Adds two new external authors to etc/update-copyright.py to cover
bfd/ax_tls.m4, and adds gprofng to dirs handled automatically, then
updates copyright messages as follows:
1) Update cgen/utils.scm emitted copyrights.
2) Run "etc/update-copyright.py --this-year" with an extra external
author I haven't committed, 'Kalray SA.', to cover gas testsuite
files (which should have their copyright message removed).
3) Build with --enable-maintainer-mode --enable-cgen-maint=yes.
4) Check out */po/*.pot which we don't update frequently.
The newer update-copyright.py fixes file encoding too, removing cr/lf
on binutils/bfdtest2.c and ld/testsuite/ld-cygwin/exe-export.exp, and
embedded cr in binutils/testsuite/binutils-all/ar.exp string match.
The result of running etc/update-copyright.py --this-year, fixing all
the files whose mode is changed by the script, plus a build with
--enable-maintainer-mode --enable-cgen-maint=yes, then checking
out */po/*.pot which we don't update frequently.
The copy of cgen was with commit d1dd5fcc38ead reverted as that commit
breaks building of bfp opcodes files.
Like for infinity, there isn't just a single NaN. The sign bit may be
of interest and, going beyond infinity, whether the value is quiet or
signalling may be even more relevant to be able to encode.
Note that an anomaly with x86'es double extended precision NaN values
gets taken care of at the same time: For all other formats a positive
value with all mantissa bits set was used, while here a negative value
with all non-significant mantissa bits clear was chose for an unknown
reason.
For m68k, since I don't know their X_PRECISION floating point value
layout, a warning gets issued if any of the new flavors was attempted
to be encoded that way. However likely it may be that, given that the
code lives in a source file supposedly implementing IEEE-compliant
formats, the bit patterns of the individual words match x86'es, I didn't
want to guess so. And my very, very old paper doc doesn't even mention
floating point formats other than single and double.