patches/gcc/4.2.0/270-soft-float.patch
author Yann Diorcet <diorcet.yann@gmail.com>
Mon Nov 19 21:45:09 2012 +0100 (2012-11-19)
changeset 3121 5016315d88ba
parent 616 6e78f7085707
permissions -rw-r--r--
binutils/binutils: simplify gold dependencies

In preparation of adding a new kernel-type, Yann D. came up
with a change in semantic on binutils/gold availability.

So far, it was architectures' responsibility to declare that
they did support binutils/gold or not. It makes much more sense
that binutils/gold declares its own availability depending on
the current architecture; after all, architectures have no way
to know wether gold supports them, while gold does know it.

Signed-off-by:Yann Diorcet <diorcet.yann@gmail.com>
[yann.morin.1998@free.fr: split up original patch for self-contained changes]
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@free.fr>
Message-Id: <d3d1d51f399e6d2c1163.1353320546@macbook-smorlat.local>
Patchwork-Id: 199971
     1 diff -uNpr gcc-4.2.1_orig/gcc/config/rs6000/darwin-ldouble.c gcc-4.2.1/gcc/config/rs6000/darwin-ldouble.c
     2 --- gcc-4.2.1_orig/gcc/config/rs6000/darwin-ldouble.c	2007-03-05 11:54:00.000000000 -0500
     3 +++ gcc-4.2.1/gcc/config/rs6000/darwin-ldouble.c	2008-01-31 17:51:24.000000000 -0500
     4 @@ -70,6 +70,8 @@ Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street,
     5     but GCC currently generates poor code when a union is used to turn
     6     a long double into a pair of doubles.  */
     7  
     8 +#if defined (_SOFT_FLOAT) && defined (__LONG_DOUBLE_128__)
     9 +
    10  long double __gcc_qadd (double, double, double, double);
    11  long double __gcc_qsub (double, double, double, double);
    12  long double __gcc_qmul (double, double, double, double);
    13 @@ -219,8 +221,6 @@ __gcc_qdiv (double a, double b, double c
    14    return z.ldval;
    15  }
    16  
    17 -#if defined (_SOFT_FLOAT) && defined (__LONG_DOUBLE_128__)
    18 -
    19  long double __gcc_qneg (double, double);
    20  int __gcc_qeq (double, double, double, double);
    21  int __gcc_qne (double, double, double, double);