Double-word memory operands are accessed as their high and low part, so the
memory location has to be offsettable. Use "o" constraint instead of "m"
for double-word memory operands.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/i386/i386.md (*insvti_lowpart_1): Use "o" constraint
instead of "m" for double-word mode memory operands.
We crash when dependent_type_p gets a TEMPLATE_TYPE_PARM outside
a template. That happens here because in
template <template <typename T, typename T::type TT> typename X>
void func() {}
template <typename U, int I>
struct Y {};
void g() { func<Y>(); }
when performing overload resolution for func<Y>() we have to check
if U matches T and I matches TT. So we wind up in
coerce_template_template_parm/PARM_DECL. TREE_TYPE (arg) is int
so we try to substitute TT's type, which is T::type. But we have
nothing to substitute T with. And we call make_typename_type where
ctx is still T, which checks dependent_scope_p and we trip the assert.
It should work to always perform the substitution in a template context.
If the result still contains template parameters, we cannot say if they
match.
PR c++/96097
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* pt.cc (coerce_template_template_parm): Increment
processing_template_decl before calling tsubst.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/template/ttp44.C: New test.
In s390_expand_insv(), if generating code for ICM et al. src is a MEM
and gen_lowpart might force src into a register such that we end up with
patterns which do not match anymore. Use adjust_address() instead in
order to preserve a MEM.
Furthermore, it is not straight forward to enforce a subreg. For
example, in case of a paradoxical subreg, gen_lowpart() may return a
register. In order to compensate this, s390_gen_lowpart_subreg() emits
a reference to a pseudo which does not coincide with its definition
which is wrong. Additionally, if dest is a paradoxical subreg, then do
not try to emit a strict_low_part since it could mean that dest was not
initialized even though this might be fixed up later by init-regs.
Splitter for insn *get_tp_64, *zero_extendhisi2_31,
*zero_extendqisi2_31, *zero_extendqihi2_31 are applied after reload.
Thus, operands[0] is a hard register and gen_lowpart (m, operands[0])
just returns the hard register for mode m which is fine to use as an
argument for strict_low_part, i.e., we do not need to enforce subregs
here since after reload subregs are supposed to be eliminated anyway.
This fixes gcc.dg/torture/pr111821.c.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/s390/s390-protos.h (s390_gen_lowpart_subreg): Remove.
* config/s390/s390.cc (s390_gen_lowpart_subreg): Remove.
(s390_expand_insv): Use adjust_address() and emit a
strict_low_part only in case of a natural subreg.
* config/s390/s390.md: Use gen_lowpart() instead of
s390_gen_lowpart_subreg().
As we can't cope with removed SLP instances during analysis there's
no point in doing that or even continuing analysis of SLP instances
after a failure. The following makes us abort early.
* tree-vect-slp.cc (vect_slp_analyze_operations): When
doing loop analysis fail after the first failed SLP
instance. Only remove instances when doing BB vectorization.
* tree-vect-loop.cc (vect_analyze_loop_2): Check whether
vect_slp_analyze_operations failed instead of checking
the number of SLP instances remaining.
The following patch adds on top of the just posted #embed patch
a first extension, gnu::offset which allows to seek in the data
file (for seekable files, otherwise read and throw away).
I think this is useful e.g. when some binary data start with
some well known header which shouldn't be included in the data etc.
2024-09-12 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
libcpp/
* internal.h (struct cpp_embed_params): Add offset member.
* directives.cc (EMBED_PARAMS): Add gnu::offset entry.
(enum embed_param_kind): Add NUM_EMBED_STD_PARAMS.
(_cpp_parse_embed_params): Use NUM_EMBED_STD_PARAMS rather than
NUM_EMBED_PARAMS when parsing standard parameters. Parse gnu::offset
parameter.
* files.cc (struct _cpp_file): Add offset member.
(_cpp_stack_embed): Handle params->offset.
gcc/
* doc/cpp.texi (Binary Resource Inclusion): Document gnu::offset
#embed parameter.
gcc/testsuite/
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-15.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-16.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/embed-5.c: New test.
The following patch implements the C23 N3017 "#embed - a scannable,
tooling-friendly binary resource inclusion mechanism" paper.
The implementation is intentionally dumb, in that it doesn't significantly
speed up compilation of larger initializers and doesn't make it possible
to use huge #embeds (like several gigabytes large, that is compile time
and memory still infeasible).
There are 2 reasons for this. One is that I think like it is implemented
now in the patch is how we should use it for the smaller #embed sizes,
dunno with which boundary, whether 32 bytes or 64 or something like that,
certainly handling the single byte cases which is something that can appear
anywhere in the source where constant integer literal can appear is
desirable and I think for a few bytes it isn't worth it to come up with
something smarter and users would like to e.g. see it in -E readably as
well (perhaps the slow vs. fast boundary should be determined by command
line option). And the other one is to be able to more easily find
regressions in behavior caused by the optimizations, so we have something
to get back in git to compare against.
I'm definitely willing to work on the optimizations (likely introduce a new
CPP_* token type to refer to a range of libcpp owned memory (start + size)
and similarly some tree which can do the same, and can be at any time e.g.
split into 2 subparts + say INTEGER_CST in between if needed say for
const unsigned char d[] = {
#embed "2GB.dat" prefix (0, 0, ) suffix (, [0x40000000] = 42)
}; still without having to copy around huge amounts of data; STRING_CST
owns the memory it points to and can be only 2GB in size), but would
like to do that incrementally.
And would like to first include some extensions also not included in
this patch, like gnu::offset (off) parameter to allow to skip certain
constant amount of bytes at the start of the files, plus
gnu::base64 ("base64_encoded_data") parameter to add something which can
store more efficiently large amounts of the #embed data in preprocessed
source.
I've been cross-checking all the tests also against the LLVM implementation
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/68620
which has been for a few hours even committed to LLVM trunk but reverted
afterwards. LLVM now has the support committed and I admit I haven't
rechecked whether the behavior on the below mentioned spots have been fixed
in it already or not yet.
The patch uses --embed-dir= option that clang plans to add above and doesn't
use other variants on the search directories yet, plus there are no
default directories at least for the time being where to search for embed
files. So, #embed "..." works if it is found in the same directory (or
relative to the current file's directory) and #embed "/..." or #embed </...>
work always, but relative #embed <...> doesn't unless at least one
--embed-dir= is specified. There is no reason to differentiate between
system and non-system directories, so we don't need -isystem like
counterpart, perhaps -iquote like counterpart could be useful in the future,
dunno what else. It has --embed-directory=dir and --embed-directory dir
as aliases.
There are some differences beyond clang ICEs, so I'd like to point them out
to make sure there is agreement on the choices in the patch. They are also
mentioned in the comments of the llvm pull request.
The most important is that the GCC patch (as well as the original thephd.dev
LLVM branch on godbolt) expands #embed (or acts as if it is expanded) into
a mere sequence of numbers like 123,2,35,26 rather then what clang
effectively treats as (unsigned char)123,(unsigned char)2,(unsigned
char)35,(unsigned char)26 but only does that when using integrated
preprocessor, not when using -save-temps where it acts as GCC.
JeanHeyd as the original author agrees that is how it is currently worded in
C23.
Another difference (not tested in the testsuite, not sure how to check for
effective target /dev/urandom nor am sure it is desirable to check that
during testsuite) is how to treat character devices, named pipes etc.
(block devices are errored on). The original paper uses /dev/urandom
in various examples and seems to assume that unlike regular files the
devices aren't really cached, so
#embed </dev/urandom> limit(1) prefix(int a = ) suffix(;)
#embed </dev/urandom> limit(1) prefix(int b = ) suffix(;)
usually results in a != b. That is what the godbolt thephd.dev branch
implements too and what this patch does as well, but clang actually seems
to just go from st.st_size == 0, ergo it must be zero-sized resource and
so just copies over if_empty if present. It is really questionable
what to do about the character devices/named pipes with __has_embed, for
regular files the patch doesn't read anything from them, relies on
st.st_size + limit for whether it is empty or non-empty. But I don't know
of a way to check if read on say a character device would read anything
or not (the </dev/null> limit (1) vs. </dev/zero> limit (1) cases), and
if we read something, that would be better cached for later because
#embed later if it reads again could read no further data even when it
first read something. So, the patch currently for __has_embed just
always returns 2 on the non-regular files, like the thephd.dev
branch does as well and like the clang pull request as well.
A question is also what to do for gnu::offset on the non-regular files
even for #embed, those aren't seekable and do we want to just read and throw
away the offset bytes each time we see it used?
clang also chokes on the
#if __has_embed (__FILE__ __limit__ (1) __prefix__ () suffix (1 / 0) \
__if_empty__ ((({{[0[0{0{0(0(0)1)1}1}]]}})))) != __STDC_EMBED_FOUND__
#error "__has_embed fail"
#endif
in embed-1.c, but thephd.dev branch accepts it and I don't see why
it shouldn't, (({{[0[0{0{0(0(0)1)1}1}]]}}))) is a balanced token
sequence and the file isn't empty, so it should just be parsed and
discarded.
clang also IMHO mishandles
const unsigned char w[] = {
#embed __FILE__ prefix([0] = 42, [15] =) limit(32)
};
but again only without -save-temps, seems like it
treats it as
[0] = 42, [15] = (99,111,110,115,116,32,117,110,115,105,103,110,101,100,
32,99,104,97,114,32,119,91,93,32,61,32,123,10,35,101,109,98)
rather than
[0] = 42, [15] = 99,111,110,115,116,32,117,110,115,105,103,110,101,100,
32,99,104,97,114,32,119,91,93,32,61,32,123,10,35,101,109,98
and warns on it for -Wunused-value and just compiles it as
[0] = 42, [15] = 98
And also
void foo (int, int, int, int);
void bar (void) { foo (
#embed __FILE__ limit (4) prefix (172 + ) suffix (+ 2)
); }
is treated as
172 + (118, 111, 105, 100) + 2
rather than
172 + 118, 111, 105, 100 + 2
which clang -save-temps or GCC treats it like, so results
in just one argument passed rather than 4.
if (!strstr ((const char *) magna_carta, "imprisonétur")) abort ();
in the testcase fails as well, but in that case calling it in gdb succeeds:
p ((char *(*)(char *, char *))__strstr_sse2) (magna_carta, "imprisonétur")
$2 = 0x555555558d3c <magna_carta+11564> "imprisonétur aut disseisiátur"...
so I guess they are just trying to constant evaluate strstr and do it
incorrectly.
They started with making the optimizations together in the initial patch
set, so they don't have the luxury to compare if it is just because of
the optimization they are trying to do or because that is how the
feature works for them. At least unless they use -save-temps for now.
There is also different behavior between clang and gcc on -M or other
dependency generating options. Seems clang includes the __has_embed
searched files in dependencies, while my patch doesn't. But so does
clang for __has_include and GCC doesn't. Emitting a hard dependency
on some header just because there was __has_include/__has_embed for it
seems wrong to me, because (at least when properly written) the source
likely doesn't mind if the file is missing, it will do something else,
so a hard error from make because of it doesn't seem right. Does
make have some weaker dependencies, such that if some file can be remade
it is but if it doesn't exist, it isn't fatal?
I wonder whether #embed <non-existent-file> really needs to be fatal
or whether we could simply after diagnosing it pretend the file exists
and is empty. For #include I think fatal errors make tons of sense,
but perhaps for #embed which is more localized we'd get better error
reporting if we didn't bail out immediately. Note, both GCC and clang
currently treat those as fatal errors.
clang also added -dE option which with -E instead of preprocessing
the #embed directives keeps them as is, but the preprocessed source
then isn't self-contained. That option looks more harmful than useful to
me.
Also, it isn't clear to me from C23 whether it is possible to have
__has_include/__has_c_attribute/__has_embed expressions inside of
the limit #embed/__has_embed argument.
6.10.3.2/2 says that defined should not appear there (and the patch
diagnoses it and testsuite tests), but for __has_include/__has_embed
etc. 6.10.1/11 says:
"The identifiers __has_include, __has_embed, and __has_c_attribute
shall not appear in any context not mentioned in this subclause."
If that subclause in that case means 6.10.1, then it presumably shouldn't
appear in #embed in 6.10.3, but __has_embed is in 6.10.1...
But 6.10.3.2/3 says that it should be parsed according to the 6.10.1
rules. Haven't included tests like
#if __has_embed (__FILE__ limit (__has_embed (__FILE__ limit (1))))
or
#embed __FILE__ limit (__has_include (__FILE__))
into the testsuite because of the doubts but I think the patch should
handle those right now.
The reason I've used Magna Carta text in some of the testcases is that
I hope it shouldn't be copyrighted after the centuries and I'd strongly
prefer not to have binary blobs in git after the xz backdoor lesson
and wanted something larger which doesn't change all the time.
Oh, BTW, I see in C23 draft 6.10.3.2 in Example 4
if (f_source == NULL);
return 1;
(note the spurious semicolon after closing paren), has that been fixed
already?
Like the thephd.dev and clang implementations, the patch always macro
expands the whole #embed and __has_embed directives except for the
embed keyword. That is most likely not what C23 says, my limited
understanding right now is that in #embed one needs to parse the whole
directive line with macro expansion disabled and check if it satisfies the
grammar, if not, the whole directive is macro expanded, if yes, only
the limit parameter argument is macro expanded and the prefix/suffix/if_empty
arguments are maybe macro expanded when actually used (and not at all if
unused). And I think __has_embed macro expansion has conflicting rules.
2024-09-12 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR c/105863
libcpp/
* include/cpplib.h: Implement C23 N3017 #embed - a scannable,
tooling-friendly binary resource inclusion mechanism paper.
(struct cpp_options): Add embed member.
(enum cpp_builtin_type): Add BT_HAS_EMBED.
(cpp_set_include_chains): Add another cpp_dir * argument to
the declaration.
* internal.h (enum include_type): Add IT_EMBED.
(struct cpp_reader): Add embed_include member.
(struct cpp_embed_params_tokens): New type.
(struct cpp_embed_params): New type.
(_cpp_get_token_no_padding): Declare.
(enum _cpp_find_file_kind): Add _cpp_FFK_EMBED and _cpp_FFK_HAS_EMBED.
(_cpp_stack_embed): Declare.
(_cpp_parse_expr): Change return type to cpp_num_part instead of
bool, change second argument from bool to const char * and add third
argument.
(_cpp_parse_embed_params): Declare.
* directives.cc (DIRECTIVE_TABLE): Add embed entry.
(end_directive): Don't call skip_rest_of_line for T_EMBED directive.
(_cpp_handle_directive): Return 2 rather than 1 for T_EMBED in
directives-only mode.
(parse_include): Don't Call check_eol for T_EMBED directive.
(skip_balanced_token_seq): New function.
(EMBED_PARAMS): Define.
(enum embed_param_kind): New type.
(embed_params): New variable.
(_cpp_parse_embed_params): New function.
(do_embed): New function.
(do_if): Adjust _cpp_parse_expr caller.
(do_elif): Likewise.
* expr.cc (parse_defined): Diagnose defined in #embed or __has_embed
parameters.
(_cpp_parse_expr): Change return type to cpp_num_part instead of
bool, change second argument from bool to const char * and add third
argument. Adjust function comment. For #embed/__has_embed parameters
add an artificial CPP_OPEN_PAREN. Use the second argument DIR
directly instead of string literals conditional on IS_IF.
For #embed/__has_embed parameter, stop on reaching CPP_CLOSE_PAREN
matching the artificial one. Diagnose negative or too large embed
parameter operands.
(num_binary_op): Use #embed instead of #if for diagnostics if inside
#embed/__has_embed parameter.
(num_div_op): Likewise.
* files.cc (struct _cpp_file): Add limit member and embed bitfield.
(search_cache): Add IS_EMBED argument, formatting fix. Skip over
files with different file->embed from the argument.
(find_file_in_dir): Don't call pch_open_file if file->embed.
(_cpp_find_file): Handle _cpp_FFK_EMBED and _cpp_FFK_HAS_EMBED.
(read_file_guts): Formatting fix.
(has_unique_contents): Ignore file->embed files.
(search_path_head): Handle IT_EMBED type.
(_cpp_stack_embed): New function.
(_cpp_get_file_stat): Formatting fix.
(cpp_set_include_chains): Add embed argument, save it to
pfile->embed_include and compute lens for the chain.
* init.cc (struct lang_flags): Add embed member.
(lang_defaults): Add embed initializers.
(cpp_set_lang): Initialize CPP_OPTION (pfile, embed).
(builtin_array): Add __has_embed entry.
(cpp_init_builtins): Predefine __STDC_EMBED_NOT_FOUND__,
__STDC_EMBED_FOUND__ and __STDC_EMBED_EMPTY__.
* lex.cc (cpp_directive_only_process): Handle #embed.
* macro.cc (cpp_get_token_no_padding): Rename to ...
(_cpp_get_token_no_padding): ... this. No longer static.
(builtin_has_include_1): New function.
(builtin_has_include): Use it. Use _cpp_get_token_no_padding
instead of cpp_get_token_no_padding.
(builtin_has_embed): New function.
(_cpp_builtin_macro_text): Handle BT_HAS_EMBED.
gcc/
* doc/cppdiropts.texi (--embed-dir=): Document.
* doc/cpp.texi (Binary Resource Inclusion): New chapter.
(__has_embed): Document.
* doc/invoke.texi (Directory Options): Mention --embed-dir=.
* gcc.cc (cpp_unique_options): Add %{-embed*}.
* genmatch.cc (main): Adjust cpp_set_include_chains caller.
* incpath.h (enum incpath_kind): Add INC_EMBED.
* incpath.cc (merge_include_chains): Handle INC_EMBED.
(register_include_chains): Adjust cpp_set_include_chains caller.
gcc/c-family/
* c.opt (-embed-dir=): New option.
(-embed-directory): New alias.
(-embed-directory=): New alias.
* c-opts.cc (c_common_handle_option): Handle OPT__embed_dir_.
gcc/testsuite/
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-1.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-2.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-3.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-4.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-5.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-6.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-7.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-8.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-9.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-10.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-11.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-12.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-13.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-14.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-25.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-26.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-dir/embed-1.inc: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-dir/embed-3.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-dir/embed-4.c: New test.
* c-c++-common/cpp/embed-dir/magna-carta.txt: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/embed-1.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/embed-2.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/embed-3.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/cpp/embed-4.c: New test.
* g++.dg/cpp/embed-1.C: New test.
* g++.dg/cpp/embed-2.C: New test.
* g++.dg/cpp/embed-3.C: New test.
We currently ICE upon the following code while building the "[...] is
private within this context" error message
=== cut here ===
class A { enum Enum{}; };
template<typename E, template<typename> class Alloc>
class B : private Alloc<E>, private A {};
template<typename E, template<typename> class Alloc>
int B<E, Alloc>::foo (Enum m) { return 42; }
=== cut here ===
The problem is that since r11-6880, after detecting that Enum cannot be
accessed in B, enforce_access will access the TYPE_BINFO of all the
bases of B, which ICEs for any that is a BOUND_TEMPLATE_TEMPLATE_PARM.
This patch simply skips such bases.
PR c++/116323
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* search.cc (get_parent_with_private_access): Only call access_in_type
for RECORD_OR_UNION_TYPE_P base BINFOs.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/template/access43.C: New test.
When we decide to not process a association chain of size two and
that would also mismatch with a different chain size on another lane
we shouldn't fail discovery hard at this point. Instead let the
regular discovery figure out matching lanes so the parent can
decide to perform operand swapping or we can split groups at better
points rather than forcefully splitting away the first single lane.
For example on gcc.dg/vect/vect-strided-u8-i8.c we now see two
groups of size 4 feeding the store instead of groups of size 1,
three, two, one and one.
* tree-vect-slp.cc (vect_build_slp_tree_2): On reassociation
chain length mismatch do not fail discovery of the node
but try without re-associating to compute a better matches[].
Provide a reassociation failure hint in the dump.
(vect_slp_analyze_node_operations): Avoid stray failure
dumping.
(vectorizable_slp_permutation_1): Dump the address of the
SLP node representing the permutation.
Hi all,
A simple assembly check has been added in this version. Previous version:
https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/gcc-patches/2024-September/662783.html
Thanks,
Bohan
------
The current vsetvl pass eliminates a vsetvl instruction when the previous
info is "available," but does not when "compatible." This can lead to not
only redundancy, but also incorrect behaviors when the previous info happens
to be compatible with a later vector instruction, which ends of using the
vsetvl info that should have been eliminated, as is shown in the testcase.
This patch eliminates the vsetvl when the previous info is "compatible."
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/riscv/riscv-vsetvl.cc (pre_vsetvl::fuse_local_vsetvl_info):
Delete vsetvl insn when `prev_info` is compatible
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gcc.target/riscv/rvv/vsetvl/vsetvl_bug-4.c: New test.
This patch fixes a bug in the current vsetvl pass. The current pass uses
`m_vl` to determine whether the dest operand has been used by non-RVV
instructions. However, `m_vl` may have been modified as a result of an
`update_avl` call, and thus would be no longer the dest operand of the
original instruction. This can lead to incorrect vsetvl eliminations, as is
shown in the testcase. In this patch, we create a `dest_vl` variable for
this scenerio.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/riscv/riscv-vsetvl.cc: Use `dest_vl` for dest VL operand
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gcc.target/riscv/rvv/vsetvl/vsetvl_bug-3.c: New test.
My last fix for this issue (PR c++/114947, r15-810) didn't go far
enough; I had assumed that the issue where we lost track of partial
specialisations we would need to walk again later was limited to
partitions (where we always re-walk all specialisations), but the linked
PR is the same cause but for header units, and it is possible to
construct test cases exposing the same bug just for normal modules.
As such this patch just unconditionally ensures that whenever we modify
DECL_TEMPLATE_SPECIALIZATIONS we also track any partial specialisations
that might have added.
Also clean up a couple of comments and assertions to make expected state
more obvious when processing these specs.
PR c++/116496
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* module.cc (trees_in::decl_value): Don't call
set_defining_module_for_partial_spec here.
(depset:#️⃣:add_partial_entities): Clarity assertions.
* pt.cc (add_mergeable_specialization): Always call
set_defining_module_for_partial_spec when adding a partial spec.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/modules/partial-5_a.C: New test.
* g++.dg/modules/partial-5_b.C: New test.
Signed-off-by: Nathaniel Shead <nathanieloshead@gmail.com>
Since we have the predicate, this patch converts one more check for
essentially the same thing into its use.
2024-09-11 Martin Jambor <mjambor@suse.cz>
* ipa-cp.cc (propagate_vr_across_jump_function): Use
ipa_vr_supported_type_p instead of explicit check for integral and
pointer types.
ipa_supports_p is not a name that captures well what the predicate
determines. Therefore, this patch renames it to ipa_vr_supported_type_p.
gcc/ChangeLog:
2024-09-06 Martin Jambor <mjambor@suse.cz>
* ipa-cp.h (ipa_supports_p): Rename to ipa_vr_supported_type_p.
* ipa-cp.cc (ipa_vr_operation_and_type_effects): Adjust called
function name.
(propagate_vr_across_jump_function): Likewise.
* ipa-prop.cc (ipa_compute_jump_functions_for_edge): Likewise.
(ipcp_get_parm_bits): Likewise.
On Arm only r0-r3 (the argument registers) and IP are available for
use as an address for an indirect sibcall. But if all the argument
registers are used and IP is clobbered during the epilogue, or is used
to pass closure information, then there is no spare register to hold
the address and we must reject the sibcall.
arm_function_ok_for_sibcall did try to handle this, but it did this by
examining the function declaration. That doesn't work if the function
has no prototype, or if the prototype has variadic arguments: we must,
instead, look at the list of actuals for the call rather than the list
of formals.
The old code also worked by laying out all the arguments and then
trying to add one more integer argument at the end of the list, but
this missed a corner case where a hole had been left in the argument
register list due to argument alignment.
We fix all of this by now scanning the list of actual values to be
passed and then checking if a core register has been assigned to that
argument. If it has, then we record which registers were assigned.
Once done we then look to see if all the argument registers have been
assigned and only block the sibcall if that is the case. This permits
us to sibcall:
int (*d)(int, ...);
int g(void);
int i () { return d(g(), 2LL);}
because r1 remains free (the 2LL argument is passed in {r2,r3}).
gcc/
PR target/116597
* config/arm/arm.cc (arm_function_ok_for_sibcall): Use the list of
actuals for the call, not the list of formals.
gcc/testsuite/
PR target/116597
* gcc.target/arm/pac-sibcall-2.c: New test.
* gcc.target/arm/pac-sibcall-3.c: New test.
When SLP analysis scraps an instance because it fails to analyze we
can end up calling vectorizable_* in analysis mode on a node that
was analyzed during the analysis of that instance again.
vectorizable_simd_clone_call wasn't expecting that and instead
guarded analysis/transform code on populated data structures.
The following changes it so it survives re-analysis.
PR tree-optimization/116674
* tree-vect-stmts.cc (vectorizable_simd_clone_call): Support
re-analysis.
* g++.dg/vect/pr116674.cc: New testcase.
Together with the preparatory compiler patches, this patch restores
unrolling in std::__find_if, but this time relying on the compiler to do
it by using:
#pragma GCC unroll 4
which should restore the majority of the regression relative to the
hand-unrolled version while still being vectorizable with WIP alignment
peeling enhancements.
On Neoverse V1 with LTO, this reduces the regression in xalancbmk (from
SPEC CPU 2017) from 5.8% to 1.7% (restoring ~71% of the lost
performance).
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116140
* include/bits/stl_algobase.h (std::__find_if): Add #pragma to
request GCC to unroll the loop.
When #pragma GCC unroll is processed in
tree-cfg.cc:replace_loop_annotate_in_block, we set both the loop->unroll
field (which is currently streamed out and back in during LTO) but also
the cfun->has_unroll flag.
cfun->has_unroll, however, is not currently streamed during LTO. This
patch fixes that.
Prior to this patch, loops marked with #pragma GCC unroll that would be
unrolled by RTL loop2_unroll in a non-LTO compilation didn't get
unrolled under LTO.
gcc/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116140
* lto-streamer-in.cc (input_struct_function_base): Stream in
fn->has_unroll.
* lto-streamer-out.cc (output_struct_function_base): Stream out
fn->has_unroll.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116140
* g++.dg/ext/pragma-unroll-lambda-lto.C: New test.
I noticed while working on a test that uses LTO and requests a dump
file, that we are failing to cleanup ltrans dump files in the testsuite.
E.g. the test I was working on compiles with -flto
-fdump-rtl-loop2_unroll, and we end up with the following file:
./gcc/testsuite/g++/pr116140.ltrans0.ltrans.287r.loop2_unroll
being left behind by the testsuite. This is problematic not just from a
"missing cleanup" POV, but also because it can cause the test to pass
spuriously when the test is re-run wtih an unpatched compiler (without
the bug fix). In the broken case, loop2_unroll isn't run at all, so we
end up scanning the old dumpfile (from the previous test run) and making
the dumpfile scan pass.
Running with `-v -v` in RUNTESTFLAGS we can see the following cleanup
attempt is made:
remove-build-file `pr116140.{C,exe}.{ltrans[0-9]*.,}[0-9][0-9][0-9]{l,i,r,t}.*'
looking again at the ltrans dump file above we can see this will fail for two
reasons:
- The actual dump file has no {C,exe} extension between the basename and
ltrans0.
- The actual dump file has an additional `.ltrans` component after `.ltrans0`.
This patch therefore relaxes the pattern constructed for cleaning up such
dumpfiles to also match dumpfiles with the above form.
Running the testsuite before/after this patch shows the number of files in
gcc/testsuite (in the build dir) with "ltrans" in the name goes from 1416 to 62
on aarch64.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116140
* lib/gcc-dg.exp (schedule-cleanups): Relax ltrans dumpfile
cleanup pattern to handle missing cases.
For the testcase added with this patch, we would end up losing the:
#pragma GCC unroll 4
and emitting "warning: ignoring loop annotation". That warning comes
from tree-cfg.cc:replace_loop_annotate, and means that we failed to
process the ANNOTATE_EXPR in tree-cfg.cc:replace_loop_annotate_in_block.
That function walks backwards over the GIMPLE in an exiting BB for a
loop, skipping over the final gcond, and looks for any ANNOTATE_EXPRS
immediately preceding the gcond.
The function documents the following pre-condition:
/* [...] We assume that the annotations come immediately before the
condition in BB, if any. */
now looking at the exiting BB of the loop, we have:
<bb 8> :
D.4524 = .ANNOTATE (iftmp.1, 1, 4);
retval.0 = D.4524;
if (retval.0 != 0)
goto <bb 3>; [INV]
else
goto <bb 9>; [INV]
and crucially there is an intervening assignment between the gcond and
the preceding .ANNOTATE ifn call. To see where this comes from, we can
look to the IR given by -fdump-tree-original:
if (<<cleanup_point ANNOTATE_EXPR <first != last && !use_find(short
int*)::<lambda(short int)>::operator() (&pred, *first), unroll 4>>>)
goto <D.4518>;
else
goto <D.4516>;
here the problem is that we've wrapped a CLEANUP_POINT_EXPR around the
ANNOTATE_EXPR, meaning the ANNOTATE_EXPR is no longer the outermost
expression in the condition.
The CLEANUP_POINT_EXPR gets added by the following call chain:
finish_while_stmt_cond
-> maybe_convert_cond
-> condition_conversion
-> fold_build_cleanup_point_expr
this patch chooses to fix the issue by first introducing a new helper
class (annotate_saver) to save and restore outer chains of
ANNOTATE_EXPRs and then using it in maybe_convert_cond.
With this patch, we don't get any such warning and the loop gets unrolled as
expected at -O2.
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116140
* semantics.cc (anotate_saver): New. Use it ...
(maybe_convert_cond): ... here, to ensure any ANNOTATE_EXPRs
remain the outermost expression(s) of the condition.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116140
* g++.dg/ext/pragma-unroll-lambda.C: New test.
The undefined std::ios_base_library_init() symbol that is referenced by
<iostream> is only supposed to be used for targets where symbol
versioning is supported.
The mingw-w64 target defaults to --enable-symvers=gnu due to using GNU
ld but doesn't actually support symbol versioning. This means it tries
to emit references to the std::ios_base_library_init() symbol, which
isn't really defined in the library. This causes problems when using lld
to link user binaries.
Disable the undefined symbol reference for non-ELF targets.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116159
* include/std/iostream (ios_base_library_init): Only define for
ELF targets.
* src/c++98/ios_init.cc (ios_base_library_init): Likewise.
The changes to implement LWG 2579 (r10-327-gdb33efde17932f) made
std::string::assign use the propagate_on_container_copy_assignment
(POCCA) trait, for consistency with operator=(const basic_string&).
However, this also unintentionally affected operator=(basic_string&&)
which calls assign(str) to make a deep copy when performing a move is
not possible. The fix is for the move assignment operator to call
_M_assign(str) instead of assign(str), as this just does the deep copy
and doesn't check the POCCA trait first.
The bug only affects the unlikely/useless combination of POCCA==true and
POCMA==false, but we should fix it for correctness anyway. it should
also make move assignment slightly cheaper to compile and execute,
because we skip the extra code in assign(const basic_string&).
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
PR libstdc++/116641
* include/bits/basic_string.h (operator=(basic_string&&)): Call
_M_assign instead of assign.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/allocator/116641.cc: New
test.
The following testcase is miscompiled, because
get_member_function_from_ptrfunc
emits something like
(((FUNCTION.__pfn & 1) != 0)
? ptr + FUNCTION.__delta + FUNCTION.__pfn - 1
: FUNCTION.__pfn) (ptr + FUNCTION.__delta, ...)
or so, so FUNCTION tree is used there 5 times. There is
if (TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS (function)) function = save_expr (function);
but in this case function doesn't have side-effects, just nested ARRAY_REFs.
Now, if all the FUNCTION trees would be shared, it would work fine,
FUNCTION is evaluated in the first operand of COND_EXPR; but unfortunately
that isn't the case, both the BIT_AND_EXPR shortening and conversion to
bool done for build_conditional_expr actually unshare_expr that first
expression, but none of the other 4 are unshared. With -fsanitize=bounds,
.UBSAN_BOUNDS calls are added to the ARRAY_REFs and use save_expr to avoid
evaluating the argument multiple times, but because that FUNCTION tree is
first used in the second argument of COND_EXPR (i.e. conditionally), the
SAVE_EXPR initialization is done just there and then the third argument
of COND_EXPR just uses the uninitialized temporary and so does the first
argument computation as well.
The following patch fixes that by doing save_expr even if !TREE_SIDE_EFFECTS,
but to avoid doing that too often only if !nonvirtual and if the expression
isn't a simple decl.
2024-09-10 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR c++/116449
* typeck.cc (get_member_function_from_ptrfunc): Use save_expr
on instance_ptr and function even if it doesn't have side-effects,
as long as it isn't a decl.
* g++.dg/ubsan/pr116449.C: New test.
Since r15-3532-g7cebc6384a0ad6 18_support/new_nothrow.cc fails in C++98 mode because G++
diagnoses missing exception specifications for the user-defined
(de)allocation functions. Add throw(std::bad_alloc) and throw() for
C++98 mode.
Similarly, 26_numerics/headers/numeric/synopsis.cc fails in C++20 mode
because the declarations of gcd and lcm are not noexcept.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/18_support/new_nothrow.cc (THROW_BAD_ALLOC): Define
macro to add exception specifications for C++98 mode.
(NOEXCEPT): Expand to throw() for C++98 mode.
* testsuite/26_numerics/headers/numeric/synopsis.cc (gcd, lcm):
Add noexcept.
Here we wrongly mark the reference temporary for g TREE_READONLY,
so it's put in .rodata and so we can't modify its subobject even
when the subobject is marked mutable. This is so since r9-869.
r14-1785 fixed a similar problem, but not in set_up_extended_ref_temp.
PR c++/116369
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* call.cc (set_up_extended_ref_temp): Don't mark a temporary
TREE_READONLY if its type is TYPE_HAS_MUTABLE_P.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/tree-ssa/initlist-opt7.C: New test.
Permute nodes do not have a representative so we have to guard
vect_is_slp_load_node against those.
PR tree-optimization/116658
* tree-vect-slp.cc (vect_is_slp_load_node): Make sure
node isn't a permute.
* g++.dg/vect/pr116658.cc: New testcase.
Enable reporting an error when this new aspect/pragma is set to
True, and the sources are compiled without language extensions
allowed.
gcc/ada/
* sem_ch13.adb (Analyze_One_Aspect): Call
Error_Msg_GNAT_Extension() to report an error when the aspect
First_Controlling_Parameter is set to True and the sources are
compiled without Core_Extensions_ Allowed.
* sem_prag.adb (Pragma_First_Controlling_Parameter): Call
subprogram Error_Msg_GNAT_Extension() to report an error when the
aspect First_Controlling_Parameter is set to True and the sources
are compiled without Core_Extensions_Allowed. Report an error when
the aspect pragma does not confirm an inherited True value.
The total number of characters on a source code line
is different on Windows and Linux based systems
(CRLF vs LF endings). Use the last non line change
character to adjust printing the spans that go over
the end of line.
gcc/ada/
* diagnostics-pretty_emitter.adb (Get_Last_Line_Char): New. Get
the last non line change character. Write_Span_Labels use the
adjusted line end pointer to calculate the length of the span.
When semantic checking mode is active, i.e. when switch -gnatc is
present or when the frontend is operating in the GNATprove mode,
we now rewrite calls to GNAT.Source_Info routines in evaluation
and not expansion (which is disabled in these modes).
This is needed to recognize constants initialized with calls to
GNAT.Source_Info as static constants, regardless of expansion being
enabled.
gcc/ada/
* exp_intr.ads, exp_intr.adb (Expand_Source_Info): Move
declaration to package spec.
* sem_eval.adb (Eval_Intrinsic_Call): Evaluate calls to
GNAT.Source_Info where possible.
When r14-303-gb9fedabe381cce was done, it was missed that some of the common parts could
be done in a template and a lambda could be used. This patch implements that. This new
function can be used later on to implement a simple ifcvt pass.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* tree-ssa-phiopt.cc (execute_over_cond_phis): New template function,
moved the common parts from pass_phiopt::execute/pass_cselim::execute.
(pass_phiopt::execute): Move the functon specific parts of the loop
into an lamdba.
(pass_cselim::execute): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Pinski <quic_apinski@quicinc.com>
This converts the uses of PHI_RESULT in phiopt to be gimple_phi_result
instead. Since there was already a mismatch of uses here, it
would be good to use prefered one (gimple_phi_result) instead.
Bootstrapped and tested on x86_64-linux-gnu.
PR tree-optimization/116643
gcc/ChangeLog:
* tree-ssa-phiopt.cc (replace_phi_edge_with_variable): s/PHI_RESULT/gimple_phi_result/.
(factor_out_conditional_operation): Likewise.
(minmax_replacement): Likewise.
(spaceship_replacement): Likewise.
(cond_store_replacement): Likewise.
(cond_if_else_store_replacement_1): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Pinski <quic_apinski@quicinc.com>
It fix the regression by
a51f2fc0d8 is the first bad commit
commit a51f2fc0d8
Author: liuhongt <hongtao.liu@intel.com>
Date: Wed Sep 4 15:39:17 2024 +0800
Handle const0_operand for *avx2_pcmp<mode>3_1.
caused
FAIL: gcc.target/i386/pr59539-1.c scan-assembler-times vmovdqu|vmovups 1
To reproduce:
$ cd {build_dir}/gcc && make check RUNTESTFLAGS="i386.exp=gcc.target/i386/pr59539-1.c --target_board='unix{-m32\ -march=cascadelake}'"
$ cd {build_dir}/gcc && make check RUNTESTFLAGS="i386.exp=gcc.target/i386/pr59539-1.c --target_board='unix{-m64\ -march=cascadelake}'"
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/i386/sse.md (*avx2_pcmp<mode>3_1): Don't force_reg
operands[3] when it's not const0_rtx.
Use a new struct diagnostic_option_id rather than just "int" when
referring to command-line options controlling warnings in the
diagnostic subsystem.
No functional change intended, but better documents the meaning of
the code.
gcc/c-family/ChangeLog:
* c-common.cc (c_option_controlling_cpp_diagnostic): Return
diagnostic_option_id rather than int.
(c_cpp_diagnostic): Update for renaming of
diagnostic_override_option_index to diagnostic_set_option_id.
gcc/c/ChangeLog:
* c-errors.cc (pedwarn_c23): Use "diagnostic_option_id option_id"
rather than "int opt". Update for renaming of diagnostic_info
field.
(pedwarn_c11): Likewise.
(pedwarn_c99): Likewise.
(pedwarn_c90): Likewise.
* c-tree.h (pedwarn_c90): Likewise for decl.
(pedwarn_c99): Likewise.
(pedwarn_c11): Likewise.
(pedwarn_c23): Likewise.
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* constexpr.cc (constexpr_error): Update for renaming of
diagnostic_info field.
* cp-tree.h (pedwarn_cxx98): Use "diagnostic_option_id" rather
than "int".
* error.cc (cp_adjust_diagnostic_info): Update for renaming of
diagnostic_info field.
(pedwarn_cxx98): Use "diagnostic_option_id option_id" rather than
"int opt". Update for renaming of diagnostic_info field.
(diagnostic_set_info): Likewise.
gcc/d/ChangeLog:
* d-diagnostic.cc (d_diagnostic_report_diagnostic): Update for
renaming of diagnostic_info field.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* diagnostic-core.h (struct diagnostic_option_id): New.
(warning): Use it rather than "int" for param.
(warning_n): Likewise.
(warning_at): Likewise.
(warning_meta): Likewise.
(pedwarn): Likewise.
(permerror_opt): Likewise.
(emit_diagnostic): Likewise.
(emit_diagnostic_valist): Likewise.
(emit_diagnostic_valist_meta): Likewise.
* diagnostic-format-json.cc
(json_output_format::on_report_diagnostic): Update for renaming of
diagnostic_info field.
* diagnostic-format-sarif.cc (sarif_builder::make_result_object):
Likewise.
(make_reporting_descriptor_object_for_warning): Likewise.
* diagnostic-format-text.cc (print_option_information): Likewise.
* diagnostic-global-context.cc (emit_diagnostic): Use
"diagnostic_option_id option_id" rather than "int opt".
(emit_diagnostic_valist): Likewise.
(emit_diagnostic_valist_meta): Likewise.
(warning): Likewise.
(warning_at): Likewise.
(warning_meta): Likewise.
(warning_n): Likewise.
(pedwarn): Likewise.
(permerror_opt): Likewise.
* diagnostic.cc (diagnostic_set_info_translated): Update for
renaming of diagnostic_info field.
(diagnostic_option_classifier::classify_diagnostic): Use
"diagnostic_option_id option_id" rather than "int opt".
(update_effective_level_from_pragmas): Update for renaming of
diagnostic_info field.
(diagnostic_context::diagnostic_enabled): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::warning_enabled_at): Use
"diagnostic_option_id option_id" rather than "int opt".
(diagnostic_context::diagnostic_impl): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::diagnostic_n_impl): Likewise.
* diagnostic.h (diagnostic_info::diagnostic_info): Update for...
(diagnostic_info::option_index): Rename...
(diagnostic_info::option_id): ...to this.
(class diagnostic_option_manager): Use
"diagnostic_option_id option_id" rather than "int opt" for vfuncs.
(diagnostic_option_classifier): Likewise for member funcs.
(diagnostic_classification_change_t::option): Add comment.
(diagnostic_context::warning_enabled_at): Use
"diagnostic_option_id option_id" rather than "int option_index".
(diagnostic_context::option_unspecified_p): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::classify_diagnostic): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::option_enabled_p): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::make_option_name): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::make_option_url): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::diagnostic_impl): Likewise.
(diagnostic_context::diagnostic_n_impl): Likewise.
(diagnostic_override_option_index): Rename...
(diagnostic_set_option_id): ...to this, and update for
diagnostic_info field renaming.
(diagnostic_classify_diagnostic): Use "diagnostic_option_id"
rather than "int".
(warning_enabled_at): Likewise.
(option_unspecified_p): Likewise.
gcc/fortran/ChangeLog:
* cpp.cc (cb_cpp_diagnostic_cpp_option): Convert return type from
"int" to "diagnostic_option_id".
(cb_cpp_diagnostic): Update for renaming of
diagnostic_override_option_index to diagnostic_set_option_id.
* error.cc (gfc_warning): Update for renaming of diagnostic_info
field.
(gfc_warning_now_at): Likewise.
(gfc_warning_now): Likewise.
(gfc_warning_internal): Likewise.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* ipa-pure-const.cc: Replace include of "opts.h" with
"opts-diagnostic.h".
(suggest_attribute): Convert param from int to
diagnostic_option_id.
* lto-wrapper.cc (class lto_diagnostic_option_manager): Use
diagnostic_option_id rather than "int".
* opts-common.cc
(compiler_diagnostic_option_manager::option_enabled_p): Likewise.
* opts-diagnostic.h (class gcc_diagnostic_option_manager):
Likewise.
(class compiler_diagnostic_option_manager): Likewise.
* opts.cc (compiler_diagnostic_option_manager::make_option_name):
Likewise.
(gcc_diagnostic_option_manager::make_option_url): Likewise.
* substring-locations.cc
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning_n_va): Likewise.
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning_va): Likewise.
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning): Likewise.
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning_n): Likewise.
* substring-locations.h
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning_va): Likewise.
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning_n_va): Likewise.
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning): Likewise.
(format_string_diagnostic_t::emit_warning_n): Likewise.
Signed-off-by: David Malcolm <dmalcolm@redhat.com>