How to use VC++ intrinsic functions w/o run-time library

I think I finally found a solution:

First, in a header file, declare memset() with a pragma, like so:

extern "C" void * __cdecl memset(void *, int, size_t);
#pragma intrinsic(memset)

That allows your code to call memset(). In most cases, the compiler will inline the intrinsic version.

Second, in a separate implementation file, provide an implementation. The trick to preventing the compiler from complaining about re-defining an intrinsic function is to use another pragma first. Like this:

#pragma function(memset)
void * __cdecl memset(void *pTarget, int value, size_t cbTarget) {
    unsigned char *p = static_cast<unsigned char *>(pTarget);
    while (cbTarget-- > 0) {
        *p++ = static_cast<unsigned char>(value);
    }
    return pTarget;
}

This provides an implementation for those cases where the optimizer decides not to use the intrinsic version.

The outstanding drawback is that you have to disable whole-program optimization (/GL and /LTCG). I’m not sure why. If someone finds a way to do this without disabling global optimization, please chime in.

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