-// RUN: %llvmgcc -O3 -S -o - -emit-llvm %s | grep readonly
+// RUN: %llvmgcc -O3 -S -o - -emit-llvm %s | not grep readonly
// RUN: %llvmgcc -O3 -S -o - -emit-llvm %s | not grep readnone
-// The struct being passed byval means that we need to mark the
-// function readonly instead of readnone. Readnone would allow
-// stores to the arg to be deleted in the caller.
+// The struct being passed byval means that we cannot mark the
+// function readnone. Readnone would allow stores to the arg to
+// be deleted in the caller. We also don't allow readonly since
+// the callee might write to the byval parameter. The inliner
+// would have to assume the worse and introduce an explicit
+// temporary when inlining such a function, which is costly for
+// the common case in which the byval argument is not written.
struct S { int A[1000]; };
int __attribute__ ((const)) f(struct S x) { return x.A[0]; }
-
+int g(struct S x) __attribute__ ((pure));
+int h(struct S x) { return g(x); }