/* { dg-do compile } */ /* { dg-options "-O2 -fdump-tree-isolate-paths -fdump-tree-optimized" } */ struct demangle_component { int type; int zzz; }; struct d_info { struct demangle_component *comps; int next_comp; int num_comps; }; static struct demangle_component * d_make_empty (struct d_info *di) { struct demangle_component *p; if (di->next_comp >= di->num_comps) return ((void *)0); p = &di->comps[di->next_comp]; return p; } struct demangle_component * d_type (struct d_info *di) { struct demangle_component *ret; ret = d_make_empty (di); foo (ret->type); bar (ret->zzz); return ret; } /* We're testing two aspects of isolation here. First that isolation occurs, second that if we have two null dereferences in a block that that we delete everything from the first dereferece to the end of the block, regardless of which comes first in the immediate use iterator. We leave the 0->type in the IL, so expect to see ->type twice. */ /* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "__builtin_trap" 1 "isolate-paths"} } */ /* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "->type" 2 "isolate-paths"} } */ /* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "->type" 1 "optimized"} } */ /* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "\\.type" 1 "optimized"} } */ /* { dg-final { scan-tree-dump-times "->zzz" 1 "isolate-paths"} } */ /* { dg-final { cleanup-tree-dump "isolate-paths" } } */ /* { dg-final { cleanup-tree-dump "optimized" } } */