| #! /bin/sh |
| # |
| # GMP config.guess wrapper. |
| |
| |
| # Copyright 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008 Free Software |
| # Foundation, Inc. |
| # |
| # This file is part of the GNU MP Library. |
| # |
| # The GNU MP Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| # it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published |
| # by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at |
| # your option) any later version. |
| # |
| # The GNU MP Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but |
| # WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY |
| # or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public |
| # License for more details. |
| # |
| # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License |
| # along with the GNU MP Library. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/. |
| |
| |
| # Usage: config.guess |
| # |
| # Print the host system CPU-VENDOR-OS. |
| # |
| # configfsf.guess is run and its guess then sharpened up to take advantage |
| # of the finer grained CPU types that GMP knows. |
| |
| |
| # Expect to find configfsf.guess in the same directory as this config.guess |
| configfsf_guess="`echo \"$0\" | sed 's/config.guess$/configfsf.guess/'`" |
| if test "$configfsf_guess" = "$0"; then |
| echo "Cannot derive configfsf.guess from $0" 1>&2 |
| exit 1 |
| fi |
| if test -f "$configfsf_guess"; then |
| : |
| else |
| echo "$configfsf_guess not found" 1>&2 |
| exit 1 |
| fi |
| |
| # Setup a $SHELL with which to run configfsf.guess, using the same |
| # $CONFIG_SHELL or /bin/sh as autoconf does when running config.guess |
| SHELL=${CONFIG_SHELL-/bin/sh} |
| |
| # Identify ourselves on --version, --help or errors |
| if test $# != 0; then |
| echo "(GNU MP wrapped config.guess)" |
| $SHELL $configfsf_guess "$@" |
| exit 1 |
| fi |
| |
| guess_full=`$SHELL $configfsf_guess` |
| if test $? != 0; then |
| exit 1 |
| fi |
| |
| guess_cpu=`echo "$guess_full" | sed 's/-.*$//'` |
| guess_rest=`echo "$guess_full" | sed 's/^[^-]*//'` |
| exact_cpu= |
| |
| |
| # ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| # The following should look at the current guess and probe the system to |
| # establish a better guess in exact_cpu. Leave exact_cpu empty if probes |
| # can't be done, or don't work. |
| # |
| # When a number of probes are done, test -z "$exact_cpu" can be used instead |
| # of putting each probe under an "else" of the preceeding. That can stop |
| # the code getting horribly nested and marching off the right side of the |
| # screen. |
| |
| # Note that when a compile-and-link is done in one step we need to remove .o |
| # files, since lame C compilers generate these even when not asked. |
| # |
| |
| dummy=dummy-$$ |
| trap 'rm -f $dummy.c $dummy.o $dummy.core $dummy ${dummy}1.s ${dummy}2.c ; exit 1' 1 2 15 |
| |
| # Use $HOST_CC if defined. $CC may point to a cross-compiler |
| if test x"$CC_FOR_BUILD" = x; then |
| if test x"$HOST_CC" != x; then |
| CC_FOR_BUILD="$HOST_CC" |
| else |
| if test x"$CC" != x; then |
| CC_FOR_BUILD="$CC" |
| else |
| echo 'dummy(){}' >$dummy.c |
| for c in cc gcc c89 c99; do |
| ($c $dummy.c -c) >/dev/null 2>&1 |
| if test $? = 0; then |
| CC_FOR_BUILD="$c"; break |
| fi |
| done |
| rm -f $dummy.c $dummy.o |
| if test x"$CC_FOR_BUILD" = x; then |
| CC_FOR_BUILD=no_compiler_found |
| fi |
| fi |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| |
| case "$guess_full" in |
| |
| alpha-*-*) |
| # configfsf.guess detects exact alpha cpu types for OSF and GNU/Linux, but |
| # not for *BSD and other systems. We try to get an exact type for any |
| # plain "alpha" it leaves. |
| # |
| # configfsf.guess used to have a block of code not unlike this, but these |
| # days does its thing with Linux kernel /proc/cpuinfo or OSF psrinfo. |
| # |
| cat <<EOF >$dummy.s |
| .data |
| Lformat: |
| .byte 37,100,45,37,120,10,0 # "%d-%x\n" |
| .text |
| .globl main |
| .align 4 |
| .ent main |
| main: |
| .frame \$30,16,\$26,0 |
| ldgp \$29,0(\$27) |
| .prologue 1 |
| .long 0x47e03d91 # implver \$17 |
| lda \$2,-1 |
| .long 0x47e20c21 # amask \$2,\$1 |
| lda \$16,Lformat |
| not \$1,\$18 |
| jsr \$26,printf |
| ldgp \$29,0(\$26) |
| mov 0,\$16 |
| jsr \$26,exit |
| .end main |
| EOF |
| $CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.s -o $dummy 2>/dev/null |
| if test "$?" = 0 ; then |
| case `./$dummy` in |
| 0-0) exact_cpu=alpha ;; |
| 1-0) exact_cpu=alphaev5 ;; |
| 1-1) exact_cpu=alphaev56 ;; |
| 1-101) exact_cpu=alphapca56 ;; |
| 2-303) exact_cpu=alphaev6 ;; |
| 2-307) exact_cpu=alphaev67 ;; |
| 2-1307) exact_cpu=alphaev68 ;; |
| esac |
| fi |
| rm -f $dummy.s $dummy.o $dummy |
| ;; |
| |
| ia64*-*-*) |
| # CPUID[3] bits 24 to 31 is the processor family. itanium2 is documented |
| # as 0x1f, plain itanium has been seen returning 0x07 on two systems, but |
| # haven't found any documentation on it as such. |
| # |
| # Defining both getcpuid and _getcpuid lets us ignore whether the system |
| # expects underscores or not. |
| # |
| # "unsigned long long" is always 64 bits, in fact on hpux in ilp32 mode |
| # (which is the default there), it's the only 64-bit type. |
| # |
| cat >${dummy}a.s <<EOF |
| .text |
| .global _getcpuid |
| .proc _getcpuid |
| _getcpuid: |
| mov r8 = CPUID[r32] ;; |
| br.ret.sptk.many rp ;; |
| .endp _getcpuid |
| .global getcpuid |
| .proc getcpuid |
| getcpuid: |
| mov r8 = CPUID[r32] ;; |
| br.ret.sptk.many rp ;; |
| .endp getcpuid |
| EOF |
| cat >${dummy}b.c <<EOF |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| unsigned long long getcpuid (); |
| int |
| main () |
| { |
| if (getcpuid(0LL) == 0x49656E69756E6547LL && getcpuid(1LL) == 0x6C65746ELL) |
| { |
| /* "GenuineIntel" */ |
| switch ((getcpuid(3LL) >> 24) & 0xFF) { |
| case 0x07: puts ("itanium"); break; |
| case 0x1F: puts ("itanium2"); break; /* McKinley, Madison */ |
| case 0x20: puts ("itanium2"); break; /* Montecito */ |
| } |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| EOF |
| if $CC_FOR_BUILD ${dummy}a.s ${dummy}b.c -o $dummy >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| exact_cpu=`./$dummy` |
| fi |
| rm -f ${dummy}a.s ${dummy}a.o ${dummy}b.c ${dummy}b.o $dummy $dummy.core core |
| ;; |
| |
| mips-*-irix[6789]*) |
| # IRIX 6 and up always has a 64-bit mips cpu |
| exact_cpu=mips64 |
| ;; |
| |
| m68k-*-*) |
| # NetBSD (and presumably other *BSD) "sysctl hw.model" gives for example |
| # hw.model = Apple Macintosh Quadra 610 (68040) |
| exact_cpu=`(sysctl hw.model) 2>/dev/null | sed -n 's/^.*\(680[012346]0\).*$/m\1/p'` |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # Linux kernel 2.2 gives for example "CPU: 68020" (tabs in between). |
| exact_cpu=`sed -n 's/^CPU:.*\(680[012346]0\).*$/m\1/p' /proc/cpuinfo 2>/dev/null` |
| fi |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # Try: movel #0,%d0; rts |
| # This is to check the compiler and our asm code works etc, before |
| # assuming failures below indicate cpu characteristics. |
| # .byte is used to avoid problems with assembler syntax variations. |
| # For testing, provoke failures by adding "illegal" possibly as |
| # ".byte 0x4A, 0xFC" |
| cat >$dummy.s <<EOF |
| .text |
| .globl main |
| .globl _main |
| main: |
| _main: |
| .byte 0x70, 0x00 |
| .byte 0x4e, 0x75 |
| EOF |
| if ($CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.s -o $dummy && ./$dummy) >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| |
| # $SHELL -c is used to execute ./$dummy below, since (./$dummy) |
| # 2>/dev/null still prints the SIGILL message on some shells. |
| # |
| # Try: movel #0,%d0 |
| # rtd #0 |
| cat >$dummy.s <<EOF |
| .text |
| .globl main |
| .globl _main |
| main: |
| _main: |
| .byte 0x70, 0x00 |
| .byte 0x4e, 0x74, 0x00, 0x00 |
| EOF |
| if $CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.s -o $dummy >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| $SHELL -c ./$dummy >/dev/null 2>&1 |
| if test $? != 0; then |
| exact_cpu=m68000 # because rtd didn't work |
| fi |
| fi |
| # |
| |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # Try: trapf |
| # movel #0,%d0 |
| # rts |
| # Another possibility for identifying 68000 and 68010 is the |
| # different value stored by "movem a0,(a0)+" |
| cat >$dummy.s <<EOF |
| .text |
| .globl main |
| .globl _main |
| main: |
| _main: |
| .byte 0x51, 0xFC |
| .byte 0x70, 0x00 |
| .byte 0x4e, 0x75 |
| EOF |
| if $CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.s -o $dummy >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| $SHELL -c ./$dummy >/dev/null 2>&1 |
| if test $? != 0; then |
| exact_cpu=m68010 # because trapf didn't work |
| fi |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # Try: bfffo %d1{0:31},%d0 |
| # movel #0,%d0 |
| # rts |
| cat >$dummy.s <<EOF |
| .text |
| .globl main |
| .globl _main |
| main: |
| _main: |
| .byte 0xED, 0xC1, 0x00, 0x1F |
| .byte 0x70, 0x00 |
| .byte 0x4e, 0x75 |
| EOF |
| if $CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.s -o $dummy >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| $SHELL -c ./$dummy >/dev/null 2>&1 |
| if test $? != 0; then |
| exact_cpu=m68360 # cpu32, because bfffo didn't work |
| fi |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # FIXME: Now we know 68020 or up, but how to detect 030, 040 and 060? |
| exact_cpu=m68020 |
| fi |
| fi |
| rm -f $dummy.s $dummy.o $dummy $dummy.core core |
| fi |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| case "$guess_full" in |
| *-*-next* | *-*-openstep*) # NeXTs are 68020 or better |
| exact_cpu=m68020 ;; |
| esac |
| fi |
| ;; |
| |
| |
| rs6000-*-* | powerpc*-*-*) |
| # Enhancement: On MacOS the "machine" command prints for instance |
| # "ppc750". Interestingly on powerpc970-apple-darwin6.8.5 it prints |
| # "ppc970" where there's no actual #define for 970 from NXGetLocalArchInfo |
| # (as noted below). But the man page says the command is still "under |
| # development", so it doesn't seem wise to use it just yet, not while |
| # there's an alternative. |
| # |
| # Try to read the PVR. mfpvr is a protected instruction, NetBSD, MacOS |
| # and AIX don't allow it in user mode, but the Linux kernel does. |
| # |
| # Using explicit bytes for mfpvr avoids worrying about assembler syntax |
| # and underscores. "char"s are used instead of "int"s to avoid worrying |
| # whether sizeof(int)==4 or if it's the right endianness. |
| # |
| # Note this is no good on AIX, since a C function there is the address of |
| # a function descriptor, not actual code. But this doesn't matter since |
| # AIX doesn't allow mfpvr anyway. |
| # |
| cat >$dummy.c <<\EOF |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| struct { |
| int n; /* force 4-byte alignment */ |
| char a[8]; |
| } getpvr = { |
| 0, |
| { |
| 0x7c, 0x7f, 0x42, 0xa6, /* mfpvr r3 */ |
| 0x4e, 0x80, 0x00, 0x20, /* blr */ |
| } |
| }; |
| int |
| main () |
| { |
| unsigned (*fun)(); |
| unsigned pvr; |
| |
| /* a separate "fun" variable is necessary for gcc 2.95.2 on MacOS, |
| it gets a compiler error on a combined cast and call */ |
| fun = (unsigned (*)()) getpvr.a; |
| pvr = (*fun) (); |
| |
| switch (pvr >> 16) { |
| case 0x0001: puts ("powerpc601"); break; |
| case 0x0003: puts ("powerpc603"); break; |
| case 0x0004: puts ("powerpc604"); break; |
| case 0x0006: puts ("powerpc603e"); break; |
| case 0x0007: puts ("powerpc603e"); break; /* 603ev */ |
| case 0x0008: puts ("powerpc750"); break; |
| case 0x0009: puts ("powerpc604e"); break; |
| case 0x000a: puts ("powerpc604e"); break; /* 604ev5 */ |
| case 0x000c: puts ("powerpc7400"); break; |
| case 0x0041: puts ("powerpc630"); break; |
| case 0x0050: puts ("powerpc860"); break; |
| case 0x8000: puts ("powerpc7450"); break; |
| case 0x8001: puts ("powerpc7455"); break; |
| case 0x8002: puts ("powerpc7457"); break; |
| case 0x8003: puts ("powerpc7447"); break; /* really 7447A */ |
| case 0x800c: puts ("powerpc7410"); break; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| EOF |
| if ($CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.c -o $dummy) >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| # This style construct is needed on AIX 4.3 to suppress the SIGILL error |
| # from (*fun)(). Using $SHELL -c ./$dummy 2>/dev/null doesn't work. |
| { x=`./$dummy`; } 2>/dev/null |
| if test -n "$x"; then |
| exact_cpu=$x |
| fi |
| fi |
| rm -f $dummy.c $dummy.o $dummy $dummy.core |
| |
| # Grep the linux kernel /proc/cpuinfo pseudo-file. |
| # Anything unrecognised is ignored, since of course we mustn't spit out |
| # a cpu type config.sub doesn't know. |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu" && test -f /proc/cpuinfo; then |
| x=`grep "^cpu[ ]" /proc/cpuinfo | head -n 1` |
| x=`echo $x | sed -n 's/^cpu[ ]*:[ ]*\([A-Za-z0-9]*\).*/\1/p'` |
| x=`echo $x | sed 's/PPC//'` |
| case $x in |
| 601) exact_cpu="power" ;; |
| 603ev) exact_cpu="powerpc603e" ;; |
| 604ev5) exact_cpu="powerpc604e" ;; |
| 603 | 603e | 604 | 604e | 750 | 821 | 860 | 970) |
| exact_cpu="powerpc$x" ;; |
| POWER[4-9]) |
| exact_cpu=`echo $x | sed "s;POWER;power;"` ;; |
| esac |
| fi |
| |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # On AIX, try looking at _system_configuration. This is present in |
| # version 4 at least. |
| cat >$dummy.c <<EOF |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <sys/systemcfg.h> |
| int |
| main () |
| { |
| switch (_system_configuration.implementation) { |
| /* Old versions of AIX don't have all these constants, |
| use ifdef for safety. */ |
| #ifdef POWER_RS2 |
| case POWER_RS2: puts ("power2"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_601 |
| case POWER_601: puts ("power"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_603 |
| case POWER_603: puts ("powerpc603"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_604 |
| case POWER_604: puts ("powerpc604"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_620 |
| case POWER_620: puts ("powerpc620"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_630 |
| case POWER_630: puts ("powerpc630"); break; |
| #endif |
| /* Dunno what this is, leave it out for now. |
| case POWER_A35: puts ("powerpca35"); break; |
| */ |
| /* This is waiting for a bit more info. |
| case POWER_RS64II: puts ("powerpcrs64ii"); break; |
| */ |
| #ifdef POWER_4 |
| case POWER_4: puts ("power4"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_5 |
| case POWER_5: puts ("power5"); break; |
| #endif |
| #ifdef POWER_6 |
| case POWER_6: puts ("power6"); break; |
| #endif |
| default: |
| if (_system_configuration.architecture == POWER_RS) |
| puts ("power"); |
| else if (_system_configuration.width == 64) |
| puts ("powerpc64"); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| EOF |
| if ($CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.c -o $dummy) >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| x=`./$dummy` |
| if test -n "$x"; then |
| exact_cpu=$x |
| fi |
| fi |
| rm -f $dummy.c $dummy.o $dummy |
| fi |
| |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| # On MacOS X (or any Mach-O presumably), NXGetLocalArchInfo cpusubtype |
| # can tell us the exact cpu. |
| cat >$dummy.c <<EOF |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <mach-o/arch.h> |
| int |
| main (void) |
| { |
| const NXArchInfo *a = NXGetLocalArchInfo(); |
| if (a->cputype == CPU_TYPE_POWERPC) |
| { |
| switch (a->cpusubtype) { |
| /* The following known to Darwin 1.3. */ |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_601: puts ("powerpc601"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_602: puts ("powerpc602"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_603: puts ("powerpc603"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_603e: puts ("powerpc603e"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_603ev: puts ("powerpc603e"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_604: puts ("powerpc604"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_604e: puts ("powerpc604e"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_620: puts ("powerpc620"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_750: puts ("powerpc750"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_7400: puts ("powerpc7400"); break; |
| case CPU_SUBTYPE_POWERPC_7450: puts ("powerpc7450"); break; |
| /* Darwin 6.8.5 doesn't define the following */ |
| case 0x8001: puts ("powerpc7455"); break; |
| case 0x8002: puts ("powerpc7457"); break; |
| case 0x8003: puts ("powerpc7447"); break; |
| case 100: puts ("powerpc970"); break; |
| } |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| EOF |
| if ($CC_FOR_BUILD $dummy.c -o $dummy) >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| x=`./$dummy` |
| if test -n "$x"; then |
| exact_cpu=$x |
| fi |
| fi |
| rm -f $dummy.c $dummy.o $dummy |
| fi |
| ;; |
| |
| sparc-*-* | sparc64-*-*) |
| # If we can recognise an actual v7 then $exact_cpu is set to "sparc" so as |
| # to short-circuit subsequent tests. |
| |
| # Grep the linux kernel /proc/cpuinfo pseudo-file. |
| # A typical line is "cpu\t\t: TI UltraSparc II (BlackBird)" |
| # See arch/sparc/kernel/cpu.c and arch/sparc64/kernel/cpu.c. |
| # |
| if test -f /proc/cpuinfo; then |
| if grep 'cpu.*Cypress' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="sparc" # ie. v7 |
| elif grep 'cpu.*Power-UP' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="sparc" # ie. v7 |
| elif grep 'cpu.*HyperSparc' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="sparcv8" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*SuperSparc' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="supersparc" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*MicroSparc' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="microsparc" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*MB86904' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| # actually MicroSPARC-II |
| exact_cpu=microsparc |
| elif grep 'cpu.*UltraSparc T1' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| # this grep pattern has not been tested against any Linux |
| exact_cpu="ultrasparct1" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*UltraSparc III' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="ultrasparc3" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*UltraSparc IIi' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="ultrasparc2i" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*UltraSparc II' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="ultrasparc2" |
| elif grep 'cpu.*UltraSparc' /proc/cpuinfo >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu="ultrasparc" |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| # Grep the output from sysinfo on SunOS. |
| # sysinfo has been seen living in /bin or in /usr/kvm |
| # cpu0 is a "SuperSPARC Model 41 SPARCmodule" CPU |
| # cpu0 is a "75 MHz TI,TMS390Z55" CPU |
| # |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| for i in sysinfo /usr/kvm/sysinfo; do |
| if $SHELL -c $i 2>/dev/null >conftest.dat; then |
| if grep 'cpu0 is a "SuperSPARC' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=supersparc |
| break |
| elif grep 'cpu0 is a .*TMS390Z5.' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # TMS390Z50 and TMS390Z55 |
| exact_cpu=supersparc |
| break |
| fi |
| fi |
| done |
| rm -f conftest.dat |
| fi |
| |
| # Grep the output from prtconf on Solaris. |
| # Use an explicit /usr/sbin, since that directory might not be in a normal |
| # user's path. |
| # |
| # SUNW,UltraSPARC (driver not attached) |
| # SUNW,UltraSPARC-II (driver not attached) |
| # SUNW,UltraSPARC-IIi (driver not attached) |
| # SUNW,UltraSPARC-III+ (driver not attached) |
| # Ross,RT625 (driver not attached) |
| # TI,TMS390Z50 (driver not attached) |
| # |
| # /usr/sbin/sysdef prints similar information, but includes all loadable |
| # cpu modules, not just the real cpu. |
| # |
| # We first try a plain prtconf, since that is known to work on older systems. |
| # But for newer T1 systems, that doesn't produce any useful output, we need |
| # "prtconf -vp" there. |
| # |
| for prtconfopt in "" "-vp"; do |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| if $SHELL -c "/usr/sbin/prtconf $prtconfopt" 2>/dev/null >conftest.dat; then |
| if grep 'SUNW,UltraSPARC-T1' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparct1 |
| elif grep 'SUNW,UltraSPARC-III' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc3 |
| elif grep 'SUNW,UltraSPARC-IIi' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc2i |
| elif grep 'SUNW,UltraSPARC-II' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc2 |
| elif grep 'SUNW,UltraSPARC' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc |
| elif grep 'Ross,RT62.' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # RT620, RT625, RT626 hypersparcs (v8). |
| exact_cpu=sparcv8 |
| elif grep 'TI,TMS390Z5.' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # TMS390Z50 and TMS390Z55 |
| exact_cpu=supersparc |
| elif grep 'TI,TMS390S10' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=microsparc |
| elif grep 'FMI,MB86904' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # actually MicroSPARC-II |
| exact_cpu=microsparc |
| fi |
| fi |
| rm -f conftest.dat |
| fi |
| done |
| |
| # Grep the output from sysctl hw.model on sparc or sparc64 *BSD. |
| # Use an explicit /sbin, since that directory might not be in a normal |
| # user's path. Example outputs, |
| # |
| # hw.model: Sun Microsystems UltraSparc-IIi |
| # |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| if $SHELL -c "/sbin/sysctl hw.model" 2>/dev/null >conftest.dat; then |
| if grep 'UltraSparc-T1' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # this grep pattern has not been tested against any BSD |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparct1 |
| elif grep 'UltraSparc-III' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc3 |
| elif grep 'UltraSparc-IIi' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc2i |
| elif grep 'UltraSparc-II' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc2 |
| elif grep 'UltraSparc' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=ultrasparc |
| elif grep 'TMS390Z5.' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # TMS390Z50 and TMS390Z55 |
| exact_cpu=supersparc |
| elif grep 'TMS390S10' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=microsparc |
| elif grep 'MB86904' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| # actually MicroSPARC-II |
| exact_cpu=microsparc |
| elif grep 'MB86907' conftest.dat >/dev/null; then |
| exact_cpu=turbosparc |
| fi |
| fi |
| rm -f conftest.dat |
| fi |
| |
| # sun4m and sun4d are v8s of some sort, sun4u is a v9 of some sort |
| # |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| case `uname -m` in |
| sun4[md]) exact_cpu=sparcv8 ;; |
| sun4u) exact_cpu=sparcv9 ;; |
| esac |
| fi |
| ;; |
| |
| i?86-*-* | amd64-*-* | x86_64-*-*) |
| cat <<EOF >${dummy}0.s |
| .globl cpuid |
| .globl _cpuid |
| cpuid: |
| _cpuid: |
| pushl %esi |
| pushl %ebx |
| movl 16(%esp),%eax |
| .byte 0x0f |
| .byte 0xa2 |
| movl 12(%esp),%esi |
| movl %ebx,(%esi) |
| movl %edx,4(%esi) |
| movl %ecx,8(%esi) |
| popl %ebx |
| popl %esi |
| ret |
| EOF |
| cat <<EOF >${dummy}1.s |
| .globl cpuid |
| .globl _cpuid |
| cpuid: |
| _cpuid: |
| push %rbx |
| mov %esi,%eax |
| .byte 0x0f |
| .byte 0xa2 |
| mov %ebx,(%rdi) |
| mov %edx,4(%rdi) |
| mov %ecx,8(%rdi) |
| pop %rbx |
| ret |
| EOF |
| cat <<EOF >${dummy}2.c |
| main () |
| { |
| char vendor_string[13]; |
| char dummy_string[12]; |
| long fms; |
| int family, model, stepping; |
| char *modelstr; |
| |
| cpuid (vendor_string, 0); |
| vendor_string[12] = 0; |
| |
| fms = cpuid (dummy_string, 1); |
| |
| family = ((fms >> 8) & 0xf) + ((fms >> 20) & 0xff); |
| model = ((fms >> 4) & 0xf) + ((fms >> 12) & 0xf0); |
| stepping = fms & 0xf; |
| |
| modelstr = "$guess_cpu"; |
| if (strcmp (vendor_string, "GenuineIntel") == 0) |
| { |
| switch (family) |
| { |
| case 5: |
| if (model <= 2) modelstr = "pentium"; |
| else if (model >= 4) modelstr = "pentiummmx"; |
| break; |
| case 6: |
| if (model <= 1) modelstr = "pentiumpro"; |
| else if (model <= 6) modelstr = "pentium2"; |
| else if (model <= 8) modelstr = "pentium3"; |
| else if (model <= 9) modelstr = "pentiumm"; |
| else if (model <= 12) modelstr = "pentium3"; |
| else if (model <= 14) modelstr = "pentiumm"; |
| else if (model <= 27) modelstr = "core2"; |
| else modelstr = "atom"; |
| break; |
| case 15: |
| modelstr = "pentium4"; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (strcmp (vendor_string, "AuthenticAMD") == 0) |
| { |
| switch (family) |
| { |
| case 5: |
| if (model <= 3) modelstr = "k5"; |
| else if (model <= 7) modelstr = "k6"; |
| else if (model == 8) modelstr = "k62"; |
| else if (model == 9) modelstr = "k63"; |
| else if (model == 10) modelstr = "geode"; |
| else if (model == 13) modelstr = "k63"; |
| break; |
| case 6: |
| modelstr = "athlon"; |
| break; |
| case 15: |
| case 16: |
| modelstr = "athlon64"; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (strcmp (vendor_string, "CyrixInstead") == 0) |
| { |
| /* Should recognize Cyrix' processors too. */ |
| } |
| else if (strcmp (vendor_string, "CentaurHauls") == 0) |
| { |
| switch (family) |
| { |
| case 6: |
| if (model < 9) modelstr = "viac3"; |
| else modelstr = "viac32"; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| printf ("%s\n", modelstr); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| EOF |
| |
| if ($CC_FOR_BUILD ${dummy}1.s ${dummy}2.c -o $dummy) >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| # On 80386 and early 80486 cpuid is not available and will result in a |
| # SIGILL message, hence 2>/dev/null. |
| # |
| # On i386-unknown-freebsd4.9, "/bin/sh -c ./dummy" seems to send an |
| # "Illegal instruction (core dumped)" message to stdout, so we test $? |
| # to check if the program run was successful. |
| # |
| x=`$SHELL -c ./$dummy 2>/dev/null` |
| if test $? = 0 && test -n "$x"; then |
| exact_cpu=$x |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| if test -z "$exact_cpu"; then |
| if ($CC_FOR_BUILD ${dummy}0.s ${dummy}2.c -o $dummy) >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
| # On 80386 and early 80486 cpuid is not available and will result in a |
| # SIGILL message, hence 2>/dev/null. |
| # |
| # On i386-unknown-freebsd4.9, "/bin/sh -c ./dummy" seems to send an |
| # "Illegal instruction (core dumped)" message to stdout, so we test $? |
| # to check if the program run was successful. |
| # |
| x=`$SHELL -c ./$dummy 2>/dev/null` |
| if test $? = 0 && test -n "$x"; then |
| exact_cpu=$x |
| fi |
| fi |
| fi |
| |
| # We need to remove some .o files here since lame C compilers |
| # generate these even when not asked. |
| rm -f ${dummy}0.s ${dummy}0.o ${dummy}1.s ${dummy}1.o ${dummy}2.c ${dummy}2.o $dummy |
| ;; |
| |
| esac |
| |
| |
| |
| # ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| # Use an exact cpu, if possible |
| |
| if test -n "$exact_cpu"; then |
| echo "$exact_cpu$guess_rest" |
| else |
| echo "$guess_full" |
| fi |
| exit 0 |
| |
| |
| |
| # Local variables: |
| # fill-column: 76 |
| # End: |