These are almost entirely identical, with these exceptions:
* lib/libc/include/csky-linux-{gnueabi,gnueabihf}
* gnu/{lib-names,stubs}.h will need manual patching for float ABI.
* lib/libc/include/{powerpc-linux-{gnueabi,gnueabihf},{powerpc64,powerpc64le}-linux-gnu}
* bits/long-double.h will need manual patching for long double ABI.
This target triple was weird on multiple levels:
* The `ilp32` ABI is the soft float ABI. This is not the main ABI we want to
support on RISC-V; rather, we want `ilp32d`.
* `gnuilp32` is a bespoke tag that was introduced in Zig. The rest of the world
just uses `gnu` for RISC-V target triples.
* `gnu_ilp32` is already the name of an ILP32 ABI used on AArch64. `gnuilp32` is
too easy to confuse with this.
* We don't use this convention for `riscv64-linux-gnu`.
* Supporting all RISC-V ABIs with this convention will result in combinatorial
explosion; see #20690.
writeFile was deprecated in favor of writeFile2 in f645022d16361865e24582d28f1e62312fbc73bb. This commit renames writeFile2 to writeFile and makes writeFile2 a compile error.
This reverts commit da94227f783ec3c92859c4713b80a668f1183f96, reversing
changes made to 8f943b3d33432a26b7e242c1181e4220ed400501.
I was against this change originally, but decided to approve it to keep
an open mind. After a year of trying it in practice, I firmly believe
that the previous way of doing it was better.
Rename all references of sparcv9 to sparc64, to make Zig align more with
other projects. Also, added new function to convert glibc arch name to Zig
arch name, since it refers to the architecture as sparcv9.
This is based on the suggestion by @kubkon in PR 11847.
(https://github.com/ziglang/zig/pull/11487#pullrequestreview-963761757)
Before this commit, glibc headers did the following mapping:
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnu => (glibc) mipsel-linux-gnu
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnu-soft => (glibc) (none)
* (zig) mips-linux-gnu => (glibc) mips-linux-gnu
* (zig) mips-linux-gnu-soft => (glibc) (none)
While the glibc ABI stubs used the (zig) gnueabi and gnueabihf ABIs,
and the stage2 available_libcs array listed:
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnu
* (zig) mips-linux-gnu
The problem is the mismatch between the ABI component of the headers and
the stubs.
This commit makes the following clarifications:
* (zig) mips-linux-gnueabi means soft-float
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnueabi means soft-float
* (zig) mips-linux-gnueabihf means hard-float
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnueabihf means hard-float
Consequently, the glibc headers now do this mapping:
* (zig) mips-linux-gnueabihf => (glibc) mips-linux-gnu
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnueabihf => (glibc) mipsel-linux-gnu
* (zig) mips-linux-gnueabi => (glibc) mips-linux-gnu-soft
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnueabi => (glibc) mipsel-linux-gnu-soft
The glibc ABI stubs are unchanged, and the stage2 available_libcs
array's 2 entries are modified and it gains 2 more:
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnueabi
* (zig) mipsel-linux-gnueabihf
* (zig) mips-linux-gnueabi
* (zig) mips-linux-gnueabihf
Now everything is consistent. Zig no longer recognizes a `mips-linux-gnu`
triple; one must use `mips-linux-gnueabi` (soft float) or
`mips-linux-gnueabihf` (hard float).
This commit also corrects a mistake from commit
6dc2236054dfcf911ce848f67a4078740a90783a which did not properly delete
files when upgrading to the 1.2.2 musl headers.
- hash/eql functions moved into a Context object
- *Context functions pass an explicit context
- *Adapted functions pass specialized keys and contexts
- new getPtr() function returns a pointer to value
- remove functions renamed to fetchRemove
- new remove functions return bool
- removeAssertDiscard deleted, use assert(remove(...)) instead
- Keys and values are stored in separate arrays
- Entry is now {*K, *V}, the new KV is {K, V}
- BufSet/BufMap functions renamed to match other set/map types
- fixed iterating-while-modifying bug in src/link/C.zig
When upgrading to the new std lib HashMap API, the process_headers code
regressed because something that was supposed to be a pointer ended up
being a copy of a value. This resulted in the modification of a field
not being picked up.
Also switch from Sha256 to Blake3 while we're at it.
Instead of having all primitives and constructions share the same namespace,
they are now organized by category and function family.
Types within the same category are expected to share the exact same API.