Re: Minimum requirements for a custom libc

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On 27/05/2025 09:52, Jonathan Wakely via Gcc-help wrote:
> On Tue, 27 May 2025 at 09:38, Basile Starynkevitch wrote:
>>
>> On Tue, 2025-05-27 at 09:33 +0100, Jonathan Wakely wrote:
>>> GCC assumes certain functions are always present, e.g. memcpy is needed for
>>> copying large structs on the stack. The question is which functions does it
>>> need. Your answer isn't really relevant to the question.
>>
>>
>> memcpy is actually a builtin inside GCC. and has to be one because many
>> processors (including x86-64 and ARM) has specific machine instructions to
>> implement it efficiently.
> 
> It *is* a built-in, but that doesn't mean it's implemented inside GCC.
> You can verify this easily with the following code:
> 
> #include <string.h>
> void f(void* to, const void* from, unsigned long n)
> {
>   memcpy(to, from, n);
> }
> 
> Even at -O3 this will be compiled to a call to the memcpy function in
> libc. GCC doesn't expand it to machine instructions unless the size is
> known (and small).

No, it's up to the implementation to chose what limit there is, if any.  On aarch64 with the FEAT_MOPS your example gives:

$ /work/rearnsha/scratch/gnu/gcc/aarch64/master/gcc/xgcc -B /work/rearnsha/scratch/gnu/gcc/aarch64/master/gcc/ -I ~/gnusrc/newlib/master/newlib/libc/include/ -O2 -march=armv8-a+mops -o - -S /tmp/mem.c 
        .arch armv8-a+mops
f:
        cpyfp   [x0]!, [x1]!, x2!
        cpyfm   [x0]!, [x1]!, x2!
        cpyfe   [x0]!, [x1]!, x2!
        ret

R.



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