2009-11-10 Tristan Gingold <gingold@adacore.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / avr-tdep.c
1 /* Target-dependent code for Atmel AVR, for GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
4 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 This file is part of GDB.
7
8 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
11 (at your option) any later version.
12
13 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
17
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
20
21 /* Contributed by Theodore A. Roth, troth@openavr.org */
22
23 /* Portions of this file were taken from the original gdb-4.18 patch developed
24 by Denis Chertykov, denisc@overta.ru */
25
26 #include "defs.h"
27 #include "frame.h"
28 #include "frame-unwind.h"
29 #include "frame-base.h"
30 #include "trad-frame.h"
31 #include "gdbcmd.h"
32 #include "gdbcore.h"
33 #include "gdbtypes.h"
34 #include "inferior.h"
35 #include "symfile.h"
36 #include "arch-utils.h"
37 #include "regcache.h"
38 #include "gdb_string.h"
39 #include "dis-asm.h"
40
41 /* AVR Background:
42
43 (AVR micros are pure Harvard Architecture processors.)
44
45 The AVR family of microcontrollers have three distinctly different memory
46 spaces: flash, sram and eeprom. The flash is 16 bits wide and is used for
47 the most part to store program instructions. The sram is 8 bits wide and is
48 used for the stack and the heap. Some devices lack sram and some can have
49 an additional external sram added on as a peripheral.
50
51 The eeprom is 8 bits wide and is used to store data when the device is
52 powered down. Eeprom is not directly accessible, it can only be accessed
53 via io-registers using a special algorithm. Accessing eeprom via gdb's
54 remote serial protocol ('m' or 'M' packets) looks difficult to do and is
55 not included at this time.
56
57 [The eeprom could be read manually via ``x/b <eaddr + AVR_EMEM_START>'' or
58 written using ``set {unsigned char}<eaddr + AVR_EMEM_START>''. For this to
59 work, the remote target must be able to handle eeprom accesses and perform
60 the address translation.]
61
62 All three memory spaces have physical addresses beginning at 0x0. In
63 addition, the flash is addressed by gcc/binutils/gdb with respect to 8 bit
64 bytes instead of the 16 bit wide words used by the real device for the
65 Program Counter.
66
67 In order for remote targets to work correctly, extra bits must be added to
68 addresses before they are send to the target or received from the target
69 via the remote serial protocol. The extra bits are the MSBs and are used to
70 decode which memory space the address is referring to. */
71
72 #undef XMALLOC
73 #define XMALLOC(TYPE) ((TYPE*) xmalloc (sizeof (TYPE)))
74
75 /* Constants: prefixed with AVR_ to avoid name space clashes */
76
77 enum
78 {
79 AVR_REG_W = 24,
80 AVR_REG_X = 26,
81 AVR_REG_Y = 28,
82 AVR_FP_REGNUM = 28,
83 AVR_REG_Z = 30,
84
85 AVR_SREG_REGNUM = 32,
86 AVR_SP_REGNUM = 33,
87 AVR_PC_REGNUM = 34,
88
89 AVR_NUM_REGS = 32 + 1 /*SREG*/ + 1 /*SP*/ + 1 /*PC*/,
90 AVR_NUM_REG_BYTES = 32 + 1 /*SREG*/ + 2 /*SP*/ + 4 /*PC*/,
91
92 AVR_PC_REG_INDEX = 35, /* index into array of registers */
93
94 AVR_MAX_PROLOGUE_SIZE = 64, /* bytes */
95
96 /* Count of pushed registers. From r2 to r17 (inclusively), r28, r29 */
97 AVR_MAX_PUSHES = 18,
98
99 /* Number of the last pushed register. r17 for current avr-gcc */
100 AVR_LAST_PUSHED_REGNUM = 17,
101
102 AVR_ARG1_REGNUM = 24, /* Single byte argument */
103 AVR_ARGN_REGNUM = 25, /* Multi byte argments */
104
105 AVR_RET1_REGNUM = 24, /* Single byte return value */
106 AVR_RETN_REGNUM = 25, /* Multi byte return value */
107
108 /* FIXME: TRoth/2002-01-??: Can we shift all these memory masks left 8
109 bits? Do these have to match the bfd vma values?. It sure would make
110 things easier in the future if they didn't need to match.
111
112 Note: I chose these values so as to be consistent with bfd vma
113 addresses.
114
115 TRoth/2002-04-08: There is already a conflict with very large programs
116 in the mega128. The mega128 has 128K instruction bytes (64K words),
117 thus the Most Significant Bit is 0x10000 which gets masked off my
118 AVR_MEM_MASK.
119
120 The problem manifests itself when trying to set a breakpoint in a
121 function which resides in the upper half of the instruction space and
122 thus requires a 17-bit address.
123
124 For now, I've just removed the EEPROM mask and changed AVR_MEM_MASK
125 from 0x00ff0000 to 0x00f00000. Eeprom is not accessible from gdb yet,
126 but could be for some remote targets by just adding the correct offset
127 to the address and letting the remote target handle the low-level
128 details of actually accessing the eeprom. */
129
130 AVR_IMEM_START = 0x00000000, /* INSN memory */
131 AVR_SMEM_START = 0x00800000, /* SRAM memory */
132 #if 1
133 /* No eeprom mask defined */
134 AVR_MEM_MASK = 0x00f00000, /* mask to determine memory space */
135 #else
136 AVR_EMEM_START = 0x00810000, /* EEPROM memory */
137 AVR_MEM_MASK = 0x00ff0000, /* mask to determine memory space */
138 #endif
139 };
140
141 /* Prologue types:
142
143 NORMAL and CALL are the typical types (the -mcall-prologues gcc option
144 causes the generation of the CALL type prologues). */
145
146 enum {
147 AVR_PROLOGUE_NONE, /* No prologue */
148 AVR_PROLOGUE_NORMAL,
149 AVR_PROLOGUE_CALL, /* -mcall-prologues */
150 AVR_PROLOGUE_MAIN,
151 AVR_PROLOGUE_INTR, /* interrupt handler */
152 AVR_PROLOGUE_SIG, /* signal handler */
153 };
154
155 /* Any function with a frame looks like this
156 ....... <-SP POINTS HERE
157 LOCALS1 <-FP POINTS HERE
158 LOCALS0
159 SAVED FP
160 SAVED R3
161 SAVED R2
162 RET PC
163 FIRST ARG
164 SECOND ARG */
165
166 struct avr_unwind_cache
167 {
168 /* The previous frame's inner most stack address. Used as this
169 frame ID's stack_addr. */
170 CORE_ADDR prev_sp;
171 /* The frame's base, optionally used by the high-level debug info. */
172 CORE_ADDR base;
173 int size;
174 int prologue_type;
175 /* Table indicating the location of each and every register. */
176 struct trad_frame_saved_reg *saved_regs;
177 };
178
179 struct gdbarch_tdep
180 {
181 /* Number of bytes stored to the stack by call instructions.
182 2 bytes for avr1-5, 3 bytes for avr6. */
183 int call_length;
184 };
185
186 /* Lookup the name of a register given it's number. */
187
188 static const char *
189 avr_register_name (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int regnum)
190 {
191 static const char * const register_names[] = {
192 "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7",
193 "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11", "r12", "r13", "r14", "r15",
194 "r16", "r17", "r18", "r19", "r20", "r21", "r22", "r23",
195 "r24", "r25", "r26", "r27", "r28", "r29", "r30", "r31",
196 "SREG", "SP", "PC"
197 };
198 if (regnum < 0)
199 return NULL;
200 if (regnum >= (sizeof (register_names) / sizeof (*register_names)))
201 return NULL;
202 return register_names[regnum];
203 }
204
205 /* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type
206 of data in register N. */
207
208 static struct type *
209 avr_register_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int reg_nr)
210 {
211 if (reg_nr == AVR_PC_REGNUM)
212 return builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_uint32;
213 if (reg_nr == AVR_SP_REGNUM)
214 return builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_data_ptr;
215 else
216 return builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_uint8;
217 }
218
219 /* Instruction address checks and convertions. */
220
221 static CORE_ADDR
222 avr_make_iaddr (CORE_ADDR x)
223 {
224 return ((x) | AVR_IMEM_START);
225 }
226
227 /* FIXME: TRoth: Really need to use a larger mask for instructions. Some
228 devices are already up to 128KBytes of flash space.
229
230 TRoth/2002-04-8: See comment above where AVR_IMEM_START is defined. */
231
232 static CORE_ADDR
233 avr_convert_iaddr_to_raw (CORE_ADDR x)
234 {
235 return ((x) & 0xffffffff);
236 }
237
238 /* SRAM address checks and convertions. */
239
240 static CORE_ADDR
241 avr_make_saddr (CORE_ADDR x)
242 {
243 /* Return 0 for NULL. */
244 if (x == 0)
245 return 0;
246
247 return ((x) | AVR_SMEM_START);
248 }
249
250 static CORE_ADDR
251 avr_convert_saddr_to_raw (CORE_ADDR x)
252 {
253 return ((x) & 0xffffffff);
254 }
255
256 /* EEPROM address checks and convertions. I don't know if these will ever
257 actually be used, but I've added them just the same. TRoth */
258
259 /* TRoth/2002-04-08: Commented out for now to allow fix for problem with large
260 programs in the mega128. */
261
262 /* static CORE_ADDR */
263 /* avr_make_eaddr (CORE_ADDR x) */
264 /* { */
265 /* return ((x) | AVR_EMEM_START); */
266 /* } */
267
268 /* static int */
269 /* avr_eaddr_p (CORE_ADDR x) */
270 /* { */
271 /* return (((x) & AVR_MEM_MASK) == AVR_EMEM_START); */
272 /* } */
273
274 /* static CORE_ADDR */
275 /* avr_convert_eaddr_to_raw (CORE_ADDR x) */
276 /* { */
277 /* return ((x) & 0xffffffff); */
278 /* } */
279
280 /* Convert from address to pointer and vice-versa. */
281
282 static void
283 avr_address_to_pointer (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
284 struct type *type, gdb_byte *buf, CORE_ADDR addr)
285 {
286 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
287
288 /* Is it a code address? */
289 if (TYPE_CODE (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
290 || TYPE_CODE (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD)
291 {
292 store_unsigned_integer (buf, TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order,
293 avr_convert_iaddr_to_raw (addr >> 1));
294 }
295 else
296 {
297 /* Strip off any upper segment bits. */
298 store_unsigned_integer (buf, TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order,
299 avr_convert_saddr_to_raw (addr));
300 }
301 }
302
303 static CORE_ADDR
304 avr_pointer_to_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
305 struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf)
306 {
307 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
308 CORE_ADDR addr
309 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order);
310
311 /* Is it a code address? */
312 if (TYPE_CODE (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC
313 || TYPE_CODE (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)) == TYPE_CODE_METHOD
314 || TYPE_CODE_SPACE (TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)))
315 return avr_make_iaddr (addr << 1);
316 else
317 return avr_make_saddr (addr);
318 }
319
320 static CORE_ADDR
321 avr_read_pc (struct regcache *regcache)
322 {
323 ULONGEST pc;
324 regcache_cooked_read_unsigned (regcache, AVR_PC_REGNUM, &pc);
325 return avr_make_iaddr (pc);
326 }
327
328 static void
329 avr_write_pc (struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR val)
330 {
331 regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, AVR_PC_REGNUM,
332 avr_convert_iaddr_to_raw (val));
333 }
334
335 /* Function: avr_scan_prologue
336
337 This function decodes an AVR function prologue to determine:
338 1) the size of the stack frame
339 2) which registers are saved on it
340 3) the offsets of saved regs
341 This information is stored in the avr_unwind_cache structure.
342
343 Some devices lack the sbiw instruction, so on those replace this:
344 sbiw r28, XX
345 with this:
346 subi r28,lo8(XX)
347 sbci r29,hi8(XX)
348
349 A typical AVR function prologue with a frame pointer might look like this:
350 push rXX ; saved regs
351 ...
352 push r28
353 push r29
354 in r28,__SP_L__
355 in r29,__SP_H__
356 sbiw r28,<LOCALS_SIZE>
357 in __tmp_reg__,__SREG__
358 cli
359 out __SP_H__,r29
360 out __SREG__,__tmp_reg__
361 out __SP_L__,r28
362
363 A typical AVR function prologue without a frame pointer might look like
364 this:
365 push rXX ; saved regs
366 ...
367
368 A main function prologue looks like this:
369 ldi r28,lo8(<RAM_ADDR> - <LOCALS_SIZE>)
370 ldi r29,hi8(<RAM_ADDR> - <LOCALS_SIZE>)
371 out __SP_H__,r29
372 out __SP_L__,r28
373
374 A signal handler prologue looks like this:
375 push __zero_reg__
376 push __tmp_reg__
377 in __tmp_reg__, __SREG__
378 push __tmp_reg__
379 clr __zero_reg__
380 push rXX ; save registers r18:r27, r30:r31
381 ...
382 push r28 ; save frame pointer
383 push r29
384 in r28, __SP_L__
385 in r29, __SP_H__
386 sbiw r28, <LOCALS_SIZE>
387 out __SP_H__, r29
388 out __SP_L__, r28
389
390 A interrupt handler prologue looks like this:
391 sei
392 push __zero_reg__
393 push __tmp_reg__
394 in __tmp_reg__, __SREG__
395 push __tmp_reg__
396 clr __zero_reg__
397 push rXX ; save registers r18:r27, r30:r31
398 ...
399 push r28 ; save frame pointer
400 push r29
401 in r28, __SP_L__
402 in r29, __SP_H__
403 sbiw r28, <LOCALS_SIZE>
404 cli
405 out __SP_H__, r29
406 sei
407 out __SP_L__, r28
408
409 A `-mcall-prologues' prologue looks like this (Note that the megas use a
410 jmp instead of a rjmp, thus the prologue is one word larger since jmp is a
411 32 bit insn and rjmp is a 16 bit insn):
412 ldi r26,lo8(<LOCALS_SIZE>)
413 ldi r27,hi8(<LOCALS_SIZE>)
414 ldi r30,pm_lo8(.L_foo_body)
415 ldi r31,pm_hi8(.L_foo_body)
416 rjmp __prologue_saves__+RRR
417 .L_foo_body: */
418
419 /* Not really part of a prologue, but still need to scan for it, is when a
420 function prologue moves values passed via registers as arguments to new
421 registers. In this case, all local variables live in registers, so there
422 may be some register saves. This is what it looks like:
423 movw rMM, rNN
424 ...
425
426 There could be multiple movw's. If the target doesn't have a movw insn, it
427 will use two mov insns. This could be done after any of the above prologue
428 types. */
429
430 static CORE_ADDR
431 avr_scan_prologue (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc_beg, CORE_ADDR pc_end,
432 struct avr_unwind_cache *info)
433 {
434 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
435 int i;
436 unsigned short insn;
437 int scan_stage = 0;
438 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
439 unsigned char prologue[AVR_MAX_PROLOGUE_SIZE];
440 int vpc = 0;
441 int len;
442
443 len = pc_end - pc_beg;
444 if (len > AVR_MAX_PROLOGUE_SIZE)
445 len = AVR_MAX_PROLOGUE_SIZE;
446
447 /* FIXME: TRoth/2003-06-11: This could be made more efficient by only
448 reading in the bytes of the prologue. The problem is that the figuring
449 out where the end of the prologue is is a bit difficult. The old code
450 tried to do that, but failed quite often. */
451 read_memory (pc_beg, prologue, len);
452
453 /* Scanning main()'s prologue
454 ldi r28,lo8(<RAM_ADDR> - <LOCALS_SIZE>)
455 ldi r29,hi8(<RAM_ADDR> - <LOCALS_SIZE>)
456 out __SP_H__,r29
457 out __SP_L__,r28 */
458
459 if (len >= 4)
460 {
461 CORE_ADDR locals;
462 static const unsigned char img[] = {
463 0xde, 0xbf, /* out __SP_H__,r29 */
464 0xcd, 0xbf /* out __SP_L__,r28 */
465 };
466
467 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
468 /* ldi r28,lo8(<RAM_ADDR> - <LOCALS_SIZE>) */
469 if ((insn & 0xf0f0) == 0xe0c0)
470 {
471 locals = (insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0x0f00) >> 4);
472 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc + 2], 2, byte_order);
473 /* ldi r29,hi8(<RAM_ADDR> - <LOCALS_SIZE>) */
474 if ((insn & 0xf0f0) == 0xe0d0)
475 {
476 locals |= ((insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0x0f00) >> 4)) << 8;
477 if (vpc + 4 + sizeof (img) < len
478 && memcmp (prologue + vpc + 4, img, sizeof (img)) == 0)
479 {
480 info->prologue_type = AVR_PROLOGUE_MAIN;
481 info->base = locals;
482 return pc_beg + 4;
483 }
484 }
485 }
486 }
487
488 /* Scanning `-mcall-prologues' prologue
489 Classic prologue is 10 bytes, mega prologue is a 12 bytes long */
490
491 while (1) /* Using a while to avoid many goto's */
492 {
493 int loc_size;
494 int body_addr;
495 unsigned num_pushes;
496 int pc_offset = 0;
497
498 /* At least the fifth instruction must have been executed to
499 modify frame shape. */
500 if (len < 10)
501 break;
502
503 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
504 /* ldi r26,<LOCALS_SIZE> */
505 if ((insn & 0xf0f0) != 0xe0a0)
506 break;
507 loc_size = (insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0x0f00) >> 4);
508 pc_offset += 2;
509
510 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc + 2], 2, byte_order);
511 /* ldi r27,<LOCALS_SIZE> / 256 */
512 if ((insn & 0xf0f0) != 0xe0b0)
513 break;
514 loc_size |= ((insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0x0f00) >> 4)) << 8;
515 pc_offset += 2;
516
517 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc + 4], 2, byte_order);
518 /* ldi r30,pm_lo8(.L_foo_body) */
519 if ((insn & 0xf0f0) != 0xe0e0)
520 break;
521 body_addr = (insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0x0f00) >> 4);
522 pc_offset += 2;
523
524 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc + 6], 2, byte_order);
525 /* ldi r31,pm_hi8(.L_foo_body) */
526 if ((insn & 0xf0f0) != 0xe0f0)
527 break;
528 body_addr |= ((insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0x0f00) >> 4)) << 8;
529 pc_offset += 2;
530
531 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__prologue_saves__", NULL, NULL);
532 if (!msymbol)
533 break;
534
535 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc + 8], 2, byte_order);
536 /* rjmp __prologue_saves__+RRR */
537 if ((insn & 0xf000) == 0xc000)
538 {
539 /* Extract PC relative offset from RJMP */
540 i = (insn & 0xfff) | (insn & 0x800 ? (-1 ^ 0xfff) : 0);
541 /* Convert offset to byte addressable mode */
542 i *= 2;
543 /* Destination address */
544 i += pc_beg + 10;
545
546 if (body_addr != (pc_beg + 10)/2)
547 break;
548
549 pc_offset += 2;
550 }
551 else if ((insn & 0xfe0e) == 0x940c)
552 {
553 /* Extract absolute PC address from JMP */
554 i = (((insn & 0x1) | ((insn & 0x1f0) >> 3) << 16)
555 | (extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc + 10], 2, byte_order)
556 & 0xffff));
557 /* Convert address to byte addressable mode */
558 i *= 2;
559
560 if (body_addr != (pc_beg + 12)/2)
561 break;
562
563 pc_offset += 4;
564 }
565 else
566 break;
567
568 /* Resolve offset (in words) from __prologue_saves__ symbol.
569 Which is a pushes count in `-mcall-prologues' mode */
570 num_pushes = AVR_MAX_PUSHES - (i - SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol)) / 2;
571
572 if (num_pushes > AVR_MAX_PUSHES)
573 {
574 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, _("Num pushes too large: %d\n"),
575 num_pushes);
576 num_pushes = 0;
577 }
578
579 if (num_pushes)
580 {
581 int from;
582
583 info->saved_regs[AVR_FP_REGNUM + 1].addr = num_pushes;
584 if (num_pushes >= 2)
585 info->saved_regs[AVR_FP_REGNUM].addr = num_pushes - 1;
586
587 i = 0;
588 for (from = AVR_LAST_PUSHED_REGNUM + 1 - (num_pushes - 2);
589 from <= AVR_LAST_PUSHED_REGNUM; ++from)
590 info->saved_regs [from].addr = ++i;
591 }
592 info->size = loc_size + num_pushes;
593 info->prologue_type = AVR_PROLOGUE_CALL;
594
595 return pc_beg + pc_offset;
596 }
597
598 /* Scan for the beginning of the prologue for an interrupt or signal
599 function. Note that we have to set the prologue type here since the
600 third stage of the prologue may not be present (e.g. no saved registered
601 or changing of the SP register). */
602
603 if (1)
604 {
605 static const unsigned char img[] = {
606 0x78, 0x94, /* sei */
607 0x1f, 0x92, /* push r1 */
608 0x0f, 0x92, /* push r0 */
609 0x0f, 0xb6, /* in r0,0x3f SREG */
610 0x0f, 0x92, /* push r0 */
611 0x11, 0x24 /* clr r1 */
612 };
613 if (len >= sizeof (img)
614 && memcmp (prologue, img, sizeof (img)) == 0)
615 {
616 info->prologue_type = AVR_PROLOGUE_INTR;
617 vpc += sizeof (img);
618 info->saved_regs[AVR_SREG_REGNUM].addr = 3;
619 info->saved_regs[0].addr = 2;
620 info->saved_regs[1].addr = 1;
621 info->size += 3;
622 }
623 else if (len >= sizeof (img) - 2
624 && memcmp (img + 2, prologue, sizeof (img) - 2) == 0)
625 {
626 info->prologue_type = AVR_PROLOGUE_SIG;
627 vpc += sizeof (img) - 2;
628 info->saved_regs[AVR_SREG_REGNUM].addr = 3;
629 info->saved_regs[0].addr = 2;
630 info->saved_regs[1].addr = 1;
631 info->size += 3;
632 }
633 }
634
635 /* First stage of the prologue scanning.
636 Scan pushes (saved registers) */
637
638 for (; vpc < len; vpc += 2)
639 {
640 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
641 if ((insn & 0xfe0f) == 0x920f) /* push rXX */
642 {
643 /* Bits 4-9 contain a mask for registers R0-R32. */
644 int regno = (insn & 0x1f0) >> 4;
645 info->size++;
646 info->saved_regs[regno].addr = info->size;
647 scan_stage = 1;
648 }
649 else
650 break;
651 }
652
653 if (vpc >= AVR_MAX_PROLOGUE_SIZE)
654 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
655 _("Hit end of prologue while scanning pushes\n"));
656
657 /* Handle static small stack allocation using rcall or push. */
658
659 while (scan_stage == 1 && vpc < len)
660 {
661 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
662 if (insn == 0xd000) /* rcall .+0 */
663 {
664 info->size += gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch)->call_length;
665 vpc += 2;
666 }
667 else if (insn == 0x920f) /* push r0 */
668 {
669 info->size += 1;
670 vpc += 2;
671 }
672 else
673 break;
674 }
675
676 /* Second stage of the prologue scanning.
677 Scan:
678 in r28,__SP_L__
679 in r29,__SP_H__ */
680
681 if (scan_stage == 1 && vpc < len)
682 {
683 static const unsigned char img[] = {
684 0xcd, 0xb7, /* in r28,__SP_L__ */
685 0xde, 0xb7 /* in r29,__SP_H__ */
686 };
687 unsigned short insn1;
688
689 if (vpc + sizeof (img) < len
690 && memcmp (prologue + vpc, img, sizeof (img)) == 0)
691 {
692 vpc += 4;
693 scan_stage = 2;
694 }
695 }
696
697 /* Third stage of the prologue scanning. (Really two stages)
698 Scan for:
699 sbiw r28,XX or subi r28,lo8(XX)
700 sbci r29,hi8(XX)
701 in __tmp_reg__,__SREG__
702 cli
703 out __SP_H__,r29
704 out __SREG__,__tmp_reg__
705 out __SP_L__,r28 */
706
707 if (scan_stage == 2 && vpc < len)
708 {
709 int locals_size = 0;
710 static const unsigned char img[] = {
711 0x0f, 0xb6, /* in r0,0x3f */
712 0xf8, 0x94, /* cli */
713 0xde, 0xbf, /* out 0x3e,r29 ; SPH */
714 0x0f, 0xbe, /* out 0x3f,r0 ; SREG */
715 0xcd, 0xbf /* out 0x3d,r28 ; SPL */
716 };
717 static const unsigned char img_sig[] = {
718 0xde, 0xbf, /* out 0x3e,r29 ; SPH */
719 0xcd, 0xbf /* out 0x3d,r28 ; SPL */
720 };
721 static const unsigned char img_int[] = {
722 0xf8, 0x94, /* cli */
723 0xde, 0xbf, /* out 0x3e,r29 ; SPH */
724 0x78, 0x94, /* sei */
725 0xcd, 0xbf /* out 0x3d,r28 ; SPL */
726 };
727
728 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
729 if ((insn & 0xff30) == 0x9720) /* sbiw r28,XXX */
730 {
731 locals_size = (insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0xc0) >> 2);
732 vpc += 2;
733 }
734 else if ((insn & 0xf0f0) == 0x50c0) /* subi r28,lo8(XX) */
735 {
736 locals_size = (insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0xf00) >> 4);
737 vpc += 2;
738 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
739 vpc += 2;
740 locals_size += ((insn & 0xf) | ((insn & 0xf00) >> 4)) << 8;
741 }
742 else
743 return pc_beg + vpc;
744
745 /* Scan the last part of the prologue. May not be present for interrupt
746 or signal handler functions, which is why we set the prologue type
747 when we saw the beginning of the prologue previously. */
748
749 if (vpc + sizeof (img_sig) < len
750 && memcmp (prologue + vpc, img_sig, sizeof (img_sig)) == 0)
751 {
752 vpc += sizeof (img_sig);
753 }
754 else if (vpc + sizeof (img_int) < len
755 && memcmp (prologue + vpc, img_int, sizeof (img_int)) == 0)
756 {
757 vpc += sizeof (img_int);
758 }
759 if (vpc + sizeof (img) < len
760 && memcmp (prologue + vpc, img, sizeof (img)) == 0)
761 {
762 info->prologue_type = AVR_PROLOGUE_NORMAL;
763 vpc += sizeof (img);
764 }
765
766 info->size += locals_size;
767
768 /* Fall through. */
769 }
770
771 /* If we got this far, we could not scan the prologue, so just return the pc
772 of the frame plus an adjustment for argument move insns. */
773
774 for (; vpc < len; vpc += 2)
775 {
776 insn = extract_unsigned_integer (&prologue[vpc], 2, byte_order);
777 if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0x0100) /* movw rXX, rYY */
778 continue;
779 else if ((insn & 0xfc00) == 0x2c00) /* mov rXX, rYY */
780 continue;
781 else
782 break;
783 }
784
785 return pc_beg + vpc;
786 }
787
788 static CORE_ADDR
789 avr_skip_prologue (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc)
790 {
791 CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end;
792 CORE_ADDR post_prologue_pc;
793
794 /* See what the symbol table says */
795
796 if (!find_pc_partial_function (pc, NULL, &func_addr, &func_end))
797 return pc;
798
799 post_prologue_pc = skip_prologue_using_sal (gdbarch, func_addr);
800 if (post_prologue_pc != 0)
801 return max (pc, post_prologue_pc);
802
803 {
804 CORE_ADDR prologue_end = pc;
805 struct avr_unwind_cache info = {0};
806 struct trad_frame_saved_reg saved_regs[AVR_NUM_REGS];
807
808 info.saved_regs = saved_regs;
809
810 /* Need to run the prologue scanner to figure out if the function has a
811 prologue and possibly skip over moving arguments passed via registers
812 to other registers. */
813
814 prologue_end = avr_scan_prologue (gdbarch, func_addr, func_end, &info);
815
816 if (info.prologue_type != AVR_PROLOGUE_NONE)
817 return prologue_end;
818 }
819
820 /* Either we didn't find the start of this function (nothing we can do),
821 or there's no line info, or the line after the prologue is after
822 the end of the function (there probably isn't a prologue). */
823
824 return pc;
825 }
826
827 /* Not all avr devices support the BREAK insn. Those that don't should treat
828 it as a NOP. Thus, it should be ok. Since the avr is currently a remote
829 only target, this shouldn't be a problem (I hope). TRoth/2003-05-14 */
830
831 static const unsigned char *
832 avr_breakpoint_from_pc (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR * pcptr, int *lenptr)
833 {
834 static const unsigned char avr_break_insn [] = { 0x98, 0x95 };
835 *lenptr = sizeof (avr_break_insn);
836 return avr_break_insn;
837 }
838
839 /* Determine, for architecture GDBARCH, how a return value of TYPE
840 should be returned. If it is supposed to be returned in registers,
841 and READBUF is non-zero, read the appropriate value from REGCACHE,
842 and copy it into READBUF. If WRITEBUF is non-zero, write the value
843 from WRITEBUF into REGCACHE. */
844
845 static enum return_value_convention
846 avr_return_value (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct type *func_type,
847 struct type *valtype, struct regcache *regcache,
848 gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf)
849 {
850 int i;
851 /* Single byte are returned in r24.
852 Otherwise, the MSB of the return value is always in r25, calculate which
853 register holds the LSB. */
854 int lsb_reg;
855
856 if ((TYPE_CODE (valtype) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
857 || TYPE_CODE (valtype) == TYPE_CODE_UNION
858 || TYPE_CODE (valtype) == TYPE_CODE_ARRAY)
859 && TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) > 8)
860 return RETURN_VALUE_STRUCT_CONVENTION;
861
862 if (TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) <= 2)
863 lsb_reg = 24;
864 else if (TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) <= 4)
865 lsb_reg = 22;
866 else if (TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) <= 8)
867 lsb_reg = 18;
868 else
869 gdb_assert (0);
870
871 if (writebuf != NULL)
872 {
873 for (i = 0; i < TYPE_LENGTH (valtype); i++)
874 regcache_cooked_write (regcache, lsb_reg + i, writebuf + i);
875 }
876
877 if (readbuf != NULL)
878 {
879 for (i = 0; i < TYPE_LENGTH (valtype); i++)
880 regcache_cooked_read (regcache, lsb_reg + i, readbuf + i);
881 }
882
883 return RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION;
884 }
885
886
887 /* Put here the code to store, into fi->saved_regs, the addresses of
888 the saved registers of frame described by FRAME_INFO. This
889 includes special registers such as pc and fp saved in special ways
890 in the stack frame. sp is even more special: the address we return
891 for it IS the sp for the next frame. */
892
893 static struct avr_unwind_cache *
894 avr_frame_unwind_cache (struct frame_info *this_frame,
895 void **this_prologue_cache)
896 {
897 CORE_ADDR start_pc, current_pc;
898 ULONGEST prev_sp;
899 ULONGEST this_base;
900 struct avr_unwind_cache *info;
901 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
902 struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep;
903 int i;
904
905 if (*this_prologue_cache)
906 return *this_prologue_cache;
907
908 info = FRAME_OBSTACK_ZALLOC (struct avr_unwind_cache);
909 *this_prologue_cache = info;
910 info->saved_regs = trad_frame_alloc_saved_regs (this_frame);
911
912 info->size = 0;
913 info->prologue_type = AVR_PROLOGUE_NONE;
914
915 start_pc = get_frame_func (this_frame);
916 current_pc = get_frame_pc (this_frame);
917 if ((start_pc > 0) && (start_pc <= current_pc))
918 avr_scan_prologue (get_frame_arch (this_frame),
919 start_pc, current_pc, info);
920
921 if ((info->prologue_type != AVR_PROLOGUE_NONE)
922 && (info->prologue_type != AVR_PROLOGUE_MAIN))
923 {
924 ULONGEST high_base; /* High byte of FP */
925
926 /* The SP was moved to the FP. This indicates that a new frame
927 was created. Get THIS frame's FP value by unwinding it from
928 the next frame. */
929 this_base = get_frame_register_unsigned (this_frame, AVR_FP_REGNUM);
930 high_base = get_frame_register_unsigned (this_frame, AVR_FP_REGNUM + 1);
931 this_base += (high_base << 8);
932
933 /* The FP points at the last saved register. Adjust the FP back
934 to before the first saved register giving the SP. */
935 prev_sp = this_base + info->size;
936 }
937 else
938 {
939 /* Assume that the FP is this frame's SP but with that pushed
940 stack space added back. */
941 this_base = get_frame_register_unsigned (this_frame, AVR_SP_REGNUM);
942 prev_sp = this_base + info->size;
943 }
944
945 /* Add 1 here to adjust for the post-decrement nature of the push
946 instruction.*/
947 info->prev_sp = avr_make_saddr (prev_sp + 1);
948 info->base = avr_make_saddr (this_base);
949
950 gdbarch = get_frame_arch (this_frame);
951
952 /* Adjust all the saved registers so that they contain addresses and not
953 offsets. */
954 for (i = 0; i < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch) - 1; i++)
955 if (info->saved_regs[i].addr > 0)
956 info->saved_regs[i].addr = info->prev_sp - info->saved_regs[i].addr;
957
958 /* Except for the main and startup code, the return PC is always saved on
959 the stack and is at the base of the frame. */
960
961 if (info->prologue_type != AVR_PROLOGUE_MAIN)
962 info->saved_regs[AVR_PC_REGNUM].addr = info->prev_sp;
963
964 /* The previous frame's SP needed to be computed. Save the computed
965 value. */
966 tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
967 trad_frame_set_value (info->saved_regs, AVR_SP_REGNUM,
968 info->prev_sp - 1 + tdep->call_length);
969
970 return info;
971 }
972
973 static CORE_ADDR
974 avr_unwind_pc (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct frame_info *next_frame)
975 {
976 ULONGEST pc;
977
978 pc = frame_unwind_register_unsigned (next_frame, AVR_PC_REGNUM);
979
980 return avr_make_iaddr (pc);
981 }
982
983 static CORE_ADDR
984 avr_unwind_sp (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct frame_info *next_frame)
985 {
986 ULONGEST sp;
987
988 sp = frame_unwind_register_unsigned (next_frame, AVR_SP_REGNUM);
989
990 return avr_make_saddr (sp);
991 }
992
993 /* Given a GDB frame, determine the address of the calling function's
994 frame. This will be used to create a new GDB frame struct. */
995
996 static void
997 avr_frame_this_id (struct frame_info *this_frame,
998 void **this_prologue_cache,
999 struct frame_id *this_id)
1000 {
1001 struct avr_unwind_cache *info
1002 = avr_frame_unwind_cache (this_frame, this_prologue_cache);
1003 CORE_ADDR base;
1004 CORE_ADDR func;
1005 struct frame_id id;
1006
1007 /* The FUNC is easy. */
1008 func = get_frame_func (this_frame);
1009
1010 /* Hopefully the prologue analysis either correctly determined the
1011 frame's base (which is the SP from the previous frame), or set
1012 that base to "NULL". */
1013 base = info->prev_sp;
1014 if (base == 0)
1015 return;
1016
1017 id = frame_id_build (base, func);
1018 (*this_id) = id;
1019 }
1020
1021 static struct value *
1022 avr_frame_prev_register (struct frame_info *this_frame,
1023 void **this_prologue_cache, int regnum)
1024 {
1025 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_frame_arch (this_frame);
1026 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
1027 struct avr_unwind_cache *info
1028 = avr_frame_unwind_cache (this_frame, this_prologue_cache);
1029
1030 if (regnum == AVR_PC_REGNUM)
1031 {
1032 if (trad_frame_addr_p (info->saved_regs, regnum))
1033 {
1034 /* Reading the return PC from the PC register is slightly
1035 abnormal. register_size(AVR_PC_REGNUM) says it is 4 bytes,
1036 but in reality, only two bytes (3 in upcoming mega256) are
1037 stored on the stack.
1038
1039 Also, note that the value on the stack is an addr to a word
1040 not a byte, so we will need to multiply it by two at some
1041 point.
1042
1043 And to confuse matters even more, the return address stored
1044 on the stack is in big endian byte order, even though most
1045 everything else about the avr is little endian. Ick! */
1046 ULONGEST pc;
1047 int i;
1048 unsigned char buf[3];
1049 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_frame_arch (this_frame);
1050 struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
1051
1052 read_memory (info->saved_regs[regnum].addr, buf, tdep->call_length);
1053
1054 /* Extract the PC read from memory as a big-endian. */
1055 pc = 0;
1056 for (i = 0; i < tdep->call_length; i++)
1057 pc = (pc << 8) | buf[i];
1058
1059 return frame_unwind_got_constant (this_frame, regnum, pc << 1);
1060 }
1061
1062 return frame_unwind_got_optimized (this_frame, regnum);
1063 }
1064
1065 return trad_frame_get_prev_register (this_frame, info->saved_regs, regnum);
1066 }
1067
1068 static const struct frame_unwind avr_frame_unwind = {
1069 NORMAL_FRAME,
1070 avr_frame_this_id,
1071 avr_frame_prev_register,
1072 NULL,
1073 default_frame_sniffer
1074 };
1075
1076 static CORE_ADDR
1077 avr_frame_base_address (struct frame_info *this_frame, void **this_cache)
1078 {
1079 struct avr_unwind_cache *info
1080 = avr_frame_unwind_cache (this_frame, this_cache);
1081
1082 return info->base;
1083 }
1084
1085 static const struct frame_base avr_frame_base = {
1086 &avr_frame_unwind,
1087 avr_frame_base_address,
1088 avr_frame_base_address,
1089 avr_frame_base_address
1090 };
1091
1092 /* Assuming THIS_FRAME is a dummy, return the frame ID of that dummy
1093 frame. The frame ID's base needs to match the TOS value saved by
1094 save_dummy_frame_tos(), and the PC match the dummy frame's breakpoint. */
1095
1096 static struct frame_id
1097 avr_dummy_id (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct frame_info *this_frame)
1098 {
1099 ULONGEST base;
1100
1101 base = get_frame_register_unsigned (this_frame, AVR_SP_REGNUM);
1102 return frame_id_build (avr_make_saddr (base), get_frame_pc (this_frame));
1103 }
1104
1105 /* When arguments must be pushed onto the stack, they go on in reverse
1106 order. The below implements a FILO (stack) to do this. */
1107
1108 struct stack_item
1109 {
1110 int len;
1111 struct stack_item *prev;
1112 void *data;
1113 };
1114
1115 static struct stack_item *
1116 push_stack_item (struct stack_item *prev, const bfd_byte *contents, int len)
1117 {
1118 struct stack_item *si;
1119 si = xmalloc (sizeof (struct stack_item));
1120 si->data = xmalloc (len);
1121 si->len = len;
1122 si->prev = prev;
1123 memcpy (si->data, contents, len);
1124 return si;
1125 }
1126
1127 static struct stack_item *pop_stack_item (struct stack_item *si);
1128 static struct stack_item *
1129 pop_stack_item (struct stack_item *si)
1130 {
1131 struct stack_item *dead = si;
1132 si = si->prev;
1133 xfree (dead->data);
1134 xfree (dead);
1135 return si;
1136 }
1137
1138 /* Setup the function arguments for calling a function in the inferior.
1139
1140 On the AVR architecture, there are 18 registers (R25 to R8) which are
1141 dedicated for passing function arguments. Up to the first 18 arguments
1142 (depending on size) may go into these registers. The rest go on the stack.
1143
1144 All arguments are aligned to start in even-numbered registers (odd-sized
1145 arguments, including char, have one free register above them). For example,
1146 an int in arg1 and a char in arg2 would be passed as such:
1147
1148 arg1 -> r25:r24
1149 arg2 -> r22
1150
1151 Arguments that are larger than 2 bytes will be split between two or more
1152 registers as available, but will NOT be split between a register and the
1153 stack. Arguments that go onto the stack are pushed last arg first (this is
1154 similar to the d10v). */
1155
1156 /* NOTE: TRoth/2003-06-17: The rest of this comment is old looks to be
1157 inaccurate.
1158
1159 An exceptional case exists for struct arguments (and possibly other
1160 aggregates such as arrays) -- if the size is larger than WORDSIZE bytes but
1161 not a multiple of WORDSIZE bytes. In this case the argument is never split
1162 between the registers and the stack, but instead is copied in its entirety
1163 onto the stack, AND also copied into as many registers as there is room
1164 for. In other words, space in registers permitting, two copies of the same
1165 argument are passed in. As far as I can tell, only the one on the stack is
1166 used, although that may be a function of the level of compiler
1167 optimization. I suspect this is a compiler bug. Arguments of these odd
1168 sizes are left-justified within the word (as opposed to arguments smaller
1169 than WORDSIZE bytes, which are right-justified).
1170
1171 If the function is to return an aggregate type such as a struct, the caller
1172 must allocate space into which the callee will copy the return value. In
1173 this case, a pointer to the return value location is passed into the callee
1174 in register R0, which displaces one of the other arguments passed in via
1175 registers R0 to R2. */
1176
1177 static CORE_ADDR
1178 avr_push_dummy_call (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct value *function,
1179 struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR bp_addr,
1180 int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp,
1181 int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
1182 {
1183 enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch);
1184 int i;
1185 unsigned char buf[3];
1186 int call_length = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch)->call_length;
1187 CORE_ADDR return_pc = avr_convert_iaddr_to_raw (bp_addr);
1188 int regnum = AVR_ARGN_REGNUM;
1189 struct stack_item *si = NULL;
1190
1191 if (struct_return)
1192 {
1193 regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, regnum--,
1194 struct_addr & 0xff);
1195 regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, regnum--,
1196 (struct_addr >> 8) & 0xff);
1197 }
1198
1199 for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
1200 {
1201 int last_regnum;
1202 int j;
1203 struct value *arg = args[i];
1204 struct type *type = check_typedef (value_type (arg));
1205 const bfd_byte *contents = value_contents (arg);
1206 int len = TYPE_LENGTH (type);
1207
1208 /* Calculate the potential last register needed. */
1209 last_regnum = regnum - (len + (len & 1));
1210
1211 /* If there are registers available, use them. Once we start putting
1212 stuff on the stack, all subsequent args go on stack. */
1213 if ((si == NULL) && (last_regnum >= 8))
1214 {
1215 ULONGEST val;
1216
1217 /* Skip a register for odd length args. */
1218 if (len & 1)
1219 regnum--;
1220
1221 val = extract_unsigned_integer (contents, len, byte_order);
1222 for (j = 0; j < len; j++)
1223 regcache_cooked_write_unsigned
1224 (regcache, regnum--, val >> (8 * (len - j - 1)));
1225 }
1226 /* No registers available, push the args onto the stack. */
1227 else
1228 {
1229 /* From here on, we don't care about regnum. */
1230 si = push_stack_item (si, contents, len);
1231 }
1232 }
1233
1234 /* Push args onto the stack. */
1235 while (si)
1236 {
1237 sp -= si->len;
1238 /* Add 1 to sp here to account for post decr nature of pushes. */
1239 write_memory (sp + 1, si->data, si->len);
1240 si = pop_stack_item (si);
1241 }
1242
1243 /* Set the return address. For the avr, the return address is the BP_ADDR.
1244 Need to push the return address onto the stack noting that it needs to be
1245 in big-endian order on the stack. */
1246 for (i = 1; i <= call_length; i++)
1247 {
1248 buf[call_length - i] = return_pc & 0xff;
1249 return_pc >>= 8;
1250 }
1251
1252 sp -= call_length;
1253 /* Use 'sp + 1' since pushes are post decr ops. */
1254 write_memory (sp + 1, buf, call_length);
1255
1256 /* Finally, update the SP register. */
1257 regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, AVR_SP_REGNUM,
1258 avr_convert_saddr_to_raw (sp));
1259
1260 /* Return SP value for the dummy frame, where the return address hasn't been
1261 pushed. */
1262 return sp + call_length;
1263 }
1264
1265 /* Unfortunately dwarf2 register for SP is 32. */
1266
1267 static int
1268 avr_dwarf_reg_to_regnum (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int reg)
1269 {
1270 if (reg >= 0 && reg < 32)
1271 return reg;
1272 if (reg == 32)
1273 return AVR_SP_REGNUM;
1274
1275 warning (_("Unmapped DWARF Register #%d encountered."), reg);
1276
1277 return -1;
1278 }
1279
1280 /* Initialize the gdbarch structure for the AVR's. */
1281
1282 static struct gdbarch *
1283 avr_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches)
1284 {
1285 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
1286 struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep;
1287 struct gdbarch_list *best_arch;
1288 int call_length;
1289
1290 /* Avr-6 call instructions save 3 bytes. */
1291 switch (info.bfd_arch_info->mach)
1292 {
1293 case bfd_mach_avr1:
1294 case bfd_mach_avr2:
1295 case bfd_mach_avr3:
1296 case bfd_mach_avr4:
1297 case bfd_mach_avr5:
1298 default:
1299 call_length = 2;
1300 break;
1301 case bfd_mach_avr6:
1302 call_length = 3;
1303 break;
1304 }
1305
1306 /* If there is already a candidate, use it. */
1307 for (best_arch = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches, &info);
1308 best_arch != NULL;
1309 best_arch = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (best_arch->next, &info))
1310 {
1311 if (gdbarch_tdep (best_arch->gdbarch)->call_length == call_length)
1312 return best_arch->gdbarch;
1313 }
1314
1315 /* None found, create a new architecture from the information provided. */
1316 tdep = XMALLOC (struct gdbarch_tdep);
1317 gdbarch = gdbarch_alloc (&info, tdep);
1318
1319 tdep->call_length = call_length;
1320
1321 set_gdbarch_short_bit (gdbarch, 2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1322 set_gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch, 2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1323 set_gdbarch_long_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1324 set_gdbarch_long_long_bit (gdbarch, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1325 set_gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch, 2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1326 set_gdbarch_addr_bit (gdbarch, 32);
1327
1328 set_gdbarch_float_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1329 set_gdbarch_double_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1330 set_gdbarch_long_double_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
1331
1332 set_gdbarch_float_format (gdbarch, floatformats_ieee_single);
1333 set_gdbarch_double_format (gdbarch, floatformats_ieee_single);
1334 set_gdbarch_long_double_format (gdbarch, floatformats_ieee_single);
1335
1336 set_gdbarch_read_pc (gdbarch, avr_read_pc);
1337 set_gdbarch_write_pc (gdbarch, avr_write_pc);
1338
1339 set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, AVR_NUM_REGS);
1340
1341 set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch, AVR_SP_REGNUM);
1342 set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch, AVR_PC_REGNUM);
1343
1344 set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, avr_register_name);
1345 set_gdbarch_register_type (gdbarch, avr_register_type);
1346
1347 set_gdbarch_return_value (gdbarch, avr_return_value);
1348 set_gdbarch_print_insn (gdbarch, print_insn_avr);
1349
1350 set_gdbarch_push_dummy_call (gdbarch, avr_push_dummy_call);
1351
1352 set_gdbarch_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch, avr_dwarf_reg_to_regnum);
1353
1354 set_gdbarch_address_to_pointer (gdbarch, avr_address_to_pointer);
1355 set_gdbarch_pointer_to_address (gdbarch, avr_pointer_to_address);
1356
1357 set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, avr_skip_prologue);
1358 set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, core_addr_lessthan);
1359
1360 set_gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch, avr_breakpoint_from_pc);
1361
1362 frame_unwind_append_unwinder (gdbarch, &avr_frame_unwind);
1363 frame_base_set_default (gdbarch, &avr_frame_base);
1364
1365 set_gdbarch_dummy_id (gdbarch, avr_dummy_id);
1366
1367 set_gdbarch_unwind_pc (gdbarch, avr_unwind_pc);
1368 set_gdbarch_unwind_sp (gdbarch, avr_unwind_sp);
1369
1370 return gdbarch;
1371 }
1372
1373 /* Send a query request to the avr remote target asking for values of the io
1374 registers. If args parameter is not NULL, then the user has requested info
1375 on a specific io register [This still needs implemented and is ignored for
1376 now]. The query string should be one of these forms:
1377
1378 "Ravr.io_reg" -> reply is "NN" number of io registers
1379
1380 "Ravr.io_reg:addr,len" where addr is first register and len is number of
1381 registers to be read. The reply should be "<NAME>,VV;" for each io register
1382 where, <NAME> is a string, and VV is the hex value of the register.
1383
1384 All io registers are 8-bit. */
1385
1386 static void
1387 avr_io_reg_read_command (char *args, int from_tty)
1388 {
1389 LONGEST bufsiz = 0;
1390 gdb_byte *buf;
1391 char query[400];
1392 char *p;
1393 unsigned int nreg = 0;
1394 unsigned int val;
1395 int i, j, k, step;
1396
1397 /* Find out how many io registers the target has. */
1398 bufsiz = target_read_alloc (&current_target, TARGET_OBJECT_AVR,
1399 "avr.io_reg", &buf);
1400
1401 if (bufsiz <= 0)
1402 {
1403 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
1404 _("ERR: info io_registers NOT supported "
1405 "by current target\n"));
1406 return;
1407 }
1408
1409 if (sscanf (buf, "%x", &nreg) != 1)
1410 {
1411 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
1412 _("Error fetching number of io registers\n"));
1413 xfree (buf);
1414 return;
1415 }
1416
1417 xfree (buf);
1418
1419 reinitialize_more_filter ();
1420
1421 printf_unfiltered (_("Target has %u io registers:\n\n"), nreg);
1422
1423 /* only fetch up to 8 registers at a time to keep the buffer small */
1424 step = 8;
1425
1426 for (i = 0; i < nreg; i += step)
1427 {
1428 /* how many registers this round? */
1429 j = step;
1430 if ((i+j) >= nreg)
1431 j = nreg - i; /* last block is less than 8 registers */
1432
1433 snprintf (query, sizeof (query) - 1, "avr.io_reg:%x,%x", i, j);
1434 bufsiz = target_read_alloc (&current_target, TARGET_OBJECT_AVR,
1435 query, &buf);
1436
1437 p = buf;
1438 for (k = i; k < (i + j); k++)
1439 {
1440 if (sscanf (p, "%[^,],%x;", query, &val) == 2)
1441 {
1442 printf_filtered ("[%02x] %-15s : %02x\n", k, query, val);
1443 while ((*p != ';') && (*p != '\0'))
1444 p++;
1445 p++; /* skip over ';' */
1446 if (*p == '\0')
1447 break;
1448 }
1449 }
1450
1451 xfree (buf);
1452 }
1453 }
1454
1455 extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_avr_tdep; /* -Wmissing-prototypes */
1456
1457 void
1458 _initialize_avr_tdep (void)
1459 {
1460 register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_avr, avr_gdbarch_init);
1461
1462 /* Add a new command to allow the user to query the avr remote target for
1463 the values of the io space registers in a saner way than just using
1464 `x/NNNb ADDR`. */
1465
1466 /* FIXME: TRoth/2002-02-18: This should probably be changed to 'info avr
1467 io_registers' to signify it is not available on other platforms. */
1468
1469 add_cmd ("io_registers", class_info, avr_io_reg_read_command,
1470 _("query remote avr target for io space register values"),
1471 &infolist);
1472 }
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