On 30 November 2011 10:57, Peter Maydell wrote:
> Drop the distinction between armv4l/armv4b in the $cpu variable
> (ie host cpu type) in favour of calling everything 'arm'. This
> makes it the same as the ARCH setting and removes some special
> casing. The only thing we were using the distinction
Drop the distinction between armv4l/armv4b in the $cpu variable
(ie host cpu type) in favour of calling everything 'arm'. This
makes it the same as the ARCH setting and removes some special
casing. The only thing we were using the distinction for was to
decide which endianness to use in cross compi
On 29 November 2011 19:26, Andreas Färber wrote:
> If you place "arm" between "alpha" and "cris" instead (alphabetical
> order except for i386+x86_64),
>
> Reviewed-by: Andreas Färber
Doh, good point. Will send v2 tomorrow.
-- PMM
Am 29.11.2011 18:18, schrieb Peter Maydell:
> Drop the distinction between armv4l/armv4b in the $cpu variable
> (ie host cpu type) in favour of calling everything 'arm'. This
> makes it the same as the ARCH setting and removes some special
> casing. The only thing we were using the distinction for
Drop the distinction between armv4l/armv4b in the $cpu variable
(ie host cpu type) in favour of calling everything 'arm'. This
makes it the same as the ARCH setting and removes some special
casing. The only thing we were using the distinction for was to
decide which endianness to use in cross compi