> <snip>
>
> > > Also, I believe that the -march=pentium4 option /was/ actually used up
> > > until kernel 2.6.10 where it was dropped because of a risk that some
> > > versions of gcc would cause the kernel to use SSE registers for data
> > > movement (which is a no-no).
> > >
> >
> > You seem right. I fetched a 2.6.9 tarball and it is really built with
> > -march=pentium4. Do you know which are versions of gcc in question ?
> >
>
> No, I'm afraid not. I only know that the advice came from Richard
> Henderson who (I think) is one of the core glibc hackers. You can see
> the point at which it was introduced by Linus in the ChangeLog (2nd
> message from last):
>
> http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/ChangeLog-2.6.10
Seems to be this one:
<[email protected]>
Don't use "-march=pentium3" for gcc tuning.
rth tells me that some versions of gcc may end up using the
SSE registers for data movement when you do that.
Use "-march=i686 -mtune=xxxx" instead.
(We do the same thing for march=pentium2/4 too, just for
consistency).
The way it is worded it seems that it is a problem with *some* versions
of gcc only on p3, not p4.
Cheers,
Ivan Yosifov.
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