Only powerpc64-unknown-freebsd was checked for.
Signed-off-by: Piotr Kubaj <pkubaj@FreeBSD.org>
gcc/
* configure.ac: Treat powerpc64*-*-freebsd* the same as
powerpc64-*-freebsd*.
* configure: Regenerate.
THis fixes teh following error seen with Clang:
error: function '_S_convert<std::basic_string_view<char8_t>>' with deduced
return type cannot be used before it is defined
return string_type(_S_convert(std::u8string_view(__str)));
^
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/bits/fs_path.h (path::_S_convert(T)): Avoid recursive
call to function with deduced return type.
A recently approved change for the C++23 working draft.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/bits/basic_string.h (__cpp_lib_string_resize_and_overwrite):
Define for C++23.
(basic_string::resize_and_overwrite): Declare.
* include/bits/basic_string.tcc (basic_string::resize_and_overwrite):
Define.
* include/std/version (__cpp_lib_resize_and_overwrite): Define
for C++23.
* testsuite/21_strings/basic_string/capacity/char/resize_and_overwrite.cc:
New test.
PRs 101402, 102033, etc. demonstrated that the fix for PR92010 wasn't
handling all cases of the CWG1001/1322 issue with parameter type qual
stripping and arrays with templates. The problem turned out to be in
determine_specialization, which did an extra substitution without the 92010
fix and then complained that the result didn't match.
But just removing that wrong/redundant code meant that we were accepting
specializations with different numbers of parameters, because the code in
fn_type_unification that compares types in this case wasn't checking for
length mismatch.
After fixing that, I realized that fn_type_unification couldn't tell the
difference between variadic and non-variadic function types, because the
args array doesn't include the terminal void we use to indicate non-variadic
function type. So I added it, and made the necessary adjustments.
Thanks to qingzhe "nick" huang <nickhuang99@hotmail.com> for the patch that
led me to dig more into this, and the extensive testcases.
PR c++/51851
PR c++/101402
PR c++/102033
PR c++/102034
PR c++/102039
PR c++/102044
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* pt.c (determine_specialization): Remove redundant code.
(fn_type_unification): Check for mismatched length.
(type_unification_real): Ignore terminal void.
(get_bindings): Don't stop at void_list_node.
* class.c (resolve_address_of_overloaded_function): Likewise.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/template/fnspec2.C: New test.
* g++.dg/template/parm-cv1.C: New test.
* g++.dg/template/parm-cv2.C: New test.
* g++.dg/template/parm-cv3.C: New test.
We were not wrapping all the default libraries in checks for whether
they should be used. We were also wasting a process launch calling
dsymutil for 'r' link lines (a NOP in practice). Order the checks
that exclude linking from most likely to occur, downwards.
Signed-off-by: Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/darwin.h (LINK_COMMAND_SPEC_A): Update 'r' handling to
skip gomp and itm when r or nodefaultlibs is given.
(DSYMUTIL_SPEC): Do not call dsymutil for '-r' link lines.
Update ordering of exclusions, remove duplicate 'v' addition
(collect2 will add this from the main command line).
Darwin has a user convenience feature where some linker options are exposed
at the driver level (so one can type '-all_load' instead of '-Wl,-all_load'
or '-Xlinker -all_load'). We retain this feature, but now these options are
all marked as 'Driver' and we process them as early as possible so that they
get allocated to the right toolchain command. There are a couple of special
cases where these driver opts are used multiple times, or to control
operations on more than one command (e.g. dynamiclib). These are handled
specially and we then add %<xxxx specs for the commands that _do not_ need
them. NOTE: the ordering of 'shared' and 'dynamiclib' is significant, hence
they are placed out of alphabetical order at the start. Likewise, we keep
a couple of cases where a negative option originally appeared after the
positive alternate, potentially overriding it.
When we report an error with %e, it seems necessary to strip the option
before doing so, otherwise it survives to the cc1 command line (%e does not
appear to abort the program before this).
Right now there is no mechanism to split up the 'variable portion' (%*) of
the matched spec string, so where we have some driver specs that take 2 or
3 arguments, these cannot be processed here, but are deferred until the
LINK_SPEC, where they are copied verbatim.
We have a 'safe' version of the macOS version string, that has been sanity-
checked and truncated to minor version. If the 'tiny' (3rd) portion of the
value is not significant, it is better to use the safe one in version-compare().
Signed-off-by: Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/darwin-driver.c (darwin_driver_init): Revise comments, handle
filelist and framework options in specs instead of code.
* config/darwin.h (SUBTARGET_DRIVER_SELF_SPECS): Update to handle link
specs that are really driver ones.
(DARWIN_CC1_SPEC): Likewise.
(CPP_SPEC): Likewise.
(SYSROOT_SPEC): Append space.
(LINK_SYSROOT_SPEC): Remove most driver link specs.
(STANDARD_STARTFILE_PREFIX_2): Update link-related specs.
(STARTFILE_SPEC): Likewise.
(ASM_MMACOSX_VERSION_MIN_SPEC): Fix line wrap.
(ASM_SPEC): Update driver-related specs.
(ASM_FINAL_SPEC): Likewise.
* config/darwin.opt: Remove now unused option aliases.
* config/i386/darwin.h (EXTRA_ASM_OPTS): Ensure space after opt.
(ASM_SPEC): Update driver-related specs.
My previous patch, which was intended to reduce the differences seen by
the combination of -march=cascadelake and -m32, has additionally found
some more instances where this combination behaves differently to regular
x86_64-pc-linux-gnu. The middle-end always, and backends usually, use
emit_move_insn to emit/expand move instructions allowing the backend
control over placing things in constant pools, adding REG_EQUAL notes,
and so on. Several of the AVX512 built-in expanders bypass this logic,
and instead generate moves directly using emit_insn(gen_rtx_SET (dst,src)).
For example, i386-expand.c line 12004 contains:
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++)
emit_insn (gen_rtx_SET (xmm_regs[i], const0_rtx));
I suspect that in this case, loading of standard_sse_constant_p, my
change to require loading of likely spilled hard registers via a
pseudo is perhaps overly strict, so this patch/fix reallows these
immediate constants values to be loaded directly prior to reload.
2021-10-15 Roger Sayle <roger@nextmovesoftware.com>
gcc/ChangeLog
* config/i386/i386.c (ix86_hardreg_mov_ok): For vector modes,
allow standard_sse_constant_p immediate constants.
This implements the changes in P2231R1 which make std::variant fully
constexpr in C++20.
We need to replace placement new with std::construct_at, but that isn't
defined for C++17. Use std::_Construct instead, which forwards to
std::construct_at in C++20 mode (since the related changes to make
std::optional fully constexpr, in r12-4389).
We also need to replace the untyped char buffer in _Uninitialized with a
union, which can be accessed in constexpr functions. But the union needs
to have a non-trivial destructor if its variant type is non-trivial,
which means that the _Variadic_union also needs a non-trivial
destructor. This adds a constrained partial specialization of
_Variadic_union for the C++20-only case where a non-trivial destructor
is needed.
We can't use concepts to constrain the specialization (or the primary
template's destructor) in C++17, so retain the untyped char buffer
solution for C++17 mode.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/std/variant (__cpp_lib_variant): Update value for
C++20.
(__variant_cast, __variant_construct): Add constexpr for C++20.
(__variant_construct_single, __construct_by_index) Likewise. Use
std::_Construct instead of placement new.
(_Uninitialized<T, false>) [__cplusplus >= 202002]: Replace
buffer with a union and define a destructor.
(_Variadic_union) [__cplusplus >= 202002]: Add a specialization
for non-trivial destruction.
(_Variant_storage::__index_of): New helper variable template.
(_Variant_storage::~_Variant_storage()): Add constexpr.
(_Variant_storage::_M_reset()): Likewise.
(_Copy_ctor_base, _Move_ctor_base): Likewise.
(_Copy_assign_base, _Move_assign_base): Likewise.
(variant, swap): Likewise.
* include/std/version (__cpp_lib_variant): Update value for
C++20.
* testsuite/20_util/optional/version.cc: Check for exact value
in C++17.
* testsuite/20_util/variant/87619.cc: Increase timeout for
C++20 mode.
* testsuite/20_util/variant/constexpr.cc: New test.
* testsuite/20_util/variant/version.cc: New test.
The __variant_construct_by_index helper function sets the new index
before constructing the new object. This means that if the construction
throws then the exception needs to be caught, so the index can be reset
to variant_npos, and then the exception rethrown. This means callers are
responsible for restoring the variant's invariants and they need the
overhead of a catch handler and a rethrow.
If we don't set the index until after construction completes then the
invariant is never broken, and callers can ignore the exception and let
it propagate. The callers all call _M_reset() first, which sets index to
variant_npos as required while the variant is valueless.
We need to be slightly careful here, because changing the order of
operations in __variant_construct_by_index and removing the try-block
from variant::emplace<I> changes an implicit ABI contract between those
two functions. If the linker were to create an executable containing an
instantiation of the old __variant_construct_by_index and an
instantiation of the new variant::emplace<I> code then we would have a
combination that breaks the invariant and doesn't have the exception
handling to restore it. To avoid this problem, we can rename the
__variant_construct_by_index function so that the new emplace<I> code
calls a new symbol, and is unaffected by the behaviour of the old
symbol.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/std/variant (__detail::__variant::__get_storage):
Remove unused function.
(__variant_construct_by_index): Set index after construction is
complete. Rename to ...
(__detail::__variant::__construct_by_index): ... this.
(variant): Use new name for __variant_construct_by_index friend
declaration. Remove __get_storage friend declaration.
(variant::emplace): Use new name and remove try-blocks.
These functions aren't used, and accessing the storage as a void* isn't
compatible with C++20 constexpr requirements anyway, so we're unlikely
to ever start using them in future.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/std/variant (_Variant_storage::_M_storage()): Remove.
(__detail::__variant::__get_storage): Remove.
(variant): Remove friend declaration of __get_storage.
After r12-4432-g7bfe7d634f60b0a9 Darwin fails to bootstrap with D
enabled since there is no definition of either DWARF2_DEBUG_INFO or
PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE.
Fixed here by adding the tm-dwarf2.h file to tm_d_file for Darwin.
Signed-off-by: Iain Sandoe <iain@sandoe.co.uk>
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config.gcc: Add tm-dwarf2.h to tm_d-file.
* gimple-range-fold.h (gimple_range_ssa_p): Don't process names
that occur in abnormal phis.
* gimple-range.cc (gimple_ranger::range_on_edge): Return false for
abnormal and EH edges.
* gimple-ssa-evrp.c (rvrp_folder::value_of_expr): Ditto.
(rvrp_folder::value_on_edge): Ditto.
(rvrp_folder::value_of_stmt): Ditto.
(hybrid_folder::value_of_expr): Ditto for ranger queries.
(hybrid_folder::value_on_edge): Ditto.
(hybrid_folder::value_of_stmt): Ditto.
* value-query.cc (gimple_range_global): Always return a range if
the type is supported.
I've noticed that while I have added hopefully sufficient test coverage
for the case where one uses simple number or !number as p-interval,
I haven't added any coverage for number:len:stride or number:len.
This patch adds that.
2021-10-15 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* testsuite/libgomp.c/affinity-1.c (struct places): Change name field
type from char [50] to const char *.
(places_array): Add a testcase for simplified syntax place followed
by length or length and stride.
2021-10-15 John David Anglin <danglin@gcc.gnu.org>
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/pa/pa.md: Consistently use "rG" constraint for copy
instruction in move patterns.
In addition to adding ll_caches and numa_domain abstract names
to OMP_PLACES syntax, OpenMP 5.1 also added one syntax simplification:
https://github.com/OpenMP/spec/issues/2080https://github.com/OpenMP/spec/pull/2081
in particular that in the grammar place non-terminal is now
not only { res-list } but also res (i.e. a non-negative integer),
which stands as a shortcut for { res }
So, one can specify OMP_PLACES=0,4,8,12 with the meaning
OMP_PLACES={0},{4},{8},{12} or OMP_PLACES=0:4 instead of OMP_PLACES={0}:4
or OMP_PLACES={0},{1},{2},{3} etc.
This patch implements that.
2021-10-15 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* env.c (parse_one_place): Handle non-negative-number the same
as { non-negative-number }. Reject even !number:1 and
!number:1:stride or !place:1 or !place:1:stride instead of just
length other than 1.
* libgomp.texi (OpenMP 5.1): Document OMP_PLACES syntax extensions
and OMP_NUM_TEAMS/OMP_TEAMS_THREAD_LIMIT and
omp_{set_num,get_max}_teams/omp_{s,g}et_teams_thread_limit features
as implemented.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/affinity-1.c: Add a test for the 5.1 place
simplified syntax.
Yesterday when working on numa_domains, I've noticed because of a bug
in my patch a hang on a large NUMA machine. I've fixed the bug, but
also discovered that the hang was a result of making wrong assumptions
about strtoul/strtoull. All the uses were for portability setting
errno = 0 before the calls and treating non-zero errno after the call
as invalid input, but for the case where there are no valid digits at
all strtoul may set errno to EINVAL, but doesn't have to and with
glibc doesn't do that. So, this patch goes through all the strtoul calls
and next to errno != 0 checks adds also endptr == startptr check.
Haven't done it in places where we immediately reject strtoul returning 0
the same as we reject errno != 0, because strtoul must return 0 in the
case where it sets endptr to the start pointer. In some spots the code
was using errno = 0; x = strtoul (p, &p, 10); if (errno) { /*invalid*/ }
and those spots had to be changed to
errno = 0; x = strtoul (p, &end, 10); if (errno || end == p) { /*invalid*/ }
p = end;
2021-10-15 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* env.c (parse_schedule): For strtoul or strtoull calls which don't
clearly reject return value 0 as invalid handle the case where end
pointer is the same as first argument as invalid.
(parse_unsigned_long_1): Likewise.
(parse_one_place): Likewise.
(parse_places_var): Likewise.
(parse_stacksize): Likewise.
(parse_spincount): Likewise.
(parse_affinity): Likewise.
(parse_gomp_openacc_dim): Likewise. Avoid strict aliasing violation.
Make code valid C89.
* config/linux/affinity.c (gomp_affinity_find_last_cache_level):
For strtoul calls which don't clearly reject return value 0 as
invalid handle the case where end pointer is the same as first
argument as invalid.
(gomp_affinity_init_level_1): Likewise.
(gomp_affinity_init_numa_domains): Likewise.
* config/rtems/proc.c (parse_thread_pools): Likewise.
When writing the places-*.c tests, I've noticed that we mishandle threads
abstract name with specified num-places if num-places isn't a multiple of
number of hw threads in a core. It then happily ignores the maximum count
and overwrites for the remaining hw threads in a core further places that
haven't been allocated.
2021-10-15 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* config/linux/affinity.c (gomp_affinity_init_level_1): For level 1
after creating count places clean up and return immediately.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-6.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-7.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-8.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-9.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-10.c: New test.
Between LLVM 9 and LLVM 13 the attribute works differently in several ways,
and this needs to be allowed for in GCC and mkoffload independently.
This patch fixes up mkoffload when debug info is enabled, which is made more
complicated because the configure tests checks whether the attribute option
is accepted silently, but does not check if the assembler actually sets the
ELF flags for that attribute, and mkoffload needs to mimick that behaviour
exactly. The patch therefore removes some of the conditionals.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/gcn/gcn-hsa.h (S_FIJI): Set unconditionally.
(S_900): Likewise.
(S_906): Likewise.
* config/gcn/gcn.c: Hard code SRAM ECC settings for old architectures.
* config/gcn/mkoffload.c (ELFABIVERSION_AMDGPU_HSA): Rename to ...
(ELFABIVERSION_AMDGPU_HSA_V3): ... this.
(ELFABIVERSION_AMDGPU_HSA_V4): New.
(SET_SRAM_ECC_UNSUPPORTED): New.
(copy_early_debug_info): Create elf flags to match the other objects.
(main): Just let the attribute flags pass through.
While determining the precission of reduction_var an SSA_NAME instead of
its TREE_TYPE is used. Streamlined with other TREE_TYPE (reduction_var)
uses.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* tree-loop-distribution.c (reduction_var_overflows_first):
Pass the type of reduction_var as first argument as it is also
done for the load type.
(loop_distribution::transform_reduction_loop): Add missing
TREE_TYPE while determining precission of reduction_var.
This test is failing on ppc64* due to different default signness for
chars.
Tested on x86-64 Linux and ppc64le Linux.
PR testsuite/pr102751
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gcc.dg/tree-ssa/pr102736.c: Make sign explicit.
This adds support for numa_domains abstract name in OMP_PLACES, also new
in OpenMP 5.1.
Way to test this is
OMP_PLACES=numa_domains OMP_DISPLAY_ENV=true LD_PRELOAD=.libs/libgomp.so.1 /bin/true
and see what it prints on OMP_PLACES line.
For non-NUMA machines it should print a single place that covers all CPUs,
for NUMA machine one place for each NUMA node with corresponding CPUs.
2021-10-15 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* env.c (parse_places_var): Handle numa_domains as level 5.
* config/linux/affinity.c (gomp_affinity_init_numa_domains): New
function.
(gomp_affinity_init_level): Use it instead of
gomp_affinity_init_level_1 for level == 5.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-5.c: New test.
This patch implements support for ll_caches abstract name in OMP_PLACES,
which stands for places where logical cpus in each place share the last
level cache.
This seems to work fine for me on x86 and kernel sources show that it is
in common code, but on some machines on CompileFarm the files I'm using,
i.e.
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpuN/cache/indexN/level
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpuN/cache/indexN/shared_cpu_list
don't exist, is that because they have too old kernel and newer kernels
are fine or should I implement some fallback methods (which)?
E.g. on gcc112.fsffrance.org I see just shared_cpu_map and not shared_cpu_list
(with shared_cpu_map being harder to parse) and on another box I didn't even
see the cache subdirectories.
Way to test this is
OMP_PLACES=ll_caches OMP_DISPLAY_ENV=true LD_PRELOAD=.libs/libgomp.so.1 /bin/true
and see what it prints on OMP_PLACES line.
2021-10-15 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* env.c (parse_places_var): Handle ll_caches as level 4.
* config/linux/affinity.c (gomp_affinity_find_last_cache_level): New
function.
(gomp_affinity_init_level_1): Handle level 4 as logical cpus sharing
last level cache.
(gomp_affinity_init_level): Likewise.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-1.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-2.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-3.c: New test.
* testsuite/libgomp.c/places-4.c: New test.
This makes defaults.h choose DWARF2_DEBUG if PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE
is not specified by the target and errors out if DWARF DWARF is not supported.
It also makes us warn when STABS is enabled but not the preferred
debugging type and removes the corresponding diagnostic from the Ada frontend.
The warnings are pruned from the testsuite output via prune_gcc_output.
The following target configurations now explicitely default to STABS:
pdp11-*-* pdp11 is a.out, dwarf support is difficult
hppa[12]*-*-hpux10* does not support DWARF
hppa[12]*-*-hpux11* likewise
note that the hppa configs have been deprecated.
Targets with DWARF support will now see
> ./cc1 -quiet t.c -gstabs
t.c: warning: STABS debugging information is obsolete and not supported anymore
that is, -gstabs will still generate STABS but use will be diagnosed
on targets where DWARF is available.
I have built all targets from contrib/config-list.mk to make sure we
don't run into the #error and the following makes the STABS usage
explicit for pdp11 and hppa with SOM.
This completes the series of deprecating STABS for GCC 12.
2021-09-21 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
gcc/
* defaults.h (PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE): Choose DWARF2_DEBUG
when not set.
* toplev.c (process_options): Warn when STABS debugging is
enabled but not the preferred format.
* config/pa/som.h (PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE): Define to
DBX_DEBUG.
* config/pdp11/pdp11.h (PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE): Likewise.
gcc/ada/
* gcc-interface/misc.c (gnat_post_options): Do not warn
about DBX_DEBUG use here.
gcc/testsuite/
* lib/prune.exp: Prune STABS obsoletion message.
This fixes an ICE for the failure to verify we're dereferencing a
pointer before throwing that at build_simple_mem_ref.
2021-10-15 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
PR c/102763
gcc/c/
* gimple-parser.c
(c_parser_gimple_postfix_expression_after_primary): Check
for a pointer do be dereferenced by ->.
gcc/testsuite/
* gcc.dg/gimplefe-error-12.c: New testcase.
We have to be careful to not break the argument space calculation.
If there's not enough arguments just do not append any.
2021-10-15 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
PR ipa/102762
* tree-inline.c (copy_bb): Avoid underflowing nargs.
* gcc.dg/torture/pr102762.c: New testcase.
The following avoids generating
(insn 6 5 7 2 (set (subreg:OI (concatn/v:TI [
(reg:DI 92 [ buffer ])
(reg:DI 93 [ buffer+8 ])
]) 0)
(subreg:OI (reg/v:V8SI 85 [ __x ]) 0)) "t.ii":76:21 74 {*movoi_internal_avx}
(nil))
via store_bit_field_1 when we try to store excess data into
a register allocated temporary. The case was supposed to
/* Use the subreg machinery either to narrow OP0 to the required
words...
but the check ensured only an register-aligned but not a large
enough piece. The following adds such missed check which ends up
decomposing the set to
(insn 6 5 7 (set (subreg:DI (reg/v:TI 84 [ buffer ]) 0)
(subreg:DI (reg/v:V8SI 85 [ __x ]) 0)) "t.ii":76:21 -1
(nil))
(insn 7 6 0 (set (subreg:DI (reg/v:TI 84 [ buffer ]) 8)
(subreg:DI (reg/v:V8SI 85 [ __x ]) 8)) "t.ii":76:21 -1
(nil))
2021-10-11 Richard Biener <rguenther@suse.de>
PR middle-end/102682
* expmed.c (store_bit_field_1): Ensure a LHS subreg would
not create a paradoxical subreg.
For V4HFmode, doing vector concat like
__builtin_shufflevector (a, b, {0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7})
could trigger ICE since it is not handled in ix86_vector_init ().
Handle HFmode like HImode to avoid such ICE.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* config/i386/i386-expand.c (ix86_expand_vector_init):
For half_vector concat for HFmode, handle them like HImode.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gcc.target/i386/avx512fp16-v4hf-concat.c: New test.
I've been experimenting with a change to make all inline functions
implicitly constexpr; this revealed that we are instantiating too
aggressively for speculative constant evaluation, leading to ordering
difficulties with e.g. is_a_helper<cgraph_node*>::test. This patch tries to
avoid such instantiation until we actually need the function definition to
determine whether a call is constant, by limiting the initial instantiation
of all used functions to manifestly-constant-evaluated expressions, and
checking whether the function arguments are constant before instantiating
the function.
This change resulted in a change in the diagnostics for a few library tests
due to instantiating the function with the static_assert later (during
constant evaluation) than we did before (during instantiation of the
intermediate function).
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* constexpr.c (cxx_bind_parameters_in_call): Replace
new_call parameter with fun.
(cxx_eval_call_expression): Call it before instantiation.
(cxx_eval_outermost_constant_expr): Only instantiate fns
when manifestly_const_eval.
* typeck2.c (check_narrowing): This context is manifestly
constant-evaluated.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* testsuite/20_util/integer_comparisons/greater_equal_neg.cc:
* testsuite/20_util/integer_comparisons/greater_neg.cc:
* testsuite/20_util/integer_comparisons/less_equal_neg.cc:
Adjust expected message.
* testsuite/lib/prune.exp: Prune 'in constexpr expansion'.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/ext/vla22.C: Don't expect a narrowing error.
* g++.dg/cpp0x/constexpr-inst1.C: New test.
The path solver runs in two modes: a quick mode which assumes any unknown
SSA names are VARYING, and a fully resolving mode using the ranger.
The backward threader currently uses the quick mode, because the fully
resolving mode was not available initially. Since we now have the ability
in the solver (used by the hybrid threader), I thought it'd be useful to
have the knob for when the time comes.
Note that enabling the fully resolving mode will require some experimenting,
as enabling it would likely render other jump threading passes irrelevant
(VRP threading comes to mind).
There should be no functional changes as the resolver is set to false.
Tested on x86-64 Linux.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* tree-ssa-threadbackward.c (class back_threader): Add m_resolve.
(back_threader::back_threader): Same.
(back_threader::resolve_phi): Try to solve without looking back if
possible.
(back_threader::find_paths_to_names): Same.
(try_thread_blocks): Pass resolve argument to back threader.
(pass_early_thread_jumps::execute): Same.
The new backward threader makes some of the --param knobs used to
control it questionable at best or no longer applicable at worst.
The fsm-maximum-phi-arguments param is unused and can be removed.
The max-fsm-thread-length param is block based which is a bit redundant,
since we already restrict paths based on instruction estimates.
The max-fsm-thread-paths restricts the total number of threadable paths
in a function. We probably don't need this. Besides, the forward
threader has no such restriction.
Tested on x86-64 Linux.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* doc/invoke.texi: Remove max-fsm-thread-length,
max-fsm-thread-paths, and fsm-maximum-phi-arguments.
* params.opt: Same.
* tree-ssa-threadbackward.c (back_threader::back_threader): Remove
argument.
(back_threader_registry::back_threader_registry): Same.
(back_threader_profitability::profitable_path_p): Remove
param_max_fsm_thread-length.
(back_threader_registry::register_path): Remove
m_max_allowable_paths.
Tested on x86-64 Linux.
gcc/ChangeLog:
* tree-ssa-threadbackward.c (class back_threader): Make m_imports
an auto_bitmap.
(back_threader::~back_threader): Do not release m_path.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/std/variant (__variant::__get(in_place_index_t<N>, U&&)):
Rename to __get_n and remove first argument. Replace pair of
overloads with a single function using 'if constexpr'.
(__variant::__get(Variant&&)): Adjust to use __get_n.
Since r12-4065 std::basic_string is always nothrow-move-constructible,
so filesystem::path is too.
That also means that path::_S_convert(T) is noexcept when returning its
argument, because T is either a basci_string or basic_string_view, and
will be moved into the return value.
libstdc++-v3/ChangeLog:
* include/bits/fs_path.h (path(path&&)): Make unconditionally
noexcept.
(path::_S_convert(T)): Add condtional noexcept.
When I enabled various decimal floating-point features for C2X /
stopped them being diagnosed with -pedantic for C2X, I missed the
format checking support. The DFP printf and scanf formats are
included in C2X. Thus, adjust the data for those formats so that they
are no longer diagnosed with -std=c2x -Wformat -pedantic.
Bootstrapped with no regressions for x86_64-pc-linux-gnu.
gcc/c-family/
* c-format.c (printf_length_specs, scanf_length_specs)
(print_char_table, scan_char_table): Support DFP formats for C2X.
* c-format.h (TEX_D32, TEX_D64, TEX_D128): Remove.
(T2X_D32, T2X_D64, T2X_D128): New macros.
gcc/testsuite/
* gcc.dg/format/c11-dfp-printf-1.c,
gcc.dg/format/c11-dfp-scanf-1.c, gcc.dg/format/c2x-dfp-printf-1.c,
gcc.dg/format/c2x-dfp-scanf-1.c: New tests.
Without dwarf2 unwind tables available _Unwind_Backtrace() is not
able to return the full backtrace.
This patch adds a fallback function on powerpc to get the backtrace
by doing a backchain, this code was originally at glibc.
libgcc/ChangeLog:
* config/rs6000/linux-unwind.h (struct rt_sigframe): Move it to
outside of get_regs() in order to use it in another function, this
is done twice: for __powerpc64__ and for !__powerpc64__.
(struct trace_arg): New struct.
(struct layout): New struct.
(ppc_backchain_fallback): New function.
* unwind.inc (_Unwind_Backtrace): Look for _URC_NORMAL_STOP code
state and call MD_BACKCHAIN_FALLBACK.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* gcc.target/powerpc/unwind-backchain.c: New test.
gcc/fortran/ChangeLog:
PR fortran/102717
* simplify.c (gfc_simplify_reshape): Replace assert by error
message for negative elements in SHAPE array.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR fortran/102717
* gfortran.dg/reshape_shape_2.f90: New test.
gcc/fortran/ChangeLog:
PR fortran/102716
* check.c (gfc_check_shape): Reorder checks so that invalid KIND
arguments can be detected.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
PR fortran/102716
* gfortran.dg/shape_10.f90: New test.
When the first operand of a signed right shift is zero or negative one, the
RHS doesn't matter and the shift can be converted to a copy.
PR tree-optimization/102738
gcc/
* vr-values.c (simplify_using_ranges::simplify): Handle RSHIFT_EXPR.
gcc/testsuite
* gcc.dg/pr102738.c: New.