Hmmm,

so load the bool variable from memory is converted to such asm code:

----------------->8------------------- 
ldb     r2,[some_bool_address]
extb_s  r2,r2
----------------->8-------------------

Could you please describe that the magic is going on there?

This extb_s instruction looks completely useless here, according on the LDB 
description from PRM:
----------------->8-------------------
LD LDH LDW LDB LDD:
The size of the requested data is specified by the data size field <.zz> and by 
default, data is zero
extended from the most-significant bit of the data to the most-significant bit 
of the destination
register.
----------------->8-------------------

Am I missing something?

On Thu, 2019-05-16 at 17:37 +0000, Vineet Gupta wrote:
> On 5/16/19 10:24 AM, Eugeniy Paltsev wrote:
> > > +    unsigned int write = 0, exec = 0, mask;
> > 
> > Probably it's better to use 'bool' type for 'write' and 'exec' as we really 
> > use them as a boolean variables.
> 
> Right those are semantics, but the generated code for "bool" is not ideal - 
> given
> it is inherently a "char" it is promoted first to an int with an additional 
> EXTB
> which I really dislike.
> Guess it is more of a style thing.
> 
> -Vineet
-- 
 Eugeniy Paltsev

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