o Primary mod: alpha and i386 code for .init and .fini section fallthroughs
o Actual fallthru is not yet enabled, see csu/{alpha,i386_elf}/Makefile
o When enabled, should fix bin/12865 & should fix at least one WINE bug,
see http://www.winehq.com/hypermail/wine-devel/2001/05/0021.html
o Also, removed the function pointer hack put in to prevent gcc from
incorrectly attempting to do short calls over section boundaries,
on some architectures, rather, simply simply move ctors() and dtors()
into .init and .fini.
Other notes.
o Our crtbegin.c and crtend.c were completely in C, despite
the fact that .init and .fini section fallthroughs require machine code.
These modules implement the gnu ctors/dtors mechanism directly, eliminating
in part the need for the elf .init/.fini section fallthrough. However,
if we ever want to use the gnu-provided constructor support, we need to
do the fallthrough, at least one program (WINE) apparently uses the
feature independently, and other compilers may depend on the mechanism.
o It is amusing that the previous NetBSD _init() and _fini() were put
into the .init and .fini sections, because nothing is gained over
plain .text if they don't fall through. Cargo cult!
o Other elf ports will need to copy the alpha and i386 example mods.
files have copyright held by people in addition to myself. (I did the
original work, they copied it, enhanced it, and added their copyright
to the derivative work.) Their approval has been given re: the license
change.
files have copyright held by people in addition to myself. (I did the
original work, they copied it, enhanced it, and added their copyright
to the derivative work.) Their approval has been given re: the license
change.
testing and archival for now. I don't expect anyone to work with it
since the binutils and gas changes are still pending. But you got to
crawl before you walk.
use it across the board.
crt0.c now contains stuff that REALLY IS machine-dependent, or stuff that
is completely intermingled in machdep code (and thus can't be separated
easily).