Hi! On Wed, Mar 31, 2021 at 08:25:14PM +0200, Jakub Jelinek wrote: > __floatunditf and __fixtfdi and a couple of other libgcc{.a,_s.so} > entrypoints for backwards compatibility should mean IBM double double > handling (i.e. IFmode), gcc emits such calls for that format and > form IEEE long double emits *kf* instead. > When gcc is configured without --with-long-double-format=ieee , > everything is fine, but when it is not, we need to compile those > libgcc sources with -mno-gnu-attribute -mabi=ibmlongdouble. > The following snippet in libgcc/config/rs6000/t-linux was attempting > to ensure that, and for some routines it works fine (e.g. for _powitf2). > But, due to 4 different types of bugs it doesn't work for most of those > functions, which means that in --with-long-double-format=ieee > configured gcc those *tf* entrypoints instead handle the long double > arguments as if they were KFmode. > > The bugs are: > 1) the first few objs properly use $(objext) as suffix, but > several other contain a typo and use $(object) instead, > which is a variable that isn't set to anything, so we don't > add .o etc. extensions
Msybe we should use the --warn-undefined-variables make flag? > 2) while unsigned fix are properly called _fixuns*, unsigned float > are called _floatun* (without s), but the var was using there > the extra s and so didn't match > 3) the variable didn't cover any of the TF <-> TI conversions, > only TF <-> DI conversions > 4) nothing in libgcc_s.so was handled, as those object files are > called *_s.o rather than *.o and IBM128_SHARED_OBJS used wrong > syntax of the GNU make substitution reference, which should be > $(var:a=b) standing for $(patsubst a,b,$(var)) but it used > $(var:a:b) instead That is POSIX, not a GNU invention :-) > PR target/97653 > * config/rs6000/t-linux (IBM128_STATIC_OBJS): Fix spelling, use > $(objext) instead of $(object). Use _floatunditf instead of > _floatunsditf. Add tf <-> ti conversion objects. > (IBM128_SHARED_OBJS): Use proper substitution reference syntax. Okay for trunk. Thank you! Segher