xen: make xen_enabled even more clever

When using xen_enabled() we're currently only checking if xen is enabled
at all during the build. But what if you want to build multiple targets
out of which only one can potentially run xen code?

That means that for generic code we'll still have to fall back to the
variable and potentially slow the code down, but it's not as important as
that is mostly xen device emulation which is not touched for non-xen targets.

The target specific code however can with this patch see that it's unable to
ever execute xen code. We can thus always return 0 on xen_enabled(), giving
gcc enough hints to evict the mapcache code from the target memory management
code.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de>
Acked-by: Anthony PERARD <anthony.perard@citrix.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alexander Graf 2011-07-17 07:30:29 +02:00
parent f03a4ac122
commit 59d21e537b
2 changed files with 6 additions and 1 deletions

5
configure vendored
View file

@ -3290,7 +3290,12 @@ case "$target_arch2" in
if test "$xen" = "yes" -a "$target_softmmu" = "yes" ; then
target_phys_bits=64
echo "CONFIG_XEN=y" >> $config_target_mak
else
echo "CONFIG_NO_XEN=y" >> $config_target_mak
fi
;;
*)
echo "CONFIG_NO_XEN=y" >> $config_target_mak
esac
case "$target_arch2" in
i386|x86_64|ppcemb|ppc|ppc64|s390x)

View file

@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ extern int xen_allowed;
static inline int xen_enabled(void)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_XEN_BACKEND
#if defined(CONFIG_XEN_BACKEND) && !defined(CONFIG_NO_XEN)
return xen_allowed;
#else
return 0;