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| author | Andrew Choi | 2002-04-26 23:39:06 +0000 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Andrew Choi | 2002-04-26 23:39:06 +0000 |
| commit | e0f712ba55fa0d073f6ab93606e428f61fc7caf2 (patch) | |
| tree | 7dc6d3403fafcbee1a83288ac840f7eba1d92b44 /src/m | |
| parent | 501d8923ae2cdec4ef50f050bb66d3715ba2a8f6 (diff) | |
| download | emacs-e0f712ba55fa0d073f6ab93606e428f61fc7caf2.tar.gz emacs-e0f712ba55fa0d073f6ab93606e428f61fc7caf2.zip | |
Patch for building Emacs on Mac OS X. April 26, 2002. See ChangeLog,
lisp/ChangeLog, and src/ChangeLog for list of changes.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/m')
| -rw-r--r-- | src/m/powermac.h | 121 |
1 files changed, 121 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/m/powermac.h b/src/m/powermac.h new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..0f54d18c839 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/m/powermac.h | |||
| @@ -0,0 +1,121 @@ | |||
| 1 | /* Machine description file for Apple Power Macintosh | ||
| 2 | Copyright (C) 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | ||
| 3 | |||
| 4 | This file is part of GNU Emacs. | ||
| 5 | |||
| 6 | GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | ||
| 7 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | ||
| 8 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) | ||
| 9 | any later version. | ||
| 10 | |||
| 11 | GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | ||
| 12 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | ||
| 13 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | ||
| 14 | GNU General Public License for more details. | ||
| 15 | |||
| 16 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | ||
| 17 | along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to | ||
| 18 | the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, | ||
| 19 | Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ | ||
| 20 | |||
| 21 | |||
| 22 | /* The following line tells the configuration script what sort of | ||
| 23 | operating system this machine is likely to run. | ||
| 24 | USUAL-OPSYS="darwin" */ | ||
| 25 | |||
| 26 | /* Define WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN iff lowest-numbered byte in a word | ||
| 27 | is the most significant byte. */ | ||
| 28 | |||
| 29 | #define WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN | ||
| 30 | |||
| 31 | /* Define NO_ARG_ARRAY if you cannot take the address of the first of a | ||
| 32 | * group of arguments and treat it as an array of the arguments. */ | ||
| 33 | |||
| 34 | #define NO_ARG_ARRAY | ||
| 35 | |||
| 36 | /* Define WORD_MACHINE if addresses and such have | ||
| 37 | * to be corrected before they can be used as byte counts. */ | ||
| 38 | |||
| 39 | /* #define WORD_MACHINE */ | ||
| 40 | |||
| 41 | /* Now define a symbol for the cpu type, if your compiler | ||
| 42 | does not define it automatically: | ||
| 43 | Ones defined so far include vax, m68000, ns16000, pyramid, | ||
| 44 | orion, tahoe, APOLLO and many others */ | ||
| 45 | |||
| 46 | /* Use type int rather than a union, to represent Lisp_Object */ | ||
| 47 | /* This is desirable for most machines. */ | ||
| 48 | |||
| 49 | #define NO_UNION_TYPE | ||
| 50 | |||
| 51 | /* Define EXPLICIT_SIGN_EXTEND if XINT must explicitly sign-extend | ||
| 52 | the 24-bit bit field into an int. In other words, if bit fields | ||
| 53 | are always unsigned. | ||
| 54 | |||
| 55 | If you use NO_UNION_TYPE, this flag does not matter. */ | ||
| 56 | |||
| 57 | /* #define EXPLICIT_SIGN_EXTEND */ | ||
| 58 | |||
| 59 | /* Data type of load average, as read out of kmem. */ | ||
| 60 | |||
| 61 | #define LOAD_AVE_TYPE long | ||
| 62 | |||
| 63 | /* Convert that into an integer that is 100 for a load average of 1.0 */ | ||
| 64 | |||
| 65 | #define LOAD_AVE_CVT(x) (int) (((double) (x)) * 100.0 / FSCALE) | ||
| 66 | |||
| 67 | /* Define CANNOT_DUMP on machines where unexec does not work. | ||
| 68 | Then the function dump-emacs will not be defined | ||
| 69 | and temacs will do (load "loadup") automatically unless told otherwise. */ | ||
| 70 | |||
| 71 | /* #define CANNOT_DUMP */ | ||
| 72 | |||
| 73 | /* Define VIRT_ADDR_VARIES if the virtual addresses of | ||
| 74 | pure and impure space as loaded can vary, and even their | ||
| 75 | relative order cannot be relied on. | ||
| 76 | |||
| 77 | Otherwise Emacs assumes that text space precedes data space, | ||
| 78 | numerically. */ | ||
| 79 | |||
| 80 | /* #define VIRT_ADDR_VARIES * */ | ||
| 81 | |||
| 82 | /* Define C_ALLOCA if this machine does not support a true alloca | ||
| 83 | and the one written in C should be used instead. | ||
| 84 | Define HAVE_ALLOCA to say that the system provides a properly | ||
| 85 | working alloca function and it should be used. | ||
| 86 | Define neither one if an assembler-language alloca | ||
| 87 | in the file alloca.s should be used. */ | ||
| 88 | |||
| 89 | /* #define C_ALLOCA */ | ||
| 90 | /* #define HAVE_ALLOCA */ | ||
| 91 | |||
| 92 | /* Define NO_REMAP if memory segmentation makes it not work well | ||
| 93 | to change the boundary between the text section and data section | ||
| 94 | when Emacs is dumped. If you define this, the preloaded Lisp | ||
| 95 | code will not be sharable; but that's better than failing completely. */ | ||
| 96 | |||
| 97 | #define NO_REMAP | ||
| 98 | |||
| 99 | /* Some really obscure 4.2-based systems (like Sequent DYNIX) | ||
| 100 | * do not support asynchronous I/O (using SIGIO) on sockets, | ||
| 101 | * even though it works fine on tty's. If you have one of | ||
| 102 | * these systems, define the following, and then use it in | ||
| 103 | * config.h (or elsewhere) to decide when (not) to use SIGIO. | ||
| 104 | * | ||
| 105 | * You'd think this would go in an operating-system description file, | ||
| 106 | * but since it only occurs on some, but not all, BSD systems, the | ||
| 107 | * reasonable place to select for it is in the machine description | ||
| 108 | * file. | ||
| 109 | */ | ||
| 110 | |||
| 111 | /* #define NO_SOCK_SIGIO */ | ||
| 112 | |||
| 113 | |||
| 114 | /* After adding support for a new system, modify the large case | ||
| 115 | statement in the `configure' script to recognize reasonable | ||
| 116 | configuration names, and add a description of the system to | ||
| 117 | `etc/MACHINES'. | ||
| 118 | |||
| 119 | If you've just fixed a problem in an existing configuration file, | ||
| 120 | you should also check `etc/MACHINES' to make sure its descriptions | ||
| 121 | of known problems in that configuration should be updated. */ | ||