re PR fortran/63861 (OpenACC coarray ICE (also with OpenMP?))
[official-gcc.git] / gcc / defaults.h
blob0f1c713c889d87d87896a62fd55c6c15b02b0aaa
1 /* Definitions of various defaults for tm.h macros.
2 Copyright (C) 1992-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Contributed by Ron Guilmette (rfg@monkeys.com)
5 This file is part of GCC.
7 GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
8 the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
9 Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
10 version.
12 GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
13 WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
14 FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
15 for more details.
17 Under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted additional
18 permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, version
19 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and
22 a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program;
23 see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see
24 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
26 #ifndef GCC_DEFAULTS_H
27 #define GCC_DEFAULTS_H
29 /* How to start an assembler comment. */
30 #ifndef ASM_COMMENT_START
31 #define ASM_COMMENT_START ";#"
32 #endif
34 /* Store in OUTPUT a string (made with alloca) containing an
35 assembler-name for a local static variable or function named NAME.
36 LABELNO is an integer which is different for each call. */
38 #ifndef ASM_PN_FORMAT
39 # ifndef NO_DOT_IN_LABEL
40 # define ASM_PN_FORMAT "%s.%lu"
41 # else
42 # ifndef NO_DOLLAR_IN_LABEL
43 # define ASM_PN_FORMAT "%s$%lu"
44 # else
45 # define ASM_PN_FORMAT "__%s_%lu"
46 # endif
47 # endif
48 #endif /* ! ASM_PN_FORMAT */
50 #ifndef ASM_FORMAT_PRIVATE_NAME
51 # define ASM_FORMAT_PRIVATE_NAME(OUTPUT, NAME, LABELNO) \
52 do { const char *const name_ = (NAME); \
53 char *const output_ = (OUTPUT) = \
54 (char *) alloca (strlen (name_) + 32); \
55 sprintf (output_, ASM_PN_FORMAT, name_, (unsigned long)(LABELNO)); \
56 } while (0)
57 #endif
59 /* Choose a reasonable default for ASM_OUTPUT_ASCII. */
61 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_ASCII
62 #define ASM_OUTPUT_ASCII(MYFILE, MYSTRING, MYLENGTH) \
63 do { \
64 FILE *_hide_asm_out_file = (MYFILE); \
65 const unsigned char *_hide_p = (const unsigned char *) (MYSTRING); \
66 int _hide_thissize = (MYLENGTH); \
67 { \
68 FILE *asm_out_file = _hide_asm_out_file; \
69 const unsigned char *p = _hide_p; \
70 int thissize = _hide_thissize; \
71 int i; \
72 fprintf (asm_out_file, "\t.ascii \""); \
74 for (i = 0; i < thissize; i++) \
75 { \
76 int c = p[i]; \
77 if (c == '\"' || c == '\\') \
78 putc ('\\', asm_out_file); \
79 if (ISPRINT (c)) \
80 putc (c, asm_out_file); \
81 else \
82 { \
83 fprintf (asm_out_file, "\\%o", c); \
84 /* After an octal-escape, if a digit follows, \
85 terminate one string constant and start another. \
86 The VAX assembler fails to stop reading the escape \
87 after three digits, so this is the only way we \
88 can get it to parse the data properly. */ \
89 if (i < thissize - 1 && ISDIGIT (p[i + 1])) \
90 fprintf (asm_out_file, "\"\n\t.ascii \""); \
91 } \
92 } \
93 fprintf (asm_out_file, "\"\n"); \
94 } \
95 } \
96 while (0)
97 #endif
99 /* This is how we tell the assembler to equate two values. */
100 #ifdef SET_ASM_OP
101 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_DEF
102 #define ASM_OUTPUT_DEF(FILE,LABEL1,LABEL2) \
103 do { fprintf ((FILE), "%s", SET_ASM_OP); \
104 assemble_name (FILE, LABEL1); \
105 fprintf (FILE, ","); \
106 assemble_name (FILE, LABEL2); \
107 fprintf (FILE, "\n"); \
108 } while (0)
109 #endif
110 #endif
112 #ifndef IFUNC_ASM_TYPE
113 #define IFUNC_ASM_TYPE "gnu_indirect_function"
114 #endif
116 #ifndef TLS_COMMON_ASM_OP
117 #define TLS_COMMON_ASM_OP ".tls_common"
118 #endif
120 #if defined (HAVE_AS_TLS) && !defined (ASM_OUTPUT_TLS_COMMON)
121 #define ASM_OUTPUT_TLS_COMMON(FILE, DECL, NAME, SIZE) \
122 do \
124 fprintf ((FILE), "\t%s\t", TLS_COMMON_ASM_OP); \
125 assemble_name ((FILE), (NAME)); \
126 fprintf ((FILE), "," HOST_WIDE_INT_PRINT_UNSIGNED",%u\n", \
127 (SIZE), DECL_ALIGN (DECL) / BITS_PER_UNIT); \
129 while (0)
130 #endif
132 /* Decide whether to defer emitting the assembler output for an equate
133 of two values. The default is to not defer output. */
134 #ifndef TARGET_DEFERRED_OUTPUT_DEFS
135 #define TARGET_DEFERRED_OUTPUT_DEFS(DECL,TARGET) false
136 #endif
138 /* This is how to output the definition of a user-level label named
139 NAME, such as the label on variable NAME. */
141 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_LABEL
142 #define ASM_OUTPUT_LABEL(FILE,NAME) \
143 do { \
144 assemble_name ((FILE), (NAME)); \
145 fputs (":\n", (FILE)); \
146 } while (0)
147 #endif
149 /* This is how to output the definition of a user-level label named
150 NAME, such as the label on a function. */
152 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_FUNCTION_LABEL
153 #define ASM_OUTPUT_FUNCTION_LABEL(FILE, NAME, DECL) \
154 ASM_OUTPUT_LABEL ((FILE), (NAME))
155 #endif
157 /* Output the definition of a compiler-generated label named NAME. */
158 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_INTERNAL_LABEL
159 #define ASM_OUTPUT_INTERNAL_LABEL(FILE,NAME) \
160 do { \
161 assemble_name_raw ((FILE), (NAME)); \
162 fputs (":\n", (FILE)); \
163 } while (0)
164 #endif
166 /* This is how to output a reference to a user-level label named NAME. */
168 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_LABELREF
169 #define ASM_OUTPUT_LABELREF(FILE,NAME) \
170 do { \
171 fputs (user_label_prefix, (FILE)); \
172 fputs ((NAME), (FILE)); \
173 } while (0);
174 #endif
176 /* Allow target to print debug info labels specially. This is useful for
177 VLIW targets, since debug info labels should go into the middle of
178 instruction bundles instead of breaking them. */
180 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_DEBUG_LABEL
181 #define ASM_OUTPUT_DEBUG_LABEL(FILE, PREFIX, NUM) \
182 (*targetm.asm_out.internal_label) (FILE, PREFIX, NUM)
183 #endif
185 /* This is how we tell the assembler that a symbol is weak. */
186 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_WEAK_ALIAS
187 #if defined (ASM_WEAKEN_LABEL) && defined (ASM_OUTPUT_DEF)
188 #define ASM_OUTPUT_WEAK_ALIAS(STREAM, NAME, VALUE) \
189 do \
191 ASM_WEAKEN_LABEL (STREAM, NAME); \
192 if (VALUE) \
193 ASM_OUTPUT_DEF (STREAM, NAME, VALUE); \
195 while (0)
196 #endif
197 #endif
199 /* This is how we tell the assembler that a symbol is a weak alias to
200 another symbol that doesn't require the other symbol to be defined.
201 Uses of the former will turn into weak uses of the latter, i.e.,
202 uses that, in case the latter is undefined, will not cause errors,
203 and will add it to the symbol table as weak undefined. However, if
204 the latter is referenced directly, a strong reference prevails. */
205 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_WEAKREF
206 #if defined HAVE_GAS_WEAKREF
207 #define ASM_OUTPUT_WEAKREF(FILE, DECL, NAME, VALUE) \
208 do \
210 fprintf ((FILE), "\t.weakref\t"); \
211 assemble_name ((FILE), (NAME)); \
212 fprintf ((FILE), ","); \
213 assemble_name ((FILE), (VALUE)); \
214 fprintf ((FILE), "\n"); \
216 while (0)
217 #endif
218 #endif
220 /* How to emit a .type directive. */
221 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_TYPE_DIRECTIVE
222 #if defined TYPE_ASM_OP && defined TYPE_OPERAND_FMT
223 #define ASM_OUTPUT_TYPE_DIRECTIVE(STREAM, NAME, TYPE) \
224 do \
226 fputs (TYPE_ASM_OP, STREAM); \
227 assemble_name (STREAM, NAME); \
228 fputs (", ", STREAM); \
229 fprintf (STREAM, TYPE_OPERAND_FMT, TYPE); \
230 putc ('\n', STREAM); \
232 while (0)
233 #endif
234 #endif
236 /* How to emit a .size directive. */
237 #ifndef ASM_OUTPUT_SIZE_DIRECTIVE
238 #ifdef SIZE_ASM_OP
239 #define ASM_OUTPUT_SIZE_DIRECTIVE(STREAM, NAME, SIZE) \
240 do \
242 HOST_WIDE_INT size_ = (SIZE); \
243 fputs (SIZE_ASM_OP, STREAM); \
244 assemble_name (STREAM, NAME); \
245 fprintf (STREAM, ", " HOST_WIDE_INT_PRINT_DEC "\n", size_); \
247 while (0)
249 #define ASM_OUTPUT_MEASURED_SIZE(STREAM, NAME) \
250 do \
252 fputs (SIZE_ASM_OP, STREAM); \
253 assemble_name (STREAM, NAME); \
254 fputs (", .-", STREAM); \
255 assemble_name (STREAM, NAME); \
256 putc ('\n', STREAM); \
258 while (0)
260 #endif
261 #endif
263 /* This determines whether or not we support weak symbols. SUPPORTS_WEAK
264 must be a preprocessor constant. */
265 #ifndef SUPPORTS_WEAK
266 #if defined (ASM_WEAKEN_LABEL) || defined (ASM_WEAKEN_DECL)
267 #define SUPPORTS_WEAK 1
268 #else
269 #define SUPPORTS_WEAK 0
270 #endif
271 #endif
273 /* This determines whether or not we support weak symbols during target
274 code generation. TARGET_SUPPORTS_WEAK can be any valid C expression. */
275 #ifndef TARGET_SUPPORTS_WEAK
276 #define TARGET_SUPPORTS_WEAK (SUPPORTS_WEAK)
277 #endif
279 /* This determines whether or not we support the discriminator
280 attribute in the .loc directive. */
281 #ifndef SUPPORTS_DISCRIMINATOR
282 #ifdef HAVE_GAS_DISCRIMINATOR
283 #define SUPPORTS_DISCRIMINATOR 1
284 #else
285 #define SUPPORTS_DISCRIMINATOR 0
286 #endif
287 #endif
289 /* This determines whether or not we support link-once semantics. */
290 #ifndef SUPPORTS_ONE_ONLY
291 #ifdef MAKE_DECL_ONE_ONLY
292 #define SUPPORTS_ONE_ONLY 1
293 #else
294 #define SUPPORTS_ONE_ONLY 0
295 #endif
296 #endif
298 /* This determines whether weak symbols must be left out of a static
299 archive's table of contents. Defining this macro to be nonzero has
300 the consequence that certain symbols will not be made weak that
301 otherwise would be. The C++ ABI requires this macro to be zero;
302 see the documentation. */
303 #ifndef TARGET_WEAK_NOT_IN_ARCHIVE_TOC
304 #define TARGET_WEAK_NOT_IN_ARCHIVE_TOC 0
305 #endif
307 /* This determines whether or not we need linkonce unwind information. */
308 #ifndef TARGET_USES_WEAK_UNWIND_INFO
309 #define TARGET_USES_WEAK_UNWIND_INFO 0
310 #endif
312 /* By default, there is no prefix on user-defined symbols. */
313 #ifndef USER_LABEL_PREFIX
314 #define USER_LABEL_PREFIX ""
315 #endif
317 /* If the target supports weak symbols, define TARGET_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK to
318 provide a weak attribute. Else define it to nothing.
320 This would normally belong in ansidecl.h, but SUPPORTS_WEAK is
321 not available at that time.
323 Note, this is only for use by target files which we know are to be
324 compiled by GCC. */
325 #ifndef TARGET_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
326 # if SUPPORTS_WEAK
327 # define TARGET_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK __attribute__ ((weak))
328 # else
329 # define TARGET_ATTRIBUTE_WEAK
330 # endif
331 #endif
333 /* By default we can assume that all global symbols are in one namespace,
334 across all shared libraries. */
335 #ifndef MULTIPLE_SYMBOL_SPACES
336 # define MULTIPLE_SYMBOL_SPACES 0
337 #endif
339 /* If the target supports init_priority C++ attribute, give
340 SUPPORTS_INIT_PRIORITY a nonzero value. */
341 #ifndef SUPPORTS_INIT_PRIORITY
342 #define SUPPORTS_INIT_PRIORITY 1
343 #endif /* SUPPORTS_INIT_PRIORITY */
345 /* If we have a definition of INCOMING_RETURN_ADDR_RTX, assume that
346 the rest of the DWARF 2 frame unwind support is also provided. */
347 #if !defined (DWARF2_UNWIND_INFO) && defined (INCOMING_RETURN_ADDR_RTX)
348 #define DWARF2_UNWIND_INFO 1
349 #endif
351 /* If we have named sections, and we're using crtstuff to run ctors,
352 use them for registering eh frame information. */
353 #if defined (TARGET_ASM_NAMED_SECTION) && DWARF2_UNWIND_INFO \
354 && !defined (EH_FRAME_THROUGH_COLLECT2)
355 #ifndef EH_FRAME_SECTION_NAME
356 #define EH_FRAME_SECTION_NAME ".eh_frame"
357 #endif
358 #endif
360 /* On many systems, different EH table encodings are used under
361 difference circumstances. Some will require runtime relocations;
362 some will not. For those that do not require runtime relocations,
363 we would like to make the table read-only. However, since the
364 read-only tables may need to be combined with read-write tables
365 that do require runtime relocation, it is not safe to make the
366 tables read-only unless the linker will merge read-only and
367 read-write sections into a single read-write section. If your
368 linker does not have this ability, but your system is such that no
369 encoding used with non-PIC code will ever require a runtime
370 relocation, then you can define EH_TABLES_CAN_BE_READ_ONLY to 1 in
371 your target configuration file. */
372 #ifndef EH_TABLES_CAN_BE_READ_ONLY
373 #ifdef HAVE_LD_RO_RW_SECTION_MIXING
374 #define EH_TABLES_CAN_BE_READ_ONLY 1
375 #else
376 #define EH_TABLES_CAN_BE_READ_ONLY 0
377 #endif
378 #endif
380 /* Provide defaults for stuff that may not be defined when using
381 sjlj exceptions. */
382 #ifndef EH_RETURN_DATA_REGNO
383 #define EH_RETURN_DATA_REGNO(N) INVALID_REGNUM
384 #endif
386 /* Offset between the eh handler address and entry in eh tables. */
387 #ifndef RETURN_ADDR_OFFSET
388 #define RETURN_ADDR_OFFSET 0
389 #endif
391 #ifndef MASK_RETURN_ADDR
392 #define MASK_RETURN_ADDR NULL_RTX
393 #endif
395 /* If we have named section and we support weak symbols, then use the
396 .jcr section for recording java classes which need to be registered
397 at program start-up time. */
398 #if defined (TARGET_ASM_NAMED_SECTION) && SUPPORTS_WEAK
399 #ifndef JCR_SECTION_NAME
400 #define JCR_SECTION_NAME ".jcr"
401 #endif
402 #endif
404 /* This decision to use a .jcr section can be overridden by defining
405 USE_JCR_SECTION to 0 in target file. This is necessary if target
406 can define JCR_SECTION_NAME but does not have crtstuff or
407 linker support for .jcr section. */
408 #ifndef TARGET_USE_JCR_SECTION
409 #ifdef JCR_SECTION_NAME
410 #define TARGET_USE_JCR_SECTION 1
411 #else
412 #define TARGET_USE_JCR_SECTION 0
413 #endif
414 #endif
416 /* Number of hardware registers that go into the DWARF-2 unwind info.
417 If not defined, equals FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER */
419 #ifndef DWARF_FRAME_REGISTERS
420 #define DWARF_FRAME_REGISTERS FIRST_PSEUDO_REGISTER
421 #endif
423 /* Offsets recorded in opcodes are a multiple of this alignment factor. */
424 #ifndef DWARF_CIE_DATA_ALIGNMENT
425 #ifdef STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD
426 #define DWARF_CIE_DATA_ALIGNMENT (-((int) UNITS_PER_WORD))
427 #else
428 #define DWARF_CIE_DATA_ALIGNMENT ((int) UNITS_PER_WORD)
429 #endif
430 #endif
432 /* The DWARF 2 CFA column which tracks the return address. Normally this
433 is the column for PC, or the first column after all of the hard
434 registers. */
435 #ifndef DWARF_FRAME_RETURN_COLUMN
436 #ifdef PC_REGNUM
437 #define DWARF_FRAME_RETURN_COLUMN DWARF_FRAME_REGNUM (PC_REGNUM)
438 #else
439 #define DWARF_FRAME_RETURN_COLUMN DWARF_FRAME_REGISTERS
440 #endif
441 #endif
443 /* How to renumber registers for dbx and gdb. If not defined, assume
444 no renumbering is necessary. */
446 #ifndef DBX_REGISTER_NUMBER
447 #define DBX_REGISTER_NUMBER(REGNO) (REGNO)
448 #endif
450 /* The mapping from gcc register number to DWARF 2 CFA column number.
451 By default, we just provide columns for all registers. */
452 #ifndef DWARF_FRAME_REGNUM
453 #define DWARF_FRAME_REGNUM(REG) DBX_REGISTER_NUMBER (REG)
454 #endif
456 /* The mapping from dwarf CFA reg number to internal dwarf reg numbers. */
457 #ifndef DWARF_REG_TO_UNWIND_COLUMN
458 #define DWARF_REG_TO_UNWIND_COLUMN(REGNO) (REGNO)
459 #endif
461 /* Map register numbers held in the call frame info that gcc has
462 collected using DWARF_FRAME_REGNUM to those that should be output in
463 .debug_frame and .eh_frame. */
464 #ifndef DWARF2_FRAME_REG_OUT
465 #define DWARF2_FRAME_REG_OUT(REGNO, FOR_EH) (REGNO)
466 #endif
468 /* The size of addresses as they appear in the Dwarf 2 data.
469 Some architectures use word addresses to refer to code locations,
470 but Dwarf 2 info always uses byte addresses. On such machines,
471 Dwarf 2 addresses need to be larger than the architecture's
472 pointers. */
473 #ifndef DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE
474 #define DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE ((POINTER_SIZE + BITS_PER_UNIT - 1) / BITS_PER_UNIT)
475 #endif
477 /* The size in bytes of a DWARF field indicating an offset or length
478 relative to a debug info section, specified to be 4 bytes in the
479 DWARF-2 specification. The SGI/MIPS ABI defines it to be the same
480 as PTR_SIZE. */
481 #ifndef DWARF_OFFSET_SIZE
482 #define DWARF_OFFSET_SIZE 4
483 #endif
485 /* The size in bytes of a DWARF 4 type signature. */
486 #ifndef DWARF_TYPE_SIGNATURE_SIZE
487 #define DWARF_TYPE_SIGNATURE_SIZE 8
488 #endif
490 /* Default sizes for base C types. If the sizes are different for
491 your target, you should override these values by defining the
492 appropriate symbols in your tm.h file. */
494 #if BITS_PER_UNIT == 8
495 #define LOG2_BITS_PER_UNIT 3
496 #elif BITS_PER_UNIT == 16
497 #define LOG2_BITS_PER_UNIT 4
498 #else
499 #error Unknown BITS_PER_UNIT
500 #endif
502 #ifndef BITS_PER_WORD
503 #define BITS_PER_WORD (BITS_PER_UNIT * UNITS_PER_WORD)
504 #endif
506 #ifndef CHAR_TYPE_SIZE
507 #define CHAR_TYPE_SIZE BITS_PER_UNIT
508 #endif
510 #ifndef BOOL_TYPE_SIZE
511 /* `bool' has size and alignment `1', on almost all platforms. */
512 #define BOOL_TYPE_SIZE CHAR_TYPE_SIZE
513 #endif
515 #ifndef SHORT_TYPE_SIZE
516 #define SHORT_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_UNIT * MIN ((UNITS_PER_WORD + 1) / 2, 2))
517 #endif
519 #ifndef INT_TYPE_SIZE
520 #define INT_TYPE_SIZE BITS_PER_WORD
521 #endif
523 #ifndef LONG_TYPE_SIZE
524 #define LONG_TYPE_SIZE BITS_PER_WORD
525 #endif
527 #ifndef LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE
528 #define LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_WORD * 2)
529 #endif
531 #ifndef WCHAR_TYPE_SIZE
532 #define WCHAR_TYPE_SIZE INT_TYPE_SIZE
533 #endif
535 #ifndef FLOAT_TYPE_SIZE
536 #define FLOAT_TYPE_SIZE BITS_PER_WORD
537 #endif
539 #ifndef DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE
540 #define DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_WORD * 2)
541 #endif
543 #ifndef LONG_DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE
544 #define LONG_DOUBLE_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_WORD * 2)
545 #endif
547 #ifndef DECIMAL32_TYPE_SIZE
548 #define DECIMAL32_TYPE_SIZE 32
549 #endif
551 #ifndef DECIMAL64_TYPE_SIZE
552 #define DECIMAL64_TYPE_SIZE 64
553 #endif
555 #ifndef DECIMAL128_TYPE_SIZE
556 #define DECIMAL128_TYPE_SIZE 128
557 #endif
559 #ifndef SHORT_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE
560 #define SHORT_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE BITS_PER_UNIT
561 #endif
563 #ifndef FRACT_TYPE_SIZE
564 #define FRACT_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_UNIT * 2)
565 #endif
567 #ifndef LONG_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE
568 #define LONG_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_UNIT * 4)
569 #endif
571 #ifndef LONG_LONG_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE
572 #define LONG_LONG_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE (BITS_PER_UNIT * 8)
573 #endif
575 #ifndef SHORT_ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE
576 #define SHORT_ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE (SHORT_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE * 2)
577 #endif
579 #ifndef ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE
580 #define ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE (FRACT_TYPE_SIZE * 2)
581 #endif
583 #ifndef LONG_ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE
584 #define LONG_ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE (LONG_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE * 2)
585 #endif
587 #ifndef LONG_LONG_ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE
588 #define LONG_LONG_ACCUM_TYPE_SIZE (LONG_LONG_FRACT_TYPE_SIZE * 2)
589 #endif
591 /* We let tm.h override the types used here, to handle trivial differences
592 such as the choice of unsigned int or long unsigned int for size_t.
593 When machines start needing nontrivial differences in the size type,
594 it would be best to do something here to figure out automatically
595 from other information what type to use. */
597 #ifndef SIZE_TYPE
598 #define SIZE_TYPE "long unsigned int"
599 #endif
601 #ifndef SIZETYPE
602 #define SIZETYPE SIZE_TYPE
603 #endif
605 #ifndef PID_TYPE
606 #define PID_TYPE "int"
607 #endif
609 /* If GCC knows the exact uint_least16_t and uint_least32_t types from
610 <stdint.h>, use them for char16_t and char32_t. Otherwise, use
611 these guesses; getting the wrong type of a given width will not
612 affect C++ name mangling because in C++ these are distinct types
613 not typedefs. */
615 #ifdef UINT_LEAST16_TYPE
616 #define CHAR16_TYPE UINT_LEAST16_TYPE
617 #else
618 #define CHAR16_TYPE "short unsigned int"
619 #endif
621 #ifdef UINT_LEAST32_TYPE
622 #define CHAR32_TYPE UINT_LEAST32_TYPE
623 #else
624 #define CHAR32_TYPE "unsigned int"
625 #endif
627 #ifndef WCHAR_TYPE
628 #define WCHAR_TYPE "int"
629 #endif
631 /* WCHAR_TYPE gets overridden by -fshort-wchar. */
632 #define MODIFIED_WCHAR_TYPE \
633 (flag_short_wchar ? "short unsigned int" : WCHAR_TYPE)
635 #ifndef PTRDIFF_TYPE
636 #define PTRDIFF_TYPE "long int"
637 #endif
639 #ifndef WINT_TYPE
640 #define WINT_TYPE "unsigned int"
641 #endif
643 #ifndef INTMAX_TYPE
644 #define INTMAX_TYPE ((INT_TYPE_SIZE == LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE) \
645 ? "int" \
646 : ((LONG_TYPE_SIZE == LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE) \
647 ? "long int" \
648 : "long long int"))
649 #endif
651 #ifndef UINTMAX_TYPE
652 #define UINTMAX_TYPE ((INT_TYPE_SIZE == LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE) \
653 ? "unsigned int" \
654 : ((LONG_TYPE_SIZE == LONG_LONG_TYPE_SIZE) \
655 ? "long unsigned int" \
656 : "long long unsigned int"))
657 #endif
660 /* There are no default definitions of these <stdint.h> types. */
662 #ifndef SIG_ATOMIC_TYPE
663 #define SIG_ATOMIC_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
664 #endif
666 #ifndef INT8_TYPE
667 #define INT8_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
668 #endif
670 #ifndef INT16_TYPE
671 #define INT16_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
672 #endif
674 #ifndef INT32_TYPE
675 #define INT32_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
676 #endif
678 #ifndef INT64_TYPE
679 #define INT64_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
680 #endif
682 #ifndef UINT8_TYPE
683 #define UINT8_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
684 #endif
686 #ifndef UINT16_TYPE
687 #define UINT16_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
688 #endif
690 #ifndef UINT32_TYPE
691 #define UINT32_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
692 #endif
694 #ifndef UINT64_TYPE
695 #define UINT64_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
696 #endif
698 #ifndef INT_LEAST8_TYPE
699 #define INT_LEAST8_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
700 #endif
702 #ifndef INT_LEAST16_TYPE
703 #define INT_LEAST16_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
704 #endif
706 #ifndef INT_LEAST32_TYPE
707 #define INT_LEAST32_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
708 #endif
710 #ifndef INT_LEAST64_TYPE
711 #define INT_LEAST64_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
712 #endif
714 #ifndef UINT_LEAST8_TYPE
715 #define UINT_LEAST8_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
716 #endif
718 #ifndef UINT_LEAST16_TYPE
719 #define UINT_LEAST16_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
720 #endif
722 #ifndef UINT_LEAST32_TYPE
723 #define UINT_LEAST32_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
724 #endif
726 #ifndef UINT_LEAST64_TYPE
727 #define UINT_LEAST64_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
728 #endif
730 #ifndef INT_FAST8_TYPE
731 #define INT_FAST8_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
732 #endif
734 #ifndef INT_FAST16_TYPE
735 #define INT_FAST16_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
736 #endif
738 #ifndef INT_FAST32_TYPE
739 #define INT_FAST32_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
740 #endif
742 #ifndef INT_FAST64_TYPE
743 #define INT_FAST64_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
744 #endif
746 #ifndef UINT_FAST8_TYPE
747 #define UINT_FAST8_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
748 #endif
750 #ifndef UINT_FAST16_TYPE
751 #define UINT_FAST16_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
752 #endif
754 #ifndef UINT_FAST32_TYPE
755 #define UINT_FAST32_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
756 #endif
758 #ifndef UINT_FAST64_TYPE
759 #define UINT_FAST64_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
760 #endif
762 #ifndef INTPTR_TYPE
763 #define INTPTR_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
764 #endif
766 #ifndef UINTPTR_TYPE
767 #define UINTPTR_TYPE ((const char *) NULL)
768 #endif
770 /* Width in bits of a pointer. Mind the value of the macro `Pmode'. */
771 #ifndef POINTER_SIZE
772 #define POINTER_SIZE BITS_PER_WORD
773 #endif
774 #ifndef POINTER_SIZE_UNITS
775 #define POINTER_SIZE_UNITS ((POINTER_SIZE + BITS_PER_UNIT - 1) / BITS_PER_UNIT)
776 #endif
779 #ifndef PIC_OFFSET_TABLE_REGNUM
780 #define PIC_OFFSET_TABLE_REGNUM INVALID_REGNUM
781 #endif
783 #ifndef PIC_OFFSET_TABLE_REG_CALL_CLOBBERED
784 #define PIC_OFFSET_TABLE_REG_CALL_CLOBBERED 0
785 #endif
787 #ifndef TARGET_DLLIMPORT_DECL_ATTRIBUTES
788 #define TARGET_DLLIMPORT_DECL_ATTRIBUTES 0
789 #endif
791 #ifndef TARGET_DECLSPEC
792 #if TARGET_DLLIMPORT_DECL_ATTRIBUTES
793 /* If the target supports the "dllimport" attribute, users are
794 probably used to the "__declspec" syntax. */
795 #define TARGET_DECLSPEC 1
796 #else
797 #define TARGET_DECLSPEC 0
798 #endif
799 #endif
801 /* By default, the preprocessor should be invoked the same way in C++
802 as in C. */
803 #ifndef CPLUSPLUS_CPP_SPEC
804 #ifdef CPP_SPEC
805 #define CPLUSPLUS_CPP_SPEC CPP_SPEC
806 #endif
807 #endif
809 #ifndef ACCUMULATE_OUTGOING_ARGS
810 #define ACCUMULATE_OUTGOING_ARGS 0
811 #endif
813 /* By default, use the GNU runtime for Objective C. */
814 #ifndef NEXT_OBJC_RUNTIME
815 #define NEXT_OBJC_RUNTIME 0
816 #endif
818 /* Supply a default definition for PUSH_ARGS. */
819 #ifndef PUSH_ARGS
820 #ifdef PUSH_ROUNDING
821 #define PUSH_ARGS !ACCUMULATE_OUTGOING_ARGS
822 #else
823 #define PUSH_ARGS 0
824 #endif
825 #endif
827 /* Decide whether a function's arguments should be processed
828 from first to last or from last to first.
830 They should if the stack and args grow in opposite directions, but
831 only if we have push insns. */
833 #ifdef PUSH_ROUNDING
835 #ifndef PUSH_ARGS_REVERSED
836 #if defined (STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD) != defined (ARGS_GROW_DOWNWARD)
837 #define PUSH_ARGS_REVERSED PUSH_ARGS
838 #endif
839 #endif
841 #endif
843 #ifndef PUSH_ARGS_REVERSED
844 #define PUSH_ARGS_REVERSED 0
845 #endif
847 /* Default value for the alignment (in bits) a C conformant malloc has to
848 provide. This default is intended to be safe and always correct. */
849 #ifndef MALLOC_ABI_ALIGNMENT
850 #define MALLOC_ABI_ALIGNMENT BITS_PER_WORD
851 #endif
853 /* If PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY is not defined, set it to STACK_BOUNDARY.
854 STACK_BOUNDARY is required. */
855 #ifndef PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY
856 #define PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY STACK_BOUNDARY
857 #endif
859 /* Set INCOMING_STACK_BOUNDARY to PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY if it is not
860 defined. */
861 #ifndef INCOMING_STACK_BOUNDARY
862 #define INCOMING_STACK_BOUNDARY PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY
863 #endif
865 #ifndef TARGET_DEFAULT_PACK_STRUCT
866 #define TARGET_DEFAULT_PACK_STRUCT 0
867 #endif
869 /* By default, the vtable entries are void pointers, the so the alignment
870 is the same as pointer alignment. The value of this macro specifies
871 the alignment of the vtable entry in bits. It should be defined only
872 when special alignment is necessary. */
873 #ifndef TARGET_VTABLE_ENTRY_ALIGN
874 #define TARGET_VTABLE_ENTRY_ALIGN POINTER_SIZE
875 #endif
877 /* There are a few non-descriptor entries in the vtable at offsets below
878 zero. If these entries must be padded (say, to preserve the alignment
879 specified by TARGET_VTABLE_ENTRY_ALIGN), set this to the number of
880 words in each data entry. */
881 #ifndef TARGET_VTABLE_DATA_ENTRY_DISTANCE
882 #define TARGET_VTABLE_DATA_ENTRY_DISTANCE 1
883 #endif
885 /* Decide whether it is safe to use a local alias for a virtual function
886 when constructing thunks. */
887 #ifndef TARGET_USE_LOCAL_THUNK_ALIAS_P
888 #ifdef ASM_OUTPUT_DEF
889 #define TARGET_USE_LOCAL_THUNK_ALIAS_P(DECL) 1
890 #else
891 #define TARGET_USE_LOCAL_THUNK_ALIAS_P(DECL) 0
892 #endif
893 #endif
895 /* Select a format to encode pointers in exception handling data. We
896 prefer those that result in fewer dynamic relocations. Assume no
897 special support here and encode direct references. */
898 #ifndef ASM_PREFERRED_EH_DATA_FORMAT
899 #define ASM_PREFERRED_EH_DATA_FORMAT(CODE,GLOBAL) DW_EH_PE_absptr
900 #endif
902 /* By default, the C++ compiler will use the lowest bit of the pointer
903 to function to indicate a pointer-to-member-function points to a
904 virtual member function. However, if FUNCTION_BOUNDARY indicates
905 function addresses aren't always even, the lowest bit of the delta
906 field will be used. */
907 #ifndef TARGET_PTRMEMFUNC_VBIT_LOCATION
908 #define TARGET_PTRMEMFUNC_VBIT_LOCATION \
909 (FUNCTION_BOUNDARY >= 2 * BITS_PER_UNIT \
910 ? ptrmemfunc_vbit_in_pfn : ptrmemfunc_vbit_in_delta)
911 #endif
913 #ifndef DEFAULT_GDB_EXTENSIONS
914 #define DEFAULT_GDB_EXTENSIONS 1
915 #endif
917 #ifndef SDB_DEBUGGING_INFO
918 #define SDB_DEBUGGING_INFO 0
919 #endif
921 /* If more than one debugging type is supported, you must define
922 PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE to choose the default. */
924 #if 1 < (defined (DBX_DEBUGGING_INFO) + (SDB_DEBUGGING_INFO) \
925 + defined (DWARF2_DEBUGGING_INFO) + defined (XCOFF_DEBUGGING_INFO) \
926 + defined (VMS_DEBUGGING_INFO))
927 #ifndef PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE
928 #error You must define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE
929 #endif /* no PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE */
931 /* If only one debugging format is supported, define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE
932 here so other code needn't care. */
933 #elif defined DBX_DEBUGGING_INFO
934 #define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE DBX_DEBUG
936 #elif SDB_DEBUGGING_INFO
937 #define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE SDB_DEBUG
939 #elif defined DWARF2_DEBUGGING_INFO || defined DWARF2_LINENO_DEBUGGING_INFO
940 #define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE DWARF2_DEBUG
942 #elif defined VMS_DEBUGGING_INFO
943 #define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE VMS_AND_DWARF2_DEBUG
945 #elif defined XCOFF_DEBUGGING_INFO
946 #define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE XCOFF_DEBUG
948 #else
949 /* No debugging format is supported by this target. */
950 #define PREFERRED_DEBUGGING_TYPE NO_DEBUG
951 #endif
953 #ifndef FLOAT_LIB_COMPARE_RETURNS_BOOL
954 #define FLOAT_LIB_COMPARE_RETURNS_BOOL(MODE, COMPARISON) false
955 #endif
957 /* True if the targets integer-comparison functions return { 0, 1, 2
958 } to indicate { <, ==, > }. False if { -1, 0, 1 } is used
959 instead. The libgcc routines are biased. */
960 #ifndef TARGET_LIB_INT_CMP_BIASED
961 #define TARGET_LIB_INT_CMP_BIASED (true)
962 #endif
964 /* If FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN is not defined in the header files,
965 then the word-endianness is the same as for integers. */
966 #ifndef FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
967 #define FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
968 #endif
970 #ifndef REG_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
971 #define REG_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
972 #endif
974 #ifdef TARGET_FLT_EVAL_METHOD
975 #define TARGET_FLT_EVAL_METHOD_NON_DEFAULT 1
976 #else
977 #define TARGET_FLT_EVAL_METHOD 0
978 #define TARGET_FLT_EVAL_METHOD_NON_DEFAULT 0
979 #endif
981 #ifndef TARGET_DEC_EVAL_METHOD
982 #define TARGET_DEC_EVAL_METHOD 2
983 #endif
985 #ifndef HAS_LONG_COND_BRANCH
986 #define HAS_LONG_COND_BRANCH 0
987 #endif
989 #ifndef HAS_LONG_UNCOND_BRANCH
990 #define HAS_LONG_UNCOND_BRANCH 0
991 #endif
993 /* Determine whether __cxa_atexit, rather than atexit, is used to
994 register C++ destructors for local statics and global objects. */
995 #ifndef DEFAULT_USE_CXA_ATEXIT
996 #define DEFAULT_USE_CXA_ATEXIT 0
997 #endif
999 #if GCC_VERSION >= 3000 && defined IN_GCC
1000 /* These old constraint macros shouldn't appear anywhere in a
1001 configuration using MD constraint definitions. */
1002 #endif
1004 /* Determin whether the target runtime library is Bionic */
1005 #ifndef TARGET_HAS_BIONIC
1006 #define TARGET_HAS_BIONIC 0
1007 #endif
1009 /* Indicate that CLZ and CTZ are undefined at zero. */
1010 #ifndef CLZ_DEFINED_VALUE_AT_ZERO
1011 #define CLZ_DEFINED_VALUE_AT_ZERO(MODE, VALUE) 0
1012 #endif
1013 #ifndef CTZ_DEFINED_VALUE_AT_ZERO
1014 #define CTZ_DEFINED_VALUE_AT_ZERO(MODE, VALUE) 0
1015 #endif
1017 /* Provide a default value for STORE_FLAG_VALUE. */
1018 #ifndef STORE_FLAG_VALUE
1019 #define STORE_FLAG_VALUE 1
1020 #endif
1022 /* This macro is used to determine what the largest unit size that
1023 move_by_pieces can use is. */
1025 /* MOVE_MAX_PIECES is the number of bytes at a time which we can
1026 move efficiently, as opposed to MOVE_MAX which is the maximum
1027 number of bytes we can move with a single instruction. */
1029 #ifndef MOVE_MAX_PIECES
1030 #define MOVE_MAX_PIECES MOVE_MAX
1031 #endif
1033 /* STORE_MAX_PIECES is the number of bytes at a time that we can
1034 store efficiently. Due to internal GCC limitations, this is
1035 MOVE_MAX_PIECES limited by the number of bytes GCC can represent
1036 for an immediate constant. */
1038 #ifndef STORE_MAX_PIECES
1039 #define STORE_MAX_PIECES MIN (MOVE_MAX_PIECES, 2 * sizeof (HOST_WIDE_INT))
1040 #endif
1042 #ifndef MAX_MOVE_MAX
1043 #define MAX_MOVE_MAX MOVE_MAX
1044 #endif
1046 #ifndef MIN_UNITS_PER_WORD
1047 #define MIN_UNITS_PER_WORD UNITS_PER_WORD
1048 #endif
1050 #ifndef MAX_BITS_PER_WORD
1051 #define MAX_BITS_PER_WORD BITS_PER_WORD
1052 #endif
1054 #ifndef STACK_POINTER_OFFSET
1055 #define STACK_POINTER_OFFSET 0
1056 #endif
1058 #ifndef LOCAL_REGNO
1059 #define LOCAL_REGNO(REGNO) 0
1060 #endif
1062 #ifndef HONOR_REG_ALLOC_ORDER
1063 #define HONOR_REG_ALLOC_ORDER 0
1064 #endif
1066 /* EXIT_IGNORE_STACK should be nonzero if, when returning from a function,
1067 the stack pointer does not matter. The value is tested only in
1068 functions that have frame pointers. */
1069 #ifndef EXIT_IGNORE_STACK
1070 #define EXIT_IGNORE_STACK 0
1071 #endif
1073 /* Assume that case vectors are not pc-relative. */
1074 #ifndef CASE_VECTOR_PC_RELATIVE
1075 #define CASE_VECTOR_PC_RELATIVE 0
1076 #endif
1078 /* Assume that trampolines need function alignment. */
1079 #ifndef TRAMPOLINE_ALIGNMENT
1080 #define TRAMPOLINE_ALIGNMENT FUNCTION_BOUNDARY
1081 #endif
1083 /* Register mappings for target machines without register windows. */
1084 #ifndef INCOMING_REGNO
1085 #define INCOMING_REGNO(N) (N)
1086 #endif
1088 #ifndef OUTGOING_REGNO
1089 #define OUTGOING_REGNO(N) (N)
1090 #endif
1092 #ifndef SHIFT_COUNT_TRUNCATED
1093 #define SHIFT_COUNT_TRUNCATED 0
1094 #endif
1096 #ifndef LEGITIMATE_PIC_OPERAND_P
1097 #define LEGITIMATE_PIC_OPERAND_P(X) 1
1098 #endif
1100 #ifndef TARGET_MEM_CONSTRAINT
1101 #define TARGET_MEM_CONSTRAINT 'm'
1102 #endif
1104 #ifndef REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE
1105 #define REVERSIBLE_CC_MODE(MODE) 0
1106 #endif
1108 /* Biggest alignment supported by the object file format of this machine. */
1109 #ifndef MAX_OFILE_ALIGNMENT
1110 #define MAX_OFILE_ALIGNMENT BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT
1111 #endif
1113 #ifndef FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARD
1114 #define FRAME_GROWS_DOWNWARD 0
1115 #endif
1117 #ifndef RETURN_ADDR_IN_PREVIOUS_FRAME
1118 #define RETURN_ADDR_IN_PREVIOUS_FRAME 0
1119 #endif
1121 /* On most machines, the CFA coincides with the first incoming parm. */
1122 #ifndef ARG_POINTER_CFA_OFFSET
1123 #define ARG_POINTER_CFA_OFFSET(FNDECL) \
1124 (FIRST_PARM_OFFSET (FNDECL) + crtl->args.pretend_args_size)
1125 #endif
1127 /* On most machines, we use the CFA as DW_AT_frame_base. */
1128 #ifndef CFA_FRAME_BASE_OFFSET
1129 #define CFA_FRAME_BASE_OFFSET(FNDECL) 0
1130 #endif
1132 /* The offset from the incoming value of %sp to the top of the stack frame
1133 for the current function. */
1134 #ifndef INCOMING_FRAME_SP_OFFSET
1135 #define INCOMING_FRAME_SP_OFFSET 0
1136 #endif
1138 #ifndef HARD_REGNO_NREGS_HAS_PADDING
1139 #define HARD_REGNO_NREGS_HAS_PADDING(REGNO, MODE) 0
1140 #define HARD_REGNO_NREGS_WITH_PADDING(REGNO, MODE) -1
1141 #endif
1143 #ifndef OUTGOING_REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE
1144 #define OUTGOING_REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE(FNTYPE) 0
1145 #endif
1147 /* MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT is the maximum stack alignment guaranteed by
1148 the backend. MAX_SUPPORTED_STACK_ALIGNMENT is the maximum best
1149 effort stack alignment supported by the backend. If the backend
1150 supports stack alignment, MAX_SUPPORTED_STACK_ALIGNMENT and
1151 MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT are the same. Otherwise, the incoming stack
1152 boundary will limit the maximum guaranteed stack alignment. */
1153 #ifdef MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT
1154 #define MAX_SUPPORTED_STACK_ALIGNMENT MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT
1155 #else
1156 #define MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT STACK_BOUNDARY
1157 #define MAX_SUPPORTED_STACK_ALIGNMENT PREFERRED_STACK_BOUNDARY
1158 #endif
1160 #define SUPPORTS_STACK_ALIGNMENT (MAX_STACK_ALIGNMENT > STACK_BOUNDARY)
1162 #ifndef LOCAL_ALIGNMENT
1163 #define LOCAL_ALIGNMENT(TYPE, ALIGNMENT) ALIGNMENT
1164 #endif
1166 #ifndef STACK_SLOT_ALIGNMENT
1167 #define STACK_SLOT_ALIGNMENT(TYPE,MODE,ALIGN) \
1168 ((TYPE) ? LOCAL_ALIGNMENT ((TYPE), (ALIGN)) : (ALIGN))
1169 #endif
1171 #ifndef LOCAL_DECL_ALIGNMENT
1172 #define LOCAL_DECL_ALIGNMENT(DECL) \
1173 LOCAL_ALIGNMENT (TREE_TYPE (DECL), DECL_ALIGN (DECL))
1174 #endif
1176 #ifndef MINIMUM_ALIGNMENT
1177 #define MINIMUM_ALIGNMENT(EXP,MODE,ALIGN) (ALIGN)
1178 #endif
1180 /* Alignment value for attribute ((aligned)). */
1181 #ifndef ATTRIBUTE_ALIGNED_VALUE
1182 #define ATTRIBUTE_ALIGNED_VALUE BIGGEST_ALIGNMENT
1183 #endif
1185 #ifndef SLOW_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
1186 #define SLOW_UNALIGNED_ACCESS(MODE, ALIGN) STRICT_ALIGNMENT
1187 #endif
1189 /* For most ports anything that evaluates to a constant symbolic
1190 or integer value is acceptable as a constant address. */
1191 #ifndef CONSTANT_ADDRESS_P
1192 #define CONSTANT_ADDRESS_P(X) (CONSTANT_P (X) && GET_CODE (X) != CONST_DOUBLE)
1193 #endif
1195 #ifndef MAX_FIXED_MODE_SIZE
1196 #define MAX_FIXED_MODE_SIZE GET_MODE_BITSIZE (DImode)
1197 #endif
1199 /* Nonzero if structures and unions should be returned in memory.
1201 This should only be defined if compatibility with another compiler or
1202 with an ABI is needed, because it results in slower code. */
1204 #ifndef DEFAULT_PCC_STRUCT_RETURN
1205 #define DEFAULT_PCC_STRUCT_RETURN 1
1206 #endif
1208 #ifndef PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS
1209 #define PCC_BITFIELD_TYPE_MATTERS false
1210 #endif
1212 #ifndef INSN_SETS_ARE_DELAYED
1213 #define INSN_SETS_ARE_DELAYED(INSN) false
1214 #endif
1216 #ifndef INSN_REFERENCES_ARE_DELAYED
1217 #define INSN_REFERENCES_ARE_DELAYED(INSN) false
1218 #endif
1220 #ifndef NO_FUNCTION_CSE
1221 #define NO_FUNCTION_CSE false
1222 #endif
1224 #ifndef HARD_REGNO_RENAME_OK
1225 #define HARD_REGNO_RENAME_OK(FROM, TO) true
1226 #endif
1228 #ifndef EPILOGUE_USES
1229 #define EPILOGUE_USES(REG) false
1230 #endif
1232 #ifndef ARGS_GROW_DOWNWARD
1233 #define ARGS_GROW_DOWNWARD 0
1234 #endif
1236 #ifndef STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD
1237 #define STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD 0
1238 #endif
1240 #ifndef STACK_PUSH_CODE
1241 #if STACK_GROWS_DOWNWARD
1242 #define STACK_PUSH_CODE PRE_DEC
1243 #else
1244 #define STACK_PUSH_CODE PRE_INC
1245 #endif
1246 #endif
1248 /* Default value for flag_pie when flag_pie is initialized to -1:
1249 --enable-default-pie: Default flag_pie to -fPIE.
1250 --disable-default-pie: Default flag_pie to 0.
1252 #ifdef ENABLE_DEFAULT_PIE
1253 # ifndef DEFAULT_FLAG_PIE
1254 # define DEFAULT_FLAG_PIE 2
1255 # endif
1256 #else
1257 # define DEFAULT_FLAG_PIE 0
1258 #endif
1260 #ifndef SWITCHABLE_TARGET
1261 #define SWITCHABLE_TARGET 0
1262 #endif
1264 /* If the target supports integers that are wider than two
1265 HOST_WIDE_INTs on the host compiler, then the target should define
1266 TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT and make the appropriate fixups.
1267 Otherwise the compiler really is not robust. */
1268 #ifndef TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT
1269 #define TARGET_SUPPORTS_WIDE_INT 0
1270 #endif
1272 #ifndef SHORT_IMMEDIATES_SIGN_EXTEND
1273 #define SHORT_IMMEDIATES_SIGN_EXTEND 0
1274 #endif
1276 #ifndef WORD_REGISTER_OPERATIONS
1277 #define WORD_REGISTER_OPERATIONS 0
1278 #endif
1280 #ifndef CONSTANT_ALIGNMENT
1281 #define CONSTANT_ALIGNMENT(EXP, ALIGN) ALIGN
1282 #endif
1284 #ifndef INITIAL_FRAME_ADDRESS_RTX
1285 #define INITIAL_FRAME_ADDRESS_RTX NULL
1286 #endif
1288 #ifndef SETUP_FRAME_ADDRESSES
1289 #define SETUP_FRAME_ADDRESSES() do { } while (0)
1290 #endif
1292 #ifndef DYNAMIC_CHAIN_ADDRESS
1293 #define DYNAMIC_CHAIN_ADDRESS(x) (x)
1294 #endif
1296 #ifndef FRAME_ADDR_RTX
1297 #define FRAME_ADDR_RTX(x) (x)
1298 #endif
1300 #ifndef REVERSE_CONDITION
1301 #define REVERSE_CONDITION(code, mode) reverse_condition (code)
1302 #endif
1304 #ifndef TARGET_PECOFF
1305 #define TARGET_PECOFF 0
1306 #endif
1308 #ifndef EH_RETURN_HANDLER_RTX
1309 #define EH_RETURN_HANDLER_RTX NULL
1310 #endif
1312 #ifdef GCC_INSN_FLAGS_H
1313 /* Dependent default target macro definitions
1315 This section of defaults.h defines target macros that depend on generated
1316 headers. This is a bit awkward: We want to put all default definitions
1317 for target macros in defaults.h, but some of the defaults depend on the
1318 HAVE_* flags defines of insn-flags.h. But insn-flags.h is not always
1319 included by files that do include defaults.h.
1321 Fortunately, the default macro definitions that depend on the HAVE_*
1322 macros are also the ones that will only be used inside GCC itself, i.e.
1323 not in the gen* programs or in target objects like libgcc.
1325 Obviously, it would be best to keep this section of defaults.h as small
1326 as possible, by converting the macros defined below to target hooks or
1327 functions.
1330 /* The default branch cost is 1. */
1331 #ifndef BRANCH_COST
1332 #define BRANCH_COST(speed_p, predictable_p) 1
1333 #endif
1335 /* If a memory-to-memory move would take MOVE_RATIO or more simple
1336 move-instruction sequences, we will do a movmem or libcall instead. */
1338 #ifndef MOVE_RATIO
1339 #if defined (HAVE_movmemqi) || defined (HAVE_movmemhi) || defined (HAVE_movmemsi) || defined (HAVE_movmemdi) || defined (HAVE_movmemti)
1340 #define MOVE_RATIO(speed) 2
1341 #else
1342 /* If we are optimizing for space (-Os), cut down the default move ratio. */
1343 #define MOVE_RATIO(speed) ((speed) ? 15 : 3)
1344 #endif
1345 #endif
1347 /* If a clear memory operation would take CLEAR_RATIO or more simple
1348 move-instruction sequences, we will do a setmem or libcall instead. */
1350 #ifndef CLEAR_RATIO
1351 #if defined (HAVE_setmemqi) || defined (HAVE_setmemhi) || defined (HAVE_setmemsi) || defined (HAVE_setmemdi) || defined (HAVE_setmemti)
1352 #define CLEAR_RATIO(speed) 2
1353 #else
1354 /* If we are optimizing for space, cut down the default clear ratio. */
1355 #define CLEAR_RATIO(speed) ((speed) ? 15 :3)
1356 #endif
1357 #endif
1359 /* If a memory set (to value other than zero) operation would take
1360 SET_RATIO or more simple move-instruction sequences, we will do a movmem
1361 or libcall instead. */
1362 #ifndef SET_RATIO
1363 #define SET_RATIO(speed) MOVE_RATIO (speed)
1364 #endif
1366 /* Supply a default definition for FUNCTION_ARG_PADDING:
1367 usually pad upward, but pad short args downward on
1368 big-endian machines. */
1370 #define DEFAULT_FUNCTION_ARG_PADDING(MODE, TYPE) \
1371 (! BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN \
1372 ? upward \
1373 : (((MODE) == BLKmode \
1374 ? ((TYPE) && TREE_CODE (TYPE_SIZE (TYPE)) == INTEGER_CST \
1375 && int_size_in_bytes (TYPE) < (PARM_BOUNDARY / BITS_PER_UNIT)) \
1376 : GET_MODE_BITSIZE (MODE) < PARM_BOUNDARY) \
1377 ? downward : upward))
1379 #ifndef FUNCTION_ARG_PADDING
1380 #define FUNCTION_ARG_PADDING(MODE, TYPE) \
1381 DEFAULT_FUNCTION_ARG_PADDING ((MODE), (TYPE))
1382 #endif
1384 /* Supply a default definition of STACK_SAVEAREA_MODE for emit_stack_save.
1385 Normally move_insn, so Pmode stack pointer. */
1387 #ifndef STACK_SAVEAREA_MODE
1388 #define STACK_SAVEAREA_MODE(LEVEL) Pmode
1389 #endif
1391 /* Supply a default definition of STACK_SIZE_MODE for
1392 allocate_dynamic_stack_space. Normally PLUS/MINUS, so word_mode. */
1394 #ifndef STACK_SIZE_MODE
1395 #define STACK_SIZE_MODE word_mode
1396 #endif
1398 /* Default value for flag_stack_protect when flag_stack_protect is initialized to -1:
1399 --enable-default-ssp: Default flag_stack_protect to -fstack-protector-strong.
1400 --disable-default-ssp: Default flag_stack_protect to 0.
1402 #ifdef ENABLE_DEFAULT_SSP
1403 # ifndef DEFAULT_FLAG_SSP
1404 # define DEFAULT_FLAG_SSP 3
1405 # endif
1406 #else
1407 # define DEFAULT_FLAG_SSP 0
1408 #endif
1410 /* Provide default values for the macros controlling stack checking. */
1412 /* The default is neither full builtin stack checking... */
1413 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_BUILTIN
1414 #define STACK_CHECK_BUILTIN 0
1415 #endif
1417 /* ...nor static builtin stack checking. */
1418 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_STATIC_BUILTIN
1419 #define STACK_CHECK_STATIC_BUILTIN 0
1420 #endif
1422 /* The default interval is one page (4096 bytes). */
1423 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_PROBE_INTERVAL_EXP
1424 #define STACK_CHECK_PROBE_INTERVAL_EXP 12
1425 #endif
1427 /* The default is not to move the stack pointer. */
1428 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_MOVING_SP
1429 #define STACK_CHECK_MOVING_SP 0
1430 #endif
1432 /* This is a kludge to try to capture the discrepancy between the old
1433 mechanism (generic stack checking) and the new mechanism (static
1434 builtin stack checking). STACK_CHECK_PROTECT needs to be bumped
1435 for the latter because part of the protection area is effectively
1436 included in STACK_CHECK_MAX_FRAME_SIZE for the former. */
1437 #ifdef STACK_CHECK_PROTECT
1438 #define STACK_OLD_CHECK_PROTECT STACK_CHECK_PROTECT
1439 #else
1440 #define STACK_OLD_CHECK_PROTECT \
1441 (!global_options.x_flag_exceptions \
1442 ? 75 * UNITS_PER_WORD \
1443 : targetm_common.except_unwind_info (&global_options) == UI_SJLJ \
1444 ? 4 * 1024 \
1445 : 8 * 1024)
1446 #endif
1448 /* Minimum amount of stack required to recover from an anticipated stack
1449 overflow detection. The default value conveys an estimate of the amount
1450 of stack required to propagate an exception. */
1451 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_PROTECT
1452 #define STACK_CHECK_PROTECT \
1453 (!global_options.x_flag_exceptions \
1454 ? 4 * 1024 \
1455 : targetm_common.except_unwind_info (&global_options) == UI_SJLJ \
1456 ? 8 * 1024 \
1457 : 12 * 1024)
1458 #endif
1460 /* Make the maximum frame size be the largest we can and still only need
1461 one probe per function. */
1462 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_MAX_FRAME_SIZE
1463 #define STACK_CHECK_MAX_FRAME_SIZE \
1464 ((1 << STACK_CHECK_PROBE_INTERVAL_EXP) - UNITS_PER_WORD)
1465 #endif
1467 /* This is arbitrary, but should be large enough everywhere. */
1468 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_FIXED_FRAME_SIZE
1469 #define STACK_CHECK_FIXED_FRAME_SIZE (4 * UNITS_PER_WORD)
1470 #endif
1472 /* Provide a reasonable default for the maximum size of an object to
1473 allocate in the fixed frame. We may need to be able to make this
1474 controllable by the user at some point. */
1475 #ifndef STACK_CHECK_MAX_VAR_SIZE
1476 #define STACK_CHECK_MAX_VAR_SIZE (STACK_CHECK_MAX_FRAME_SIZE / 100)
1477 #endif
1479 /* By default, the C++ compiler will use function addresses in the
1480 vtable entries. Setting this nonzero tells the compiler to use
1481 function descriptors instead. The value of this macro says how
1482 many words wide the descriptor is (normally 2). It is assumed
1483 that the address of a function descriptor may be treated as a
1484 pointer to a function. */
1485 #ifndef TARGET_VTABLE_USES_DESCRIPTORS
1486 #define TARGET_VTABLE_USES_DESCRIPTORS 0
1487 #endif
1489 #endif /* GCC_INSN_FLAGS_H */
1491 #endif /* ! GCC_DEFAULTS_H */