d51c6a0d3e3d0a8676d893316e5779ca9d245330
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / arm-tdep.c
1 /* Common target dependent code for GDB on ARM systems.
2 Copyright 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000
3 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
19 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
20 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
21
22 #include "defs.h"
23 #include "frame.h"
24 #include "inferior.h"
25 #include "gdbcmd.h"
26 #include "gdbcore.h"
27 #include "symfile.h"
28 #include "gdb_string.h"
29 #include "coff/internal.h" /* Internal format of COFF symbols in BFD */
30 #include "dis-asm.h" /* For register flavors. */
31 #include <ctype.h> /* for isupper () */
32
33 /* Each OS has a different mechanism for accessing the various
34 registers stored in the sigcontext structure.
35
36 SIGCONTEXT_REGISTER_ADDRESS should be defined to the name (or
37 function pointer) which may be used to determine the addresses
38 of the various saved registers in the sigcontext structure.
39
40 For the ARM target, there are three parameters to this function.
41 The first is the pc value of the frame under consideration, the
42 second the stack pointer of this frame, and the last is the
43 register number to fetch.
44
45 If the tm.h file does not define this macro, then it's assumed that
46 no mechanism is needed and we define SIGCONTEXT_REGISTER_ADDRESS to
47 be 0.
48
49 When it comes time to multi-arching this code, see the identically
50 named machinery in ia64-tdep.c for an example of how it could be
51 done. It should not be necessary to modify the code below where
52 this macro is used. */
53
54 #ifndef SIGCONTEXT_REGISTER_ADDRESS
55 #define SIGCONTEXT_REGISTER_ADDRESS 0
56 #endif
57
58 extern void _initialize_arm_tdep (void);
59
60 /* Number of different reg name sets (options). */
61 static int num_flavor_options;
62
63 /* We have more registers than the disassembler as gdb can print the value
64 of special registers as well.
65 The general register names are overwritten by whatever is being used by
66 the disassembler at the moment. We also adjust the case of cpsr and fps. */
67
68 /* Initial value: Register names used in ARM's ISA documentation. */
69 static char * arm_register_name_strings[] =
70 {"r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", /* 0 1 2 3 */
71 "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", /* 4 5 6 7 */
72 "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11", /* 8 9 10 11 */
73 "r12", "sp", "lr", "pc", /* 12 13 14 15 */
74 "f0", "f1", "f2", "f3", /* 16 17 18 19 */
75 "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", /* 20 21 22 23 */
76 "fps", "cpsr" }; /* 24 25 */
77 char **arm_register_names = arm_register_name_strings;
78
79 /* Valid register name flavors. */
80 static const char **valid_flavors;
81
82 /* Disassembly flavor to use. Default to "std" register names. */
83 static const char *disassembly_flavor;
84 static int current_option; /* Index to that option in the opcodes table. */
85
86 /* This is used to keep the bfd arch_info in sync with the disassembly
87 flavor. */
88 static void set_disassembly_flavor_sfunc(char *, int,
89 struct cmd_list_element *);
90 static void set_disassembly_flavor (void);
91
92 static void convert_from_extended (void *ptr, void *dbl);
93
94 /* Define other aspects of the stack frame. We keep the offsets of
95 all saved registers, 'cause we need 'em a lot! We also keep the
96 current size of the stack frame, and the offset of the frame
97 pointer from the stack pointer (for frameless functions, and when
98 we're still in the prologue of a function with a frame) */
99
100 struct frame_extra_info
101 {
102 struct frame_saved_regs fsr;
103 int framesize;
104 int frameoffset;
105 int framereg;
106 };
107
108 /* Addresses for calling Thumb functions have the bit 0 set.
109 Here are some macros to test, set, or clear bit 0 of addresses. */
110 #define IS_THUMB_ADDR(addr) ((addr) & 1)
111 #define MAKE_THUMB_ADDR(addr) ((addr) | 1)
112 #define UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR(addr) ((addr) & ~1)
113
114 #define SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST(buffer,len) \
115 do \
116 { \
117 if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER != HOST_BYTE_ORDER) \
118 { \
119 char tmp; \
120 char *p = (char *)(buffer); \
121 char *q = ((char *)(buffer)) + len - 1; \
122 for (; p < q; p++, q--) \
123 { \
124 tmp = *q; \
125 *q = *p; \
126 *p = tmp; \
127 } \
128 } \
129 } \
130 while (0)
131
132 /* Will a function return an aggregate type in memory or in a
133 register? Return 0 if an aggregate type can be returned in a
134 register, 1 if it must be returned in memory. */
135
136 int
137 arm_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *type)
138 {
139 int nRc;
140 register enum type_code code;
141
142 /* In the ARM ABI, "integer" like aggregate types are returned in
143 registers. For an aggregate type to be integer like, its size
144 must be less than or equal to REGISTER_SIZE and the offset of
145 each addressable subfield must be zero. Note that bit fields are
146 not addressable, and all addressable subfields of unions always
147 start at offset zero.
148
149 This function is based on the behaviour of GCC 2.95.1.
150 See: gcc/arm.c: arm_return_in_memory() for details.
151
152 Note: All versions of GCC before GCC 2.95.2 do not set up the
153 parameters correctly for a function returning the following
154 structure: struct { float f;}; This should be returned in memory,
155 not a register. Richard Earnshaw sent me a patch, but I do not
156 know of any way to detect if a function like the above has been
157 compiled with the correct calling convention. */
158
159 /* All aggregate types that won't fit in a register must be returned
160 in memory. */
161 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > REGISTER_SIZE)
162 {
163 return 1;
164 }
165
166 /* The only aggregate types that can be returned in a register are
167 structs and unions. Arrays must be returned in memory. */
168 code = TYPE_CODE (type);
169 if ((TYPE_CODE_STRUCT != code) && (TYPE_CODE_UNION != code))
170 {
171 return 1;
172 }
173
174 /* Assume all other aggregate types can be returned in a register.
175 Run a check for structures, unions and arrays. */
176 nRc = 0;
177
178 if ((TYPE_CODE_STRUCT == code) || (TYPE_CODE_UNION == code))
179 {
180 int i;
181 /* Need to check if this struct/union is "integer" like. For
182 this to be true, its size must be less than or equal to
183 REGISTER_SIZE and the offset of each addressable subfield
184 must be zero. Note that bit fields are not addressable, and
185 unions always start at offset zero. If any of the subfields
186 is a floating point type, the struct/union cannot be an
187 integer type. */
188
189 /* For each field in the object, check:
190 1) Is it FP? --> yes, nRc = 1;
191 2) Is it addressable (bitpos != 0) and
192 not packed (bitsize == 0)?
193 --> yes, nRc = 1
194 */
195
196 for (i = 0; i < TYPE_NFIELDS (type); i++)
197 {
198 enum type_code field_type_code;
199 field_type_code = TYPE_CODE (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, i));
200
201 /* Is it a floating point type field? */
202 if (field_type_code == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
203 {
204 nRc = 1;
205 break;
206 }
207
208 /* If bitpos != 0, then we have to care about it. */
209 if (TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, i) != 0)
210 {
211 /* Bitfields are not addressable. If the field bitsize is
212 zero, then the field is not packed. Hence it cannot be
213 a bitfield or any other packed type. */
214 if (TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, i) == 0)
215 {
216 nRc = 1;
217 break;
218 }
219 }
220 }
221 }
222
223 return nRc;
224 }
225
226 int
227 arm_frame_chain_valid (CORE_ADDR chain, struct frame_info *thisframe)
228 {
229 return (chain != 0 && (FRAME_SAVED_PC (thisframe) >= LOWEST_PC));
230 }
231
232 /* Set to true if the 32-bit mode is in use. */
233
234 int arm_apcs_32 = 1;
235
236 /* Flag set by arm_fix_call_dummy that tells whether the target
237 function is a Thumb function. This flag is checked by
238 arm_push_arguments. FIXME: Change the PUSH_ARGUMENTS macro (and
239 its use in valops.c) to pass the function address as an additional
240 parameter. */
241
242 static int target_is_thumb;
243
244 /* Flag set by arm_fix_call_dummy that tells whether the calling
245 function is a Thumb function. This flag is checked by
246 arm_pc_is_thumb and arm_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset. */
247
248 static int caller_is_thumb;
249
250 /* Determine if the program counter specified in MEMADDR is in a Thumb
251 function. */
252
253 int
254 arm_pc_is_thumb (CORE_ADDR memaddr)
255 {
256 struct minimal_symbol *sym;
257
258 /* If bit 0 of the address is set, assume this is a Thumb address. */
259 if (IS_THUMB_ADDR (memaddr))
260 return 1;
261
262 /* Thumb functions have a "special" bit set in minimal symbols. */
263 sym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (memaddr);
264 if (sym)
265 {
266 return (MSYMBOL_IS_SPECIAL (sym));
267 }
268 else
269 {
270 return 0;
271 }
272 }
273
274 /* Determine if the program counter specified in MEMADDR is in a call
275 dummy being called from a Thumb function. */
276
277 int
278 arm_pc_is_thumb_dummy (CORE_ADDR memaddr)
279 {
280 CORE_ADDR sp = read_sp ();
281
282 /* FIXME: Until we switch for the new call dummy macros, this heuristic
283 is the best we can do. We are trying to determine if the pc is on
284 the stack, which (hopefully) will only happen in a call dummy.
285 We hope the current stack pointer is not so far alway from the dummy
286 frame location (true if we have not pushed large data structures or
287 gone too many levels deep) and that our 1024 is not enough to consider
288 code regions as part of the stack (true for most practical purposes) */
289 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (memaddr, sp, sp + 1024))
290 return caller_is_thumb;
291 else
292 return 0;
293 }
294
295 CORE_ADDR
296 arm_addr_bits_remove (CORE_ADDR val)
297 {
298 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (val))
299 return (val & (arm_apcs_32 ? 0xfffffffe : 0x03fffffe));
300 else
301 return (val & (arm_apcs_32 ? 0xfffffffc : 0x03fffffc));
302 }
303
304 CORE_ADDR
305 arm_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *frame)
306 {
307 return ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_register (LR_REGNUM));
308 }
309
310 int
311 arm_frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info *fi)
312 {
313 CORE_ADDR func_start, after_prologue;
314 int frameless;
315
316 func_start = (get_pc_function_start ((fi)->pc) + FUNCTION_START_OFFSET);
317 after_prologue = SKIP_PROLOGUE (func_start);
318
319 /* There are some frameless functions whose first two instructions
320 follow the standard APCS form, in which case after_prologue will
321 be func_start + 8. */
322
323 frameless = (after_prologue < func_start + 12);
324 return frameless;
325 }
326
327 /* A typical Thumb prologue looks like this:
328 push {r7, lr}
329 add sp, sp, #-28
330 add r7, sp, #12
331 Sometimes the latter instruction may be replaced by:
332 mov r7, sp
333
334 or like this:
335 push {r7, lr}
336 mov r7, sp
337 sub sp, #12
338
339 or, on tpcs, like this:
340 sub sp,#16
341 push {r7, lr}
342 (many instructions)
343 mov r7, sp
344 sub sp, #12
345
346 There is always one instruction of three classes:
347 1 - push
348 2 - setting of r7
349 3 - adjusting of sp
350
351 When we have found at least one of each class we are done with the prolog.
352 Note that the "sub sp, #NN" before the push does not count.
353 */
354
355 static CORE_ADDR
356 thumb_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR func_end)
357 {
358 CORE_ADDR current_pc;
359 int findmask = 0; /* findmask:
360 bit 0 - push { rlist }
361 bit 1 - mov r7, sp OR add r7, sp, #imm (setting of r7)
362 bit 2 - sub sp, #simm OR add sp, #simm (adjusting of sp)
363 */
364
365 for (current_pc = pc; current_pc + 2 < func_end && current_pc < pc + 40; current_pc += 2)
366 {
367 unsigned short insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 2);
368
369 if ((insn & 0xfe00) == 0xb400) /* push { rlist } */
370 {
371 findmask |= 1; /* push found */
372 }
373 else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xb000) /* add sp, #simm OR sub sp, #simm */
374 {
375 if ((findmask & 1) == 0) /* before push ? */
376 continue;
377 else
378 findmask |= 4; /* add/sub sp found */
379 }
380 else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xaf00) /* add r7, sp, #imm */
381 {
382 findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
383 }
384 else if (insn == 0x466f) /* mov r7, sp */
385 {
386 findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
387 }
388 else
389 continue; /* something in the prolog that we don't care about or some
390 instruction from outside the prolog scheduled here for optimization */
391 }
392
393 return current_pc;
394 }
395
396 /* The APCS (ARM Procedure Call Standard) defines the following
397 prologue:
398
399 mov ip, sp
400 [stmfd sp!, {a1,a2,a3,a4}]
401 stmfd sp!, {...,fp,ip,lr,pc}
402 [stfe f7, [sp, #-12]!]
403 [stfe f6, [sp, #-12]!]
404 [stfe f5, [sp, #-12]!]
405 [stfe f4, [sp, #-12]!]
406 sub fp, ip, #nn @@ nn == 20 or 4 depending on second insn */
407
408 CORE_ADDR
409 arm_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc)
410 {
411 unsigned long inst;
412 CORE_ADDR skip_pc;
413 CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end;
414 struct symtab_and_line sal;
415
416 /* See what the symbol table says. */
417
418 if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, NULL, &func_addr, &func_end))
419 {
420 sal = find_pc_line (func_addr, 0);
421 if ((sal.line != 0) && (sal.end < func_end))
422 return sal.end;
423 }
424
425 /* Check if this is Thumb code. */
426 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (pc))
427 return thumb_skip_prologue (pc, func_end);
428
429 /* Can't find the prologue end in the symbol table, try it the hard way
430 by disassembling the instructions. */
431 skip_pc = pc;
432 inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
433 if (inst != 0xe1a0c00d) /* mov ip, sp */
434 return pc;
435
436 skip_pc += 4;
437 inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
438 if ((inst & 0xfffffff0) == 0xe92d0000) /* stmfd sp!,{a1,a2,a3,a4} */
439 {
440 skip_pc += 4;
441 inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
442 }
443
444 if ((inst & 0xfffff800) != 0xe92dd800) /* stmfd sp!,{...,fp,ip,lr,pc} */
445 return pc;
446
447 skip_pc += 4;
448 inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
449
450 /* Any insns after this point may float into the code, if it makes
451 for better instruction scheduling, so we skip them only if we
452 find them, but still consdier the function to be frame-ful. */
453
454 /* We may have either one sfmfd instruction here, or several stfe
455 insns, depending on the version of floating point code we
456 support. */
457 if ((inst & 0xffbf0fff) == 0xec2d0200) /* sfmfd fn, <cnt>, [sp]! */
458 {
459 skip_pc += 4;
460 inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
461 }
462 else
463 {
464 while ((inst & 0xffff8fff) == 0xed6d0103) /* stfe fn, [sp, #-12]! */
465 {
466 skip_pc += 4;
467 inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
468 }
469 }
470
471 if ((inst & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24cb000) /* sub fp, ip, #nn */
472 skip_pc += 4;
473
474 return skip_pc;
475 }
476 /* *INDENT-OFF* */
477 /* Function: thumb_scan_prologue (helper function for arm_scan_prologue)
478 This function decodes a Thumb function prologue to determine:
479 1) the size of the stack frame
480 2) which registers are saved on it
481 3) the offsets of saved regs
482 4) the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
483 This information is stored in the "extra" fields of the frame_info.
484
485 A typical Thumb function prologue would create this stack frame
486 (offsets relative to FP)
487 old SP -> 24 stack parameters
488 20 LR
489 16 R7
490 R7 -> 0 local variables (16 bytes)
491 SP -> -12 additional stack space (12 bytes)
492 The frame size would thus be 36 bytes, and the frame offset would be
493 12 bytes. The frame register is R7.
494
495 The comments for thumb_skip_prolog() describe the algorithm we use to detect
496 the end of the prolog */
497 /* *INDENT-ON* */
498
499 static void
500 thumb_scan_prologue (struct frame_info *fi)
501 {
502 CORE_ADDR prologue_start;
503 CORE_ADDR prologue_end;
504 CORE_ADDR current_pc;
505 int saved_reg[16]; /* which register has been copied to register n? */
506 int findmask = 0; /* findmask:
507 bit 0 - push { rlist }
508 bit 1 - mov r7, sp OR add r7, sp, #imm (setting of r7)
509 bit 2 - sub sp, #simm OR add sp, #simm (adjusting of sp)
510 */
511 int i;
512
513 if (find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, NULL, &prologue_start, &prologue_end))
514 {
515 struct symtab_and_line sal = find_pc_line (prologue_start, 0);
516
517 if (sal.line == 0) /* no line info, use current PC */
518 prologue_end = fi->pc;
519 else if (sal.end < prologue_end) /* next line begins after fn end */
520 prologue_end = sal.end; /* (probably means no prologue) */
521 }
522 else
523 prologue_end = prologue_start + 40; /* We're in the boondocks: allow for */
524 /* 16 pushes, an add, and "mv fp,sp" */
525
526 prologue_end = min (prologue_end, fi->pc);
527
528 /* Initialize the saved register map. When register H is copied to
529 register L, we will put H in saved_reg[L]. */
530 for (i = 0; i < 16; i++)
531 saved_reg[i] = i;
532
533 /* Search the prologue looking for instructions that set up the
534 frame pointer, adjust the stack pointer, and save registers.
535 Do this until all basic prolog instructions are found. */
536
537 fi->framesize = 0;
538 for (current_pc = prologue_start;
539 (current_pc < prologue_end) && ((findmask & 7) != 7);
540 current_pc += 2)
541 {
542 unsigned short insn;
543 int regno;
544 int offset;
545
546 insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 2);
547
548 if ((insn & 0xfe00) == 0xb400) /* push { rlist } */
549 {
550 int mask;
551 findmask |= 1; /* push found */
552 /* Bits 0-7 contain a mask for registers R0-R7. Bit 8 says
553 whether to save LR (R14). */
554 mask = (insn & 0xff) | ((insn & 0x100) << 6);
555
556 /* Calculate offsets of saved R0-R7 and LR. */
557 for (regno = LR_REGNUM; regno >= 0; regno--)
558 if (mask & (1 << regno))
559 {
560 fi->framesize += 4;
561 fi->fsr.regs[saved_reg[regno]] = -(fi->framesize);
562 saved_reg[regno] = regno; /* reset saved register map */
563 }
564 }
565 else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xb000) /* add sp, #simm OR sub sp, #simm */
566 {
567 if ((findmask & 1) == 0) /* before push ? */
568 continue;
569 else
570 findmask |= 4; /* add/sub sp found */
571
572 offset = (insn & 0x7f) << 2; /* get scaled offset */
573 if (insn & 0x80) /* is it signed? (==subtracting) */
574 {
575 fi->frameoffset += offset;
576 offset = -offset;
577 }
578 fi->framesize -= offset;
579 }
580 else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xaf00) /* add r7, sp, #imm */
581 {
582 findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
583 fi->framereg = THUMB_FP_REGNUM;
584 fi->frameoffset = (insn & 0xff) << 2; /* get scaled offset */
585 }
586 else if (insn == 0x466f) /* mov r7, sp */
587 {
588 findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
589 fi->framereg = THUMB_FP_REGNUM;
590 fi->frameoffset = 0;
591 saved_reg[THUMB_FP_REGNUM] = SP_REGNUM;
592 }
593 else if ((insn & 0xffc0) == 0x4640) /* mov r0-r7, r8-r15 */
594 {
595 int lo_reg = insn & 7; /* dest. register (r0-r7) */
596 int hi_reg = ((insn >> 3) & 7) + 8; /* source register (r8-15) */
597 saved_reg[lo_reg] = hi_reg; /* remember hi reg was saved */
598 }
599 else
600 continue; /* something in the prolog that we don't care about or some
601 instruction from outside the prolog scheduled here for optimization */
602 }
603 }
604
605 /* Check if prologue for this frame's PC has already been scanned. If
606 it has, copy the relevant information about that prologue and
607 return non-zero. Otherwise do not copy anything and return zero.
608
609 The information saved in the cache includes:
610 * the frame register number;
611 * the size of the stack frame;
612 * the offsets of saved regs (relative to the old SP); and
613 * the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
614
615 The cache contains only one entry, since this is adequate for the
616 typical sequence of prologue scan requests we get. When performing
617 a backtrace, GDB will usually ask to scan the same function twice
618 in a row (once to get the frame chain, and once to fill in the
619 extra frame information). */
620
621 static struct frame_info prologue_cache;
622
623 static int
624 check_prologue_cache (struct frame_info *fi)
625 {
626 int i;
627
628 if (fi->pc == prologue_cache.pc)
629 {
630 fi->framereg = prologue_cache.framereg;
631 fi->framesize = prologue_cache.framesize;
632 fi->frameoffset = prologue_cache.frameoffset;
633 for (i = 0; i <= NUM_REGS; i++)
634 fi->fsr.regs[i] = prologue_cache.fsr.regs[i];
635 return 1;
636 }
637 else
638 return 0;
639 }
640
641
642 /* Copy the prologue information from fi to the prologue cache. */
643
644 static void
645 save_prologue_cache (struct frame_info *fi)
646 {
647 int i;
648
649 prologue_cache.pc = fi->pc;
650 prologue_cache.framereg = fi->framereg;
651 prologue_cache.framesize = fi->framesize;
652 prologue_cache.frameoffset = fi->frameoffset;
653
654 for (i = 0; i <= NUM_REGS; i++)
655 prologue_cache.fsr.regs[i] = fi->fsr.regs[i];
656 }
657
658
659 /* This function decodes an ARM function prologue to determine:
660 1) the size of the stack frame
661 2) which registers are saved on it
662 3) the offsets of saved regs
663 4) the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
664 This information is stored in the "extra" fields of the frame_info.
665
666 There are two basic forms for the ARM prologue. The fixed argument
667 function call will look like:
668
669 mov ip, sp
670 stmfd sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc}
671 sub fp, ip, #4
672 [sub sp, sp, #4]
673
674 Which would create this stack frame (offsets relative to FP):
675 IP -> 4 (caller's stack)
676 FP -> 0 PC (points to address of stmfd instruction + 8 in callee)
677 -4 LR (return address in caller)
678 -8 IP (copy of caller's SP)
679 -12 FP (caller's FP)
680 SP -> -28 Local variables
681
682 The frame size would thus be 32 bytes, and the frame offset would be
683 28 bytes. The stmfd call can also save any of the vN registers it
684 plans to use, which increases the frame size accordingly.
685
686 Note: The stored PC is 8 off of the STMFD instruction that stored it
687 because the ARM Store instructions always store PC + 8 when you read
688 the PC register.
689
690 A variable argument function call will look like:
691
692 mov ip, sp
693 stmfd sp!, {a1, a2, a3, a4}
694 stmfd sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc}
695 sub fp, ip, #20
696
697 Which would create this stack frame (offsets relative to FP):
698 IP -> 20 (caller's stack)
699 16 A4
700 12 A3
701 8 A2
702 4 A1
703 FP -> 0 PC (points to address of stmfd instruction + 8 in callee)
704 -4 LR (return address in caller)
705 -8 IP (copy of caller's SP)
706 -12 FP (caller's FP)
707 SP -> -28 Local variables
708
709 The frame size would thus be 48 bytes, and the frame offset would be
710 28 bytes.
711
712 There is another potential complication, which is that the optimizer
713 will try to separate the store of fp in the "stmfd" instruction from
714 the "sub fp, ip, #NN" instruction. Almost anything can be there, so
715 we just key on the stmfd, and then scan for the "sub fp, ip, #NN"...
716
717 Also, note, the original version of the ARM toolchain claimed that there
718 should be an
719
720 instruction at the end of the prologue. I have never seen GCC produce
721 this, and the ARM docs don't mention it. We still test for it below in
722 case it happens...
723
724 */
725
726 static void
727 arm_scan_prologue (struct frame_info *fi)
728 {
729 int regno, sp_offset, fp_offset;
730 CORE_ADDR prologue_start, prologue_end, current_pc;
731
732 /* Check if this function is already in the cache of frame information. */
733 if (check_prologue_cache (fi))
734 return;
735
736 /* Assume there is no frame until proven otherwise. */
737 fi->framereg = SP_REGNUM;
738 fi->framesize = 0;
739 fi->frameoffset = 0;
740
741 /* Check for Thumb prologue. */
742 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (fi->pc))
743 {
744 thumb_scan_prologue (fi);
745 save_prologue_cache (fi);
746 return;
747 }
748
749 /* Find the function prologue. If we can't find the function in
750 the symbol table, peek in the stack frame to find the PC. */
751 if (find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, NULL, &prologue_start, &prologue_end))
752 {
753 /* One way to find the end of the prologue (which works well
754 for unoptimized code) is to do the following:
755
756 struct symtab_and_line sal = find_pc_line (prologue_start, 0);
757
758 if (sal.line == 0)
759 prologue_end = fi->pc;
760 else if (sal.end < prologue_end)
761 prologue_end = sal.end;
762
763 This mechanism is very accurate so long as the optimizer
764 doesn't move any instructions from the function body into the
765 prologue. If this happens, sal.end will be the last
766 instruction in the first hunk of prologue code just before
767 the first instruction that the scheduler has moved from
768 the body to the prologue.
769
770 In order to make sure that we scan all of the prologue
771 instructions, we use a slightly less accurate mechanism which
772 may scan more than necessary. To help compensate for this
773 lack of accuracy, the prologue scanning loop below contains
774 several clauses which'll cause the loop to terminate early if
775 an implausible prologue instruction is encountered.
776
777 The expression
778
779 prologue_start + 64
780
781 is a suitable endpoint since it accounts for the largest
782 possible prologue plus up to five instructions inserted by
783 the scheduler. */
784
785 if (prologue_end > prologue_start + 64)
786 {
787 prologue_end = prologue_start + 64; /* See above. */
788 }
789 }
790 else
791 {
792 /* Get address of the stmfd in the prologue of the callee; the saved
793 PC is the address of the stmfd + 8. */
794 prologue_start = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_memory_integer (fi->frame, 4))
795 - 8;
796 prologue_end = prologue_start + 64; /* See above. */
797 }
798
799 /* Now search the prologue looking for instructions that set up the
800 frame pointer, adjust the stack pointer, and save registers.
801
802 Be careful, however, and if it doesn't look like a prologue,
803 don't try to scan it. If, for instance, a frameless function
804 begins with stmfd sp!, then we will tell ourselves there is
805 a frame, which will confuse stack traceback, as well ad"finish"
806 and other operations that rely on a knowledge of the stack
807 traceback.
808
809 In the APCS, the prologue should start with "mov ip, sp" so
810 if we don't see this as the first insn, we will stop. */
811
812 sp_offset = fp_offset = 0;
813
814 if (read_memory_unsigned_integer (prologue_start, 4)
815 == 0xe1a0c00d) /* mov ip, sp */
816 {
817 for (current_pc = prologue_start + 4; current_pc < prologue_end;
818 current_pc += 4)
819 {
820 unsigned int insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 4);
821
822 if ((insn & 0xffff0000) == 0xe92d0000)
823 /* stmfd sp!, {..., fp, ip, lr, pc}
824 or
825 stmfd sp!, {a1, a2, a3, a4} */
826 {
827 int mask = insn & 0xffff;
828
829 /* Calculate offsets of saved registers. */
830 for (regno = PC_REGNUM; regno >= 0; regno--)
831 if (mask & (1 << regno))
832 {
833 sp_offset -= 4;
834 fi->fsr.regs[regno] = sp_offset;
835 }
836 }
837 else if ((insn & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24cb000) /* sub fp, ip #n */
838 {
839 unsigned imm = insn & 0xff; /* immediate value */
840 unsigned rot = (insn & 0xf00) >> 7; /* rotate amount */
841 imm = (imm >> rot) | (imm << (32 - rot));
842 fp_offset = -imm;
843 fi->framereg = FP_REGNUM;
844 }
845 else if ((insn & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24dd000) /* sub sp, sp #n */
846 {
847 unsigned imm = insn & 0xff; /* immediate value */
848 unsigned rot = (insn & 0xf00) >> 7; /* rotate amount */
849 imm = (imm >> rot) | (imm << (32 - rot));
850 sp_offset -= imm;
851 }
852 else if ((insn & 0xffff7fff) == 0xed6d0103) /* stfe f?, [sp, -#c]! */
853 {
854 sp_offset -= 12;
855 regno = F0_REGNUM + ((insn >> 12) & 0x07);
856 fi->fsr.regs[regno] = sp_offset;
857 }
858 else if ((insn & 0xffbf0fff) == 0xec2d0200) /* sfmfd f0, 4, [sp!] */
859 {
860 int n_saved_fp_regs;
861 unsigned int fp_start_reg, fp_bound_reg;
862
863 if ((insn & 0x800) == 0x800) /* N0 is set */
864 {
865 if ((insn & 0x40000) == 0x40000) /* N1 is set */
866 n_saved_fp_regs = 3;
867 else
868 n_saved_fp_regs = 1;
869 }
870 else
871 {
872 if ((insn & 0x40000) == 0x40000) /* N1 is set */
873 n_saved_fp_regs = 2;
874 else
875 n_saved_fp_regs = 4;
876 }
877
878 fp_start_reg = F0_REGNUM + ((insn >> 12) & 0x7);
879 fp_bound_reg = fp_start_reg + n_saved_fp_regs;
880 for (; fp_start_reg < fp_bound_reg; fp_start_reg++)
881 {
882 sp_offset -= 12;
883 fi->fsr.regs[fp_start_reg++] = sp_offset;
884 }
885 }
886 else if ((insn & 0xf0000000) != 0xe0000000)
887 break; /* Condition not true, exit early */
888 else if ((insn & 0xfe200000) == 0xe8200000) /* ldm? */
889 break; /* Don't scan past a block load */
890 else
891 /* The optimizer might shove anything into the prologue,
892 so we just skip what we don't recognize. */
893 continue;
894 }
895 }
896
897 /* The frame size is just the negative of the offset (from the original SP)
898 of the last thing thing we pushed on the stack. The frame offset is
899 [new FP] - [new SP]. */
900 fi->framesize = -sp_offset;
901 fi->frameoffset = fp_offset - sp_offset;
902
903 save_prologue_cache (fi);
904 }
905
906 /* Find REGNUM on the stack. Otherwise, it's in an active register.
907 One thing we might want to do here is to check REGNUM against the
908 clobber mask, and somehow flag it as invalid if it isn't saved on
909 the stack somewhere. This would provide a graceful failure mode
910 when trying to get the value of caller-saves registers for an inner
911 frame. */
912
913 static CORE_ADDR
914 arm_find_callers_reg (struct frame_info *fi, int regnum)
915 {
916 for (; fi; fi = fi->next)
917
918 #if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
919 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
920 return generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, regnum);
921 else
922 #endif
923 if (fi->fsr.regs[regnum] != 0)
924 return read_memory_integer (fi->fsr.regs[regnum],
925 REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum));
926 return read_register (regnum);
927 }
928 /* *INDENT-OFF* */
929 /* Function: frame_chain
930 Given a GDB frame, determine the address of the calling function's frame.
931 This will be used to create a new GDB frame struct, and then
932 INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO and INIT_FRAME_PC will be called for the new frame.
933 For ARM, we save the frame size when we initialize the frame_info.
934
935 The original definition of this function was a macro in tm-arm.h:
936 { In the case of the ARM, the frame's nominal address is the FP value,
937 and 12 bytes before comes the saved previous FP value as a 4-byte word. }
938
939 #define FRAME_CHAIN(thisframe) \
940 ((thisframe)->pc >= LOWEST_PC ? \
941 read_memory_integer ((thisframe)->frame - 12, 4) :\
942 0)
943 */
944 /* *INDENT-ON* */
945
946 CORE_ADDR
947 arm_frame_chain (struct frame_info *fi)
948 {
949 #if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
950 CORE_ADDR fn_start, callers_pc, fp;
951
952 /* is this a dummy frame? */
953 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
954 return fi->frame; /* dummy frame same as caller's frame */
955
956 /* is caller-of-this a dummy frame? */
957 callers_pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi); /* find out who called us: */
958 fp = arm_find_callers_reg (fi, FP_REGNUM);
959 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (callers_pc, fp, fp))
960 return fp; /* dummy frame's frame may bear no relation to ours */
961
962 if (find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, 0, &fn_start, 0))
963 if (fn_start == entry_point_address ())
964 return 0; /* in _start fn, don't chain further */
965 #endif
966 CORE_ADDR caller_pc, fn_start;
967 struct frame_info caller_fi;
968 int framereg = fi->framereg;
969
970 if (fi->pc < LOWEST_PC)
971 return 0;
972
973 /* If the caller is the startup code, we're at the end of the chain. */
974 caller_pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi);
975 if (find_pc_partial_function (caller_pc, 0, &fn_start, 0))
976 if (fn_start == entry_point_address ())
977 return 0;
978
979 /* If the caller is Thumb and the caller is ARM, or vice versa,
980 the frame register of the caller is different from ours.
981 So we must scan the prologue of the caller to determine its
982 frame register number. */
983 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (caller_pc) != arm_pc_is_thumb (fi->pc))
984 {
985 memset (&caller_fi, 0, sizeof (caller_fi));
986 caller_fi.pc = caller_pc;
987 arm_scan_prologue (&caller_fi);
988 framereg = caller_fi.framereg;
989 }
990
991 /* If the caller used a frame register, return its value.
992 Otherwise, return the caller's stack pointer. */
993 if (framereg == FP_REGNUM || framereg == THUMB_FP_REGNUM)
994 return arm_find_callers_reg (fi, framereg);
995 else
996 return fi->frame + fi->framesize;
997 }
998
999 /* This function actually figures out the frame address for a given pc
1000 and sp. This is tricky because we sometimes don't use an explicit
1001 frame pointer, and the previous stack pointer isn't necessarily
1002 recorded on the stack. The only reliable way to get this info is
1003 to examine the prologue. FROMLEAF is a little confusing, it means
1004 this is the next frame up the chain AFTER a frameless function. If
1005 this is true, then the frame value for this frame is still in the
1006 fp register. */
1007
1008 void
1009 arm_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *fi)
1010 {
1011 int reg;
1012
1013 if (fi->next)
1014 fi->pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi->next);
1015
1016 memset (fi->fsr.regs, '\000', sizeof fi->fsr.regs);
1017
1018 #if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
1019 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
1020 {
1021 /* We need to setup fi->frame here because run_stack_dummy gets it wrong
1022 by assuming it's always FP. */
1023 fi->frame = generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, SP_REGNUM);
1024 fi->framesize = 0;
1025 fi->frameoffset = 0;
1026 return;
1027 }
1028 else
1029 #endif
1030
1031 /* Determine whether or not we're in a sigtramp frame.
1032 Unfortunately, it isn't sufficient to test
1033 fi->signal_handler_caller because this value is sometimes set
1034 after invoking INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO. So we test *both*
1035 fi->signal_handler_caller and IN_SIGTRAMP to determine if we need
1036 to use the sigcontext addresses for the saved registers.
1037
1038 Note: If an ARM IN_SIGTRAMP method ever needs to compare against
1039 the name of the function, the code below will have to be changed
1040 to first fetch the name of the function and then pass this name
1041 to IN_SIGTRAMP. */
1042
1043 if (SIGCONTEXT_REGISTER_ADDRESS
1044 && (fi->signal_handler_caller || IN_SIGTRAMP (fi->pc, 0)))
1045 {
1046 CORE_ADDR sp;
1047
1048 if (!fi->next)
1049 sp = read_sp();
1050 else
1051 sp = fi->next->frame - fi->next->frameoffset + fi->next->framesize;
1052
1053 for (reg = 0; reg < NUM_REGS; reg++)
1054 fi->fsr.regs[reg] = SIGCONTEXT_REGISTER_ADDRESS (sp, fi->pc, reg);
1055
1056 /* FIXME: What about thumb mode? */
1057 fi->framereg = SP_REGNUM;
1058 fi->frame = read_memory_integer (fi->fsr.regs[fi->framereg], 4);
1059 fi->framesize = 0;
1060 fi->frameoffset = 0;
1061
1062 }
1063 else
1064 {
1065 arm_scan_prologue (fi);
1066
1067 if (!fi->next)
1068 /* this is the innermost frame? */
1069 fi->frame = read_register (fi->framereg);
1070 else if (fi->framereg == FP_REGNUM || fi->framereg == THUMB_FP_REGNUM)
1071 {
1072 /* not the innermost frame */
1073 /* If we have an FP, the callee saved it. */
1074 if (fi->next->fsr.regs[fi->framereg] != 0)
1075 fi->frame =
1076 read_memory_integer (fi->next->fsr.regs[fi->framereg], 4);
1077 else if (fromleaf)
1078 /* If we were called by a frameless fn. then our frame is
1079 still in the frame pointer register on the board... */
1080 fi->frame = read_fp ();
1081 }
1082
1083 /* Calculate actual addresses of saved registers using offsets
1084 determined by arm_scan_prologue. */
1085 for (reg = 0; reg < NUM_REGS; reg++)
1086 if (fi->fsr.regs[reg] != 0)
1087 fi->fsr.regs[reg] += fi->frame + fi->framesize - fi->frameoffset;
1088 }
1089 }
1090
1091
1092 /* Find the caller of this frame. We do this by seeing if LR_REGNUM
1093 is saved in the stack anywhere, otherwise we get it from the
1094 registers.
1095
1096 The old definition of this function was a macro:
1097 #define FRAME_SAVED_PC(FRAME) \
1098 ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_memory_integer ((FRAME)->frame - 4, 4)) */
1099
1100 CORE_ADDR
1101 arm_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *fi)
1102 {
1103 #if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
1104 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
1105 return generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, PC_REGNUM);
1106 else
1107 #endif
1108 {
1109 CORE_ADDR pc = arm_find_callers_reg (fi, LR_REGNUM);
1110 return IS_THUMB_ADDR (pc) ? UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (pc) : pc;
1111 }
1112 }
1113
1114 /* Return the frame address. On ARM, it is R11; on Thumb it is R7.
1115 Examine the Program Status Register to decide which state we're in. */
1116
1117 CORE_ADDR
1118 arm_target_read_fp (void)
1119 {
1120 if (read_register (PS_REGNUM) & 0x20) /* Bit 5 is Thumb state bit */
1121 return read_register (THUMB_FP_REGNUM); /* R7 if Thumb */
1122 else
1123 return read_register (FP_REGNUM); /* R11 if ARM */
1124 }
1125
1126 /* Calculate the frame offsets of the saved registers (ARM version). */
1127
1128 void
1129 arm_frame_find_saved_regs (struct frame_info *fi,
1130 struct frame_saved_regs *regaddr)
1131 {
1132 memcpy (regaddr, &fi->fsr, sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs));
1133 }
1134
1135 void
1136 arm_push_dummy_frame (void)
1137 {
1138 CORE_ADDR old_sp = read_register (SP_REGNUM);
1139 CORE_ADDR sp = old_sp;
1140 CORE_ADDR fp, prologue_start;
1141 int regnum;
1142
1143 /* Push the two dummy prologue instructions in reverse order,
1144 so that they'll be in the correct low-to-high order in memory. */
1145 /* sub fp, ip, #4 */
1146 sp = push_word (sp, 0xe24cb004);
1147 /* stmdb sp!, {r0-r10, fp, ip, lr, pc} */
1148 prologue_start = sp = push_word (sp, 0xe92ddfff);
1149
1150 /* Push a pointer to the dummy prologue + 12, because when stm
1151 instruction stores the PC, it stores the address of the stm
1152 instruction itself plus 12. */
1153 fp = sp = push_word (sp, prologue_start + 12);
1154 sp = push_word (sp, read_register (PC_REGNUM)); /* FIXME: was PS_REGNUM */
1155 sp = push_word (sp, old_sp);
1156 sp = push_word (sp, read_register (FP_REGNUM));
1157
1158 for (regnum = 10; regnum >= 0; regnum--)
1159 sp = push_word (sp, read_register (regnum));
1160
1161 write_register (FP_REGNUM, fp);
1162 write_register (THUMB_FP_REGNUM, fp);
1163 write_register (SP_REGNUM, sp);
1164 }
1165
1166 /* Fix up the call dummy, based on whether the processor is currently
1167 in Thumb or ARM mode, and whether the target function is Thumb or
1168 ARM. There are three different situations requiring three
1169 different dummies:
1170
1171 * ARM calling ARM: uses the call dummy in tm-arm.h, which has already
1172 been copied into the dummy parameter to this function.
1173 * ARM calling Thumb: uses the call dummy in tm-arm.h, but with the
1174 "mov pc,r4" instruction patched to be a "bx r4" instead.
1175 * Thumb calling anything: uses the Thumb dummy defined below, which
1176 works for calling both ARM and Thumb functions.
1177
1178 All three call dummies expect to receive the target function
1179 address in R4, with the low bit set if it's a Thumb function. */
1180
1181 void
1182 arm_fix_call_dummy (char *dummy, CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR fun, int nargs,
1183 value_ptr *args, struct type *type, int gcc_p)
1184 {
1185 static short thumb_dummy[4] =
1186 {
1187 0xf000, 0xf801, /* bl label */
1188 0xdf18, /* swi 24 */
1189 0x4720, /* label: bx r4 */
1190 };
1191 static unsigned long arm_bx_r4 = 0xe12fff14; /* bx r4 instruction */
1192
1193 /* Set flag indicating whether the current PC is in a Thumb function. */
1194 caller_is_thumb = arm_pc_is_thumb (read_pc ());
1195
1196 /* If the target function is Thumb, set the low bit of the function
1197 address. And if the CPU is currently in ARM mode, patch the
1198 second instruction of call dummy to use a BX instruction to
1199 switch to Thumb mode. */
1200 target_is_thumb = arm_pc_is_thumb (fun);
1201 if (target_is_thumb)
1202 {
1203 fun |= 1;
1204 if (!caller_is_thumb)
1205 store_unsigned_integer (dummy + 4, sizeof (arm_bx_r4), arm_bx_r4);
1206 }
1207
1208 /* If the CPU is currently in Thumb mode, use the Thumb call dummy
1209 instead of the ARM one that's already been copied. This will
1210 work for both Thumb and ARM target functions. */
1211 if (caller_is_thumb)
1212 {
1213 int i;
1214 char *p = dummy;
1215 int len = sizeof (thumb_dummy) / sizeof (thumb_dummy[0]);
1216
1217 for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
1218 {
1219 store_unsigned_integer (p, sizeof (thumb_dummy[0]), thumb_dummy[i]);
1220 p += sizeof (thumb_dummy[0]);
1221 }
1222 }
1223
1224 /* Put the target address in r4; the call dummy will copy this to
1225 the PC. */
1226 write_register (4, fun);
1227 }
1228
1229 /* Return the offset in the call dummy of the instruction that needs
1230 to have a breakpoint placed on it. This is the offset of the 'swi
1231 24' instruction, which is no longer actually used, but simply acts
1232 as a place-holder now.
1233
1234 This implements the CALL_DUMMY_BREAK_OFFSET macro. */
1235
1236 int
1237 arm_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset (void)
1238 {
1239 if (caller_is_thumb)
1240 return 4;
1241 else
1242 return 8;
1243 }
1244
1245 /* Note: ScottB
1246
1247 This function does not support passing parameters using the FPA
1248 variant of the APCS. It passes any floating point arguments in the
1249 general registers and/or on the stack. */
1250
1251 CORE_ADDR
1252 arm_push_arguments (int nargs, value_ptr * args, CORE_ADDR sp,
1253 int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
1254 {
1255 char *fp;
1256 int argnum, argreg, nstack_size;
1257
1258 /* Walk through the list of args and determine how large a temporary
1259 stack is required. Need to take care here as structs may be
1260 passed on the stack, and we have to to push them. */
1261 nstack_size = -4 * REGISTER_SIZE; /* Some arguments go into A1-A4. */
1262 if (struct_return) /* The struct address goes in A1. */
1263 nstack_size += REGISTER_SIZE;
1264
1265 /* Walk through the arguments and add their size to nstack_size. */
1266 for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
1267 {
1268 int len;
1269 struct type *arg_type;
1270
1271 arg_type = check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (args[argnum]));
1272 len = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type);
1273
1274 /* ANSI C code passes float arguments as integers, K&R code
1275 passes float arguments as doubles. Correct for this here. */
1276 if (TYPE_CODE_FLT == TYPE_CODE (arg_type) && REGISTER_SIZE == len)
1277 nstack_size += FP_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE;
1278 else
1279 nstack_size += len;
1280 }
1281
1282 /* Allocate room on the stack, and initialize our stack frame
1283 pointer. */
1284 fp = NULL;
1285 if (nstack_size > 0)
1286 {
1287 sp -= nstack_size;
1288 fp = (char *) sp;
1289 }
1290
1291 /* Initialize the integer argument register pointer. */
1292 argreg = A1_REGNUM;
1293
1294 /* The struct_return pointer occupies the first parameter passing
1295 register. */
1296 if (struct_return)
1297 write_register (argreg++, struct_addr);
1298
1299 /* Process arguments from left to right. Store as many as allowed
1300 in the parameter passing registers (A1-A4), and save the rest on
1301 the temporary stack. */
1302 for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
1303 {
1304 int len;
1305 char *val;
1306 double dbl_arg;
1307 CORE_ADDR regval;
1308 enum type_code typecode;
1309 struct type *arg_type, *target_type;
1310
1311 arg_type = check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (args[argnum]));
1312 target_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (arg_type);
1313 len = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type);
1314 typecode = TYPE_CODE (arg_type);
1315 val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (args[argnum]);
1316
1317 /* ANSI C code passes float arguments as integers, K&R code
1318 passes float arguments as doubles. The .stabs record for
1319 for ANSI prototype floating point arguments records the
1320 type as FP_INTEGER, while a K&R style (no prototype)
1321 .stabs records the type as FP_FLOAT. In this latter case
1322 the compiler converts the float arguments to double before
1323 calling the function. */
1324 if (TYPE_CODE_FLT == typecode && REGISTER_SIZE == len)
1325 {
1326 float f;
1327 double d;
1328 char * bufo = (char *) &d;
1329 char * bufd = (char *) &dbl_arg;
1330
1331 len = sizeof (double);
1332 f = *(float *) val;
1333 SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST (&f, sizeof (float)); /* adjust endianess */
1334 d = f;
1335 /* We must revert the longwords so they get loaded into the
1336 the right registers. */
1337 memcpy (bufd, bufo + len / 2, len / 2);
1338 SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST (bufd, len / 2); /* adjust endianess */
1339 memcpy (bufd + len / 2, bufo, len / 2);
1340 SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST (bufd + len / 2, len / 2); /* adjust endianess */
1341 val = (char *) &dbl_arg;
1342 }
1343 #if 1
1344 /* I don't know why this code was disable. The only logical use
1345 for a function pointer is to call that function, so setting
1346 the mode bit is perfectly fine. FN */
1347 /* If the argument is a pointer to a function, and it is a Thumb
1348 function, set the low bit of the pointer. */
1349 if (TYPE_CODE_PTR == typecode
1350 && NULL != target_type
1351 && TYPE_CODE_FUNC == TYPE_CODE (target_type))
1352 {
1353 CORE_ADDR regval = extract_address (val, len);
1354 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (regval))
1355 store_address (val, len, MAKE_THUMB_ADDR (regval));
1356 }
1357 #endif
1358 /* Copy the argument to general registers or the stack in
1359 register-sized pieces. Large arguments are split between
1360 registers and stack. */
1361 while (len > 0)
1362 {
1363 int partial_len = len < REGISTER_SIZE ? len : REGISTER_SIZE;
1364
1365 if (argreg <= ARM_LAST_ARG_REGNUM)
1366 {
1367 /* It's an argument being passed in a general register. */
1368 regval = extract_address (val, partial_len);
1369 write_register (argreg++, regval);
1370 }
1371 else
1372 {
1373 /* Push the arguments onto the stack. */
1374 write_memory ((CORE_ADDR) fp, val, REGISTER_SIZE);
1375 fp += REGISTER_SIZE;
1376 }
1377
1378 len -= partial_len;
1379 val += partial_len;
1380 }
1381 }
1382
1383 /* Return adjusted stack pointer. */
1384 return sp;
1385 }
1386
1387 void
1388 arm_pop_frame (void)
1389 {
1390 int regnum;
1391 struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame ();
1392
1393 if (!PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY(frame->pc, frame->frame, read_fp()))
1394 {
1395 CORE_ADDR old_SP;
1396
1397 old_SP = read_register (frame->framereg);
1398 for (regnum = 0; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++)
1399 if (frame->fsr.regs[regnum] != 0)
1400 write_register (regnum,
1401 read_memory_integer (frame->fsr.regs[regnum], 4));
1402
1403 write_register (PC_REGNUM, FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
1404 write_register (SP_REGNUM, old_SP);
1405 }
1406 else
1407 {
1408 CORE_ADDR sp;
1409
1410 sp = read_register (FP_REGNUM);
1411 sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR); /* we don't care about this first word */
1412
1413 write_register (PC_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
1414 sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
1415 write_register (SP_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
1416 sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
1417 write_register (FP_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
1418 sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
1419
1420 for (regnum = 10; regnum >= 0; regnum--)
1421 {
1422 write_register (regnum, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
1423 sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
1424 }
1425 }
1426
1427 flush_cached_frames ();
1428 }
1429
1430 static void
1431 print_fpu_flags (int flags)
1432 {
1433 if (flags & (1 << 0))
1434 fputs ("IVO ", stdout);
1435 if (flags & (1 << 1))
1436 fputs ("DVZ ", stdout);
1437 if (flags & (1 << 2))
1438 fputs ("OFL ", stdout);
1439 if (flags & (1 << 3))
1440 fputs ("UFL ", stdout);
1441 if (flags & (1 << 4))
1442 fputs ("INX ", stdout);
1443 putchar ('\n');
1444 }
1445
1446 void
1447 arm_float_info (void)
1448 {
1449 register unsigned long status = read_register (FPS_REGNUM);
1450 int type;
1451
1452 type = (status >> 24) & 127;
1453 printf ("%s FPU type %d\n",
1454 (status & (1 << 31)) ? "Hardware" : "Software",
1455 type);
1456 fputs ("mask: ", stdout);
1457 print_fpu_flags (status >> 16);
1458 fputs ("flags: ", stdout);
1459 print_fpu_flags (status);
1460 }
1461
1462 #if 0
1463 /* FIXME: The generated assembler works but sucks. Instead of using
1464 r0, r1 it pushes them on the stack, then loads them into r3, r4 and
1465 uses those registers. I must be missing something. ScottB */
1466
1467 void
1468 convert_from_extended (void *ptr, void *dbl)
1469 {
1470 __asm__ ("
1471 ldfe f0,[%0]
1472 stfd f0,[%1] "
1473 : /* no output */
1474 : "r" (ptr), "r" (dbl));
1475 }
1476
1477 void
1478 convert_to_extended (void *dbl, void *ptr)
1479 {
1480 __asm__ ("
1481 ldfd f0,[%0]
1482 stfe f0,[%1] "
1483 : /* no output */
1484 : "r" (dbl), "r" (ptr));
1485 }
1486 #else
1487 static void
1488 convert_from_extended (void *ptr, void *dbl)
1489 {
1490 *(double *) dbl = *(double *) ptr;
1491 }
1492
1493 void
1494 convert_to_extended (void *dbl, void *ptr)
1495 {
1496 *(double *) ptr = *(double *) dbl;
1497 }
1498 #endif
1499
1500 /* Nonzero if register N requires conversion from raw format to
1501 virtual format. */
1502
1503 int
1504 arm_register_convertible (unsigned int regnum)
1505 {
1506 return ((regnum - F0_REGNUM) < 8);
1507 }
1508
1509 /* Convert data from raw format for register REGNUM in buffer FROM to
1510 virtual format with type TYPE in buffer TO. */
1511
1512 void
1513 arm_register_convert_to_virtual (unsigned int regnum, struct type *type,
1514 void *from, void *to)
1515 {
1516 double val;
1517
1518 convert_from_extended (from, &val);
1519 store_floating (to, TYPE_LENGTH (type), val);
1520 }
1521
1522 /* Convert data from virtual format with type TYPE in buffer FROM to
1523 raw format for register REGNUM in buffer TO. */
1524
1525 void
1526 arm_register_convert_to_raw (unsigned int regnum, struct type *type,
1527 void *from, void *to)
1528 {
1529 double val = extract_floating (from, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
1530
1531 convert_to_extended (&val, to);
1532 }
1533
1534 static int
1535 condition_true (unsigned long cond, unsigned long status_reg)
1536 {
1537 if (cond == INST_AL || cond == INST_NV)
1538 return 1;
1539
1540 switch (cond)
1541 {
1542 case INST_EQ:
1543 return ((status_reg & FLAG_Z) != 0);
1544 case INST_NE:
1545 return ((status_reg & FLAG_Z) == 0);
1546 case INST_CS:
1547 return ((status_reg & FLAG_C) != 0);
1548 case INST_CC:
1549 return ((status_reg & FLAG_C) == 0);
1550 case INST_MI:
1551 return ((status_reg & FLAG_N) != 0);
1552 case INST_PL:
1553 return ((status_reg & FLAG_N) == 0);
1554 case INST_VS:
1555 return ((status_reg & FLAG_V) != 0);
1556 case INST_VC:
1557 return ((status_reg & FLAG_V) == 0);
1558 case INST_HI:
1559 return ((status_reg & (FLAG_C | FLAG_Z)) == FLAG_C);
1560 case INST_LS:
1561 return ((status_reg & (FLAG_C | FLAG_Z)) != FLAG_C);
1562 case INST_GE:
1563 return (((status_reg & FLAG_N) == 0) == ((status_reg & FLAG_V) == 0));
1564 case INST_LT:
1565 return (((status_reg & FLAG_N) == 0) != ((status_reg & FLAG_V) == 0));
1566 case INST_GT:
1567 return (((status_reg & FLAG_Z) == 0) &&
1568 (((status_reg & FLAG_N) == 0) == ((status_reg & FLAG_V) == 0)));
1569 case INST_LE:
1570 return (((status_reg & FLAG_Z) != 0) ||
1571 (((status_reg & FLAG_N) == 0) != ((status_reg & FLAG_V) == 0)));
1572 }
1573 return 1;
1574 }
1575
1576 #define submask(x) ((1L << ((x) + 1)) - 1)
1577 #define bit(obj,st) (((obj) >> (st)) & 1)
1578 #define bits(obj,st,fn) (((obj) >> (st)) & submask ((fn) - (st)))
1579 #define sbits(obj,st,fn) \
1580 ((long) (bits(obj,st,fn) | ((long) bit(obj,fn) * ~ submask (fn - st))))
1581 #define BranchDest(addr,instr) \
1582 ((CORE_ADDR) (((long) (addr)) + 8 + (sbits (instr, 0, 23) << 2)))
1583 #define ARM_PC_32 1
1584
1585 static unsigned long
1586 shifted_reg_val (unsigned long inst, int carry, unsigned long pc_val,
1587 unsigned long status_reg)
1588 {
1589 unsigned long res, shift;
1590 int rm = bits (inst, 0, 3);
1591 unsigned long shifttype = bits (inst, 5, 6);
1592
1593 if (bit (inst, 4))
1594 {
1595 int rs = bits (inst, 8, 11);
1596 shift = (rs == 15 ? pc_val + 8 : read_register (rs)) & 0xFF;
1597 }
1598 else
1599 shift = bits (inst, 7, 11);
1600
1601 res = (rm == 15
1602 ? ((pc_val | (ARM_PC_32 ? 0 : status_reg))
1603 + (bit (inst, 4) ? 12 : 8))
1604 : read_register (rm));
1605
1606 switch (shifttype)
1607 {
1608 case 0: /* LSL */
1609 res = shift >= 32 ? 0 : res << shift;
1610 break;
1611
1612 case 1: /* LSR */
1613 res = shift >= 32 ? 0 : res >> shift;
1614 break;
1615
1616 case 2: /* ASR */
1617 if (shift >= 32)
1618 shift = 31;
1619 res = ((res & 0x80000000L)
1620 ? ~((~res) >> shift) : res >> shift);
1621 break;
1622
1623 case 3: /* ROR/RRX */
1624 shift &= 31;
1625 if (shift == 0)
1626 res = (res >> 1) | (carry ? 0x80000000L : 0);
1627 else
1628 res = (res >> shift) | (res << (32 - shift));
1629 break;
1630 }
1631
1632 return res & 0xffffffff;
1633 }
1634
1635 /* Return number of 1-bits in VAL. */
1636
1637 static int
1638 bitcount (unsigned long val)
1639 {
1640 int nbits;
1641 for (nbits = 0; val != 0; nbits++)
1642 val &= val - 1; /* delete rightmost 1-bit in val */
1643 return nbits;
1644 }
1645
1646 static CORE_ADDR
1647 thumb_get_next_pc (CORE_ADDR pc)
1648 {
1649 unsigned long pc_val = ((unsigned long) pc) + 4; /* PC after prefetch */
1650 unsigned short inst1 = read_memory_integer (pc, 2);
1651 CORE_ADDR nextpc = pc + 2; /* default is next instruction */
1652 unsigned long offset;
1653
1654 if ((inst1 & 0xff00) == 0xbd00) /* pop {rlist, pc} */
1655 {
1656 CORE_ADDR sp;
1657
1658 /* Fetch the saved PC from the stack. It's stored above
1659 all of the other registers. */
1660 offset = bitcount (bits (inst1, 0, 7)) * REGISTER_SIZE;
1661 sp = read_register (SP_REGNUM);
1662 nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (sp + offset, 4);
1663 nextpc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (nextpc);
1664 if (nextpc == pc)
1665 error ("Infinite loop detected");
1666 }
1667 else if ((inst1 & 0xf000) == 0xd000) /* conditional branch */
1668 {
1669 unsigned long status = read_register (PS_REGNUM);
1670 unsigned long cond = bits (inst1, 8, 11);
1671 if (cond != 0x0f && condition_true (cond, status)) /* 0x0f = SWI */
1672 nextpc = pc_val + (sbits (inst1, 0, 7) << 1);
1673 }
1674 else if ((inst1 & 0xf800) == 0xe000) /* unconditional branch */
1675 {
1676 nextpc = pc_val + (sbits (inst1, 0, 10) << 1);
1677 }
1678 else if ((inst1 & 0xf800) == 0xf000) /* long branch with link */
1679 {
1680 unsigned short inst2 = read_memory_integer (pc + 2, 2);
1681 offset = (sbits (inst1, 0, 10) << 12) + (bits (inst2, 0, 10) << 1);
1682 nextpc = pc_val + offset;
1683 }
1684
1685 return nextpc;
1686 }
1687
1688 CORE_ADDR
1689 arm_get_next_pc (CORE_ADDR pc)
1690 {
1691 unsigned long pc_val;
1692 unsigned long this_instr;
1693 unsigned long status;
1694 CORE_ADDR nextpc;
1695
1696 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (pc))
1697 return thumb_get_next_pc (pc);
1698
1699 pc_val = (unsigned long) pc;
1700 this_instr = read_memory_integer (pc, 4);
1701 status = read_register (PS_REGNUM);
1702 nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) (pc_val + 4); /* Default case */
1703
1704 if (condition_true (bits (this_instr, 28, 31), status))
1705 {
1706 switch (bits (this_instr, 24, 27))
1707 {
1708 case 0x0:
1709 case 0x1: /* data processing */
1710 case 0x2:
1711 case 0x3:
1712 {
1713 unsigned long operand1, operand2, result = 0;
1714 unsigned long rn;
1715 int c;
1716
1717 if (bits (this_instr, 12, 15) != 15)
1718 break;
1719
1720 if (bits (this_instr, 22, 25) == 0
1721 && bits (this_instr, 4, 7) == 9) /* multiply */
1722 error ("Illegal update to pc in instruction");
1723
1724 /* Multiply into PC */
1725 c = (status & FLAG_C) ? 1 : 0;
1726 rn = bits (this_instr, 16, 19);
1727 operand1 = (rn == 15) ? pc_val + 8 : read_register (rn);
1728
1729 if (bit (this_instr, 25))
1730 {
1731 unsigned long immval = bits (this_instr, 0, 7);
1732 unsigned long rotate = 2 * bits (this_instr, 8, 11);
1733 operand2 = ((immval >> rotate) | (immval << (32 - rotate)))
1734 & 0xffffffff;
1735 }
1736 else /* operand 2 is a shifted register */
1737 operand2 = shifted_reg_val (this_instr, c, pc_val, status);
1738
1739 switch (bits (this_instr, 21, 24))
1740 {
1741 case 0x0: /*and */
1742 result = operand1 & operand2;
1743 break;
1744
1745 case 0x1: /*eor */
1746 result = operand1 ^ operand2;
1747 break;
1748
1749 case 0x2: /*sub */
1750 result = operand1 - operand2;
1751 break;
1752
1753 case 0x3: /*rsb */
1754 result = operand2 - operand1;
1755 break;
1756
1757 case 0x4: /*add */
1758 result = operand1 + operand2;
1759 break;
1760
1761 case 0x5: /*adc */
1762 result = operand1 + operand2 + c;
1763 break;
1764
1765 case 0x6: /*sbc */
1766 result = operand1 - operand2 + c;
1767 break;
1768
1769 case 0x7: /*rsc */
1770 result = operand2 - operand1 + c;
1771 break;
1772
1773 case 0x8:
1774 case 0x9:
1775 case 0xa:
1776 case 0xb: /* tst, teq, cmp, cmn */
1777 result = (unsigned long) nextpc;
1778 break;
1779
1780 case 0xc: /*orr */
1781 result = operand1 | operand2;
1782 break;
1783
1784 case 0xd: /*mov */
1785 /* Always step into a function. */
1786 result = operand2;
1787 break;
1788
1789 case 0xe: /*bic */
1790 result = operand1 & ~operand2;
1791 break;
1792
1793 case 0xf: /*mvn */
1794 result = ~operand2;
1795 break;
1796 }
1797 nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (result);
1798
1799 if (nextpc == pc)
1800 error ("Infinite loop detected");
1801 break;
1802 }
1803
1804 case 0x4:
1805 case 0x5: /* data transfer */
1806 case 0x6:
1807 case 0x7:
1808 if (bit (this_instr, 20))
1809 {
1810 /* load */
1811 if (bits (this_instr, 12, 15) == 15)
1812 {
1813 /* rd == pc */
1814 unsigned long rn;
1815 unsigned long base;
1816
1817 if (bit (this_instr, 22))
1818 error ("Illegal update to pc in instruction");
1819
1820 /* byte write to PC */
1821 rn = bits (this_instr, 16, 19);
1822 base = (rn == 15) ? pc_val + 8 : read_register (rn);
1823 if (bit (this_instr, 24))
1824 {
1825 /* pre-indexed */
1826 int c = (status & FLAG_C) ? 1 : 0;
1827 unsigned long offset =
1828 (bit (this_instr, 25)
1829 ? shifted_reg_val (this_instr, c, pc_val, status)
1830 : bits (this_instr, 0, 11));
1831
1832 if (bit (this_instr, 23))
1833 base += offset;
1834 else
1835 base -= offset;
1836 }
1837 nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer ((CORE_ADDR) base,
1838 4);
1839
1840 nextpc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (nextpc);
1841
1842 if (nextpc == pc)
1843 error ("Infinite loop detected");
1844 }
1845 }
1846 break;
1847
1848 case 0x8:
1849 case 0x9: /* block transfer */
1850 if (bit (this_instr, 20))
1851 {
1852 /* LDM */
1853 if (bit (this_instr, 15))
1854 {
1855 /* loading pc */
1856 int offset = 0;
1857
1858 if (bit (this_instr, 23))
1859 {
1860 /* up */
1861 unsigned long reglist = bits (this_instr, 0, 14);
1862 offset = bitcount (reglist) * 4;
1863 if (bit (this_instr, 24)) /* pre */
1864 offset += 4;
1865 }
1866 else if (bit (this_instr, 24))
1867 offset = -4;
1868
1869 {
1870 unsigned long rn_val =
1871 read_register (bits (this_instr, 16, 19));
1872 nextpc =
1873 (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer ((CORE_ADDR) (rn_val
1874 + offset),
1875 4);
1876 }
1877 nextpc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (nextpc);
1878 if (nextpc == pc)
1879 error ("Infinite loop detected");
1880 }
1881 }
1882 break;
1883
1884 case 0xb: /* branch & link */
1885 case 0xa: /* branch */
1886 {
1887 nextpc = BranchDest (pc, this_instr);
1888
1889 nextpc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (nextpc);
1890 if (nextpc == pc)
1891 error ("Infinite loop detected");
1892 break;
1893 }
1894
1895 case 0xc:
1896 case 0xd:
1897 case 0xe: /* coproc ops */
1898 case 0xf: /* SWI */
1899 break;
1900
1901 default:
1902 fprintf (stderr, "Bad bit-field extraction\n");
1903 return (pc);
1904 }
1905 }
1906
1907 return nextpc;
1908 }
1909
1910 #include "bfd-in2.h"
1911 #include "libcoff.h"
1912
1913 static int
1914 gdb_print_insn_arm (bfd_vma memaddr, disassemble_info *info)
1915 {
1916 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (memaddr))
1917 {
1918 static asymbol *asym;
1919 static combined_entry_type ce;
1920 static struct coff_symbol_struct csym;
1921 static struct _bfd fake_bfd;
1922 static bfd_target fake_target;
1923
1924 if (csym.native == NULL)
1925 {
1926 /* Create a fake symbol vector containing a Thumb symbol. This is
1927 solely so that the code in print_insn_little_arm() and
1928 print_insn_big_arm() in opcodes/arm-dis.c will detect the presence
1929 of a Thumb symbol and switch to decoding Thumb instructions. */
1930
1931 fake_target.flavour = bfd_target_coff_flavour;
1932 fake_bfd.xvec = &fake_target;
1933 ce.u.syment.n_sclass = C_THUMBEXTFUNC;
1934 csym.native = &ce;
1935 csym.symbol.the_bfd = &fake_bfd;
1936 csym.symbol.name = "fake";
1937 asym = (asymbol *) & csym;
1938 }
1939
1940 memaddr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (memaddr);
1941 info->symbols = &asym;
1942 }
1943 else
1944 info->symbols = NULL;
1945
1946 if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
1947 return print_insn_big_arm (memaddr, info);
1948 else
1949 return print_insn_little_arm (memaddr, info);
1950 }
1951
1952 /* This function implements the BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC macro. It uses the
1953 program counter value to determine whether a 16-bit or 32-bit
1954 breakpoint should be used. It returns a pointer to a string of
1955 bytes that encode a breakpoint instruction, stores the length of
1956 the string to *lenptr, and adjusts the program counter (if
1957 necessary) to point to the actual memory location where the
1958 breakpoint should be inserted. */
1959
1960 unsigned char *
1961 arm_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR *pcptr, int *lenptr)
1962 {
1963 if (arm_pc_is_thumb (*pcptr) || arm_pc_is_thumb_dummy (*pcptr))
1964 {
1965 if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
1966 {
1967 static char thumb_breakpoint[] = THUMB_BE_BREAKPOINT;
1968 *pcptr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (*pcptr);
1969 *lenptr = sizeof (thumb_breakpoint);
1970 return thumb_breakpoint;
1971 }
1972 else
1973 {
1974 static char thumb_breakpoint[] = THUMB_LE_BREAKPOINT;
1975 *pcptr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (*pcptr);
1976 *lenptr = sizeof (thumb_breakpoint);
1977 return thumb_breakpoint;
1978 }
1979 }
1980 else
1981 {
1982 if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
1983 {
1984 static char arm_breakpoint[] = ARM_BE_BREAKPOINT;
1985 *lenptr = sizeof (arm_breakpoint);
1986 return arm_breakpoint;
1987 }
1988 else
1989 {
1990 static char arm_breakpoint[] = ARM_LE_BREAKPOINT;
1991 *lenptr = sizeof (arm_breakpoint);
1992 return arm_breakpoint;
1993 }
1994 }
1995 }
1996
1997 /* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state a
1998 function return value of type TYPE, and copy that, in virtual
1999 format, into VALBUF. */
2000
2001 void
2002 arm_extract_return_value (struct type *type,
2003 char regbuf[REGISTER_BYTES],
2004 char *valbuf)
2005 {
2006 if (TYPE_CODE_FLT == TYPE_CODE (type))
2007 convert_from_extended (&regbuf[REGISTER_BYTE (F0_REGNUM)], valbuf);
2008 else
2009 memcpy (valbuf, &regbuf[REGISTER_BYTE (A1_REGNUM)], TYPE_LENGTH (type));
2010 }
2011
2012 /* Return non-zero if the PC is inside a thumb call thunk. */
2013
2014 int
2015 arm_in_call_stub (CORE_ADDR pc, char *name)
2016 {
2017 CORE_ADDR start_addr;
2018
2019 /* Find the starting address of the function containing the PC. If
2020 the caller didn't give us a name, look it up at the same time. */
2021 if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, name ? NULL : &name, &start_addr, NULL) == 0)
2022 return 0;
2023
2024 return strncmp (name, "_call_via_r", 11) == 0;
2025 }
2026
2027 /* If PC is in a Thumb call or return stub, return the address of the
2028 target PC, which is in a register. The thunk functions are called
2029 _called_via_xx, where x is the register name. The possible names
2030 are r0-r9, sl, fp, ip, sp, and lr. */
2031
2032 CORE_ADDR
2033 arm_skip_stub (CORE_ADDR pc)
2034 {
2035 char *name;
2036 CORE_ADDR start_addr;
2037
2038 /* Find the starting address and name of the function containing the PC. */
2039 if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, &start_addr, NULL) == 0)
2040 return 0;
2041
2042 /* Call thunks always start with "_call_via_". */
2043 if (strncmp (name, "_call_via_", 10) == 0)
2044 {
2045 /* Use the name suffix to determine which register contains the
2046 target PC. */
2047 static char *table[15] =
2048 {"r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7",
2049 "r8", "r9", "sl", "fp", "ip", "sp", "lr"
2050 };
2051 int regno;
2052
2053 for (regno = 0; regno <= 14; regno++)
2054 if (strcmp (&name[10], table[regno]) == 0)
2055 return read_register (regno);
2056 }
2057
2058 return 0; /* not a stub */
2059 }
2060
2061 /* If the user changes the register disassembly flavor used for info register
2062 and other commands, we have to also switch the flavor used in opcodes
2063 for disassembly output.
2064 This function is run in the set disassembly_flavor command, and does that. */
2065
2066 static void
2067 set_disassembly_flavor_sfunc (char *args, int from_tty,
2068 struct cmd_list_element *c)
2069 {
2070 set_disassembly_flavor ();
2071 }
2072 \f
2073 static void
2074 set_disassembly_flavor (void)
2075 {
2076 const char *setname, *setdesc, **regnames;
2077 int numregs, j;
2078
2079 /* Find the flavor that the user wants in the opcodes table. */
2080 int current = 0;
2081 numregs = get_arm_regnames (current, &setname, &setdesc, &regnames);
2082 while ((disassembly_flavor != setname)
2083 && (current < num_flavor_options))
2084 get_arm_regnames (++current, &setname, &setdesc, &regnames);
2085 current_option = current;
2086
2087 /* Fill our copy. */
2088 for (j = 0; j < numregs; j++)
2089 arm_register_names[j] = (char *) regnames[j];
2090
2091 /* Adjust case. */
2092 if (isupper (*regnames[PC_REGNUM]))
2093 {
2094 arm_register_names[FPS_REGNUM] = "FPS";
2095 arm_register_names[PS_REGNUM] = "CPSR";
2096 }
2097 else
2098 {
2099 arm_register_names[FPS_REGNUM] = "fps";
2100 arm_register_names[PS_REGNUM] = "cpsr";
2101 }
2102
2103 /* Synchronize the disassembler. */
2104 set_arm_regname_option (current);
2105 }
2106
2107 /* arm_othernames implements the "othernames" command. This is kind
2108 of hacky, and I prefer the set-show disassembly-flavor which is
2109 also used for the x86 gdb. I will keep this around, however, in
2110 case anyone is actually using it. */
2111
2112 static void
2113 arm_othernames (char *names, int n)
2114 {
2115 /* Circle through the various flavors. */
2116 current_option = (current_option + 1) % num_flavor_options;
2117
2118 disassembly_flavor = valid_flavors[current_option];
2119 set_disassembly_flavor ();
2120 }
2121
2122 void
2123 _initialize_arm_tdep (void)
2124 {
2125 struct ui_file *stb;
2126 long length;
2127 struct cmd_list_element *new_cmd;
2128 const char *setname;
2129 const char *setdesc;
2130 const char **regnames;
2131 int numregs, i, j;
2132 static char *helptext;
2133
2134 tm_print_insn = gdb_print_insn_arm;
2135
2136 /* Get the number of possible sets of register names defined in opcodes. */
2137 num_flavor_options = get_arm_regname_num_options ();
2138
2139 /* Sync the opcode insn printer with our register viewer: */
2140 parse_arm_disassembler_option ("reg-names-std");
2141
2142 /* Begin creating the help text. */
2143 stb = mem_fileopen ();
2144 fprintf_unfiltered (stb, "Set the disassembly flavor.\n\
2145 The valid values are:\n");
2146
2147 /* Initialize the array that will be passed to add_set_enum_cmd(). */
2148 valid_flavors = xmalloc ((num_flavor_options + 1) * sizeof (char *));
2149 for (i = 0; i < num_flavor_options; i++)
2150 {
2151 numregs = get_arm_regnames (i, &setname, &setdesc, &regnames);
2152 valid_flavors[i] = setname;
2153 fprintf_unfiltered (stb, "%s - %s\n", setname,
2154 setdesc);
2155 /* Copy the default names (if found) and synchronize disassembler. */
2156 if (!strcmp (setname, "std"))
2157 {
2158 disassembly_flavor = setname;
2159 current_option = i;
2160 for (j = 0; j < numregs; j++)
2161 arm_register_names[j] = (char *) regnames[j];
2162 set_arm_regname_option (i);
2163 }
2164 }
2165 /* Mark the end of valid options. */
2166 valid_flavors[num_flavor_options] = NULL;
2167
2168 /* Finish the creation of the help text. */
2169 fprintf_unfiltered (stb, "The default is \"std\".");
2170 helptext = ui_file_xstrdup (stb, &length);
2171 ui_file_delete (stb);
2172
2173 /* Add the disassembly-flavor command */
2174 new_cmd = add_set_enum_cmd ("disassembly-flavor", no_class,
2175 valid_flavors,
2176 &disassembly_flavor,
2177 helptext,
2178 &setlist);
2179 new_cmd->function.sfunc = set_disassembly_flavor_sfunc;
2180 add_show_from_set (new_cmd, &showlist);
2181
2182 /* ??? Maybe this should be a boolean. */
2183 add_show_from_set (add_set_cmd ("apcs32", no_class,
2184 var_zinteger, (char *) &arm_apcs_32,
2185 "Set usage of ARM 32-bit mode.\n", &setlist),
2186 &showlist);
2187
2188 /* Add the deprecated "othernames" command */
2189
2190 add_com ("othernames", class_obscure, arm_othernames,
2191 "Switch to the next set of register names.");
2192 }
2193
2194 /* Test whether the coff symbol specific value corresponds to a Thumb
2195 function. */
2196
2197 int
2198 coff_sym_is_thumb (int val)
2199 {
2200 return (val == C_THUMBEXT ||
2201 val == C_THUMBSTAT ||
2202 val == C_THUMBEXTFUNC ||
2203 val == C_THUMBSTATFUNC ||
2204 val == C_THUMBLABEL);
2205 }
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