On Fri, May 19, 2017 at 01:57:24PM +0300, Alexander Monakov wrote: > On Fri, 19 May 2017, Richard Biener wrote: > > > On Fri, 19 May 2017, Marek Polacek wrote: > > > > > On Fri, May 19, 2017 at 09:58:45AM +0200, Richard Biener wrote: > > > > On Fri, 19 May 2017, Marek Polacek wrote: > > > > > > > > > extract_muldiv folds > > > > > > > > > > (n * 10000 * z) * 50 > > > > > > > > > > to > > > > > > > > > > (n * 500000) * z > > > > > > > > > > which is a wrong transformation to do, because it may introduce an > > > > > overflow. > > > > > This resulted in a ubsan false positive. So we should just disable > > > > > this > > > > > folding altogether. Does the approach I took make sense? > > I think it's possible to keep this folding, note that it's valid to transform > to > > (n * 1 * z) * 500000 > > (i.e. accumulate multiplications on the outermost factor) > > > > > > > > > > > Bootstrapped/regtested on x86_64-linux, ok for trunk? > > > > > > > > Didn't dig very far to identify extract_muldiv, but I guess it's either > > > > of the following recursions that trigger? > > > > > > > > /* If we can extract our operation from the LHS, do so and return > > > > a > > > > new operation. Likewise for the RHS from a MULT_EXPR. > > > > Otherwise, > > > > do something only if the second operand is a constant. */ > > > > if (same_p > > > > && (t1 = extract_muldiv (op0, c, code, wide_type, > > > > strict_overflow_p)) != 0) > > > > return fold_build2 (tcode, ctype, fold_convert (ctype, t1), > > > > fold_convert (ctype, op1)); > > > > else if (tcode == MULT_EXPR && code == MULT_EXPR > > > > && (t1 = extract_muldiv (op1, c, code, wide_type, > > > > strict_overflow_p)) != 0) > > > > return fold_build2 (tcode, ctype, fold_convert (ctype, op0), > > > > fold_convert (ctype, t1)); > > > > > > Exactly. extract_muldiv first gets (n * 10000 * z) * 50 so it tries > > > to fold 50 with (subexpressions) of (n * 10000 * z). So it then tries > > > (n * 10000) * 50, and then n * 50 and then 10000 * 50 which finally > > > works out, so it uses 50000 and removes the outermost multiplication. > > so would it be possible to adjust things here to remove the innermost > multiplication instead?
I think I'd rather not expand this function any more, sorry. Marek