mirror of
https://github.com/gcc-mirror/gcc.git
synced 2026-05-06 14:59:39 +02:00
446835a07d5ba4752805ab24101b3951e31defe4
While in this case it is not an assemble failure nor wrong-code,
because say xchgl %eax, %edx and xchg eax, edx do the same thing,
they are encoded differently, so if we want consistency between
-masm=att and -masm=intel emitted code (my understanding is that
is what is Zdenek testing right now, fuzzing code, compiling
with both -masm=att and -masm=intel and making sure if the former
assembles, the latter does too and they result in identical
*.o files), we should use different order of the operands
even here (and it doesn't matter which order we pick).
I've grepped the *.md files with
grep '\\t%[0-9], %[0-9]' *.md | grep -v '%0, %0'
i386.md: "xchg{<imodesuffix>}\t%1, %0"
i386.md: xchg{<imodesuffix>}\t%1, %0
i386.md: "wrss<mskmodesuffix>\t%0, %1"
i386.md: "wruss<mskmodesuffix>\t%0, %1"
(before this and PR124366 fix) and later on also with
grep '\\t%[a-z0-9_<>]*[0-9], %[a-z0-9_<>]*[0-9]' *.md | grep -v '%0, %0'
and checked all the output and haven't found anything else problematic.
2026-03-05 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* config/i386/i386.md (swap<mode>): Swap operand order for
-masm=intel.
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
…
This directory contains the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC). The GNU Compiler Collection is free software. See the files whose names start with COPYING for copying permission. The manuals, and some of the runtime libraries, are under different terms; see the individual source files for details. The directory INSTALL contains copies of the installation information as HTML and plain text. The source of this information is gcc/doc/install.texi. The installation information includes details of what is included in the GCC sources and what files GCC installs. See the file gcc/doc/gcc.texi (together with other files that it includes) for usage and porting information. An online readable version of the manual is in the files gcc/doc/gcc.info*. See http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs/ for how to report bugs usefully. Copyright years on GCC source files may be listed using range notation, e.g., 1987-2012, indicating that every year in the range, inclusive, is a copyrightable year that could otherwise be listed individually.
Description
Languages
C++
30.7%
C
30.2%
Ada
14.4%
D
6.1%
Go
5.7%
Other
12.4%