don't call it according to the runtime specification and especially
WRT to gp this can cause trouble. The gcc 3.3.1 import broke the
ia64 runtime because the compiler saved gp prior to us being able
to set it properly. Restoring gp after the calls would then invalidate
gp and cause segmentation faults later on.
By rewriting _start() as an assembly function, we also avoided even
more gcc dependences, by trying to use gcc specific features to work
around the problem.
This version of _start() does not reference _DYNAMIC. We register the
cleanup function when it's a non-NULL pointer. The kernel will always
pass a NULL pointer and dynamic linkers may pass a non-NULL pointer.
The machine independent code to set __progname now unfortunately is
written in assembly. So be it.
- -elf in CFLAGS had no effect except to reduce portability.
- -elf in LDFLAGS had even less effect, since LDFLAGS is not used.
- -Wall in CFLAGS had no effect except to reduce portability and break
overriding of WARNS, since the setting of WARNS implies -Wall.
since it has been MFC'ed. See the log message for the previous commit
for more details. The alignment bug in gcc-3 has not been fixed, but
it is not very serious and the previous commit just moved it (as intended).
Approved by: re (murray)
-fomit-frame-pointer is not used). This is mostly moot for -current
because gcc-3 does the alignment (slightly incorrectly) in main().
This patch is intended for easy MFC'ing and should be backed out in
-current soon since it causes compiler warnings and better fixes are
possible in -current. The best fix is to do nothing here and wait for
gcc to do stack alignment right. gcc-3 aligns the stack in main(), but
does it too late for main()'s local variables and too late for anything
called before main(). A misaligned stack is now more than an efficiency
problem, since some SSE instructions in some or all (hardware)
implementations trap on misaligned operands even if alignment checking
is not enabled.
PR: 41528:
Submitted by: NIIMI Satoshi <sa2c@sa2c.net> (original version)
MFC after: 3 days
Assembler macros are tidied up and made as similar as sanely possible.
The macros are translated into C (__inline static) functions for lint.
Declaration orders are made the same.
Declarations are all ISOfied and tidied up.
Comment contents have gratuitous diffs removed.
The net result is a bunch of crt1.c's that are 90% the same.
It may be possible to now encapsulate the differences in one
MD header, and have only one MI crt1.c file (although the macros
to do this may be ugly).
Helpful comments by: obrien, bde
Alpha tested by: des
i386-elf tested by: markm
Get rid of the INTERNALSTATICLIB knob and just use plain INTERNALLIB.
INTERNALLIB now means to build static library only and don't install
anything. Added a NOINSTALLLIB knob for libpam/modules. To not
build any library at all, just do not set LIB.
except to generate spurious warnings about a system header <sys/param.h>
having some inline functions (the bswap family). This backs out the main
part of rev.1.5 (which was the only part left). The problem fixed by
rev.1.5 of the Makefile went away in rev.1.5 of ../common/crtbegin.c
when the references to do_ctors() and do_dtors() in the latter were moved
from inline asm to C code.
This leaves the problem that implementation details cause warnings.
Discussed with: jdp
Also, make an internal _getprogname() that is used only inside
libc. For libc, getprogname(3) is a weak symbol in case a
function of the same name is defined in userland.