There are special features to handle computers where some of the “registers” form a stack. Stack registers are normally written by pushing onto the stack, and are numbered relative to the top of the stack.
Currently, GCC can only handle one group of stack-like registers, and they must be consecutively numbered. Furthermore, the existing support for stack-like registers is specific to the 80387 floating point coprocessor. If you have a new architecture that uses stack-like registers, you will need to do substantial work on reg-stack.cc and write your machine description to cooperate with it, as well as defining these macros.
Define this if the machine has any stack-like registers.
This is a cover class containing the stack registers. Define this if the machine has any stack-like registers.
The number of the first stack-like register. This one is the top of the stack.
The number of the last stack-like register. This one is the bottom of the stack.