ARM: Prevent the compiler from using NEON registers
For ARMv8-A, NEON is standard, so the compiler can use it even when no
special target flags are provided. For example, it can use stores from
NEON registers to zero-initialize large structures. GCC 11 decides to
do this inside the DRAM init code for the Allwinner H6.
However, GCC 11 has a bug where it generates misaligned NEON register
stores even with -mstrict-align. Since the MMU is not enabled this early
in SPL, the misaligned store causes an exception and breaks booting.
Work around this issue by restricting the compiler to using GPRs only,
not vector registers. This prevents any future surprises relating to
NEON use as well.
Signed-off-by: Samuel Holland <samuel@sholland.org>
Acked-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
diff --git a/arch/arm/config.mk b/arch/arm/config.mk
index b684d8b..b107b1a 100644
--- a/arch/arm/config.mk
+++ b/arch/arm/config.mk
@@ -25,6 +25,7 @@
PLATFORM_RELFLAGS += -fno-common -ffixed-r9
PLATFORM_RELFLAGS += $(call cc-option, -msoft-float) \
+ $(call cc-option,-mgeneral-regs-only) \
$(call cc-option,-mshort-load-bytes,$(call cc-option,-malignment-traps,))
# LLVM support