A bare `return X;` / `raise` in the middle of a block closed the current
LLVM basic block, but lowerBlock / lowerBlockValue only stopped the
statement loop on the `block_terminated` flag — which lowerReturn
deliberately never sets (it would leak past an `if cond { return }` merge
block). So trailing dead statements were emitted into the already-closed
block, tripping the LLVM verifier with "Terminator found in the middle of
a basic block".
Fix: also stop the statement loop when currentBlockHasTerminator() is
true. That is CFG-level termination of the *current* block, which is
naturally false at an if / inline-if merge block, so conditional returns
still fall through to their trailing statements.
This unblocks ERR E5.1: the canonical failable-closure form
`closure((x) -> (s32,!) { raise error.X; return x; })` has a dead
`return x;` after the unconditional raise and tripped the verifier.
Regression: examples/0038-basic-dead-code-after-terminator.sx.
5 lines
44 B
Plaintext
5 lines
44 B
Plaintext
const_one=1
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raised=0
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clamp_hi=10
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clamp_lo=7
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