buildroot/arch/Config.in.arm

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# arm cpu features
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
bool
# for some cores, NEON support is optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_NEON
bool
# For some cores, the FPU is optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPU
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPU
bool
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
# for some cores, VFPv2 is optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV2
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPU
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPU
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
# for some cores, VFPv3 is optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV3
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV2
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
# for some cores, VFPv4 is optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV4
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV3
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
# FPv4 is always optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV4
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPU
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV4
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPU
# FPv5 is always optional
config BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV5
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV4
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV5
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV4
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
bool
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV4
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV5
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV6
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7M
bool
config BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
bool
choice
prompt "Target Architecture Variant"
default BR2_cortex_a53 if BR2_ARCH_IS_64
default BR2_arm926t
help
Specific CPU variant to use
if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
comment "armv4 cores"
config BR2_arm920t
bool "arm920t"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV4
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_arm922t
bool "arm922t"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV4
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_fa526
bool "fa526/626"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV4
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_strongarm
bool "strongarm sa110/sa1100"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV4
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
comment "armv5 cores"
config BR2_arm926t
bool "arm926t"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV5
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_iwmmxt
bool "iwmmxt"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV5
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_xscale
bool "xscale"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV5
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
comment "armv6 cores"
config BR2_arm1136j_s
bool "arm1136j-s"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV6
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
arch/arm: do not distinguish revisions of ARM1136JF-S In commit 88cf3bb91792c9c04586e14f293d89a6e0c13e1d ("arch/Config.in.arm: Use armv6k for arm1136jf-s rev1"), Benoît Thébaudeau added separate options for the revision 0 and revision 1 of the ARM1136JF-S processor, so that different -march values could be used (armv6j for revision 0, armv6k for revision 1). However, this is preventing the removal of the BR2_GCC_TARGET_ARCH option, which we need to do to give only the CPU type to gcc, and let it decide the architecture variant that matches. This is because this story of revision 0 vs. revision 1 is the only case where -mcpu doesn't fully define the CPU. Moreover, a quick test with gcc shows that -march=armv6j -mcpu=arm1136jf-s is accepted, while -march=armv6k -mcpu=arm1136jf-s makes gcc complain: " warning: switch -mcpu=arm1136jf-s conflicts with -march=armv6k switch". In addition, gcc 5 will apparently no longer allow to pass all of --with-arch, --with-cpu and --with-tune, so we will anyway have to rely only on one of them. As a consequence, this commit basically reverts 88cf3bb91792c9c04586e14f293d89a6e0c13e1d and provides only one option for ARM1136JF-S. If the two revisions are really different, then they should be supported in upstream gcc with different -mcpu values. Note that the removal of the two options should not break existing full .config, since the hidden option BR2_arm1136jf_s becomes again a visible option to select the CPU. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Cc: Benoît Thébaudeau <benoit.thebaudeau@advansee.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <peter@korsgaard.com>
2014-10-22 04:27:08 +08:00
config BR2_arm1136jf_s
bool "arm1136jf-s"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV6
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_arm1176jz_s
bool "arm1176jz-s"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV6
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_arm1176jzf_s
bool "arm1176jzf-s"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV6
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_arm11mpcore
bool "mpcore"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV6
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
comment "armv7a cores"
config BR2_cortex_a5
bool "cortex-A5"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_NEON
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a7
bool "cortex-A7"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a8
bool "cortex-A8"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a9
bool "cortex-A9"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_NEON
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV3
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a12
bool "cortex-A12"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a15
bool "cortex-A15"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a15_a7
bool "cortex-A15/A7 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_4_9
config BR2_cortex_a17
bool "cortex-A17"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
config BR2_cortex_a17_a7
bool "cortex-A17/A7 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
config BR2_pj4
bool "pj4"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
comment "armv7m cores"
config BR2_cortex_m3
bool "cortex-M3"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7M
config BR2_cortex_m4
bool "cortex-M4"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7M
config BR2_cortex_m7
bool "cortex-M7"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV5
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV7M
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
endif # !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
comment "armv8 cores"
config BR2_cortex_a32
bool "cortex-A32"
depends on !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_6
config BR2_cortex_a35
bool "cortex-A35"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_6
config BR2_cortex_a53
bool "cortex-A53"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a57
bool "cortex-A57"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
config BR2_cortex_a57_a53
bool "cortex-A57/A53 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_6
config BR2_cortex_a72
bool "cortex-A72"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
config BR2_cortex_a72_a53
bool "cortex-A72/A53 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_6
config BR2_cortex_a73
bool "cortex-A73"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_cortex_a73_a35
bool "cortex-A73/A35 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_cortex_a73_a53
bool "cortex-A73/A53 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_exynos_m1
bool "exynos-m1"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
if BR2_ARCH_IS_64
config BR2_falkor
bool "falkor"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_qdf24xx
bool "qdf24xx"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_6
config BR2_thunderx
bool "thunderx"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
config BR2_thunderxt81
bool "thunderxt81"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_thunderxt83
bool "thunderxt83"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_thunderxt88
bool "thunderxt88"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_thunderxt88p1
bool "thunderxt88p1"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
endif # BR2_ARCH_IS_64
config BR2_xgene1
bool "xgene1"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2 if !BR2_ARCH_IS_64
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
if BR2_ARCH_IS_64
comment "armv8.1a cores"
config BR2_thunderx2t99
bool "thunderx2t99"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_thunderx2t99p1
bool "thunderx2t99p1"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
config BR2_vulcan
bool "vulcan"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_7
endif # BR2_ARCH_IS_64
if BR2_ARCH_IS_64
comment "armv8.2a cores"
config BR2_cortex_a55
bool "cortex-A55"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_8
config BR2_cortex_a75
bool "cortex-A75"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_8
config BR2_cortex_a75_a55
bool "cortex-A75/A55 big.LITTLE"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_8
endif # BR2_ARCH_IS_64
if BR2_ARCH_IS_64
comment "armv8.3a cores"
config BR2_saphira
bool "saphira"
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
select BR2_ARM_CPU_ARMV8A
select BR2_ARCH_HAS_MMU_OPTIONAL
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_8
endif # BR2_ARCH_IS_64
endchoice
config BR2_ARM_ENABLE_NEON
bool "Enable NEON SIMD extension support"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_NEON
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
help
For some CPU cores, the NEON SIMD extension is optional.
Select this option if you are certain your particular
implementation has NEON support and you want to use it.
config BR2_ARM_ENABLE_VFP
bool "Enable VFP extension support"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPU
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV5 if BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV5
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV4 if BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_FPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4 if BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV4
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3 if BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV3
select BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2 if BR2_ARM_CPU_MAYBE_HAS_VFPV2
help
For some CPU cores, the VFP extension is optional. Select
this option if you are certain your particular
implementation has VFP support and you want to use it.
choice
prompt "Target ABI"
default BR2_ARM_EABIHF if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPU
default BR2_ARM_EABI
depends on BR2_arm || BR2_armeb
help
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
Application Binary Interface to use. The Application Binary
Interface describes the calling conventions (how arguments
are passed to functions, how the return value is passed, how
system calls are made, etc.).
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
config BR2_ARM_EABI
bool "EABI"
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
help
The EABI is currently the standard ARM ABI, which is used in
most projects. It supports both the 'soft' floating point
model (in which floating point instructions are emulated in
software) and the 'softfp' floating point model (in which
floating point instructions are executed using an hardware
floating point unit, but floating point arguments to
functions are passed in integer registers).
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
The 'softfp' floating point model is link-compatible with
the 'soft' floating point model, i.e you can link a library
built 'soft' with some other code built 'softfp'.
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
However, passing the floating point arguments in integer
registers is a bit inefficient, so if your ARM processor has
a floating point unit, and you don't have pre-compiled
'soft' or 'softfp' code, using the EABIhf ABI will provide
better floating point performances.
If your processor does not have a floating point unit, then
you must use this ABI.
config BR2_ARM_EABIHF
bool "EABIhf"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPU
help
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
The EABIhf is an extension of EABI which supports the 'hard'
floating point model. This model uses the floating point
unit to execute floating point instructions, and passes
floating point arguments in floating point registers.
It is more efficient than EABI for floating point related
workload. However, it does not allow to link against code
that has been pre-built for the 'soft' or 'softfp' floating
point models.
If your processor has a floating point unit, and you don't
depend on existing pre-compiled code, this option is most
likely the best choice.
endchoice
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
choice
prompt "Floating point strategy"
default BR2_ARM_FPU_FP_ARMV8 if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
default BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV5D16 if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV5
default BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV4D16 if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV4
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
default BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV4D16 if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
default BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV3D16 if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
default BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV2 if BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
default BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT if !BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPU
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
config BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT
bool "Soft float"
depends on BR2_ARM_EABI
select BR2_SOFT_FLOAT
help
This option allows to use software emulated floating
point. It should be used for ARM cores that do not include a
Vector Floating Point unit, such as ARMv5 cores (ARM926 for
example) or certain ARMv6 cores.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV2
bool "VFPv2"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
help
This option allows to use the VFPv2 floating point unit, as
available in some ARMv5 processors (ARM926EJ-S) and some
ARMv6 processors (ARM1136JF-S, ARM1176JZF-S and ARM11
MPCore).
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
Note that this option is also safe to use for newer cores
such as Cortex-A, because the VFPv3 and VFPv4 units are
backward compatible with VFPv2.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV3
bool "VFPv3"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
help
This option allows to use the VFPv3 floating point unit, as
available in some ARMv7 processors (Cortex-A{8, 9}). This
option requires a VFPv3 unit that has 32 double-precision
registers, which is not necessarily the case in all SOCs
based on Cortex-A{8, 9}. If you're unsure, use VFPv3-D16
instead, which is guaranteed to work on all Cortex-A{8, 9}.
Note that this option is also safe to use for newer cores
that have a VFPv4 unit, because VFPv4 is backward compatible
with VFPv3. They must of course also have 32
double-precision registers.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV3D16
bool "VFPv3-D16"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV3
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
help
This option allows to use the VFPv3 floating point unit, as
available in some ARMv7 processors (Cortex-A{8, 9}). This
option requires a VFPv3 unit that has 16 double-precision
registers, which is generally the case in all SOCs based on
Cortex-A{8, 9}, even though VFPv3 is technically optional on
Cortex-A9. This is the safest option for those cores.
Note that this option is also safe to use for newer cores
such that have a VFPv4 unit, because the VFPv4 is backward
compatible with VFPv3.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV4
bool "VFPv4"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
help
This option allows to use the VFPv4 floating point unit, as
available in some ARMv7 processors (Cortex-A{5, 7, 12,
15}). This option requires a VFPv4 unit that has 32
double-precision registers, which is not necessarily the
case in all SOCs based on Cortex-A{5, 7, 12, 15}. If you're
unsure, you should probably use VFPv4-D16 instead.
Note that if you want binary code that works on all ARMv7
cores, including the earlier Cortex-A{8, 9}, you should
instead select VFPv3.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV4D16
bool "VFPv4-D16"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
help
This option allows to use the VFPv4 floating point unit, as
available in some ARMv7 processors (Cortex-A{5, 7, 12,
15}). This option requires a VFPv4 unit that has 16
double-precision registers, which is always available on
Cortex-A12 and Cortex-A15, but optional on Cortex-A5 and
Cortex-A7.
Note that if you want binary code that works on all ARMv7
cores, including the earlier Cortex-A{8, 9}, you should
instead select VFPv3-D16.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_NEON
bool "NEON"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
help
This option allows to use the NEON SIMD unit, as available
in some ARMv7 processors, as a floating-point unit. It
should however be noted that using NEON for floating point
operations doesn't provide a complete compatibility with the
IEEE 754.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_NEON_VFPV4
bool "NEON/VFPv4"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV4
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
help
This option allows to use both the VFPv4 and the NEON SIMD
units for floating point operations. Note that some ARMv7
cores do not necessarily have VFPv4 and/or NEON support, for
example on Cortex-A5 and Cortex-A7, support for VFPv4 and
NEON is optional.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV4D16
bool "FPv4-D16"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV4
help
This option allows to use the FPv4-SP (single precision)
floating point unit, as available in some ARMv7m processors
(Cortex-M4).
config BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV5D16
bool "FPv5-D16"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV5
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
help
This option allows to use the FPv5-SP (single precision)
floating point unit, as available in some ARMv7m processors
(Cortex-M7).
Note that if you want binary code that works on the earlier
Cortex-M4, you should instead select FPv4-D16.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV5DPD16
bool "FPv5-DP-D16"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FPV5
select BR2_ARCH_NEEDS_GCC_AT_LEAST_5
help
This option allows to use the FPv5-DP (double precision)
floating point unit, as available in some ARMv7m processors
(Cortex-M7).
Note that if you want binary code that works on the earlier
Cortex-M4, you should instead select FPv4-D16.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_FP_ARMV8
bool "FP-ARMv8"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
help
This option allows to use the ARMv8 floating point unit.
config BR2_ARM_FPU_NEON_FP_ARMV8
bool "NEON/FP-ARMv8"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_FP_ARMV8
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_NEON
help
This option allows to use both the ARMv8 floating point unit
and the NEON SIMD unit for floating point operations.
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
endchoice
choice
prompt "ARM instruction set"
depends on BR2_arm || BR2_armeb
config BR2_ARM_INSTRUCTIONS_ARM
bool "ARM"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_ARM
help
This option instructs the compiler to generate regular ARM
instructions, that are all 32 bits wide.
config BR2_ARM_INSTRUCTIONS_THUMB
bool "Thumb"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
# Thumb-1 and VFP are not compatible
depends on BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT
help
This option instructions the compiler to generate Thumb
instructions, which allows to mix 16 bits instructions and
32 bits instructions. This generally provides a much smaller
compiled binary size.
comment "Thumb1 is not compatible with VFP"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB
depends on !BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT
config BR2_ARM_INSTRUCTIONS_THUMB2
bool "Thumb2"
depends on BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_THUMB2
help
This option instructions the compiler to generate Thumb2
instructions, which allows to mix 16 bits instructions and
32 bits instructions. This generally provides a much smaller
compiled binary size.
endchoice
config BR2_ARCH
default "arm" if BR2_arm
default "armeb" if BR2_armeb
default "aarch64" if BR2_aarch64
default "aarch64_be" if BR2_aarch64_be
config BR2_ENDIAN
default "LITTLE" if (BR2_arm || BR2_aarch64)
default "BIG" if (BR2_armeb || BR2_aarch64_be)
config BR2_GCC_TARGET_CPU
# armv4
default "arm920t" if BR2_arm920t
default "arm922t" if BR2_arm922t
default "fa526" if BR2_fa526
default "strongarm" if BR2_strongarm
# armv5
default "arm926ej-s" if BR2_arm926t
default "iwmmxt" if BR2_iwmmxt
default "xscale" if BR2_xscale
# armv6
default "arm1136j-s" if BR2_arm1136j_s
default "arm1136jf-s" if BR2_arm1136jf_s
default "arm1176jz-s" if BR2_arm1176jz_s
default "arm1176jzf-s" if BR2_arm1176jzf_s
default "mpcore" if BR2_arm11mpcore && BR2_ARM_CPU_HAS_VFPV2
default "mpcorenovfp" if BR2_arm11mpcore
# armv7a
default "cortex-a5" if BR2_cortex_a5
default "cortex-a7" if BR2_cortex_a7
default "cortex-a8" if BR2_cortex_a8
default "cortex-a9" if BR2_cortex_a9
default "cortex-a12" if BR2_cortex_a12
default "cortex-a15" if BR2_cortex_a15
default "cortex-a15.cortex-a7" if BR2_cortex_a15_a7
default "cortex-a17" if BR2_cortex_a17
default "cortex-a17.cortex-a7" if BR2_cortex_a17_a7
default "marvell-pj4" if BR2_pj4
# armv7m
default "cortex-m3" if BR2_cortex_m3
default "cortex-m4" if BR2_cortex_m4
default "cortex-m7" if BR2_cortex_m7
# armv8a
default "cortex-a32" if BR2_cortex_a32
default "cortex-a35" if BR2_cortex_a35
default "cortex-a53" if BR2_cortex_a53
default "cortex-a57" if BR2_cortex_a57
default "cortex-a57.cortex-a53" if BR2_cortex_a57_a53
default "cortex-a72" if BR2_cortex_a72
default "cortex-a72.cortex-a53" if BR2_cortex_a72_a53
default "cortex-a73" if BR2_cortex_a73
default "cortex-a73.cortex-a35" if BR2_cortex_a73_a35
default "cortex-a73.cortex-a53" if BR2_cortex_a73_a53
default "exynos-m1" if BR2_exynos_m1
default "falkor" if BR2_falkor
default "qdf24xx" if BR2_qdf24xx
default "thunderx" if BR2_thunderx
default "thunderxt81" if BR2_thunderxt81
default "thunderxt83" if BR2_thunderxt83
default "thunderxt88" if BR2_thunderxt88
default "thunderxt88p1" if BR2_thunderxt88p1
default "xgene1" if BR2_xgene1
# armv8.1a
default "thunderx2t99" if BR2_thunderx2t99
default "thunderx2t99p1" if BR2_thunderx2t99p1
default "vulcan" if BR2_vulcan
# armv8.2a
default "cortex-a55" if BR2_cortex_a55
default "cortex-a75" if BR2_cortex_a75
default "cortex-a75.cortex-a55" if BR2_cortex_a75_a55
# armv8.3a
default "saphira" if BR2_saphira
config BR2_GCC_TARGET_ABI
default "aapcs-linux" if BR2_arm || BR2_armeb
default "lp64" if BR2_aarch64 || BR2_aarch64_be
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
config BR2_GCC_TARGET_FPU
default "vfp" if BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV2
default "vfpv3" if BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV3
default "vfpv3-d16" if BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV3D16
default "vfpv4" if BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV4
default "vfpv4-d16" if BR2_ARM_FPU_VFPV4D16
default "neon" if BR2_ARM_FPU_NEON
default "neon-vfpv4" if BR2_ARM_FPU_NEON_VFPV4
default "fpv4-sp-d16" if BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV4D16
default "fpv5-sp-d16" if BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV5D16
default "fpv5-d16" if BR2_ARM_FPU_FPV5DPD16
default "fp-armv8" if BR2_ARM_FPU_FP_ARMV8
default "neon-fp-armv8" if BR2_ARM_FPU_NEON_FP_ARMV8
depends on BR2_arm || BR2_armeb
arch: improve ARM floating point support and add support for EABIhf This commit introduces the support for the EABIhf ABI, next to the existing support we have for EABI and OABI (even though OABI support is deprecated). EABIhf allows to improve performance of floating point workload by using floating point registers to transfer floating point arguments when calling functions, instead of using integer registers to do, as is done in the 'softfp' floating point model of EABI. In addition to this, this commit introduces a list of options for the floating point support: * Software floating point * VFP * VFPv3 * VFPv3-D16 * VFPv4 * VFPv4-D16 and it introduces some logic to make sure the options are only visible when it makes sense, depending on the ARM core being selected. This is however made complicated by the fact that certain VFP capabilities are mandatory on some cores, but optional on some other cores. The kconfig logic tries to achieve the following goals: * Hide options that are definitely not possible. * Use safe default values (i.e for Cortex-A5 and A7, the presence of the VFPv4 unit is optional, so we default on software floating point on these cores).. * Show the available possibilities, even if some of them are not necessarily working on a particular core (again, for the Cortex-A5 and A7 cores, there is no way of knowing whether the particular variant used by the user has VFPv4 or not, so we select software floating point by default, but still show VFP/VFPv3/VFPv4 options). It is worth noting that this commit doesn't add support for all possible -mfpu= values on ARM. We haven't added support for fpa, fpe2, fpe3, maverick (those four are only used on very old ARM cores), for vfpv3-fp16, vfpv3-d16-fp16, vfpv3xd, vfpv3xd-fp16, neon-fp16, vfpv4-sp-d16. They can be added quite easily if needed thanks to the new organization of the Config.in options. Signed-off-by: Thomas Petazzoni <thomas.petazzoni@free-electrons.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Korsgaard <jacmet@sunsite.dk>
2013-07-16 16:03:14 +08:00
config BR2_GCC_TARGET_FLOAT_ABI
default "soft" if BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT
default "softfp" if !BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT && BR2_ARM_EABI
default "hard" if !BR2_ARM_SOFT_FLOAT && BR2_ARM_EABIHF
config BR2_GCC_TARGET_MODE
default "arm" if BR2_ARM_INSTRUCTIONS_ARM
default "thumb" if BR2_ARM_INSTRUCTIONS_THUMB || BR2_ARM_INSTRUCTIONS_THUMB2
config BR2_READELF_ARCH_NAME
default "ARM" if BR2_arm || BR2_armeb
default "AArch64" if BR2_aarch64 || BR2_aarch64_be