Philip Reames via llvm-dev
2016-Feb-25 04:12 UTC
[llvm-dev] Possible soundness issue with available_externally (split from "RFC: Add guard intrinsics")
On 02/24/2016 08:10 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev wrote:>> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:46, Sanjoy Das <sanjoy at playingwithpointers.com> wrote: >> >> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:38 PM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> wrote: >>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:34 PM Duncan P. N. Exon Smith >>> <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:17, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:10 PM Sanjoy Das via llvm-dev >>>>> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 6:51 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith >>>>> <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: >>>>>>> If we do not inline @foo(), and instead re-link the call site in >>>>>>> @main >>>>>>> to some non-optimized copy (or differently optimized copy) of @foo, >>>>>>> then it is possible for the program to have the behavior {print("Y"); >>>>>>> print ("X")}, which was disallowed in the earlier program. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> In other words, opt refined the semantics of @foo() (i.e. reduced the >>>>>>> set of behaviors it may have) in ways that would make later >>>>>>> optimizations invalid if we de-refine the implementation of @foo(). >>>>>> I'm probably missing something obvious here. How could the result of >>>>>> `%t0 != %t1` be different at optimization time in one file than from >>>>>> runtime in the "real" implementation? Doesn't this make the CSE >>>>>> invalid? >>>>> `%t0` and `%t1` are "allowed" to "always be the same", i.e. an >>>>> implementation of @foo that always feeds in the same >>>>> value for `%t0` and `%t1` is a valid implementation (which is why the >>>>> CSE was valid); but it is not the *only* valid implementation. If I >>>>> don't CSE the two load instructions (also a valid thing to do), and >>>>> this is a second thread writing to `%par`, then the two values loaded >>>>> can be different, and you could end up printing `"X"` in `@foo`. >>>>> >>>>> Did that make sense? >>>> Yes. To be sure I understand the scope: this is only a problem for >>>> atomics, correct? (Because multi-threaded behaviour with other globals >>>> is UB?) >>>> >>>>>> Does linkonce_odr linkage have the same problem? >>>>>> - If so, do you want to change it too? >>>>>> - Else, why not? >>>>> Going by the specification in the LangRef, I'd say it depends on how >>>>> you define "definitive". If you're allowed to replace the body of a >>>>> function with a differently optimized body, then the above problem >>>>> exists. >>>>> >>>>> I believe that is the case, and I strongly believe the problem you >>>>> outline exists for linkonce_odr exactly as it does for available_externally. >>>>> >>>>> Which is what makes this scary: every C++ inline function today can >>>>> trigger this. >>>> Every C/C++ inline or template function. But only the ones that use >>>> atomics, right? >>> >>> Well, with *this* example... >> Atomic are one source of non-determinism that compilers can reason >> about. I don't know if the following snippet is well defined or not, >> but you could have similar issues with >> >> >> void foo() { >> int *p = malloc(sizeof(int)); >> if (*p < 10) print("X"); >> } >> >> or (again, I don't know if this is actually well defined) >> >> void foo() { >> int t; // it is probably reasonable to fold compares with >> ptrtoint(alloca) to undef >> if ((intptr_t)(&t) < 10) print("X"); >> } >> > The first one at least is UB, but as Richard pointed out the scope > is certainly broader than atomics (it's not even just well-defined > non-deterministism). > > I'm kind of terrified by the implications.Me too. :(> >> -- Sanjoy >> >>>> >>>> Not that I'm sure that will end up being a helpful distinction. >>> >>> Right. See Richard's comment. I think that sums up the real issue here. =/ > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev
2016-Feb-25 04:29 UTC
[llvm-dev] Possible soundness issue with available_externally (split from "RFC: Add guard intrinsics")
Yea, I'm pretty sad about all of this. I'm also not seeing a lot of awesome paths forward. Here is the least bad strategy I can come up with. Curious if folks think this is sufficient: 1) Stop deducing function attributes within comdats by examining the bodies of the functions (so that we remain free to transform the bodies of functions). 2) Teach frontends to emit (even at O0!!!) trivially deduced function attributes for comdats so that we continue to catch easy cases. 3) Ensure and specify that we never hoist code *into* a comdat group in which it would not have been executed previously. I don't know of anything in LLVM that does this today, but it would become an important invariant. 4) Work a lot harder to do internalizing and removing of this restriction. Pretty horrible. But I think it is correct. As a slight modification to #1 and #2, we could have a very carefully crafted deduction rule where we only deduce function attributes for functions prior to any modification of their function bodies. Such attributes should be conservatively correct because we would never lift new code into the function bodies. This would at least allow us to do bottom-up deduction to catch interprocedural cases. But it would become incredibly subtle that this is only valid prior to *any* transformations of the comdat-containing functions. I'm starting to think this subtle rule might be worth it. But I'm frankly terrified by the implications. On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 8:13 PM Philip Reames via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > > On 02/24/2016 08:10 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev wrote: > >> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:46, Sanjoy Das <sanjoy at playingwithpointers.com> > wrote: > >> > >> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:38 PM, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> > wrote: > >>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:34 PM Duncan P. N. Exon Smith > >>> <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: > >>>> > >>>>> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:17, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> > wrote: > >>>>> > >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:10 PM Sanjoy Das via llvm-dev > >>>>> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 6:51 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith > >>>>> <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: > >>>>>>> If we do not inline @foo(), and instead re-link the call site in > >>>>>>> @main > >>>>>>> to some non-optimized copy (or differently optimized copy) of @foo, > >>>>>>> then it is possible for the program to have the behavior > {print("Y"); > >>>>>>> print ("X")}, which was disallowed in the earlier program. > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> In other words, opt refined the semantics of @foo() (i.e. reduced > the > >>>>>>> set of behaviors it may have) in ways that would make later > >>>>>>> optimizations invalid if we de-refine the implementation of @foo(). > >>>>>> I'm probably missing something obvious here. How could the result > of > >>>>>> `%t0 != %t1` be different at optimization time in one file than from > >>>>>> runtime in the "real" implementation? Doesn't this make the CSE > >>>>>> invalid? > >>>>> `%t0` and `%t1` are "allowed" to "always be the same", i.e. an > >>>>> implementation of @foo that always feeds in the same > >>>>> value for `%t0` and `%t1` is a valid implementation (which is why the > >>>>> CSE was valid); but it is not the *only* valid implementation. If I > >>>>> don't CSE the two load instructions (also a valid thing to do), and > >>>>> this is a second thread writing to `%par`, then the two values loaded > >>>>> can be different, and you could end up printing `"X"` in `@foo`. > >>>>> > >>>>> Did that make sense? > >>>> Yes. To be sure I understand the scope: this is only a problem for > >>>> atomics, correct? (Because multi-threaded behaviour with other > globals > >>>> is UB?) > >>>> > >>>>>> Does linkonce_odr linkage have the same problem? > >>>>>> - If so, do you want to change it too? > >>>>>> - Else, why not? > >>>>> Going by the specification in the LangRef, I'd say it depends on how > >>>>> you define "definitive". If you're allowed to replace the body of a > >>>>> function with a differently optimized body, then the above problem > >>>>> exists. > >>>>> > >>>>> I believe that is the case, and I strongly believe the problem you > >>>>> outline exists for linkonce_odr exactly as it does for > available_externally. > >>>>> > >>>>> Which is what makes this scary: every C++ inline function today can > >>>>> trigger this. > >>>> Every C/C++ inline or template function. But only the ones that use > >>>> atomics, right? > >>> > >>> Well, with *this* example... > >> Atomic are one source of non-determinism that compilers can reason > >> about. I don't know if the following snippet is well defined or not, > >> but you could have similar issues with > >> > >> > >> void foo() { > >> int *p = malloc(sizeof(int)); > >> if (*p < 10) print("X"); > >> } > >> > >> or (again, I don't know if this is actually well defined) > >> > >> void foo() { > >> int t; // it is probably reasonable to fold compares with > >> ptrtoint(alloca) to undef > >> if ((intptr_t)(&t) < 10) print("X"); > >> } > >> > > The first one at least is UB, but as Richard pointed out the scope > > is certainly broader than atomics (it's not even just well-defined > > non-deterministism). > > > > I'm kind of terrified by the implications. > Me too. :( > > > >> -- Sanjoy > >> > >>>> > >>>> Not that I'm sure that will end up being a helpful distinction. > >>> > >>> Right. See Richard's comment. I think that sums up the real issue > here. =/ > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160225/2c50f253/attachment.html>
Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev
2016-Feb-25 04:50 UTC
[llvm-dev] Possible soundness issue with available_externally (split from "RFC: Add guard intrinsics")
A clarification pointed out by David Majnemer: what I"m really talking about is "comdat or comdat-semantic-equivalents" which include linkonce_odr and available_externally. As a further strategy to recover optimizations: On platforms with comdat support, we could also teach function attrs that deduction is safe for functions which are only called from within their own comdat. And then we could do some work in Clang (or other FEs) to try to form larger comdats when safe to do so. For example with C++, inline method definitions inside of class bodies could have a merged comdat I think because the class body can't change between translation units. This would in turn allow, for example, continuing to get full deduction for private inline methods inside of class bodies whose callers were all also inline and inside the class body. We could probably also do some tricks where we actually expand comdats themselves in order to enable deduction and subsequnet optimizations, although that might need a cost model. -Chandler On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 8:29 PM Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> wrote:> Yea, I'm pretty sad about all of this. I'm also not seeing a lot of > awesome paths forward. > > Here is the least bad strategy I can come up with. Curious if folks think > this is sufficient: > > 1) Stop deducing function attributes within comdats by examining the > bodies of the functions (so that we remain free to transform the bodies of > functions). > 2) Teach frontends to emit (even at O0!!!) trivially deduced function > attributes for comdats so that we continue to catch easy cases. > 3) Ensure and specify that we never hoist code *into* a comdat group in > which it would not have been executed previously. I don't know of anything > in LLVM that does this today, but it would become an important invariant. > 4) Work a lot harder to do internalizing and removing of this restriction. > > Pretty horrible. But I think it is correct. > > As a slight modification to #1 and #2, we could have a very carefully > crafted deduction rule where we only deduce function attributes for > functions prior to any modification of their function bodies. Such > attributes should be conservatively correct because we would never lift new > code into the function bodies. This would at least allow us to do bottom-up > deduction to catch interprocedural cases. But it would become incredibly > subtle that this is only valid prior to *any* transformations of the > comdat-containing functions. > > I'm starting to think this subtle rule might be worth it. But I'm frankly > terrified by the implications. > > On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 8:13 PM Philip Reames via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> >> >> On 02/24/2016 08:10 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev wrote: >> >> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:46, Sanjoy Das <sanjoy at playingwithpointers.com> >> wrote: >> >> >> >> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:38 PM, Chandler Carruth < >> chandlerc at google.com> wrote: >> >>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:34 PM Duncan P. N. Exon Smith >> >>> <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: >> >>>> >> >>>>> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:17, Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at google.com> >> wrote: >> >>>>> >> >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:10 PM Sanjoy Das via llvm-dev >> >>>>> <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 6:51 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith >> >>>>> <dexonsmith at apple.com> wrote: >> >>>>>>> If we do not inline @foo(), and instead re-link the call site in >> >>>>>>> @main >> >>>>>>> to some non-optimized copy (or differently optimized copy) of >> @foo, >> >>>>>>> then it is possible for the program to have the behavior >> {print("Y"); >> >>>>>>> print ("X")}, which was disallowed in the earlier program. >> >>>>>>> >> >>>>>>> In other words, opt refined the semantics of @foo() (i.e. reduced >> the >> >>>>>>> set of behaviors it may have) in ways that would make later >> >>>>>>> optimizations invalid if we de-refine the implementation of >> @foo(). >> >>>>>> I'm probably missing something obvious here. How could the result >> of >> >>>>>> `%t0 != %t1` be different at optimization time in one file than >> from >> >>>>>> runtime in the "real" implementation? Doesn't this make the CSE >> >>>>>> invalid? >> >>>>> `%t0` and `%t1` are "allowed" to "always be the same", i.e. an >> >>>>> implementation of @foo that always feeds in the same >> >>>>> value for `%t0` and `%t1` is a valid implementation (which is why >> the >> >>>>> CSE was valid); but it is not the *only* valid implementation. If I >> >>>>> don't CSE the two load instructions (also a valid thing to do), and >> >>>>> this is a second thread writing to `%par`, then the two values >> loaded >> >>>>> can be different, and you could end up printing `"X"` in `@foo`. >> >>>>> >> >>>>> Did that make sense? >> >>>> Yes. To be sure I understand the scope: this is only a problem for >> >>>> atomics, correct? (Because multi-threaded behaviour with other >> globals >> >>>> is UB?) >> >>>> >> >>>>>> Does linkonce_odr linkage have the same problem? >> >>>>>> - If so, do you want to change it too? >> >>>>>> - Else, why not? >> >>>>> Going by the specification in the LangRef, I'd say it depends on how >> >>>>> you define "definitive". If you're allowed to replace the body of a >> >>>>> function with a differently optimized body, then the above problem >> >>>>> exists. >> >>>>> >> >>>>> I believe that is the case, and I strongly believe the problem you >> >>>>> outline exists for linkonce_odr exactly as it does for >> available_externally. >> >>>>> >> >>>>> Which is what makes this scary: every C++ inline function today can >> >>>>> trigger this. >> >>>> Every C/C++ inline or template function. But only the ones that use >> >>>> atomics, right? >> >>> >> >>> Well, with *this* example... >> >> Atomic are one source of non-determinism that compilers can reason >> >> about. I don't know if the following snippet is well defined or not, >> >> but you could have similar issues with >> >> >> >> >> >> void foo() { >> >> int *p = malloc(sizeof(int)); >> >> if (*p < 10) print("X"); >> >> } >> >> >> >> or (again, I don't know if this is actually well defined) >> >> >> >> void foo() { >> >> int t; // it is probably reasonable to fold compares with >> >> ptrtoint(alloca) to undef >> >> if ((intptr_t)(&t) < 10) print("X"); >> >> } >> >> >> > The first one at least is UB, but as Richard pointed out the scope >> > is certainly broader than atomics (it's not even just well-defined >> > non-deterministism). >> > >> > I'm kind of terrified by the implications. >> Me too. :( >> > >> >> -- Sanjoy >> >> >> >>>> >> >>>> Not that I'm sure that will end up being a helpful distinction. >> >>> >> >>> Right. See Richard's comment. I think that sums up the real issue >> here. =/ >> > _______________________________________________ >> > LLVM Developers mailing list >> > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20160225/aa8d0f6b/attachment.html>
Hal Finkel via llvm-dev
2016-Feb-25 05:34 UTC
[llvm-dev] Possible soundness issue with available_externally (split from "RFC: Add guard intrinsics")
----- Original Message -----> From: "Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > To: "Philip Reames" <listmail at philipreames.com>, "Duncan P. N. Exon > Smith" <dexonsmith at apple.com>, "Sanjoy Das" > <sanjoy at playingwithpointers.com> > Cc: "llvm-dev" <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2016 10:29:23 PM > Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] Possible soundness issue with > available_externally (split from "RFC: Add guard intrinsics")> Yea, I'm pretty sad about all of this. I'm also not seeing a lot of > awesome paths forward.> Here is the least bad strategy I can come up with. Curious if folks > think this is sufficient:I may not completely understand the problem, but this seems like overkill. The underlying restriction is that, if the compiler makes a non-determinism-collapsing choice when optimizing a function, it must make the same choice for all definitions of that function (undefined behavior excluded). Thus, with an externally_available function, the CSE in Sanjoy's original example should be forbidden. Richard's example again demonstrates this principle, although in this case the non-determinism is in the choice of a globally-visible implementation technique rather than non-determinism from memory-subsystem reordering. There is a complication, which you imply in your proposal, that such optimizations need to be forbidden not just in the externally_available functions themselves, but in any local function transitively called by one. This, however, we can take care of with an (easily-deduced) attribute. In short, it is not clear to me that the number of problematic optimizations is large (seems likely restricted to things involving atomics in practice), and while I understand the auditing difficulties here, we should just restrict these in appropriate contexts instead of trying to restrict all information flow into or out of comdats. -Hal> 1) Stop deducing function attributes within comdats by examining the > bodies of the functions (so that we remain free to transform the > bodies of functions). > 2) Teach frontends to emit (even at O0!!!) trivially deduced function > attributes for comdats so that we continue to catch easy cases. > 3) Ensure and specify that we never hoist code *into* a comdat group > in which it would not have been executed previously. I don't know of > anything in LLVM that does this today, but it would become an > important invariant. > 4) Work a lot harder to do internalizing and removing of this > restriction.> Pretty horrible. But I think it is correct.> As a slight modification to #1 and #2, we could have a very carefully > crafted deduction rule where we only deduce function attributes for > functions prior to any modification of their function bodies. Such > attributes should be conservatively correct because we would never > lift new code into the function bodies. This would at least allow us > to do bottom-up deduction to catch interprocedural cases. But it > would become incredibly subtle that this is only valid prior to > *any* transformations of the comdat-containing functions.> I'm starting to think this subtle rule might be worth it. But I'm > frankly terrified by the implications.> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 8:13 PM Philip Reames via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > wrote:> > On 02/24/2016 08:10 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith via llvm-dev wrote: > > > >> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:46, Sanjoy Das < > > >> sanjoy at playingwithpointers.com > wrote: > > > >> > > > >> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:38 PM, Chandler Carruth < > > >> chandlerc at google.com > wrote: > > > >>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:34 PM Duncan P. N. Exon Smith > > > >>> < dexonsmith at apple.com > wrote: > > > >>>> > > > >>>>> On 2016-Feb-24, at 19:17, Chandler Carruth < > > >>>>> chandlerc at google.com > wrote: > > > >>>>> > > > >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 7:10 PM Sanjoy Das via llvm-dev > > > >>>>> < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > wrote: > > > >>>>> On Wed, Feb 24, 2016 at 6:51 PM, Duncan P. N. Exon Smith > > > >>>>> < dexonsmith at apple.com > wrote: > > > >>>>>>> If we do not inline @foo(), and instead re-link the call > > >>>>>>> site > > >>>>>>> in > > > >>>>>>> @main > > > >>>>>>> to some non-optimized copy (or differently optimized copy) > > >>>>>>> of > > >>>>>>> @foo, > > > >>>>>>> then it is possible for the program to have the behavior > > >>>>>>> {print("Y"); > > > >>>>>>> print ("X")}, which was disallowed in the earlier program. > > > >>>>>>> > > > >>>>>>> In other words, opt refined the semantics of @foo() (i.e. > > >>>>>>> reduced the > > > >>>>>>> set of behaviors it may have) in ways that would make later > > > >>>>>>> optimizations invalid if we de-refine the implementation of > > >>>>>>> @foo(). > > > >>>>>> I'm probably missing something obvious here. How could the > > >>>>>> result of > > > >>>>>> `%t0 != %t1` be different at optimization time in one file > > >>>>>> than from > > > >>>>>> runtime in the "real" implementation? Doesn't this make the > > >>>>>> CSE > > > >>>>>> invalid? > > > >>>>> `%t0` and `%t1` are "allowed" to "always be the same", i.e. > > >>>>> an > > > >>>>> implementation of @foo that always feeds in the same > > > >>>>> value for `%t0` and `%t1` is a valid implementation (which is > > >>>>> why the > > > >>>>> CSE was valid); but it is not the *only* valid > > >>>>> implementation. > > >>>>> If I > > > >>>>> don't CSE the two load instructions (also a valid thing to > > >>>>> do), > > >>>>> and > > > >>>>> this is a second thread writing to `%par`, then the two > > >>>>> values > > >>>>> loaded > > > >>>>> can be different, and you could end up printing `"X"` in > > >>>>> `@foo`. > > > >>>>> > > > >>>>> Did that make sense? > > > >>>> Yes. To be sure I understand the scope: this is only a problem > > >>>> for > > > >>>> atomics, correct? (Because multi-threaded behaviour with other > > >>>> globals > > > >>>> is UB?) > > > >>>> > > > >>>>>> Does linkonce_odr linkage have the same problem? > > > >>>>>> - If so, do you want to change it too? > > > >>>>>> - Else, why not? > > > >>>>> Going by the specification in the LangRef, I'd say it depends > > >>>>> on how > > > >>>>> you define "definitive". If you're allowed to replace the > > >>>>> body > > >>>>> of a > > > >>>>> function with a differently optimized body, then the above > > >>>>> problem > > > >>>>> exists. > > > >>>>> > > > >>>>> I believe that is the case, and I strongly believe the > > >>>>> problem > > >>>>> you > > > >>>>> outline exists for linkonce_odr exactly as it does for > > >>>>> available_externally. > > > >>>>> > > > >>>>> Which is what makes this scary: every C++ inline function > > >>>>> today > > >>>>> can > > > >>>>> trigger this. > > > >>>> Every C/C++ inline or template function. But only the ones > > >>>> that > > >>>> use > > > >>>> atomics, right? > > > >>> > > > >>> Well, with *this* example... > > > >> Atomic are one source of non-determinism that compilers can > > >> reason > > > >> about. I don't know if the following snippet is well defined or > > >> not, > > > >> but you could have similar issues with > > > >> > > > >> > > > >> void foo() { > > > >> int *p = malloc(sizeof(int)); > > > >> if (*p < 10) print("X"); > > > >> } > > > >> > > > >> or (again, I don't know if this is actually well defined) > > > >> > > > >> void foo() { > > > >> int t; // it is probably reasonable to fold compares with > > > >> ptrtoint(alloca) to undef > > > >> if ((intptr_t)(&t) < 10) print("X"); > > > >> } > > > >> > > > > The first one at least is UB, but as Richard pointed out the > > > scope > > > > is certainly broader than atomics (it's not even just > > > well-defined > > > > non-deterministism). > > > > > > > > I'm kind of terrified by the implications. > > > Me too. :( > > > > > > > >> -- Sanjoy > > > >> > > > >>>> > > > >>>> Not that I'm sure that will end up being a helpful > > >>>> distinction. > > > >>> > > > >>> Right. See Richard's comment. I think that sums up the real > > >>> issue > > >>> here. =/ > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > > > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> > _______________________________________________ > > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev-- -- Hal Finkel Assistant Computational Scientist Leadership Computing Facility Argonne National Laboratory
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