fpc/rtl
2020-09-09 15:15:52 +00:00
..
aarch64
aix
amicommon
amiga
android
arm
aros
atari
avr
beos
bsd
charmaps
darwin
dragonfly
embedded Move z80 specific -Sf options from rtl.cfg to system.cfg, as -Sf options are only accepted when compiliing system unit 2020-08-25 15:15:51 +00:00
emx
freebsd
freertos * enable initialization of exceptions and threading on FreeRTOS 2020-09-01 20:32:45 +00:00
gba
go32v2
haiku
i386
i8086
inc * Disable range and overflow checking inside softfpu implementation 2020-08-25 06:34:29 +00:00
java
jvm
linux * linux: use ugetrlimit syscall on m68k for rlimits retrieval. this fixes fpgetrlimit() call, and stack checking on Linux/m68k (tstack.pp test), at least on anything newer than kernel 2.4+ (2001) 2020-09-09 15:15:52 +00:00
m68k
macos
mips
mipsel
morphos
msdos
msxdos
nativent
nds
netbsd
netware
netwlibc
objpas * fix formatfloat for 0 in exponential format (based on patch by 2020-09-05 18:44:57 +00:00
openbsd
os2
palmos
powerpc
powerpc64
qnx
riscv32
riscv64
solaris
sparc
sparc64
symbian
ucmaps
unix
watcom
wii
win * handle unknown reparse tags as non-symlinks 2020-09-04 14:41:40 +00:00
win16
win32
win64
wince
x86_64
xtensa * Xtensa-FreeRTOS: use setjmp/longjmp provided by the Xtensa libraries, we 2020-08-25 21:39:38 +00:00
z80
zxspectrum
COPYING.FPC
COPYING.txt
fpmake.inc
fpmake.pp
Makefile
Makefile.fpc
README.txt

This is the Run-Time Library (RTL) tree for Free Pascal.

To recompile the RTL, edit the main makefile. The makefiles NEED a GNU make
compatible make, they need unix-like 'rm' and 'mv' commands, as well as some
others. You can find these in the gnuutils package on the ftp site.

The main makefile is located ABOVE the RTL tree. It uses the FPC
makefile.fpc to guess reasonable defaults for everything it needs.
(these files can be found in base.zip on the FTP site)

The only variable that you may want to set are
FPC             - What compiler to use. Use an absolute path. 
                  (default is ppc386)
INSTALL_UNITDIR - Where to install the RTL units 
OPT             - any special options you want to set for the compiler.

In principle, you can also descend into the subdirectory of your OS, and
type 'make' there, that should also compile everything.

The tree contains subdirectories for all the supported operating systems,
as well as all processor architectures. The processor directories contain
low-level routines which are required for the system unit (if they are not 
available in high-level language form), as well as optimized versions of
the pascal generic routines (the generic routine source code is localed in
the inc subdirectory).

Enjoy.