================
@@ -9125,9 +9126,25 @@ bool
LValueExprEvaluator::VisitCompoundLiteralExpr(const CompoundLiteralExpr *E) {
assert((!Info.getLangOpts().CPlusPlus || E->isFileScope()) &&
"lvalue compound literal in c++?");
- // Defer visiting the literal until the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion. We can
- // only see this when folding in C, so there's no standard to follow here.
- return Success(E);
+ APValue *Lit;
+ // If CompountLiteral has static storage, its value can be used outside
+ // this expression. So evaluate it once and store it in ASTContext.
+ if (E->hasStaticStorage()) {
+ Lit = E->getOrCreateStaticValue(Info.Ctx);
+ Result.set(E);
+ // Reset any previously evaluated state, otherwise evaluation below might
+ // fail.
+ // FIXME: Should we just re-use the previously evaluated value instead?
+ *Lit = APValue();
----------------
kadircet wrote:
> It's not really about whether we re-evaluate it, it's about whether we
> evaluate it in the right context
Thanks, you're right. But I think that's about usage of `EvaluateInPlace`,
rather than resetting and re-evaluating expression here. Added another comment
next to it.
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/137163
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