Hi, I'm writing a gcc plugin to find out target basic blocks to branch instructions, and need to match instructions and basic blocks with compiled binaries, so I decided to explicitly annotate all the branch instructions and basic blocks with named labels, then from the compiler plugin I assign named labels to branch instructions and basic blocks, and from symbol table I can get offset to these instructions and basic blocks. Is this the right way to do it, or I shouldn't do this task in compiling phase? When I was trying with this method, I wrote a plugin with some code like this: unsigned int first_rtl_exec(void) { rtx insn, bb_start, bb_end; basic_block bb; FOR_EACH_BB(bb) { bb_start = gen_label_rtx(); LABEL_NAME(bb_start) = "BB Start"; LABEL_NUSES(bb_start) = 1; bb_end = gen_label_rtx(); LABEL_NAME(bb_end) = "BB End"; LABEL_NUSES(bb_end) = 1; emit_label_before(bb_start, BB_HEAD(bb)); emit_label_after(bb_end, BB_END(bb)); } return 0; } I insert this pass before final pass. But when compiling C program with this plugin, I got error: foo.c:7:1: internal compiler error: in final, at final.c:1958 } ^ It seems this is not the correct way to insert labels. Am I using emit_label_* in a wrong way, at wrong time, or I'm totally in the wrong direction? Thanks, Yue Liu