--- Comment #7 from darkjames at darkjames dot ath dot cx 2006-10-25 17:24
---
Ok, one more question, is it possible to gcc print some warnings about code
like that? Cause even with -Wall it doesn't ;(
gcc4 is quite more verbose than gcc3 so I think
It'll be better to print warning ab
--- Comment #6 from pinskia at gcc dot gnu dot org 2006-10-25 17:18 ---
(In reply to comment #5)
> Yeah, I know, but why gcc generate good code if we add that printf to test1.c
> (test2.c) ? It's still wchar * -> char * still aliasing violation.
Yes but there is a barrier which cause op
--- Comment #5 from darkjames at darkjames dot ath dot cx 2006-10-25 17:11
---
Yeah, I know, but why gcc generate good code if we add that printf to test1.c
(test2.c) ? It's still wchar * -> char * still aliasing violation.
or if we replace:
__SN(&str, 1); with
str = (CHAR_T *) (((char
--- Comment #4 from pinskia at gcc dot gnu dot org 2006-10-25 16:45 ---
In the both case, you are accessing "wchar *" via "char *" which causes an
alias violation.
--
pinskia at gcc dot gnu dot org changed:
What|Removed |Added
-
--- Comment #3 from darkjames at darkjames dot ath dot cx 2006-10-25 16:20
---
By the way, it's possible to fix the code in other way than using unions?
It just need to work both for wchar_t strings and normal strings...
If you have some ideas how, it'll be nice if you give me some hint
--- Comment #2 from darkjames at darkjames dot ath dot cx 2006-10-25 16:13
---
Created an attachment (id=12491)
--> (http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=12491&action=view)
Second testcase
test1.c + added printf() to loop, not loops with -O2
--
http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzil
--- Comment #1 from darkjames at darkjames dot ath dot cx 2006-10-25 16:12
---
Created an attachment (id=12490)
--> (http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=12490&action=view)
First testcase
First testcase loops unending with -O2, not loops with -O2 -fno-strict-aliasing
||
-fst