On Tue, 3 Jul 2007, Frank Lichtenheld wrote: > Hi, > > while testing for an (probably) unrelated miscompilation bug, > I got the following warning while compiling git: > > gcc-4.2 -o sha1_file.o -c -g -O2 -Wall -DSHA1_HEADER='<openssl/sha.h>' > -DETC_GITCONFIG='"/home/djpig/etc/gitconfig"' -DNO_STRLCPY sha1_file.c > sha1_file.c: In function ‘check_packed_git_idx’: > sha1_file.c:523: warning: assuming signed overflow does not occur when assuming that (X + c) < X is always false > sha1_file.c:523: warning: assuming signed overflow does not occur when assuming that (X + c) < X is always false > > This comes from the new -Wstrict-overflow which warns about the fact > that with -fstrict-overflow, which is activated by default with -O2, > the if clause referenced in the warning will be optimised away. > > So I would be interested to know > a) if the compiler optimising this check away (which seems to be a check > about whether signed overflow can occour) can lead to unwanted results Of course it can if the compiler blindly optimizes the test away. In this particular case, the answer can be determined at compile time though, since all values to perform the test are constants. So in this case the warning is rather obnoxious. However it would be completely wrong if the compiler optimized away the if from index-pack.c on line 104, or from builtin-pack-objects.c on line 579. Even warning about it without actually optimizing it away would be bad in those cases. > b) if not a), if it would make sense trying to suppress that warning, so > that other people don't end up wondering the same as me I really wonder what's the point for gcc to warn about such things. Sure the warning should go away, but not by compromizing the test that we need performed on the actual definition of off_t. Nicolas