instructions. Partially obtained from OpenBSD by Pedro Giffuni, while I
added the fcomip variants.
Apparently this should help with compiling certain variants of WebKit.
MFC after: 3 days
Add support for stac/clac instructions to manipulate the flag
that controls the behaviour of Intel's Supervisor Mode Access
Prevention (SMAP) feature.
Tested by: dim
Obtained from: OpenBSD
MFC after: 5 days
This fixes the problem on amd64 miscompiling mpboot.s causing boot
issues... We are still using gas for a few files in the kernel...
Submitted by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
Thanks to Mike Belopuhov for the pointer to the OpenBSD patch, though
OpenBSD's gcc is very different that it only helped w/ where to modify,
not how... Thanks to jhb for some early reviews...
Reviewed by: imp, kib
MFC after: 1 month
adding appropriate table entries, the assembler had to be adjusted as
these are the first non-SSE instructions to use a 3-byte opcode (and a
mandatory prefix to boot).
MFC after: 1 month
instructions. I reimplemented this from scratch based on the Intel
manuals and the existing support for handling the fxsave and fxrstor
instructions. This will let us use these instructions natively with GCC
rather than hardcoding the opcodes in hex.
Reviewed by: kib
MFC after: 1 month
us up to version 2.17.50.20070703, at the last GPLv2 commit.
Amongst others, this added upstream support for some FreeBSD-specific
things that we previously had to manually hack in, such as the OSABI
label support, and so on.
There are also quite a number of new files, some for cpu's (e.g. SPU)
that we may or may not be interested in, but those can be cleaned up
later on, if needed.
The change made to bfd/elf.c in upstream revision 1.217.4.3 (which was a
revert of an earlier change), caused objcopy on powerpc to fail to copy
debug info from kernel modules. This had to be fixed by applying the
diff from upstream revision 1.243 on top of it.
o) Add TARGET_ABI to the MIPS toolchain build process. This sets the default
ABI to one of o32, n32 or n64. If it is not set, o32 is assumed as that is
the current default.
o) Set the default GCC cpu type to any specified TARGET_CPUTYPE. This is
necessary to have a working "cc" if e.g. mips64 is specified, as binutils
will refuse to link objects using different ISAs in some cases.
o) Add support for n32 and n64 ABIs to binutils and GCC.
o) Add additional required libgcc2 stubs for n32 and n64.
o) Add support for the "mips64r2" architecture to GCC. Add the "octeon"
o) When static linking, wrap default libraries in --start-group and
--end-group. This is required for static linking to work on n64 with the
interdependencies between libraries there. This is what other OSes that
support n64 seem to do, as well.
o) Fix our GCC spec to define __mips64 for 64-bit targets, not __mips64__, the
former being what libgcc, etc., check and the latter seemingly being a
misspelling of a hand merge from a Linux spec.
o) When no TARGET_CPUTYPE is specified at build time, make GCC take the default
ISA from the ABI. Our old defaults were too liberal and assumed that 64-bit
ABIs should default to the MIPS64 ISA and that 32-bit ABIs should default to
the MIPS32 ISA, when we are supporting or will support some systems based on
earlier 32-bit and 64-bit ISAs, most notably MIPS-III.
o) Merge a new opcode file (and support code) from a later version of binutils
and add flags and code necessary to support Octeon-specific instructions.
This should also make merging opcodes for other modern architectures easier.
Reviewed by: imp
Binutils has a "contrib" subdirectory - thus flattening cannot happen
without renaming the upper level contrib directory in a first pass.
Also, don't record this move and remove any keyword expansion.
(Note this makes the vendor branch not represent Binutils in the vendor's
CVS repository at any point in time. Portmgr did not like the state of
Binutils on Sparc that represented the point in time the vendor fixed this
issue. I'd rather have fixed this on RELENG_6.)
Approved by: re