On Tue, May 02, 2017 at 02:50:16PM +0200, Richard Biener wrote: > > If array_at_struct_end_p is wrong, it should be fixed ;) > > Indeed. It was originally meant to say false if you can trust > TYPE_DOMAIN of the array but now it says false if there's some means > to constrain the array size (the DECL_P path and now your STRING_CST > one). But all callers afterwards just look at TYPE_DOMAIN ...
So shall we verify that TYPE_DOMAIN is consistent with the object size in that case inside of array_at_struct_end_p? > > > I'd restructure the patch quite different, using for_each_index on the > > > ref gather an array of index pointers (bail out on sth unhandled). > > > Then I'd see if I have interesting ranges for them, if not, bail out. > > > Also compute the size product of all ranges and test that against > > > PARAM_MAX_VRP_CONSTANT_ARRAY_LOADS. Then store the minimum range > > > value in the index places (temporarily) and use get_base_ref_and_extent to > > > get at the constant "starting" offset. From there iterate using > > > the remembered indices (remember the ref tree as well via for_each_index), > > > directly adjusting the constant offset so you can feed > > > fold_ctor_reference the constant offsets of all elements that need to > > > be considered. As optimization fold_ctor_reference would know how > > > to start from the "last" offset (much refactoring would need to be > > > done here given nested ctors and multiple indices I guess). > > > > But for this, don't you want to take it over? > > I can try. Is there a PR for this? Ok, filed PR80603, it is now all yours. > > I agree that the current implementation is not very efficient and that is > > why it is also limited to that small number of iterations. > > As many cases just aren't able to use the valueize callback, handling > > arbitrary numbers of non-constant indexes would be harder. > > Sure. I'd have expected you simply handle ARRAY_REF of a VAR_DECL > and nothing else ;) That would be too simple and boring ;) Jakub