[PATCH] use gcc_checking_assert instead of ENABLE_CHECKING/gcc_assert

Richard Guenther richard.guenther@gmail.com
Thu Oct 21 13:04:00 GMT 2010


On Thu, Oct 21, 2010 at 1:45 PM, Richard Guenther
<richard.guenther@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 21, 2010 at 1:41 PM, Nathan Froyd <froydnj@codesourcery.com> wrote:
>> The patch below replaces a number of instances of:
>>
>> #ifdef ENABLE_CHECKING
>>  gcc_assert (x)
>> #endif
>>
>> with the simpler:
>>
>>  gcc_checking_assert (x)
>>
>> It's actually slightly more aggressive than that; if we had something
>> like:
>>
>> #ifdef ENABLE_CHECKING
>>  for (...)
>>    gcc_assert (x)
>> #endif
>>
>> I've gone ahead and replaced the gcc_assert there with ENABLE_CHECKING,
>> on the assumption that the compiler will be able to optimize out the
>> empty for loop.  I've not replaced cases like:
>>
>> #ifdef ENABLE_CHECKING
>>  {
>>    thing x = func (...);
>>
>>    gcc_assert (y);
>>  }
>> #endif
>>
>> as the compiler might not be able to tell x is dead (func might have
>> side-effects).  It's certainly possible that such blocks could be
>> modified once func is checked for constness of parameters and so forth;
>> I just did the brainless replacements.
>>
>> Tested on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.  OK to commit?
>
> I think that #ifdefed loops are more easy to identify as enabled
> only in checkin mode.  And I'd be not so sure that the iterators
> themselves are optimized if the loop is empty (they have calls
> to non-inline fns at least).
>
> The rest of the changes is ok.

Which means that the changes removing the #ifdef around loops
are not.  Just in case that wasn't clear.

Richard.



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