SLAU132Y September 2004 – June 2021
C and C++ programs generally use many pointer variables. Frequently, compilers are unable to determine whether or not two or more I values (lowercase L: symbols, pointer references, or structure references) refer to the same memory location. This aliasing of memory locations often prevents the compiler from retaining values in registers because it cannot be sure that the register and memory continue to hold the same values over time.
Alias disambiguation is a technique that determines when two pointer expressions cannot point to the same location, allowing the compiler to freely optimize such expressions.