/freebsd/sys/powerpc/fpu/ |
H A D | fpu_instr.h | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_arith.h | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_emu.h | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_mul.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_compare.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_div.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_extern.h | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_implode.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_subr.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_add.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_explode.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_sqrt.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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H A D | fpu_emu.c | 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD 7e76048a Sat Feb 23 20:05:26 GMT 2008 Marcel Moolenaar <marcel@FreeBSD.org> Add a floating-point emulator so that a single userland or single ABI can run on processors that don't have a FPU. This is typically the case for Book E processors. While a tuned system will probably want to use soft-float (or use a processor that has a FPU if the usage is FP intensive enough), allowing hard-float on FPU-less systems gives great portability and flexibility.
Obtained from: NetBSD
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