertion, bounds check, or final switch failure.
           The following values are supported:

           context
               Throw an "AssertError" with extra context information.

           halt
               Halt the program execution.

           throw
               Throw an "AssertError" (the default).

       -fdebug
       -fdebug=value
           Turn on compilation of conditional "debug" code into the program.  The -fdebug option itself sets the
           debug level to 1, while -fdebug= enables "debug" code that are identified by  any  of  the  following
           values:

           ident
               Turns on compilation of any "debug" code identified by ident.

       -fno-druntime
           Implements  <https://dlang.org/spec/betterc.html>.   Assumes  that compilation targets an environment
           without a D runtime library.

           This is equivalent to compiling with the following options:

                   gdc -nophoboslib -fno-exceptions -fno-moduleinfo -fno-rtti

       -fextern-std=standard
           Sets the C++ name mangling compatibility to the version identified by standard.  The following values
           are supported:

           c++98
           c++03
               Sets "__traits(getTargetInfo, "cppStd")" to 199711.

           c++11
               Sets "__traits(getTargetInfo, "cppStd")" to 201103.

           c++14
               Sets "__traits(getTargetInfo, "cppStd")" to 201402.

           c++17
               Sets "__traits(getTargetInfo, "cppStd")" to 201703.  This is the default.

           c++20
               Sets "__traits(getTargetInfo, "cppStd")" to 202002.

           c++23
               Sets "__traits(getTargetInfo, "cppStd")" to 202302.

       -finclude-imports
           Include imported modules in the compilation, as if they were given on the command  line.   When  this
           option is enabled, all imported modules are compiled except those that are part of libphobos.

       -fno-invariants
           Turns off code generation for class "invariant" contracts.

       -fmain
           Generates  a default "main()" function when compiling.  This is useful when unittesting a library, as
           it enables running the unittests in a library  without  having  to  manually  define  an  entry-point
           function.  This option does nothing when "main" is already defined in user code.

       -fno-moduleinfo
           Turns off generation of the "ModuleInfo" and related functions that would become unreferenced without
           it,  which  may  allow  linking  to  programs  not written in D.  Functions that are not be generated
           include module constructors and destructors ("static this" and "static ~this"), "unittest" code,  and
           "DSO" registry functions for dynamically linked code.

       -fonly=filename
           Tells  the  compiler  to parse and run semantic analysis on all modules on the command line, but only
           generate code for the module specified by filename.

       -fno-postconditions
           Turns off code generation for postcondition "out" contracts.

       -fno-preconditions
           Turns off code generation for precondition "in" contracts.

       -fpreview=id
           Turns on an upcoming D language change identified by id.  The following values are supported:

           all Turns on all upcoming D language features.

           bitfields
               Implements bit-fields in D.

           dip1000
               Implements <https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/other/DIP1000.md> (Scoped pointers).

           dip1008
               Implements <https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/other/DIP1008.md> (Allow exceptions in
               @nogc code).

           dip1021
               Implements <https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/accepted/DIP1021.md> (Mutable function
               arguments).

           dip25
               Implements <https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/archive/DIP25.md> (Sealed references).

           dtorfields
               Turns on generation for destructing fields of partially constructed objects.

           fieldwise
               Turns on generation of struct equality to use field-wise comparisons.

           fixaliasthis
               Implements new lookup rules that check the current scope for "alias  this"  before  searching  in
               upper scopes.

           fiximmutableconv
               Disallows unsound immutable conversions that were formerly incorrectly permitted.

           in  Implements "in" parameters to mean "scope const [ref]" and accepts rvalues.

           inclusiveincontracts
               Implements "in" contracts of overridden methods to be a superset of parent contract.

           nosharedaccess
               Turns off and disallows all access to shared memory objects.

           rvaluerefparam
               Implements rvalue arguments to "ref" parameters.

           systemvariables
               Disables access to variables marked @system from @safe code.

       -frelease
           Turns  on  compiling  in  release  mode,  which  means  not emitting runtime checks for contracts and
           asserts.  Array bounds checking is not  done  for  @system  and  @trusted  functions,  and  assertion
           failures are undefined behavior.

           This is equivalent to compiling with the following options:

                   gdc -fno-assert -fbounds-check=safe -fno-invariants \
                       -fno-postconditions -fno-preconditions -fno-switch-errors

       -frevert=
           Turns off a D language feature identified by id.  The following values are supported:

           all Turns off all revertable D language features.

           dip1000
               Reverts <https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/other/DIP1000.md> (Scoped pointers).

           dip25
               Reverts <https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/archive/DIP25.md> (Sealed references).

           dtorfields
               Turns off generation for destructing fields of partially constructed objects.

           intpromote
               Turns off C-style integral promotion for unary "+", "-" and "~" expressions.

       -fno-rtti
           Turns  off  generation  of  run-time type information for all user defined types.  Any code that uses
           features of the language that require access to this information will result in an error.

       -fno-switch-errors
           This option controls what code is generated when no case is matched in a  "final  switch"  statement.
           The  default  run  time behavior is to throw a "SwitchError".  Turning off -fswitch-errors means that
           instead the execution of the program is immediately halted.

       -funittest
           Turns on compilation of "unittest" code, and  turns  on  the  "version(unittest)"  identifier.   This
           implies -fassert.

       -fversion=value
           Turns  on  compilation  of  conditional  "version"  code  into  the  program identified by any of the
           following values:

           ident
               Turns on compilation of "version" code identified by ident.

       -fno-weak-templates
           Turns off emission of declarations that can be defined in multiple  objects  as  weak  symbols.   The
           default  is  to  emit  all  public symbols as weak, unless the target lacks support for weak symbols.
           Disabling this option means that common symbols are instead put in COMDAT or become private.

   Options for Directory Search
       These options specify directories to search for files, libraries, and other parts of the compiler:

       -Idir
           Specify a directory to use when searching for imported modules at compile time.  Multiple -I  options
           can be used, and the paths are searched in the same order.

       -Jdir
           Specify  a  directory to use when searching for files in string imports at compile time.  This switch
           is required in order to use "import(file)" expressions.  Multiple -J options can  be  used,  and  the
           paths are searched in the same order.

       -Ldir
           When linking, specify a library search directory, as with gcc.

       -Bdir
           This  option  specifies where to find the executables, libraries, source files, and data files of the
           compiler itself, as with gcc.

       -fmodule-file=module=spec
           This option manipulates file paths of imported modules, such that if an imported module  matches  all
           or  the  leftmost  part  of  module,  the  file  path in spec is used as the location to search for D
           sources.  This is used when the source file path and names are not the same as the package and module
           hierarchy.  Consider the following examples:

                   gdc test.d -fmodule-file=A.B=foo.d -fmodule-file=C=bar

           This will tell the compiler to search in all import paths for the source file  foo.d  when  importing
           A.B, and the directory bar/ when importing C, as annotated in the following D code:

                   module test;
                   import A.B;     // Matches A.B, searches for foo.d
                   import C.D.E;   // Matches C, searches for bar/D/E.d
                   import A.B.C;   // No match, searches for A/B/C.d

       -imultilib dir
           Use dir as a subdirectory of the gcc directory containing target-specific D sources and interfaces.

       -iprefix prefix
           Specify  prefix  as  the  prefix  for  the  gcc  directory  containing  target-specific D sources and
           interfaces.  If the prefix represents a directory, you should include the final '/'.

       -nostdinc
           Do not search the standard system directories for D source and interface files.  Only the directories
           that have been specified with -I options (and the directory of the current file, if appropriate)  are
           searched.

   Code Generation
       In  addition  to  the  many  gcc options controlling code generation, gdc has several options specific to
       itself.

       -H  Generates D interface files for all modules being compiled.  The compiler determines the output  file
           based on the name of the input file, removes any directory components and suffix, and applies the .di
           suffix.

       -Hd dir
           Same  as  -H,  but writes interface files to directory dir.  This option can be used with -Hf file to
           independently set the output file and directory path.

       -Hf file
           Same as -H but writes interface files to file.  This option can be used with -Hd dir to independently
           set the output file and directory path.

       -M  Output the module dependencies of all source files being compiled in a format suitable for make.  The
           compiler outputs one make rule containing the object file name for that source file, a colon, and the
           names of all imported files.

       -MM Like -M but does not mention imported modules from the D standard library package directories.

       -MF file
           When used with -M or -MM, specifies a file to write the dependencies to.  When used with  the  driver
           options -MD or -MMD, -MF overrides the default dependency output file.

       -MG This option is for compatibility with gcc, and is ignored by the compiler.

       -MP Outputs  a  phony  target  for each dependency other than the modules being compiled, causing each to
           depend on nothing.

       -MT target
           Change the target of the rule emitted by dependency generation to be exactly the string you  specify.
           If  you  want multiple targets, you can specify them as a single argument to -MT, or use multiple -MT
           options.

       -MQ target
           Same as -MT, but it quotes any characters which are special to make.

       -MD This option is equivalent to -M -MF file.  The driver  determines  file  by  removing  any  directory
           components and suffix from the input file, and then adding a .deps suffix.

       -MMD
           Like -MD but does not mention imported modules from the D standard library package directories.

       -X  Output  information  describing  the  contents of all source files being compiled in JSON format to a
           file.  The driver determines file by removing any directory components  and  suffix  from  the  input
           file, and then adding a .json suffix.

       -Xf file
           Same as -X, but writes all JSON contents to the specified file.

       -fdoc
           Generates "Ddoc" documentation and writes it to a file.  The compiler determines file by removing any
           directory components and suffix from the input file, and then adding a .html suffix.

       -fdoc-dir=dir
           Same  as  -fdoc,  but  writes  documentation  to  directory  dir.   This  option  can  be  used  with
           -fdoc-file=file to independently set the output file and directory path.

       -fdoc-file=file
           Same as -fdoc, but writes documentation to file.  This option  can  be  used  with  -fdoc-dir=dir  to
           independently set the output file and directory path.

       -fdoc-inc=file
           Specify  file as a Ddoc macro file to be read.  Multiple -fdoc-inc options can be used, and files are
           read and processed in the same order.

       -fdump-c++-spec=file
           For D source files, generate corresponding C++ declarations in file.

       -fdump-c++-spec-verbose
           In conjunction with -fdump-c++-spec= above, add comments for ignored declarations  in  the  generated
           C++ header.

       -fsave-mixins=file
           Generates  code expanded from D "mixin" statements and writes the processed sources to file.  This is
           useful to debug errors in compilation and provides source for debuggers to show when requested.

   Warnings
       Warnings are diagnostic messages that report constructions that are not inherently erroneous but that are
       risky or suggest there is likely to be a bug in the program.  Unless -Werror is specified,  they  do  not
       prevent compilation of the program.

       -Wall
           Turns  on  all  warnings  messages.   Warnings  are  not  a  defined  part of the D language, and all
           constructs for which this may generate a warning message are valid code.

       -Walloca
           This option warns on all uses of "alloca" in the source.

       -Walloca-larger-than=n
           Warn on unbounded uses of alloca, and on bounded uses of alloca whose bound  can  be  larger  than  n
           bytes.    -Wno-alloca-larger-than   disables   -Walloca-larger-than  warning  and  is  equivalent  to
           -Walloca-larger-than=SIZE_MAX or larger.

       -Wno-builtin-declaration-mismatch
           Warn if a built-in function is declared with an incompatible signature.

       -Wcast-result
           Warn about casts that will produce a null or zero result.  Currently this is only  done  for  casting
           between an imaginary and non-imaginary data type, or casting between a D and C++ class.

       -Wno-deprecated
           Do not warn about usage of deprecated features and symbols with "deprecated" attributes.

       -Werror
           Turns all warnings into errors.

       -Wextra
           This enables some extra warning flags that are not enabled by -Wall.

           -Waddress -Wcast-result -Wmismatched-special-enum -Wunknown-pragmas

       -Wmismatched-special-enum
           Warn  when an enum the compiler recognizes as special is declared with a different size to the built-
           in type it is representing.

       -Wspeculative
           List all error messages from speculative compiles, such as "__traits(compiles,  ...)".   This  option
           does  not  report  messages  as  warnings,  and these messages therefore never become errors when the
           -Werror option is also used.

       -Wunknown-pragmas
           Warn  when  a  "pragma()"  is  encountered  that  is  not  understood  by  gdc.   This  differs  from
           -fignore-unknown-pragmas  where  a  pragma that is part of the D language, but not implemented by the
           compiler, won't get reported.

       -Wno-varargs
           Do not warn upon questionable usage of the macros used to handle variable arguments like "va_start".

       -fno-ignore-unknown-pragmas
           Do not recognize unsupported pragmas.  Any "pragma()" encountered that is not part of the D  language
           will result in an error.  This option is now deprecated and will be removed in a future release.

       -fmax-errors=n
           Limits the maximum number of error messages to n, at which point gdc bails out rather than attempting
           to  continue processing the source code.  If n is 0 (the default), there is no limit on the number of
           error messages produced.

       -fsyntax-only
           Check the code for syntax errors, but do not actually compile it.  This can be  used  in  conjunction
           with  -fdoc  or -H to generate files for each module present on the command-line, but no other output
           file.

       -ftransition=id
           Report additional information about D language changes identified by id.  The  following  values  are
           supported:

           all List information on all D language transitions.

           complex
               List all usages of complex or imaginary types.

           field
               List all non-mutable fields which occupy an object instance.

           in  List all usages of "in" on parameter.

           nogc
               List all hidden GC allocations.

           templates
               List statistics on template instantiations.

           tls List all variables going into thread local storage.

   Options for Linking
       These  options  come into play when the compiler links object files into an executable output file.  They
       are meaningless if the compiler is not doing a link step.

       -defaultlib=libname
           Specify the library to use instead of libphobos when linking.   Options  specifying  the  linkage  of
           libphobos, such as -static-libphobos or -shared-libphobos, are ignored.

       -debuglib=libname
           Specify the debug library to use instead of libphobos when linking.  This option has no effect unless
           the  -g option was also given on the command line.  Options specifying the linkage of libphobos, such
           as -static-libphobos or -shared-libphobos, are ignored.

       -nophoboslib
           Do not use the Phobos or  D  runtime  library  when  linking.   Options  specifying  the  linkage  of
           libphobos,  such  as  -static-libphobos  or  -shared-libphobos,  are  ignored.   The  standard system
           libraries are used normally, unless -nostdlib or -nodefaultlibs is used.

       -shared-libphobos
           On systems that provide libgphobos and libgdruntime as a shared and a  static  library,  this  option
           forces  the  use  of  the  shared  version.   If  no  shared  version was built when the compiler was
           configured, this option has no effect.

       -static-libphobos
           On systems that provide libgphobos and libgdruntime as a shared and a  static  library,  this  option
           forces  the  use  of  the  static  version.   If  no  static  version was built when the compiler was
           configured, this option has no effect.

   Developer Options
       This section describes command-line options that are primarily of  interest  to  developers  or  language
       tooling.

       -fdump-d-original
           Output  the  internal  front-end  AST  after  the  "semantic3" stage.  This option is only useful for
           debugging the GNU D compiler itself.

       -v  Dump information about the compiler language  processing  stages  as  the  source  program  is  being
           compiled.   This  includes  listing  all  modules that are processed through the "parse", "semantic",
           "semantic2", and "semantic3" stages; all "import" modules and their file paths;  and  all  "function"
           bodies that are being compiled.

SEE ALSO

       gpl(7), gfdl(7), fsf-funding(7), gcc(1) and the Info entries for gdc and gcc.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2006-2025 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

       Permission  is  granted  to  copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free
       Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software  Foundation;  with
       no  Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.  A copy of the license is included
       in the man page gfdl(7).

gcc-15.1.0                                         2025-04-25                                             GDC(1)