http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=49498
--- Comment #4 from davidxl <xinliangli at gmail dot com> 2011-06-30 20:37:36 UTC --- I can to reproduce the problem on x86-64 linux. Can you help provide the following dump: -fdump-tree-uninit-blocks-details? Thanks, David (In reply to comment #3) > Frankly, I'm just not able to wrap my head around the tree-ssa-uninit > implementation. I understand the general concepts, but just can't seem to > find > where in that code we handle certain things. Perhaps it simply doesn't handle > them. > > In this simpler sample code we have: > > /* { dg-do compile } */ > /* { dg-options "-Wuninitialized -O2" } */ > > int g; > void bar(); > void blah(int); > > int foo (int n, int l, int m, int r) > { > int v; > > if (n < 10 || m > 100) > v = r; > > if (m) g++; > > if ( n < 10 || m > 100) > blah(v); /* { dg-bogus "uninitialized" "bogus warning" } */ > > return 0; > } > > Compiling with -O2 -Wuninitialized on cris-elf. > > Someone who knows the code in tree-ssa-uninit.c really needs to chime in... > Reading that code just makes my head hurt. > > From the standpoint of the resulting CFG, the path 2->8->4->5->6 can never be > traversed, nor can 2->3->9->4->6. 2->3->9->4->5 is properly guarded as far as > I can tell, though I'm not convinced tree-ssa-uninit.c is computing the guards > correctly.