// Simple program that uses C99 restrict qualifier. // Once GCC is fixed to output DW_TAG_restrict_type in the debuginfo // valgrind --read-var-info=yes would get a serious error reading the // debuginfo. This tests makes sure that a fixed GCC and a fixed valgrind // work well together. // https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=59051 // https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=336619 #include #include #include #include #include "memcheck/memcheck.h" /* Cause memcheck to complain about the address "a" and so to print its best guess as to what "a" actually is. a must be addressible. */ void croak (void *aV ) { char* a = (char*)aV; char* undefp = malloc(1); char saved = *a; assert(undefp); *a = *undefp; (void) VALGRIND_CHECK_MEM_IS_DEFINED(a, 1); *a = saved; free(undefp); } void bad_restrict_ptr (void * restrict bad_ptr) { croak ((void *) &bad_ptr); } char * cpy (char * restrict s1, const char * restrict s2, size_t n) { char *t1 = s1; const char *t2 = s2; while(n-- > 0) *t1++ = *t2++; return s1; } int main (int argc, char **argv) { const char *hello = "World"; size_t l = strlen (hello) + 1; char *earth = malloc (l); fprintf (stderr, "Hello %s\n", cpy (earth, hello, l)); free (earth); void *bad = malloc (16); bad_restrict_ptr (bad); free (bad); return 0; }