strlen
. 05:08
@mike4ty4 I ended up posting an answer on this question. It turns out that glibc's pure-C implementation is used on some real targets, including MIPS. Nobody wants to destroy the performance of MIPS
In my answer I showed how GCC
__attribute__((may_alias))
could be used to make this safe; I'd agree that would be a good idea. Doing that throughout glibc might make it possible to build glibc with internal LTO between its own source files. (Which is currently not possible because of stuff like this strlen with UB)
@SebastianMach I don't think current compilers do idiom recognition for
strlen
, but that is a thing compilers do. e.g. clang knows how to optimize sum(i, i=1..n)
into Gauss's closed-form solution. (See Matt Godbolt's CppCon2017 talk “What Has My Compiler Done for Me Lately? Unbolting the Compiler's Lid” youtu.be/bSkpMdDe4g4 for that example). Most compilers can spot a copy or init loop and replace it with a call to memcpy
or memset
, or an inline expansion like x86 rep stos
.
Most compilers recognize the
(x << n) | (x>>(32-n))
idiom as a rotate. stackoverflow.com/q/776508 Some recognize some forms of popcount loops and replace them with a popcnt
instruction if available. lemire.me/blog/2016/05/23/… (The last 2 are basically just peephole patterns to replace with a single instruction, not exactly another whole AST. But yes compilers do look for patterns in the data flow).
5 hours later…
10:17
This is a rather strange argument, in my opinion. It all basically boils down to whether it's OK to invoke undefined behavior according to the standard if the compiler somehow makes it defined. The only way this is OK is if the compiler makes guarantees beyond the standard.
If these are public guarantees (in the spirit of language extensions), then yeah, it's OK. If there are some internal guarantees, then it's OK for the writers of the standard library, but not anyone else because they have the right to change it every time. Obviously, in each case these guarantees should be well-documented and tested each time like any other.
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