I guess we'll see what the experts say. If you (or whoever else may be reading this) is not on the gcc mailing list, you can follow the discussion at gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2017-08/msg00116.html (once there is something to follow).
I didn't know we were running out (of reasons)... Peter might be a good person to ask, but I don't know how to get a hold of him (short of posting a comment on one of his many answers).
Modifying patrick's example makes it painfully clear what the problem is. I can take a crack at it, but I don't know how receptive people will be. My last attempt there was to get 'basic' asm completely deprecated.
@rubenvb Really? Ok then. But I'm going to break down the discussion at take it by section. Until he and I come to some common ground about how the asm statement works, the rest of the discussion is pointless. And I think I can make my case just fine using gcc.
@rubenvb That's what I figured. Well, I'll reply to his post and suggest he and I take the discussion offline. No need to clog up the list with something most people don't care about.
@rubenvb Yes, Kai responded. But I believe he is wrong. And having that discussion around a monster post is going to be challenging. Are he and I the only people who work with asm?
@rubenvb I'll check out the mailing list then. I do understand about the volunteer nature of MinGW-w64. I have a couple projects of my own on SF. I'll check out the mailing list then. I'm not quite sure how to concisely describe problems with nearly 40 different routines, but I'll see what I can come up with.
@rubenvb Since the first 5 routines I looked at all had problems, I've been examining all the rest. I think I've made changes to almost all of them now.
@rubenvb If I just had questions about how to write c++ code, I could ask them anywhere. But what I'm trying to discuss are actual bugs in the code. ktietz70 popped right up initially, but he's sort of disappeared.
Well, I'm off. I'll compose a message to gcc-help later and we'll see what happens. If I get a (useful) response, I'll put it as an answer on the question I posted. Thanks all for your help.
Since I have now asked this question in the wrong place twice, would anyone care to steer me to which of the gcc mailing lists seems appropriate? I see a gcc-help, gcc & gcc-bugs. (Obviously) I'm not subscribed to any of these, but at a guess, people who post just choose one randomly, so there is no right answer. But if I'm looking for the "maintainers", what's my best bet?
@sehe I wouldn't say that SO is broken. I knew this question dealt with an uncommon area and would likely require some back and forth. Yes, SO can do that. Over time. If you can hold people's attention.
@BrettHale So it's probably not worth trying to get this section fixed? Normally when I work this hard to figure something out, I like to make things easier for those who come after. But if this section is so "known bad," will anyone even listen?
@sehe Hey, I'm willing to write it up as a question if you really think this information is generally useful. But as has already been pointed out, extended asm is a pretty esoteric area.
@BrettHale I struggle with his assertion that the docs aren't right and the docs don't matter. How then are we supposed to write correctly functioning code for a compiler who's behavior is unknown and undefined? Such a thing isn't a tool, it's a random number generator.
@BrettHale So, if the docs are wrong, I suppose I should figure out how to get them fixed. I may be the only person on the planet who will ever question this, but still.
@BrettHale I certainly wasn't looking forward to the implications. However, that statement from the docs seemed pretty definitive. So you believe the docs are wrong?
@BrettHale Simple is a relative term. (From above): I'm trying to understand the constraints on the gcc asm instruction. In particular, this statement from the docs "You should only use read-write operands when the constraints for the operand [...] allow a register." Does this mean that using "+rm" as an output is forbidden? Or is it just "+m" that's not allowed? Or am I totally misunderstanding what they're trying to say?