skia2/gyp/opts.gyp

53 lines
1.8 KiB
Python

{
'includes': [
'common.gypi',
],
'targets': [
# Due to an unfortunate intersection of lameness between gcc and gyp,
# we have to build the *_SSE2.cpp files in a separate target. The
# gcc lameness is that, in order to compile SSE2 intrinsics code, it
# must be passed the -msse2 flag. However, with this flag, it may
# emit SSE2 instructions even for scalar code, such as the CPUID
# test used to test for the presence of SSE2. So that, and all other
# code must be compiled *without* -msse2. The gyp lameness is that it
# does not allow file-specific CFLAGS, so we must create this extra
# target for those files to be compiled with -msse2.
#
# This is actually only a problem on 32-bit Linux (all Intel Macs have
# SSE2, Linux x86_64 has SSE2 by definition, and MSC will happily emit
# SSE2 from instrinsics, while generating plain ol' 386 for everything
# else). However, to keep the .gyp file simple and avoid platform-specific
# build breakage, we do this on all platforms.
# For about the same reason, we need to compile the ARM opts files
# separately as well.
{
'target_name': 'opts',
'type': 'static_library',
'include_dirs': [
'../include/config',
'../include/core',
'../src/core',
],
'conditions': [
[ 'skia_os in ["linux", "freebsd", "openbsd", "solaris"]', {
'cflags': [
'-msse2',
],
}],
],
'sources': [
'../src/opts/SkBitmapProcState_opts_SSE2.cpp',
'../src/opts/SkBlitRow_opts_SSE2.cpp',
'../src/opts/SkUtils_opts_SSE2.cpp',
],
},
],
}
# Local Variables:
# tab-width:2
# indent-tabs-mode:nil
# End:
# vim: set expandtab tabstop=2 shiftwidth=2: