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authorRich Felker <dalias@aerifal.cx>2022-09-30 21:20:32 -0400
committerRich Felker <dalias@aerifal.cx>2022-10-19 14:01:31 -0400
commit833a469167521040c7ae94f3c990e258e29445f9 (patch)
treefa7510dabaa9c099afe7a4ca51c798f2a39a5dfc /src/math/m68k/sqrtl.c
parente6e8213244a816511e95e14fb99176442922abac (diff)
downloadmusl-833a469167521040c7ae94f3c990e258e29445f9.tar.gz
configure: disable TBAA optimization because most compilers are buggy
unlike most projects that use -fno-strict-aliasing, we aim to have all sources respect the C language rules for effective type that make type-based alias analysis optimizations possible. unfortunately, it turns out that there are deep, and likely very difficult to fix, flaws in the TBAA performed by GCC and likely other compilers, whereby this kind of optimization can transform code that follows the rules strictly in ways that will make it malfunction. see for example GCC bugs 107107 and 107115, the latter of which also affects clang. there are not presently any known instances of breakage due to wrong type-based aliasing optimizations in our codebase. nonetheless, since the transformations are unsound and could introduce breakage, configure CFLAGS to build with -fno-strict-aliasing. some casual analysis of the effects on codegen suggest that this is unlikely to affect performance except possibly in the regex engine. in general, we should probably prefer making better use of the restrict keyword over relying on types to imply non-aliasing for optimization purposes; doing so should be able to get back any performance that was lost and more, should it turn out to matter (unlikely).
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