Hi Patrick, > On 13 Aug 2025, at 16:26, Patrick Palka <ppa...@redhat.com> wrote: > > On Sun, 10 Aug 2025, Jason Merrill wrote: > >> On 8/8/25 1:27 PM, Patrick Palka wrote: >>> Bootstrapped and regtested on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, does this look OK >>> for trunk? >>> >>> -- >8 -- >>> >>> At some point these flag start getting defined in terms of the previous >>> flag, which is inconvenient when we want to test if the flag is set >>> during a debugging session since we don't immediately know its actual >>> numeric value. >> >> Can't you ask the debugger its value? You're using -g3, right? > > I've just been using a vanilla --disable-bootstrap build which uses -g by > default. -g3 works nicely, I wonder why it isn't the default given our > still pervasive use of macros? > > Looks like impact on build time/memory use is minimal compared to -g, > but it does increase the size of each object file by about 2MB. Can't > we just build one object file with -g3 to preserve the macro definitions > (and perhaps with -fkeep-inline-functions so that small inline functions > will be preserved as well), and the rest with -g?
g3 is problematical on Darwin where it is not supported by the ‘binutils' or lldb and newer linker issues warnings about the lack of support (yes, I wish it worked, but too many projects already). So, please loop me in to test any proposed patch to catch build fails early. thanks Iain > >> >> The current pattern was intended to allow adding/removing flags without >> adjusting the whole list, but I guess we could also leave a hole if we remove >> a flag. > > Makes sense, though removing flags doesn't seem to happen very often -- > around 12 times according to > > git log --oneline --grep "LOOKUP_.*[rR]emove" --grep "LOOKUP_.*[dD]elete" > >> >> So, it's not clear to me that this is an improvement, but I also don't object >> to it; if it's helpful to you then it's OK. >> >>> It also results in a rather large AST that looks like >>> ((1 << (1 << ...)) << 1). This patch defines all LOOKUP_* flags directly. >>> >>> gcc/cp/ChangeLog: >>> >>> * cp-tree.h (LOOKUP_NO_NARROWING): Determine value directly, not >>> in terms of the previous flag. >>> (LOOKUP_LIST_INIT_CTOR): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_COPY_PARM): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_LIST_ONLY): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_SPECULATIVE): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_DEFAULTED): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_ALREADY_DIGESTED): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_NO_RVAL_BIND): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_NO_NON_INTEGRAL): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_DELEGATING_CONS): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_ALLOW_FLEXARRAY_INIT): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_REWRITTEN): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_REVERSED): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_AGGREGATE_PAREN_INIT): Likewise. >>> (LOOKUP_SHORTCUT_BAD_CONVS): Likewise. >>> --- >>> gcc/cp/cp-tree.h | 30 +++++++++++++++--------------- >>> 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/gcc/cp/cp-tree.h b/gcc/cp/cp-tree.h >>> index fb8e0d8d98e3..bc0b8fd8b85b 100644 >>> --- a/gcc/cp/cp-tree.h >>> +++ b/gcc/cp/cp-tree.h >>> @@ -6224,52 +6224,52 @@ enum overload_flags { NO_SPECIAL = 0, DTOR_FLAG, >>> TYPENAME_FLAG }; >>> /* Do not permit references to bind to temporaries. */ >>> #define LOOKUP_NO_TEMP_BIND (1 << 6) >>> /* We're inside an init-list, so narrowing conversions are ill-formed. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_NO_NARROWING (LOOKUP_NO_TEMP_BIND << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_NO_NARROWING (1 << 7) >>> /* We're looking up a constructor for list-initialization. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_LIST_INIT_CTOR (LOOKUP_NO_NARROWING << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_LIST_INIT_CTOR (1 << 8) >>> /* This is the first parameter of a copy constructor. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_COPY_PARM (LOOKUP_LIST_INIT_CTOR << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_COPY_PARM (1 << 9) >>> /* We only want to consider list constructors. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_LIST_ONLY (LOOKUP_COPY_PARM << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_LIST_ONLY (1 << 10) >>> /* Return after determining which function to call and checking access. >>> Used by sythesized_method_walk to determine which functions will >>> be called to initialize subobjects, in order to determine exception >>> specification and possible implicit delete. >>> This is kind of a hack, but exiting early avoids problems with trying >>> to perform argument conversions when the class isn't complete yet. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_SPECULATIVE (LOOKUP_LIST_ONLY << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_SPECULATIVE (1 << 11) >>> /* Used by calls from defaulted functions to limit the overload set to >>> avoid >>> cycles trying to declare them (core issue 1092). */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_DEFAULTED (LOOKUP_SPECULATIVE << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_DEFAULTED (1 << 12) >>> /* Used in calls to store_init_value to suppress its usual call to >>> digest_init. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_ALREADY_DIGESTED (LOOKUP_DEFAULTED << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_ALREADY_DIGESTED (1 << 13) >>> /* Like LOOKUP_NO_TEMP_BIND, but also prevent binding to xvalues. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_NO_RVAL_BIND (LOOKUP_ALREADY_DIGESTED << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_NO_RVAL_BIND (1 << 14) >>> /* Used by case_conversion to disregard non-integral conversions. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_NO_NON_INTEGRAL (LOOKUP_NO_RVAL_BIND << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_NO_NON_INTEGRAL (1 << 15) >>> /* Used for delegating constructors in order to diagnose self-delegation. >>> */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_DELEGATING_CONS (LOOKUP_NO_NON_INTEGRAL << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_DELEGATING_CONS (1 << 16) >>> /* Allow initialization of a flexible array members. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_ALLOW_FLEXARRAY_INIT (LOOKUP_DELEGATING_CONS << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_ALLOW_FLEXARRAY_INIT (1 << 17) >>> /* We're looking for either a rewritten comparison operator candidate or >>> the >>> operator to use on the former's result. We distinguish between the two >>> by >>> knowing that comparisons other than == and <=> must be the latter, as >>> must >>> a <=> expression trying to rewrite to <=> without reversing. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_REWRITTEN (LOOKUP_ALLOW_FLEXARRAY_INIT << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_REWRITTEN (1 << 18) >>> /* Reverse the order of the two arguments for comparison rewriting. First >>> we >>> swap the arguments in add_operator_candidates, then we swap the >>> conversions >>> in add_candidate (so that they correspond to the original order of the >>> args), then we swap the conversions back in build_new_op_1 (so they >>> correspond to the order of the args in the candidate). */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_REVERSED (LOOKUP_REWRITTEN << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_REVERSED (1 << 19) >>> /* We're initializing an aggregate from a parenthesized list of values. >>> */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_AGGREGATE_PAREN_INIT (LOOKUP_REVERSED << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_AGGREGATE_PAREN_INIT (1 << 20) >>> /* We're computing conversions as part of a first pass of overload >>> resolution >>> wherein we don't try to distinguish an unviable candidate from a >>> non-strictly viable candidate and thus can avoid computing unnecessary >>> bad conversions. */ >>> -#define LOOKUP_SHORTCUT_BAD_CONVS (LOOKUP_AGGREGATE_PAREN_INIT << 1) >>> +#define LOOKUP_SHORTCUT_BAD_CONVS (1 << 21) >>> /* These flags are used by the conversion code. >>> CONV_IMPLICIT : Perform implicit conversions (standard and >>> user-defined).