[llvm] [msan] Handle x86_avx512_(min|max)_p[sd]_512 intrinsics (PR #124421)

via llvm-commits llvm-commits at lists.llvm.org
Sat Jan 25 09:38:07 PST 2025


github-actions[bot] wrote:

<!--LLVM CODE FORMAT COMMENT: {undef deprecator}-->


:warning: undef deprecator found issues in your code. :warning:

<details>
<summary>
You can test this locally with the following command:
</summary>

``````````bash
git diff -U0 --pickaxe-regex -S '([^a-zA-Z0-9#_-]undef[^a-zA-Z0-9_-]|UndefValue::get)' 1b1270f30bbdb2c7a310009d0512e167b09bac48 6613d0e3bbac38d12f4177b0271b3adef2c23588 llvm/test/Instrumentation/MemorySanitizer/avx512-intrinsics.ll llvm/lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/MemorySanitizer.cpp
``````````

</details>


The following files introduce new uses of undef:
 - llvm/test/Instrumentation/MemorySanitizer/avx512-intrinsics.ll

[Undef](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#undefined-values) is now deprecated and should only be used in the rare cases where no replacement is possible. For example, a load of uninitialized memory yields `undef`. You should use `poison` values for placeholders instead.

In tests, avoid using `undef` and having tests that trigger undefined behavior. If you need an operand with some unimportant value, you can add a new argument to the function and use that instead.

For example, this is considered a bad practice:
```llvm
define void @fn() {
  ...
  br i1 undef, ...
}
```

Please use the following instead:
```llvm
define void @fn(i1 %cond) {
  ...
  br i1 %cond, ...
}
```

Please refer to the [Undefined Behavior Manual](https://llvm.org/docs/UndefinedBehavior.html) for more information.



https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/124421


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