ack/plat/linux68k
tevorbl 04fe0aa53e fixed floats in printf in linux59k platform
problem was implementation of fint & fintrz floating point ops in m68kfpu.c
Both these ops truncated the integer to 32 bits instead of leaving it as an extended precision floating point number

Changed the implementation to use 64 bit ints instead of 32 bit ints.
2020-06-01 20:53:29 +01:00
..
emu fixed floats in printf in linux59k platform 2020-06-01 20:53:29 +01:00
include All the Linux include directories are the same, so common them all out into a 2018-06-24 19:57:43 +02:00
libsys All the Linux include directories are the same, so common them all out into a 2018-06-24 19:57:43 +02:00
tests Add 8-byte long long for linux68k. 2019-09-24 13:32:17 -04:00
boot.s Ensure that procedure labels are word aligned (required by the EM spec). 2019-06-17 22:26:31 +02:00
build-pkg.lua linux68k builds now. 2016-08-14 11:34:18 +02:00
build-tools.lua Plats which use aelflod need to depend on it. 2016-11-26 12:07:08 +01:00
descr Add 8-byte long long for linux68k. 2019-09-24 13:32:17 -04:00
README Add missing linux68k platform and liblinux support library. 2013-05-09 00:56:10 +01:00

# $Source: /cvsroot/tack/Ack/plat/linux386/README,v $
# $State: Exp $
# $Revision: 1.2 $


The linux386 platform
=====================

linux386 is an i386-based BSP that produces Linux ELF executables.

This port only implements a very limited number of system calls; basically,
just enough to make the demo apps run. Adding more is easy, but there are some
subtleties that require more thought. The port should be considered only in
proof-of-concept stage right now.

Important note: you *can't* link access ELF shared libraries from these
executables. In other words, you have to all your work from inside ACK.

IEEE floating point is available, but requires an FPU.

The executables are generated with aelfslod and are extremely simple; there's
one rwx ELF section which contains all the application's code and data. This
is not optimal, but it does work.


Bugs
====

isatty() is a stub and always returns 0.


Example command line
====================

ack -mlinux386 -O -o linux386.exe examples/paranoia.c

The file linux386.exe can then be run on a i386 Linux machine (or on an
emulation thereof).


David Given
dg@cowlark.com