Fix architecture detection on Windows in Makefile

$PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE seems to contain the architecture of the host,
but we need the architecture the current MinGW shell is targeting.
$MINGW_CHOST seems to be just that, and on my system it's either
i686-w64-mingw32 (mingw32.exe) or x86_64-w64-mingw32 (mingw64.exe)
(No idea what it looks like for Windows on ARM...)
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Gibson 2021-01-14 02:35:04 +01:00
parent f31b3264d5
commit 928066d37d

View file

@ -31,6 +31,13 @@ endif
# Detect the architecture
ifeq ($(YQ2_OSTYPE), Windows)
ifdef MINGW_CHOST
ifeq ($(MINGW_CHOST), x86_64-w64-mingw32)
YQ2_ARCH ?= x86_64
else # i686-w64-mingw32
YQ2_ARCH ?= i386
endif
else # windows, but MINGW_CHOST not defined
ifdef PROCESSOR_ARCHITEW6432
# 64 bit Windows
YQ2_ARCH ?= $(PROCESSOR_ARCHITEW6432)
@ -38,6 +45,7 @@ else
# 32 bit Windows
YQ2_ARCH ?= $(PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE)
endif
endif # windows but MINGW_CHOST not defined
else
# Normalize some abiguous YQ2_ARCH strings
YQ2_ARCH ?= $(shell uname -m | sed -e 's/i.86/i386/' -e 's/amd64/x86_64/' -e 's/^arm.*/arm/')
@ -120,13 +128,12 @@ endif
# ----------
# If we're building with gcc for i386 let's define -ffloat-store.
# This helps the old and crappy x87 FPU to produce correct values.
# Would be nice if Clang had something comparable.
# Using the default x87 float math on 32bit x86 causes rounding trouble
# -ffloat-store could work around that, but the better solution is to
# just enforce SSE - every x86 CPU since Pentium3 supports that
# and this should even improve the performance on old CPUs
ifeq ($(YQ2_ARCH), i386)
ifeq ($(COMPILER), gcc)
override CFLAGS += -ffloat-store
endif
override CFLAGS += -msse -mfpmath=sse
endif
# Force SSE math on x86_64. All sane compilers should do this