David Chisnall via llvm-dev
2018-Apr-04 10:15 UTC
[llvm-dev] llvm::PointerIntPair -- is this by design or a bug?
On 4 Apr 2018, at 11:01, Florian Hahn via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > Hi, > > On 04/04/2018 05:34, Riyaz Puthiyapurayil via llvm-dev wrote: >> llvm::PointerIntPair<double*, 3, signed> P; >> P.setInt(-4); >> Ideally, the value range for a 3-bit signed integer should be [-4,3]. But the above call to setInt will fail. Essentially, the signed int field in PointerIntPair is behaving the same as an 3-bit unsigned field which has the legal value range of [0,7]. Is this by design? Are negative values not allowed in PointerIntPair? > > I think that's by design. setInt only allows you to set integer values that fit into the available bits. It won't move the sign bit, so negative values won't fit, unless you have a 3 bit signed type ;)That doesn’t sound right (for any computer made in the last few decades), the representation of -3 will be 1111…1111101. Storing the low bits will yield 101, which is a 3-bit negative three. When you then sign extend this to any other signed type, you will get -3 in that representation. It sounds as if the signed specialisation of PointerIntPair is simply not doing the sign extension. David
Florian Hahn via llvm-dev
2018-Apr-04 11:04 UTC
[llvm-dev] llvm::PointerIntPair -- is this by design or a bug?
On 04/04/2018 11:15, David Chisnall wrote:> On 4 Apr 2018, at 11:01, Florian Hahn via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> On 04/04/2018 05:34, Riyaz Puthiyapurayil via llvm-dev wrote: >>> llvm::PointerIntPair<double*, 3, signed> P; >>> P.setInt(-4); >>> Ideally, the value range for a 3-bit signed integer should be [-4,3]. But the above call to setInt will fail. Essentially, the signed int field in PointerIntPair is behaving the same as an 3-bit unsigned field which has the legal value range of [0,7]. Is this by design? Are negative values not allowed in PointerIntPair? >> >> I think that's by design. setInt only allows you to set integer values that fit into the available bits. It won't move the sign bit, so negative values won't fit, unless you have a 3 bit signed type ;) > > That doesn’t sound right (for any computer made in the last few decades), the representation of -3 will be 1111…1111101. Storing the low bits will yield 101, which is a 3-bit negative three. When you then sign extend this to any other signed type, you will get -3 in that representation. It sounds as if the signed specialisation of PointerIntPair is simply not doing the sign extension. >Yep, I meant it looks like it currently does not do a sign extension, it expects only the available bits to be set, no others. In any case, it is probably worth documenting the behaviour. Cheers, Florian
Riyaz Puthiyapurayil via llvm-dev
2018-Apr-04 14:16 UTC
[llvm-dev] llvm::PointerIntPair -- is this by design or a bug?
It won't move the sign bit, so negative values won't fit, unless you have a 3 bit signed type ;) Note that if you assign negative values to and then read from a signed bit-field, you would do sign extension. So 3-bit signed types do exist in C++. It begs the question why PointerIntPair supports signed int types if it always loses the sign. Is it just to avoid signed/unsigned comparison when comparing the return value of getInt with signed types? Or to use enums that default to a signed type? In any case, this should be clearly documented if there is no intention to fix it. / Riyaz On Apr 4, 2018, at 4:04 AM, Florian Hahn <florian.hahn at arm.com<mailto:florian.hahn at arm.com>> wrote: On 04/04/2018 11:15, David Chisnall wrote: On 4 Apr 2018, at 11:01, Florian Hahn via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org<mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>> wrote: Hi, On 04/04/2018 05:34, Riyaz Puthiyapurayil via llvm-dev wrote: llvm::PointerIntPair<double*, 3, signed> P; P.setInt(-4); Ideally, the value range for a 3-bit signed integer should be [-4,3]. But the above call to setInt will fail. Essentially, the signed int field in PointerIntPair is behaving the same as an 3-bit unsigned field which has the legal value range of [0,7]. Is this by design? Are negative values not allowed in PointerIntPair? I think that's by design. setInt only allows you to set integer values that fit into the available bits. It won't move the sign bit, so negative values won't fit, unless you have a 3 bit signed type ;) That doesn’t sound right (for any computer made in the last few decades), the representation of -3 will be 1111…1111101. Storing the low bits will yield 101, which is a 3-bit negative three. When you then sign extend this to any other signed type, you will get -3 in that representation. It sounds as if the signed specialisation of PointerIntPair is simply not doing the sign extension. Yep, I meant it looks like it currently does not do a sign extension, it expects only the available bits to be set, no others. In any case, it is probably worth documenting the behaviour. Cheers, Florian -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20180404/e0d354d4/attachment.html>
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