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RedBear-OS/recipes/tools/file/source/magic/Magdir/aout
T
vasilito 7686729069 drm: implement syncobj and fence for VIRGL/VirtIO driver
Extract protocol-agnostic FenceTimeline from Intel to shared
src/drivers/fence.rs — atomic-based fence tracking suitable
for Intel, VIRGL, and AMD drivers.

Extract protocol-agnostic SyncobjManager from Intel to shared
src/drivers/syncobj.rs — syncobj create/destroy/signal/reset/
wait/query and sync_file fd export/import.

Wire both into VirtioDriver:
- Add FenceTimeline + SyncobjManager fields
- Implement all 5 GpuDriver syncobj trait methods
  (create, destroy, wait, export_fd, import_fd)
- Track fence seqnos in virgl_submit_3d (allocate
  before submit, signal after completion)

Intel fence.rs and syncobj.rs converted to thin re-export
modules pointing at shared sources — no behavioral change
for Intel driver.

This gives Mesa VIRGL userspace the standard DRM syncobj
API for GPU/compositor synchronization.
2026-06-02 14:33:28 +03:00

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#------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# $File: aout,v 1.1 2013/01/09 22:37:23 christos Exp $
# aout: file(1) magic for a.out executable/object/etc entries that
# handle executables on multiple platforms.
#
#
# Little-endian 32-bit-int a.out, merged from bsdi (for BSD/OS, from
# BSDI), netbsd, and vax (for UNIX/32V and BSD)
#
# XXX - is there anything we can look at to distinguish BSD/OS 386 from
# NetBSD 386 from various VAX binaries? The BSD/OS shared library flag
# works only for binaries using shared libraries. Grabbing the entry
# point from the a.out header, using it to find the first code executed
# in the program, and looking at that might help.
#
0 lelong 0407 a.out little-endian 32-bit executable
>16 lelong >0 not stripped
>32 byte 0x6a (uses BSD/OS shared libs)
0 lelong 0410 a.out little-endian 32-bit pure executable
>16 lelong >0 not stripped
>32 byte 0x6a (uses BSD/OS shared libs)
0 lelong 0413 a.out little-endian 32-bit demand paged pure executable
>16 lelong >0 not stripped
>32 byte 0x6a (uses BSD/OS shared libs)
#
# Big-endian 32-bit-int a.out, merged from sun (for old 68010 SunOS a.out),
# mips (for old 68020(!) SGI a.out), and netbsd (for old big-endian a.out).
#
# XXX - is there anything we can look at to distinguish old SunOS 68010
# from old 68020 IRIX from old NetBSD? Again, I guess we could look at
# the first instruction or instructions in the program.
#
0 belong 0407 a.out big-endian 32-bit executable
>16 belong >0 not stripped
0 belong 0410 a.out big-endian 32-bit pure executable
>16 belong >0 not stripped
0 belong 0413 a.out big-endian 32-bit demand paged executable
>16 belong >0 not stripped