29 lines
1 KiB
LLVM
29 lines
1 KiB
LLVM
|
; This test lets globalopt split the global struct and array into different
|
||
|
; values. This used to crash, because globalopt forgot to put the new var in the
|
||
|
; same address space as the old one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
; RUN: opt < %s -passes=globalopt -S | FileCheck %s
|
||
|
|
||
|
; Check that the new global values still have their address space
|
||
|
; CHECK: addrspace(1) global
|
||
|
; CHECK: addrspace(1) global
|
||
|
|
||
|
@struct = internal addrspace(1) global { i32, i32 } zeroinitializer
|
||
|
@array = internal addrspace(1) global [ 2 x i32 ] zeroinitializer
|
||
|
|
||
|
define i32 @foo() {
|
||
|
%A = load i32, ptr addrspace(1) getelementptr ({ i32, i32 }, ptr addrspace(1) @struct, i32 0, i32 0)
|
||
|
%B = load i32, ptr addrspace(1) @array
|
||
|
; Use the loaded values, so they won't get removed completely
|
||
|
%R = add i32 %A, %B
|
||
|
ret i32 %R
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
; We put stores in a different function, so that the global variables won't get
|
||
|
; optimized away completely.
|
||
|
define void @bar(i32 %R) {
|
||
|
store i32 %R, ptr addrspace(1) @array
|
||
|
store i32 %R, ptr addrspace(1) getelementptr ({ i32, i32 }, ptr addrspace(1) @struct, i32 0, i32 0)
|
||
|
ret void
|
||
|
}
|