implement load/store to constant address
use VT_LLONG instead of VT_PTR in register passing
fix bound checking problem with small structs
enable riscv tests in tests/tcctest.c and tests/tests2/119_random_stuff.c
moved target_machine defines to the <target>-gen.c files.
Also:
- c2str.c moved into conftest.c
- tccdefs.h ; defined(__TINYC__) && !defined(_LOCORE) removed
(in tinycc __TINYC__ is always defined and _LO... is never.)
- stddef.h : too many #ifdefs, removed
- tccgen.c:stabs: support win32 long doubles aka doubles.
- win32: math.h/tcc_libm.h: fix pointer mismatch in modfl
- tccpp.c: increment include_stack_ptr after the file was
actually found otherwise it would print
"in file included from <itself>: file not found..."
netbsd does not allow text relocations in text segment.
tcc.h:
- Add data_ro_section
- Fix typo rela.plt
tccelf.c:
- Add data_ro_section
- Make bounds_section/lbounds_section rw
- Add GNU_RELRO section for data_ro_section/bounds_section/lbounds_section
- Fix relocation for __dso_handle in atexit()
tccgen.c:
- Use data_ro_section
x86_64-gen.c:
- Use R_X86_64_PC32 instead of R_X86_64_64 for bounds checking
tests/Makefile, tests/tests2/Makefile
- Enable dll tests for netbsd
... not just on the BSDs. Sometimes e.g. .note.ABI-tag is allocated
and other sections might contain relocations referring to symbols in
them. TCC doesn't do any special processing to them, like merging
or somesuch, it just pastes them all together in normal link-editing
behaviour.
(Seen on a recent openSUSE with glibc 2.32, when the crt1.o file
contains debug information)
tcc_define_symbol(): now only for -D on command line
include/tccdefs.h: converted to strings and compiled into
the tcc executable. Can be disabled with
./configure --config-predefs=no
In this case include/tccdefs.h is loaded at runtime. This is
default for other build-methods (build-tcc.bat) also (to avoid
some complexity).
Also:
- lib/Makefile: fix typo
- tcc.h : avoid _strto(u)i64 (for TCC on WIN98/2K)
- tccpp.h:cstr_printf() : workaround incompatible vsnprintf's
(generally faster too)