On Tue, 4 Oct 2011, Jakub Jelinek wrote: > On Tue, Oct 04, 2011 at 11:01:27AM +0200, Richard Guenther wrote: > > > > > void foo (int *p) > > > > > { > > > > > int * __restrict p1 = p; > > > > > int * __restrict p2 = p + 32; > > > > > int *q; > > > > > int i; > > > > > for (i = 0; i < 32; ++i) > > > > > p1[i] = p2[i]; > > > > > p = p1; > > > > > q = p2 - 31; > > > > > for (i = 0; i < 32; ++i) > > > > > p[i] = q[i]; > > > > > } > > > > > > > > In the above first loop the restrict pointers p1 and p2 access > > distinct object pieces. The second loop uses non-restrict qualified > > pointers p and q (that are based on the restrict variants p1 and p2 > > though) to access overlapping pieces. Is the second loop invalid > > because p and q are based on p1 and p2 even though they are not > > restrict qualified? > > IMHO yes. The standard doesn't seem to talk about the accesses being done > through the restricted pointer, but about accesses that are based on > the restricted pointer, and as soon as you access in the associated block > (here the foo function) some object through an lvalue whose address is > based on some restricted pointer and the value is modified by any means, > then all accesses to that object need to be done through something > based on that restricted pointer.
So when I change the above to /*p = p;*/ q = (p + 32) - 31; then the code will be valid? When I obfuscate that enough I can get GCC CSEing p + 32 and thus effectively q will look like it is based on p2. Richard.