nexmon – Rev 1

Subversion Repositories:
Rev:


GLib's configure options and corresponding macros
=================================================

--enable-debug=no
        -DG_DISABLE_ASSERT -DG_DISABLE_CHECKS
--enable-debug=minimum  [default for stable branches]
        none
--enable-debug=yes      [default for development branches]
        -DG_ENABLE_DEBUG -g
--enable-gc-friendly=yes
        #define ENABLE_GC_FRIENDLY_DEFAULT 1
--disable-mem-pools=yes
        #define DISABLE_MEM_POOLS 1

Besides these, there are some local feature specific options, but my main
focus here is to concentrate on macros that affect overall GLib behaviour
and/or third party code.


Notes on GLib's internal and global macros
==========================================


ENABLE_GC_FRIENDLY_DEFAULT
        Newly allocated memory that isn't directly initialized, as well
        as memory being freed should be reset to 0. The point here is to
        allow memory checkers and similar programs that use bohem GC alike
        algorithms to produce more accurate results.
        This can also be accomplished by setting the environment variable
        G_DEBUG=gc-friendly.
DISABLE_MEM_POOLS
        Many small chunks of memory are often allocated via collective pools
        in GLib and are cached after release to speed up reallocations.
        For sparse memory systems this behaviour is often inferior, so
        memory pools can be disabled to avoid excessive caching and force
        atomic maintenance of chunks through the g_malloc/g_free.
        Code currently affected by this macro:
        - GList, GSList, GNode allocations
        - GMemChunks become basically non-effective
        - GSignal disables all caching (potentially very slow)
        - GType doesn't honour the GTypeInfo n_preallocs field anymore
        - the GBSearchArray flag G_BSEARCH_ALIGN_POWER2 becomes non-functional
G_DISABLE_ASSERT
        The g_assert() and g_assert_not_reached() become non-functional
        with this define. The motivation is to speed up end-user apps by
        avoiding expensive checks.
        This macro can affect third-party code. --enable-debug=no will only
        disable the assertion macros for GLib itself, but third-party code
        that passes -DG_DISABLE_ASSERT to the compiler upon its own build
        will end up with the non-functional variants after including glib.h
        as well.
        NOTE: Code inside the assertion macros should not have side effects
        that affect the operation of the program.
G_DISABLE_CHECKS
        This macro is similar to G_DISABLE_ASSERT, it affects third-party
        code as mentioned above and the NOTE about G_DISABLE_ASSERT applies
        too. The macros that become non-functional here are
        g_return_if_fail(), g_return_val_if_fail(), g_return_if_reached() and
        g_return_val_if_reached().
        Additionally the glib_mem_profiler_table and g_mem_profile() from
        gmem.h become non-functional if this macro is supplied.
        This macro also switches off certain checks in the GSignal code.
G_ENABLE_DEBUG
        Quite a bit of additional debugging code is compiled into GLib for this
        macro, and since it is a globally visible define, third-party code may
        be affected by it similar to G_DISABLE_ASSERT.
        The additional code executed/compiled for this macro currently involve:
        - extra validity checks for GDate
        - memory profiling traps in gmem.c (consult debugging.txt for details)
        - BREAKPOINT abortion for fatal log levels in gmessage.c instead of
          plain abort() to allow debuggers trapping and overriding them
        - added verbosity of gscanner.c to catch deprecated code paths
        - added verbosity of gutils.c to catch deprecated code paths
        - object ref/unref traps (consult debugging.txt) and object bookkeeping
          in gobject.c
        - extra validity checks in gsignal.c


2000/12/28      Tim Janik