Mercurial > emacs
view src/m/amdx86-64.h @ 112221:1e3cae16f7b0
Update refcards/*.tex short copyright year to 2011.
* refcards/calccard.tex, refcards/cs-dired-ref.tex:
* refcards/cs-refcard.tex, refcards/cs-survival.tex:
* refcards/de-refcard.tex, refcards/dired-ref.tex:
* refcards/fr-dired-ref.tex, refcards/fr-refcard.tex:
* refcards/fr-survival.tex, refcards/orgcard.tex:
* refcards/pl-refcard.tex, refcards/pt-br-refcard.tex:
* refcards/refcard.tex, refcards/ru-refcard.tex:
* refcards/sk-dired-ref.tex, refcards/sk-refcard.tex:
* refcards/sk-survival.tex, refcards/survival.tex:
* refcards/vipcard.tex, refcards/viperCard.tex:
Update short copyright year to 2011.
author | Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 02 Jan 2011 16:39:50 -0800 |
parents | 376148b31b5e |
children | 417b1e4d63cd |
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/* machine description file for AMD x86-64. Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs 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 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs 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 Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #ifdef i386 /* Although we're running on an amd64 kernel, we're actually compiling for the x86 architecture. The user should probably have provided an explicit --build to `configure', but if everything else than the kernel is running in i386 mode, then the bug is really ours: we should have guessed better. */ #include "m/intel386.h" #else /* The following line tells the configuration script what sort of operating system this machine is likely to run. USUAL-OPSYS="linux" */ #define BITS_PER_LONG 64 #define BITS_PER_EMACS_INT 64 /* Define WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN if lowest-numbered byte in a word is the most significant byte. */ #undef WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN /* Define NO_ARG_ARRAY if you cannot take the address of the first of a * group of arguments and treat it as an array of the arguments. */ #define NO_ARG_ARRAY /* Now define a symbol for the cpu type, if your compiler does not define it automatically: Ones defined so far include vax, m68000, ns16000, pyramid, orion, tahoe, APOLLO and many others */ /* __x86_64 defined automatically. */ /* Define the type to use. */ #define EMACS_INT long #define EMACS_UINT unsigned long /* Define EXPLICIT_SIGN_EXTEND if XINT must explicitly sign-extend the 24-bit bit field into an int. In other words, if bit fields are always unsigned. This flag only matters if you use USE_LISP_UNION_TYPE. */ #define EXPLICIT_SIGN_EXTEND /* Data type of load average, as read out of kmem. */ #define LOAD_AVE_TYPE long /* Convert that into an integer that is 100 for a load average of 1.0 */ #define LOAD_AVE_CVT(x) (int) (((double) (x)) * 100.0 / FSCALE) /* Define XPNTR to avoid or'ing with DATA_SEG_BITS */ #undef DATA_SEG_BITS #ifdef __FreeBSD__ /* The libraries for binaries native to the build host's architecture are installed under /usr/lib in FreeBSD, and the ones that need special paths are 32-bit compatibility libraries (installed under /usr/lib32). To build a native binary of Emacs on FreeBSD/amd64 we can just point to /usr/lib. */ #undef START_FILES #define START_FILES pre-crt0.o $(CRT_DIR)/crt1.o $(CRT_DIR)/crti.o /* The duplicate -lgcc is intentional in the definition of LIB_STANDARD. The reason is that some functions in libgcc.a call functions from libc.a, and some libc.a functions need functions from libgcc.a. Since most versions of ld are one-pass linkers, we need to mention -lgcc twice, or else we risk getting unresolved externals. */ #undef LIB_STANDARD #define LIB_STANDARD -lgcc -lc -lgcc $(CRT_DIR)/crtn.o #elif defined(__OpenBSD__) #undef START_FILES #define START_FILES pre-crt0.o $(CRT_DIR)/crt0.o $(CRT_DIR)/crtbegin.o #undef LIB_STANDARD #define LIB_STANDARD -lgcc -lc -lgcc $(CRT_DIR)/crtend.o #elif defined(__NetBSD__) /* LIB_STANDARD and START_FILES set correctly in s/netbsd.h */ #elif defined(SOLARIS2) #undef START_FILES #undef LIB_STANDARD #elif defined(__APPLE__) /* LIB_STANDARD and START_FILES set correctly in s/darwin.h */ #else /* !__OpenBSD__ && !__FreeBSD__ && !__NetBSD__ && !SOLARIS2 && !__APPLE__ */ /* The duplicate -lgcc is intentional in the definition of LIB_STANDARD. The reason is that some functions in libgcc.a call functions from libc.a, and some libc.a functions need functions from libgcc.a. Since most versions of ld are one-pass linkers, we need to mention -lgcc twice, or else we risk getting unresolved externals. */ #undef START_FILES #undef LIB_STANDARD #define START_FILES pre-crt0.o $(CRT_DIR)/crt1.o $(CRT_DIR)/crti.o #define LIB_STANDARD -lgcc -lc -lgcc $(CRT_DIR)/crtn.o #endif /* __FreeBSD__ */ #endif /* !i386 */ /* arch-tag: 8a5e001d-e12e-4692-a3a6-0b15ba271c6e (do not change this comment) */