The new target names are easier to remember / decipher:
term
term-cachegrind
term-gprof
term-valgrind
all
all-cachegrind
all-gprof
all-valgrind
all-debug
eval-gprof
eval-cachegrind
native modules will never need the dynamic INCLUDES, so we define our
own NATIVEINCLUDES. Due to the current make structure, the only way to
not use INCLUDES is to redefine the build rules.
An application might want to use C11 features. The user would assume
that setting `CFLAGS=-std=gnu11` in the Makefile would work. It does not
since the board's Makefile.include shadows the `-std` flag.
This patch removes the `-std=gnu99` from the various Makefile.includes,
and sets the flag in the common Makefile.include of RIOT instead.
If an `-std` flag was provided by an earlier Makefile (the application,
the board, or the CPU [whilst only the former one should]), then no
additional flag is set. It is first tested if the supplied compiler
understands `-std=gnu99`, then `-std=c99`.
* add missing $(AD) to osx $(LINK) invocation
* move osx build determination to native makefile
* move old libc test to native makefile
* set objcopy to "true" - it is superfluous for native no matter what the system is
* add some documentation to natives makefile
wrap some libc functions that do system calls (terminal output)
wrap read/write with syscall guard
define real_read/write (next dynamic linker find for read/write)
guard system calls in remaining code
introduce native_internhal.h
throw out some debug statements that break things
clean up includes a bit
declare board_init in native_internhal.h
add -ldl to LINKFLAGS for cpu/syscalls