Mike Frysinger 63fd5b5dda sim: switch sim_{read,write} APIs to 64-bit all the time [PR sim/7504]
We've been using SIM_ADDR which has always been 32-bit.  This means
the upper 32-bit address range in 64-bit sims is inaccessible.  Use
64-bit addresses all the time since we want the APIs to be stable
regardless of the active arch backend (which can be 32 or 64-bit).

The length is also 64-bit because it's completely feasible to have
a program that is larger than 4 GiB in size/image/runtime.  Forcing
the caller to manually chunk those accesses up into 4 GiB at a time
doesn't seem useful to anyone.

Bug: https://sourceware.org/PR7504
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		   README for GNU development tools

This directory contains various GNU compilers, assemblers, linkers, 
debuggers, etc., plus their support routines, definitions, and documentation.

If you are receiving this as part of a GDB release, see the file gdb/README.
If with a binutils release, see binutils/README;  if with a libg++ release,
see libg++/README, etc.  That'll give you info about this
package -- supported targets, how to use it, how to report bugs, etc.

It is now possible to automatically configure and build a variety of
tools with one command.  To build all of the tools contained herein,
run the ``configure'' script here, e.g.:

	./configure 
	make

To install them (by default in /usr/local/bin, /usr/local/lib, etc),
then do:
	make install

(If the configure script can't determine your type of computer, give it
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If you have more than one compiler on your system, it is often best to
explicitly set CC in the environment before running configure, and to
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	CC=gcc ./configure
	make

A similar example using csh:

	setenv CC gcc
	./configure
	make

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