2005-10-01 Diego Novillo <dnovillo@redhat.com>
+ * tree-vrp.c (value_inside_range, range_includes_zero_p): Add
+ FIXME note regarding quirky semantics.
+
+2005-10-01 Diego Novillo <dnovillo@redhat.com>
+
PR 24141
* tree-vrp.c (vrp_meet): Clear VR0->EQUIV when building a
non-null range as a last resort.
/* Return 1 if VAL is inside value range VR (VR->MIN <= VAL <= VR->MAX),
0 if VAL is not inside VR,
- -2 if we cannot tell either way. */
+ -2 if we cannot tell either way.
+
+ FIXME, the current semantics of this functions are a bit quirky
+ when taken in the context of VRP. In here we do not care
+ about VR's type. If VR is the anti-range ~[3, 5] the call
+ value_inside_range (4, VR) will return 1.
+
+ This is counter-intuitive in a strict sense, but the callers
+ currently expect this. They are calling the function
+ merely to determine whether VR->MIN <= VAL <= VR->MAX. The
+ callers are applying the VR_RANGE/VR_ANTI_RANGE semantics
+ themselves.
+
+ This also applies to value_ranges_intersect_p and
+ range_includes_zero_p. The semantics of VR_RANGE and
+ VR_ANTI_RANGE should be encoded here, but that also means
+ adapting the users of these functions to the new semantics. */
static inline int
value_inside_range (tree val, value_range_t *vr)
}
-/* Return true if VR includes the value zero, false otherwise. */
+/* Return true if VR includes the value zero, false otherwise. FIXME,
+ currently this will return false for an anti-range like ~[-4, 3].
+ This will be wrong when the semantics of value_inside_range are
+ modified (currently the users of this function expect these
+ semantics). */
static inline bool
range_includes_zero_p (value_range_t *vr)