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Surgical fix for bad assertion generation #55626
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kunalspathak
merged 3 commits into
dotnet:main
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SingleAccretion:Fix-Assertion-Prop-Surgical
Jul 15, 2021
Merged
Surgical fix for bad assertion generation #55626
kunalspathak
merged 3 commits into
dotnet:main
from
SingleAccretion:Fix-Assertion-Prop-Surgical
Jul 15, 2021
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Say we have a cast like this: CAST(uint <- long). What value does this tree compute? [int.MinValue..int.MaxValue] - IR operates on signed TYP_INTs. But assertion prop generated [0..uint.MaxValue] for it. The confusion created by this "how to interpret TYP_UINT" question caused a bug where for the assertion generated for the above cast, in the form of [0..uint.MaxValue], propagation could remove a checked cast in the form of CAST_OVF(uint < int). The proper fix is to generate proper ranges for such casts. The surgical fix proposed here is to always treat casts to TYP_UINT as if they were to TYP_INT. This is conservative, but always correct. The generated assertion is useless of course, but that makes this a zero-diff change.
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LGTM
Hello @kunalspathak! Because this pull request has the p.s. you can customize the way I help with merging this pull request, such as holding this pull request until a specific person approves. Simply @mention me (
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Failures seems to be infra issues. |
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area-CodeGen-coreclr
CLR JIT compiler in src/coreclr/src/jit and related components such as SuperPMI
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Say we have a cast like this:
CAST(uint <- long)
.What value does this tree compute?
[int.MinValue..int.MaxValue]
- IR operates on signedTYP_INT
s.But assertion prop generated
[0..uint.MaxValue]
for it.The confusion created by this "how to interpret
TYP_UINT
" questioncaused a bug where for the assertion generated for the above cast,
in the form of
[0..uint.MaxValue]
, propagation could removea checked cast in the form of
CAST_OVF(uint < int)
.The proper fix is to generate proper ranges for such casts, it is in #55186 and waiting for .NET 7.
The surgical fix proposed here, for .NET 6, is to always treat casts to
TYP_UINT
as if they were to
TYP_INT
. This is conservative, but always correct.The generated assertion is useless of course, but that makes this a
zero-diff change (verified via replaying all
win-x64
&win-x86
collections).Fixes #54842
cc @kunalspathak