On Wed, 2015-07-15 at 08:52 -0500, Scott Duplichan wrote:
> It needs libc to resolve compiler generated calls
> to functions such as __umoddi3, __udivdi3, etc. The workaround is in
> StdLib.inc:
Hm, do we pull libgcc into the build?
The OpenSSL patches disable any functionality that would do 64-
David Woodhouse [mailto:dw...@infradead.org] wrote:
]Sent: Friday, August 14, 2015 03:43 AM
]To: Scott Duplichan ; 'Tian, Feng' ;
edk2-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
]Cc: 'Mcdaniel, Daryl'
]Subject: Re: [edk2] [PATCH] BaseTools: Add GCC49LTO tool chain: GCC49 with
link time optimization
]
]On Wed,
On Fri, 2015-08-14 at 09:55 -0500, Scott Duplichan wrote:
>
> It sounds like the answer is no. It might be worth a build test with
> those disabled functions restored.
It was definitely failing but then again, maybe the GCC build
succeeded and the MinGW build fails. Perhaps we don't include t
> On Aug 14, 2015, at 8:01 AM, David Woodhouse wrote:
>
> On Fri, 2015-08-14 at 09:55 -0500, Scott Duplichan wrote:
>>
>> It sounds like the answer is no. It might be worth a build test with
>> those disabled functions restored.
>
> It was definitely failing but then again, maybe the GCC b
On Fri, 2015-08-14 at 08:13 -0700, Andrew Fish wrote:
>
> https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/MdeModulePkg/MdeModulePkg.dsc
> [LibraryClasses.ARM, LibraryClasses.AARCH64]
> #
> # It is not possible to prevent ARM compiler calls to generic intrinsic
> functions.
> # This library pr
> On Aug 14, 2015, at 8:36 AM, David Woodhouse wrote:
>
> On Fri, 2015-08-14 at 08:13 -0700, Andrew Fish wrote:
>>
>> https://github.com/tianocore/edk2/blob/master/MdeModulePkg/MdeModulePkg.dsc
>> [LibraryClasses.ARM, LibraryClasses.AARCH64]
>> #
>> # It is not possible to prevent ARM compile
Hi,
I assume that Shell 2.0 apps are expected to run fine in Shell 2.1. Can you
please confirm?
Should shell 2.1 app be using new toolkit (e.g., UDK2014 or newer?) when
app want to make use of the content added in Shell 2.1?
Will there be any backward or forward compatibility issue? That is