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authorJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2014-02-08 01:49:39 +0000
committerJoseph Myers <joseph@codesourcery.com>2014-02-08 01:49:39 +0000
commitc6bfe5c4d756913297db03f55e42016d1c48918c (patch)
tree898d2910ef903f46b596ad54e519ed4495357766 /ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6
parent852fa2dd3aa1a687780e27300df9eb0bdc433863 (diff)
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Move arm from ports to libc.
I've moved the ARM port from ports to the main sysdeps hierarchy.
Beyond the README update, the move of the files was simply

git mv ports/sysdeps/arm sysdeps/arm
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/arm sysdeps/unix/arm
git mv ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm

and in addition to the ChangeLog entries here, I put a note at the top
of ports/ChangeLog.arm similar to that at the top of
ChangeLog.powerpc.  There is deliberately no NEWS change, as I think
it makes the most sense to put in a general note above all ports
having moved if we can achieve that for 2.20.

Tested that disassembly of installed shared libraries for arm is the
same before and after this patch, except for data (not instructions)
in ld.so (there are assertions in sysdeps/arm/dl-machine.h, and the
path by which that file is found, and so by which it appears in the
assertion message, changes as a result of the move).

	* sysdeps/arm: Move directory from ports/sysdeps/arm.
	* sysdeps/unix/arm: Move directory from ports/sysdeps/unix/arm.
	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm: Move directory from
	ports/sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm.
	* README: Update listing for arm-*-linux-gnueabi.

ports/ChangeLog.arm:
	* sysdeps/arm: Move directory to ../sysdeps/arm.
	* sysdeps/unix/arm: Move directory to ../sysdeps.arm.
	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm: Move directory to
	../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm.
Diffstat (limited to 'ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6')
-rw-r--r--ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/rawmemchr.S109
-rw-r--r--ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/stpcpy.S1
-rw-r--r--ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strchr.S147
-rw-r--r--ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strcpy.S231
-rw-r--r--ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strlen.S103
-rw-r--r--ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strrchr.S131
6 files changed, 0 insertions, 722 deletions
diff --git a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/rawmemchr.S b/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/rawmemchr.S
deleted file mode 100644
index c34fdc6988..0000000000
--- a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/rawmemchr.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,109 +0,0 @@
-/* rawmemchr -- find a byte within an unsized memory block.
-   Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-   This file is part of the GNU C Library.
-
-   The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
-   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
-   The GNU C Library 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
-   Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
-   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License along with the GNU C Library.  If not, see
-   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
-
-#include <sysdep.h>
-
-	.syntax unified
-	.text
-
-ENTRY (__rawmemchr)
-	@ r0 = start of string
-	@ r1 = character to match
-	@ returns a pointer to the match, which must be present.
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B]		@ load first byte asap
-
-	@ To cater to long strings, we want to search through a few
-	@ characters until we reach an aligned pointer.  To cater to
-	@ small strings, we don't want to start doing word operations
-	@ immediately.  The compromise is a maximum of 16 bytes less
-	@ whatever is required to end with an aligned pointer.
-	@ r3 = number of characters to search in alignment loop
-	and	r3, r0, #7
-	uxtb	r1, r1
-	rsb	r3, r3, #15		@ 16 - 1 peeled loop iteration
-	cmp	r2, r1
-	it	eq
-	bxeq	lr
-
-	@ Loop until we find ...
-1:	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B, #1]!
-	subs	r3, r3, #1		@ ... the alignment point
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, r1			@ ... or C
-	bne	1b
-
-	@ Disambiguate the exit possibilites above
-	cmp	r2, r1			@ Found C
-	it	eq
-	bxeq	lr
-	add	r0, r0, #1
-
-	@ So now we're aligned.
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrd	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	orr	r1, r1, r1, lsl #8	@ Replicate C to all bytes
-#ifdef ARCH_HAS_T2
-	movw	ip, #0x0101
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-	movt	ip, #0x0101
-#else
-	ldr	ip, =0x01010101
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-#endif
-	orr	r1, r1, r1, lsl #16
-
-	@ Loop searching for C, 8 bytes at a time.
-	@ Subtracting (unsigned saturating) from 1 means result of 1 for
-	@ any byte that was originally zero and 0 otherwise.  Therefore
-	@ we consider the lsb of each byte the "found" bit.
-2:	eor	r2, r2, r1		@ Convert C bytes to 0
-	eor	r3, r3, r1
-	uqsub8	r2, ip, r2		@ Find C
-	uqsub8	r3, ip, r3
-	sfi_pld	r0, #128
-	orrs	r3, r3, r2		@ Test both words for found
-	it	eq
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrdeq	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	beq	2b
-
-	@ Found something.  Disambiguate between first and second words.
-	@ Adjust r0 to point to the word containing the match.
-	@ Adjust r2 to the found bits for the word containing the match.
-	cmp	r2, #0
-	sub	r0, r0, #4
-	ite	eq
-	moveq	r2, r3
-	subne	r0, r0, #4
-
-	@ Find the bit-offset of the match within the word.  Note that the
-	@ bit result from clz will be 7 higher than "true", but we'll
-	@ immediately discard those bits converting to a byte offset.
-#ifdef __ARMEL__
-	rev	r2, r2			@ For LE, count from the little end
-#endif
-	clz	r2, r2
-	add	r0, r0, r2, lsr #3	@ Adjust the pointer to the found byte
-	bx	lr
-
-END (__rawmemchr)
-
-weak_alias (__rawmemchr, rawmemchr)
-libc_hidden_def (__rawmemchr)
diff --git a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/stpcpy.S b/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/stpcpy.S
deleted file mode 100644
index 21a4f385be..0000000000
--- a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/stpcpy.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-/* Defined in strcpy.S.  */
diff --git a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strchr.S b/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strchr.S
deleted file mode 100644
index e4de0f3323..0000000000
--- a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strchr.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,147 +0,0 @@
-/* strchr -- find the first instance of C in a nul-terminated string.
-   Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-   This file is part of the GNU C Library.
-
-   The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
-   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
-   The GNU C Library 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
-   Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
-   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License along with the GNU C Library.  If not, see
-   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
-
-#include <sysdep.h>
-
-	.syntax unified
-	.text
-
-ENTRY (strchr)
-	@ r0 = start of string
-	@ r1 = character to match
-	@ returns NULL for no match, or a pointer to the match
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B]		@ load the first byte asap
-	uxtb	r1, r1
-
-	@ To cater to long strings, we want to search through a few
-	@ characters until we reach an aligned pointer.  To cater to
-	@ small strings, we don't want to start doing word operations
-	@ immediately.  The compromise is a maximum of 16 bytes less
-	@ whatever is required to end with an aligned pointer.
-	@ r3 = number of characters to search in alignment loop
-	and	r3, r0, #7
-	rsb	r3, r3, #15		@ 16 - 1 peeled loop iteration
-	cmp	r2, r1			@ Found C?
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, #0			@ Found EOS?
-	beq	99f
-
-	@ Loop until we find ...
-1:	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B, #1]!
-	subs	r3, r3, #1		@ ... the aligment point
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, r1			@ ... or the character
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, #0			@ ... or EOS
-	bne	1b
-
-	@ Disambiguate the exit possibilites above
-	cmp	r2, r1			@ Found the character
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, #0			@ Found EOS
-	beq	99f
-	add	r0, r0, #1
-
-	@ So now we're aligned.  Now we actually need a stack frame.
-	push	{ r4, r5, r6, r7 }
-	cfi_adjust_cfa_offset (16)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r4, 0)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r5, 4)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r6, 8)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r7, 12)
-
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrd	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	orr	r1, r1, r1, lsl #8	@ Replicate C to all bytes
-#ifdef ARCH_HAS_T2
-	movw	ip, #0x0101
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-	movt	ip, #0x0101
-#else
-	ldr	ip, =0x01010101
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-#endif
-	orr	r1, r1, r1, lsl #16
-
-	@ Loop searching for EOS or C, 8 bytes at a time.
-2:
-	@ Subtracting (unsigned saturating) from 1 means result of 1 for
-	@ any byte that was originally zero and 0 otherwise.  Therefore
-	@ we consider the lsb of each byte the "found" bit.
-	uqsub8	r4, ip, r2		@ Find EOS
-	eor	r6, r2, r1		@ Convert C bytes to 0
-	uqsub8	r5, ip, r3
-	eor	r7, r3, r1
-	uqsub8	r6, ip, r6		@ Find C
-	sfi_pld	r0, #128		@ Prefetch 2 lines ahead
-	uqsub8	r7, ip, r7
-	orr	r4, r4, r6		@ Combine found for EOS and C
-	orr	r5, r5, r7
-	orrs	r6, r4, r5		@ Combine the two words
-	it	eq
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrdeq	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	beq	2b
-
-	@ Found something.  Disambiguate between first and second words.
-	@ Adjust r0 to point to the word containing the match.
-	@ Adjust r2 to the contents of the word containing the match.
-	@ Adjust r4 to the found bits for the word containing the match.
-	cmp	r4, #0
-	sub	r0, r0, #4
-	itte	eq
-	moveq	r4, r5
-	moveq	r2, r3
-	subne	r0, r0, #4
-
-	@ Find the bit-offset of the match within the word.
-#if defined(__ARMEL__)
-	@ For LE, swap the found word so clz searches from the little end.
-	rev	r4, r4
-#else
-	@ For BE, byte swap the word to make it easier to extract the byte.
-	rev	r2, r2
-#endif
-	@ We're counting 0x01 (not 0x80), so the bit offset is 7 too high.
-	clz	r3, r4
-	sub	r3, r3, #7
-	lsr	r2, r2, r3		@ Shift down found byte
-	uxtb	r1, r1			@ Undo replication of C
-	uxtb	r2, r2			@ Extract found byte
-	add	r0, r0, r3, lsr #3	@ Adjust the pointer to the found byte
-
-	pop	{ r4, r5, r6, r7 }
-	cfi_adjust_cfa_offset (-16)
-	cfi_restore (r4)
-	cfi_restore (r5)
-	cfi_restore (r6)
-	cfi_restore (r7)
-
-	@ Disambiguate between EOS and C.
-99:
-	cmp	r2, r1
-	it	ne
-	movne	r0, #0			@ Found EOS, return NULL
-	bx	lr
-
-END (strchr)
-
-weak_alias (strchr, index)
-libc_hidden_builtin_def (strchr)
diff --git a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strcpy.S b/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strcpy.S
deleted file mode 100644
index 833a83c28f..0000000000
--- a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strcpy.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,231 +0,0 @@
-/* strcpy -- copy a nul-terminated string.
-   Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-   This file is part of the GNU C Library.
-
-   The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
-   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
-   The GNU C Library 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
-   Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
-   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License along with the GNU C Library.  If not, see
-   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
-
-#include <sysdep.h>
-
-/* Endian independent macros for shifting bytes within registers.  */
-#ifdef __ARMEB__
-#define lsh_gt		lsr
-#define lsh_ls		lsl
-#else
-#define lsh_gt		lsl
-#define lsh_ls		lsr
-#endif
-
-	.syntax unified
-	.text
-
-ENTRY (__stpcpy)
-	@ Signal stpcpy with NULL in IP.
-	mov	ip, #0
-	b	0f
-END (__stpcpy)
-
-weak_alias (__stpcpy, stpcpy)
-libc_hidden_def (__stpcpy)
-libc_hidden_builtin_def (stpcpy)
-
-ENTRY (strcpy)
-	@ Signal strcpy with DEST in IP.
-	mov	ip, r0
-0:
-	sfi_pld	r0
-	sfi_pld	r1
-
-	@ To cater to long strings, we want 8 byte alignment in the source.
-	@ To cater to small strings, we don't want to start that right away.
-	@ Loop up to 16 times, less whatever it takes to reach alignment.
-	and	r3, r1, #7
-	rsb	r3, r3, #16
-
-	@ Loop until we find ...
-1:	sfi_breg r1, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B], #1
-	subs	r3, r3, #1		@ ... the alignment point
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	strb	r2, [\B], #1
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, #0			@ ... or EOS
-	bne	1b
-
-	@ Disambiguate the exit possibilites above
-	cmp	r2, #0			@ Found EOS
-	beq	.Lreturn
-
-	@ Load the next two words asap
-	sfi_breg r1, \
-	ldrd	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-	sfi_pld	r1, #64
-
-	@ For longer strings, we actaully need a stack frame.
-	push	{ r4, r5, r6, r7 }
-	cfi_adjust_cfa_offset (16)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r4, 0)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r5, 4)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r6, 8)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r7, 12)
-
-	@ Subtracting (unsigned saturating) from 1 for any byte means result
-	@ of 1 for any byte that was originally zero and 0 otherwise.
-	@ Therefore we consider the lsb of each byte the "found" bit.
-#ifdef ARCH_HAS_T2
-	movw	r7, #0x0101
-	tst	r0, #3			@ Test alignment of DEST
-	movt	r7, #0x0101
-#else
-	ldr	r7, =0x01010101
-	tst	r0, #3
-#endif
-	bne	.Lunaligned
-
-	@ So now source (r1) is aligned to 8, and dest (r0) is aligned to 4.
-	@ Loop, reading 8 bytes at a time, searching for EOS.
-	.balign	16
-2:	uqsub8	r4, r7, r2		@ Find EOS
-	uqsub8	r5, r7, r3
-	sfi_pld	r1, #128
-	cmp	r4, #0			@ EOS in first word?
-	sfi_pld	r0, #128
-	bne	3f
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	str	r2, [\B], #4
-	cmp	r5, #0			@ EOS in second word?
-	bne	4f
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	str	r3, [\B], #4
-	sfi_breg r1, \
-	ldrd	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	b	2b
-
-3:	sub	r1, r1, #4		@ backup to first word
-4:	sub	r1, r1, #4		@ backup to second word
-
-	@ ... then finish up any tail a byte at a time.
-	@ Note that we generally back up and re-read source bytes,
-	@ but we'll not re-write dest bytes.
-.Lbyte_loop:
-	sfi_breg r1, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B], #1
-	cmp	r2, #0
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	strb	r2, [\B], #1
-	bne	.Lbyte_loop
-
-	pop	{ r4, r5, r6, r7 }
-	cfi_remember_state
-	cfi_adjust_cfa_offset (-16)
-	cfi_restore (r4)
-	cfi_restore (r5)
-	cfi_restore (r6)
-	cfi_restore (r7)
-
-.Lreturn:
-	cmp	ip, #0			@ Was this strcpy or stpcpy?
-	ite	eq
-	subeq	r0, r0, #1		@ stpcpy: undo post-inc from store
-	movne	r0, ip			@ strcpy: return original dest
-	bx	lr
-
-.Lunaligned:
-	cfi_restore_state
-	@ Here, source is aligned to 8, but the destination is not word
-	@ aligned.  Therefore we have to shift the data in order to be
-	@ able to perform aligned word stores.
-
-	@ Find out which misalignment we're dealing with.
-	tst	r0, #1
-	beq	.Lunaligned2
-	tst	r0, #2
-	bne	.Lunaligned3
-	@ Fallthru to .Lunaligned1.
-
-.macro unaligned_copy	unalign
-	@ Prologue to unaligned loop.  Seed shifted non-zero bytes.
-	uqsub8	r4, r7, r2		@ Find EOS
-	uqsub8	r5, r7, r3
-	mvns	r4, r4			@ EOS in first word?
-	it	ne
-	subne	r1, r1, #8
-	bne	.Lbyte_loop
-#ifdef __ARMEB__
-	rev	r2, r2			@ Byte stores below need LE data
-#endif
-	@ Store a few bytes from the first word.
-	@ At the same time we align r0 and shift out bytes from r2.
-.rept	4-\unalign
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	strb	r2, [\B], #1
-	lsr	r2, r2, #8
-.endr
-#ifdef __ARMEB__
-	rev	r2, r2			@ Undo previous rev
-#endif
-	@ Rotated unaligned copy loop.  The tail of the prologue is
-	@ shared with the loop itself.
-	.balign 8
-1:	mvns	r5, r5			@ EOS in second word?
-	bne	4f
-	@ Combine first and second words
-	orr	r2, r2, r3, lsh_gt #(\unalign*8)
-	@ Save leftover bytes from the two words
-	lsh_ls	r6, r3, #((4-\unalign)*8)
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	str	r2, [\B], #4
-	@ The "real" start of the unaligned copy loop.
-	sfi_breg r1, \
-	ldrd	r2, r3, [\B], #8	@ Load 8 more bytes
-	uqsub8	r4, r7, r2		@ Find EOS
-	sfi_pld	r1, #128
-	uqsub8	r5, r7, r3
-	sfi_pld	r0, #128
-	mvns	r4, r4			@ EOS in first word?
-	bne	3f
-	@ Combine the leftover and the first word
-	orr	r6, r6, r2, lsh_gt #(\unalign*8)
-	@ Discard used bytes from the first word.
-	lsh_ls	r2, r2, #((4-\unalign)*8)
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	str	r6, [\B], #4
-	b	1b
-	@ Found EOS in one of the words; adjust backward
-3:	sub	r1, r1, #4
-	mov	r2, r6
-4:	sub	r1, r1, #4
-	@ And store the remaining bytes from the leftover
-#ifdef __ARMEB__
-	rev	r2, r2
-#endif
-.rept	\unalign
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	strb	r2, [\B], #1
-	lsr	r2, r2, #8
-.endr
-	b	.Lbyte_loop
-.endm
-
-.Lunaligned1:
-	unaligned_copy	1
-.Lunaligned2:
-	unaligned_copy	2
-.Lunaligned3:
-	unaligned_copy	3
-
-END (strcpy)
-
-libc_hidden_builtin_def (strcpy)
diff --git a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strlen.S b/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strlen.S
deleted file mode 100644
index 290d7bc86d..0000000000
--- a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strlen.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,103 +0,0 @@
-/* strlen -- find the length of a nul-terminated string.
-   Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-   This file is part of the GNU C Library.
-
-   The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
-   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
-   The GNU C Library 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
-   Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
-   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License along with the GNU C Library.  If not, see
-   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
-
-#include <sysdep.h>
-
-	.syntax unified
-	.text
-
-ENTRY (strlen)
-	@ r0 = start of string
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B]		@ load the first byte asap
-
-	@ To cater to long strings, we want to search through a few
-	@ characters until we reach an aligned pointer.  To cater to
-	@ small strings, we don't want to start doing word operations
-	@ immediately.  The compromise is a maximum of 16 bytes less
-	@ whatever is required to end with an aligned pointer.
-	@ r3 = number of characters to search in alignment loop
-	and	r3, r0, #7
-	mov	r1, r0			@ Save the input pointer
-	rsb	r3, r3, #15		@ 16 - 1 peeled loop iteration
-	cmp	r2, #0
-	beq	99f
-
-	@ Loop until we find ...
-1:	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B, #1]!
-	subs	r3, r3, #1		@ ... the aligment point
-	it	ne
-	cmpne	r2, #0			@ ... or EOS
-	bne	1b
-
-	@ Disambiguate the exit possibilites above
-	cmp	r2, #0			@ Found EOS
-	beq	99f
-	add	r0, r0, #1
-
-	@ So now we're aligned.
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrd	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-#ifdef ARCH_HAS_T2
-	movw	ip, #0x0101
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-	movt	ip, #0x0101
-#else
-	ldr	ip, =0x01010101
-	sfi_pld	r0, #64
-#endif
-
-	@ Loop searching for EOS, 8 bytes at a time.
-	@ Subtracting (unsigned saturating) from 1 for any byte means that
-	@ we get 1 for any byte that was originally zero and 0 otherwise.
-	@ Therefore we consider the lsb of each byte the "found" bit.
-	.balign	16
-2:	uqsub8	r2, ip, r2		@ Find EOS
-	uqsub8	r3, ip, r3
-	sfi_pld	r0, #128		@ Prefetch 2 lines ahead
-	orrs	r3, r3, r2		@ Combine the two words
-	it	eq
-	sfi_breg r0, \
-	ldrdeq	r2, r3, [\B], #8
-	beq	2b
-
-	@ Found something.  Disambiguate between first and second words.
-	@ Adjust r0 to point to the word containing the match.
-	@ Adjust r2 to the found bits for the word containing the match.
-	cmp	r2, #0
-	sub	r0, r0, #4
-	ite	eq
-	moveq	r2, r3
-	subne	r0, r0, #4
-
-	@ Find the bit-offset of the match within the word.  Note that the
-	@ bit result from clz will be 7 higher than "true", but we'll
-	@ immediately discard those bits converting to a byte offset.
-#ifdef __ARMEL__
-	rev	r2, r2			@ For LE, count from the little end
-#endif
-	clz	r2, r2
-	add	r0, r0, r2, lsr #3	@ Adjust the pointer to the found byte
-99:
-	sub	r0, r0, r1		@ Subtract input to compute length
-	bx	lr
-
-END (strlen)
-
-libc_hidden_builtin_def (strlen)
diff --git a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strrchr.S b/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strrchr.S
deleted file mode 100644
index a1e753c11b..0000000000
--- a/ports/sysdeps/arm/armv6/strrchr.S
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,131 +0,0 @@
-/* strrchr -- find the last occurence of C in a nul-terminated string
-   Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-   This file is part of the GNU C Library.
-
-   The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
-   modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
-   version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
-
-   The GNU C Library 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
-   Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
-   You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
-   License along with the GNU C Library.  If not, see
-   <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
-
-#include <sysdep.h>
-
-	.syntax unified
-	.text
-
-ENTRY (strrchr)
-	@ r0 = start of string
-	@ r1 = character to match
-	@ returns NULL for no match, or a pointer to the match
-
-	mov	r3, r0
-	mov	r0, #0
-	uxtb	r1, r1
-
-	@ Loop a few times until we're aligned.
-	tst	r3, #7
-	beq	2f
-1:	sfi_breg r3, \
-	ldrb	r2, [\B], #1
-	cmp	r2, r1			@ Find the character
-	it	eq
-	subeq	r0, r3, #1
-	cmp	r2, #0			@ Find EOS
-	it	eq
-	bxeq	lr
-	tst	r3, #7			@ Find the aligment point
-	bne	1b
-
-	@ So now we're aligned.  Now we actually need a stack frame.
-2:	push	{ r4, r5, r6, r7 }
-	cfi_adjust_cfa_offset (16)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r4, 0)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r5, 4)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r6, 8)
-	cfi_rel_offset (r7, 12)
-
-	orr	r1, r1, r1, lsl #8	@ Replicate C to all bytes
-#ifdef ARCH_HAS_T2
-	movw	ip, #0x0101
-	movt	ip, #0x0101
-#else
-	ldr	ip, =0x01010101
-#endif
-	orr	r1, r1, r1, lsl #16
-	mov	r2, #0			@ No found bits yet
-
-	@ Loop searching for EOS and C, 8 bytes at a time.
-	@ Any time we find a match in a word, we copy the address of
-	@ the word to r0, and the found bits to r2.
-3:	sfi_breg r3, \
-	ldrd	r4, r5, [\B], #8
-	@ Subtracting (unsigned saturating) from 1 means result of 1 for
-	@ any byte that was originally zero and 0 otherwise.  Therefore
-	@ we consider the lsb of each byte the "found" bit.
-	uqsub8	r6, ip, r4		@ Find EOS
-	uqsub8	r7, ip, r5
-	eor	r4, r4, r1		@ Convert C bytes to 0
-	eor	r5, r5, r1
-	uqsub8	r4, ip, r4		@ Find C
-	uqsub8	r5, ip, r5
-	cmp	r6, #0			@ Found EOS, first word
-	bne	4f
-	cmp	r4, #0			@ Handle C, first word
-	itt	ne
-	subne	r0, r3, #8
-	movne	r2, r4
-	cmp	r7, #0			@ Found EOS, second word
-	bne	5f
-	cmp	r5, #0			@ Handle C, second word
-	itt	ne
-	subne	r0, r3, #4
-	movne	r2, r5
-	b	3b
-
-	@ Found EOS in second word; fold to first word.
-5:	add	r3, r3, #4		@ Dec pointer to 2nd word, with below
-	mov	r4, r5			@ Overwrite first word C found
-	mov	r6, r7			@ Overwrite first word EOS found
-
-	@ Found EOS.  Zap found C after EOS.
-4:	sub	r3, r3, #8		@ Decrement pointer to first word
-#ifdef __ARMEB__
-	@ Byte swap to be congruent with LE, which is easier from here on.
-	rev	r6, r6			@ Byte swap found EOS,
-	rev	r4, r4			@ ... this found C
-	rev	r2, r2			@ ... prev found C
-#endif
-	sub	r7, r6, #1		@ Toggle EOS lsb and below
-	eor	r6, r6, r7		@ All bits below and including lsb
-	ands	r4, r4, r6		@ Zap C above EOS
-	itt	ne
-	movne	r2, r4			@ Copy to result, if still non-zero
-	movne	r0, r3
-
-	pop	{ r4, r5, r6, r7 }
-	cfi_adjust_cfa_offset (-16)
-	cfi_restore (r4)
-	cfi_restore (r5)
-	cfi_restore (r6)
-	cfi_restore (r7)
-
-	@ Adjust the result pointer if we found a word containing C.
-	cmp	r2, #0
-	clz	r2, r2			@ Find the bit offset of the last C
-	itt	ne
-	rsbne	r2, r2, #32		@ Convert to a count from the right
-	addne	r0, r0, r2, lsr #3	@ Convert to byte offset and add.
-	bx	lr
-
-END (strrchr)
-
-weak_alias (strrchr, rindex)
-libc_hidden_builtin_def (strrchr)