| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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ARM has an override of the test math/test-fpucw.c, to disable (for
soft-float testing) definitions of hard-float macros in fpu_control.h
that the header normally defines not only when building for
hard-float, but also when building for soft-float with _LIBC defined
so that libc code can dynamically test whether VFP hardware is
present. (_LIBC is defined when building tests, although ideally it
wouldn't be.)
The override doesn't work for the derived tests test-fpucw-*.c because
they use #include "" instead of <> to include test-fpucw.c, so always
get the math/ version instead of the ARM sysdeps override. This patch
changes them to use <> so the sysdeps override is effective.
(test-fpucw-ieee-static.c doesn't need a change because it includes
test-fpucw-ieee.c, which isn't itself being overridden, which in turn
includes test-fpucw.c with a #include changed by this patch.)
Tested for ARM (big-endian soft-float, non-VFP hardware).
* math/test-fpucw-ieee.c: Use <> in #include of test-fpucw.c.
* math/test-fpucw-static.c: Likewise.
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Not all architectures define this value, and if they don't,
just let the test run the same as test-fpucw, with __fpu_control
set to _FPU_DEFAULT explicitly.
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Long ago static startup did not parse the auxiliary vector and therefore
could not get at any `AT_FPUCW' tag to check whether upon FPU context
allocation the kernel would use a FPU control word setting different to
that provided by the `__fpu_control' variable. Static startup therefore
always initialized the FPU control word, forcing immediate FPU context
allocation even for binaries that otherwise never used the FPU.
As from GIT commit f8f900ecb9096ec47f5b7bb7626e29223c69061a static
startup supports parsing the auxiliary vector, so now it can avoid
explicit initialization of the FPU control word, just as can dynamic
startup, in the usual case where the setting written to the FPU control
word would be the same as the kernel uses. This defers FPU context
allocation until the binary itself actually pokes at the FPU.
Note that the `AT_FPUCW' tag is usually absent from the auxiliary vector
in which case _FPU_DEFAULT is assumed to be the kernel default.
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