Like most other Chrome settings and options, you can find Chrome flags by just typing “chrome://flags” or “about://flags” in the Omnibox (address/search bar). 2. Once 'Chrome flags' is open, you'll see a long list of features that you can enable or disable.
You can reset individual Flags by clicking on their link to disable them or return them to default. If you want to reset all your Flags, you can select “Reset all to default” at the top of the Flags page. In either case, you'll have to relaunch Chrome to see your changes take effect.
You can use the -Q --help=target
options:
gcc -march=native -Q --help=target ...
The -v
option may also be of use.
You can see the documentation on the --help
option here.
To see command-line flags, use:
gcc -march=native -E -v - </dev/null 2>&1 | grep cc1
If you want to see the compiler/precompiler defines set by certain parameters, do this:
echo | gcc -dM -E - -march=native
It should be (-###
is similar to -v
):
echo | gcc -### -E - -march=native
To show the "real" native flags for gcc.
You can make them appear more "clearly" with a command:
gcc -### -E - -march=native 2>&1 | sed -r '/cc1/!d;s/(")|(^.* - )//g'
and you can get rid of flags with -mno-* with:
gcc -### -E - -march=native 2>&1 | sed -r '/cc1/!d;s/(")|(^.* - )|( -mno-[^\ ]+)//g'
If you want to find out how to set-up a non-native cross compile, I found this useful:
On the target machine,
% gcc -march=native -Q --help=target | grep march
-march= core-avx-i
Then use this on the build machine:
% gcc -march=core-avx-i ...
I'm going to throw my two cents into this question and suggest a slightly more verbose extension of elias's answer. As of gcc 4.6, running of gcc -march=native -v -E - < /dev/null
emits an increasing amount of spam in the form of superfluous -mno-*
flags. The following will strip these:
gcc -march=native -v -E - < /dev/null 2>&1 | grep cc1 | perl -pe 's/ -mno-\S+//g; s/^.* - //g;'
However, I have only verified the correctness of this on two different CPUs (an Intel Core2 and AMD Phenom), so I suggest also running the following script to be sure that all of these -mno-*
flags can be safely stripped.
2021 EDIT: There are indeed machines where -march=native
uses a particular -march
value, but must disable some implied ISAs (Instruction Set Architecture) with -mno-*
.
#!/bin/bash
gcc_cmd="gcc"
# Optionally supply path to gcc as first argument
if (($#)); then
gcc_cmd="$1"
fi
with_mno=$(
"${gcc_cmd}" -march=native -mtune=native -v -E - < /dev/null 2>&1 |
grep cc1 |
perl -pe 's/^.* - //g;'
)
without_mno=$(echo "${with_mno}" | perl -pe 's/ -mno-\S+//g;')
"${gcc_cmd}" ${with_mno} -dM -E - < /dev/null > /tmp/gcctest.a.$$
"${gcc_cmd}" ${without_mno} -dM -E - < /dev/null > /tmp/gcctest.b.$$
if diff -u /tmp/gcctest.{a,b}.$$; then
echo "Safe to strip -mno-* options."
else
echo
echo "WARNING! Some -mno-* options are needed!"
exit 1
fi
rm /tmp/gcctest.{a,b}.$$
I haven't found a difference between gcc -march=native -v -E - < /dev/null
and gcc -march=native -### -E - < /dev/null
other than some parameters being quoted -- and parameters that contain no special characters, so I'm not sure under what circumstances this makes any real difference.
Finally, note that --march=native
was introduced in gcc 4.2, prior to which it is just an unrecognized argument.
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