Here after dependent substitution of {Ts...} into the alias 'wrap',
since we never partially instantiate a requires-expr, we end up with a
requires-expr whose REQUIRES_EXPR_EXTRA_ARGS contains an
ARGUMENT_PACK_SELECT (which just resolves to the parameter pack Ts).
Then when hashing the resulting dependent specialization of A, we crash
from iterative_hash_template_arg since it deliberately doesn't handle
ARGUMENT_PACK_SELECT.
Like in
r12-7102-gdb5f1c17031ad8, it seems the right fix here is to
resolve ARGUMENT_PACK_SELECT arguments before storing them into an
extra args tree (such as REQUIRES_EXPR).
PR c++/103105
gcc/cp/ChangeLog:
* pt.c (build_extra_args): Call preserve_args.
gcc/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* g++.dg/cpp2a/concepts-requires29.C: New test.
* g++.dg/cpp2a/concepts-requires29a.C: New test.
(cherry picked from commit
e2c7070ac7740508a7c49bfee9f895e216a272d6)
{
/* Make a copy of the extra arguments so that they won't get changed
out from under us. */
- tree extra = copy_template_args (args);
+ tree extra = preserve_args (copy_template_args (args), /*cow_p=*/false);
if (local_specializations)
if (tree locals = extract_local_specs (pattern, complain))
extra = tree_cons (NULL_TREE, extra, locals);
--- /dev/null
+// PR c++/103105
+// { dg-do compile { target c++20 } }
+
+template<bool> struct A;
+
+template<class... Ts>
+using wrap = A<1 != (0 + ... + requires { Ts(); })>;
+
+template<class... Ts> using type = wrap<Ts...>;
+
+using ty0 = type<>;
+using ty0 = A<true>;
+
+using ty1 = type<int>;
+using ty1 = A<false>;
+
+using ty2 = type<int, int>;
+using ty2 = A<true>;
--- /dev/null
+// PR c++/103105
+// { dg-do compile { target c++20 } }
+
+template<class...> struct list;
+
+template<bool> struct A;
+
+template<class T, class... Ts>
+using wrap = A<1 != (0 + ... + requires { T() = Ts(); })>;
+
+template<class... Ts> using type = list<wrap<Ts, Ts...>...>;
+
+using ty0 = type<>;
+using ty0 = list<>;
+
+using ty1 = type<int>;
+using ty1 = list<A<true>>;
+
+using ty2 = type<int, int>;
+using ty2 = list<A<true>, A<true>>;
+
+using ty3 = type<int, int, int>;
+using ty3 = list<A<true>, A<true>, A<true>>;