https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=104620
--- Comment #5 from Patrick Palka <ppalka at gcc dot gnu.org> --- Some context: consider the simplified/extended C++20 testcase (the consteval-if seems to be a red herring): consteval int foo(int x) { return x; } template<class> void bar(int x) { constexpr int y = 0; foo(8 * x); // #1 foo(8 * y); // #2 } Before r12-7264, we would indeed correctly reject #1 ahead of time (which has a non-constant arg), but we would also incorrectly reject #2 (which has a constant arg), because both arguments are wrapped in NON_DEPENDENT_EXPR which cxx_eval_constant_expr considers to be always non-constant. So essentially we used to reject the two now-failing tests in consteval-if2.C only by accident. After r12-7264, is_constant_expr returns false for NON_DEPENDENT_EXPR (mirroring cxx_eval_constant_expr) which in particular means that fold_non_dependent_expr no longer tries to check a non-dependent consteval call ahead of time if it has a "complex" argument (i.e. one that is wrapped in NON_DEPENDENT_EXPR). Thus we no longer reject #1 ahead of time, and we also no longer incorrectly reject #2. IMHO this is overall an improvement, since not rejecting #1 ahead of time is a QoI issue, whereas rejecting #2 is a correctness issue. This also fixed PR103443 for a similar reason. (In reply to Jakub Jelinek from comment #3) > So, either build_non_dependent_arg should be made smarter and not wrap even > simple arithmetics etc. where no C++ template-ish trees appear inside of it > and everything is like in normal non-template-ish code, or we should > reconsider > the r12-7264 case because clearly often we can handle NON_DEPENDENT_EXPR > just fine. I wonder if we can get rid of NON_DEPENDENT_EXPR entirely? I'm not sure if it's at all necessary anymore. Or perhaps we could change tsubst / is_constant_expr / eval_constant_expr to actually look through NON_DEPENDENT_EXPR. These ideas seem out of scope for GCC 12 though :/