Sun Studio 12: C++ User's Guide

Warnings

If you use -xchar, be particularly careful when you compare a char against a predefined system macro because the value in the macro may be signed. This is most common for any routine that returns an error code which is accessed through a macro. Error codes are typically negative values so when you compare a char against the value from such a macro, the result is always false. A negative number can never be equal to any value of an unsigned type.

It is strongly recommended that you never use -xchar to compile routines for any interface exported through a library. The Solaris ABI specifies type char as signed, and system libraries behave accordingly. The effect of making char unsigned has not been extensively tested with system libraries. Instead of using this option, modify your code so that it does not depend on whether type char is signed or unsigned. The sign of type char varies among compilers and operating systems.