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sh: Merge the _32/_64 variants of arch/sh/mm/Makefile.

Now that there is sufficient shared infrastructure, merge the Makefiles.

Signed-off-by: Paul Mundt <lethal@linux-sh.org>
Paul Mundt 16 年之前
父節點
當前提交
1b3edd9745
共有 3 個文件被更改,包括 66 次插入89 次删除
  1. 66 4
      arch/sh/mm/Makefile
  2. 0 39
      arch/sh/mm/Makefile_32
  3. 0 46
      arch/sh/mm/Makefile_64

+ 66 - 4
arch/sh/mm/Makefile

@@ -1,5 +1,67 @@
-ifeq ($(CONFIG_SUPERH32),y)
-include ${srctree}/arch/sh/mm/Makefile_32
-else
-include ${srctree}/arch/sh/mm/Makefile_64
+#
+# Makefile for the Linux SuperH-specific parts of the memory manager.
+#
+
+obj-y			:= cache.o init.o consistent.o mmap.o
+
+ifndef CONFIG_CACHE_OFF
+cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH2)		:= cache-sh2.o
+cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH2A)		:= cache-sh2a.o
+cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH3)		:= cache-sh3.o
+cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH4)		:= cache-sh4.o flush-sh4.o
+cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH5)		:= cache-sh5.o flush-sh4.o
+cacheops-$(CONFIG_SH7705_CACHE_32KB)	+= cache-sh7705.o
 endif
+
+obj-y			+= $(cacheops-y)
+
+mmu-y			:= nommu.o extable_32.o
+mmu-$(CONFIG_MMU)	:= extable_$(BITS).o fault_$(BITS).o \
+			   ioremap_$(BITS).o kmap.o tlbflush_$(BITS).o
+
+obj-y			+= $(mmu-y)
+obj-$(CONFIG_DEBUG_FS)	+= asids-debugfs.o
+
+ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_FS
+obj-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH4)	+= cache-debugfs.o
+endif
+
+ifdef CONFIG_MMU
+tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH3)		:= tlb-sh3.o
+tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH4)		:= tlb-sh4.o
+tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH5)		:= tlb-sh5.o
+tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_HAS_PTEAEX)	:= tlb-pteaex.o
+obj-y				+= $(tlb-y)
+endif
+
+obj-$(CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE)	+= hugetlbpage.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_PMB)		+= pmb.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_PMB_FIXED)		+= pmb-fixed.o
+obj-$(CONFIG_NUMA)		+= numa.o
+
+# Special flags for fault_64.o.  This puts restrictions on the number of
+# caller-save registers that the compiler can target when building this file.
+# This is required because the code is called from a context in entry.S where
+# very few registers have been saved in the exception handler (for speed
+# reasons).
+# The caller save registers that have been saved and which can be used are
+# r2,r3,r4,r5 : argument passing
+# r15, r18 : SP and LINK
+# tr0-4 : allow all caller-save TR's.  The compiler seems to be able to make
+#         use of them, so it's probably beneficial to performance to save them
+#         and have them available for it.
+#
+# The resources not listed below are callee save, i.e. the compiler is free to
+# use any of them and will spill them to the stack itself.
+
+CFLAGS_fault_64.o += -ffixed-r7 \
+	-ffixed-r8 -ffixed-r9 -ffixed-r10 -ffixed-r11 -ffixed-r12 \
+	-ffixed-r13 -ffixed-r14 -ffixed-r16 -ffixed-r17 -ffixed-r19 \
+	-ffixed-r20 -ffixed-r21 -ffixed-r22 -ffixed-r23 \
+	-ffixed-r24 -ffixed-r25 -ffixed-r26 -ffixed-r27 \
+	-ffixed-r36 -ffixed-r37 -ffixed-r38 -ffixed-r39 -ffixed-r40 \
+	-ffixed-r41 -ffixed-r42 -ffixed-r43  \
+	-ffixed-r60 -ffixed-r61 -ffixed-r62 \
+	-fomit-frame-pointer
+
+EXTRA_CFLAGS += -Werror

+ 0 - 39
arch/sh/mm/Makefile_32

@@ -1,39 +0,0 @@
-#
-# Makefile for the Linux SuperH-specific parts of the memory manager.
-#
-
-obj-y			:= cache.o init.o extable_32.o consistent.o mmap.o
-
-ifndef CONFIG_CACHE_OFF
-cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH2)		:= cache-sh2.o
-cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH2A)		:= cache-sh2a.o
-cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH3)		:= cache-sh3.o
-cacheops-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH4)		:= cache-sh4.o flush-sh4.o
-cacheops-$(CONFIG_SH7705_CACHE_32KB)	+= cache-sh7705.o
-endif
-
-obj-y			+= $(cacheops-y)
-
-mmu-y			:= nommu.o
-mmu-$(CONFIG_MMU)	:= fault_32.o kmap.o tlbflush_32.o ioremap_32.o
-
-obj-y			+= $(mmu-y)
-obj-$(CONFIG_DEBUG_FS)	+= asids-debugfs.o
-
-ifdef CONFIG_DEBUG_FS
-obj-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH4)	+= cache-debugfs.o
-endif
-
-ifdef CONFIG_MMU
-tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH3)		:= tlb-sh3.o
-tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_SH4)		:= tlb-sh4.o
-tlb-$(CONFIG_CPU_HAS_PTEAEX)	:= tlb-pteaex.o
-obj-y				+= $(tlb-y)
-endif
-
-obj-$(CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE)	+= hugetlbpage.o
-obj-$(CONFIG_PMB)		+= pmb.o
-obj-$(CONFIG_PMB_FIXED)		+= pmb-fixed.o
-obj-$(CONFIG_NUMA)		+= numa.o
-
-EXTRA_CFLAGS += -Werror

+ 0 - 46
arch/sh/mm/Makefile_64

@@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
-#
-# Makefile for the Linux SuperH-specific parts of the memory manager.
-#
-
-obj-y			:= cache.o consistent.o init.o kmap.o mmap.o
-
-mmu-y			:= nommu.o extable_32.o
-mmu-$(CONFIG_MMU)	:= fault_64.o ioremap_64.o tlbflush_64.o tlb-sh5.o \
-			   extable_64.o
-
-ifndef CONFIG_CACHE_OFF
-obj-y			+= cache-sh5.o flush-sh4.o
-endif
-
-obj-y			+= $(mmu-y)
-obj-$(CONFIG_DEBUG_FS)	+= asids-debugfs.o
-
-obj-$(CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE)	+= hugetlbpage.o
-obj-$(CONFIG_NUMA)		+= numa.o
-
-EXTRA_CFLAGS += -Werror
-
-# Special flags for fault_64.o.  This puts restrictions on the number of
-# caller-save registers that the compiler can target when building this file.
-# This is required because the code is called from a context in entry.S where
-# very few registers have been saved in the exception handler (for speed
-# reasons).
-# The caller save registers that have been saved and which can be used are
-# r2,r3,r4,r5 : argument passing
-# r15, r18 : SP and LINK
-# tr0-4 : allow all caller-save TR's.  The compiler seems to be able to make
-#         use of them, so it's probably beneficial to performance to save them
-#         and have them available for it.
-#
-# The resources not listed below are callee save, i.e. the compiler is free to
-# use any of them and will spill them to the stack itself.
-
-CFLAGS_fault_64.o += -ffixed-r7 \
-	-ffixed-r8 -ffixed-r9 -ffixed-r10 -ffixed-r11 -ffixed-r12 \
-	-ffixed-r13 -ffixed-r14 -ffixed-r16 -ffixed-r17 -ffixed-r19 \
-	-ffixed-r20 -ffixed-r21 -ffixed-r22 -ffixed-r23 \
-	-ffixed-r24 -ffixed-r25 -ffixed-r26 -ffixed-r27 \
-	-ffixed-r36 -ffixed-r37 -ffixed-r38 -ffixed-r39 -ffixed-r40 \
-	-ffixed-r41 -ffixed-r42 -ffixed-r43  \
-	-ffixed-r60 -ffixed-r61 -ffixed-r62 \
-	-fomit-frame-pointer