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Rémy Oudompheng authored
Compiling expressions like: s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[s[i]]]]]]]]]]]] make 5g and 6g run out of registers. Such expressions can arise if a slice is used to represent a permutation and the user wants to iterate it. This is due to the usual problem of allocating registers before going down the expression tree, instead of allocating them in a postfix way. The functions cgenr and agenr (that generate a value to a newly allocated register instead of an existing location), are either introduced or modified when they already existed to allocate the new register as late as possible, and sudoaddable is disabled for OINDEX nodes so that igen/agenr is used instead. Update #4207. R=dave, daniel.morsing, rsc CC=golang-dev https://golang.org/cl/6733055
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