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Re: libffi merge


README, libffi -> gcc.

Andrew.


2009-06-08  Andrew Haley  <aph@redhat.com>

	* README: Import from libffi 3.0.8.

Index: README
===================================================================
--- README	(revision 148170)
+++ README	(working copy)
@@ -4,10 +4,8 @@
 Status
 ======

-libffi-2.00 has not been released yet! This is a development snapshot!
-
-libffi-1.20 was released on October 5, 1998. Check the libffi web
-page for updates: <URL:http://sources.redhat.com/libffi/>.
+libffi-3.0.8 was released on December 19, 2008. Check the libffi web
+page for updates: <URL:http://sourceware.org/libffi/>.


 What is libffi?
@@ -32,7 +30,7 @@
 call any function specified by a call interface description at run
 time.

-Ffi stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function
+FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface.  A foreign function
 interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code
 written in one language to call code written in another language. The
 libffi library really only provides the lowest, machine dependent
@@ -41,38 +39,36 @@
 between the two languages.


-Supported Platforms and Prerequisites
-=====================================
-
-Libffi has been ported to:
-
-	SunOS 4.1.3 & Solaris 2.x (SPARC-V8, SPARC-V9)
-
-	Irix 5.3 & 6.2 (System V/o32 & n32)
-
-	Intel x86 - Linux (System V ABI)
-
-	Alpha - Linux and OSF/1
-
-	m68k - Linux (System V ABI)
-
-	PowerPC - Linux (System V ABI, Darwin, AIX)
+Supported Platforms
+===================

-	ARM - Linux (System V ABI)
-
-Libffi has been tested with the egcs 1.0.2 gcc compiler. Chances are
-that other versions will work.  Libffi has also been built and tested
-with the SGI compiler tools.
-
-On PowerPC, the tests failed (see the note below).
-
-You must use GNU make to build libffi. SGI's make will not work.
-Sun's probably won't either.
-	
-If you port libffi to another platform, please let me know! I assume
-that some will be easy (x86 NetBSD), and others will be more difficult
-(HP).
+Libffi has been ported to many different platforms, although this
+release was only tested on:

+     arm oabi linux
+     arm eabi linux
+     hppa linux
+     mips o32 linux (little endian)
+     powerpc darwin
+     powerpc freebsd
+     powerpc64 linux
+     sparc solaris
+     sparc64 freebsd
+     sparc64 solaris
+     x86 cygwin
+     x86 darwin
+     x86 freebsd
+     x86 linux
+     x86 openbsd
+     x86 solaris
+     x86-64 darwin
+     x86-64 linux
+     x86-64 OS X
+     x86-64 freebsd
+     x86-64 solaris
+
+Please send additional platform test results to
+libffi-discuss@sourceware.org.

 Installing libffi
 =================
@@ -101,216 +97,17 @@
 Configure has many other options. Use "configure --help" to see them all.

 Once configure has finished, type "make". Note that you must be using
-GNU make. SGI's make will not work.  Sun's probably won't either.
-You can ftp GNU make from prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu.
+GNU make.  You can ftp GNU make from prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu.

-To ensure that libffi is working as advertised, type "make test".
+To ensure that libffi is working as advertised, type "make check".
+This will require that you have DejaGNU installed.

 To install the library and header files, type "make install".


-Using libffi
-============
-
-	The Basics
-	----------
-
-Libffi assumes that you have a pointer to the function you wish to
-call and that you know the number and types of arguments to pass it,
-as well as the return type of the function.
-
-The first thing you must do is create an ffi_cif object that matches
-the signature of the function you wish to call. The cif in ffi_cif
-stands for Call InterFace. To prepare a call interface object, use the
-following function:
-
-ffi_status ffi_prep_cif(ffi_cif *cif, ffi_abi abi,
-			unsigned int nargs,
-			ffi_type *rtype, ffi_type **atypes);
-
-	CIF is a pointer to the call interface object you wish
-		to initialize.
-
-	ABI is an enum that specifies the calling convention
-		to use for the call. FFI_DEFAULT_ABI defaults
-		to the system's native calling convention. Other
-		ABI's may be used with care. They are system
-		specific.
-
-	NARGS is the number of arguments this function accepts.	
-		libffi does not yet support vararg functions.
-
-	RTYPE is a pointer to an ffi_type structure that represents
-		the return type of the function. Ffi_type objects
-		describe the types of values. libffi provides
-		ffi_type objects for many of the native C types:
-		signed int, unsigned int, signed char, unsigned char,
-		etc. There is also a pointer ffi_type object and
-		a void ffi_type. Use &ffi_type_void for functions that
-		don't return values.
-
-	ATYPES is a vector of ffi_type pointers. ARGS must be NARGS long.
-		If NARGS is 0, this is ignored.
-
-
-ffi_prep_cif will return a status code that you are responsible
-for checking. It will be one of the following:
-
-	FFI_OK - All is good.
-
-	FFI_BAD_TYPEDEF - One of the ffi_type objects that ffi_prep_cif
-		came across is bad.
-
-
-Before making the call, the VALUES vector should be initialized
-with pointers to the appropriate argument values.
-
-To call the the function using the initialized ffi_cif, use the
-ffi_call function:
-
-void ffi_call(ffi_cif *cif, void *fn, void *rvalue, void **avalues);
-
-	CIF is a pointer to the ffi_cif initialized specifically
-		for this function.
-
-	FN is a pointer to the function you want to call.
-
-	RVALUE is a pointer to a chunk of memory that is to hold the
-		result of the function call. Currently, it must be
-		at least one word in size (except for the n32 version
-		under Irix 6.x, which must be a pointer to an 8 byte
-		aligned value (a long long). It must also be at least
-		word aligned (depending on the return type, and the
-		system's alignment requirements). If RTYPE is
-		&ffi_type_void, this is ignored. If RVALUE is NULL,
-		the return value is discarded.
-
-	AVALUES is a vector of void* that point to the memory locations
-		holding the argument values for a call.
-		If NARGS is 0, this is ignored.
-
-
-If you are expecting a return value from FN it will have been stored
-at RVALUE.
-
-
-
-	An Example
-	----------
-
-Here is a trivial example that calls puts() a few times.
-
-    #include <stdio.h>
-    #include <ffi.h>
-
-    int main()
-    {
-      ffi_cif cif;
-      ffi_type *args[1];
-      void *values[1];
-      char *s;
-      int rc;
-
-      /* Initialize the argument info vectors */
-      args[0] = &ffi_type_pointer;
-      values[0] = &s;
-
-      /* Initialize the cif */
-      if (ffi_prep_cif(&cif, FFI_DEFAULT_ABI, 1,
-    		       &ffi_type_uint, args) == FFI_OK)
-        {
-          s = "Hello World!";
-          ffi_call(&cif, puts, &rc, values);
-          /* rc now holds the result of the call to puts */
-
-          /* values holds a pointer to the function's arg, so to
-	     call puts() again all we need to do is change the
-             value of s */
-          s = "This is cool!";
-          ffi_call(&cif, puts, &rc, values);
-        }
-
-      return 0;
-    }
-
-
-
-	Aggregate Types
-	---------------
-
-Although libffi has no special support for unions or bit-fields, it is
-perfectly happy passing structures back and forth. You must first
-describe the structure to libffi by creating a new ffi_type object
-for it. Here is the definition of ffi_type:
-
-    typedef struct _ffi_type
-    {
-      unsigned size;
-      short alignment;
-      short type;
-      struct _ffi_type **elements;
-    } ffi_type;
-
-All structures must have type set to FFI_TYPE_STRUCT.  You may set
-size and alignment to 0. These will be calculated and reset to the
-appropriate values by ffi_prep_cif().
-
-elements is a NULL terminated array of pointers to ffi_type objects
-that describe the type of the structure elements. These may, in turn,
-be structure elements.
-
-The following example initializes a ffi_type object representing the
-tm struct from Linux's time.h:
-
-				    struct tm {
-					int tm_sec;
-					int tm_min;
-					int tm_hour;
-					int tm_mday;
-					int tm_mon;
-					int tm_year;
-					int tm_wday;
-					int tm_yday;
-					int tm_isdst;
-					/* Those are for future use. */
-					long int __tm_gmtoff__;
-					__const char *__tm_zone__;
-				    };
-
-    {
-      ffi_type tm_type;
-      ffi_type *tm_type_elements[12];
-      int i;
-
-      tm_type.size = tm_type.alignment = 0;
-      tm_type.elements = &tm_type_elements;
-
-      for (i = 0; i < 9; i++)
-          tm_type_elements[i] = &ffi_type_sint;
-
-      tm_type_elements[9] = &ffi_type_slong;
-      tm_type_elements[10] = &ffi_type_pointer;
-      tm_type_elements[11] = NULL;
-
-      /* tm_type can now be used to represent tm argument types and
-	 return types for ffi_prep_cif() */
-    }
-
-
-
 Platform Specific Notes
 =======================

-	Intel x86
-	---------
-
-There are no known problems with the x86 port.
-
-	Sun SPARC - SunOS 4.1.3 & Solaris 2.x
-	-------------------------------------
-
-You must use GNU Make to build libffi on Sun platforms.
-
 	MIPS - Irix 5.3 & 6.x
 	---------------------

@@ -339,13 +136,6 @@

 You must use GNU Make to build libffi on SGI platforms.

-	ARM - System V ABI
-	------------------
-
-The ARM port was performed on a NetWinder running ARM Linux ELF
-(2.0.31) and gcc 2.8.1.
-
-

 	PowerPC System V ABI
 	--------------------
@@ -375,6 +165,42 @@
 History
 =======

+3.0.7 Nov-11-08
+        Fix for ppc FreeBSD.
+	(thanks to Andreas Tobler)
+
+3.0.6 Jul-17-08
+        Fix for closures on sh.
+	Mark the sh/sh64 stack as non-executable.
+	(both thanks to Kaz Kojima)
+
+3.0.5 Apr-3-08
+        Fix libffi.pc file.
+	Fix #define ARM for IcedTea users.
+	Fix x86 closure bug.
+
+3.0.4 Feb-24-08
+        Fix x86 OpenBSD configury.
+
+3.0.3 Feb-22-08
+        Enable x86 OpenBSD thanks to Thomas Heller, and
+	x86-64 FreeBSD thanks to Björn König and Andreas Tobler.
+	Clean up test instruction in README.
+
+3.0.2 Feb-21-08
+        Improved x86 FreeBSD support.
+	Thanks to Björn König.
+
+3.0.1 Feb-15-08
+        Fix instruction cache flushing bug on MIPS.
+	Thanks to David Daney.
+
+3.0.0 Feb-15-08
+        Many changes, mostly thanks to the GCC project.
+	Cygnus Solutions is now Red Hat.
+
+  [10 years go by...]
+
 1.20 Oct-5-98
 	Raffaele Sena produces ARM port.

@@ -458,34 +284,56 @@
 Authors & Credits
 =================

-libffi was written by Anthony Green <green@cygnus.com>.
+libffi was originally written by Anthony Green <green@redhat.com>.
+
+The developers of the GNU Compiler Collection project have made
+innumerable valuable contributions.  See the ChangeLog file for
+details.

-Portions of libffi were derived from Gianni Mariani's free gencall
-library for Silicon Graphics machines.
+Some of the ideas behind libffi were inspired by Gianni Mariani's free
+gencall library for Silicon Graphics machines.

 The closure mechanism was designed and implemented by Kresten Krab
 Thorup.

-The Sparc port was derived from code contributed by the fine folks at
-Visible Decisions Inc <http://www.vdi.com>. Further enhancements were
-made by Gordon Irlam at Cygnus Solutions <http://www.cygnus.com>.
-
-The Alpha port was written by Richard Henderson at Cygnus Solutions.
-
-Andreas Schwab ported libffi to m68k Linux and provided a number of
-bug fixes.
+Major processor architecture ports were contributed by the following
+developers:

-Geoffrey Keating ported libffi to the PowerPC.
-
-Raffaele Sena ported libffi to the ARM.
+alpha		Richard Henderson
+arm		Raffaele Sena
+cris		Simon Posnjak, Hans-Peter Nilsson
+frv		Anthony Green
+ia64		Hans Boehm
+m32r		Kazuhiro Inaoka
+m68k		Andreas Schwab
+mips		Anthony Green, Casey Marshall
+mips64		David Daney
+pa		Randolph Chung, Dave Anglin, Andreas Tobler
+powerpc		Geoffrey Keating, Andreas Tobler,
+			 David Edelsohn, John Hornkvist
+powerpc64	Jakub Jelinek
+s390		Gerhard Tonn, Ulrich Weigand
+sh		Kaz Kojima
+sh64		Kaz Kojima
+sparc		Anthony Green, Gordon Irlam
+x86		Anthony Green, Jon Beniston
+x86-64		Bo Thorsen

 Jesper Skov and Andrew Haley both did more than their fair share of
 stepping through the code and tracking down bugs.

-Thanks also to Tom Tromey for bug fixes and configuration help.
+Thanks also to Tom Tromey for bug fixes, documentation and
+configuration help.

 Thanks to Jim Blandy, who provided some useful feedback on the libffi
 interface.

+Andreas Tobler has done a tremendous amount of work on the testsuite.
+
+Alex Oliva solved the executable page problem for SElinux.
+
+The list above is almost certainly incomplete and inaccurate.  I'm
+happy to make corrections or additions upon request.
+
 If you have a problem, or have found a bug, please send a note to
-green@cygnus.com.
+green@redhat.com.


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