Specify storage duration and linkage of objects and functions:
auto - automatic duration and no linkage register - automatic duration and no linkage; address of this variable cannot be taken static - static duration and internal linkage (unless at block scope) extern - static duration and external linkage (unless already declared internal)
| (since C11) |
Storage-class specifiers appear in declarations and compound literal expressions(since C23). At most one specifier may be used, except that _Thread_local(until C23)thread_local(since C23) may be combined with static or extern to adjust linkage(since C11). The storage-class specifiers determine two independent properties of the names they declare: storage duration and linkage.
| 5) _Thread_local(until C23)thread_local(since C23) indicates thread storage duration. It cannot be used with function declarations. If it is used on a declaration of an object, it must be present on every declaration of the same object. If it is used on a block-scope declaration, it must be combined with either static or extern to decide linkage. | (since C11) |
If no storage-class specifier is provided, the defaults are:
For any struct or union declared with a storage-class specifier, the storage duration (but not linkage) applies to their members, recursively.
Function declarations at block scope can use extern or none at all. Function declarations at file scope can use extern or static.
Function parameters cannot use any storage-class specifiers other than register. Note that static has special meaning in function parameters of array type.
Every object has a property called storage duration, which limits the object lifetime. There are four kinds of storage duration in C:
| (since C11) |
Linkage refers to the ability of an identifier (variable or function) to be referred to in other scopes. If a variable or function with the same identifier is declared in several scopes, but cannot be referred to from all of them, then several instances of the variable are generated. The following linkages are recognized:
If the same identifier appears with both internal and external linkage in the same translation unit, the behavior is undefined. This is possible when tentative definitions are used.
Declarations with external linkage are commonly made available in header files so that all translation units that #include the file may refer to the same identifier that are defined elsewhere.
Any declaration with internal linkage that appears in a header file results in a separate and distinct object in each translation unit that includes that file.
| Library interface, header file "flib.h": #ifndef FLIB_H
#define FLIB_H
void f(void); // function declaration with external linkage
extern int state; // variable declaration with external linkage
static const int size = 5; // definition of a read-only variable with internal linkage
enum { MAX = 10 }; // constant definition
inline int sum (int a, int b) { return a + b; } // inline function definition
#endif // FLIB_HLibrary implementation, source file "flib.c": #include "flib.h"
static void local_f(int s) {} // definition with internal linkage (only used in this file)
static int local_state; // definition with internal linkage (only used in this file)
int state; // definition with external linkage (used by main.c)
void f(void) { local_f(state); } // definition with external linkage (used by main.c)Application code, source file "main.c": #include "flib.h"
int main(void)
{
int x[MAX] = {size}; // uses the constant and the read-only variable
state = 7; // modifies state in flib.c
f(); // calls f() in flib.c
} |
auto, register, static, extern, _Thread_local thread_local
| The keyword _Thread_local is usually used through the convenience macro | (until C23) |
The typedef and constexpr(since C23) specifiers are formally listed as storage-class specifiers in the C language grammar, but do not specify storage.
| The auto specifier is also used for type inference. | (since C23) |
Names at file scope that are const and not extern have external linkage in C (as the default for all file-scope declarations), but internal linkage in C++.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
// static storage duration
int A;
int main(void)
{
printf("&A = %p\n", (void*)&A);
// automatic storage duration
int A = 1; // hides global A
printf("&A = %p\n", (void*)&A);
// allocated storage duration
int* ptr_1 = malloc(sizeof(int)); // start allocated storage duration
printf("address of int in allocated memory = %p\n", (void*)ptr_1);
free(ptr_1); // stop allocated storage duration
}Possible output:
&A = 0x600ae4 &A = 0x7ffefb064f5c address of int in allocated memory = 0x1f28c30
| C++ documentation for Storage class specifiers |
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