> Hi,
>
> is there a way to find out that a function is a clone of another function
> after materialization? I believe that `clone_of_p` only works before
> materialization. I tried and no clones were detected.
After materialization function becomes a normal function, but there is
former_clone_of
On Mon, Jul 20 2020, Erick Ochoa wrote:
> Hi,
>
> is there a way to find out that a function is a clone of another
> function after materialization? I believe that `clone_of_p` only works
> before materialization. I tried and no clones were detected.
there is former_clone_of - but as recently as
Hi,
is there a way to find out that a function is a clone of another
function after materialization? I believe that `clone_of_p` only works
before materialization. I tried and no clones were detected.
Thanks!
Richard Biener wrote:
The first release candidate for GCC 10.2 is available from
https://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/snapshots/10.2.0-RC-20200715/
ftp://gcc.gnu.org/pub/gcc/snapshots/10.2.0-RC-20200715/
and shortly its mirrors. It has been generated from git commit
932e9140d3268cf2033c1c3e93219541c