Revert DECL_USER_ALIGN part of r241959
r241959 included code to stop the vectoriser increasing the alignment of
a "user-aligned" variable. This wasn't the main purpose of the patch,
but was done for consistency with pass_increase_alignment, and was
needed to make the testcase work.
The documentation for the aligned attribute says:
This attribute specifies a minimum alignment for the variable or
structure field, measured in bytes.
so I think it's reasonable for the vectoriser to increase the
alignment further, if that helps us to vectorise code. It's also
useful if the "user" alignment actually came from an earlier pass
rather than the source code.
A possible counterexample came up when this was discussed on the lists.
Users who are trying to collate things from several translation units
into a single section can use:
__attribute__((section ("whatever"), aligned(N)))
and would not want extra padding. It turns out that the supported way
of doing that is to add a "used" attribute, which works even when no
"aligned" attribute is given.
2018-01-05 Richard Sandiford <richard.sandiford@linaro.org>
gcc/
* tree-vect-data-refs.c (vect_compute_data_ref_alignment): Don't
punt for user-aligned variables.
gcc/testsuite/
* gcc.dg/vect/vect-align-4.c: New test.
* gcc.dg/vect/vect-nb-iter-ub-2.c (cc): Remove alignment attribute
and redefine as a structure with an unaligned member "b".
(foo): Update accordingly.
From-SVN: r256277