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GENCCODE(8) ICU 73.2 Manual GENCCODE(8)
NAME genccode - generate C or platform specific assembly code from an ICU data file.
SYNOPSIS genccode [ -h, -?, --help ] [ -a, --assembly name ] [ -d, --destdir destination ] [ -n, --name name ] [ -e, --entrypoint name ] [ -f, --filename name ] [ filename ... ]
DESCRIPTION genccode reads each of the supplied filename and writes out a C file containing a compilable definition of the data in the data file. The C file name is made by taking the base name of the data filename, replacing dots by underscores, and adding a .c file extension.
If the -a option is used, platform specific assembly code is generated instead of C code. Most C compilers will accept both C and assembly files. Instead of writing a filename with a .c file extension, a filename with a .s will be written instead.
If genccode is called with no filename it terminates gracefully.
OPTIONS -h, -?, --help Print help about usage and exit.
-a, --assembly name Output assembly code instead of C code. Use -h to see the list of available types of assembly to generate and to specify for this option.
-d, --destdir destination Set the destination directory to destination. The default destination directory is the current directory.
-n, --name name Set the data name to name instead of the default. This name is also used as the base name of the output. The default name is made of the icudt prefix, followed by a two-digit version number corresponding to the current version of the ICU release, and a single letter indicating the endianness of the data (the letter b indicated big endian data, and the letter l indicates little endian ones).
-f, --filename name Normally, an ICU data file such as mydata.icu will be turned into mydata_icu.c and mydata_icu.o. However, if this parameter was set to "somedata", the output files will be somedata.o and somedata.c, respectively.
-e, --entrypoint name Set the data entry point (used for linking against the data in a shared library form) to name. The default entry point name is made of the data (set by the -n, --name option) followed by an underscore and the type of the data (set by the -t, --type option).