NAME¶
feature_test_macros - feature test macros
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <features.h>
DESCRIPTION¶
Feature test macros allow the programmer to control the definitions that are
  exposed by system header files when a program is compiled.
 
NOTE: In order to be effective, a feature test macro 
must be defined
  before including any header files. This can be done either in the
  compilation command (
cc -DMACRO=value) or by defining the macro within
  the source code before including any headers.
 
Some feature test macros are useful for creating portable applications, by
  preventing nonstandard definitions from being exposed. Other macros can be
  used to expose nonstandard definitions that are not exposed by default. The
  precise effects of each of the feature test macros described below can be
  ascertained by inspecting the 
<features.h> header file.
Specification of feature test macro requirements in manual
  pages¶
When a function requires that a feature test macro is defined, the manual page
  SYNOPSIS typically includes a note of the following form (this example from
  the 
acct(2) manual page):
 
#include <unistd.h>
 
int acct(const char *filename);
 
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see
feature_test_macros(7)):
 
acct(): _BSD_SOURCE || (_XOPEN_SOURCE &&
  _XOPEN_SOURCE < 500)
 
The 
|| means that in order to obtain the declaration of 
acct(2)
  from 
<unistd.h>, 
either of the following macro definitions
  must be made before including any header files:
#define _BSD_SOURCE
#define _XOPEN_SOURCE        /* or any value < 500 */
 
Alternatively, equivalent definitions can be included in the compilation
  command:
cc -D_BSD_SOURCE
cc -D_XOPEN_SOURCE           # Or any value < 500
 
Note that, as described below, 
some feature test macros are defined by
  default, so that it may not always be necessary to explicitly specify the
  feature test macro(s) shown in the SYNOPSIS.
 
In a few cases, manual pages use a shorthand for expressing the feature test
  macro requirements (this example from 
readahead(2)):
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <fcntl.h>
 
ssize_t readahead(int fd, off64_t *offset, size_t count);
 
This format is employed in cases where only a single feature test macro can be
  used to expose the function declaration, and that macro is not defined by
  default.
Feature test macros understood by glibc¶
The following paragraphs explain how feature test macros are handled in Linux
  glibc 2. 
x, 
x > 0.
 
Linux glibc understands the following feature test macros:
  - __STRICT_ANSI__
 
  - ISO Standard C. This macro is implicitly defined by
      gcc(1) when invoked with, for example, the -std=c99 or
      -ansi flag.
 
  - _POSIX_C_SOURCE
 
  - Defining this macro causes header files to expose
      definitions as follows:
 
  - •
 
  - The value 1 exposes definitions conforming to POSIX.1-1990
      and ISO C (1990).
 
  - •
 
  - The value 2 or greater additionally exposes definitions for
      POSIX.2-1992.
 
  - •
 
  - The value 199309L or greater additionally exposes
      definitions for POSIX.1b (real-time extensions).
 
  - •
 
  - The value 199506L or greater additionally exposes
      definitions for POSIX.1c (threads).
 
  - •
 
  - (Since glibc 2.3.3) The value 200112L or greater exposes
      definitions corresponding to the POSIX.1-2001 base specification
      (excluding the XSI extension).
 
  - •
 
  - (Since glibc 2.10) The value 200809L or greater exposes
      definitions corresponding to the POSIX.1-2008 base specification
      (excluding the XSI extension).
 
 
  - _POSIX_SOURCE
 
  - Defining this obsolete macro with any value is equivalent
      to defining _POSIX_C_SOURCE with the value 1.
 
  - _XOPEN_SOURCE
 
  - Defining this macro causes header files to expose
      definitions as follows:
 
  - •
 
  - Defining with any value exposes definitions conforming to
      POSIX.1, POSIX.2, and XPG4.
 
  - •
 
  - The value 500 or greater additionally exposes definitions
      for SUSv2 (UNIX 98).
 
  - •
 
  - (Since glibc 2.2) The value 600 or greater additionally
      exposes definitions for SUSv3 (UNIX 03; i.e., the POSIX.1-2001 base
      specification plus the XSI extension) and C99 definitions.
 
  - •
 
  - (Since glibc 2.10) The value 700 or greater additionally
      exposes definitions for SUSv4 (i.e., the POSIX.1-2008 base specification
      plus the XSI extension).
 
 
  - _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED
 
  - If this macro is defined, and _XOPEN_SOURCE is
      defined, then expose definitions corresponding to the XPG4v2 (SUSv1) UNIX
      extensions (UNIX 95). This macro is also implicitly defined if
      _XOPEN_SOURCE is defined with a value of 500 or more.
 
  - _ISOC95_SOURCE
 
  - Exposes ISO C (1990) Amendment 1 definitions (also known as
      C95). This macro is recognized since glibc 2.12. The primary change in C95
      was support for international character sets. The C95 changes were
      included in the subsequent C99 standard (in other words,
      _ISOC99_SOURCE implies _ISOC95_SOURCE).
 
  - _ISOC99_SOURCE
 
  - Exposes C99 extensions to ISO C (1990). This macro is
      recognized since glibc 2.1.3; earlier glibc 2.1.x versions recognized an
      equivalent macro named _ISOC9X_SOURCE (because the C99 standard had
      not then been finalized). Although the use of the latter macro is
      obsolete, glibc continues to recognize it for backward compatibility.
 
  - _ISOC11_SOURCE
 
  - Exposes declarations consistent with the ISO C11 standard.
      This macro is recognized since glibc 2.16.
 
  - _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
 
  - Expose definitions for the alternative API specified by the
      LFS (Large File Summit) as a "transitional extension" to the
      Single UNIX Specification. (See
 
http://opengroup.org/platform/lfs.html
  The alternative API consists of a set of new objects (i.e., functions and
  types) whose names are suffixed with "64" (e.g., 
off64_t
  versus 
off_t, 
lseek64() versus 
lseek(), etc.). New
  programs should not employ this interface; instead 
_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
  should be employed.
  - _FILE_OFFSET_BITS
 
  - Defining this macro with the value 64 automatically
      converts references to 32-bit functions and data types related to file I/O
      and file system operations into references to their 64-bit counterparts.
      This is useful for performing I/O on large files (> 2 Gigabytes) on
      32-bit systems. (Defining this macro permits correctly written programs to
      use large files with only a recompilation being required.) 64-bit systems
      naturally permit file sizes greater than 2 Gigabytes, and on those systems
      this macro has no effect.
 
  - _BSD_SOURCE
 
  - Defining this macro with any value causes header files to
      expose BSD-derived definitions. Defining this macro also causes BSD
      definitions to be preferred in some situations where standards conflict,
      unless one or more of _SVID_SOURCE, _POSIX_SOURCE,
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE, _XOPEN_SOURCE,
      _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED, or _GNU_SOURCE is defined, in which
      case BSD definitions are disfavored.
 
  - _SVID_SOURCE
 
  - Defining this macro with any value causes header files to
      expose System V-derived definitions. (SVID == System V Interface
      Definition; see standards(7).)
 
  - _ATFILE_SOURCE (since glibc 2.4)
 
  - Defining this macro with any value causes header files to
      expose declarations of a range of functions with the suffix
      "at"; see openat(2). Since glibc 2.10, this macro is also
      implicitly defined if _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined with a value
      greater than or equal to 200809L.
 
  - _GNU_SOURCE
 
  - Defining this macro (with any value) is equivalent to
      defining _BSD_SOURCE, _SVID_SOURCE, _ATFILE_SOURCE,
      _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE, _ISOC99_SOURCE,
      _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED, _POSIX_SOURCE,
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE with the value 200809L (200112L in glibc versions
      before 2.10; 199506L in glibc versions before 2.5; 199309L in glibc
      versions before 2.1) and _XOPEN_SOURCE with the value 700 (600 in
      glibc versions before 2.10; 500 in glibc versions before 2.2). In
      addition, various GNU-specific extensions are also exposed. Where
      standards conflict, BSD definitions are disfavored.
 
  - _REENTRANT
 
  - Defining this macro exposes definitions of certain
      reentrant functions. For multithreaded programs, use
      cc -pthread instead.
 
  - _THREAD_SAFE
 
  - Synonym for _REENTRANT, provided for compatibility
      with some other implementations.
 
  - _FORTIFY_SOURCE (since glibc 2.3.4)
 
  - Defining this macro causes some lightweight checks to be
      performed to detect some buffer overflow errors when employing various
      string and memory manipulation functions. Not all buffer overflows are
      detected, just some common cases. In the current implementation checks are
      added for calls to memcpy(3), mempcpy(3), memmove(3),
      memset(3), stpcpy(3), strcpy(3), strncpy(3),
      strcat(3), strncat(3), sprintf(3),
      snprintf(3), vsprintf(3), vsnprintf(3), and
      gets(3). If _FORTIFY_SOURCE is set to 1, with compiler
      optimization level 1 (gcc -O1) and above, checks that
      shouldn't change the behavior of conforming programs are performed. With
      _FORTIFY_SOURCE set to 2 some more checking is added, but some
      conforming programs might fail. Some of the checks can be performed at
      compile time, and result in compiler warnings; other checks take place at
      run time, and result in a run-time error if the check fails. Use of this
      macro requires compiler support, available with gcc(1) since
      version 4.0.
 
Default definitions, implicit definitions, and combining
  definitions¶
If no feature test macros are explicitly defined, then the following feature
  test macros are defined by default: 
_BSD_SOURCE, 
_SVID_SOURCE,
  
_POSIX_SOURCE, and 
_POSIX_C_SOURCE=200809L (200112L in glibc
  versions before 2.10; 199506L in glibc versions before 2.4; 199309L in glibc
  versions before 2.1).
If any of 
__STRICT_ANSI__, 
_ISOC99_SOURCE, 
_POSIX_SOURCE,
  
_POSIX_C_SOURCE, 
_XOPEN_SOURCE, 
_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED,
  
_BSD_SOURCE, or 
_SVID_SOURCE is explicitly defined, then
  
_BSD_SOURCE, and 
_SVID_SOURCE are not defined by default.
 
If 
_POSIX_SOURCE and 
_POSIX_C_SOURCE are not explicitly defined,
  and either 
__STRICT_ANSI__ is not defined or 
_XOPEN_SOURCE is
  defined with a value of 500 or more, then
  - *
 
  - _POSIX_SOURCE is defined with the value 1; and
 
  - *
 
  - _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined with one of the following
      values:
 
  - •
 
  - 2, if XOPEN_SOURCE is defined with a value less than
      500;
 
  - •
 
  - 199506L, if XOPEN_SOURCE is defined with a value
      greater than or equal to 500 and less than 600; or
 
  - •
 
  - (since glibc 2.4) 200112L, if XOPEN_SOURCE is
      defined with a value greater than or equal to 600 and less than 700.
 
  - •
 
  - (Since glibc 2.10) 200809L, if XOPEN_SOURCE is
      defined with a value greater than or equal to 700.
 
  - •
 
  - Older versions of glibc do not know about the values
      200112L and 200809L for _POSIX_C_SOURCE, and the setting of this
      macro will depend on the glibc version.
 
  - •
 
  - If _XOPEN_SOURCE is undefined, then the setting of
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE depends on the glibc version: 199506L, in glibc
      versions before 2.4; 200112L, in glibc 2.4 to 2.9; and 200809L, since
      glibc 2.10.
 
 
 
Multiple macros can be defined; the results are additive.
POSIX.1 specifies 
_POSIX_C_SOURCE, 
_POSIX_SOURCE, and
  
_XOPEN_SOURCE. 
_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED was specified by XPG4v2
  (aka SUSv1).
 
_FILE_OFFSET_BITS is not specified by any standard, but is employed on
  some other implementations.
 
_BSD_SOURCE, 
_SVID_SOURCE, 
_ATFILE_SOURCE,
  
_GNU_SOURCE, 
_FORTIFY_SOURCE, 
_REENTRANT, and
  
_THREAD_SAFE are specific to Linux (glibc).
NOTES¶
<features.h> is a Linux/glibc-specific header file. Other systems
  have an analogous file, but typically with a different name. This header file
  is automatically included by other header files as required: it is not
  necessary to explicitly include it in order to employ feature test macros.
 
According to which of the above feature test macros are defined,
  
<features.h> internally defines various other macros that are
  checked by other glibc header files. These macros have names prefixed by two
  underscores (e.g., 
__USE_MISC). Programs should 
never define
  these macros directly: instead, the appropriate feature test macro(s) from the
  list above should be employed.
EXAMPLE¶
The program below can be used to explore how the various feature test macros are
  set depending on the glibc version and what feature test macros are explicitly
  set. The following shell session, on a system with glibc 2.10, shows some
  examples of what we would see:
$  cc ftm.c
$  ./a.out
_POSIX_SOURCE defined
_POSIX_C_SOURCE defined: 200809L
_BSD_SOURCE defined
_SVID_SOURCE defined
_ATFILE_SOURCE defined
$  cc -D_XOPEN_SOURCE=500 ftm.c
$  ./a.out
_POSIX_SOURCE defined
_POSIX_C_SOURCE defined: 199506L
_XOPEN_SOURCE defined: 500
$  cc -D_GNU_SOURCE ftm.c
$  ./a.out
_POSIX_SOURCE defined
_POSIX_C_SOURCE defined: 200809L
_ISOC99_SOURCE defined
_XOPEN_SOURCE defined: 700
_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED defined
_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE defined
_BSD_SOURCE defined
_SVID_SOURCE defined
_ATFILE_SOURCE defined
_GNU_SOURCE defined
Program source¶
/* ftm.c */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
#ifdef _POSIX_SOURCE
    printf("_POSIX_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _POSIX_C_SOURCE
    printf("_POSIX_C_SOURCE defined: %ldL\n", (long) _POSIX_C_SOURCE);
#endif
#ifdef _ISOC99_SOURCE
    printf("_ISOC99_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _XOPEN_SOURCE
    printf("_XOPEN_SOURCE defined: %d\n", _XOPEN_SOURCE);
#endif
#ifdef _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED
    printf("_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
    printf("_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS
    printf("_FILE_OFFSET_BITS defined: %d\n", _FILE_OFFSET_BITS);
#endif
#ifdef _BSD_SOURCE
    printf("_BSD_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _SVID_SOURCE
    printf("_SVID_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _ATFILE_SOURCE
    printf("_ATFILE_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _GNU_SOURCE
    printf("_GNU_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _REENTRANT
    printf("_REENTRANT defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _THREAD_SAFE
    printf("_THREAD_SAFE defined\n");
#endif
#ifdef _FORTIFY_SOURCE
    printf("_FORTIFY_SOURCE defined\n");
#endif
    exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
SEE ALSO¶
libc(7), 
standards(7)
 
The section "Feature Test Macros" under 
info libc.
 
/usr/include/features.h
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.44 of the Linux 
man-pages project. A
  description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found
  at 
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.