view lwlib/lw_cmdline.h @ 418:3832a68d83ef

Fix internal compiler error on "var2 = var1 + 1" patterns This appears to be the correct fix. It was provided by Tormod Volden (debian.tormod@gmail.com). The final commit is substantially different from Tormod's submission mostly due to housecleaning (removing the old patches and updating the README). Tormod's comments follow. The original addhi_mem_1 "insn" instruction pattern /matches/ two memory operands, just with the /constraint/ that these are the same location. A pattern match tells the compiler "you should be able to use this, but you might have to work on it to meet the constraints". For typical constraints on registers the compiler can add "reloads", moving stuff between registers or from memory, until the constraints are met and the instruction can be used. However, in this case, no amount of reloads can make two memory locations the same if they already weren't, so the compiler breaks down and cries "unable to generate reloads". It seems this issue only appears if optimization is enabled. The proof is in gcc's reload.c and is left as an exercise to the reader. Limiting the matching pattern to identical memory operands avoids these situations, while allowing the common "var++" cases. References: The pattern/constraints difference is explained in https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Simple-Constraints.html#index-other-register-constraints-3335
author William Astle <lost@l-w.ca>
date Tue, 29 Mar 2016 21:21:49 -0600
parents 8e25147c2aa8
children
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/*
lw_cmdline.h

Copyright © 2010 William Astle

This file is part of LWTOOLS.

LWTOOLS is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/

/*

This argument parser is patterned after argp from the gnu C library but
has much of the functionality removed. It is provided here because not
every system has glibc.

Most notably, it does not support option groups or i18n.

*/

#ifndef ___lw_cmdline_h_seen___
#define ___lw_cmdline_h_seen___

struct lw_cmdline_options
{
	char *name;
	int key;
	char *arg;
	int flags;
	char *doc;
};

enum
{
	lw_cmdline_opt_optional = 1,
	lw_cmdline_opt_hidden = 2,
/*	lw_cmdline_opt_alias = 4,*/
/*	lw_cmdline_opt_nousage = 0x10,*/
	lw_cmdline_opt_doc = 0x80
};

enum
{
	lw_cmdline_err_unknown = -1
};

enum
{
	lw_cmdline_key_arg = -1,
	lw_cmdline_key_end = 0
};

struct lw_cmdline_parser
{
	struct lw_cmdline_options *options;
	int (*parser)(int key, char *arg, void *input);
	char *args_doc;
	char *doc;
	char *program_version;
};

int lw_cmdline_parse(struct lw_cmdline_parser *parser, int argc, char **argv, unsigned flags, int *arg_index, void *input);

#endif /* ___lw_cmdline_h_seen___ */