On 5/21/19 5:53 AM, Richard Biener wrote:
On Tue, May 21, 2019 at 4:13 AM Martin Sebor <mse...@gmail.com> wrote:
On 5/20/19 3:16 AM, Richard Biener wrote:
On Mon, May 20, 2019 at 10:16 AM Marc Glisse <marc.gli...@inria.fr> wrote:
On Mon, 20 May 2019, Richard Biener wrote:
On Sun, May 19, 2019 at 6:16 PM Marc Glisse <marc.gli...@inria.fr> wrote:
Hello,
2 pieces:
- the first one handles the case where the denominator is negative. It
doesn't happen often with exact_div, so I don't handle it everywhere, but
this one looked trivial
- handle the case where a pointer difference is cast to an unsigned type
before being compared to a constant (I hit this in std::vector). With some
range info we could probably handle some non-constant cases as well...
The second piece breaks Walloca-13.c (-Walloca-larger-than=100 -O2)
void f (void*);
void g (int *p, int *q)
{
__SIZE_TYPE__ n = (__SIZE_TYPE__)(p - q);
if (n < 100)
f (__builtin_alloca (n));
}
At the time of walloca2, we have
_1 = p_5(D) - q_6(D);
# RANGE [-2305843009213693952, 2305843009213693951]
_2 = _1 /[ex] 4;
# RANGE ~[2305843009213693952, 16140901064495857663]
n_7 = (long unsigned intD.10) _2;
_11 = (long unsigned intD.10) _1;
if (_11 <= 396)
[...]
_3 = allocaD.1059 (n_7);
and warn.
That's indeed to complicated relation of _11 to n_7 for
VRP predicate discovery.
However, DOM3 later produces
_1 = p_5(D) - q_6(D);
_11 = (long unsigned intD.10) _1;
if (_11 <= 396)
while _11 vs. _1 works fine.
[...]
# RANGE [0, 99] NONZERO 127
_2 = _1 /[ex] 4;
# RANGE [0, 99] NONZERO 127
n_7 = (long unsigned intD.10) _2;
_3 = allocaD.1059 (n_7);
so I am tempted to say that the walloca2 pass is too early, xfail the
testcase and file an issue...
Hmm, there's a DOM pass before walloca2 already and moving
walloca2 after loop opts doesn't look like the best thing to do?
I suppose it's not DOM but sinking that does the important transform
here? That is,
Index: gcc/passes.def
===================================================================
--- gcc/passes.def (revision 271395)
+++ gcc/passes.def (working copy)
@@ -241,9 +241,9 @@ along with GCC; see the file COPYING3.
NEXT_PASS (pass_optimize_bswap);
NEXT_PASS (pass_laddress);
NEXT_PASS (pass_lim);
- NEXT_PASS (pass_walloca, false);
NEXT_PASS (pass_pre);
NEXT_PASS (pass_sink_code);
+ NEXT_PASS (pass_walloca, false);
NEXT_PASS (pass_sancov);
NEXT_PASS (pass_asan);
NEXT_PASS (pass_tsan);
fixes it?
I will check, but I don't think walloca uses any kind of on-demand VRP, so
we still need some pass to update the ranges after sinking, which doesn't
seem to happen until the next DOM pass.
Oh, ok... Aldy, why's this a separate pass anyways? I think similar
other warnigns are emitted from RTL expansion? So maybe we can
indeed move the pass towards warn_restrict or late_warn_uninit.
I thought there was a preference to add new middle-end warnings
into passes of their own rather than into existing passes. Is
that not so (either in general or in this specific case)?
The preference was to add them not into optimization passes. But
of course having 10+ warning passes, each going over the whole IL
is excessive. Also each of the locally computing ranges or so.
Given the simplicity of Walloca I wonder why it's not part of another
warning pass - since it's about tracking "sizes" again there are plenty
that fit ;)
From my POV, the main (only?) benefit of putting warnings in their
own passes is modularity. Are there any others?
The biggest drawback I see is that it makes it hard to then share
data across multiple passes. The sharing can help not just
warnings (reduce both false positive and false negative rates) but
also optimization. That's why I'm merging the strlen and sprintf
passes, and want to eventually also look into merging
the -Wstringop-overflow warnings there (also emitted just before
RTL expansion. Did I miss any downsides?
When things fit together they are fine to merge obviously.
One may not like -Warray-bounds inside VRP but it really "fits".
OTOH making a warning part of an optimization pass naturally
limits its effect to when the specific optimization is enabled.
In theory it's possible to do -Warray-bounds at -O0 - we are in
SSA form after all - but of course you don't want to enable VRP at -O0.
I don't know if there's the -Walloca pass would benefit from merging
with any of the others or vice versa, but superficially it seems like
it might be worth thinking about integrating the -Walloc-larger-than
warnings into the -Walloca pass, if only to keep similar functionality
in the same place.
My original code was in the VRP pass and I can't remember whether it was
you or Jeff that suggested a separate pass so we'd stop polluting VRP
with everything but the kitchen sink.
Aldy