Correct libgcc complex multiply excess precision handling (PR libgcc/77519).
libgcc complex multiply is meant to eliminate excess
precision from certain internal values by forcing them to memory in
exactly those cases where the type has excess precision. But in
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2014-09/msg01894.html I
accidentally inverted the logic so that values get forced to memory in
exactly the cases where it's not needed. (This is a pessimization in
the no-excess-precision case, in principle could lead to bad results
depending on code generation in the excess-precision case. Note: I do
not have a test demonstrating bad results.)
Bootstrapped with no regressions on x86_64-pc-linux-gnu. Code size
went down on x86_64 as expected; old sizes:
text data bss dec hex filename
887 0 0 887 377 _muldc3.o
810 0 0 810 32a _mulsc3.o
2032 0 0 2032 7f0 _multc3.o
983 0 0 983 3d7 _mulxc3.o
New sizes:
847 0 0 847 34f _muldc3.o
770 0 0 770 302 _mulsc3.o
2032 0 0 2032 7f0 _multc3.o
951 0 0 951 3b7 _mulxc3.o
PR libgcc/77519
* libgcc2.c (NOTRUNC): Invert settings.
From-SVN: r240033