live as long as they needed to. This led to equality tests involving persistent variables often failing or succeeding when they had no business doing so. To do this, I introduced the ability for a memory allocation to "leak" - that is, to persist in the process beyond the lifetime of the expression. Hand-declared persistent variables do this now. <rdar://problem/13956311> llvm-svn: 182528
15 lines
438 B
C
15 lines
438 B
C
//===-- main.c --------------------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
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//
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// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
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//
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// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
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// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
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//
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//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
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int main (int argc, char const *argv[])
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{
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int i = 5;
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return 0; // Set breakpoint here
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}
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