For targets without alias support, we emit two essentially identical function bodies into the gimple (complete and base CTORs). So this test needs to allow for that when the target does not support aliases. The target support alias test does not seem to be usable in the context of a single scan-tree-dump so the fix here uses the target designation.
Note that the array has 10 elements, so that if the test were failing (because we were emitting 10 inits instead of a loop) the count would be expected to exceed 2, on Darwin and 1 where there's alias support. tested on x86_64 darwin / linux, pushed to master, thanks, Iain Signed-off-by: Iain Sandoe <i...@sandoe.co.uk> gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog: * g++.dg/init/array61.C: Allow for two CTOR bodies on Darwin, where aliases are not currently supported. --- gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/init/array61.C | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/init/array61.C b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/init/array61.C index eaf535c2546..c8f82b9f155 100644 --- a/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/init/array61.C +++ b/gcc/testsuite/g++.dg/init/array61.C @@ -1,7 +1,8 @@ // PR c++/92385 // { dg-do compile { target c++11 } } // { dg-additional-options -fdump-tree-gimple } -// { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "item::item" 1 "gimple" } } +// { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "item::item" 1 "gimple" { target { ! *-*-darwin* } } } } +// { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "item::item" 2 "gimple" { target { *-*-darwin* } } } } struct item { int i; -- 2.24.3 (Apple Git-128)