Add a new gdbarch hook to report additional signal information.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / gdbarch.sh
CommitLineData
66b43ecb 1#!/bin/sh -u
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2
3# Architecture commands for GDB, the GNU debugger.
79d45cd4 4#
b811d2c2 5# Copyright (C) 1998-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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6#
7# This file is part of GDB.
8#
9# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
50efebf8 11# the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
104c1213
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12# (at your option) any later version.
13#
14# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17# GNU General Public License for more details.
18#
19# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
50efebf8 20# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
104c1213 21
6e2c7fa1 22# Make certain that the script is not running in an internationalized
d8864532 23# environment.
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24LANG=C ; export LANG
25LC_ALL=C ; export LC_ALL
d8864532 26
59233f88 27# Format of the input table
97030eea 28read="class returntype function formal actual staticdefault predefault postdefault invalid_p print garbage_at_eol"
c0e8c252
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29
30do_read ()
31{
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32 comment=""
33 class=""
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34 # On some SH's, 'read' trims leading and trailing whitespace by
35 # default (e.g., bash), while on others (e.g., dash), it doesn't.
36 # Set IFS to empty to disable the trimming everywhere.
ffc2844e 37 # shellcheck disable=SC2162
c9023fb3 38 while IFS='' read line
34620563
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39 do
40 if test "${line}" = ""
41 then
42 continue
43 elif test "${line}" = "#" -a "${comment}" = ""
f0d4cc9e 44 then
34620563
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45 continue
46 elif expr "${line}" : "#" > /dev/null
f0d4cc9e 47 then
34620563
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48 comment="${comment}
49${line}"
f0d4cc9e 50 else
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51
52 # The semantics of IFS varies between different SH's. Some
ea480a30
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53 # treat ``;;' as three fields while some treat it as just two.
54 # Work around this by eliminating ``;;'' ....
cb02ab24 55 line="$(echo "${line}" | sed -e 's/;;/; ;/g' -e 's/;;/; ;/g')"
3d9a5942 56
ea480a30 57 OFS="${IFS}" ; IFS="[;]"
a6fc5ffc 58 eval read "${read}" <<EOF
34620563
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59${line}
60EOF
61 IFS="${OFS}"
62
1207375d 63 if test -n "${garbage_at_eol:-}"
283354d8
AC
64 then
65 echo "Garbage at end-of-line in ${line}" 1>&2
66 kill $$
67 exit 1
68 fi
69
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70 # .... and then going back through each field and strip out those
71 # that ended up with just that space character.
72 for r in ${read}
73 do
a6fc5ffc 74 if eval test "\"\${${r}}\" = ' '"
3d9a5942 75 then
a6fc5ffc 76 eval "${r}="
3d9a5942
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77 fi
78 done
79
a72293e2 80 case "${class}" in
1207375d 81 m ) staticdefault="${predefault:-}" ;;
a72293e2
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82 M ) staticdefault="0" ;;
83 * ) test "${staticdefault}" || staticdefault=0 ;;
84 esac
06b25f14 85
ae45cd16
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86 case "${class}" in
87 F | V | M )
1207375d 88 case "${invalid_p:-}" in
34620563 89 "" )
f7968451 90 if test -n "${predefault}"
34620563
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91 then
92 #invalid_p="gdbarch->${function} == ${predefault}"
1207375d 93 predicate="gdbarch->${function:-} != ${predefault}"
f7968451
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94 elif class_is_variable_p
95 then
96 predicate="gdbarch->${function} != 0"
97 elif class_is_function_p
98 then
99 predicate="gdbarch->${function} != NULL"
34620563
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100 fi
101 ;;
ae45cd16 102 * )
1e9f55d0 103 echo "Predicate function ${function} with invalid_p." 1>&2
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104 kill $$
105 exit 1
106 ;;
107 esac
34620563
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108 esac
109
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110 #NOT YET: See gdbarch.log for basic verification of
111 # database
112
113 break
f0d4cc9e 114 fi
34620563 115 done
72e74a21 116 if [ -n "${class}" ]
34620563
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117 then
118 true
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119 else
120 false
121 fi
122}
123
104c1213 124
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125fallback_default_p ()
126{
1207375d 127 { [ -n "${postdefault:-}" ] && [ "x${invalid_p}" != "x0" ]; } \
9fdb2916 128 || { [ -n "${predefault}" ] && [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ]; }
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129}
130
131class_is_variable_p ()
132{
4a5c6a1d
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133 case "${class}" in
134 *v* | *V* ) true ;;
135 * ) false ;;
136 esac
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137}
138
139class_is_function_p ()
140{
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141 case "${class}" in
142 *f* | *F* | *m* | *M* ) true ;;
143 * ) false ;;
144 esac
145}
146
147class_is_multiarch_p ()
148{
149 case "${class}" in
150 *m* | *M* ) true ;;
151 * ) false ;;
152 esac
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153}
154
155class_is_predicate_p ()
156{
4a5c6a1d
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157 case "${class}" in
158 *F* | *V* | *M* ) true ;;
159 * ) false ;;
160 esac
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161}
162
163class_is_info_p ()
164{
4a5c6a1d
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165 case "${class}" in
166 *i* ) true ;;
167 * ) false ;;
168 esac
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169}
170
171
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172# dump out/verify the doco
173for field in ${read}
174do
175 case ${field} in
176
177 class ) : ;;
c4093a6a 178
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179 # # -> line disable
180 # f -> function
181 # hiding a function
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182 # F -> function + predicate
183 # hiding a function + predicate to test function validity
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184 # v -> variable
185 # hiding a variable
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186 # V -> variable + predicate
187 # hiding a variable + predicate to test variables validity
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188 # i -> set from info
189 # hiding something from the ``struct info'' object
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190 # m -> multi-arch function
191 # hiding a multi-arch function (parameterised with the architecture)
192 # M -> multi-arch function + predicate
193 # hiding a multi-arch function + predicate to test function validity
cff3e48b 194
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195 returntype ) : ;;
196
c0e8c252 197 # For functions, the return type; for variables, the data type
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198
199 function ) : ;;
200
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201 # For functions, the member function name; for variables, the
202 # variable name. Member function names are always prefixed with
203 # ``gdbarch_'' for name-space purity.
cff3e48b
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204
205 formal ) : ;;
206
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207 # The formal argument list. It is assumed that the formal
208 # argument list includes the actual name of each list element.
209 # A function with no arguments shall have ``void'' as the
210 # formal argument list.
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211
212 actual ) : ;;
213
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214 # The list of actual arguments. The arguments specified shall
215 # match the FORMAL list given above. Functions with out
216 # arguments leave this blank.
cff3e48b 217
0b8f9e4d 218 staticdefault ) : ;;
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219
220 # To help with the GDB startup a static gdbarch object is
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221 # created. STATICDEFAULT is the value to insert into that
222 # static gdbarch object. Since this a static object only
223 # simple expressions can be used.
cff3e48b 224
0b8f9e4d 225 # If STATICDEFAULT is empty, zero is used.
c0e8c252 226
0b8f9e4d 227 predefault ) : ;;
cff3e48b 228
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229 # An initial value to assign to MEMBER of the freshly
230 # malloc()ed gdbarch object. After initialization, the
231 # freshly malloc()ed object is passed to the target
232 # architecture code for further updates.
cff3e48b 233
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234 # If PREDEFAULT is empty, zero is used.
235
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236 # A non-empty PREDEFAULT, an empty POSTDEFAULT and a zero
237 # INVALID_P are specified, PREDEFAULT will be used as the
238 # default for the non- multi-arch target.
239
240 # A zero PREDEFAULT function will force the fallback to call
241 # internal_error().
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242
243 # Variable declarations can refer to ``gdbarch'' which will
244 # contain the current architecture. Care should be taken.
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245
246 postdefault ) : ;;
247
248 # A value to assign to MEMBER of the new gdbarch object should
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249 # the target architecture code fail to change the PREDEFAULT
250 # value.
0b8f9e4d
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251
252 # If POSTDEFAULT is empty, no post update is performed.
253
254 # If both INVALID_P and POSTDEFAULT are non-empty then
255 # INVALID_P will be used to determine if MEMBER should be
256 # changed to POSTDEFAULT.
257
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258 # If a non-empty POSTDEFAULT and a zero INVALID_P are
259 # specified, POSTDEFAULT will be used as the default for the
260 # non- multi-arch target (regardless of the value of
261 # PREDEFAULT).
262
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263 # You cannot specify both a zero INVALID_P and a POSTDEFAULT.
264
be7811ad 265 # Variable declarations can refer to ``gdbarch'' which
db446970
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266 # will contain the current architecture. Care should be
267 # taken.
cff3e48b 268
c4093a6a 269 invalid_p ) : ;;
cff3e48b 270
0b8f9e4d 271 # A predicate equation that validates MEMBER. Non-zero is
c0e8c252 272 # returned if the code creating the new architecture failed to
0b8f9e4d
AC
273 # initialize MEMBER or the initialized the member is invalid.
274 # If POSTDEFAULT is non-empty then MEMBER will be updated to
275 # that value. If POSTDEFAULT is empty then internal_error()
276 # is called.
277
278 # If INVALID_P is empty, a check that MEMBER is no longer
279 # equal to PREDEFAULT is used.
280
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281 # The expression ``0'' disables the INVALID_P check making
282 # PREDEFAULT a legitimate value.
0b8f9e4d
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283
284 # See also PREDEFAULT and POSTDEFAULT.
cff3e48b 285
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286 print ) : ;;
287
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288 # An optional expression that convers MEMBER to a value
289 # suitable for formatting using %s.
c0e8c252 290
0b1553bc
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291 # If PRINT is empty, core_addr_to_string_nz (for CORE_ADDR)
292 # or plongest (anything else) is used.
cff3e48b 293
283354d8 294 garbage_at_eol ) : ;;
0b8f9e4d 295
283354d8 296 # Catches stray fields.
cff3e48b 297
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298 *)
299 echo "Bad field ${field}"
300 exit 1;;
cff3e48b
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301 esac
302done
303
cff3e48b 304
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305function_list ()
306{
cff3e48b 307 # See below (DOCO) for description of each field
34620563 308 cat <<EOF
ea480a30 309i;const struct bfd_arch_info *;bfd_arch_info;;;&bfd_default_arch_struct;;;;gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (gdbarch)->printable_name
104c1213 310#
ea480a30
SM
311i;enum bfd_endian;byte_order;;;BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
312i;enum bfd_endian;byte_order_for_code;;;BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
4be87837 313#
ea480a30 314i;enum gdb_osabi;osabi;;;GDB_OSABI_UNKNOWN
424163ea 315#
ea480a30 316i;const struct target_desc *;target_desc;;;;;;;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->target_desc)
32c9a795 317
66b43ecb 318# Number of bits in a short or unsigned short for the target machine.
ea480a30 319v;int;short_bit;;;8 * sizeof (short);2*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
66b43ecb 320# Number of bits in an int or unsigned int for the target machine.
ea480a30 321v;int;int_bit;;;8 * sizeof (int);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
66b43ecb 322# Number of bits in a long or unsigned long for the target machine.
ea480a30 323v;int;long_bit;;;8 * sizeof (long);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
66b43ecb
AC
324# Number of bits in a long long or unsigned long long for the target
325# machine.
ea480a30 326v;int;long_long_bit;;;8 * sizeof (LONGEST);2*gdbarch->long_bit;;0
456fcf94 327
f9e9243a
UW
328# The ABI default bit-size and format for "half", "float", "double", and
329# "long double". These bit/format pairs should eventually be combined
330# into a single object. For the moment, just initialize them as a pair.
8da61cc4
DJ
331# Each format describes both the big and little endian layouts (if
332# useful).
456fcf94 333
ea480a30
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334v;int;half_bit;;;16;2*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
335v;const struct floatformat **;half_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_half;;pformat (gdbarch->half_format)
336v;int;float_bit;;;8 * sizeof (float);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
337v;const struct floatformat **;float_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_single;;pformat (gdbarch->float_format)
338v;int;double_bit;;;8 * sizeof (double);8*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
339v;const struct floatformat **;double_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_double;;pformat (gdbarch->double_format)
340v;int;long_double_bit;;;8 * sizeof (long double);8*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
341v;const struct floatformat **;long_double_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_double;;pformat (gdbarch->long_double_format)
456fcf94 342
53375380
PA
343# The ABI default bit-size for "wchar_t". wchar_t is a built-in type
344# starting with C++11.
ea480a30 345v;int;wchar_bit;;;8 * sizeof (wchar_t);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0
53375380 346# One if \`wchar_t' is signed, zero if unsigned.
ea480a30 347v;int;wchar_signed;;;1;-1;1
53375380 348
9b790ce7
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349# Returns the floating-point format to be used for values of length LENGTH.
350# NAME, if non-NULL, is the type name, which may be used to distinguish
351# different target formats of the same length.
ea480a30 352m;const struct floatformat **;floatformat_for_type;const char *name, int length;name, length;0;default_floatformat_for_type;;0
9b790ce7 353
52204a0b
DT
354# For most targets, a pointer on the target and its representation as an
355# address in GDB have the same size and "look the same". For such a
17a912b6 356# target, you need only set gdbarch_ptr_bit and gdbarch_addr_bit
52204a0b
DT
357# / addr_bit will be set from it.
358#
17a912b6 359# If gdbarch_ptr_bit and gdbarch_addr_bit are different, you'll probably
8da614df
CV
360# also need to set gdbarch_dwarf2_addr_size, gdbarch_pointer_to_address and
361# gdbarch_address_to_pointer as well.
52204a0b
DT
362#
363# ptr_bit is the size of a pointer on the target
ea480a30 364v;int;ptr_bit;;;8 * sizeof (void*);gdbarch->int_bit;;0
52204a0b 365# addr_bit is the size of a target address as represented in gdb
ea480a30 366v;int;addr_bit;;;8 * sizeof (void*);0;gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch);
104c1213 367#
8da614df
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368# dwarf2_addr_size is the target address size as used in the Dwarf debug
369# info. For .debug_frame FDEs, this is supposed to be the target address
370# size from the associated CU header, and which is equivalent to the
371# DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE as defined by the target specific GCC back-end.
372# Unfortunately there is no good way to determine this value. Therefore
373# dwarf2_addr_size simply defaults to the target pointer size.
374#
375# dwarf2_addr_size is not used for .eh_frame FDEs, which are generally
376# defined using the target's pointer size so far.
377#
378# Note that dwarf2_addr_size only needs to be redefined by a target if the
379# GCC back-end defines a DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE other than the target pointer size,
380# and if Dwarf versions < 4 need to be supported.
ea480a30 381v;int;dwarf2_addr_size;;;sizeof (void*);0;gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT;
8da614df 382#
4e409299 383# One if \`char' acts like \`signed char', zero if \`unsigned char'.
ea480a30 384v;int;char_signed;;;1;-1;1
4e409299 385#
c113ed0c 386F;CORE_ADDR;read_pc;readable_regcache *regcache;regcache
ea480a30 387F;void;write_pc;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR val;regcache, val
39d4ef09
AC
388# Function for getting target's idea of a frame pointer. FIXME: GDB's
389# whole scheme for dealing with "frames" and "frame pointers" needs a
390# serious shakedown.
ea480a30 391m;void;virtual_frame_pointer;CORE_ADDR pc, int *frame_regnum, LONGEST *frame_offset;pc, frame_regnum, frame_offset;0;legacy_virtual_frame_pointer;;0
66b43ecb 392#
849d0ba8 393M;enum register_status;pseudo_register_read;readable_regcache *regcache, int cookednum, gdb_byte *buf;regcache, cookednum, buf
3543a589
TT
394# Read a register into a new struct value. If the register is wholly
395# or partly unavailable, this should call mark_value_bytes_unavailable
396# as appropriate. If this is defined, then pseudo_register_read will
397# never be called.
849d0ba8 398M;struct value *;pseudo_register_read_value;readable_regcache *regcache, int cookednum;regcache, cookednum
ea480a30 399M;void;pseudo_register_write;struct regcache *regcache, int cookednum, const gdb_byte *buf;regcache, cookednum, buf
61a0eb5b 400#
ea480a30 401v;int;num_regs;;;0;-1
0aba1244
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402# This macro gives the number of pseudo-registers that live in the
403# register namespace but do not get fetched or stored on the target.
3d9a5942
AC
404# These pseudo-registers may be aliases for other registers,
405# combinations of other registers, or they may be computed by GDB.
ea480a30 406v;int;num_pseudo_regs;;;0;0;;0
c2169756 407
175ff332
HZ
408# Assemble agent expression bytecode to collect pseudo-register REG.
409# Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise.
ea480a30 410M;int;ax_pseudo_register_collect;struct agent_expr *ax, int reg;ax, reg
175ff332
HZ
411
412# Assemble agent expression bytecode to push the value of pseudo-register
413# REG on the interpreter stack.
414# Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise.
ea480a30 415M;int;ax_pseudo_register_push_stack;struct agent_expr *ax, int reg;ax, reg
175ff332 416
012b3a21
WT
417# Some targets/architectures can do extra processing/display of
418# segmentation faults. E.g., Intel MPX boundary faults.
419# Call the architecture dependent function to handle the fault.
420# UIOUT is the output stream where the handler will place information.
ea480a30 421M;void;handle_segmentation_fault;struct ui_out *uiout;uiout
012b3a21 422
272bb05c
JB
423# Some architectures can display additional information for specific
424# signals.
425# UIOUT is the output stream where the handler will place information.
426M;void;report_signal_info;struct ui_out *uiout, enum gdb_signal siggnal;uiout, siggnal
427
c2169756
AC
428# GDB's standard (or well known) register numbers. These can map onto
429# a real register or a pseudo (computed) register or not be defined at
1200cd6e 430# all (-1).
3e8c568d 431# gdbarch_sp_regnum will hopefully be replaced by UNWIND_SP.
ea480a30
SM
432v;int;sp_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0
433v;int;pc_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0
434v;int;ps_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0
435v;int;fp0_regnum;;;0;-1;;0
88c72b7d 436# Convert stab register number (from \`r\' declaration) to a gdb REGNUM.
ea480a30 437m;int;stab_reg_to_regnum;int stab_regnr;stab_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0
88c72b7d 438# Provide a default mapping from a ecoff register number to a gdb REGNUM.
ea480a30 439m;int;ecoff_reg_to_regnum;int ecoff_regnr;ecoff_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0
88c72b7d 440# Convert from an sdb register number to an internal gdb register number.
ea480a30 441m;int;sdb_reg_to_regnum;int sdb_regnr;sdb_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0
ba2b1c56 442# Provide a default mapping from a DWARF2 register number to a gdb REGNUM.
0fde2c53 443# Return -1 for bad REGNUM. Note: Several targets get this wrong.
ea480a30
SM
444m;int;dwarf2_reg_to_regnum;int dwarf2_regnr;dwarf2_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0
445m;const char *;register_name;int regnr;regnr;;0
9c04cab7 446
7b9ee6a8
DJ
447# Return the type of a register specified by the architecture. Only
448# the register cache should call this function directly; others should
449# use "register_type".
ea480a30 450M;struct type *;register_type;int reg_nr;reg_nr
9c04cab7 451
8bcb5208
AB
452# Generate a dummy frame_id for THIS_FRAME assuming that the frame is
453# a dummy frame. A dummy frame is created before an inferior call,
454# the frame_id returned here must match the frame_id that was built
455# for the inferior call. Usually this means the returned frame_id's
456# stack address should match the address returned by
457# gdbarch_push_dummy_call, and the returned frame_id's code address
458# should match the address at which the breakpoint was set in the dummy
459# frame.
460m;struct frame_id;dummy_id;struct frame_info *this_frame;this_frame;;default_dummy_id;;0
669fac23 461# Implement DUMMY_ID and PUSH_DUMMY_CALL, then delete
064f5156 462# deprecated_fp_regnum.
ea480a30 463v;int;deprecated_fp_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0
f3be58bc 464
cf84fa6b 465M;CORE_ADDR;push_dummy_call;struct value *function, struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR bp_addr, int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp, function_call_return_method return_method, CORE_ADDR struct_addr;function, regcache, bp_addr, nargs, args, sp, return_method, struct_addr
ea480a30
SM
466v;int;call_dummy_location;;;;AT_ENTRY_POINT;;0
467M;CORE_ADDR;push_dummy_code;CORE_ADDR sp, CORE_ADDR funaddr, struct value **args, int nargs, struct type *value_type, CORE_ADDR *real_pc, CORE_ADDR *bp_addr, struct regcache *regcache;sp, funaddr, args, nargs, value_type, real_pc, bp_addr, regcache
57010b1c 468
7eb89530 469# Return true if the code of FRAME is writable.
ea480a30 470m;int;code_of_frame_writable;struct frame_info *frame;frame;;default_code_of_frame_writable;;0
7eb89530 471
ea480a30
SM
472m;void;print_registers_info;struct ui_file *file, struct frame_info *frame, int regnum, int all;file, frame, regnum, all;;default_print_registers_info;;0
473m;void;print_float_info;struct ui_file *file, struct frame_info *frame, const char *args;file, frame, args;;default_print_float_info;;0
474M;void;print_vector_info;struct ui_file *file, struct frame_info *frame, const char *args;file, frame, args
7c7651b2
AC
475# MAP a GDB RAW register number onto a simulator register number. See
476# also include/...-sim.h.
ea480a30
SM
477m;int;register_sim_regno;int reg_nr;reg_nr;;legacy_register_sim_regno;;0
478m;int;cannot_fetch_register;int regnum;regnum;;cannot_register_not;;0
479m;int;cannot_store_register;int regnum;regnum;;cannot_register_not;;0
eade6471
JB
480
481# Determine the address where a longjmp will land and save this address
482# in PC. Return nonzero on success.
483#
484# FRAME corresponds to the longjmp frame.
ea480a30 485F;int;get_longjmp_target;struct frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR *pc;frame, pc
eade6471 486
104c1213 487#
ea480a30 488v;int;believe_pcc_promotion;;;;;;;
104c1213 489#
ea480a30
SM
490m;int;convert_register_p;int regnum, struct type *type;regnum, type;0;generic_convert_register_p;;0
491f;int;register_to_value;struct frame_info *frame, int regnum, struct type *type, gdb_byte *buf, int *optimizedp, int *unavailablep;frame, regnum, type, buf, optimizedp, unavailablep;0
492f;void;value_to_register;struct frame_info *frame, int regnum, struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf;frame, regnum, type, buf;0
9acbedc0 493# Construct a value representing the contents of register REGNUM in
2ed3c037 494# frame FRAME_ID, interpreted as type TYPE. The routine needs to
9acbedc0
UW
495# allocate and return a struct value with all value attributes
496# (but not the value contents) filled in.
ea480a30 497m;struct value *;value_from_register;struct type *type, int regnum, struct frame_id frame_id;type, regnum, frame_id;;default_value_from_register;;0
104c1213 498#
ea480a30
SM
499m;CORE_ADDR;pointer_to_address;struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf;type, buf;;unsigned_pointer_to_address;;0
500m;void;address_to_pointer;struct type *type, gdb_byte *buf, CORE_ADDR addr;type, buf, addr;;unsigned_address_to_pointer;;0
501M;CORE_ADDR;integer_to_address;struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf;type, buf
92ad9cd9 502
6a3a010b
MR
503# Return the return-value convention that will be used by FUNCTION
504# to return a value of type VALTYPE. FUNCTION may be NULL in which
ea42b34a
JB
505# case the return convention is computed based only on VALTYPE.
506#
507# If READBUF is not NULL, extract the return value and save it in this buffer.
508#
509# If WRITEBUF is not NULL, it contains a return value which will be
510# stored into the appropriate register. This can be used when we want
511# to force the value returned by a function (see the "return" command
512# for instance).
ea480a30 513M;enum return_value_convention;return_value;struct value *function, struct type *valtype, struct regcache *regcache, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf;function, valtype, regcache, readbuf, writebuf
92ad9cd9 514
18648a37
YQ
515# Return true if the return value of function is stored in the first hidden
516# parameter. In theory, this feature should be language-dependent, specified
517# by language and its ABI, such as C++. Unfortunately, compiler may
518# implement it to a target-dependent feature. So that we need such hook here
519# to be aware of this in GDB.
ea480a30 520m;int;return_in_first_hidden_param_p;struct type *type;type;;default_return_in_first_hidden_param_p;;0
18648a37 521
ea480a30
SM
522m;CORE_ADDR;skip_prologue;CORE_ADDR ip;ip;0;0
523M;CORE_ADDR;skip_main_prologue;CORE_ADDR ip;ip
591a12a1
UW
524# On some platforms, a single function may provide multiple entry points,
525# e.g. one that is used for function-pointer calls and a different one
526# that is used for direct function calls.
527# In order to ensure that breakpoints set on the function will trigger
528# no matter via which entry point the function is entered, a platform
529# may provide the skip_entrypoint callback. It is called with IP set
530# to the main entry point of a function (as determined by the symbol table),
531# and should return the address of the innermost entry point, where the
532# actual breakpoint needs to be set. Note that skip_entrypoint is used
533# by GDB common code even when debugging optimized code, where skip_prologue
534# is not used.
ea480a30 535M;CORE_ADDR;skip_entrypoint;CORE_ADDR ip;ip
591a12a1 536
ea480a30
SM
537f;int;inner_than;CORE_ADDR lhs, CORE_ADDR rhs;lhs, rhs;0;0
538m;const gdb_byte *;breakpoint_from_pc;CORE_ADDR *pcptr, int *lenptr;pcptr, lenptr;0;default_breakpoint_from_pc;;0
cd6c3b4f
YQ
539
540# Return the breakpoint kind for this target based on *PCPTR.
ea480a30 541m;int;breakpoint_kind_from_pc;CORE_ADDR *pcptr;pcptr;;0;
cd6c3b4f
YQ
542
543# Return the software breakpoint from KIND. KIND can have target
544# specific meaning like the Z0 kind parameter.
545# SIZE is set to the software breakpoint's length in memory.
ea480a30 546m;const gdb_byte *;sw_breakpoint_from_kind;int kind, int *size;kind, size;;NULL;;0
cd6c3b4f 547
833b7ab5
YQ
548# Return the breakpoint kind for this target based on the current
549# processor state (e.g. the current instruction mode on ARM) and the
550# *PCPTR. In default, it is gdbarch->breakpoint_kind_from_pc.
ea480a30 551m;int;breakpoint_kind_from_current_state;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR *pcptr;regcache, pcptr;0;default_breakpoint_kind_from_current_state;;0
833b7ab5 552
ea480a30
SM
553M;CORE_ADDR;adjust_breakpoint_address;CORE_ADDR bpaddr;bpaddr
554m;int;memory_insert_breakpoint;struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt;bp_tgt;0;default_memory_insert_breakpoint;;0
555m;int;memory_remove_breakpoint;struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt;bp_tgt;0;default_memory_remove_breakpoint;;0
556v;CORE_ADDR;decr_pc_after_break;;;0;;;0
782263ab
AC
557
558# A function can be addressed by either it's "pointer" (possibly a
559# descriptor address) or "entry point" (first executable instruction).
560# The method "convert_from_func_ptr_addr" converting the former to the
cbf3b44a 561# latter. gdbarch_deprecated_function_start_offset is being used to implement
782263ab
AC
562# a simplified subset of that functionality - the function's address
563# corresponds to the "function pointer" and the function's start
564# corresponds to the "function entry point" - and hence is redundant.
565
ea480a30 566v;CORE_ADDR;deprecated_function_start_offset;;;0;;;0
782263ab 567
123dc839
DJ
568# Return the remote protocol register number associated with this
569# register. Normally the identity mapping.
ea480a30 570m;int;remote_register_number;int regno;regno;;default_remote_register_number;;0
123dc839 571
b2756930 572# Fetch the target specific address used to represent a load module.
ea480a30 573F;CORE_ADDR;fetch_tls_load_module_address;struct objfile *objfile;objfile
6e056c81
JB
574
575# Return the thread-local address at OFFSET in the thread-local
576# storage for the thread PTID and the shared library or executable
577# file given by LM_ADDR. If that block of thread-local storage hasn't
578# been allocated yet, this function may throw an error. LM_ADDR may
579# be zero for statically linked multithreaded inferiors.
580
581M;CORE_ADDR;get_thread_local_address;ptid_t ptid, CORE_ADDR lm_addr, CORE_ADDR offset;ptid, lm_addr, offset
104c1213 582#
ea480a30 583v;CORE_ADDR;frame_args_skip;;;0;;;0
8bcb5208
AB
584m;CORE_ADDR;unwind_pc;struct frame_info *next_frame;next_frame;;default_unwind_pc;;0
585m;CORE_ADDR;unwind_sp;struct frame_info *next_frame;next_frame;;default_unwind_sp;;0
42efa47a
AC
586# DEPRECATED_FRAME_LOCALS_ADDRESS as been replaced by the per-frame
587# frame-base. Enable frame-base before frame-unwind.
ea480a30 588F;int;frame_num_args;struct frame_info *frame;frame
104c1213 589#
ea480a30
SM
590M;CORE_ADDR;frame_align;CORE_ADDR address;address
591m;int;stabs_argument_has_addr;struct type *type;type;;default_stabs_argument_has_addr;;0
592v;int;frame_red_zone_size
f0d4cc9e 593#
ea480a30 594m;CORE_ADDR;convert_from_func_ptr_addr;CORE_ADDR addr, struct target_ops *targ;addr, targ;;convert_from_func_ptr_addr_identity;;0
875e1767
AC
595# On some machines there are bits in addresses which are not really
596# part of the address, but are used by the kernel, the hardware, etc.
bf6ae464 597# for special purposes. gdbarch_addr_bits_remove takes out any such bits so
875e1767
AC
598# we get a "real" address such as one would find in a symbol table.
599# This is used only for addresses of instructions, and even then I'm
600# not sure it's used in all contexts. It exists to deal with there
601# being a few stray bits in the PC which would mislead us, not as some
602# sort of generic thing to handle alignment or segmentation (it's
603# possible it should be in TARGET_READ_PC instead).
ea480a30 604m;CORE_ADDR;addr_bits_remove;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;core_addr_identity;;0
e6590a1b 605
a738ea1d
YQ
606# On some machines, not all bits of an address word are significant.
607# For example, on AArch64, the top bits of an address known as the "tag"
608# are ignored by the kernel, the hardware, etc. and can be regarded as
609# additional data associated with the address.
5969f0db 610v;int;significant_addr_bit;;;;;;0
a738ea1d 611
e6590a1b
UW
612# FIXME/cagney/2001-01-18: This should be split in two. A target method that
613# indicates if the target needs software single step. An ISA method to
614# implement it.
615#
e6590a1b
UW
616# FIXME/cagney/2001-01-18: The logic is backwards. It should be asking if the
617# target can single step. If not, then implement single step using breakpoints.
64c4637f 618#
93f9a11f
YQ
619# Return a vector of addresses on which the software single step
620# breakpoints should be inserted. NULL means software single step is
621# not used.
622# Multiple breakpoints may be inserted for some instructions such as
623# conditional branch. However, each implementation must always evaluate
624# the condition and only put the breakpoint at the branch destination if
625# the condition is true, so that we ensure forward progress when stepping
626# past a conditional branch to self.
a0ff9e1a 627F;std::vector<CORE_ADDR>;software_single_step;struct regcache *regcache;regcache
e6590a1b 628
3352ef37
AC
629# Return non-zero if the processor is executing a delay slot and a
630# further single-step is needed before the instruction finishes.
ea480a30 631M;int;single_step_through_delay;struct frame_info *frame;frame
f6c40618 632# FIXME: cagney/2003-08-28: Need to find a better way of selecting the
b2fa5097 633# disassembler. Perhaps objdump can handle it?
39503f82 634f;int;print_insn;bfd_vma vma, struct disassemble_info *info;vma, info;;default_print_insn;;0
ea480a30 635f;CORE_ADDR;skip_trampoline_code;struct frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR pc;frame, pc;;generic_skip_trampoline_code;;0
d50355b6
MS
636
637
cfd8ab24 638# If in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code() returns true, and SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER
dea0c52f
MK
639# evaluates non-zero, this is the address where the debugger will place
640# a step-resume breakpoint to get us past the dynamic linker.
ea480a30 641m;CORE_ADDR;skip_solib_resolver;CORE_ADDR pc;pc;;generic_skip_solib_resolver;;0
d50355b6 642# Some systems also have trampoline code for returning from shared libs.
ea480a30 643m;int;in_solib_return_trampoline;CORE_ADDR pc, const char *name;pc, name;;generic_in_solib_return_trampoline;;0
d50355b6 644
1d509aa6
MM
645# Return true if PC lies inside an indirect branch thunk.
646m;bool;in_indirect_branch_thunk;CORE_ADDR pc;pc;;default_in_indirect_branch_thunk;;0
647
c12260ac
CV
648# A target might have problems with watchpoints as soon as the stack
649# frame of the current function has been destroyed. This mostly happens
c9cf6e20 650# as the first action in a function's epilogue. stack_frame_destroyed_p()
c12260ac
CV
651# is defined to return a non-zero value if either the given addr is one
652# instruction after the stack destroying instruction up to the trailing
653# return instruction or if we can figure out that the stack frame has
654# already been invalidated regardless of the value of addr. Targets
655# which don't suffer from that problem could just let this functionality
656# untouched.
ea480a30 657m;int;stack_frame_destroyed_p;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;0;generic_stack_frame_destroyed_p;;0
3e29f34a
MR
658# Process an ELF symbol in the minimal symbol table in a backend-specific
659# way. Normally this hook is supposed to do nothing, however if required,
660# then this hook can be used to apply tranformations to symbols that are
661# considered special in some way. For example the MIPS backend uses it
662# to interpret \`st_other' information to mark compressed code symbols so
663# that they can be treated in the appropriate manner in the processing of
664# the main symbol table and DWARF-2 records.
ea480a30
SM
665F;void;elf_make_msymbol_special;asymbol *sym, struct minimal_symbol *msym;sym, msym
666f;void;coff_make_msymbol_special;int val, struct minimal_symbol *msym;val, msym;;default_coff_make_msymbol_special;;0
3e29f34a
MR
667# Process a symbol in the main symbol table in a backend-specific way.
668# Normally this hook is supposed to do nothing, however if required,
669# then this hook can be used to apply tranformations to symbols that
670# are considered special in some way. This is currently used by the
671# MIPS backend to make sure compressed code symbols have the ISA bit
672# set. This in turn is needed for symbol values seen in GDB to match
673# the values used at the runtime by the program itself, for function
674# and label references.
ea480a30 675f;void;make_symbol_special;struct symbol *sym, struct objfile *objfile;sym, objfile;;default_make_symbol_special;;0
3e29f34a
MR
676# Adjust the address retrieved from a DWARF-2 record other than a line
677# entry in a backend-specific way. Normally this hook is supposed to
678# return the address passed unchanged, however if that is incorrect for
679# any reason, then this hook can be used to fix the address up in the
680# required manner. This is currently used by the MIPS backend to make
681# sure addresses in FDE, range records, etc. referring to compressed
682# code have the ISA bit set, matching line information and the symbol
683# table.
ea480a30 684f;CORE_ADDR;adjust_dwarf2_addr;CORE_ADDR pc;pc;;default_adjust_dwarf2_addr;;0
3e29f34a
MR
685# Adjust the address updated by a line entry in a backend-specific way.
686# Normally this hook is supposed to return the address passed unchanged,
687# however in the case of inconsistencies in these records, this hook can
688# be used to fix them up in the required manner. This is currently used
689# by the MIPS backend to make sure all line addresses in compressed code
690# are presented with the ISA bit set, which is not always the case. This
691# in turn ensures breakpoint addresses are correctly matched against the
692# stop PC.
ea480a30
SM
693f;CORE_ADDR;adjust_dwarf2_line;CORE_ADDR addr, int rel;addr, rel;;default_adjust_dwarf2_line;;0
694v;int;cannot_step_breakpoint;;;0;0;;0
7ea65f08
PA
695# See comment in target.h about continuable, steppable and
696# non-steppable watchpoints.
ea480a30
SM
697v;int;have_nonsteppable_watchpoint;;;0;0;;0
698F;int;address_class_type_flags;int byte_size, int dwarf2_addr_class;byte_size, dwarf2_addr_class
699M;const char *;address_class_type_flags_to_name;int type_flags;type_flags
b41c5a85
JW
700# Execute vendor-specific DWARF Call Frame Instruction. OP is the instruction.
701# FS are passed from the generic execute_cfa_program function.
ea480a30 702m;bool;execute_dwarf_cfa_vendor_op;gdb_byte op, struct dwarf2_frame_state *fs;op, fs;;default_execute_dwarf_cfa_vendor_op;;0
69f97648
SM
703
704# Return the appropriate type_flags for the supplied address class.
705# This function should return 1 if the address class was recognized and
706# type_flags was set, zero otherwise.
ea480a30 707M;int;address_class_name_to_type_flags;const char *name, int *type_flags_ptr;name, type_flags_ptr
b59ff9d5 708# Is a register in a group
ea480a30 709m;int;register_reggroup_p;int regnum, struct reggroup *reggroup;regnum, reggroup;;default_register_reggroup_p;;0
f6214256 710# Fetch the pointer to the ith function argument.
ea480a30 711F;CORE_ADDR;fetch_pointer_argument;struct frame_info *frame, int argi, struct type *type;frame, argi, type
6ce6d90f 712
5aa82d05
AA
713# Iterate over all supported register notes in a core file. For each
714# supported register note section, the iterator must call CB and pass
715# CB_DATA unchanged. If REGCACHE is not NULL, the iterator can limit
716# the supported register note sections based on the current register
717# values. Otherwise it should enumerate all supported register note
718# sections.
ea480a30 719M;void;iterate_over_regset_sections;iterate_over_regset_sections_cb *cb, void *cb_data, const struct regcache *regcache;cb, cb_data, regcache
17ea7499 720
6432734d 721# Create core file notes
ea480a30 722M;char *;make_corefile_notes;bfd *obfd, int *note_size;obfd, note_size
6432734d 723
35c2fab7 724# Find core file memory regions
ea480a30 725M;int;find_memory_regions;find_memory_region_ftype func, void *data;func, data
35c2fab7 726
de584861 727# Read offset OFFSET of TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES formatted shared libraries list from
c09f20e4
YQ
728# core file into buffer READBUF with length LEN. Return the number of bytes read
729# (zero indicates failure).
730# failed, otherwise, return the red length of READBUF.
ea480a30 731M;ULONGEST;core_xfer_shared_libraries;gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len;readbuf, offset, len
de584861 732
356a5233
JB
733# Read offset OFFSET of TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES_AIX formatted shared
734# libraries list from core file into buffer READBUF with length LEN.
c09f20e4 735# Return the number of bytes read (zero indicates failure).
ea480a30 736M;ULONGEST;core_xfer_shared_libraries_aix;gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len;readbuf, offset, len
356a5233 737
c0edd9ed 738# How the core target converts a PTID from a core file to a string.
a068643d 739M;std::string;core_pid_to_str;ptid_t ptid;ptid
28439f5e 740
4dfc5dbc 741# How the core target extracts the name of a thread from a core file.
ea480a30 742M;const char *;core_thread_name;struct thread_info *thr;thr
4dfc5dbc 743
382b69bb
JB
744# Read offset OFFSET of TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO signal information
745# from core file into buffer READBUF with length LEN. Return the number
746# of bytes read (zero indicates EOF, a negative value indicates failure).
747M;LONGEST;core_xfer_siginfo;gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len; readbuf, offset, len
748
a78c2d62 749# BFD target to use when generating a core file.
ea480a30 750V;const char *;gcore_bfd_target;;;0;0;;;pstring (gdbarch->gcore_bfd_target)
a78c2d62 751
0d5de010
DJ
752# If the elements of C++ vtables are in-place function descriptors rather
753# than normal function pointers (which may point to code or a descriptor),
754# set this to one.
ea480a30 755v;int;vtable_function_descriptors;;;0;0;;0
0d5de010
DJ
756
757# Set if the least significant bit of the delta is used instead of the least
758# significant bit of the pfn for pointers to virtual member functions.
ea480a30 759v;int;vbit_in_delta;;;0;0;;0
6d350bb5
UW
760
761# Advance PC to next instruction in order to skip a permanent breakpoint.
ea480a30 762f;void;skip_permanent_breakpoint;struct regcache *regcache;regcache;default_skip_permanent_breakpoint;default_skip_permanent_breakpoint;;0
1c772458 763
1668ae25 764# The maximum length of an instruction on this architecture in bytes.
ea480a30 765V;ULONGEST;max_insn_length;;;0;0
237fc4c9
PA
766
767# Copy the instruction at FROM to TO, and make any adjustments
768# necessary to single-step it at that address.
769#
770# REGS holds the state the thread's registers will have before
771# executing the copied instruction; the PC in REGS will refer to FROM,
772# not the copy at TO. The caller should update it to point at TO later.
773#
774# Return a pointer to data of the architecture's choice to be passed
19b187a9 775# to gdbarch_displaced_step_fixup.
237fc4c9
PA
776#
777# For a general explanation of displaced stepping and how GDB uses it,
778# see the comments in infrun.c.
779#
780# The TO area is only guaranteed to have space for
781# gdbarch_max_insn_length (arch) bytes, so this function must not
782# write more bytes than that to that area.
783#
784# If you do not provide this function, GDB assumes that the
785# architecture does not support displaced stepping.
786#
7f03bd92
PA
787# If the instruction cannot execute out of line, return NULL. The
788# core falls back to stepping past the instruction in-line instead in
789# that case.
fdb61c6c 790M;displaced_step_closure_up;displaced_step_copy_insn;CORE_ADDR from, CORE_ADDR to, struct regcache *regs;from, to, regs
237fc4c9 791
99e40580
UW
792# Return true if GDB should use hardware single-stepping to execute
793# the displaced instruction identified by CLOSURE. If false,
794# GDB will simply restart execution at the displaced instruction
795# location, and it is up to the target to ensure GDB will receive
796# control again (e.g. by placing a software breakpoint instruction
797# into the displaced instruction buffer).
798#
799# The default implementation returns false on all targets that
800# provide a gdbarch_software_single_step routine, and true otherwise.
ea480a30 801m;int;displaced_step_hw_singlestep;struct displaced_step_closure *closure;closure;;default_displaced_step_hw_singlestep;;0
99e40580 802
237fc4c9
PA
803# Fix up the state resulting from successfully single-stepping a
804# displaced instruction, to give the result we would have gotten from
805# stepping the instruction in its original location.
806#
807# REGS is the register state resulting from single-stepping the
808# displaced instruction.
809#
810# CLOSURE is the result from the matching call to
811# gdbarch_displaced_step_copy_insn.
812#
813# If you provide gdbarch_displaced_step_copy_insn.but not this
814# function, then GDB assumes that no fixup is needed after
815# single-stepping the instruction.
816#
817# For a general explanation of displaced stepping and how GDB uses it,
818# see the comments in infrun.c.
ea480a30 819M;void;displaced_step_fixup;struct displaced_step_closure *closure, CORE_ADDR from, CORE_ADDR to, struct regcache *regs;closure, from, to, regs;;NULL
237fc4c9 820
237fc4c9
PA
821# Return the address of an appropriate place to put displaced
822# instructions while we step over them. There need only be one such
823# place, since we're only stepping one thread over a breakpoint at a
824# time.
825#
826# For a general explanation of displaced stepping and how GDB uses it,
827# see the comments in infrun.c.
ea480a30 828m;CORE_ADDR;displaced_step_location;void;;;NULL;;(! gdbarch->displaced_step_location) != (! gdbarch->displaced_step_copy_insn)
237fc4c9 829
dde08ee1
PA
830# Relocate an instruction to execute at a different address. OLDLOC
831# is the address in the inferior memory where the instruction to
832# relocate is currently at. On input, TO points to the destination
833# where we want the instruction to be copied (and possibly adjusted)
834# to. On output, it points to one past the end of the resulting
835# instruction(s). The effect of executing the instruction at TO shall
836# be the same as if executing it at FROM. For example, call
837# instructions that implicitly push the return address on the stack
838# should be adjusted to return to the instruction after OLDLOC;
839# relative branches, and other PC-relative instructions need the
840# offset adjusted; etc.
ea480a30 841M;void;relocate_instruction;CORE_ADDR *to, CORE_ADDR from;to, from;;NULL
dde08ee1 842
1c772458 843# Refresh overlay mapped state for section OSECT.
ea480a30 844F;void;overlay_update;struct obj_section *osect;osect
4eb0ad19 845
ea480a30 846M;const struct target_desc *;core_read_description;struct target_ops *target, bfd *abfd;target, abfd
149ad273 847
203c3895 848# Set if the address in N_SO or N_FUN stabs may be zero.
ea480a30 849v;int;sofun_address_maybe_missing;;;0;0;;0
1cded358 850
0508c3ec
HZ
851# Parse the instruction at ADDR storing in the record execution log
852# the registers REGCACHE and memory ranges that will be affected when
853# the instruction executes, along with their current values.
854# Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise.
ea480a30 855M;int;process_record;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR addr;regcache, addr
0508c3ec 856
3846b520
HZ
857# Save process state after a signal.
858# Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise.
ea480a30 859M;int;process_record_signal;struct regcache *regcache, enum gdb_signal signal;regcache, signal
3846b520 860
22203bbf 861# Signal translation: translate inferior's signal (target's) number
86b49880
PA
862# into GDB's representation. The implementation of this method must
863# be host independent. IOW, don't rely on symbols of the NAT_FILE
864# header (the nm-*.h files), the host <signal.h> header, or similar
865# headers. This is mainly used when cross-debugging core files ---
866# "Live" targets hide the translation behind the target interface
1f8cf220 867# (target_wait, target_resume, etc.).
ea480a30 868M;enum gdb_signal;gdb_signal_from_target;int signo;signo
60c5725c 869
eb14d406
SDJ
870# Signal translation: translate the GDB's internal signal number into
871# the inferior's signal (target's) representation. The implementation
872# of this method must be host independent. IOW, don't rely on symbols
873# of the NAT_FILE header (the nm-*.h files), the host <signal.h>
874# header, or similar headers.
875# Return the target signal number if found, or -1 if the GDB internal
876# signal number is invalid.
ea480a30 877M;int;gdb_signal_to_target;enum gdb_signal signal;signal
eb14d406 878
4aa995e1
PA
879# Extra signal info inspection.
880#
881# Return a type suitable to inspect extra signal information.
ea480a30 882M;struct type *;get_siginfo_type;void;
4aa995e1 883
60c5725c 884# Record architecture-specific information from the symbol table.
ea480a30 885M;void;record_special_symbol;struct objfile *objfile, asymbol *sym;objfile, sym
50c71eaf 886
a96d9b2e
SDJ
887# Function for the 'catch syscall' feature.
888
889# Get architecture-specific system calls information from registers.
00431a78 890M;LONGEST;get_syscall_number;thread_info *thread;thread
a96d9b2e 891
458c8db8 892# The filename of the XML syscall for this architecture.
ea480a30 893v;const char *;xml_syscall_file;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->xml_syscall_file)
458c8db8
SDJ
894
895# Information about system calls from this architecture
ea480a30 896v;struct syscalls_info *;syscalls_info;;;0;0;;0;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->syscalls_info)
458c8db8 897
55aa24fb
SDJ
898# SystemTap related fields and functions.
899
05c0465e
SDJ
900# A NULL-terminated array of prefixes used to mark an integer constant
901# on the architecture's assembly.
55aa24fb
SDJ
902# For example, on x86 integer constants are written as:
903#
904# \$10 ;; integer constant 10
905#
906# in this case, this prefix would be the character \`\$\'.
ea480a30 907v;const char *const *;stap_integer_prefixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_integer_prefixes)
55aa24fb 908
05c0465e
SDJ
909# A NULL-terminated array of suffixes used to mark an integer constant
910# on the architecture's assembly.
ea480a30 911v;const char *const *;stap_integer_suffixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_integer_suffixes)
55aa24fb 912
05c0465e
SDJ
913# A NULL-terminated array of prefixes used to mark a register name on
914# the architecture's assembly.
55aa24fb
SDJ
915# For example, on x86 the register name is written as:
916#
917# \%eax ;; register eax
918#
919# in this case, this prefix would be the character \`\%\'.
ea480a30 920v;const char *const *;stap_register_prefixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_prefixes)
55aa24fb 921
05c0465e
SDJ
922# A NULL-terminated array of suffixes used to mark a register name on
923# the architecture's assembly.
ea480a30 924v;const char *const *;stap_register_suffixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_suffixes)
55aa24fb 925
05c0465e
SDJ
926# A NULL-terminated array of prefixes used to mark a register
927# indirection on the architecture's assembly.
55aa24fb
SDJ
928# For example, on x86 the register indirection is written as:
929#
930# \(\%eax\) ;; indirecting eax
931#
932# in this case, this prefix would be the charater \`\(\'.
933#
934# Please note that we use the indirection prefix also for register
935# displacement, e.g., \`4\(\%eax\)\' on x86.
ea480a30 936v;const char *const *;stap_register_indirection_prefixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_indirection_prefixes)
55aa24fb 937
05c0465e
SDJ
938# A NULL-terminated array of suffixes used to mark a register
939# indirection on the architecture's assembly.
55aa24fb
SDJ
940# For example, on x86 the register indirection is written as:
941#
942# \(\%eax\) ;; indirecting eax
943#
944# in this case, this prefix would be the charater \`\)\'.
945#
946# Please note that we use the indirection suffix also for register
947# displacement, e.g., \`4\(\%eax\)\' on x86.
ea480a30 948v;const char *const *;stap_register_indirection_suffixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_indirection_suffixes)
55aa24fb 949
05c0465e 950# Prefix(es) used to name a register using GDB's nomenclature.
55aa24fb
SDJ
951#
952# For example, on PPC a register is represented by a number in the assembly
953# language (e.g., \`10\' is the 10th general-purpose register). However,
954# inside GDB this same register has an \`r\' appended to its name, so the 10th
955# register would be represented as \`r10\' internally.
ea480a30 956v;const char *;stap_gdb_register_prefix;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->stap_gdb_register_prefix)
55aa24fb
SDJ
957
958# Suffix used to name a register using GDB's nomenclature.
ea480a30 959v;const char *;stap_gdb_register_suffix;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->stap_gdb_register_suffix)
55aa24fb
SDJ
960
961# Check if S is a single operand.
962#
963# Single operands can be:
964# \- Literal integers, e.g. \`\$10\' on x86
965# \- Register access, e.g. \`\%eax\' on x86
966# \- Register indirection, e.g. \`\(\%eax\)\' on x86
967# \- Register displacement, e.g. \`4\(\%eax\)\' on x86
968#
969# This function should check for these patterns on the string
970# and return 1 if some were found, or zero otherwise. Please try to match
971# as much info as you can from the string, i.e., if you have to match
972# something like \`\(\%\', do not match just the \`\(\'.
ea480a30 973M;int;stap_is_single_operand;const char *s;s
55aa24fb
SDJ
974
975# Function used to handle a "special case" in the parser.
976#
977# A "special case" is considered to be an unknown token, i.e., a token
978# that the parser does not know how to parse. A good example of special
979# case would be ARM's register displacement syntax:
980#
981# [R0, #4] ;; displacing R0 by 4
982#
983# Since the parser assumes that a register displacement is of the form:
984#
985# <number> <indirection_prefix> <register_name> <indirection_suffix>
986#
987# it means that it will not be able to recognize and parse this odd syntax.
988# Therefore, we should add a special case function that will handle this token.
989#
990# This function should generate the proper expression form of the expression
991# using GDB\'s internal expression mechanism (e.g., \`write_exp_elt_opcode\'
992# and so on). It should also return 1 if the parsing was successful, or zero
993# if the token was not recognized as a special token (in this case, returning
994# zero means that the special parser is deferring the parsing to the generic
995# parser), and should advance the buffer pointer (p->arg).
ea480a30 996M;int;stap_parse_special_token;struct stap_parse_info *p;p
55aa24fb 997
7d7571f0
SDJ
998# Perform arch-dependent adjustments to a register name.
999#
1000# In very specific situations, it may be necessary for the register
1001# name present in a SystemTap probe's argument to be handled in a
1002# special way. For example, on i386, GCC may over-optimize the
1003# register allocation and use smaller registers than necessary. In
1004# such cases, the client that is reading and evaluating the SystemTap
1005# probe (ourselves) will need to actually fetch values from the wider
1006# version of the register in question.
1007#
1008# To illustrate the example, consider the following probe argument
1009# (i386):
1010#
1011# 4@%ax
1012#
1013# This argument says that its value can be found at the %ax register,
1014# which is a 16-bit register. However, the argument's prefix says
1015# that its type is "uint32_t", which is 32-bit in size. Therefore, in
1016# this case, GDB should actually fetch the probe's value from register
1017# %eax, not %ax. In this scenario, this function would actually
1018# replace the register name from %ax to %eax.
1019#
1020# The rationale for this can be found at PR breakpoints/24541.
6b78c3f8 1021M;std::string;stap_adjust_register;struct stap_parse_info *p, const std::string \&regname, int regnum;p, regname, regnum
7d7571f0 1022
8b367e17
JM
1023# DTrace related functions.
1024
1025# The expression to compute the NARTGth+1 argument to a DTrace USDT probe.
1026# NARG must be >= 0.
37eedb39 1027M;void;dtrace_parse_probe_argument;struct expr_builder *builder, int narg;builder, narg
8b367e17
JM
1028
1029# True if the given ADDR does not contain the instruction sequence
1030# corresponding to a disabled DTrace is-enabled probe.
ea480a30 1031M;int;dtrace_probe_is_enabled;CORE_ADDR addr;addr
8b367e17
JM
1032
1033# Enable a DTrace is-enabled probe at ADDR.
ea480a30 1034M;void;dtrace_enable_probe;CORE_ADDR addr;addr
8b367e17
JM
1035
1036# Disable a DTrace is-enabled probe at ADDR.
ea480a30 1037M;void;dtrace_disable_probe;CORE_ADDR addr;addr
55aa24fb 1038
50c71eaf
PA
1039# True if the list of shared libraries is one and only for all
1040# processes, as opposed to a list of shared libraries per inferior.
2567c7d9
PA
1041# This usually means that all processes, although may or may not share
1042# an address space, will see the same set of symbols at the same
1043# addresses.
ea480a30 1044v;int;has_global_solist;;;0;0;;0
2567c7d9
PA
1045
1046# On some targets, even though each inferior has its own private
1047# address space, the debug interface takes care of making breakpoints
1048# visible to all address spaces automatically. For such cases,
1049# this property should be set to true.
ea480a30 1050v;int;has_global_breakpoints;;;0;0;;0
6c95b8df
PA
1051
1052# True if inferiors share an address space (e.g., uClinux).
ea480a30 1053m;int;has_shared_address_space;void;;;default_has_shared_address_space;;0
7a697b8d
SS
1054
1055# True if a fast tracepoint can be set at an address.
281d762b 1056m;int;fast_tracepoint_valid_at;CORE_ADDR addr, std::string *msg;addr, msg;;default_fast_tracepoint_valid_at;;0
75cebea9 1057
5f034a78
MK
1058# Guess register state based on tracepoint location. Used for tracepoints
1059# where no registers have been collected, but there's only one location,
1060# allowing us to guess the PC value, and perhaps some other registers.
1061# On entry, regcache has all registers marked as unavailable.
ea480a30 1062m;void;guess_tracepoint_registers;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR addr;regcache, addr;;default_guess_tracepoint_registers;;0
5f034a78 1063
f870a310 1064# Return the "auto" target charset.
ea480a30 1065f;const char *;auto_charset;void;;default_auto_charset;default_auto_charset;;0
f870a310 1066# Return the "auto" target wide charset.
ea480a30 1067f;const char *;auto_wide_charset;void;;default_auto_wide_charset;default_auto_wide_charset;;0
08105857
PA
1068
1069# If non-empty, this is a file extension that will be opened in place
1070# of the file extension reported by the shared library list.
1071#
1072# This is most useful for toolchains that use a post-linker tool,
1073# where the names of the files run on the target differ in extension
1074# compared to the names of the files GDB should load for debug info.
ea480a30 1075v;const char *;solib_symbols_extension;;;;;;;pstring (gdbarch->solib_symbols_extension)
ab38a727
PA
1076
1077# If true, the target OS has DOS-based file system semantics. That
1078# is, absolute paths include a drive name, and the backslash is
1079# considered a directory separator.
ea480a30 1080v;int;has_dos_based_file_system;;;0;0;;0
6710bf39
SS
1081
1082# Generate bytecodes to collect the return address in a frame.
1083# Since the bytecodes run on the target, possibly with GDB not even
1084# connected, the full unwinding machinery is not available, and
1085# typically this function will issue bytecodes for one or more likely
1086# places that the return address may be found.
ea480a30 1087m;void;gen_return_address;struct agent_expr *ax, struct axs_value *value, CORE_ADDR scope;ax, value, scope;;default_gen_return_address;;0
6710bf39 1088
3030c96e 1089# Implement the "info proc" command.
ea480a30 1090M;void;info_proc;const char *args, enum info_proc_what what;args, what
3030c96e 1091
451b7c33
TT
1092# Implement the "info proc" command for core files. Noe that there
1093# are two "info_proc"-like methods on gdbarch -- one for core files,
1094# one for live targets.
ea480a30 1095M;void;core_info_proc;const char *args, enum info_proc_what what;args, what
451b7c33 1096
19630284
JB
1097# Iterate over all objfiles in the order that makes the most sense
1098# for the architecture to make global symbol searches.
1099#
1100# CB is a callback function where OBJFILE is the objfile to be searched,
1101# and CB_DATA a pointer to user-defined data (the same data that is passed
1102# when calling this gdbarch method). The iteration stops if this function
1103# returns nonzero.
1104#
1105# CB_DATA is a pointer to some user-defined data to be passed to
1106# the callback.
1107#
1108# If not NULL, CURRENT_OBJFILE corresponds to the objfile being
1109# inspected when the symbol search was requested.
ea480a30 1110m;void;iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order;iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order_cb_ftype *cb, void *cb_data, struct objfile *current_objfile;cb, cb_data, current_objfile;0;default_iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order;;0
19630284 1111
7e35103a 1112# Ravenscar arch-dependent ops.
ea480a30 1113v;struct ravenscar_arch_ops *;ravenscar_ops;;;NULL;NULL;;0;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->ravenscar_ops)
c2170eef
MM
1114
1115# Return non-zero if the instruction at ADDR is a call; zero otherwise.
ea480a30 1116m;int;insn_is_call;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;default_insn_is_call;;0
c2170eef
MM
1117
1118# Return non-zero if the instruction at ADDR is a return; zero otherwise.
ea480a30 1119m;int;insn_is_ret;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;default_insn_is_ret;;0
c2170eef
MM
1120
1121# Return non-zero if the instruction at ADDR is a jump; zero otherwise.
ea480a30 1122m;int;insn_is_jump;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;default_insn_is_jump;;0
27a48a92 1123
5133a315
LM
1124# Return true if there's a program/permanent breakpoint planted in
1125# memory at ADDRESS, return false otherwise.
1126m;bool;program_breakpoint_here_p;CORE_ADDR address;address;;default_program_breakpoint_here_p;;0
1127
27a48a92
MK
1128# Read one auxv entry from *READPTR, not reading locations >= ENDPTR.
1129# Return 0 if *READPTR is already at the end of the buffer.
1130# Return -1 if there is insufficient buffer for a whole entry.
1131# Return 1 if an entry was read into *TYPEP and *VALP.
ea480a30 1132M;int;auxv_parse;gdb_byte **readptr, gdb_byte *endptr, CORE_ADDR *typep, CORE_ADDR *valp;readptr, endptr, typep, valp
3437254d 1133
2faa3447
JB
1134# Print the description of a single auxv entry described by TYPE and VAL
1135# to FILE.
ea480a30 1136m;void;print_auxv_entry;struct ui_file *file, CORE_ADDR type, CORE_ADDR val;file, type, val;;default_print_auxv_entry;;0
2faa3447 1137
3437254d
PA
1138# Find the address range of the current inferior's vsyscall/vDSO, and
1139# write it to *RANGE. If the vsyscall's length can't be determined, a
1140# range with zero length is returned. Returns true if the vsyscall is
1141# found, false otherwise.
ea480a30 1142m;int;vsyscall_range;struct mem_range *range;range;;default_vsyscall_range;;0
f208eee0
JK
1143
1144# Allocate SIZE bytes of PROT protected page aligned memory in inferior.
1145# PROT has GDB_MMAP_PROT_* bitmask format.
1146# Throw an error if it is not possible. Returned address is always valid.
ea480a30 1147f;CORE_ADDR;infcall_mmap;CORE_ADDR size, unsigned prot;size, prot;;default_infcall_mmap;;0
f208eee0 1148
7f361056
JK
1149# Deallocate SIZE bytes of memory at ADDR in inferior from gdbarch_infcall_mmap.
1150# Print a warning if it is not possible.
ea480a30 1151f;void;infcall_munmap;CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR size;addr, size;;default_infcall_munmap;;0
7f361056 1152
f208eee0
JK
1153# Return string (caller has to use xfree for it) with options for GCC
1154# to produce code for this target, typically "-m64", "-m32" or "-m31".
1155# These options are put before CU's DW_AT_producer compilation options so that
953cff56
TT
1156# they can override it.
1157m;std::string;gcc_target_options;void;;;default_gcc_target_options;;0
ac04f72b
TT
1158
1159# Return a regular expression that matches names used by this
1160# architecture in GNU configury triplets. The result is statically
1161# allocated and must not be freed. The default implementation simply
1162# returns the BFD architecture name, which is correct in nearly every
1163# case.
ea480a30 1164m;const char *;gnu_triplet_regexp;void;;;default_gnu_triplet_regexp;;0
3374165f
SM
1165
1166# Return the size in 8-bit bytes of an addressable memory unit on this
1167# architecture. This corresponds to the number of 8-bit bytes associated to
1168# each address in memory.
ea480a30 1169m;int;addressable_memory_unit_size;void;;;default_addressable_memory_unit_size;;0
3374165f 1170
65b48a81 1171# Functions for allowing a target to modify its disassembler options.
471b9d15 1172v;const char *;disassembler_options_implicit;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->disassembler_options_implicit)
ea480a30 1173v;char **;disassembler_options;;;0;0;;0;pstring_ptr (gdbarch->disassembler_options)
471b9d15 1174v;const disasm_options_and_args_t *;valid_disassembler_options;;;0;0;;0;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->valid_disassembler_options)
65b48a81 1175
5561fc30
AB
1176# Type alignment override method. Return the architecture specific
1177# alignment required for TYPE. If there is no special handling
1178# required for TYPE then return the value 0, GDB will then apply the
1179# default rules as laid out in gdbtypes.c:type_align.
2b4424c3
TT
1180m;ULONGEST;type_align;struct type *type;type;;default_type_align;;0
1181
aa7ca1bb
AH
1182# Return a string containing any flags for the given PC in the given FRAME.
1183f;std::string;get_pc_address_flags;frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR pc;frame, pc;;default_get_pc_address_flags;;0
1184
104c1213 1185EOF
104c1213
JM
1186}
1187
0b8f9e4d
AC
1188#
1189# The .log file
1190#
41a77cba 1191exec > gdbarch.log
34620563 1192function_list | while do_read
0b8f9e4d
AC
1193do
1194 cat <<EOF
1207375d 1195${class} ${returntype:-} ${function} (${formal:-})
104c1213 1196EOF
3d9a5942
AC
1197 for r in ${read}
1198 do
a6fc5ffc 1199 eval echo "\" ${r}=\${${r}}\""
3d9a5942 1200 done
f0d4cc9e 1201 if class_is_predicate_p && fallback_default_p
0b8f9e4d 1202 then
66d659b1 1203 echo "Error: predicate function ${function} can not have a non- multi-arch default" 1>&2
0b8f9e4d
AC
1204 kill $$
1205 exit 1
1206 fi
759cea5e 1207 if [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ] && [ -n "${postdefault}" ]
f0d4cc9e
AC
1208 then
1209 echo "Error: postdefault is useless when invalid_p=0" 1>&2
1210 kill $$
1211 exit 1
1212 fi
a72293e2
AC
1213 if class_is_multiarch_p
1214 then
1215 if class_is_predicate_p ; then :
1216 elif test "x${predefault}" = "x"
1217 then
2f9b146e 1218 echo "Error: pure multi-arch function ${function} must have a predefault" 1>&2
a72293e2
AC
1219 kill $$
1220 exit 1
1221 fi
1222 fi
3d9a5942 1223 echo ""
0b8f9e4d
AC
1224done
1225
1226exec 1>&2
0b8f9e4d 1227
104c1213
JM
1228
1229copyright ()
1230{
1231cat <<EOF
c4bfde41
JK
1232/* *INDENT-OFF* */ /* THIS FILE IS GENERATED -*- buffer-read-only: t -*- */
1233/* vi:set ro: */
59233f88 1234
104c1213 1235/* Dynamic architecture support for GDB, the GNU debugger.
79d45cd4 1236
e5d78223 1237 Copyright (C) 1998-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
104c1213
JM
1238
1239 This file is part of GDB.
1240
1241 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
1242 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
50efebf8 1243 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
104c1213 1244 (at your option) any later version.
618f726f 1245
104c1213
JM
1246 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
1247 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
1248 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
1249 GNU General Public License for more details.
618f726f 1250
104c1213 1251 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
50efebf8 1252 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
104c1213 1253
41a77cba 1254/* This file was created with the aid of \`\`gdbarch.sh''. */
104c1213
JM
1255
1256EOF
1257}
1258
1259#
1260# The .h file
1261#
1262
1263exec > new-gdbarch.h
1264copyright
1265cat <<EOF
1266#ifndef GDBARCH_H
1267#define GDBARCH_H
1268
a0ff9e1a 1269#include <vector>
eb7a547a 1270#include "frame.h"
65b48a81 1271#include "dis-asm.h"
284a0e3c 1272#include "gdb_obstack.h"
fdb61c6c 1273#include "infrun.h"
fe4b2ee6 1274#include "osabi.h"
eb7a547a 1275
da3331ec
AC
1276struct floatformat;
1277struct ui_file;
104c1213 1278struct value;
b6af0555 1279struct objfile;
1c772458 1280struct obj_section;
a2cf933a 1281struct minimal_symbol;
049ee0e4 1282struct regcache;
b59ff9d5 1283struct reggroup;
6ce6d90f 1284struct regset;
a89aa300 1285struct disassemble_info;
e2d0e7eb 1286struct target_ops;
030f20e1 1287struct obstack;
8181d85f 1288struct bp_target_info;
424163ea 1289struct target_desc;
3e29f34a 1290struct symbol;
a96d9b2e 1291struct syscall;
175ff332 1292struct agent_expr;
6710bf39 1293struct axs_value;
55aa24fb 1294struct stap_parse_info;
37eedb39 1295struct expr_builder;
7e35103a 1296struct ravenscar_arch_ops;
3437254d 1297struct mem_range;
458c8db8 1298struct syscalls_info;
4dfc5dbc 1299struct thread_info;
012b3a21 1300struct ui_out;
104c1213 1301
8a526fa6
PA
1302#include "regcache.h"
1303
6ecd4729
PA
1304/* The architecture associated with the inferior through the
1305 connection to the target.
1306
1307 The architecture vector provides some information that is really a
1308 property of the inferior, accessed through a particular target:
1309 ptrace operations; the layout of certain RSP packets; the solib_ops
1310 vector; etc. To differentiate architecture accesses to
1311 per-inferior/target properties from
1312 per-thread/per-frame/per-objfile properties, accesses to
1313 per-inferior/target properties should be made through this
1314 gdbarch. */
1315
1316/* This is a convenience wrapper for 'current_inferior ()->gdbarch'. */
f5656ead 1317extern struct gdbarch *target_gdbarch (void);
6ecd4729 1318
19630284
JB
1319/* Callback type for the 'iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order'
1320 gdbarch method. */
1321
1322typedef int (iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order_cb_ftype)
1323 (struct objfile *objfile, void *cb_data);
5aa82d05 1324
1528345d
AA
1325/* Callback type for regset section iterators. The callback usually
1326 invokes the REGSET's supply or collect method, to which it must
a616bb94
AH
1327 pass a buffer - for collects this buffer will need to be created using
1328 COLLECT_SIZE, for supply the existing buffer being read from should
1329 be at least SUPPLY_SIZE. SECT_NAME is a BFD section name, and HUMAN_NAME
1330 is used for diagnostic messages. CB_DATA should have been passed
1331 unchanged through the iterator. */
1528345d 1332
5aa82d05 1333typedef void (iterate_over_regset_sections_cb)
a616bb94
AH
1334 (const char *sect_name, int supply_size, int collect_size,
1335 const struct regset *regset, const char *human_name, void *cb_data);
c5ac5cbb
AH
1336
1337/* For a function call, does the function return a value using a
1338 normal value return or a structure return - passing a hidden
1339 argument pointing to storage. For the latter, there are two
1340 cases: language-mandated structure return and target ABI
1341 structure return. */
1342
1343enum function_call_return_method
1344{
1345 /* Standard value return. */
1346 return_method_normal = 0,
1347
1348 /* Language ABI structure return. This is handled
1349 by passing the return location as the first parameter to
1350 the function, even preceding "this". */
1351 return_method_hidden_param,
1352
1353 /* Target ABI struct return. This is target-specific; for instance,
1354 on ia64 the first argument is passed in out0 but the hidden
1355 structure return pointer would normally be passed in r8. */
1356 return_method_struct,
1357};
1358
104c1213
JM
1359EOF
1360
1361# function typedef's
3d9a5942
AC
1362printf "\n"
1363printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1364printf "/* The following are pre-initialized by GDBARCH. */\n"
34620563 1365function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1366do
2ada493a
AC
1367 if class_is_info_p
1368 then
3d9a5942 1369 printf "\n"
8d113d13
SM
1370 printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function"
1371 printf "/* set_gdbarch_%s() - not applicable - pre-initialized. */\n" "$function"
2ada493a 1372 fi
104c1213
JM
1373done
1374
1375# function typedef's
3d9a5942
AC
1376printf "\n"
1377printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1378printf "/* The following are initialized by the target dependent code. */\n"
34620563 1379function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1380do
72e74a21 1381 if [ -n "${comment}" ]
34620563
AC
1382 then
1383 echo "${comment}" | sed \
1384 -e '2 s,#,/*,' \
1385 -e '3,$ s,#, ,' \
1386 -e '$ s,$, */,'
1387 fi
412d5987
AC
1388
1389 if class_is_predicate_p
2ada493a 1390 then
412d5987 1391 printf "\n"
8d113d13 1392 printf "extern int gdbarch_%s_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$function"
4a5c6a1d 1393 fi
2ada493a
AC
1394 if class_is_variable_p
1395 then
3d9a5942 1396 printf "\n"
8d113d13
SM
1397 printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function"
1398 printf "extern void set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s %s);\n" "$function" "$returntype" "$function"
2ada493a
AC
1399 fi
1400 if class_is_function_p
1401 then
3d9a5942 1402 printf "\n"
72e74a21 1403 if [ "x${formal}" = "xvoid" ] && class_is_multiarch_p
4a5c6a1d 1404 then
8d113d13 1405 printf "typedef %s (gdbarch_%s_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function"
4a5c6a1d
AC
1406 elif class_is_multiarch_p
1407 then
8d113d13 1408 printf "typedef %s (gdbarch_%s_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s);\n" "$returntype" "$function" "$formal"
4a5c6a1d 1409 else
8d113d13 1410 printf "typedef %s (gdbarch_%s_ftype) (%s);\n" "$returntype" "$function" "$formal"
4a5c6a1d 1411 fi
72e74a21 1412 if [ "x${formal}" = "xvoid" ]
104c1213 1413 then
8d113d13 1414 printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function"
104c1213 1415 else
8d113d13 1416 printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s);\n" "$returntype" "$function" "$formal"
104c1213 1417 fi
8d113d13 1418 printf "extern void set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, gdbarch_%s_ftype *%s);\n" "$function" "$function" "$function"
2ada493a 1419 fi
104c1213
JM
1420done
1421
1422# close it off
1423cat <<EOF
1424
1425extern struct gdbarch_tdep *gdbarch_tdep (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
1426
1427
1428/* Mechanism for co-ordinating the selection of a specific
1429 architecture.
1430
1431 GDB targets (*-tdep.c) can register an interest in a specific
1432 architecture. Other GDB components can register a need to maintain
1433 per-architecture data.
1434
1435 The mechanisms below ensures that there is only a loose connection
1436 between the set-architecture command and the various GDB
0fa6923a 1437 components. Each component can independently register their need
104c1213
JM
1438 to maintain architecture specific data with gdbarch.
1439
1440 Pragmatics:
1441
1442 Previously, a single TARGET_ARCHITECTURE_HOOK was provided. It
1443 didn't scale.
1444
1445 The more traditional mega-struct containing architecture specific
1446 data for all the various GDB components was also considered. Since
0fa6923a 1447 GDB is built from a variable number of (fairly independent)
104c1213 1448 components it was determined that the global aproach was not
0963b4bd 1449 applicable. */
104c1213
JM
1450
1451
1452/* Register a new architectural family with GDB.
1453
1454 Register support for the specified ARCHITECTURE with GDB. When
1455 gdbarch determines that the specified architecture has been
1456 selected, the corresponding INIT function is called.
1457
1458 --
1459
1460 The INIT function takes two parameters: INFO which contains the
1461 information available to gdbarch about the (possibly new)
1462 architecture; ARCHES which is a list of the previously created
1463 \`\`struct gdbarch'' for this architecture.
1464
0f79675b 1465 The INFO parameter is, as far as possible, be pre-initialized with
7a107747 1466 information obtained from INFO.ABFD or the global defaults.
0f79675b
AC
1467
1468 The ARCHES parameter is a linked list (sorted most recently used)
1469 of all the previously created architures for this architecture
1470 family. The (possibly NULL) ARCHES->gdbarch can used to access
1471 values from the previously selected architecture for this
59837fe0 1472 architecture family.
104c1213
JM
1473
1474 The INIT function shall return any of: NULL - indicating that it
ec3d358c 1475 doesn't recognize the selected architecture; an existing \`\`struct
104c1213
JM
1476 gdbarch'' from the ARCHES list - indicating that the new
1477 architecture is just a synonym for an earlier architecture (see
1478 gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info()); a newly created \`\`struct gdbarch''
4b9b3959
AC
1479 - that describes the selected architecture (see gdbarch_alloc()).
1480
1481 The DUMP_TDEP function shall print out all target specific values.
1482 Care should be taken to ensure that the function works in both the
0963b4bd 1483 multi-arch and non- multi-arch cases. */
104c1213
JM
1484
1485struct gdbarch_list
1486{
1487 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
1488 struct gdbarch_list *next;
1489};
1490
1491struct gdbarch_info
1492{
0963b4bd 1493 /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */
104c1213
JM
1494 const struct bfd_arch_info *bfd_arch_info;
1495
428721aa 1496 /* Use default: BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN (NB: is not ZERO). */
94123b4f 1497 enum bfd_endian byte_order;
104c1213 1498
94123b4f 1499 enum bfd_endian byte_order_for_code;
9d4fde75 1500
0963b4bd 1501 /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */
104c1213
JM
1502 bfd *abfd;
1503
0963b4bd 1504 /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */
0dba2a6c
MR
1505 union
1506 {
1507 /* Architecture-specific information. The generic form for targets
1508 that have extra requirements. */
1509 struct gdbarch_tdep_info *tdep_info;
1510
1511 /* Architecture-specific target description data. Numerous targets
1512 need only this, so give them an easy way to hold it. */
1513 struct tdesc_arch_data *tdesc_data;
1514
1515 /* SPU file system ID. This is a single integer, so using the
1516 generic form would only complicate code. Other targets may
1517 reuse this member if suitable. */
1518 int *id;
1519 };
4be87837
DJ
1520
1521 /* Use default: GDB_OSABI_UNINITIALIZED (-1). */
1522 enum gdb_osabi osabi;
424163ea
DJ
1523
1524 /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */
1525 const struct target_desc *target_desc;
104c1213
JM
1526};
1527
1528typedef struct gdbarch *(gdbarch_init_ftype) (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches);
4b9b3959 1529typedef void (gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct ui_file *file);
104c1213 1530
4b9b3959 1531/* DEPRECATED - use gdbarch_register() */
104c1213
JM
1532extern void register_gdbarch_init (enum bfd_architecture architecture, gdbarch_init_ftype *);
1533
4b9b3959
AC
1534extern void gdbarch_register (enum bfd_architecture architecture,
1535 gdbarch_init_ftype *,
1536 gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *);
1537
104c1213 1538
b4a20239
AC
1539/* Return a freshly allocated, NULL terminated, array of the valid
1540 architecture names. Since architectures are registered during the
1541 _initialize phase this function only returns useful information
0963b4bd 1542 once initialization has been completed. */
b4a20239
AC
1543
1544extern const char **gdbarch_printable_names (void);
1545
1546
104c1213 1547/* Helper function. Search the list of ARCHES for a GDBARCH that
0963b4bd 1548 matches the information provided by INFO. */
104c1213 1549
424163ea 1550extern struct gdbarch_list *gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (struct gdbarch_list *arches, const struct gdbarch_info *info);
104c1213
JM
1551
1552
1553/* Helper function. Create a preliminary \`\`struct gdbarch''. Perform
424163ea 1554 basic initialization using values obtained from the INFO and TDEP
104c1213 1555 parameters. set_gdbarch_*() functions are called to complete the
0963b4bd 1556 initialization of the object. */
104c1213
JM
1557
1558extern struct gdbarch *gdbarch_alloc (const struct gdbarch_info *info, struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep);
1559
1560
4b9b3959
AC
1561/* Helper function. Free a partially-constructed \`\`struct gdbarch''.
1562 It is assumed that the caller freeds the \`\`struct
0963b4bd 1563 gdbarch_tdep''. */
4b9b3959 1564
058f20d5
JB
1565extern void gdbarch_free (struct gdbarch *);
1566
284a0e3c
SM
1567/* Get the obstack owned by ARCH. */
1568
1569extern obstack *gdbarch_obstack (gdbarch *arch);
058f20d5 1570
aebd7893
AC
1571/* Helper function. Allocate memory from the \`\`struct gdbarch''
1572 obstack. The memory is freed when the corresponding architecture
1573 is also freed. */
1574
284a0e3c
SM
1575#define GDBARCH_OBSTACK_CALLOC(GDBARCH, NR, TYPE) \
1576 obstack_calloc<TYPE> (gdbarch_obstack ((GDBARCH)), (NR))
1577
1578#define GDBARCH_OBSTACK_ZALLOC(GDBARCH, TYPE) \
1579 obstack_zalloc<TYPE> (gdbarch_obstack ((GDBARCH)))
aebd7893 1580
6c214e7c
PP
1581/* Duplicate STRING, returning an equivalent string that's allocated on the
1582 obstack associated with GDBARCH. The string is freed when the corresponding
1583 architecture is also freed. */
1584
1585extern char *gdbarch_obstack_strdup (struct gdbarch *arch, const char *string);
aebd7893 1586
0963b4bd 1587/* Helper function. Force an update of the current architecture.
104c1213 1588
b732d07d
AC
1589 The actual architecture selected is determined by INFO, \`\`(gdb) set
1590 architecture'' et.al., the existing architecture and BFD's default
1591 architecture. INFO should be initialized to zero and then selected
1592 fields should be updated.
104c1213 1593
0963b4bd 1594 Returns non-zero if the update succeeds. */
16f33e29
AC
1595
1596extern int gdbarch_update_p (struct gdbarch_info info);
104c1213
JM
1597
1598
ebdba546
AC
1599/* Helper function. Find an architecture matching info.
1600
1601 INFO should be initialized using gdbarch_info_init, relevant fields
1602 set, and then finished using gdbarch_info_fill.
1603
1604 Returns the corresponding architecture, or NULL if no matching
59837fe0 1605 architecture was found. */
ebdba546
AC
1606
1607extern struct gdbarch *gdbarch_find_by_info (struct gdbarch_info info);
1608
1609
aff68abb 1610/* Helper function. Set the target gdbarch to "gdbarch". */
ebdba546 1611
aff68abb 1612extern void set_target_gdbarch (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
ebdba546 1613
104c1213
JM
1614
1615/* Register per-architecture data-pointer.
1616
1617 Reserve space for a per-architecture data-pointer. An identifier
1618 for the reserved data-pointer is returned. That identifer should
95160752 1619 be saved in a local static variable.
104c1213 1620
fcc1c85c
AC
1621 Memory for the per-architecture data shall be allocated using
1622 gdbarch_obstack_zalloc. That memory will be deleted when the
1623 corresponding architecture object is deleted.
104c1213 1624
95160752
AC
1625 When a previously created architecture is re-selected, the
1626 per-architecture data-pointer for that previous architecture is
76860b5f 1627 restored. INIT() is not re-called.
104c1213
JM
1628
1629 Multiple registrarants for any architecture are allowed (and
1630 strongly encouraged). */
1631
95160752 1632struct gdbarch_data;
104c1213 1633
030f20e1
AC
1634typedef void *(gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype) (struct obstack *obstack);
1635extern struct gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data_register_pre_init (gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype *init);
1636typedef void *(gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
1637extern struct gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data_register_post_init (gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype *init);
104c1213 1638
451fbdda 1639extern void *gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct gdbarch_data *);
104c1213
JM
1640
1641
0fa6923a 1642/* Set the dynamic target-system-dependent parameters (architecture,
0963b4bd 1643 byte-order, ...) using information found in the BFD. */
104c1213
JM
1644
1645extern void set_gdbarch_from_file (bfd *);
1646
1647
e514a9d6
JM
1648/* Initialize the current architecture to the "first" one we find on
1649 our list. */
1650
1651extern void initialize_current_architecture (void);
1652
104c1213 1653/* gdbarch trace variable */
ccce17b0 1654extern unsigned int gdbarch_debug;
104c1213 1655
4b9b3959 1656extern void gdbarch_dump (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct ui_file *file);
104c1213 1657
f6efe3f8
SM
1658/* Return the number of cooked registers (raw + pseudo) for ARCH. */
1659
1660static inline int
1661gdbarch_num_cooked_regs (gdbarch *arch)
1662{
1663 return gdbarch_num_regs (arch) + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (arch);
1664}
1665
104c1213
JM
1666#endif
1667EOF
1668exec 1>&2
41a77cba
SM
1669../move-if-change new-gdbarch.h gdbarch.h
1670rm -f new-gdbarch.h
104c1213
JM
1671
1672
1673#
1674# C file
1675#
1676
1677exec > new-gdbarch.c
1678copyright
1679cat <<EOF
1680
1681#include "defs.h"
7355ddba 1682#include "arch-utils.h"
104c1213 1683
104c1213 1684#include "gdbcmd.h"
faaf634c 1685#include "inferior.h"
104c1213
JM
1686#include "symcat.h"
1687
f0d4cc9e 1688#include "floatformat.h"
b59ff9d5 1689#include "reggroups.h"
4be87837 1690#include "osabi.h"
aebd7893 1691#include "gdb_obstack.h"
0bee6dd4 1692#include "observable.h"
a3ecef73 1693#include "regcache.h"
19630284 1694#include "objfiles.h"
2faa3447 1695#include "auxv.h"
8bcb5208
AB
1696#include "frame-unwind.h"
1697#include "dummy-frame.h"
95160752 1698
104c1213
JM
1699/* Static function declarations */
1700
b3cc3077 1701static void alloc_gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *);
104c1213 1702
104c1213
JM
1703/* Non-zero if we want to trace architecture code. */
1704
1705#ifndef GDBARCH_DEBUG
1706#define GDBARCH_DEBUG 0
1707#endif
ccce17b0 1708unsigned int gdbarch_debug = GDBARCH_DEBUG;
920d2a44
AC
1709static void
1710show_gdbarch_debug (struct ui_file *file, int from_tty,
1711 struct cmd_list_element *c, const char *value)
1712{
1713 fprintf_filtered (file, _("Architecture debugging is %s.\\n"), value);
1714}
104c1213 1715
456fcf94 1716static const char *
8da61cc4 1717pformat (const struct floatformat **format)
456fcf94
AC
1718{
1719 if (format == NULL)
1720 return "(null)";
1721 else
8da61cc4
DJ
1722 /* Just print out one of them - this is only for diagnostics. */
1723 return format[0]->name;
456fcf94
AC
1724}
1725
08105857
PA
1726static const char *
1727pstring (const char *string)
1728{
1729 if (string == NULL)
1730 return "(null)";
1731 return string;
05c0465e
SDJ
1732}
1733
a121b7c1 1734static const char *
f7bb4e3a
PB
1735pstring_ptr (char **string)
1736{
1737 if (string == NULL || *string == NULL)
1738 return "(null)";
1739 return *string;
1740}
1741
05c0465e
SDJ
1742/* Helper function to print a list of strings, represented as "const
1743 char *const *". The list is printed comma-separated. */
1744
a121b7c1 1745static const char *
05c0465e
SDJ
1746pstring_list (const char *const *list)
1747{
1748 static char ret[100];
1749 const char *const *p;
1750 size_t offset = 0;
1751
1752 if (list == NULL)
1753 return "(null)";
1754
1755 ret[0] = '\0';
1756 for (p = list; *p != NULL && offset < sizeof (ret); ++p)
1757 {
1758 size_t s = xsnprintf (ret + offset, sizeof (ret) - offset, "%s, ", *p);
1759 offset += 2 + s;
1760 }
1761
1762 if (offset > 0)
1763 {
1764 gdb_assert (offset - 2 < sizeof (ret));
1765 ret[offset - 2] = '\0';
1766 }
1767
1768 return ret;
08105857
PA
1769}
1770
104c1213
JM
1771EOF
1772
1773# gdbarch open the gdbarch object
3d9a5942 1774printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1775printf "/* Maintain the struct gdbarch object. */\n"
3d9a5942
AC
1776printf "\n"
1777printf "struct gdbarch\n"
1778printf "{\n"
76860b5f
AC
1779printf " /* Has this architecture been fully initialized? */\n"
1780printf " int initialized_p;\n"
aebd7893
AC
1781printf "\n"
1782printf " /* An obstack bound to the lifetime of the architecture. */\n"
1783printf " struct obstack *obstack;\n"
1784printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1785printf " /* basic architectural information. */\n"
34620563 1786function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1787do
2ada493a
AC
1788 if class_is_info_p
1789 then
8d113d13 1790 printf " %s %s;\n" "$returntype" "$function"
2ada493a 1791 fi
104c1213 1792done
3d9a5942 1793printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1794printf " /* target specific vector. */\n"
3d9a5942
AC
1795printf " struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep;\n"
1796printf " gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *dump_tdep;\n"
1797printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1798printf " /* per-architecture data-pointers. */\n"
95160752 1799printf " unsigned nr_data;\n"
3d9a5942
AC
1800printf " void **data;\n"
1801printf "\n"
104c1213
JM
1802cat <<EOF
1803 /* Multi-arch values.
1804
1805 When extending this structure you must:
1806
1807 Add the field below.
1808
1809 Declare set/get functions and define the corresponding
1810 macro in gdbarch.h.
1811
1812 gdbarch_alloc(): If zero/NULL is not a suitable default,
1813 initialize the new field.
1814
1815 verify_gdbarch(): Confirm that the target updated the field
1816 correctly.
1817
7e73cedf 1818 gdbarch_dump(): Add a fprintf_unfiltered call so that the new
104c1213
JM
1819 field is dumped out
1820
104c1213
JM
1821 get_gdbarch(): Implement the set/get functions (probably using
1822 the macro's as shortcuts).
1823
1824 */
1825
1826EOF
34620563 1827function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1828do
2ada493a
AC
1829 if class_is_variable_p
1830 then
8d113d13 1831 printf " %s %s;\n" "$returntype" "$function"
2ada493a
AC
1832 elif class_is_function_p
1833 then
8d113d13 1834 printf " gdbarch_%s_ftype *%s;\n" "$function" "$function"
2ada493a 1835 fi
104c1213 1836done
3d9a5942 1837printf "};\n"
104c1213 1838
104c1213 1839# Create a new gdbarch struct
104c1213 1840cat <<EOF
7de2341d 1841
66b43ecb 1842/* Create a new \`\`struct gdbarch'' based on information provided by
0963b4bd 1843 \`\`struct gdbarch_info''. */
104c1213 1844EOF
3d9a5942 1845printf "\n"
104c1213
JM
1846cat <<EOF
1847struct gdbarch *
1848gdbarch_alloc (const struct gdbarch_info *info,
1849 struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep)
1850{
be7811ad 1851 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
aebd7893
AC
1852
1853 /* Create an obstack for allocating all the per-architecture memory,
1854 then use that to allocate the architecture vector. */
70ba0933 1855 struct obstack *obstack = XNEW (struct obstack);
aebd7893 1856 obstack_init (obstack);
8d749320 1857 gdbarch = XOBNEW (obstack, struct gdbarch);
be7811ad
MD
1858 memset (gdbarch, 0, sizeof (*gdbarch));
1859 gdbarch->obstack = obstack;
85de9627 1860
be7811ad 1861 alloc_gdbarch_data (gdbarch);
85de9627 1862
be7811ad 1863 gdbarch->tdep = tdep;
104c1213 1864EOF
3d9a5942 1865printf "\n"
34620563 1866function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1867do
2ada493a
AC
1868 if class_is_info_p
1869 then
8d113d13 1870 printf " gdbarch->%s = info->%s;\n" "$function" "$function"
2ada493a 1871 fi
104c1213 1872done
3d9a5942 1873printf "\n"
0963b4bd 1874printf " /* Force the explicit initialization of these. */\n"
34620563 1875function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1876do
2ada493a
AC
1877 if class_is_function_p || class_is_variable_p
1878 then
759cea5e 1879 if [ -n "${predefault}" ] && [ "x${predefault}" != "x0" ]
104c1213 1880 then
8d113d13 1881 printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$predefault"
104c1213 1882 fi
2ada493a 1883 fi
104c1213
JM
1884done
1885cat <<EOF
1886 /* gdbarch_alloc() */
1887
be7811ad 1888 return gdbarch;
104c1213
JM
1889}
1890EOF
1891
058f20d5 1892# Free a gdbarch struct.
3d9a5942
AC
1893printf "\n"
1894printf "\n"
058f20d5 1895cat <<EOF
aebd7893 1896
284a0e3c 1897obstack *gdbarch_obstack (gdbarch *arch)
aebd7893 1898{
284a0e3c 1899 return arch->obstack;
aebd7893
AC
1900}
1901
6c214e7c
PP
1902/* See gdbarch.h. */
1903
1904char *
1905gdbarch_obstack_strdup (struct gdbarch *arch, const char *string)
1906{
1907 return obstack_strdup (arch->obstack, string);
1908}
1909
aebd7893 1910
058f20d5
JB
1911/* Free a gdbarch struct. This should never happen in normal
1912 operation --- once you've created a gdbarch, you keep it around.
1913 However, if an architecture's init function encounters an error
1914 building the structure, it may need to clean up a partially
1915 constructed gdbarch. */
4b9b3959 1916
058f20d5
JB
1917void
1918gdbarch_free (struct gdbarch *arch)
1919{
aebd7893 1920 struct obstack *obstack;
05c547f6 1921
95160752 1922 gdb_assert (arch != NULL);
aebd7893
AC
1923 gdb_assert (!arch->initialized_p);
1924 obstack = arch->obstack;
1925 obstack_free (obstack, 0); /* Includes the ARCH. */
1926 xfree (obstack);
058f20d5
JB
1927}
1928EOF
1929
104c1213 1930# verify a new architecture
104c1213 1931cat <<EOF
db446970
AC
1932
1933
1934/* Ensure that all values in a GDBARCH are reasonable. */
1935
104c1213 1936static void
be7811ad 1937verify_gdbarch (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
104c1213 1938{
d7e74731 1939 string_file log;
05c547f6 1940
104c1213 1941 /* fundamental */
be7811ad 1942 if (gdbarch->byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN)
d7e74731 1943 log.puts ("\n\tbyte-order");
be7811ad 1944 if (gdbarch->bfd_arch_info == NULL)
d7e74731 1945 log.puts ("\n\tbfd_arch_info");
0963b4bd 1946 /* Check those that need to be defined for the given multi-arch level. */
104c1213 1947EOF
34620563 1948function_list | while do_read
104c1213 1949do
2ada493a
AC
1950 if class_is_function_p || class_is_variable_p
1951 then
72e74a21 1952 if [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ]
c0e8c252 1953 then
8d113d13 1954 printf " /* Skip verify of %s, invalid_p == 0 */\n" "$function"
2ada493a
AC
1955 elif class_is_predicate_p
1956 then
8d113d13 1957 printf " /* Skip verify of %s, has predicate. */\n" "$function"
f0d4cc9e 1958 # FIXME: See do_read for potential simplification
759cea5e 1959 elif [ -n "${invalid_p}" ] && [ -n "${postdefault}" ]
f0d4cc9e 1960 then
8d113d13
SM
1961 printf " if (%s)\n" "$invalid_p"
1962 printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$postdefault"
759cea5e 1963 elif [ -n "${predefault}" ] && [ -n "${postdefault}" ]
f0d4cc9e 1964 then
8d113d13
SM
1965 printf " if (gdbarch->%s == %s)\n" "$function" "$predefault"
1966 printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$postdefault"
72e74a21 1967 elif [ -n "${postdefault}" ]
f0d4cc9e 1968 then
8d113d13
SM
1969 printf " if (gdbarch->%s == 0)\n" "$function"
1970 printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$postdefault"
72e74a21 1971 elif [ -n "${invalid_p}" ]
104c1213 1972 then
8d113d13
SM
1973 printf " if (%s)\n" "$invalid_p"
1974 printf " log.puts (\"\\\\n\\\\t%s\");\n" "$function"
72e74a21 1975 elif [ -n "${predefault}" ]
104c1213 1976 then
8d113d13
SM
1977 printf " if (gdbarch->%s == %s)\n" "$function" "$predefault"
1978 printf " log.puts (\"\\\\n\\\\t%s\");\n" "$function"
104c1213 1979 fi
2ada493a 1980 fi
104c1213
JM
1981done
1982cat <<EOF
d7e74731 1983 if (!log.empty ())
f16a1923 1984 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
85c07804 1985 _("verify_gdbarch: the following are invalid ...%s"),
d7e74731 1986 log.c_str ());
104c1213
JM
1987}
1988EOF
1989
1990# dump the structure
3d9a5942
AC
1991printf "\n"
1992printf "\n"
104c1213 1993cat <<EOF
0963b4bd 1994/* Print out the details of the current architecture. */
4b9b3959 1995
104c1213 1996void
be7811ad 1997gdbarch_dump (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct ui_file *file)
104c1213 1998{
b78960be 1999 const char *gdb_nm_file = "<not-defined>";
05c547f6 2000
b78960be
AC
2001#if defined (GDB_NM_FILE)
2002 gdb_nm_file = GDB_NM_FILE;
2003#endif
2004 fprintf_unfiltered (file,
2005 "gdbarch_dump: GDB_NM_FILE = %s\\n",
2006 gdb_nm_file);
104c1213 2007EOF
ea480a30 2008function_list | sort '-t;' -k 3 | while do_read
104c1213 2009do
1e9f55d0
AC
2010 # First the predicate
2011 if class_is_predicate_p
2012 then
7996bcec 2013 printf " fprintf_unfiltered (file,\n"
8d113d13
SM
2014 printf " \"gdbarch_dump: gdbarch_%s_p() = %%d\\\\n\",\n" "$function"
2015 printf " gdbarch_%s_p (gdbarch));\n" "$function"
08e45a40 2016 fi
48f7351b 2017 # Print the corresponding value.
283354d8 2018 if class_is_function_p
4b9b3959 2019 then
7996bcec 2020 printf " fprintf_unfiltered (file,\n"
8d113d13
SM
2021 printf " \"gdbarch_dump: %s = <%%s>\\\\n\",\n" "$function"
2022 printf " host_address_to_string (gdbarch->%s));\n" "$function"
4b9b3959 2023 else
48f7351b 2024 # It is a variable
2f9b146e
AC
2025 case "${print}:${returntype}" in
2026 :CORE_ADDR )
0b1553bc
UW
2027 fmt="%s"
2028 print="core_addr_to_string_nz (gdbarch->${function})"
48f7351b 2029 ;;
2f9b146e 2030 :* )
48f7351b 2031 fmt="%s"
623d3eb1 2032 print="plongest (gdbarch->${function})"
48f7351b
AC
2033 ;;
2034 * )
2f9b146e 2035 fmt="%s"
48f7351b
AC
2036 ;;
2037 esac
3d9a5942 2038 printf " fprintf_unfiltered (file,\n"
8d113d13
SM
2039 printf " \"gdbarch_dump: %s = %s\\\\n\",\n" "$function" "$fmt"
2040 printf " %s);\n" "$print"
2ada493a 2041 fi
104c1213 2042done
381323f4 2043cat <<EOF
be7811ad
MD
2044 if (gdbarch->dump_tdep != NULL)
2045 gdbarch->dump_tdep (gdbarch, file);
381323f4
AC
2046}
2047EOF
104c1213
JM
2048
2049
2050# GET/SET
3d9a5942 2051printf "\n"
104c1213
JM
2052cat <<EOF
2053struct gdbarch_tdep *
2054gdbarch_tdep (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
2055{
2056 if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)
3d9a5942 2057 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_tdep called\\n");
104c1213
JM
2058 return gdbarch->tdep;
2059}
2060EOF
3d9a5942 2061printf "\n"
34620563 2062function_list | while do_read
104c1213 2063do
2ada493a
AC
2064 if class_is_predicate_p
2065 then
3d9a5942
AC
2066 printf "\n"
2067 printf "int\n"
8d113d13 2068 printf "gdbarch_%s_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function"
3d9a5942 2069 printf "{\n"
8de9bdc4 2070 printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n"
8d113d13 2071 printf " return %s;\n" "$predicate"
3d9a5942 2072 printf "}\n"
2ada493a
AC
2073 fi
2074 if class_is_function_p
2075 then
3d9a5942 2076 printf "\n"
8d113d13 2077 printf "%s\n" "$returntype"
72e74a21 2078 if [ "x${formal}" = "xvoid" ]
104c1213 2079 then
8d113d13 2080 printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function"
104c1213 2081 else
8d113d13 2082 printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s)\n" "$function" "$formal"
104c1213 2083 fi
3d9a5942 2084 printf "{\n"
8de9bdc4 2085 printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n"
8d113d13 2086 printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch->%s != NULL);\n" "$function"
f7968451 2087 if class_is_predicate_p && test -n "${predefault}"
ae45cd16
AC
2088 then
2089 # Allow a call to a function with a predicate.
8d113d13 2090 printf " /* Do not check predicate: %s, allow call. */\n" "$predicate"
ae45cd16 2091 fi
3d9a5942 2092 printf " if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)\n"
8d113d13 2093 printf " fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, \"gdbarch_%s called\\\\n\");\n" "$function"
1207375d 2094 if [ "x${actual:-}" = "x-" ] || [ "x${actual:-}" = "x" ]
4a5c6a1d
AC
2095 then
2096 if class_is_multiarch_p
2097 then
2098 params="gdbarch"
2099 else
2100 params=""
2101 fi
2102 else
2103 if class_is_multiarch_p
2104 then
2105 params="gdbarch, ${actual}"
2106 else
2107 params="${actual}"
2108 fi
2109 fi
72e74a21 2110 if [ "x${returntype}" = "xvoid" ]
104c1213 2111 then
8d113d13 2112 printf " gdbarch->%s (%s);\n" "$function" "$params"
104c1213 2113 else
8d113d13 2114 printf " return gdbarch->%s (%s);\n" "$function" "$params"
104c1213 2115 fi
3d9a5942
AC
2116 printf "}\n"
2117 printf "\n"
2118 printf "void\n"
8d113d13 2119 printf "set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,\n" "$function"
cb02ab24 2120 printf " %s gdbarch_%s_ftype %s)\n" "$(echo "$function" | sed -e 's/./ /g')" "$function" "$function"
3d9a5942 2121 printf "{\n"
8d113d13 2122 printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$function"
3d9a5942 2123 printf "}\n"
2ada493a
AC
2124 elif class_is_variable_p
2125 then
3d9a5942 2126 printf "\n"
8d113d13
SM
2127 printf "%s\n" "$returntype"
2128 printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function"
3d9a5942 2129 printf "{\n"
8de9bdc4 2130 printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n"
72e74a21 2131 if [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ]
c0e8c252 2132 then
8d113d13 2133 printf " /* Skip verify of %s, invalid_p == 0 */\n" "$function"
72e74a21 2134 elif [ -n "${invalid_p}" ]
104c1213 2135 then
956ac328 2136 printf " /* Check variable is valid. */\n"
8d113d13 2137 printf " gdb_assert (!(%s));\n" "$invalid_p"
72e74a21 2138 elif [ -n "${predefault}" ]
104c1213 2139 then
956ac328 2140 printf " /* Check variable changed from pre-default. */\n"
8d113d13 2141 printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch->%s != %s);\n" "$function" "$predefault"
104c1213 2142 fi
3d9a5942 2143 printf " if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)\n"
8d113d13
SM
2144 printf " fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, \"gdbarch_%s called\\\\n\");\n" "$function"
2145 printf " return gdbarch->%s;\n" "$function"
3d9a5942
AC
2146 printf "}\n"
2147 printf "\n"
2148 printf "void\n"
8d113d13 2149 printf "set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,\n" "$function"
cb02ab24 2150 printf " %s %s %s)\n" "$(echo "$function" | sed -e 's/./ /g')" "$returntype" "$function"
3d9a5942 2151 printf "{\n"
8d113d13 2152 printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$function"
3d9a5942 2153 printf "}\n"
2ada493a
AC
2154 elif class_is_info_p
2155 then
3d9a5942 2156 printf "\n"
8d113d13
SM
2157 printf "%s\n" "$returntype"
2158 printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function"
3d9a5942 2159 printf "{\n"
8de9bdc4 2160 printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n"
3d9a5942 2161 printf " if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)\n"
8d113d13
SM
2162 printf " fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, \"gdbarch_%s called\\\\n\");\n" "$function"
2163 printf " return gdbarch->%s;\n" "$function"
3d9a5942 2164 printf "}\n"
2ada493a 2165 fi
104c1213
JM
2166done
2167
2168# All the trailing guff
2169cat <<EOF
2170
2171
f44c642f 2172/* Keep a registry of per-architecture data-pointers required by GDB
0963b4bd 2173 modules. */
104c1213
JM
2174
2175struct gdbarch_data
2176{
95160752 2177 unsigned index;
76860b5f 2178 int init_p;
030f20e1
AC
2179 gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype *pre_init;
2180 gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype *post_init;
104c1213
JM
2181};
2182
2183struct gdbarch_data_registration
2184{
104c1213
JM
2185 struct gdbarch_data *data;
2186 struct gdbarch_data_registration *next;
2187};
2188
f44c642f 2189struct gdbarch_data_registry
104c1213 2190{
95160752 2191 unsigned nr;
104c1213
JM
2192 struct gdbarch_data_registration *registrations;
2193};
2194
f44c642f 2195struct gdbarch_data_registry gdbarch_data_registry =
104c1213
JM
2196{
2197 0, NULL,
2198};
2199
030f20e1
AC
2200static struct gdbarch_data *
2201gdbarch_data_register (gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype *pre_init,
2202 gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype *post_init)
104c1213
JM
2203{
2204 struct gdbarch_data_registration **curr;
05c547f6
MS
2205
2206 /* Append the new registration. */
f44c642f 2207 for (curr = &gdbarch_data_registry.registrations;
104c1213
JM
2208 (*curr) != NULL;
2209 curr = &(*curr)->next);
70ba0933 2210 (*curr) = XNEW (struct gdbarch_data_registration);
104c1213 2211 (*curr)->next = NULL;
70ba0933 2212 (*curr)->data = XNEW (struct gdbarch_data);
f44c642f 2213 (*curr)->data->index = gdbarch_data_registry.nr++;
030f20e1
AC
2214 (*curr)->data->pre_init = pre_init;
2215 (*curr)->data->post_init = post_init;
76860b5f 2216 (*curr)->data->init_p = 1;
104c1213
JM
2217 return (*curr)->data;
2218}
2219
030f20e1
AC
2220struct gdbarch_data *
2221gdbarch_data_register_pre_init (gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype *pre_init)
2222{
2223 return gdbarch_data_register (pre_init, NULL);
2224}
2225
2226struct gdbarch_data *
2227gdbarch_data_register_post_init (gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype *post_init)
2228{
2229 return gdbarch_data_register (NULL, post_init);
2230}
104c1213 2231
0963b4bd 2232/* Create/delete the gdbarch data vector. */
95160752
AC
2233
2234static void
b3cc3077 2235alloc_gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
95160752 2236{
b3cc3077
JB
2237 gdb_assert (gdbarch->data == NULL);
2238 gdbarch->nr_data = gdbarch_data_registry.nr;
aebd7893 2239 gdbarch->data = GDBARCH_OBSTACK_CALLOC (gdbarch, gdbarch->nr_data, void *);
b3cc3077 2240}
3c875b6f 2241
104c1213 2242/* Return the current value of the specified per-architecture
0963b4bd 2243 data-pointer. */
104c1213
JM
2244
2245void *
451fbdda 2246gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct gdbarch_data *data)
104c1213 2247{
451fbdda 2248 gdb_assert (data->index < gdbarch->nr_data);
030f20e1 2249 if (gdbarch->data[data->index] == NULL)
76860b5f 2250 {
030f20e1
AC
2251 /* The data-pointer isn't initialized, call init() to get a
2252 value. */
2253 if (data->pre_init != NULL)
2254 /* Mid architecture creation: pass just the obstack, and not
2255 the entire architecture, as that way it isn't possible for
2256 pre-init code to refer to undefined architecture
2257 fields. */
2258 gdbarch->data[data->index] = data->pre_init (gdbarch->obstack);
2259 else if (gdbarch->initialized_p
2260 && data->post_init != NULL)
2261 /* Post architecture creation: pass the entire architecture
2262 (as all fields are valid), but be careful to also detect
2263 recursive references. */
2264 {
2265 gdb_assert (data->init_p);
2266 data->init_p = 0;
2267 gdbarch->data[data->index] = data->post_init (gdbarch);
2268 data->init_p = 1;
2269 }
2270 else
3bc98c0c
AB
2271 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
2272 _("gdbarch post-init data field can only be used "
2273 "after gdbarch is fully initialised"));
76860b5f
AC
2274 gdb_assert (gdbarch->data[data->index] != NULL);
2275 }
451fbdda 2276 return gdbarch->data[data->index];
104c1213
JM
2277}
2278
2279
0963b4bd 2280/* Keep a registry of the architectures known by GDB. */
104c1213 2281
4b9b3959 2282struct gdbarch_registration
104c1213
JM
2283{
2284 enum bfd_architecture bfd_architecture;
2285 gdbarch_init_ftype *init;
4b9b3959 2286 gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *dump_tdep;
104c1213 2287 struct gdbarch_list *arches;
4b9b3959 2288 struct gdbarch_registration *next;
104c1213
JM
2289};
2290
f44c642f 2291static struct gdbarch_registration *gdbarch_registry = NULL;
104c1213 2292
b4a20239
AC
2293static void
2294append_name (const char ***buf, int *nr, const char *name)
2295{
1dc7a623 2296 *buf = XRESIZEVEC (const char *, *buf, *nr + 1);
b4a20239
AC
2297 (*buf)[*nr] = name;
2298 *nr += 1;
2299}
2300
2301const char **
2302gdbarch_printable_names (void)
2303{
7996bcec 2304 /* Accumulate a list of names based on the registed list of
0963b4bd 2305 architectures. */
7996bcec
AC
2306 int nr_arches = 0;
2307 const char **arches = NULL;
2308 struct gdbarch_registration *rego;
05c547f6 2309
7996bcec
AC
2310 for (rego = gdbarch_registry;
2311 rego != NULL;
2312 rego = rego->next)
b4a20239 2313 {
7996bcec
AC
2314 const struct bfd_arch_info *ap;
2315 ap = bfd_lookup_arch (rego->bfd_architecture, 0);
2316 if (ap == NULL)
2317 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
85c07804 2318 _("gdbarch_architecture_names: multi-arch unknown"));
7996bcec
AC
2319 do
2320 {
2321 append_name (&arches, &nr_arches, ap->printable_name);
2322 ap = ap->next;
2323 }
2324 while (ap != NULL);
b4a20239 2325 }
7996bcec
AC
2326 append_name (&arches, &nr_arches, NULL);
2327 return arches;
b4a20239
AC
2328}
2329
2330
104c1213 2331void
4b9b3959
AC
2332gdbarch_register (enum bfd_architecture bfd_architecture,
2333 gdbarch_init_ftype *init,
2334 gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *dump_tdep)
104c1213 2335{
4b9b3959 2336 struct gdbarch_registration **curr;
104c1213 2337 const struct bfd_arch_info *bfd_arch_info;
05c547f6 2338
ec3d358c 2339 /* Check that BFD recognizes this architecture */
104c1213
JM
2340 bfd_arch_info = bfd_lookup_arch (bfd_architecture, 0);
2341 if (bfd_arch_info == NULL)
2342 {
8e65ff28 2343 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
0963b4bd
MS
2344 _("gdbarch: Attempt to register "
2345 "unknown architecture (%d)"),
8e65ff28 2346 bfd_architecture);
104c1213 2347 }
0963b4bd 2348 /* Check that we haven't seen this architecture before. */
f44c642f 2349 for (curr = &gdbarch_registry;
104c1213
JM
2350 (*curr) != NULL;
2351 curr = &(*curr)->next)
2352 {
2353 if (bfd_architecture == (*curr)->bfd_architecture)
8e65ff28 2354 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
64b9b334 2355 _("gdbarch: Duplicate registration "
0963b4bd 2356 "of architecture (%s)"),
8e65ff28 2357 bfd_arch_info->printable_name);
104c1213
JM
2358 }
2359 /* log it */
2360 if (gdbarch_debug)
30737ed9 2361 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "register_gdbarch_init (%s, %s)\n",
104c1213 2362 bfd_arch_info->printable_name,
30737ed9 2363 host_address_to_string (init));
104c1213 2364 /* Append it */
70ba0933 2365 (*curr) = XNEW (struct gdbarch_registration);
104c1213
JM
2366 (*curr)->bfd_architecture = bfd_architecture;
2367 (*curr)->init = init;
4b9b3959 2368 (*curr)->dump_tdep = dump_tdep;
104c1213
JM
2369 (*curr)->arches = NULL;
2370 (*curr)->next = NULL;
4b9b3959
AC
2371}
2372
2373void
2374register_gdbarch_init (enum bfd_architecture bfd_architecture,
2375 gdbarch_init_ftype *init)
2376{
2377 gdbarch_register (bfd_architecture, init, NULL);
104c1213 2378}
104c1213
JM
2379
2380
424163ea 2381/* Look for an architecture using gdbarch_info. */
104c1213
JM
2382
2383struct gdbarch_list *
2384gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (struct gdbarch_list *arches,
2385 const struct gdbarch_info *info)
2386{
2387 for (; arches != NULL; arches = arches->next)
2388 {
2389 if (info->bfd_arch_info != arches->gdbarch->bfd_arch_info)
2390 continue;
2391 if (info->byte_order != arches->gdbarch->byte_order)
2392 continue;
4be87837
DJ
2393 if (info->osabi != arches->gdbarch->osabi)
2394 continue;
424163ea
DJ
2395 if (info->target_desc != arches->gdbarch->target_desc)
2396 continue;
104c1213
JM
2397 return arches;
2398 }
2399 return NULL;
2400}
2401
2402
ebdba546 2403/* Find an architecture that matches the specified INFO. Create a new
59837fe0 2404 architecture if needed. Return that new architecture. */
104c1213 2405
59837fe0
UW
2406struct gdbarch *
2407gdbarch_find_by_info (struct gdbarch_info info)
104c1213
JM
2408{
2409 struct gdbarch *new_gdbarch;
4b9b3959 2410 struct gdbarch_registration *rego;
104c1213 2411
b732d07d 2412 /* Fill in missing parts of the INFO struct using a number of
7a107747
DJ
2413 sources: "set ..."; INFOabfd supplied; and the global
2414 defaults. */
2415 gdbarch_info_fill (&info);
4be87837 2416
0963b4bd 2417 /* Must have found some sort of architecture. */
b732d07d 2418 gdb_assert (info.bfd_arch_info != NULL);
104c1213
JM
2419
2420 if (gdbarch_debug)
2421 {
2422 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
59837fe0 2423 "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.bfd_arch_info %s\n",
104c1213
JM
2424 (info.bfd_arch_info != NULL
2425 ? info.bfd_arch_info->printable_name
2426 : "(null)"));
2427 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
59837fe0 2428 "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.byte_order %d (%s)\n",
104c1213 2429 info.byte_order,
d7449b42 2430 (info.byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG ? "big"
778eb05e 2431 : info.byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE ? "little"
104c1213 2432 : "default"));
4be87837 2433 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
59837fe0 2434 "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.osabi %d (%s)\n",
4be87837 2435 info.osabi, gdbarch_osabi_name (info.osabi));
104c1213 2436 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
59837fe0 2437 "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.abfd %s\n",
30737ed9 2438 host_address_to_string (info.abfd));
104c1213 2439 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
59837fe0 2440 "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.tdep_info %s\n",
30737ed9 2441 host_address_to_string (info.tdep_info));
104c1213
JM
2442 }
2443
ebdba546 2444 /* Find the tdep code that knows about this architecture. */
b732d07d
AC
2445 for (rego = gdbarch_registry;
2446 rego != NULL;
2447 rego = rego->next)
2448 if (rego->bfd_architecture == info.bfd_arch_info->arch)
2449 break;
2450 if (rego == NULL)
2451 {
2452 if (gdbarch_debug)
59837fe0 2453 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: "
ebdba546 2454 "No matching architecture\n");
b732d07d
AC
2455 return 0;
2456 }
2457
ebdba546 2458 /* Ask the tdep code for an architecture that matches "info". */
104c1213
JM
2459 new_gdbarch = rego->init (info, rego->arches);
2460
ebdba546
AC
2461 /* Did the tdep code like it? No. Reject the change and revert to
2462 the old architecture. */
104c1213
JM
2463 if (new_gdbarch == NULL)
2464 {
2465 if (gdbarch_debug)
59837fe0 2466 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: "
ebdba546
AC
2467 "Target rejected architecture\n");
2468 return NULL;
104c1213
JM
2469 }
2470
ebdba546
AC
2471 /* Is this a pre-existing architecture (as determined by already
2472 being initialized)? Move it to the front of the architecture
2473 list (keeping the list sorted Most Recently Used). */
2474 if (new_gdbarch->initialized_p)
104c1213 2475 {
ebdba546 2476 struct gdbarch_list **list;
fe978cb0 2477 struct gdbarch_list *self;
104c1213 2478 if (gdbarch_debug)
59837fe0 2479 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: "
30737ed9
JB
2480 "Previous architecture %s (%s) selected\n",
2481 host_address_to_string (new_gdbarch),
104c1213 2482 new_gdbarch->bfd_arch_info->printable_name);
ebdba546
AC
2483 /* Find the existing arch in the list. */
2484 for (list = &rego->arches;
2485 (*list) != NULL && (*list)->gdbarch != new_gdbarch;
2486 list = &(*list)->next);
2487 /* It had better be in the list of architectures. */
2488 gdb_assert ((*list) != NULL && (*list)->gdbarch == new_gdbarch);
fe978cb0
PA
2489 /* Unlink SELF. */
2490 self = (*list);
2491 (*list) = self->next;
2492 /* Insert SELF at the front. */
2493 self->next = rego->arches;
2494 rego->arches = self;
ebdba546
AC
2495 /* Return it. */
2496 return new_gdbarch;
104c1213
JM
2497 }
2498
ebdba546
AC
2499 /* It's a new architecture. */
2500 if (gdbarch_debug)
59837fe0 2501 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: "
30737ed9
JB
2502 "New architecture %s (%s) selected\n",
2503 host_address_to_string (new_gdbarch),
ebdba546
AC
2504 new_gdbarch->bfd_arch_info->printable_name);
2505
2506 /* Insert the new architecture into the front of the architecture
2507 list (keep the list sorted Most Recently Used). */
0f79675b 2508 {
fe978cb0
PA
2509 struct gdbarch_list *self = XNEW (struct gdbarch_list);
2510 self->next = rego->arches;
2511 self->gdbarch = new_gdbarch;
2512 rego->arches = self;
0f79675b 2513 }
104c1213 2514
4b9b3959
AC
2515 /* Check that the newly installed architecture is valid. Plug in
2516 any post init values. */
2517 new_gdbarch->dump_tdep = rego->dump_tdep;
104c1213 2518 verify_gdbarch (new_gdbarch);
ebdba546 2519 new_gdbarch->initialized_p = 1;
104c1213 2520
4b9b3959 2521 if (gdbarch_debug)
ebdba546
AC
2522 gdbarch_dump (new_gdbarch, gdb_stdlog);
2523
2524 return new_gdbarch;
2525}
2526
e487cc15 2527/* Make the specified architecture current. */
ebdba546
AC
2528
2529void
aff68abb 2530set_target_gdbarch (struct gdbarch *new_gdbarch)
ebdba546
AC
2531{
2532 gdb_assert (new_gdbarch != NULL);
ebdba546 2533 gdb_assert (new_gdbarch->initialized_p);
6ecd4729 2534 current_inferior ()->gdbarch = new_gdbarch;
0bee6dd4 2535 gdb::observers::architecture_changed.notify (new_gdbarch);
a3ecef73 2536 registers_changed ();
ebdba546 2537}
104c1213 2538
f5656ead 2539/* Return the current inferior's arch. */
6ecd4729
PA
2540
2541struct gdbarch *
f5656ead 2542target_gdbarch (void)
6ecd4729
PA
2543{
2544 return current_inferior ()->gdbarch;
2545}
2546
a1237872 2547void _initialize_gdbarch ();
104c1213 2548void
a1237872 2549_initialize_gdbarch ()
104c1213 2550{
ccce17b0 2551 add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd ("arch", class_maintenance, &gdbarch_debug, _("\\
85c07804
AC
2552Set architecture debugging."), _("\\
2553Show architecture debugging."), _("\\
2554When non-zero, architecture debugging is enabled."),
2555 NULL,
920d2a44 2556 show_gdbarch_debug,
85c07804 2557 &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist);
104c1213
JM
2558}
2559EOF
2560
2561# close things off
2562exec 1>&2
41a77cba
SM
2563../move-if-change new-gdbarch.c gdbarch.c
2564rm -f new-gdbarch.c
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