FreeCalypso > hg > freecalypso-tools
view target-utils/libc/bzero.S @ 752:c79aaed75bd8
compile-fc-batt: allow possible third field in source lines
Battery tables maintained in the fc-battery-conf repository will now
have a third field added, defining thresholds for the battery bars icon,
and there will be a new utility to compile them into the new
/etc/batterytab2 file read by the FC Tourmaline version of our
FCHG driver. For backward compatibility with the original Magnetite
version of FCHG, compile-fc-batt remains the tool for compiling the
original /etc/batterytab file format, and it needs to ignore the
newly added third field in battery table sources.
author | Mychaela Falconia <falcon@freecalypso.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 05 Nov 2020 20:37:55 +0000 |
parents | bfed7a5c21a6 |
children |
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/* * This ARM implementation of bzero() has been derived from: * * linux/arch/arm/lib/memzero.S * * Copyright (C) 1995-2000 Russell King * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as * published by the Free Software Foundation. */ .text .code 32 .globl bzero /* * Align the pointer in r0. r3 contains the number of bytes that we are * mis-aligned by, and r1 is the number of bytes. If r1 < 4, then we * don't bother; we use byte stores instead. */ 1: subs r1, r1, #4 @ 1 do we have enough blt 5f @ 1 bytes to align with? cmp r3, #2 @ 1 strltb r2, [r0], #1 @ 1 strleb r2, [r0], #1 @ 1 strb r2, [r0], #1 @ 1 add r1, r1, r3 @ 1 (r1 = r1 - (4 - r3)) /* * The pointer is now aligned and the length is adjusted. Try doing the * bzero again. */ bzero: mov r2, #0 @ 1 ands r3, r0, #3 @ 1 unaligned? bne 1b @ 1 /* * r3 = 0, and we know that the pointer in r0 is aligned to a word boundary. */ 3: subs r1, r1, #4 strcs r2, [r0], #4 bhi 3b @ 1 bxeq lr @ 1/2 quick exit /* * No need to correct the count; we're only testing bits from now on * * When we get here, we've got less than 4 bytes to zero. We * may have an unaligned pointer as well. */ 5: tst r1, #2 @ 1 2 bytes or more? strneb r2, [r0], #1 @ 1 strneb r2, [r0], #1 @ 1 tst r1, #1 @ 1 a byte left over strneb r2, [r0], #1 @ 1 bx lr @ 1