This simplifies the build a bit (especially for deps in port subdirs),
and avoids recursive make. This in turn speeds up the build, and sets
us up for multi-target.
These use the same pattern as seen in the opcodes/ dir and in automake
in general (ish). This helps simplify the boilerplate for building and
linking build-time code, and fixes some inconsistency in flag usage.
For rules that were compiling+linking in a single step, split them into
separate steps so we can apply the correct set of options. This matches
automake behavior too.
This hasn't been initialized anywhere for years. It used to be for
passing in the path to libiberty, but that stopped happening long ago.
Delete it to simplify the build logic.
This local macro doesn't take any args, so adjust the API to match.
No one really noticed as this is behind code that is not normally
built, only when a dev specifically tries to compile it.
While the configure script was checking for a bunch of headers, only
one of them was conditionally included in the source (unistd.h). The
rest were always included. Based on those usage this whole time, we
can reasonably assume that the build also has unistd.h.
All the other files including config.h never actually used any defines
from the header.
This file is quite large and is getting unmanageable. Split it apart
to follow aclocal best practices by putting one-macro-per-file. There
shouldn't be any real functional changes here as can be seen in the
configure script regens.
Rather than hand maintain m4 includes in various autotool files,
use AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS to declare the relevant search paths.
This simplifies the code, makes it more robust, and cleans out
unused logic from configure.
These settings might have made sense in darker compiler times, but I
think they're largely obsolete now. Looking through the values that
get used in HDEFINES, it's quite limited, and configure itself should
handle them. If we still need something, we can leverage standard
autoconf macros instead, after we get a clear user report.
TDEFINES was never set anywhere and was always empty, so prune that.
Since we require C11 now, we can assume many headers exist, and
clean up all of the conditional includes. It's not like any of
this code actually accounted for the headers not existing, just
whether we could include them.
The strings.h cleanup is a little nuanced: it isn't in C11, but
every use of it in the codebase will include strings.h only if
string.h doesn't exist. Since we now assume the C11 string.h
exists, we'll never include strings.h, so we can delete it.
We've had this off for a long time because the sim code was way too
full of warnings for it to be feasible. However, I've cleaned things
up significantly from when this was first merged, and we can start to
turn this around.
Change the macro to enable -Werror by default, and allow ports to opt
out. New ports will get it automatically (and we can push back on
them if they try to turn it off).
Also turn it off for the few ports that still hit warnings for me.
All the rest will get the new default, and we'll wait for feedback
if/when new issues come up.
Make sure the files using atoi() include stdlib.h for its prototype.
These files were relying on it being included implicitly by others
which isn't guaranteed, and newer toolchains produce warnings.
GCC 10 enables -fno-common by default. This resulted in multiple
definition linker errors since a global variable was declared and
defined in a header file:
ld: libsim.a(idecode.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: multiple definition of
`idecode_issue'; libsim.a(irun.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: first defined
here
ld: libsim.a(engine.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: multiple definition of
`idecode_issue'; libsim.a(irun.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: first defined
here
ld: libsim.a(support.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: multiple definition of
`idecode_issue'; libsim.a(irun.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: first defined
here
ld: libsim.a(semantics.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: multiple definition
of `idecode_issue'; libsim.a(irun.o):sim/v850/idecode.h:71: first
defined here
sim/igen
PR sim/26194
* lf.h (lf_get_file_type): Declare.
* lf.c (lf_get_file_type): Define.
* gen-idecode.c (print_idecode_issue_function_header): Use
lf_get_file_type() to issue an extern variable declaration in
case of header files.
PR build/24572 notes that "make install-strip" fails. For me, it
works in every directory except "sim", so this patch adds
install-strip targets to the Makefiles that appear there.
sim/ChangeLog
2019-12-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/24572:
* Makefile.in (install-strip): New target.
sim/common/ChangeLog
2019-12-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/24572:
* Makefile.in (install-strip): New target.
sim/igen/ChangeLog
2019-12-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/24572:
* Makefile.in (install-strip): New target.
sim/ppc/ChangeLog
2019-12-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/24572:
* Makefile.in (install-strip): New target.
sim/testsuite/ChangeLog
2019-12-19 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com>
PR build/24572:
* Makefile.in (install-strip): New target.
Change-Id: I76613bc5c7e7812284f33826f8a5d914477fcdc5
Rather than stuffing the command line with a bunch of -D flags, start
moving things to config.h which is managed by autoheader. This makes
the makefile a bit simpler and the build output tighter, and it makes
the migration to automake easier as there are fewer vars to juggle.
We'll want to move the other options out too, but it'll take more work.
This was imported from the ppc sim, but that was only used to control
a single file, and that is already governed by the hw models. There's
no need to have a sep configure option here, especially since none of
the other sims are using it. Even when the code is enabled, there's
no runtime overhead.
Currently ports have to call SIM_AC_OPTION_INLINE explicitly in order
to make the configure flag available. There's no real reason to not
allow this flag for all ports, so move it to the common sim macro.
This way we get standard behavior across all ports too.
These options were never exposed for most sims (just the ppc one),
and they are really only useful on 32-bit x86 systems. Considering
modern systems tend to be 64-bit x86_64 and how well modern compilers
are at optimizing code, these have outlived their usefulness.
The compiler/C library should produce reasonable code for htonl/ntohl,
and at least glibc tries pretty hard to always produce good code for
them. This logic only had support for 32-bit x86 systems anymore, and
it's unlikely people were even opting into this, so drop it all.
The CIA_{GET,SET} macros serve the same function as CPU_PC_{GET,SET}
except the latter adds a layer of indirection via the sim state. This
lets models set up different functions at runtime and doesn't reach so
directly into the arch-specific cpu state.
It also doesn't make sense to have two sets of macros that do exactly
the same thing, so lets standardize on the one that gets us more.
Before POSIX standardized strsignal(), old systems would hide the
prototype unless the normal extension defines were enabled. So use
the AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS helper for that.
Then make sure we include string.h ourselves in nrun.c rather than
relying on implicit includes via other sim headers.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Automake likes to dump macros automatically used into the aclocal.m4
file, but the common/aclocal.m4 naming prevents that. So rename it
to the more normal "acinclude.m4" so the aclocal tool can work.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Now that the sourceware tree generally requires autoconf-2.64, update
the sim tree to require that too.
This allows us to drop the long standing SIM_AC_COMMON/common.m4
workaround as autoconf 2.64+ seems to work for me.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
* gen.c (insn_field_cmp): Tweak comment about neither field
being an insn_field_string with a cond_eq-to-value condition.
(insns_bit_useless) <case insn_field_string, case
decode_find_mixed>: Handle cond_eq-to-value fields as
insn_field_int.
* gen-idecode.c (print_idecode_validate): Handle
insn_field_string cond-equal-to-value fields as insn_field_int.
* gen-icache.c (print_icache_body): Add comment why constant
string fields are handled.
The sim keeps track of which allocations are zero-ed internally (via
zalloc) and then calls a helper "zfree" function rather than "free".
But this "zfree" function simply calls "free" itself. Since I can
see no point in this and it is simply useless overhead, punt it.
The only real change is in hw-alloc.c where we remove the zalloc_p
tracking, and sim-utils.c where zfree is delete. The rest of the
changes are a simple `sed` from "zfree" to "free".
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>