On Thu, Jun 04, 2015 at 02:53:31PM +0200, Ondřej Bílka wrote: > On Thu, Jun 04, 2015 at 02:33:19PM +0200, Jakub Jelinek wrote: > > On Thu, Jun 04, 2015 at 12:26:03PM +0000, Joseph Myers wrote: > > > > Again is this worth a gcc pass? > > > > > > This isn't a matter of compiler passes; it's additional checks in > > > existing > > > built-in function handling. Maybe that built-in function handling should > > > move to the match-and-simplify infrastructure (some, for libm functions > > > and bswap, already has) to make this even simpler to implement. > > > > GCC already has a pass that attempts to track known and earlier computed > > lengths of strings, and do various transformations and optimizations based > > on that, see the tree-ssa-strlen.c pass. Most of that you really can't do > > at the glibc headers level. > > > Yes, I was writing down ideas that I have and this was one of these. I > didn't knew it does transformations, just checked that it doesn't use > length from stpcpy or in
It does use length from stpcpy in various cases, but stpcpy needs to be prototyped. See gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/strlenopt* for what it does. > > int foo(char *s) > { > int l = strlen (s); > char *p = strchr (s,'a'); > return p+l; > } And what do you want to optimize here? The length from strlen is different from the difference between p and s. Furthermore, p can return NULL. Jakub