to add PPC64 LE support. The other two patches can be found in Bugzillas
334834 and 334836. The commit does not have a VEX commit associated with it.
POWER PC, add initial Little Endian support
The IBM POWER processor now supports both Big Endian and Little Endian.
This patch renames the #defines with the name ppc64 to ppc64be for the BE
specific code. This patch adds the Little Endian #define ppc64le to the
Additionally, a few functions are renamed to remove BE from the name if the
function is used by BE and LE. Functions that are BE specific have BE put
in the name.
The goals of this patch is to make sure #defines, function names and
variables consistently use PPC64/ppc64 if it refers to BE and LE,
PPC64BE/ppc64be if it is specific to BE, PPC64LE/ppc64le if it is LE
specific. The patch does not break the code for PPC64 Big Endian.
The test files memcheck/tests/atomic_incs.c, tests/power_insn_available.c
and tests/power_insn_available.c are also updated to the new #define
definition for PPC64 BE.
Signed-off-by: Carl Love <carll@us.ibm.com>
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@14238
Necessary changes to Valgrind to support MIPS64LE on Linux.
Minor cleanup/style changes embedded in the patch as well.
The change corresponds to r2687 in VEX.
Patch written by Dejan Jevtic and Petar Jovanovic.
More information about this issue:
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=313267
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@13292
Apparently the 32-bit Fedora 16 compiler chooses register esp to pass "&block"
to the inline assembly code in local_sys_write_stderr(). First pushing data on
the stack and next reading the contents of %0 doesn't yield the desired result
if %0 == %esp.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@12360
side components. (Florian Krohm <britzel@acm.org> and Christian
Borntraeger <borntraeger@de.ibm.com>). Fixes#243404.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@11604
the changes to do with reading and using ELF and DWARF3 info.
This breaks all targets except amd64-linux and x86-linux.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10982
- Introduced VG_SYSNUM_STRING and VG_SYSNUM_STRING_EXTRA which factor out
differences in the way syscall numbers are printed on different platforms.
This gets rid of seven "DDD" fixme-style comments.
- This also meant that Darwin syscall numbers are now printed in a
non-ambiguous way -- previously Unix, machine-dependent and diagnostic
syscalls were all printed the same way, even though their numbers overlap.
Now each number is prefixed with "unix", "mdep", etc. And Mach trap
numbers aren't printed as negative numbers now that they have a "mach"
prefix.
- Split each of pub_core_vkiscnums.h and pub_tool_vkiscnums.h into two
parts, one suitable for inclusion in asm files, one suitable for inclusion
in C files; in both cases the latter includes the former. This makes
this module more like other modules that have asm-only components (eg.
m_transtab); it also allows the hacky VG_IN_ASSEMBLY_SOURCE macros and
tests to be removed.
- Removed some of the VG_DARWIN_SYSNO_* macros that were no longer needed,
and renamed some of the existing ones to make their meanings clearer.
- Added comments on the encoding of Darwin syscall numbers so it's
possible for mortals to understand without reading the kernel code..
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10218
I tried using 'svn merge' to do the merge but it did a terrible job and
there were bazillions of conflicts. So instead I just took the diff between
the branch and trunk at r10155, applied the diff to the trunk, 'svn add'ed
the added files (no files needed to be 'svn remove'd) and committed.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@10156
hex numbers: %x produces lowercase hex, and %X produces uppercase.
Unfortunately this probably changes the output in dozens of places.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@6596
equally bogus new version. In fact if I actually understood the
magical "earlyclobber" (&) asm constraint this would probably be
unnecessary, but I don't. Ah well.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@5935
since it trashed the regs that gcc assigned for %0 and %1 before reading
them. local_sys_write_stderr() for the 3 other targets suffer from the
same problem.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@5865
changes from r4341 through r4787 inclusive). That branch is now dead.
Please do not commit anything else to it.
For the most part the merge was not troublesome. The main areas of
uncertainty are:
- build system: I had to import by hand Makefile.core-AM_CPPFLAGS.am
and include it in a couple of places. Building etc seems to still
work, but I haven't tried building the documentation.
- syscall wrappers: Following analysis by Greg & Nick, a whole lot of
stuff was moved from -generic to -linux after the branch was created.
I think that is satisfactorily glued back together now.
- Regtests: although this appears to work, no .out files appear, which
is strange, and makes it hard to diagnose regtest failures. In
particular memcheck/tests/x86/scalar.stderr.exp remains in a
conflicted state.
- amd64 is broken (slightly), and ppc32 will be unbuildable. I'll
attend to the former shortly.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@4789
Previously, %d printed a 32-bit int. %ld and %lld printed 64-bit ints.
So if you wanted to print a word-sized int (eg. a SizeT variable), you
had to cast it to a Long and then print with %lld in order to work on
both 32-bit and 64-bit platforms.
I changed things so that %d prints a 32-bit int, %ld prints a word-sized
int, and %lld prints a 64-bit int. There are two advantages to this:
- it now matches the way the normal glibc printf() works;
- you can print word-sized ints without casting.
I also made the corresponding change for %u/lu/llu and %x/lx/llx, and I
changed a couple of VG_(printf)() invocations accordingly.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@4527
Plenty still to do, but simple programs like ls seem to run ok
Thanks, Paul, for having your ppc port of valgrind 2.4 to work from!
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@3969
- Broke part of m_scheduler off into a new module m_threadstate. It
contains ThreadState, VG_(threads)[] and some basic operations on the
thread table. All simple stuff, the complex stuff stays in m_scheduler.
This avoids lots of circular dependencies between m_scheduler and other
modules.
- Managed to finally remove core.h and tool.h, double hurrah!
- Introduced pub_tool_basics.h and pub_core_basics.h, one of which is
include by every single C file.
- Lots of little cleanups and changes related to the above.
- I even did a small amount of documentation updating.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@3944
rather than `foo', as www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/quotes.html explains
we should (in more detail than you'd imagine was possible). I did this
both in output messages and in some comments, for consistency.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@3723
Otherwise it doesn't save %ebx across the routine, which is fatal as
%ebx is a callee-save register, it seems.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@3578