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Rich Felker
cccc1844be
add arm-optimized memcpy implementation from bionic libc
the approach of this implementation was heavily investigated prior to adopting it. attempts to obtain similar performance with pure C code were capping out at about 75% of the performance of the asm, with considerably larger code size, and were fragile in that the compiler would sometimes compile part of memcpy into a call to itself. therefore, just using the asm seems to be the best option. this commit is the first to make use of the new subarch-specific asm framework. the new armel directory is the location for arm asm that should not be used for all arm subarchs, only the default one. armhf is the name of the little-endian hardfloat-ABI subarch, which can use the exact same asm. in both cases, the build system finds the asm by following a memcpy.sub file. the other two subarchs, armeb and armebhf, would need a big-endian variant of this code. it would not be hard to adapt the code to big endian, but I will hold off on doing so until there is demand for it.
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musl libc - a new standard library to power a new generation of Linux-based devices. musl is lightweight, fast, simple, free, and strives to be correct in the sense of standards-conformance and safety. musl is an alternative to glibc, eglibc, uClibc, dietlibc, and klibc. For reasons why one might prefer musl, please see the FAQ and libc comparison chart on the project website, http://www.musl-libc.org/ For installation instructions, see the INSTALL file. Please refer to the COPYRIGHT file for details on the copyright and license status of code included in musl (standard MIT license). Greetings! The 0.9.x release series for musl features interface coverage for all interfaces defined in ISO C99 and POSIX 2008 base, along with a number of non-standardized interfaces for compatibility with Linux, BSD, and glibc functionality. As the release series progresses, we are gradually adding support for incomplete functionality in existing interfaces, additional functions that are deemed to be important due to their use in real-world software, and support for new library and language features in C11 such as thread-local storage, which is now supported on all targets. In addition, support for additional target cpu architectures is being added. The number of packages build successfully against musl - either out-of-the-box or with minor patches to address portability errors - has exceeded 5000 and is steadily growing. In addition to application compatibility testing, unit testing has been conducted using three separate test frameworks and numerous additional standalone test cases to verify the correctness of the implementation. Included with this package is a gcc wrapper script (musl-gcc) which allows you to build musl-linked programs using an existing gcc 3.x or 4.x toolchain on the host. There are also now at several mini distributions (in the form of build scripts) which provide a self-hosting musl-based toolchain and system root. These are much better options than the wrapper script if you wish to use dynamic linking or build packages with many library dependencies. See the musl website for details. The musl project is actively seeking contributors, mostly in the areas of porting, testing, and application compatibility improvement. For bug reports, support requests, or to get involved in development, please visit #musl on Freenode IRC or subscribe to the musl mailing list by sending a blank email to musl-subscribe AT lists DOT openwall DOT com. Thank you for using musl. Cheers, Rich Felker / dalias
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