I see the /Gy option and am wondering why I would use it? http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/xsa71f43.aspx
See Question&Answers more detail:osI see the /Gy option and am wondering why I would use it? http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/xsa71f43.aspx
See Question&Answers more detail:osThe currently accepted answer is somewhat incomplete.
The purpose of a COMDAT section is to allow "duplicate" sections to be defined in multiple object files. Normally, if the same symbol is defined in multiple object files, the linker will report errors. This can cause problems for some C++ language features, like templates, that may instantiate the same symbols in different cpp files.
COMDAT sections are used to get around this. When a section is marked as a COMDAT in an object file, it also specifies a flag that indicates how conflicts should be resolved. There are a bunch of options, including "just pick anyone you like", "make sure all dups. are the same size", "make sure all dups. have the same content", "pick the largest one", etc. See the COFF spec for a complete list.
In any case, unlike what the currently accepted answer said, there's no requirements, one way or the other, on what the contents of a COMDAT section has to be. They can contain one procedure, many procedures, data, or any combination of both code and data.