fvisibility

Specifies the default visibility for global symbols or the visibility for symbols in a file.

IDE Equivalent

None

Architectures

IA-32, IntelŪ EM64T, IntelŪ ItaniumŪ architecture

Syntax

Linux and Mac OS: -fvisibility=keyword
-fvisibility-
keyword=file
Windows:  None

Arguments

keyword     Specifies the visibility setting. Possible values are:
  default Sets visibility to default.
  extern Sets visibility to extern.
  hidden Sets visibility to hidden.
  internal Sets visibility to internal.
  protected Sets visibility to protected.
file Is the pathname of a file containing the list of symbols whose visibility you want to set. The symbols must be separated by whitespace (spaces, tabs, or newlines).

Default

-fvisibility=default The compiler sets visibility of symbols to default.

Description

This option specifies the default visibility for global symbols (syntax -fvisibility=keyword) or the visibility for symbols in a file (syntax -fvisibility-keyword=file). For symbols specified in file, the second syntax form overrides the first.

Note

These two ways to explicitly set visibility are mutually exclusive. You may set visibility in the declaration, or specify the symbol name in a file, but not both.

Option Description
-fvisibility=default
-fvisibility-default=file
Sets visibility of symbols to default. This means other components can reference the symbol, and the symbol definition can be overridden (preempted) by a definition of the same name in another component.
-fvisibility=extern
-fvisibility-extern=file
Sets visibility of symbols to extern. This means the symbol is treated as though it is defined in another component.  It also means that the symbol can be overridden by a definition of the same name in another component.
-fvisibility=hidden
-fvisibility-hidden=file
Sets visibility of symbols to hidden. This means that other components cannot directly reference the symbol. However, its address may be passed to other components indirectly.
-fvisibility=internal
-fvisibility-internal=file
Sets visibility of symbols to internal. This means the symbol cannot be referenced outside its defining component, either directly or indirectly.
-fvisibility=protected
-fvisibility-protected=file
Sets visibility of symbols to protected. This means other components can reference the symbol, but it cannot be overridden by a definition of the same name in another component.

If an -fvisibility option is specified more than once on the command line, the last specification takes precedence over any others.

If a symbol appears in more than one visibility file, the setting with the least visibility takes precedence.

The following shows the precedence of the visibility settings (from greatest to least visibility):

Note that extern visibility only applies to functions. If a variable symbol is specified as extern, it is assumed to be default.

Alternate Options

None

Example

A file named prot.txt contains symbols a, b, c, d, and e. Consider the following:

-fvisibility-protected=prot.txt

 

This option sets protected visibility for all the symbols in the file. It has the same effect as specifying fvisibility=protected in the declaration for each of the symbols.

See Also

Optimizing Applications: Symbol Visibility Attribute Options (Linux* and Mac OS*)