https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=99234
--- Comment #28 from CVS Commits <cvs-commit at gcc dot gnu.org> --- The releases/gcc-11 branch has been updated by Eric Botcazou <ebotca...@gcc.gnu.org>: https://gcc.gnu.org/g:e9a8d6852c966e0511f2cfe40224fd81cbeaae24 commit r11-8358-ge9a8d6852c966e0511f2cfe40224fd81cbeaae24 Author: Eric Botcazou <ebotca...@adacore.com> Date: Wed May 5 22:48:51 2021 +0200 Fix PR target/100402 This is a regression for 64-bit Windows present from mainline down to the 9 branch and introduced by the fix for PR target/99234. Again SEH, but with a twist related to the way MinGW implements setjmp/longjmp, which turns out to be piggybacked on SEH with recent versions of MinGW, i.e. the longjmp performs a bona-fide unwinding of the stack, because it calls RtlUnwindEx with the second argument initially passed to setjmp, which is the result of __builtin_frame_address (0) in the MinGW header file: define setjmp(BUF) _setjmp((BUF), __builtin_frame_address (0)) This means that we directly expose the frame pointer to the SEH machinery here (unlike with regular exception handling where we use an intermediate CFA) and thus that we cannot do whatever we want with it. The old code would leave it unaligned, i.e. not multiple of 16, whereas the new code aligns it, but this breaks for some reason; at least it appears that a .seh_setframe directive with 0 as second argument always works, so the fix aligns it this way. gcc/ PR target/100402 * config/i386/i386.c (ix86_compute_frame_layout): For a SEH target, always return the establisher frame for __builtin_frame_address (0). gcc/testsuite/ * gcc.c-torture/execute/20210505-1.c: New test.