Summary:
Since we can now build the builtins without a full toolchain these files should no longer be needed.
This is the last vestige of autoconf!
Reviewers: compnerd, iains, jroelofs
Subscribers: dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23777
llvm-svn: 279539
These routines do not require executable stacks. However, by default ELFish
linkers may assume an executable stack on GNUish environments (and some non-GNU
ones too!). The GNU extension to add a note to indicate a non-executable stack
is honoured by these environments to mark the stack as non-executable (the
compiler normally emits this directive on appropriate targets whenever
possible). This allows normal builds from getting executable stacks due to
linking to the compiler rt builtins.
llvm-svn: 273500
Add chkstk/alloca for gcc objects.
Replace or instructions with test, the latter should be marginally more
efficent, as it does not write to memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14044
Patch by vadimcn
llvm-svn: 251928
Each of the object formats use a different directive for selecting the constant
section. Use a macro to avoid the duplication across a number of files. Also
correct a small macro mismatch on the Windows case (HIDDEN_DIRECTIVE -> HIDDEN).
Patch by Vadim Chugunov!
llvm-svn: 223910
The .rodata directive was added on the IA-64 (Itanium) platform. The LLVM IAS
supports the .rodata on i386 and x86_64 as well. There is no reason to really
restrict compilation of the builtins to just clang. By explicitly indicating
that the data is meant to be pushed into the .rodata section via the .section
.rodata, the assembly is made compatible with clang and gcc (with GAS).
This will enable building these routines on the Linux buildbots via CMake.
llvm-svn: 214012
Place constants into .rdata if targeting ELF or COFF/PE. This should be
functionally identical, however, the data would be placed into a different
section. This is purely a cleanup change.
llvm-svn: 209986
Make the whitespace a bit more uniform in the various assembly routines. This
also makes the assembly files a bit more uniform on the ARM side by explicitly
stating that it is using the unified syntax and that the contents of the code is
in the text section (or segment). No functional change.
llvm-svn: 209985
The .align statements in ARM assembly routines is actually meant to be a power
of 2 alignment (e.g. .align 2 == 4 byte alignment, not 2). Switch to using
.p2align. .p2align is guaranteed to be a power-of-two alignment always and much
more explicit.
The .align in the case of x86_64 is byte alignment, use .balign instead of
.align.
llvm-svn: 208578