match.pd: Fix up a ? cst1 : cst2 regression on signed bool [PR111668]
My relatively recent changes to these simplifiers to avoid
doing build_nonstandard_integer_type (primarily for BITINT_TYPE)
broke PR111668, a recurrence of the PR110487 bug.
I thought the build_nonstandard_integer_type isn't ever needed there,
but there is one special case where it is.
For the a ? -1 : 0 and a ? 0 : -1 simplifications there are actually
3 different cases. One is for signed 1-bit precision types (signed
kind of implied from integer_all_onesp, because otherwise it would
match integer_onep earlier), where the simplifier wierdly was matching
them using the a ? powerof2cst : 0 -> a << (log2(powerof2cst))
simplification and then another simplifier optimizing away the left shift
when log2(powerof2cst) was 0. Another one is signed BOOLEAN_TYPE with
precision > 1, where indeed we shouldn't be doing the negation in type,
because it isn't well defined in that type, the type only has 2 valid
values, 0 and -1. As an alternative, we could also e.g. cast to
signed 1-bit precision BOOLEAN_TYPE and then extend to type.
And the last case is what we were doing for types which have both 1 and -1
(all all ones) as valid values (i.e. all signed/unsigned ENUMERAL_TYPEs,
INTEGRAL_TYPEs and BITINT_TYPEs with precision > 1).
The following patch avoids the hops through << 0 for 1-bit precision
and uses build_nonstandard_integer_type solely for the BOOLEAN_TYPE types
(where we have a guarantee the precision is reasonably small, nothing ought
to be created 129+ bit precision BOOLEAN_TYPEs).
2023-10-04 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR tree-optimization/111668
* match.pd (a ? CST1 : CST2): Handle the a ? -1 : 0 and
a ? 0 : -1 cases before the powerof2cst cases and differentiate
between 1-bit precision types, larger precision boolean types
and other integral types. Fix comment pastos and formatting.