strlen: Fix handle_builtin_string_cmp [PR96758]
The following testcase is miscompiled, because handle_builtin_string_cmp
sees a strncmp call with constant last argument 4, where one of the strings
has an upper bound of 5 bytes (due to it being an array of that size) and
the other has a known string length of 1 and the result is used only in
equality comparison.
It is folded into __builtin_strncmp_eq (str1, str2, 4), which is
incorrect, because that means reading 4 bytes from both strings and
comparing that. When one of the strings has known strlen of 1, we want to
compare just 2 bytes, not 4, as strncmp shouldn't compare any bytes beyond
the null.
So, the last argument to __builtin_strncmp_eq should be the minimum of the
provided strncmp last argument and the known string length + 1 (assuming
the other string has only a known upper bound due to array size).
Besides that, I've noticed the code has been written with the intent to also
support the case where we know exact string length of both strings (but not
the string content, so we can't compute it at compile time). In that case,
both cstlen1 and cstlen2 are non-negative and both arysiz1 and arysiz2 are
negative. We wouldn't optimize that, cmpsiz would be either the strncmp
last argument, or for strcmp the first string length, but varsiz would be
-1 and thus cmpsiz would be never < varsiz. The patch fixes it by using the
correct length, in that case using the minimum of the two and for strncmp
also the last argument.
2020-08-25 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR tree-optimization/96758
* tree-ssa-strlen.c (handle_builtin_string_cmp): If both cstlen1
and cstlen2 are set, set cmpsiz to their minimum, otherwise use the
one that is set. If bound is used and smaller than cmpsiz, set cmpsiz
to bound. If both cstlen1 and cstlen2 are set, perform the optimization.
* gcc.dg/strcmpopt_12.c: New test.