freebsd-skq/sys/conf/kern.mk

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# $FreeBSD$
#
# Warning flags for compiling the kernel and components of the kernel.
#
# Note that the newly added -Wcast-qual is responsible for generating
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# most of the remaining warnings. Warnings introduced with -Wall will
# also pop up, but are easier to fix.
CWARNFLAGS?= -Wall -Wredundant-decls -Wnested-externs -Wstrict-prototypes \
-Wmissing-prototypes -Wpointer-arith -Winline -Wcast-qual \
-Wundef -Wno-pointer-sign -fformat-extensions \
-Wmissing-include-dirs
#
# The following flags are next up for working on:
# -Wextra
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#
# 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.
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "i386"
.if ${CC:T:Mclang} != "clang"
CFLAGS+= -mno-align-long-strings -mpreferred-stack-boundary=2
.endif
CFLAGS+= -mno-mmx -mno-3dnow -mno-sse -mno-sse2 -mno-sse3 -msoft-float
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "arm"
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INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.endif
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#
# For IA-64, we use r13 for the kernel globals pointer and we only use
# a very small subset of float registers for integer divides.
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "ia64"
CFLAGS+= -ffixed-r13 -mfixed-range=f32-f127 -fpic #-mno-sdata
INLINE_LIMIT?= 15000
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.endif
#
# For sparc64 we want medlow code model, and we 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+= -mcmodel=medany -msoft-float
INLINE_LIMIT?= 15000
.endif
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#
# 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.
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#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "amd64"
CFLAGS+= -mcmodel=kernel -mno-red-zone \
-mfpmath=387 -mno-mmx -mno-3dnow -mno-sse -mno-sse2 -mno-sse3 \
-msoft-float -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables
INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
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.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+= -msoft-float -mno-altivec
INLINE_LIMIT?= 15000
.endif
#
# Use dot symbols on powerpc64 to make ddb happy
#
.if ${MACHINE_ARCH} == "powerpc64"
CFLAGS+= -mcall-aixdesc
.endif
#
# For MIPS we also tell gcc to use floating point emulation
#
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "mips"
CFLAGS+= -msoft-float
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INLINE_LIMIT?= 8000
.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
#
# GCC SSP support
#
.if ${MK_SSP} != "no" && ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} != "ia64" && \
${MACHINE_CPUARCH} != "arm" && ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} != "mips"
CFLAGS+= -fstack-protector
.endif
#
# Enable CTF conversation on request
#
.if defined(WITH_CTF)
.undef NO_CTF
.endif