Dixi quod…
>although I believe some 3.0.11 checks to be broken:
And indeed, with a few minor changes on top of git master,
I still get a full run of PASS plus one XPASS on amd64-linux!
With the other patches (from this message’s parent) and
these applied, I get a full PASS on m68k-linux as well.
So, please git am these three diffs ☺
bye,
//mirabilos
--
FWIW, I'm quite impressed with mksh interactively. I thought it was much
*much* more bare bones. But it turns out it beats the living hell out of
ksh93 in that respect. I'd even consider it for my daily use if I hadn't
wasted half my life on my zsh setup. :-) -- Frank Terbeck in #!/bin/mksh
From
5cb15a3bad1f0fb360520dd48bfc938c821cdcca Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Thorsten Glaser <tg@mirbsd.org>
Date: Sun, 2 Dec 2012 23:20:56 +0000
Subject: [PATCH 1/2] Fix tests writing to a closure retval via pointer casts
As explained in <Pine.BSM.4.64L.
1212022014490.23442@herc.mirbsd.org>
all other tests that do the same cast to an ffi_arg pointer instead.
PASS on amd64-linux (Xen domU) and m68k-linux (ARAnyM)
Signed-off-by: Thorsten Glaser <tg@mirbsd.org>
static void cls_ret_T_fn(ffi_cif* cif __UNUSED__, void* resp, void** args,
void* userdata __UNUSED__)
{
- *(T *)resp = *(T *)args[0];
+ *(ffi_arg *)resp = *(T *)args[0];
- printf("%d: %d %d\n", *(T *)resp, *(T *)args[0], *(T *)args[1]);
+ printf("%d: %d %d\n", (int)(*(ffi_arg *)resp), *(T *)args[0], *(T *)args[1]);
}
typedef T (*cls_ret_T)(T, ...);
static void cls_ret_T_fn(ffi_cif* cif __UNUSED__, void* resp, void** args,
void* userdata __UNUSED__)
{
- *(T *)resp = *(T *)args[0];
+ *(ffi_arg *)resp = *(T *)args[0];
- printf("%d: %d %d\n", *(T *)resp, *(T *)args[0], *(T *)args[1]);
+ printf("%d: %d %d\n", (int)(*(ffi_arg *)resp), *(T *)args[0], *(T *)args[1]);
}
typedef T (*cls_ret_T)(T, ...);
Originator: ARM Ltd. */
/* { dg-do run } */
-/* { dg-output "" { xfail avr32*-*-* x86_64-*-*-* } } */
+/* { dg-output "" { xfail avr32*-*-* } } */
#include "ffitest.h"
#include <stdarg.h>
arg_types[1] = &s_type;
arg_types[2] = &l_type;
arg_types[3] = &s_type;
- arg_types[4] = &ffi_type_uint;
- arg_types[5] = &ffi_type_sint;
- arg_types[6] = &ffi_type_uint;
- arg_types[7] = &ffi_type_sint;
+ arg_types[4] = &ffi_type_uchar;
+ arg_types[5] = &ffi_type_schar;
+ arg_types[6] = &ffi_type_ushort;
+ arg_types[7] = &ffi_type_sshort;
arg_types[8] = &ffi_type_uint;
arg_types[9] = &ffi_type_sint;
arg_types[10] = &ffi_type_ulong;