/* Base configuration file for all OpenBSD targets. Copyright (C) 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU CC. GNU CC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. GNU CC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU CC; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ /* Common OpenBSD configuration. All OpenBSD architectures include this file, which is intended as a repository for common defines. Some defines are common to all architectures, a few of them are triggered by OBSD_* guards, so that we won't override architecture defaults by mistakes. OBSD_HAS_CORRECT_SPECS: another mechanism provides correct specs already. OBSD_NO_DYNAMIC_LIBRARIES: no implementation of dynamic libraries. OBSD_OLD_GAS: older flavor of gas which needs help for PIC. OBSD_HAS_DECLARE_FUNCTION_NAME, OBSD_HAS_DECLARE_FUNCTION_SIZE, OBSD_HAS_DECLARE_OBJECT: PIC support, FUNCTION_NAME/FUNCTION_SIZE are independent, whereas the corresponding logic for OBJECTS is necessarily coupled. OBSD_HAS_CORRECT_ASM_OPS: another mechanism provides correct ASM_OP values already. There are also a few `default' defines such as ASM_WEAKEN_LABEL, intended as common ground for arch that don't provide anything suitable. */ /* OPENBSD_NATIVE is defined only when gcc is configured as part of the OpenBSD source tree, specifically through Makefile.bsd-wrapper. In such a case the include path can be trimmed as there is no distinction between system includes and gcc includes. */ /* This configuration method, namely Makefile.bsd-wrapper and OPENBSD_NATIVE is NOT recommended for building cross-compilers. */ #ifdef OPENBSD_NATIVE #undef GCC_INCLUDE_DIR #define GCC_INCLUDE_DIR "/usr/include" /* The compiler is configured with ONLY the gcc/g++ standard headers. */ #undef INCLUDE_DEFAULTS #define INCLUDE_DEFAULTS \ { \ { GPLUSPLUS_INCLUDE_DIR, "G++", 1, 1 }, \ { GCC_INCLUDE_DIR, "GCC", 0, 0 }, \ { 0, 0, 0, 0 } \ } /* Under OpenBSD, the normal location of the various *crt*.o files is the /usr/lib directory. */ #define STANDARD_STARTFILE_PREFIX "/usr/lib/" #endif /* Controlling the compilation driver. */ /* CPP_SPEC appropriate for OpenBSD. We deal with -posix and -pthread. XXX the way threads are handling currently is not very satisfying, since all code must be compiled with -pthread to work. This two-stage defines makes it easy to pick that for targets that have subspecs. */ #define OBSD_CPP_SPEC "%{posix:-D_POSIX_SOURCE} %{pthread:-D_POSIX_THREADS}" /* LIB_SPEC appropriate for OpenBSD. Include -lpthread if -pthread is specified on the command line. */ #define OBSD_LIB_SPEC "%{!shared:%{pthread:-lpthread%{p:_p}%{!p:%{pg:_p}}}} %{!shared:-lc%{p:_p}%{!p:%{pg:_p}}}" #ifndef OBSD_HAS_CORRECT_SPECS #ifndef OBSD_NO_DYNAMIC_LIBRARIES #undef SWITCH_TAKES_ARG #define SWITCH_TAKES_ARG(CHAR) \ (DEFAULT_SWITCH_TAKES_ARG (CHAR) \ || (CHAR) == 'R') #endif #undef CPP_SPEC #define CPP_SPEC OBSD_CPP_SPEC #ifdef OBSD_OLD_GAS /* ASM_SPEC appropriate for OpenBSD. For some architectures, OpenBSD still uses a special flavor of gas that needs to be told when generating pic code. */ #undef ASM_SPEC #define ASM_SPEC "%{fpic:-k} %{fPIC:-k -K} %|" #else /* Since we use gas, stdin -> - is a good idea, but we don't want to override native specs just for that. */ #ifndef ASM_SPEC #define ASM_SPEC "%|" #endif #endif /* LINK_SPEC appropriate for OpenBSD. Support for GCC options -static, -assert, and -nostdlib. */ #undef LINK_SPEC #ifdef OBSD_NO_DYNAMIC_LIBRARIES #define LINK_SPEC \ "%{g:%{!nostdlib:-L/usr/lib/debug}} %{!nostdlib:%{!r*:%{!e*:-e start}}} -dc -dp %{assert*}" #else #define LINK_SPEC \ "%{g:%{!nostdlib:-L/usr/lib/debug}} %{!shared:%{!nostdlib:%{!r*:%{!e*:-e start}}}} %{shared:-Bshareable -x} -dc -dp %{R*} %{static:-Bstatic} %{assert*}" #endif #undef LIB_SPEC #define LIB_SPEC OBSD_LIB_SPEC #endif /* Runtime target specification. */ /* You must redefine CPP_PREDEFINES in any arch specific file. */ #undef CPP_PREDEFINES /* Implicit calls to library routines. */ /* Use memcpy and memset instead of bcopy and bzero. */ #define TARGET_MEM_FUNCTIONS /* Miscellaneous parameters. */ /* Tell libgcc2.c that OpenBSD targets support atexit. */ #define HAVE_ATEXIT /* Controlling debugging info: dbx options. */ /* Don't use the `xsTAG;' construct in DBX output; OpenBSD systems that use DBX don't support it. */ #define DBX_NO_XREFS /* Support of shared libraries, mostly imported from svr4.h through netbsd. */ /* Two differences from svr4.h: - we use . - _func instead of a local label, - we put extra spaces in expressions such as .type _func , @function This is more readable for a human being and confuses c++filt less. */ /* Assembler format: output and generation of labels. */ /* Define the strings used for the .type and .size directives. These strings generally do not vary from one system running OpenBSD to another, but if a given system needs to use different pseudo-op names for these, they may be overridden in the arch specific file. */ /* OpenBSD assembler is hacked to have .type & .size support even in a.out format object files. Functions size are supported but not activated yet (look for GRACE_PERIOD_EXPIRED in gas/config/obj-aout.c). SET_ASM_OP is needed for attribute alias to work. */ #ifndef OBSD_HAS_CORRECT_ASM_OPS #undef TYPE_ASM_OP #undef SIZE_ASM_OP #undef SET_ASM_OP #define TYPE_ASM_OP ".type" #define SIZE_ASM_OP ".size" #define SET_ASM_OP ".set" #endif /* The following macro defines the format used to output the second operand of the .type assembler directive. */ #undef TYPE_OPERAND_FMT #define TYPE_OPERAND_FMT "@%s" /* Provision if extra assembler code is needed to declare a function's result (taken from svr4, not needed yet actually). */ #ifndef ASM_DECLARE_RESULT #define ASM_DECLARE_RESULT(FILE, RESULT) #endif /* These macros generate the special .type and .size directives which are used to set the corresponding fields of the linker symbol table entries under OpenBSD. These macros also have to output the starting labels for the relevant functions/objects. */ #ifndef OBSD_HAS_DECLARE_FUNCTION_NAME /* Extra assembler code needed to declare a function properly. Some assemblers may also need to also have something extra said about the function's return value. We allow for that here. */ #undef ASM_DECLARE_FUNCTION_NAME #define ASM_DECLARE_FUNCTION_NAME(FILE, NAME, DECL) \ do { \ fprintf (FILE, "\t%s\t", TYPE_ASM_OP); \ assemble_name (FILE, NAME); \ fputs (" , ", FILE); \ fprintf (FILE, TYPE_OPERAND_FMT, "function"); \ putc ('\n', FILE); \ ASM_DECLARE_RESULT (FILE, DECL_RESULT (DECL)); \ ASM_OUTPUT_LABEL(FILE, NAME); \ } while (0) #endif #ifndef OBSD_HAS_DECLARE_FUNCTION_SIZE /* Declare the size of a function. */ #undef ASM_DECLARE_FUNCTION_SIZE #define ASM_DECLARE_FUNCTION_SIZE(FILE, FNAME, DECL) \ do { \ if (!flag_inhibit_size_directive) \ { \ fprintf (FILE, "\t%s\t", SIZE_ASM_OP); \ assemble_name (FILE, (FNAME)); \ fputs (" , . - ", FILE); \ assemble_name (FILE, (FNAME)); \ putc ('\n', FILE); \ } \ } while (0) #endif #ifndef OBSD_HAS_DECLARE_OBJECT /* Extra assembler code needed to declare an object properly. */ #undef ASM_DECLARE_OBJECT_NAME #define ASM_DECLARE_OBJECT_NAME(FILE, NAME, DECL) \ do { \ fprintf (FILE, "\t%s\t ", TYPE_ASM_OP); \ assemble_name (FILE, NAME); \ fputs (" , ", FILE); \ fprintf (FILE, TYPE_OPERAND_FMT, "object"); \ putc ('\n', FILE); \ size_directive_output = 0; \ if (!flag_inhibit_size_directive && DECL_SIZE (DECL)) \ { \ size_directive_output = 1; \ fprintf (FILE, "\t%s\t", SIZE_ASM_OP); \ assemble_name (FILE, NAME); \ fprintf (FILE, " , %d\n", int_size_in_bytes (TREE_TYPE (DECL)));\ } \ ASM_OUTPUT_LABEL (FILE, NAME); \ } while (0) /* Output the size directive for a decl in rest_of_decl_compilation in the case where we did not do so before the initializer. Once we find the error_mark_node, we know that the value of size_directive_output was set by ASM_DECLARE_OBJECT_NAME when it was run for the same decl. */ #undef ASM_FINISH_DECLARE_OBJECT #define ASM_FINISH_DECLARE_OBJECT(FILE, DECL, TOP_LEVEL, AT_END) \ do { \ char *name = XSTR (XEXP (DECL_RTL (DECL), 0), 0); \ if (!flag_inhibit_size_directive && DECL_SIZE (DECL) \ && ! AT_END && TOP_LEVEL \ && DECL_INITIAL (DECL) == error_mark_node \ && !size_directive_output) \ { \ size_directive_output = 1; \ fprintf (FILE, "\t%s\t", SIZE_ASM_OP); \ assemble_name (FILE, name); \ fprintf (FILE, " , %d\n", int_size_in_bytes (TREE_TYPE (DECL)));\ } \ } while (0) #endif /* Those are `generic' ways to weaken/globalize a label. We shouldn't need to override a processor specific definition. Hence, #ifndef ASM_* In case overriding turns out to be needed, one can always #undef ASM_* before including this file. */ /* Tell the assembler that a symbol is weak. */ /* Note: netbsd arm32 assembler needs a .globl here. An override may be needed when/if we go for arm32 support. */ #ifndef ASM_WEAKEN_LABEL #define ASM_WEAKEN_LABEL(FILE,NAME) \ do { fputs ("\t.weak\t", FILE); assemble_name (FILE, NAME); \ fputc ('\n', FILE); } while (0) #endif /* Tell the assembler that a symbol is global. */ #ifndef ASM_GLOBALIZE_LABEL #define ASM_GLOBALIZE_LABEL(FILE,NAME) \ do { fputs ("\t.globl\t", FILE); assemble_name (FILE, NAME); \ fputc ('\n', FILE); } while(0) #endif /* Storage layout. */ /* We don't have to worry about binary compatibility with older C++ code, but there is a big known bug with vtable thunks which has not been fixed yet, so DON'T activate it by default. */ /* #define DEFAULT_VTABLE_THUNKS 1 */ /* Otherwise, since we support weak, gthr.h erroneously tries to use #pragma weak. */ #define GTHREAD_USE_WEAK 0 /* bug work around: we don't want to support #pragma weak, but the current code layout needs HANDLE_PRAGMA_WEAK asserted for __attribute((weak)) to work. On the other hand, we don't define HANDLE_PRAGMA_WEAK directly, as this depends on a few other details as well... */ #define HANDLE_SYSV_PRAGMA /* Disable the use of unsafe builtin functions, (strcpy), making * them easier to spot in the object files. */ #define NO_UNSAFE_BUILTINS