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Node:<a name="Global%20Reg%20Vars">Global Reg Vars</a>,

Next:<a rel="next" accesskey="n" href="Local-Reg-Vars.html#Local%20Reg%20Vars">Local Reg Vars</a>,

Up:<a rel="up" accesskey="u" href="Explicit-Reg-Vars.html#Explicit%20Reg%20Vars">Explicit Reg Vars</a>

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<h4 class="subsection">Defining Global Register Variables</h4>



   <p>You can define a global register variable in GNU C like this:



<pre class="example">     register int *foo asm ("a5");

     </pre>



<p>Here <code>a5</code> is the name of the register which should be used.  Choose a

register which is normally saved and restored by function calls on your

machine, so that library routines will not clobber it.



   <p>Naturally the register name is cpu-dependent, so you would need to

conditionalize your program according to cpu type.  The register

<code>a5</code> would be a good choice on a 68000 for a variable of pointer

type.  On machines with register windows, be sure to choose a "global"

register that is not affected magically by the function call mechanism.



   <p>In addition, operating systems on one type of cpu may differ in how they

name the registers; then you would need additional conditionals.  For

example, some 68000 operating systems call this register <code>%a5</code>.



   <p>Eventually there may be a way of asking the compiler to choose a register

automatically, but first we need to figure out how it should choose and

how to enable you to guide the choice.  No solution is evident.



   <p>Defining a global register variable in a certain register reserves that

register entirely for this use, at least within the current compilation. 

The register will not be allocated for any other purpose in the functions

in the current compilation.  The register will not be saved and restored by

these functions.  Stores into this register are never deleted even if they

would appear to be dead, but references may be deleted or moved or

simplified.



   <p>It is not safe to access the global register variables from signal

handlers, or from more than one thread of control, because the system

library routines may temporarily use the register for other things (unless

you recompile them specially for the task at hand).



   <p>It is not safe for one function that uses a global register variable to

call another such function <code>foo</code> by way of a third function

<code>lose</code> that was compiled without knowledge of this variable (i.e. in a

different source file in which the variable wasn't declared).  This is

because <code>lose</code> might save the register and put some other value there. 

For example, you can't expect a global register variable to be available in

the comparison-function that you pass to <code>qsort</code>, since <code>qsort</code>

might have put something else in that register.  (If you are prepared to

recompile <code>qsort</code> with the same global register variable, you can

solve this problem.)



   <p>If you want to recompile <code>qsort</code> or other source files which do not

actually use your global register variable, so that they will not use that

register for any other purpose, then it suffices to specify the compiler

option <code>-ffixed-</code><var>reg</var><code></code>.  You need not actually add a global

register declaration to their source code.



   <p>A function which can alter the value of a global register variable cannot

safely be called from a function compiled without this variable, because it

could clobber the value the caller expects to find there on return. 

Therefore, the function which is the entry point into the part of the

program that uses the global register variable must explicitly save and

restore the value which belongs to its caller.



   <p>On most machines, <code>longjmp</code> will restore to each global register

variable the value it had at the time of the <code>setjmp</code>.  On some

machines, however, <code>longjmp</code> will not change the value of global

register variables.  To be portable, the function that called <code>setjmp</code>

should make other arrangements to save the values of the global register

variables, and to restore them in a <code>longjmp</code>.  This way, the same

thing will happen regardless of what <code>longjmp</code> does.



   <p>All global register variable declarations must precede all function

definitions.  If such a declaration could appear after function

definitions, the declaration would be too late to prevent the register from

being used for other purposes in the preceding functions.



   <p>Global register variables may not have initial values, because an

executable file has no means to supply initial contents for a register.



   <p>On the SPARC, there are reports that g3 <small class="dots">...</small> g7 are suitable

registers, but certain library functions, such as <code>getwd</code>, as well

as the subroutines for division and remainder, modify g3 and g4.  g1 and

g2 are local temporaries.



   <p>On the 68000, a2 <small class="dots">...</small> a5 should be suitable, as should d2 <small class="dots">...</small> d7. 

Of course, it will not do to use more than a few of those.



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