/** @file Copyright (c) 2014, ARM Limited. All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials are licensed and made available under the terms and conditions of the BSD License which accompanies this distribution. The full text of the license may be found at http://opensource.org/licenses/bsd-license.php THE PROGRAM IS DISTRIBUTED UNDER THE BSD LICENSE ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. **/ /* $NetBSD: arm-gcc.h,v 1.4 2013/01/26 07:08:14 matt Exp $ */ /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- One of the macros `BIGENDIAN' or `LITTLEENDIAN' must be defined. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #define LITTLEENDIAN /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The macro `BITS64' can be defined to indicate that 64-bit integer types are supported by the compiler. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #define BITS64 /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Each of the following `typedef's defines the most convenient type that holds integers of at least as many bits as specified. For example, `uint8' should be the most convenient type that can hold unsigned integers of as many as 8 bits. The `flag' type must be able to hold either a 0 or 1. For most implementations of C, `flag', `uint8', and `int8' should all be `typedef'ed to the same as `int'. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ typedef int flag; typedef int uint8; typedef int int8; typedef int uint16; typedef int int16; typedef unsigned int uint32; typedef signed int int32; #ifdef BITS64 typedef unsigned long long int uint64; typedef signed long long int int64; #endif /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Each of the following `typedef's defines a type that holds integers of _exactly_ the number of bits specified. For instance, for most implementation of C, `bits16' and `sbits16' should be `typedef'ed to `unsigned short int' and `signed short int' (or `short int'), respectively. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ typedef unsigned char bits8; typedef signed char sbits8; typedef unsigned short int bits16; typedef signed short int sbits16; typedef unsigned int bits32; typedef signed int sbits32; #ifdef BITS64 typedef unsigned long long int bits64; typedef signed long long int sbits64; #endif #ifdef BITS64 /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The `LIT64' macro takes as its argument a textual integer literal and if necessary ``marks'' the literal as having a 64-bit integer type. For example, the GNU C Compiler (`gcc') requires that 64-bit literals be appended with the letters `LL' standing for `long long', which is `gcc's name for the 64-bit integer type. Some compilers may allow `LIT64' to be defined as the identity macro: `#define LIT64( a ) a'. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #define LIT64( a ) a##ULL #endif /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The macro `INLINE' can be used before functions that should be inlined. If a compiler does not support explicit inlining, this macro should be defined to be `static'. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #define INLINE static inline /* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The ARM FPA is odd in that it stores doubles high-order word first, no matter what the endianness of the CPU. VFP is sane. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #if defined(SOFTFLOAT_FOR_GCC) #if defined(__VFP_FP__) #define FLOAT64_DEMANGLE(a) (a) #define FLOAT64_MANGLE(a) (a) #else #define FLOAT64_DEMANGLE(a) (((a) << 32) | ((a) >> 32)) #define FLOAT64_MANGLE(a) FLOAT64_DEMANGLE(a) #endif #endif