Mac OS X/iOS version for the compiler code
o such a parameter is not passed, extract the information from the
environment variables MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET/IPHONEOS_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET,
like gcc
o if neither the parameter nor the environment variable is used, use preset
default values
o pass on this version setting on to the Darwin linker
o use this setting to determine which version of the startup code (crt1.o
etc) to use, if any (based on information gathered from the GCC sources)
o define a symbol called MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED/
IPHONE_OS_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED based on this parameter
o for usage information, see
http://wiki.freepascal.org/FPC_New_Features_Trunk#Support_for_specifying_and_querying_the_deployment_version
git-svn-id: trunk@20503 -
alignment for each memory reference (mantis #12137, and
test/packages/fcl-registry/tregistry1.pp on sparc). This also
enables better code generation for packed records in many cases.
o several changes were made to the compiler to minimise the chances
of accidentally forgetting to set the alignment of memory references
in the future:
- reference_reset*() now has an extra alignment parameter
- location_reset() can now only be used for non LOC_(C)REFERENCE,
use location_reset_ref() for those (split the tloc enum so the
compiler can catch errors using range checking)
git-svn-id: trunk@12719 -
* Suppressed 2 unreachable code warnings.
* Now x86 compiler compiles without warnings and notes! It will be great to keep such state in future...
git-svn-id: trunk@11455 -
a) cpu64bitaddr, which means that we are generating a compiler which
will generate code for targets with a 64 bit address space/abi
b) cpu64bitalu, which means that we are generating a compiler which
will generate code for a cpu with support for 64 bit integer
operations (possibly running in a 32 bit address space, depending
on the cpu64bitaddr define)
All cpus which had cpu64bit set now have both the above defines set,
and none of the 32 bit cpus have cpu64bitalu set (and none will
compile with it currently)
+ pint and puint types, similar to aint/aword (not pword because that
that conflicts with pword=^word)
* several changes from aint/aword to pint/pword
* some changes of tcgsize2size[OS_INT] to sizeof(pint)
git-svn-id: trunk@10320 -
* varsets ({$packset x}) are now supported on big endian targets
* gdb now displays sets properly on big endian systems
* cleanup of generic set code (in, include/exclude, helpers), all
based on "bitpacked array[] of 0..1" now
* there are no helpers available yet to convert sets from the old to
the new format, because the set format will change again slightly
in the near future (so that e.g. a set of 24..31 will be stored in
1 byte), and creating two classes of set conversion helpers would
confuse things (i.e., it's not recommended to use trunk currently for
programs which load sets stored to disk by big endian programs compiled
by previous FPC versions)
* cross-endian compiling has been tested and still works, but one case
is not supported: compiling a compiler for a different endianess
using a starting compiler from before the current revision (so first
cycle natively, and then use the newly created compiler to create a
cross-compiler)
git-svn-id: trunk@7395 -
* symtables based on TFPHashObjectList and TFPObjectList
* rename torddef.typ to torddef.ordtype
* rename tfloatdef.typ to tfloatdef.floattype
* rename tdef.deftype to tdef.typ
* remove obsolete browser code, browcol is kept so the ide
can still be compiled
git-svn-id: trunk@5192 -
are allocated at irregular intervals in between larger allocations
(reduces stack usage of taddnode.det_resulttype on darwin/i386 from
11+kb to 868 bytes; no effect on Darwin/ppc, and a few small
improvements on linux/i386)
git-svn-id: trunk@4640 -
+ use {$bitpacking on/+} to change the meaning of "packed"
into "bitpacked" for arrays. This is the default for MacPas.
You can also define individual arrays as "bitpacked", but
this is not encouraged since this keyword is not known by
other compilers and therefore makes your code unportable.
+ pack(unpackedarray,index,packedarray) to pack
length(packedarray) elements starting at
unpackedarray[index] into packedarray.
+ unpack(packedarray,unpackedarray,index) to unpack
packedarray into unpackedarray, with the first
element being stored at unpackedarray[index]
* todo:
* "open packed arrays" and rtti for packed arrays are not
yet supported
* gdb does not properly support bitpacked arrays
git-svn-id: trunk@4449 -