pr38704.c
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// RUN: %libomptarget-compile-run-and-check-aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
// RUN: %libomptarget-compile-run-and-check-powerpc64-ibm-linux-gnu
// RUN: %libomptarget-compile-run-and-check-powerpc64le-ibm-linux-gnu
// RUN: %libomptarget-compile-run-and-check-x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
// Clang 6.0 doesn't use the new map interface, undefined behavior when
// the compiler emits "old" interface code for structures.
// UNSUPPORTED: clang-6
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
typedef struct {
int *ptr1;
int *ptr2;
} StructWithPtrs;
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
StructWithPtrs s, s2;
s.ptr1 = malloc(sizeof(int));
s.ptr2 = malloc(2 * sizeof(int));
s2.ptr1 = malloc(sizeof(int));
s2.ptr2 = malloc(2 * sizeof(int));
#pragma omp target enter data map(to: s2.ptr2[0:1])
#pragma omp target map(s.ptr1[0:1], s.ptr2[0:2])
{
s.ptr1[0] = 1;
s.ptr2[0] = 2;
s.ptr2[1] = 3;
}
#pragma omp target exit data map(from: s2.ptr1[0:1], s2.ptr2[0:1])
// CHECK: s.ptr1[0] = 1
// CHECK: s.ptr2[0] = 2
// CHECK: s.ptr2[1] = 3
printf("s.ptr1[0] = %d\n", s.ptr1[0]);
printf("s.ptr2[0] = %d\n", s.ptr2[0]);
printf("s.ptr2[1] = %d\n", s.ptr2[1]);
free(s.ptr1);
free(s.ptr2);
free(s2.ptr1);
free(s2.ptr2);
return 0;
}