GCC builds a chain of recurrence to capture a pattern in which an
array is accessed in a loop. Is there any function which identifies
that gcc has built a chain of recurrence? Is this information
associated to the gimple assignment which accesses the array elements?
Thanks,
Pritam Gharat
Hi,
How do we identify whether a function is a pure or a const function?
Is there any flag associated with its cgraph_node or the tree node
(decl of cgraph_node)?
Thanks,
Pritam Gharat
identifies it as pure function
__attribute__((pure))
int error()
{
return 2;
}
I am unable to understand why error function is not identified as a
pure function by gcc? Are the checks to identify pure and const
functions correct?
Thanks,
Pritam Gharat
On Fri, May 29, 2015 at 1:26 PM, Mar
and recompiling the source
code?
Thanks,
Pritam Gharat
On Fri, May 29, 2015 at 10:34 AM, Bin.Cheng wrote:
> On Fri, May 29, 2015 at 12:41 PM, Pritam Gharat
> wrote:
>> GCC builds a chain of recurrence to capture a pattern in which an
>> array is accessed in a loop. Is there
e/c++/4.7.2/cstdlib:127:11:
error: attempt to use poisoned "realloc"
make: *** [pointsto-callstrings.o] Error 1
How can I resolve this problem?
--
Thanks,
Pritam Gharat
It worked. Thank You :-)
On Thursday 20 February 2014 06:03 PM, Marc Glisse wrote:
On Thu, 20 Feb 2014, Pritam Gharat wrote:
I am using sets of stl in gcc. I need to perform operations like
set union, set intersection and set difference for my analysis. These
functions are defined in the