Files
gem5/ext/iostream3
Gabe Black 64d1297d86 scons: Move the build of ext/ into the variant dirs.
These are no longer split out and shared in the root build/ directory.
This does result in a small amount of overhead from building redundant
copies of these files, although the overhead is not significant. When
building 7 different variants of gem5, all the ISAs and NULL, the
difference on my machine was:

Before:
real    41m25.372s
user    914m22.266s
sys     41m51.816s

After:
real    42m38.074s
user    921m36.852s
sys     43m2.949s

This is about a 2-3% difference, which is a worse than typical case,
since the overhead scales with the number of variants being built.

The benefit of pulling ext/ into the variant directory is that there can
now be a single config which applies to all files used to build gem5,
and that config is represented by the variant of gem5 being built.

Change-Id: I6f0db97c63a7f3e252e7e351aa862340978e701b
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/c/public/gem5/+/56750
Maintainer: Gabe Black <gabe.black@gmail.com>
Tested-by: kokoro <noreply+kokoro@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Gabe Black <gabe.black@gmail.com>
2022-03-11 22:54:16 +00:00
..

These classes provide a C++ stream interface to the zlib library. It allows you
to do things like:

  gzofstream outf("blah.gz");
  outf << "These go into the gzip file " << 123 << endl;

It does this by deriving a specialized stream buffer for gzipped files, which is
the way Stroustrup would have done it. :->

The gzifstream and gzofstream classes were originally written by Kevin Ruland
and made available in the zlib contrib/iostream directory. The older version still
compiles under gcc 2.xx, but not under gcc 3.xx, which sparked the development of
this version.

The new classes are as standard-compliant as possible, closely following the
approach of the standard library's fstream classes. It compiles under gcc versions
3.2 and 3.3, but not under gcc 2.xx. This is mainly due to changes in the standard
library naming scheme. The new version of gzifstream/gzofstream/gzfilebuf differs
from the previous one in the following respects:
- added showmanyc
- added setbuf, with support for unbuffered output via setbuf(0,0)
- a few bug fixes of stream behavior
- gzipped output file opened with default compression level instead of maximum level
- setcompressionlevel()/strategy() members replaced by single setcompression()

The code is provided "as is", with the permission to use, copy, modify, distribute
and sell it for any purpose without fee.

Ludwig Schwardt
<schwardt@sun.ac.za>

DSP Lab
Electrical & Electronic Engineering Department
University of Stellenbosch
South Africa