It's been a while... I see the CRIS port broke with the
time_t-default-to-64-bit change, observable by a few test-cases in the
gcc fortran(!) tests failing, regressing when trying a recent newlib.
This is a two-part belt-and-suspenders change: adjust the CRIS port
gettimeofday syscall (the only one in newlib/CRIS passing a time_t or
struct timeval) to handle a userspace 64-bit time_t and secondly default
time_t to 32-bit long anyway. I considered making the local
"kernel_timeval" copy in _gettimeofday conditional on (userspace) time_t
being 64 bits, but thought it not worth bothering with the few move insns.
The effect of a 64-bit time_t is however observable as longer simulation
time when running the gcc testsuite and as bigger binaries without any
actual upside from the larger time_t size, so I thought better make the
default for this port go back to being a "long" again.
Tested by running the gcc testsuite over the three combinations of two
parts of the patch and observing the expected changes. Committed.
libgloss:
Adjust for syscall and userspace having different time_t or timeval.
* cris/linunistd.h (kernel_time_t, kernel_suseconds_t, kernel_timeval):
New types.
(gettimeofday): Change the type of the first argument to be a
pointer to a struct kernel_timeval.
* cris/gensyscalls (_gettimeofday): Use an intermediate struct
kernel_timeval for the syscall and initialize the result from
that.
Signed-off-by: Hans-Peter Nilsson <hp@axis.com>