rustc_target/spec/targets/thumbv7em_nuttx_eabihf.rs
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// Targets the Cortex-M4F and Cortex-M7F processors (ARMv7E-M)
//
// This target assumes that the device does have a FPU (Floating Point Unit) and lowers all (single
// precision) floating point operations to hardware instructions.
//
// Additionally, this target uses the "hard" floating convention (ABI) where floating point values
// are passed to/from subroutines via FPU registers (S0, S1, D0, D1, etc.).
//
// To opt into double precision hardware support, use the `-C target-feature=+fp64` flag.
use crate::spec::{Target, TargetOptions, base, cvs};
pub(crate) fn target() -> Target {
Target {
llvm_target: "thumbv7em-none-eabihf".into(),
metadata: crate::spec::TargetMetadata {
description: None,
tier: None,
host_tools: None,
std: None,
},
pointer_width: 32,
data_layout: "e-m:e-p:32:32-Fi8-i64:64-v128:64:128-a:0:32-n32-S64".into(),
arch: "arm".into(),
options: TargetOptions {
families: cvs!["unix"],
os: "nuttx".into(),
abi: "eabihf".into(),
// vfp4 is the lowest common denominator between the Cortex-M4F (vfp4) and the
// Cortex-M7 (vfp5).
// Both the Cortex-M4 and the Cortex-M7 only have 16 double-precision registers
// available, and the Cortex-M4 only supports single-precision floating point operations
// whereas in the Cortex-M7 double-precision is optional.
//
// Reference:
// ARMv7-M Architecture Reference Manual - A2.5 The optional floating-point extension
features: "+vfp4d16sp".into(),
max_atomic_width: Some(32),
..base::thumb::opts()
},
}
}