blob: 3e0e6a0793eef5c105c071d6dad1f77e845bcabc [file] [log] [blame]
#include "harness.h"
/* This problem occurs if a function is inlined. When its local
variables get allocated space on the caller's (the function to
which it is inlined) stack frame, they don't get 16-byte alignment
even if they need it. Here's an example with a union (that's the
first case I uncovered, but it's probably a general occurrence on
inlining). */
#define N 10
/* adjust N = size of buffer to try to get bad alignment for inlined union */
#define DO_INLINE __attribute__ ((always_inline))
#define DONT_INLINE __attribute__ ((noinline))
#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN__
static inline DO_INLINE int inline_me(vector signed short data)
{
union {vector signed short v; signed short s[8];} u;
signed short x;
unsigned char x1, x2;
u.v = data;
x = u.s[7];
x1 = (x >> 8) & 0xff;
x2 = x & 0xff;
return ((x2 << 8) | x1);
}
#else
static inline DO_INLINE int inline_me(vector signed short data)
{
union {vector signed short v; signed short s[8];} u;
u.v = data;
return u.s[7];
}
#endif
static DONT_INLINE int foo(vector signed short data)
{
int c, buffer[N], i;
c = inline_me(data);
for (i=0; i<N; i++) {
if (i == 0)
buffer[i] = c;
else
buffer[i] = buffer[i-1] + c*i;
}
return buffer[N-1];
}
static void test()
{
check(foo((vector signed short)
((vector unsigned char){1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,
9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16})) == 0x2b4e0,
"foo");
}