Bruce Evans ab372207b2 Fixed botched tables:
- the operands for bt, bts, arpl and `enter' were reversed.
- btr was reported as bts (with the correct operand order).
- cmpxchg was misplaced.  It was misplaced differently in the
  comments.  It is misplaced differently again in the i486 manual.
  I put it where the i586 manual and gas say it is.
- fucompp was misplaced.
- the rr table for(s) some versions of fstp, fcom and fcomp was non-null.
  This caused some invalid opcodes to be reported as "" instead of as
  "<bad instruction>".
- the word and long versions of the fi* instructions were reversed.
- aaa and daa were reversed.

Fixed bugs involving unusual operand sizes:
- 32-bit registers weren't always forced for bswap or for moves to and
  from special registers.
- the operand sizes weren't reported for [l]call or [l]jmp.
- displacements weren't truncated mod 2^16 when the operand size was
  16-bit.
- too-large displacements and offsets were fetched, and too-large
  offsets were reported, when the operand size was 16-bit.
- sign extended immediate bytes were extended too far when the operand
  size was 16-bit.

Fixed bugs involving usual operand sizes:
- 8-bit source registers weren't forced for mov[sz]b[wl].
- 16-bit source registers weren't forced for mov[sz]w[wl].
- immediate bytes were sometimes reported as sign extended even for
  byte operations.  Same for immediate words in word operations.
- the immediate byte was not reported as sign extended for `push'.

Finished Pentium support:
- cpuid, cmpxchg8b and rsm were missing.

Finished i287 support:
- fneni, fndisi and fsetpm were missing.  These are harmless nops on
  later FPUs.

Improvements:
- report invalid opcodes 0xd6 and 0xf1 using .byte.  They are special
  in not causing invalid operand exceptions when executed.
- report the immediate byte for unusual aam and aad instuctions.
  Immediate bytes other than 0x0a always worked and are documented to
  work on Pentiums.
1997-01-04 13:47:30 +00:00
1997-01-02 20:41:07 +00:00
1996-11-11 14:18:40 +00:00
1996-11-07 14:42:57 +00:00
1997-01-04 13:47:30 +00:00
1996-12-20 08:18:47 +00:00

This is the top level of the FreeBSD source directory.  This file
was last revised on: $Id$

For copyright information, please see the file COPYRIGHT in this
directory (additional copyright information also exists for some
sources in this tree - please see the specific source directories for
more information).

The Makefile in this directory supports a number of targets for
building components (or all) of the FreeBSD source tree, the most
commonly used one being ``world'', which rebuilds and installs
everything in the FreeBSD system from the source tree except the
kernel.  Please see the top of the Makefile for more information on
the standard build targets and compile-time flags.

Building a kernel with config(1) is a somewhat more involved process,
documentation for which can be found at:
   http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/kernelconfig.html
And in the config(1) man page.

The sample kernel configuration files reside in the sys/i386/conf
sub-directory (assuming that you've installed the kernel sources), the
file named GENERIC being the one used to build your initial installation
kernel.  The file LINT contains entries for all possible devices, not
just those commonly used, and is meant more as a general reference
than an actual kernel configuration file (a kernel built from it
wouldn't even run).


Source Roadmap:
---------------
bin		System/User commands.

contrib		Packages contributed by 3rd parties.

eBones		Kerberos package - NOT FOR EXPORT!

etc		Template files for /etc

games		Amusements.

gnu		Various commands and libraries under the GNU Public License.
		Please see gnu/COPYING* for more information.

include		System include files.

lib		System libraries.

libexec		System daemons.

lkm		Loadable Kernel Modules.

release		Release building Makefile & associated tools.

sbin		System commands.

secure		DES and DES-related utilities - NOT FOR EXPORT!

share		Shared resources.

sys		Kernel sources.

tools		Utilities for regression testing and miscellaneous tasks.

usr.bin		User commands.

usr.sbin	System administration commands.


For information on synchronizing your source tree with one or more of
the FreeBSD Project's development branches, please see:

  http://www.freebsd.org/handbook/synching.html
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