> They are the alias set mechanism, which you don't seem to understand.
> They always have been.

I certainly understand the alias set mechanism.  It sounded like you were
talking about something else since if the only thing we're using is alias
sets, I'm mystified as to what the issue is.

> I'd rather not explain all of alias.c to you in an email message, to
> be honest

As I said, I completely understand alias.c.  It sounded like you were
trying to do something OUTSIDE of that.

So let's start again: why is it suddenly necessary that their be a
hierarchy of alias sets when no fields are addressable?  If I have
        struct foo {int a: 1; int b: 1;};

why do we need more than one alias set?  Who is it that requires any
subsetting at all?  Certainly nothing in alias.c does.

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