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the allocation of structure members in Compaq C v6.5 for openVMS system

作者:未知 来源:月光软件站 加入时间:2005-2-28 月光软件站

very important about the size

the allocation of structure members in Compaq C v6.5 for openVMS system

Size of structure members (very important!)

OS is OpenVMS (TM) Alpha Operating System(Version V7.3-2),I had made a program for testing:

#include

 void main()
{
    struct test1{
                char        a;  // 1 byte(+3 bytes as filler follow a)
                int         b;   // 4 bytes
                short       c;  // 2 bytes(+2 bytes as filler follow c)
    }abc;                       //12 bytes
    struct test2{
                char     d;     // 1 byte
    }ddd;

    struct test{
                struct test3{
                char        a;  // 1 byte(+3 bytes as filler follow a)
                int         b;   // 4 bytes
                short       c;  // 2 bytes(+2 bytes as filler follow c)
        }_abc;                  //12 bytes

        struct test4{
                char     d;     // 1 bytes(+3 bytes as filler follow d)
        }_ddd;
    }abcd;                      // 16 bytes  4*4=16

    float  e;                                   // 4 bytes
    double f;                                   // 8 bytes

        printf("abc   = %d n",sizeof (abc));
        printf("ddd   = %d n",sizeof (ddd));
        printf("abcd  = %d n",sizeof (abcd));
        printf("e     = %d n",sizeof (e));
        printf("f     = %d n",sizeof (f));

}

ca *.c    //ca="CC/FLOAT=IEEE_FLOAT/INCLUDE_DIRECTORY=(???ignored)/LIST"

link *  

link.com:

$ SET VER
$ LINK/MAP='P1' /EXE='P1' 'P1', ???ignored/OPT, -
                       ora_proc:oraclient/opt,-
                       .../LIB,-
                       ???ignored/LIB,-
                       ???ignored/LIB,-
                       ???ignored/LIB,-
                       ???ignored/LIB,-
                       ???ignored/LIB,-
                       ???ignored/LIB,-
                      ???ignored/OPT, ???ignored:???ignored/LIB
$ SET NOVER

the result is :

abc    = 12
ddd    = 1
abcd  = 16
e       =
4
f        = 8

-nomember_alignment

Direct the compiler to byte-align data structure members (with the exception of bit-field members). By default, data structure members are aligned on natural boundaries (the next boundary appropriate to the type of the member) rather than the next byte. For example, an int variable member is aligned on the next longword boundary; a short variable member is aligned on the next word boundary. Using any of the #pragma member_alignment , #pragma nomember_alignment , and #pragma pack directives within the source code overrides the setting established by this option.

 

-Zp n

Align structure members on alignment specified by the integer n, where n can be 1, 2, or 4. This option specifies packing so that each structure member after the first is stored on n-byte boundaries as specified by the flag you choose. When you specify the -Zp option without an n value, structure members are packed on 1-byte boundaries.

If under turbo c 2.0 & window xp :

 pattern            size

 char                    1 byte

 int           2 bytes

unsigned int  2 bytes

signed int    2 bytes

float        4bytes

double      8 bytes

#pragma [no]member_alignment Directive

By default, Compaq C for OpenVMS VAX systems does not align structure members on natural boundaries; they are stored on byte boundaries (with the exception of bit-field members).

By default, Compaq C for OpenVMS Alpha systems does align structure members on natural boundaries.

The #pragma member_alignment preprocessor directive can be used to force natural-boundary alignment of structure members. The #pragma nomember_alignment preprocessor directive restores byte-alignment of structure members.

This pragma has the following formats:


#pragma member_alignment
#pragma member_alignment save
#pragma member_alignment restore
#pragma nomember_alignment [base_alignment]

When #pragma member_alignment is used, the compiler aligns structure members on the next boundary appropriate to the type of the member, rather than on the next byte. For example, a long variable is aligned on the next longword boundary; a short variable is aligned on the next word boundary.

Consider the following example:

#pragma nomember_alignment

 

struct x {

           char c; //1byte

           int b; //4bytes

           };

 

#pragma member_alignment

 

struct y {

          char c; //4bytes  /*3 bytes of filler follow c */

          int b; //4bytes

          };

 

main ()

 

{

        printf( "The sizeof y is: %dn", sizeof (struct y) );

        printf( "The sizeof x is: %dn", sizeof (struct x) );

}

 

 

When this example is executed, it shows the difference between #pragma member_alignment and #pragma nomember_alignment .

Once used, the member_alignment pragma remains in effect until the nomember_alignment pragma is encountered; the reverse is also true.

The optional base_alignment parameter can be used to specify the base-alignment of the structure. Use one of the following keywords for the base_alignment:

  • byte (1 byte)

  • word (2 bytes)

  • longword (4 bytes)

  • quadword (8 bytes)

  • octaword (16 bytes)

The #pragma member_alignment save and #pragma member_alignment restore directives can be used to save the current state of the member_alignment and to restore the previous state, respectively. This feature is necessary for writing header files that require member_alignment or nomember_alignment , or that require inclusion in a member_alignment that is already set.

 

 

 

 

 




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