freebsd-dev/sys/conf/kern.mk
Ruslan Bukin 5bca221511 Add full softfloat and hardfloat support for MIPS.
This adds new target architectures for hardfloat:
mipselhf mipshf mips64elhf mips64hf.

Tested in QEMU only.

Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Sponsored by:	HEIF5
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D8376
2016-10-31 15:33:58 +00:00

276 lines
8.9 KiB
Makefile

# $FreeBSD$
#
# Warning flags for compiling the kernel and components of the kernel:
#
CWARNFLAGS?= -Wall -Wredundant-decls -Wnested-externs -Wstrict-prototypes \
-Wmissing-prototypes -Wpointer-arith -Winline -Wcast-qual \
-Wundef -Wno-pointer-sign ${FORMAT_EXTENSIONS} \
-Wmissing-include-dirs -fdiagnostics-show-option \
-Wno-unknown-pragmas \
${CWARNEXTRA}
#
# The following flags are next up for working on:
# -Wextra
# Disable a few warnings for clang, since there are several places in the
# kernel where fixing them is more trouble than it is worth, or where there is
# a false positive.
.if ${COMPILER_TYPE} == "clang"
NO_WCONSTANT_CONVERSION= -Wno-error-constant-conversion
NO_WSHIFT_COUNT_NEGATIVE= -Wno-error-shift-count-negative
NO_WSHIFT_COUNT_OVERFLOW= -Wno-error-shift-count-overflow
NO_WSELF_ASSIGN= -Wno-error-self-assign
NO_WUNNEEDED_INTERNAL_DECL= -Wno-error-unneeded-internal-declaration
NO_WSOMETIMES_UNINITIALIZED= -Wno-error-sometimes-uninitialized
NO_WCAST_QUAL= -Wno-error-cast-qual
# Several other warnings which might be useful in some cases, but not severe
# enough to error out the whole kernel build. Display them anyway, so there is
# some incentive to fix them eventually.
CWARNEXTRA?= -Wno-error-tautological-compare -Wno-error-empty-body \
-Wno-error-parentheses-equality -Wno-error-unused-function \
-Wno-error-pointer-sign
.if ${COMPILER_VERSION} >= 30700
CWARNEXTRA+= -Wno-error-shift-negative-value
.endif
CLANG_NO_IAS= -no-integrated-as
.if ${COMPILER_VERSION} < 30500
# XXX: clang < 3.5 integrated-as doesn't grok .codeNN directives
CLANG_NO_IAS34= -no-integrated-as
.endif
.endif
.if ${COMPILER_TYPE} == "gcc"
.if ${COMPILER_VERSION} >= 40800
# Catch-all for all the things that are in our tree, but for which we're
# not yet ready for this compiler.
CWARNEXTRA?= -Wno-error=address \
-Wno-error=aggressive-loop-optimizations \
-Wno-error=array-bounds \
-Wno-error=attributes \
-Wno-error=cast-qual \
-Wno-error=enum-compare \
-Wno-error=inline \
-Wno-error=maybe-uninitialized \
-Wno-error=overflow \
-Wno-error=sequence-point \
-Wno-error=strict-overflow \
-Wno-error=unused-but-set-variable
.if ${COMPILER_VERSION} >= 60100
CWARNEXTRA+= -Wno-error=misleading-indentation \
-Wno-error=nonnull-compare \
-Wno-error=shift-overflow \
-Wno-error=tautological-compare
.endif
.else
# For gcc 4.2, eliminate the too-often-wrong warnings about uninitialized vars.
CWARNEXTRA?= -Wno-uninitialized
.endif
.endif
# External compilers may not support our format extensions. Allow them
# to be disabled. WARNING: format checking is disabled in this case.
.if ${MK_FORMAT_EXTENSIONS} == "no"
FORMAT_EXTENSIONS= -Wno-format
.elif ${COMPILER_TYPE} == "clang" && ${COMPILER_VERSION} >= 30600
FORMAT_EXTENSIONS= -D__printf__=__freebsd_kprintf__
.else
FORMAT_EXTENSIONS= -fformat-extensions
.endif
#
# On i386, do not align the stack to 16-byte boundaries. Otherwise GCC 2.95
# and above adds code to the entry and exit point of every function to align the
# stack to 16-byte boundaries -- thus wasting approximately 12 bytes of stack
# per function call. While the 16-byte alignment may benefit micro benchmarks,
# it is probably an overall loss as it makes the code bigger (less efficient
# use of code cache tag lines) and uses more stack (less efficient use of data
# cache tag lines). Explicitly prohibit the use of FPU, SSE and other SIMD
# operations inside the kernel itself. These operations are exclusively
# reserved for user applications.
#
# gcc:
# Setting -mno-mmx implies -mno-3dnow
# Setting -mno-sse implies -mno-sse2, -mno-sse3 and -mno-ssse3
#
# clang:
# Setting -mno-mmx implies -mno-3dnow and -mno-3dnowa
# Setting -mno-sse implies -mno-sse2, -mno-sse3, -mno-ssse3, -mno-sse41 and -mno-sse42
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "i386"
CFLAGS.gcc+= -mno-align-long-strings -mpreferred-stack-boundary=2
CFLAGS.clang+= -mno-aes -mno-avx
CFLAGS+= -mno-mmx -mno-sse -msoft-float
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "arm"
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "aarch64"
# We generally don't want fpu instructions in the kernel.
CFLAGS += -mgeneral-regs-only
# Reserve x18 for pcpu data
CFLAGS += -ffixed-x18
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "riscv"
CFLAGS.gcc+= -mcmodel=medany
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
#
# For sparc64 we want the medany code model so modules may be located
# anywhere in the 64-bit address space. We also tell GCC to use floating
# point emulation. This avoids using floating point registers for integer
# operations which it has a tendency to do.
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "sparc64"
CFLAGS.clang+= -mcmodel=large -fno-dwarf2-cfi-asm
CFLAGS.gcc+= -mcmodel=medany -msoft-float
INLINE_LIMIT?= 15000
.endif
#
# For AMD64, we explicitly prohibit the use of FPU, SSE and other SIMD
# operations inside the kernel itself. These operations are exclusively
# reserved for user applications.
#
# gcc:
# Setting -mno-mmx implies -mno-3dnow
# Setting -mno-sse implies -mno-sse2, -mno-sse3, -mno-ssse3 and -mfpmath=387
#
# clang:
# Setting -mno-mmx implies -mno-3dnow and -mno-3dnowa
# Setting -mno-sse implies -mno-sse2, -mno-sse3, -mno-ssse3, -mno-sse41 and -mno-sse42
# (-mfpmath= is not supported)
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "amd64"
CFLAGS.clang+= -mno-aes -mno-avx
CFLAGS+= -mcmodel=kernel -mno-red-zone -mno-mmx -mno-sse -msoft-float \
-fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
#
# For PowerPC we tell gcc to use floating point emulation. This avoids using
# floating point registers for integer operations which it has a tendency to do.
# Also explicitly disable Altivec instructions inside the kernel.
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "powerpc"
CFLAGS+= -mno-altivec
CFLAGS.clang+= -mllvm -disable-ppc-float-in-variadic=true
CFLAGS.gcc+= -msoft-float
INLINE_LIMIT?= 15000
.endif
.if ${MACHINE_ARCH} == "powerpcspe"
CFLAGS+= -mno-spe
.endif
#
# Use dot symbols on powerpc64 to make ddb happy
#
.if ${MACHINE_ARCH} == "powerpc64"
CFLAGS.gcc+= -mcall-aixdesc
.endif
#
# For MIPS we also tell gcc to use floating point emulation
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "mips"
CFLAGS+= -msoft-float
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.if ${TARGET_ARCH:Mmips*hf} != ""
CFLAGS+= -DCPU_HAVEFPU
.endif
.endif
#
# GCC 3.0 and above like to do certain optimizations based on the
# assumption that the program is linked against libc. Stop this.
#
CFLAGS+= -ffreestanding
#
# The C standard leaves signed integer overflow behavior undefined.
# gcc and clang opimizers take advantage of this. The kernel makes
# use of signed integer wraparound mechanics so we need the compiler
# to treat it as a wraparound and not take shortcuts.
#
CFLAGS+= -fwrapv
#
# GCC SSP support
#
.if ${MK_SSP} != "no" && \
${MACHINE_CPUARCH} != "arm" && ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} != "mips"
CFLAGS+= -fstack-protector
.endif
#
# Add -gdwarf-2 when compiling -g. The default starting in clang v3.4
# and gcc 4.8 is to generate DWARF version 4. However, our tools don't
# cope well with DWARF 4, so force it to genereate DWARF2, which they
# understand. Do this unconditionally as it is harmless when not needed,
# but critical for these newer versions.
#
.if ${CFLAGS:M-g} != "" && ${CFLAGS:M-gdwarf*} == ""
CFLAGS+= -gdwarf-2
.endif
CFLAGS+= ${CWARNFLAGS:M*} ${CWARNFLAGS.${.IMPSRC:T}}
CFLAGS+= ${CFLAGS.${COMPILER_TYPE}} ${CFLAGS.${.IMPSRC:T}}
# Tell bmake not to mistake standard targets for things to be searched for
# or expect to ever be up-to-date.
PHONY_NOTMAIN = afterdepend afterinstall all beforedepend beforeinstall \
beforelinking build build-tools buildfiles buildincludes \
checkdpadd clean cleandepend cleandir cleanobj configure \
depend distclean distribute exe \
html includes install installfiles installincludes lint \
obj objlink objs objwarn \
realinstall regress \
tags whereobj
.PHONY: ${PHONY_NOTMAIN}
.NOTMAIN: ${PHONY_NOTMAIN}
CSTD= c99
.if ${CSTD} == "k&r"
CFLAGS+= -traditional
.elif ${CSTD} == "c89" || ${CSTD} == "c90"
CFLAGS+= -std=iso9899:1990
.elif ${CSTD} == "c94" || ${CSTD} == "c95"
CFLAGS+= -std=iso9899:199409
.elif ${CSTD} == "c99"
CFLAGS+= -std=iso9899:1999
.else # CSTD
CFLAGS+= -std=${CSTD}
.endif # CSTD
# Set target-specific linker emulation name. Used by ld -b binary to convert
# binary files into ELF objects.
LD_EMULATION_aarch64=aarch64elf
LD_EMULATION_amd64=elf_x86_64_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_arm=armelf_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_armeb=armelf_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_armv6=armelf_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_i386=elf_i386_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_mips= elf32btsmip_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_mips64= elf64btsmip_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_mipsel= elf32ltsmip_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_mips64el= elf64ltsmip_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_mipsn32= elf32btsmipn32_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_mipsn32el= elf32btsmipn32_fbsd # I don't think this is a thing that works
LD_EMULATION_powerpc= elf32ppc_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_powerpcspe= elf32ppc_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_powerpc64= elf64ppc_fbsd
LD_EMULATION_riscv= elf64riscv
LD_EMULATION_sparc64= elf64_sparc_fbsd
LD_EMULATION=${LD_EMULATION_${MACHINE_ARCH}}