kumquat-buildroot/package/cairo/old_patches/0001-Add-autoconf-macro-AX_C_FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN.patch
2008-03-06 17:56:30 +00:00

104 lines
3.7 KiB
Diff

From nobody Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Dan Amelang <dan@amelang.net>
Date: Sun Oct 29 21:30:08 2006 -0800
Subject: [PATCH] Add autoconf macro AX_C_FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN
The symbol that this macro defines (FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN) can be used
to make double arithmetic tricks portable.
---
acinclude.m4 | 65 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
configure.in | 1 +
2 files changed, 66 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
3231d91b59a6c2e1c40bbaa8b143694b6c693662
diff --git a/acinclude.m4 b/acinclude.m4
index af73800..a0eb13a 100644
--- a/acinclude.m4
+++ b/acinclude.m4
@@ -51,3 +51,68 @@ ifelse([$1],[],,
AM_CONDITIONAL(ENABLE_GTK_DOC, test x$enable_gtk_doc = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(GTK_DOC_USE_LIBTOOL, test -n "$LIBTOOL")
])
+
+# AX_C_FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN ([ACTION-IF-TRUE], [ACTION-IF-FALSE],
+# [ACTION-IF-UNKNOWN])
+#
+# Checks the ordering of words within a multi-word float. This check
+# is necessary because on some systems (e.g. certain ARM systems), the
+# float word ordering can be different from the byte ordering. In a
+# multi-word float context, "big-endian" implies that the word containing
+# the sign bit is found in the memory location with the lowest address.
+# This implemenation was inspired by the AC_C_BIGENDIAN macro in autoconf.
+# -------------------------------------------------------------------------
+AC_DEFUN([AX_C_FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN],
+ [AC_CACHE_CHECK(whether float word ordering is bigendian,
+ ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian, [
+
+# The endianess is detected by first compiling C code that contains a special
+# double float value, then grepping the resulting object file for certain
+# strings of ascii values. The double is specially crafted to have a
+# binary representation that corresponds with a simple string. In this
+# implementation, the string "noonsees" was selected because the individual
+# word values ("noon" and "sees") are palindromes, thus making this test
+# byte-order agnostic. If grep finds the string "noonsees" in the object
+# file, the target platform stores float words in big-endian order. If grep
+# finds "seesnoon", float words are in little-endian order. If neither value
+# is found, the user is instructed to specify the ordering.
+
+ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian=unknown
+AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_SOURCE([[
+
+double d = 90904234967036810337470478905505011476211692735615632014797120844053488865816695273723469097858056257517020191247487429516932130503560650002327564517570778480236724525140520121371739201496540132640109977779420565776568942592.0;
+
+]])], [
+
+if grep noonsees conftest.$ac_objext >/dev/null ; then
+ ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian=yes
+fi
+if grep seesnoon conftest.$ac_objext >/dev/null ; then
+ if test "$ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian" = unknown; then
+ ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian=no
+ else
+ ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian=unknown
+ fi
+fi
+
+])])
+
+case $ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian in
+ yes)
+ m4_default([$1],
+ [AC_DEFINE([FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN], 1,
+ [Define to 1 if your system stores words within floats
+ with the most significant word first])]) ;;
+ no)
+ $2 ;;
+ *)
+ m4_default([$3],
+ [AC_MSG_ERROR([
+
+Unknown float word ordering. You need to manually preset
+ax_cv_c_float_words_bigendian=no (or yes) according to your system.
+
+ ])]) ;;
+esac
+
+])# AX_C_FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN
diff --git a/configure.in b/configure.in
index 2d2bf9f..797c7ce 100644
--- a/configure.in
+++ b/configure.in
@@ -55,6 +55,7 @@ AC_PROG_CPP
AC_PROG_LIBTOOL dnl required version (1.4) DON'T REMOVE!
AC_STDC_HEADERS
AC_C_BIGENDIAN
+AX_C_FLOAT_WORDS_BIGENDIAN
dnl ===========================================================================
dnl === Local macros
--
1.2.6