| 1 | /**************************************************************************** |
| 2 | ** |
| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd. |
| 4 | ** Copyright (C) 2016 Intel Corporation. |
| 5 | ** Contact: https://www.qt.io/licensing/ |
| 6 | ** |
| 7 | ** This file is part of the QtCore module of the Qt Toolkit. |
| 8 | ** |
| 9 | ** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ |
| 10 | ** Commercial License Usage |
| 11 | ** Licensees holding valid commercial Qt licenses may use this file in |
| 12 | ** accordance with the commercial license agreement provided with the |
| 13 | ** Software or, alternatively, in accordance with the terms contained in |
| 14 | ** a written agreement between you and The Qt Company. For licensing terms |
| 15 | ** and conditions see https://www.qt.io/terms-conditions. For further |
| 16 | ** information use the contact form at https://www.qt.io/contact-us. |
| 17 | ** |
| 18 | ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage |
| 19 | ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser |
| 20 | ** General Public License version 3 as published by the Free Software |
| 21 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL3 included in the |
| 22 | ** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to |
| 23 | ** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 3 requirements |
| 24 | ** will be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/lgpl-3.0.html. |
| 25 | ** |
| 26 | ** GNU General Public License Usage |
| 27 | ** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU |
| 28 | ** General Public License version 2.0 or (at your option) the GNU General |
| 29 | ** Public license version 3 or any later version approved by the KDE Free |
| 30 | ** Qt Foundation. The licenses are as published by the Free Software |
| 31 | ** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL2 and LICENSE.GPL3 |
| 32 | ** included in the packaging of this file. Please review the following |
| 33 | ** information to ensure the GNU General Public License requirements will |
| 34 | ** be met: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html and |
| 35 | ** https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html. |
| 36 | ** |
| 37 | ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ |
| 38 | ** |
| 39 | ****************************************************************************/ |
| 40 | |
| 41 | #ifndef QGLOBAL_H |
| 42 | # include <QtCore/qglobal.h> |
| 43 | #endif |
| 44 | |
| 45 | #ifndef QPROCESSORDETECTION_H |
| 46 | #define QPROCESSORDETECTION_H |
| 47 | |
| 48 | /* |
| 49 | This file uses preprocessor #defines to set various Q_PROCESSOR_* #defines |
| 50 | based on the following patterns: |
| 51 | |
| 52 | Q_PROCESSOR_{FAMILY} |
| 53 | Q_PROCESSOR_{FAMILY}_{VARIANT} |
| 54 | Q_PROCESSOR_{FAMILY}_{REVISION} |
| 55 | |
| 56 | The first is always defined. Defines for the various revisions/variants are |
| 57 | optional and usually dependent on how the compiler was invoked. Variants |
| 58 | that are a superset of another should have a define for the superset. |
| 59 | |
| 60 | In addition to the processor family, variants, and revisions, we also set |
| 61 | Q_BYTE_ORDER appropriately for the target processor. For bi-endian |
| 62 | processors, we try to auto-detect the byte order using the __BIG_ENDIAN__, |
| 63 | __LITTLE_ENDIAN__, or __BYTE_ORDER__ preprocessor macros. |
| 64 | |
| 65 | Note: when adding support for new processors, be sure to update |
| 66 | config.tests/arch/arch.cpp to ensure that configure can detect the target |
| 67 | and host architectures. |
| 68 | */ |
| 69 | |
| 70 | /* Machine byte-order, reuse preprocessor provided macros when available */ |
| 71 | #if defined(__ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__) |
| 72 | # define Q_BIG_ENDIAN __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__ |
| 73 | #else |
| 74 | # define Q_BIG_ENDIAN 4321 |
| 75 | #endif |
| 76 | #if defined(__ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__) |
| 77 | # define Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__ |
| 78 | #else |
| 79 | # define Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN 1234 |
| 80 | #endif |
| 81 | |
| 82 | /* |
| 83 | Alpha family, no revisions or variants |
| 84 | |
| 85 | Alpha is bi-endian, use endianness auto-detection implemented below. |
| 86 | */ |
| 87 | // #elif defined(__alpha__) || defined(_M_ALPHA) |
| 88 | // # define Q_PROCESSOR_ALPHA |
| 89 | // Q_BYTE_ORDER not defined, use endianness auto-detection |
| 90 | |
| 91 | /* |
| 92 | ARM family, known revisions: V5, V6, V7, V8 |
| 93 | |
| 94 | ARM is bi-endian, detect using __ARMEL__ or __ARMEB__, falling back to |
| 95 | auto-detection implemented below. |
| 96 | */ |
| 97 | #if defined(__arm__) || defined(__TARGET_ARCH_ARM) || defined(_M_ARM) || defined(_M_ARM64) || defined(__aarch64__) || defined(__ARM64__) |
| 98 | # if defined(__aarch64__) || defined(__ARM64__) || defined(_M_ARM64) |
| 99 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM_64 |
| 100 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 8 |
| 101 | # else |
| 102 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM_32 |
| 103 | # endif |
| 104 | # if defined(__ARM_ARCH) && __ARM_ARCH > 1 |
| 105 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM __ARM_ARCH |
| 106 | # elif defined(__TARGET_ARCH_ARM) && __TARGET_ARCH_ARM > 1 |
| 107 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM __TARGET_ARCH_ARM |
| 108 | # elif defined(_M_ARM) && _M_ARM > 1 |
| 109 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM _M_ARM |
| 110 | # elif defined(__ARM64_ARCH_8__) \ |
| 111 | || defined(__aarch64__) \ |
| 112 | || defined(__ARMv8__) \ |
| 113 | || defined(__ARMv8_A__) \ |
| 114 | || defined(_M_ARM64) |
| 115 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM 8 |
| 116 | # elif defined(__ARM_ARCH_7__) \ |
| 117 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7A__) \ |
| 118 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7R__) \ |
| 119 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7M__) \ |
| 120 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_7S__) \ |
| 121 | || defined(_ARM_ARCH_7) \ |
| 122 | || defined(__CORE_CORTEXA__) |
| 123 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM 7 |
| 124 | # elif defined(__ARM_ARCH_6__) \ |
| 125 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6J__) \ |
| 126 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6T2__) \ |
| 127 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6Z__) \ |
| 128 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6K__) \ |
| 129 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6ZK__) \ |
| 130 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_6M__) |
| 131 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM 6 |
| 132 | # elif defined(__ARM_ARCH_5TEJ__) \ |
| 133 | || defined(__ARM_ARCH_5TE__) |
| 134 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM 5 |
| 135 | # else |
| 136 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM 0 |
| 137 | # endif |
| 138 | # if Q_PROCESSOR_ARM >= 8 |
| 139 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM_V8 |
| 140 | # endif |
| 141 | # if Q_PROCESSOR_ARM >= 7 |
| 142 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM_V7 |
| 143 | # endif |
| 144 | # if Q_PROCESSOR_ARM >= 6 |
| 145 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM_V6 |
| 146 | # endif |
| 147 | # if Q_PROCESSOR_ARM >= 5 |
| 148 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_ARM_V5 |
| 149 | # else |
| 150 | # error "ARM architecture too old" |
| 151 | # endif |
| 152 | # if defined(__ARMEL__) || defined(_M_ARM64) |
| 153 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 154 | # elif defined(__ARMEB__) |
| 155 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_BIG_ENDIAN |
| 156 | # else |
| 157 | // Q_BYTE_ORDER not defined, use endianness auto-detection |
| 158 | #endif |
| 159 | |
| 160 | /* |
| 161 | AVR32 family, no revisions or variants |
| 162 | |
| 163 | AVR32 is big-endian. |
| 164 | */ |
| 165 | // #elif defined(__avr32__) |
| 166 | // # define Q_PROCESSOR_AVR32 |
| 167 | // # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_BIG_ENDIAN |
| 168 | |
| 169 | /* |
| 170 | Blackfin family, no revisions or variants |
| 171 | |
| 172 | Blackfin is little-endian. |
| 173 | */ |
| 174 | // #elif defined(__bfin__) |
| 175 | // # define Q_PROCESSOR_BLACKFIN |
| 176 | // # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 177 | |
| 178 | /* |
| 179 | X86 family, known variants: 32- and 64-bit |
| 180 | |
| 181 | X86 is little-endian. |
| 182 | */ |
| 183 | #elif defined(__i386) || defined(__i386__) || defined(_M_IX86) |
| 184 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86_32 |
| 185 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 186 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 4 |
| 187 | |
| 188 | /* |
| 189 | * We define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 == 6 for anything above a equivalent or better |
| 190 | * than a Pentium Pro (the processor whose architecture was called P6) or an |
| 191 | * Athlon. |
| 192 | * |
| 193 | * All processors since the Pentium III and the Athlon 4 have SSE support, so |
| 194 | * we use that to detect. That leaves the original Athlon, Pentium Pro and |
| 195 | * Pentium II. |
| 196 | */ |
| 197 | |
| 198 | # if defined(_M_IX86) |
| 199 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 (_M_IX86/100) |
| 200 | # elif defined(__i686__) || defined(__athlon__) || defined(__SSE__) || defined(__pentiumpro__) |
| 201 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 6 |
| 202 | # elif defined(__i586__) || defined(__k6__) || defined(__pentium__) |
| 203 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 5 |
| 204 | # elif defined(__i486__) || defined(__80486__) |
| 205 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 4 |
| 206 | # else |
| 207 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 3 |
| 208 | # endif |
| 209 | |
| 210 | #elif defined(__x86_64) || defined(__x86_64__) || defined(__amd64) || defined(_M_X64) |
| 211 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86 6 |
| 212 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_X86_64 |
| 213 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 214 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 8 |
| 215 | |
| 216 | /* |
| 217 | Itanium (IA-64) family, no revisions or variants |
| 218 | |
| 219 | Itanium is bi-endian, use endianness auto-detection implemented below. |
| 220 | */ |
| 221 | #elif defined(__ia64) || defined(__ia64__) || defined(_M_IA64) |
| 222 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_IA64 |
| 223 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 8 |
| 224 | // Q_BYTE_ORDER not defined, use endianness auto-detection |
| 225 | |
| 226 | /* |
| 227 | MIPS family, known revisions: I, II, III, IV, 32, 64 |
| 228 | |
| 229 | MIPS is bi-endian, use endianness auto-detection implemented below. |
| 230 | */ |
| 231 | #elif defined(__mips) || defined(__mips__) || defined(_M_MRX000) |
| 232 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS |
| 233 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS1) || (defined(__mips) && __mips - 0 >= 1) |
| 234 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_I |
| 235 | # endif |
| 236 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS2) || (defined(__mips) && __mips - 0 >= 2) |
| 237 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_II |
| 238 | # endif |
| 239 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS3) || (defined(__mips) && __mips - 0 >= 3) |
| 240 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_III |
| 241 | # endif |
| 242 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS4) || (defined(__mips) && __mips - 0 >= 4) |
| 243 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_IV |
| 244 | # endif |
| 245 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS5) || (defined(__mips) && __mips - 0 >= 5) |
| 246 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_V |
| 247 | # endif |
| 248 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS32) || defined(__mips32) || (defined(__mips) && __mips - 0 >= 32) |
| 249 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_32 |
| 250 | # endif |
| 251 | # if defined(_MIPS_ARCH_MIPS64) || defined(__mips64) |
| 252 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_MIPS_64 |
| 253 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 8 |
| 254 | # endif |
| 255 | # if defined(__MIPSEL__) |
| 256 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 257 | # elif defined(__MIPSEB__) |
| 258 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_BIG_ENDIAN |
| 259 | # else |
| 260 | // Q_BYTE_ORDER not defined, use endianness auto-detection |
| 261 | # endif |
| 262 | |
| 263 | /* |
| 264 | Power family, known variants: 32- and 64-bit |
| 265 | |
| 266 | There are many more known variants/revisions that we do not handle/detect. |
| 267 | See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_Architecture |
| 268 | and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PowerISA-evolution.svg |
| 269 | |
| 270 | Power is bi-endian, use endianness auto-detection implemented below. |
| 271 | */ |
| 272 | #elif defined(__ppc__) || defined(__ppc) || defined(__powerpc__) \ |
| 273 | || defined(_ARCH_COM) || defined(_ARCH_PWR) || defined(_ARCH_PPC) \ |
| 274 | || defined(_M_MPPC) || defined(_M_PPC) |
| 275 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_POWER |
| 276 | # if defined(__ppc64__) || defined(__powerpc64__) || defined(__64BIT__) |
| 277 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_POWER_64 |
| 278 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 8 |
| 279 | # else |
| 280 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_POWER_32 |
| 281 | # endif |
| 282 | // Q_BYTE_ORDER not defined, use endianness auto-detection |
| 283 | |
| 284 | /* |
| 285 | RISC-V family, known variants: 32- and 64-bit |
| 286 | |
| 287 | RISC-V is little-endian. |
| 288 | */ |
| 289 | #elif defined(__riscv) |
| 290 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_RISCV |
| 291 | # if __riscv_xlen == 64 |
| 292 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_RISCV_64 |
| 293 | # else |
| 294 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_RISCV_32 |
| 295 | # endif |
| 296 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 297 | |
| 298 | /* |
| 299 | S390 family, known variant: S390X (64-bit) |
| 300 | |
| 301 | S390 is big-endian. |
| 302 | */ |
| 303 | #elif defined(__s390__) |
| 304 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_S390 |
| 305 | # if defined(__s390x__) |
| 306 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_S390_X |
| 307 | # endif |
| 308 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_BIG_ENDIAN |
| 309 | |
| 310 | /* |
| 311 | SuperH family, optional revision: SH-4A |
| 312 | |
| 313 | SuperH is bi-endian, use endianness auto-detection implemented below. |
| 314 | */ |
| 315 | // #elif defined(__sh__) |
| 316 | // # define Q_PROCESSOR_SH |
| 317 | // # if defined(__sh4a__) |
| 318 | // # define Q_PROCESSOR_SH_4A |
| 319 | // # endif |
| 320 | // Q_BYTE_ORDER not defined, use endianness auto-detection |
| 321 | |
| 322 | /* |
| 323 | SPARC family, optional revision: V9 |
| 324 | |
| 325 | SPARC is big-endian only prior to V9, while V9 is bi-endian with big-endian |
| 326 | as the default byte order. Assume all SPARC systems are big-endian. |
| 327 | */ |
| 328 | #elif defined(__sparc__) |
| 329 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_SPARC |
| 330 | # if defined(__sparc_v9__) |
| 331 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_SPARC_V9 |
| 332 | # endif |
| 333 | # if defined(__sparc64__) |
| 334 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_SPARC_64 |
| 335 | # endif |
| 336 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_BIG_ENDIAN |
| 337 | |
| 338 | // -- Web Assembly -- |
| 339 | #elif defined(__EMSCRIPTEN__) |
| 340 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WASM |
| 341 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 342 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE 8 |
| 343 | #endif |
| 344 | |
| 345 | /* |
| 346 | NOTE: |
| 347 | GCC 4.6 added __BYTE_ORDER__, __ORDER_BIG_ENDIAN__, __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__ |
| 348 | and __ORDER_PDP_ENDIAN__ in SVN r165881. If you are using GCC 4.6 or newer, |
| 349 | this code will properly detect your target byte order; if you are not, and |
| 350 | the __LITTLE_ENDIAN__ or __BIG_ENDIAN__ macros are not defined, then this |
| 351 | code will fail to detect the target byte order. |
| 352 | */ |
| 353 | // Some processors support either endian format, try to detect which we are using. |
| 354 | #if !defined(Q_BYTE_ORDER) |
| 355 | # if defined(__BYTE_ORDER__) && (__BYTE_ORDER__ == Q_BIG_ENDIAN || __BYTE_ORDER__ == Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN) |
| 356 | // Reuse __BYTE_ORDER__ as-is, since our Q_*_ENDIAN #defines match the preprocessor defaults |
| 357 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER __BYTE_ORDER__ |
| 358 | # elif defined(__BIG_ENDIAN__) || defined(_big_endian__) || defined(_BIG_ENDIAN) |
| 359 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_BIG_ENDIAN |
| 360 | # elif defined(__LITTLE_ENDIAN__) || defined(_little_endian__) || defined(_LITTLE_ENDIAN) \ |
| 361 | || defined(WINAPI_FAMILY) // WinRT is always little-endian according to MSDN. |
| 362 | # define Q_BYTE_ORDER Q_LITTLE_ENDIAN |
| 363 | # else |
| 364 | # error "Unable to determine byte order!" |
| 365 | # endif |
| 366 | #endif |
| 367 | |
| 368 | /* |
| 369 | Size of a pointer and the machine register size. We detect a 64-bit system by: |
| 370 | * GCC and compatible compilers (Clang, ICC on OS X and Windows) always define |
| 371 | __SIZEOF_POINTER__. This catches all known cases of ILP32 builds on 64-bit |
| 372 | processors. |
| 373 | * Most other Unix compilers define __LP64__ or _LP64 on 64-bit mode |
| 374 | (Long and Pointer 64-bit) |
| 375 | * If Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE was defined above, it's assumed to match the pointer |
| 376 | size. |
| 377 | Otherwise, we assume to be 32-bit and then check in qglobal.cpp that it is right. |
| 378 | */ |
| 379 | |
| 380 | #if defined __SIZEOF_POINTER__ |
| 381 | # define QT_POINTER_SIZE __SIZEOF_POINTER__ |
| 382 | #elif defined(__LP64__) || defined(_LP64) |
| 383 | # define QT_POINTER_SIZE 8 |
| 384 | #elif defined(Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE) |
| 385 | # define QT_POINTER_SIZE Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE |
| 386 | #else |
| 387 | # define QT_POINTER_SIZE 4 |
| 388 | #endif |
| 389 | |
| 390 | /* |
| 391 | Define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE to be the size of the machine's word (usually, |
| 392 | the size of the register). On some architectures where a pointer could be |
| 393 | smaller than the register, the macro is defined above. |
| 394 | |
| 395 | Falls back to QT_POINTER_SIZE if not set explicitly for the platform. |
| 396 | */ |
| 397 | #ifndef Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE |
| 398 | # define Q_PROCESSOR_WORDSIZE QT_POINTER_SIZE |
| 399 | #endif |
| 400 | |
| 401 | |
| 402 | #endif // QPROCESSORDETECTION_H |
| 403 | |