4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Paul E. Murphy
2c46d11486 Build s_nan* objects from a generic template
This requires adding a macro to synthesize the call
to __strto*_nan.  Since this is likely to be the only
usage ever for strto* functions in generated libm
calls, a dedicated macro is defined for it.
2016-09-20 14:37:42 -05:00
Paul E. Murphy
fc7f4691d3 Remove __nan{f,,l} macros
Use the GCC builtin instead.  With the exception of the
files built from a template, they are unused.  This
is preparation for making the s_nanF objects generated.
2016-09-20 14:37:41 -05:00
Paul E. Murphy
9f9834f582 Make ldexpF generic.
This one is a little more tricky since it is built both for
libm and libc, and exports multiple aliases.

To simplify aliasing, a new macro is introduced which handles
aliasing to two symbols.  By default, it just applies
declare_mgen_alias to both target symbols.

Likewise, the makefile is tweaked a little to generate
templates for shared files too, and a new rule is added
to build m_*.c objects from the objpfx directory.

Verified there are no symbol or code changes using a script
to diff the *_ldexp* object files on s390x, aarch64, arm,
x86_64, and ppc64.
2016-09-20 14:37:40 -05:00
Paul E. Murphy
ce6698ea0a Support for type-generic libm function implementations libm
This defines a new classes of libm objects.  The
<func>_template.c file which is used in conjunction
with the new makefile hooks to derive variants for
each type supported by the target machine.

The headers math-type-macros-TYPE.h are used to supply
macros to a common implementation of a function in
a file named FUNC_template.c and glued togethor via
a generated file matching existing naming in the
build directory.

This has the properties of preserving the existing
override mechanism and not requiring any arcane
build system twiddling.  Likewise, it enables machines
to override these files without any additional work.

I have verified the built objects for ppc64, x86_64,
alpha, arm, and m68k do not change in any meaningful
way with these changes using the Fedora cross toolchains.
I have verified the x86_64 and ppc64 changes still run.
2016-08-17 14:06:03 -05:00