* be consistant on protecting "#define FOO"s with "#undef FOO".
* be consistant that macro params are upper case, and commas are followed
by a space in the macro definition
* protect macro param expansion by ()'s
* break long lines
* line continuations chars to consistant column
* remove trailing spaces
FreeBSD wide config file.
This includes "WORD_SWITCH_TAKES_ARG" & "SWITCH_TAKES_ARG". Platforms
such as FreeBSD/MIPS will need to override these two defintions, but it
can #undef them and define them approapiately.
* In the absence of the env vars TMPDIR, TMP, TEMP (which override this
ordering), attempt to create temperary files in /tmp, P_tmpdir (/var/tmp),
/usr/tmp, and . until successful.
* Support for our dual ELF/a.out building ability
* Our custom ASM_* definitions
* Our custom debugger and profiling related definitions
* Our custom STARTFILE/ENDFILE specs
* The stock EGCS 1.1.2 freebsd-elf.h file depended on
egcs-1.1.2/gcc/config/linux.h, which included "svr4.h". We will
include "svr4.h" via our "tm.h" definition. So add the few bits
from "linux.h" we actually needed.
* Using our current crtbegin.o/crtend.o we cannot support the DWARF2
unwinding mechanisms. In the future we will switch to the
non-sjlj-exceptions type exception machanism. However the `make world'
bootstrap problems with the EGCS crtstuff.c must be overcome first.
* Our a.out gas doesn't "know" to use NOP's for aligns while in the text
section. Thus the a.out alignment generation needed tweaking from
what we did with GCC 2.7.2. [from BDE]
* The definition of SUPPORTS_ONE_ONLY prevents the compiler from trying
to use "linkonce" sections for a.out. The definition of
NO_DBX_FUNCTION_END we had causes it to avoid .stabs symbols that the
assembler cannot handle for a.out. [from JDP]
* The previous "EXCEPTION_SECTION_FUNCTION" is the wrong name for EGCS.
It also needed tweaking for EGCS. [from JDP]
Also bump __FreeBSD_cc_version to 400002 in case we need to know we are
using EGCS at some point.
Don't exclude directories that the linker is "known" to search (/lib
and /usr/lib) when deciding whether to pass certain paths to the
linker. Under FreeBSD, the linker is actually known to never search
/lib and to only search /usr/lib in the elf case. Not passing the
paths causes at best causes confusing differences for cross compiling.
This change is conditional on FREEBSD_NATIVE but should be absolute.
Also return "1" rather than "-1". According to bde: -1 is unrepresentable.
Exit statuses must be >= 0 and <= 255, at least if chars are 8 bits and
shorts are 16 bits. This seems to only be documented indirectly in exit.2
by referring to wait.2. WEXITSTATUS() throws away all except the low 8 bits
of the status returned by _exit(), and the kernel actually only stores 8
bits of it (if chars are 8 bits, etc.), so wait() can't return any more bits.
Obtained from: rev 1.4 of contrib/gcc/gcc.c
if compiling with -fformat-extensions). Gcc's format checker never
actually supported %q length specifiers. It treats %q as an alias
for %ll, which is correct if quad_t is long long (e.g., on i386's)
and broken otherwise (e.g., on alphas).
quad_t's currently should be printed in the same way that they
already need to be printed to avoid compiler warnings on all
supported systems: cast them to a standard type that is at least
as large (long or long long) and use the length specifier for that
(%l or %ll). This is problematic since long long isn't standard
yet. C9x's intmax_t should be implemented soon.
Don't accept %L length specifiers in the kernel either. The only
legitimate ones are for long doubles, but the kernel doesn't even
support plain doubles. (gcc bogusly accepts %Ld as an alias for
%lld, and it sometimes prints "q" in error messages about "ll" and
"L" length specifiers, becauses it represents all these specifiers
as 'q'.)
Submitted by: bde
- plain %r and %z were disallowed. The hard NULs in the warnings were
hopefully caused by disallowing of plain formats being nonsense.
- new formats for shortening to a byte were allowed, but even the libc
printf doesn't support them.
- old %hr and %hz formats were allowed, but the kernel printf doesn't
support them. The kernel doesn't support %hd either, but this is
harder to fix.
Submitted by: bde
* Consistantly put spaces after "," in macro param lists
* Consistantly align continuation characters.
* Don't need to supply all variations of __FOO__ in CPP_PREDEFINES,
gcc will do that for us.