Some of the routines were using artificially limited builtin already,
drop the explicit limit.
The use of builtins allows quite often allows the compiler to elide the call
or most zeroing to begin with. For instance, if the target object is 32 bytes
in size and gets zeroed + has 16 bytes initialized, the compiler can just
add code to zero out the rest.
Note not all the primites have asm variants and some of the existing ones
are not optimized. Maintaines are strongly encourage to take a look
(regardless of this change).
1. Remove special-casing of 0 as it just results in an extra function call.
This is clearly pessimal.
2. Drop the inline stuff. For the most part it is much better served with
__builtin_memset (coming later).
3. Move the declaration to systm.h to match other funcs.
Archs are encouraged to implement the variant for their own platform so that
this implementation can be dropped.
Shortly, we'll be moving to defining bzero and memset in terms of
__builting_memset. To do that, we can't have macro calls to bzero in
the fallback impelmentation of memset. Normal calls to bzero are fine.
All 4 architectures that use this have their own copies of bzero, so
there's no mutual recursion issue between memset and bcopy.
Mainly focus on files that use BSD 2-Clause license, however the tool I
was using misidentified many licenses so this was mostly a manual - error
prone - task.
The Software Package Data Exchange (SPDX) group provides a specification
to make it easier for automated tools to detect and summarize well known
opensource licenses. We are gradually adopting the specification, noting
that the tags are considered only advisory and do not, in any way,
superceed or replace the license texts.