https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=96810
--- Comment #4 from Wei Wentao <weiwt.fnst at cn dot fujitsu.com> --- >>--- Comment #3 from Jakub Jelinek <jakub at gcc dot gnu.org> --- >>Actually sorry, the diagnostics clang emits is not about the bug mentioned in >>the testcase, but about something different. >>And while the bug described in the comment is really hard to diagnose at >>compile time and in most cases impossible, what clang diagnoses is the fact >>that >>the target construct has implicit map(tofrom:A) clause and because the target >>data maps only a small part of it, it mapping in target construct will fail. >>Still, clang implements it incorrectly, it e.g. rejects: >>int A[30]; >>void >>foo (void) >>{ >> #pragma omp target data map (A[0:4]) >> #pragma omp target >> A[2] = 0; >>} >>int >>main () >>{ >> #pragma omp target data map (A) >> foo (); >> return 0; >>} >>or >>void bar (int *, int); >>void >>foo (void) >>{ >> int A[30]; >> bar (A, 0); >> #pragma omp target data map (A[0:4]) >> #pragma omp target >> A[2] = 0; >> bar (A, 1); >>} >>Both are completely valid and e.g. the latter could work just fine at runtime >>if bar performs #pragma omp target enter data (arg1[:30]) for arg2 0 and exit >>data for arg2 non-zero. >>Perhaps a warning might be ok, but it still can have many false positives >>(unless the compiler can prove that the array can't be mapped before the outer >>target data).