I'm writing a program in C intended to be compiled and run on a HP NonStop machine. However, I want to do the main development on my workstation running Linux. The HP NonStop C-Compiler requires non-standard #include directives like the following:
#include <stdio.h> nolist
For each #include directive, my workstation's GCC is complaining:
S88USF.c:139:21: warning: extra tokens at end of #include directive
How can I suppress this particular warning?
Note: On SO, similar questions have already been asked, the correct answer being along the lines of "don't give gcc any reason to complain in the first place". In this scenario however, I explicitly want to have the #include directives exactly as they are.
I know what I'm doing, I just don't know how to inform gcc about it.
Macroexpansion happening within include can probably help.
GCC will accept this:
#define nolist
#include <stdlib.h> nolist
/* maybe #undef nolist here */