config/cc/gcc.in.mips
author "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
Sun Jul 17 22:43:07 2011 +0200 (2011-07-17)
changeset 2893 a8a65758664f
permissions -rw-r--r--
cc/gcc: do not use the core pass-2 to build the baremetal compiler

In case we build a baremetal compiler, use the standard passes:
- core_cc is used to build the C library;
- as such, it is meant to run on build, not host;
- the final compiler is meant to run on host;

As the current final compiler step can not build a baremetal compiler,
call the core backend from the final step.

NB: Currently, newlib is built during the start_files pass, so we have
to have a core compiler by then... Once we can build the baremetal
compiler from the final cc step, then we can move the newlib build to
the proper step, and then get rid of the core pass-1 static compiler...

Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
     1 # MIPS specific options for gcc
     2 
     3 config CC_GCC_HAS_ARCH_OPTIONS
     4     default y
     5 
     6 config CC_GCC_mips_llsc
     7     tristate
     8     prompt "Use llsc"
     9     default m
    10     help
    11       This configures how gcc will emit load-link, store-conditional and
    12       sync opcodes. Normally, you'd set this to 'M', and configure will do
    13       the correct thing (ie. enable llsc for Linux-based targets, disable
    14       for others). If you know better, you can force either using llsc or
    15       not using it (resp. 'Y' or 'N').
    16 
    17 config CC_GCC_mips_synci
    18     tristate
    19     prompt "Use synci"
    20     default m
    21     help
    22       This configures how gcc will emit the synci opcode. Normally, you'd
    23       set this to 'M', and configure will do the correct thing (ie. disable).
    24       If you know better, you can force using synci (say 'Y'), or not using
    25       it (say 'N').
    26 
    27 config CC_GCC_mips_plt
    28     bool
    29     prompt "Use copy relocations & PLTs"
    30     help
    31       This configures gcc to use copy relocations & PLTs. These are
    32       extensions to the traditional SVR4-based MIPS ABIs and require
    33       support from GNU binutils and the runtime C library.
    34       Say 'N' to keep the default and not use them, say 'Y' to use them.