e7996da3fa
if compiling with -fformat-extensions). Gcc's format checker never actually supported %q length specifiers. It treats %q as an alias for %ll, which is correct if quad_t is long long (e.g., on i386's) and broken otherwise (e.g., on alphas). quad_t's currently should be printed in the same way that they already need to be printed to avoid compiler warnings on all supported systems: cast them to a standard type that is at least as large (long or long long) and use the length specifier for that (%l or %ll). This is problematic since long long isn't standard yet. C9x's intmax_t should be implemented soon. Don't accept %L length specifiers in the kernel either. The only legitimate ones are for long doubles, but the kernel doesn't even support plain doubles. (gcc bogusly accepts %Ld as an alias for %lld, and it sometimes prints "q" in error messages about "ll" and "L" length specifiers, becauses it represents all these specifiers as 'q'.) Submitted by: bde