e2b0ab597857bfe9d7c8742ff50bbb77c70936c4
This patch is part of a series of patches to add support for ARMv8.1-M Mainline instructions to binutils. This adds infrastructure for the Branch Future instructions (BF, BFX, BFL, BFLX, BFCSEL). These are the first instructions in ARM that have more than one relocations in them. Their external relocations can be found in the 'ELF for the Arm Architecture - ABI 2019Q1' document on developer.arm.com This is the second infrastructure patch that adds support to allow up to 3 relocations in an instruction. This is done by changing the reloc member of struct arm_it to an array instead (relocs[3]). All the previous occurrences of reloc can now to referring to relocs[0]. ChangeLog entries are as follows : *** gas/ChangeLog *** 2019-04-15 Sudakshina Das <sudi.das@arm.com> * config/tc-arm.c (ARM_IT_MAX_RELOCS): New macro. (arm_it): Member reloc renamed relocs and updated to an array. Rest: Replace all occurrences of reloc to relocs[0].
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README for GNU development tools This directory contains various GNU compilers, assemblers, linkers, debuggers, etc., plus their support routines, definitions, and documentation. If you are receiving this as part of a GDB release, see the file gdb/README. If with a binutils release, see binutils/README; if with a libg++ release, see libg++/README, etc. That'll give you info about this package -- supported targets, how to use it, how to report bugs, etc. It is now possible to automatically configure and build a variety of tools with one command. To build all of the tools contained herein, run the ``configure'' script here, e.g.: ./configure make To install them (by default in /usr/local/bin, /usr/local/lib, etc), then do: make install (If the configure script can't determine your type of computer, give it the name as an argument, for instance ``./configure sun4''. You can use the script ``config.sub'' to test whether a name is recognized; if it is, config.sub translates it to a triplet specifying CPU, vendor, and OS.) If you have more than one compiler on your system, it is often best to explicitly set CC in the environment before running configure, and to also set CC when running make. For example (assuming sh/bash/ksh): CC=gcc ./configure make A similar example using csh: setenv CC gcc ./configure make Much of the code and documentation enclosed is copyright by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. See the file COPYING or COPYING.LIB in the various directories, for a description of the GNU General Public License terms under which you can copy the files. REPORTING BUGS: Again, see gdb/README, binutils/README, etc., for info on where and how to report problems.
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