Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Use bin subdir for windows dlls, lib for unices.
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Fixes windows build.
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Some of the demo progams legitimately need the functionality
that's disabled by WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN.
Instead the solution should be to define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN just before
including windows.h on a case by case basis.
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This fixes MinGW cross compilation build, recently broken due to the use
of convenience libraries in the GLSL preprocessor.
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It fixes cached configuration results from one platform being erroneously
used in other platforms.
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This reverts commit a2937a2f4ecf22a5a4242cd0a350f20228f50232.
Per Jose's comment, We don't want this on master.
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Enable whole program optimizations and fast math.
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Strict aliasing tule violations were fixed on master, but
they're still causing problem in this branch, so disable this assumptions.
Do not apply this fix to master (revert when you merge).
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All code covered by scons is being built on multiple OSes, so pointer
arithmetic must really be addressed when spotted.
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It's not sampling based so its results are biased towards functions called
many times.
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-mstackrealign causes stack corruption on MinGW. And without it the ability
to use SSE instrinsics goes down the drain. Even if we use
__attribute__((force_align_arg_pointer)) for the functions we explicitly
use SSE instrinsics, the SSE code automatically generated by gcc will
cause assertion failures. What a nightmare.
Thankfully LLVM gets this right, so all runtime generated SSE code just
works. rtasm code doesn't assume 16byte alignment. Therefore the bulk of
our performance sensitive code is not affected by this.
Still, intrinsics can be convenient, and it would be nice
to get this working again some day, sp will try to get a reduced test
case.
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gprof is useful for shared libraries, hence our drivers. Nevertheless
profilers like oprofile can benefit from disabling some relatively
minor optimizations for more accurate / complete results.
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It is impossible to have gcc generate SSE code without it, as thirdparty
applications often call us with an unaligned stack pointer.
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Conflicts:
Makefile
progs/glsl/multitex.c
src/mesa/main/enums.c
src/mesa/main/state.c
src/mesa/main/texenvprogram.c
src/mesa/main/version.h
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See also:
- http://bugs.python.org/issue6476
- http://scons.tigris.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=2449
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gcc-4.2's optimizer has a strange bug where it looses code from inner
loops in certain situations. For example, if the appearently innocent
looking code below is compiled with gcc-4.2 -S -O1, the inner loop's
code is missing from the outputed assembly.
struct Size {
unsigned width;
};
struct Command {
unsigned length;
struct Size sizes[32];
};
extern void emit_command(void *command, unsigned length);
void
create_surface( struct Size size, unsigned faces, unsigned levels)
{
struct Command cmd;
unsigned face;
unsigned level;
cmd.length = faces*levels*sizeof(cmd.sizes[0]);
for(face = 0; face < faces; ++face) {
for(level = 0; level < levels; ++level) {
cmd.sizes[face*levels + level] = size;
// This should generate a shrl statement, but the whole for body
// disappears in gcc-4.2 -O1/-O2/-O3!
size.width >>= 1;
}
}
emit(&cmd, sizeof cmd.length + cmd.length);
}
Note that this is not specific to MinGW's gcc-4.2 crosscompiler (the
version typically found in debian/ubuntu's mingw32 packages). gcc-4.2 on
Linux also displays the same error. gcc-4.3 and above gets this
correctly though.
Updated MinGW debian packages with gcc-4.3 are available from
http://people.freedesktop.org/~jrfonseca/debian/pool/main/m/
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This prevents the error
relocation R_X86_64_PC32 against symbol `_gl_DispatchTSD' can not be used when making a shared object; recompile with -fPIC
when building on x86_64 architecture.
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Conflicts:
Makefile
src/gallium/drivers/softpipe/sp_screen.c
src/mesa/main/version.h
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Also add ASPPCOMSTR.
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This reverts commit fc7f92478286041a018ac4e72d2ccedeea7c0eca.
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MSVC 64bit compiler takes forever on some of the files.
Might want to revisit this again later.
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You can still get the old behavior by passing the option quiet=no to scons.
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x86_64 is also supported.
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Conflicts:
src/gallium/auxiliary/pipebuffer/pb_bufmgr_mm.c
src/gallium/auxiliary/util/u_tile.c
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DRI drivers can be build side by side with other non-DRI drivers, therefore
there is no need to build gallium twice.
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Like ccache, but works on all OSes.
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It creates problems in many libraries (glut, glew) which are not unicode
aware.
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It a scary world out there: people use all sort of non standard C stuff,
and we must enable support for that in here in order to build.
-pedantic still warn us when we use that nonstandard though.
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MSVC may not support full C99, but supports more than plain C90. And
-pedantic without -std=c99 generates too many spurious warnings
(specially C++ style comments) to be of any use.
Note that using certain C99 features in the cross-platform parts of Gallium
is still not possible; namely mid-of-scope variable declarations and named
structure initializers will break MSVC builds.
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MSVC may not support full C99, but supports more than plain C90. And
-pedantic without -std=c99 generates too many spurious warnings
(specially C++ style comments) to be of any use.
Note that using certain C99 features in the cross-platform parts of Gallium
is still not possible; namely mid-of-scope variable declarations and named
structure initializers will break MSVC builds.
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