This patch adds support for the OpenRISC architecture.
(http://opencores.org/or1k/Main_Page)
This patch has been tested under Linux with QEMU-user emulation support.
- 32 Bit
- big endian
- delayed instructions
This is the only available configuration under Linux.
The description of the ABI can be found on the official website.
Is passes the testsuite except of the unwindtest_ffi_call.cc
testcase, which seems to be a problem of gcc and not libffi.
Some testcases of the gcc testsuite still fail.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Macke <sebastian@macke.de>
This was originally done in PR #84, except the change was made to Makefile.in instead of Makefile.am and was therefore reverted the next time the files were regenerated.
Linux supports the stdcall calling convention, either via functions
explicitly declared with the stdcall attribute, or via code compiled
with -mrtd which effectively makes stdcall the default.
This introduces FFI_STDCALL, FFI_THISCALL, and FFI_FASTCALL on
non-Windows x86-32 platforms, as non-default calling conventions.
code, and makes it possible to link code compiled with different
options to those used to compile libffi. For example, a
-mlong-double-128 libffi can be used with -mlong-double-64 code.
Using the return value area as a place to pass parameters wasn't such
a good idea, causing a failure of cls_ulonglong.c. I didn't see this
when running the mainline gcc libffi testsuite because that version of
the test is inferior to the upstreamm libffi test.
Using NUM_FPR_ARG_REGISTERS rather than NUM_FPR_ARG_REGISTERS64 meant
that a parameter save area could be allocated before it was strictly
necessary. Wrong but harmless. Found when splitting apart ffi.c
into 32-bit and 64-bit support.
This adds support for the ARC architecture to libffi. DesignWare ARC
is a family of processors from Synopsys, Inc.
This patch has been tested on a little-endian system and passes
the testsuite.
Signed-off-by: Mischa Jonker <mjonker@synopsys.com>