; If we have an 'and' of the result of an 'or', and one of the 'or' operands ; cannot have contributed any of the resultant bits, delete the or. This ; occurs for very common C/C++ code like this: ; ; struct foo { int A : 16; int B : 16; }; ; void test(struct foo *F, int X, int Y) { ; F->A = X; F->B = Y; ; } ; ; Which corresponds to test1. ; ; This tests arbitrary precision integers. ; RUN: opt < %s -passes=instcombine -S | not grep "or " ; END. define i17 @test1(i17 %X, i17 %Y) { %A = and i17 %X, 7 %B = and i17 %Y, 8 %C = or i17 %A, %B %D = and i17 %C, 7 ;; This cannot include any bits from %Y! ret i17 %D } define i49 @test3(i49 %X, i49 %Y) { %B = shl i49 %Y, 1 %C = or i49 %X, %B %D = and i49 %C, 1 ;; This cannot include any bits from %Y! ret i49 %D } define i67 @test4(i67 %X, i67 %Y) { %B = lshr i67 %Y, 66 %C = or i67 %X, %B %D = and i67 %C, 2 ;; This cannot include any bits from %Y! ret i67 %D } define i231 @or_test1(i231 %X, i231 %Y) { %A = and i231 %X, 1 %B = or i231 %A, 1 ;; This cannot include any bits from X! ret i231 %B } define i7 @or_test2(i7 %X, i7 %Y) { %A = shl i7 %X, 6 %B = or i7 %A, 64 ;; This cannot include any bits from X! ret i7 %B }