Fix up some formatting.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / remote-mips.c
1 /* Remote debugging interface for MIPS remote debugging protocol.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002,
4 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 Contributed by Cygnus Support. Written by Ian Lance Taylor
7 <ian@cygnus.com>.
8
9 This file is part of GDB.
10
11 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
14 (at your option) any later version.
15
16 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 GNU General Public License for more details.
20
21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
23
24 #include "defs.h"
25 #include "inferior.h"
26 #include "bfd.h"
27 #include "symfile.h"
28 #include "gdbcmd.h"
29 #include "gdbcore.h"
30 #include "serial.h"
31 #include "target.h"
32 #include "exceptions.h"
33 #include "gdb_string.h"
34 #include "gdb_stat.h"
35 #include "regcache.h"
36 #include <ctype.h>
37 #include "mips-tdep.h"
38 \f
39
40 /* Breakpoint types. Values 0, 1, and 2 must agree with the watch
41 types passed by breakpoint.c to target_insert_watchpoint.
42 Value 3 is our own invention, and is used for ordinary instruction
43 breakpoints. Value 4 is used to mark an unused watchpoint in tables. */
44 enum break_type
45 {
46 BREAK_WRITE, /* 0 */
47 BREAK_READ, /* 1 */
48 BREAK_ACCESS, /* 2 */
49 BREAK_FETCH, /* 3 */
50 BREAK_UNUSED /* 4 */
51 };
52
53 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
54
55 static int mips_readchar (int timeout);
56
57 static int mips_receive_header (unsigned char *hdr, int *pgarbage,
58 int ch, int timeout);
59
60 static int mips_receive_trailer (unsigned char *trlr, int *pgarbage,
61 int *pch, int timeout);
62
63 static int mips_cksum (const unsigned char *hdr,
64 const unsigned char *data, int len);
65
66 static void mips_send_packet (const char *s, int get_ack);
67
68 static void mips_send_command (const char *cmd, int prompt);
69
70 static int mips_receive_packet (char *buff, int throw_error, int timeout);
71
72 static ULONGEST mips_request (int cmd, ULONGEST addr, ULONGEST data,
73 int *perr, int timeout, char *buff);
74
75 static void mips_initialize (void);
76
77 static void mips_open (char *name, int from_tty);
78
79 static void pmon_open (char *name, int from_tty);
80
81 static void ddb_open (char *name, int from_tty);
82
83 static void lsi_open (char *name, int from_tty);
84
85 static void mips_close (int quitting);
86
87 static void mips_detach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty);
88
89 static void mips_resume (ptid_t ptid, int step,
90 enum target_signal siggnal);
91
92 static int mips_map_regno (struct gdbarch *, int);
93
94 static void mips_fetch_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno);
95
96 static void mips_prepare_to_store (struct regcache *regcache);
97
98 static void mips_store_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno);
99
100 static unsigned int mips_fetch_word (CORE_ADDR addr);
101
102 static int mips_store_word (CORE_ADDR addr, unsigned int value,
103 char *old_contents);
104
105 static int mips_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, gdb_byte *myaddr, int len,
106 int write,
107 struct mem_attrib *attrib,
108 struct target_ops *target);
109
110 static void mips_files_info (struct target_ops *ignore);
111
112 static void mips_mourn_inferior (void);
113
114 static int pmon_makeb64 (unsigned long v, char *p, int n, int *chksum);
115
116 static int pmon_zeroset (int recsize, char **buff, int *amount,
117 unsigned int *chksum);
118
119 static int pmon_checkset (int recsize, char **buff, int *value);
120
121 static void pmon_make_fastrec (char **outbuf, unsigned char *inbuf,
122 int *inptr, int inamount, int *recsize,
123 unsigned int *csum, unsigned int *zerofill);
124
125 static int pmon_check_ack (char *mesg);
126
127 static void pmon_start_download (void);
128
129 static void pmon_end_download (int final, int bintotal);
130
131 static void pmon_download (char *buffer, int length);
132
133 static void pmon_load_fast (char *file);
134
135 static void mips_load (char *file, int from_tty);
136
137 static int mips_make_srec (char *buffer, int type, CORE_ADDR memaddr,
138 unsigned char *myaddr, int len);
139
140 static int mips_set_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, enum break_type type);
141
142 static int mips_clear_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
143 enum break_type type);
144
145 static int mips_common_breakpoint (int set, CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
146 enum break_type type);
147
148 /* Forward declarations. */
149 extern struct target_ops mips_ops;
150 extern struct target_ops pmon_ops;
151 extern struct target_ops ddb_ops;
152 \f/* *INDENT-OFF* */
153 /* The MIPS remote debugging interface is built on top of a simple
154 packet protocol. Each packet is organized as follows:
155
156 SYN The first character is always a SYN (ASCII 026, or ^V). SYN
157 may not appear anywhere else in the packet. Any time a SYN is
158 seen, a new packet should be assumed to have begun.
159
160 TYPE_LEN
161 This byte contains the upper five bits of the logical length
162 of the data section, plus a single bit indicating whether this
163 is a data packet or an acknowledgement. The documentation
164 indicates that this bit is 1 for a data packet, but the actual
165 board uses 1 for an acknowledgement. The value of the byte is
166 0x40 + (ack ? 0x20 : 0) + (len >> 6)
167 (we always have 0 <= len < 1024). Acknowledgement packets do
168 not carry data, and must have a data length of 0.
169
170 LEN1 This byte contains the lower six bits of the logical length of
171 the data section. The value is
172 0x40 + (len & 0x3f)
173
174 SEQ This byte contains the six bit sequence number of the packet.
175 The value is
176 0x40 + seq
177 An acknowlegment packet contains the sequence number of the
178 packet being acknowledged plus 1 modulo 64. Data packets are
179 transmitted in sequence. There may only be one outstanding
180 unacknowledged data packet at a time. The sequence numbers
181 are independent in each direction. If an acknowledgement for
182 the previous packet is received (i.e., an acknowledgement with
183 the sequence number of the packet just sent) the packet just
184 sent should be retransmitted. If no acknowledgement is
185 received within a timeout period, the packet should be
186 retransmitted. This has an unfortunate failure condition on a
187 high-latency line, as a delayed acknowledgement may lead to an
188 endless series of duplicate packets.
189
190 DATA The actual data bytes follow. The following characters are
191 escaped inline with DLE (ASCII 020, or ^P):
192 SYN (026) DLE S
193 DLE (020) DLE D
194 ^C (003) DLE C
195 ^S (023) DLE s
196 ^Q (021) DLE q
197 The additional DLE characters are not counted in the logical
198 length stored in the TYPE_LEN and LEN1 bytes.
199
200 CSUM1
201 CSUM2
202 CSUM3
203 These bytes contain an 18 bit checksum of the complete
204 contents of the packet excluding the SEQ byte and the
205 CSUM[123] bytes. The checksum is simply the twos complement
206 addition of all the bytes treated as unsigned characters. The
207 values of the checksum bytes are:
208 CSUM1: 0x40 + ((cksum >> 12) & 0x3f)
209 CSUM2: 0x40 + ((cksum >> 6) & 0x3f)
210 CSUM3: 0x40 + (cksum & 0x3f)
211
212 It happens that the MIPS remote debugging protocol always
213 communicates with ASCII strings. Because of this, this
214 implementation doesn't bother to handle the DLE quoting mechanism,
215 since it will never be required. */
216 /* *INDENT-ON* */
217
218
219 /* The SYN character which starts each packet. */
220 #define SYN '\026'
221
222 /* The 0x40 used to offset each packet (this value ensures that all of
223 the header and trailer bytes, other than SYN, are printable ASCII
224 characters). */
225 #define HDR_OFFSET 0x40
226
227 /* The indices of the bytes in the packet header. */
228 #define HDR_INDX_SYN 0
229 #define HDR_INDX_TYPE_LEN 1
230 #define HDR_INDX_LEN1 2
231 #define HDR_INDX_SEQ 3
232 #define HDR_LENGTH 4
233
234 /* The data/ack bit in the TYPE_LEN header byte. */
235 #define TYPE_LEN_DA_BIT 0x20
236 #define TYPE_LEN_DATA 0
237 #define TYPE_LEN_ACK TYPE_LEN_DA_BIT
238
239 /* How to compute the header bytes. */
240 #define HDR_SET_SYN(data, len, seq) (SYN)
241 #define HDR_SET_TYPE_LEN(data, len, seq) \
242 (HDR_OFFSET \
243 + ((data) ? TYPE_LEN_DATA : TYPE_LEN_ACK) \
244 + (((len) >> 6) & 0x1f))
245 #define HDR_SET_LEN1(data, len, seq) (HDR_OFFSET + ((len) & 0x3f))
246 #define HDR_SET_SEQ(data, len, seq) (HDR_OFFSET + (seq))
247
248 /* Check that a header byte is reasonable. */
249 #define HDR_CHECK(ch) (((ch) & HDR_OFFSET) == HDR_OFFSET)
250
251 /* Get data from the header. These macros evaluate their argument
252 multiple times. */
253 #define HDR_IS_DATA(hdr) \
254 (((hdr)[HDR_INDX_TYPE_LEN] & TYPE_LEN_DA_BIT) == TYPE_LEN_DATA)
255 #define HDR_GET_LEN(hdr) \
256 ((((hdr)[HDR_INDX_TYPE_LEN] & 0x1f) << 6) + (((hdr)[HDR_INDX_LEN1] & 0x3f)))
257 #define HDR_GET_SEQ(hdr) ((unsigned int)(hdr)[HDR_INDX_SEQ] & 0x3f)
258
259 /* The maximum data length. */
260 #define DATA_MAXLEN 1023
261
262 /* The trailer offset. */
263 #define TRLR_OFFSET HDR_OFFSET
264
265 /* The indices of the bytes in the packet trailer. */
266 #define TRLR_INDX_CSUM1 0
267 #define TRLR_INDX_CSUM2 1
268 #define TRLR_INDX_CSUM3 2
269 #define TRLR_LENGTH 3
270
271 /* How to compute the trailer bytes. */
272 #define TRLR_SET_CSUM1(cksum) (TRLR_OFFSET + (((cksum) >> 12) & 0x3f))
273 #define TRLR_SET_CSUM2(cksum) (TRLR_OFFSET + (((cksum) >> 6) & 0x3f))
274 #define TRLR_SET_CSUM3(cksum) (TRLR_OFFSET + (((cksum) ) & 0x3f))
275
276 /* Check that a trailer byte is reasonable. */
277 #define TRLR_CHECK(ch) (((ch) & TRLR_OFFSET) == TRLR_OFFSET)
278
279 /* Get data from the trailer. This evaluates its argument multiple
280 times. */
281 #define TRLR_GET_CKSUM(trlr) \
282 ((((trlr)[TRLR_INDX_CSUM1] & 0x3f) << 12) \
283 + (((trlr)[TRLR_INDX_CSUM2] & 0x3f) << 6) \
284 + ((trlr)[TRLR_INDX_CSUM3] & 0x3f))
285
286 /* The sequence number modulos. */
287 #define SEQ_MODULOS (64)
288
289 /* PMON commands to load from the serial port or UDP socket. */
290 #define LOAD_CMD "load -b -s tty0\r"
291 #define LOAD_CMD_UDP "load -b -s udp\r"
292
293 /* The target vectors for the four different remote MIPS targets.
294 These are initialized with code in _initialize_remote_mips instead
295 of static initializers, to make it easier to extend the target_ops
296 vector later. */
297 struct target_ops mips_ops, pmon_ops, ddb_ops, lsi_ops;
298
299 enum mips_monitor_type
300 {
301 /* IDT/SIM monitor being used: */
302 MON_IDT,
303 /* PMON monitor being used: */
304 MON_PMON, /* 3.0.83 [COGENT,EB,FP,NET] Algorithmics Ltd. Nov 9 1995 17:19:50 */
305 MON_DDB, /* 2.7.473 [DDBVR4300,EL,FP,NET] Risq Modular Systems, Thu Jun 6 09:28:40 PDT 1996 */
306 MON_LSI, /* 4.3.12 [EB,FP], LSI LOGIC Corp. Tue Feb 25 13:22:14 1997 */
307 /* Last and unused value, for sizing vectors, etc. */
308 MON_LAST
309 };
310 static enum mips_monitor_type mips_monitor = MON_LAST;
311
312 /* The monitor prompt text. If the user sets the PMON prompt
313 to some new value, the GDB `set monitor-prompt' command must also
314 be used to inform GDB about the expected prompt. Otherwise, GDB
315 will not be able to connect to PMON in mips_initialize().
316 If the `set monitor-prompt' command is not used, the expected
317 default prompt will be set according the target:
318 target prompt
319 ----- -----
320 pmon PMON>
321 ddb NEC010>
322 lsi PMON>
323 */
324 static char *mips_monitor_prompt;
325
326 /* Set to 1 if the target is open. */
327 static int mips_is_open;
328
329 /* Currently active target description (if mips_is_open == 1) */
330 static struct target_ops *current_ops;
331
332 /* Set to 1 while the connection is being initialized. */
333 static int mips_initializing;
334
335 /* Set to 1 while the connection is being brought down. */
336 static int mips_exiting;
337
338 /* The next sequence number to send. */
339 static unsigned int mips_send_seq;
340
341 /* The next sequence number we expect to receive. */
342 static unsigned int mips_receive_seq;
343
344 /* The time to wait before retransmitting a packet, in seconds. */
345 static int mips_retransmit_wait = 3;
346
347 /* The number of times to try retransmitting a packet before giving up. */
348 static int mips_send_retries = 10;
349
350 /* The number of garbage characters to accept when looking for an
351 SYN for the next packet. */
352 static int mips_syn_garbage = 10;
353
354 /* The time to wait for a packet, in seconds. */
355 static int mips_receive_wait = 5;
356
357 /* Set if we have sent a packet to the board but have not yet received
358 a reply. */
359 static int mips_need_reply = 0;
360
361 /* Handle used to access serial I/O stream. */
362 static struct serial *mips_desc;
363
364 /* UDP handle used to download files to target. */
365 static struct serial *udp_desc;
366 static int udp_in_use;
367
368 /* TFTP filename used to download files to DDB board, in the form
369 host:filename. */
370 static char *tftp_name; /* host:filename */
371 static char *tftp_localname; /* filename portion of above */
372 static int tftp_in_use;
373 static FILE *tftp_file;
374
375 /* Counts the number of times the user tried to interrupt the target (usually
376 via ^C. */
377 static int interrupt_count;
378
379 /* If non-zero, means that the target is running. */
380 static int mips_wait_flag = 0;
381
382 /* If non-zero, monitor supports breakpoint commands. */
383 static int monitor_supports_breakpoints = 0;
384
385 /* Data cache header. */
386
387 #if 0 /* not used (yet?) */
388 static DCACHE *mips_dcache;
389 #endif
390
391 /* Non-zero means that we've just hit a read or write watchpoint */
392 static int hit_watchpoint;
393
394 /* Table of breakpoints/watchpoints (used only on LSI PMON target).
395 The table is indexed by a breakpoint number, which is an integer
396 from 0 to 255 returned by the LSI PMON when a breakpoint is set.
397 */
398 #define MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS 256
399 struct lsi_breakpoint_info
400 {
401 enum break_type type; /* type of breakpoint */
402 CORE_ADDR addr; /* address of breakpoint */
403 int len; /* length of region being watched */
404 unsigned long value; /* value to watch */
405 }
406 lsi_breakpoints[MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS];
407
408 /* Error/warning codes returned by LSI PMON for breakpoint commands.
409 Warning values may be ORed together; error values may not. */
410 #define W_WARN 0x100 /* This bit is set if the error code is a warning */
411 #define W_MSK 0x101 /* warning: Range feature is supported via mask */
412 #define W_VAL 0x102 /* warning: Value check is not supported in hardware */
413 #define W_QAL 0x104 /* warning: Requested qualifiers are not supported in hardware */
414
415 #define E_ERR 0x200 /* This bit is set if the error code is an error */
416 #define E_BPT 0x200 /* error: No such breakpoint number */
417 #define E_RGE 0x201 /* error: Range is not supported */
418 #define E_QAL 0x202 /* error: The requested qualifiers can not be used */
419 #define E_OUT 0x203 /* error: Out of hardware resources */
420 #define E_NON 0x204 /* error: Hardware breakpoint not supported */
421
422 struct lsi_error
423 {
424 int code; /* error code */
425 char *string; /* string associated with this code */
426 };
427
428 struct lsi_error lsi_warning_table[] =
429 {
430 {W_MSK, "Range feature is supported via mask"},
431 {W_VAL, "Value check is not supported in hardware"},
432 {W_QAL, "Requested qualifiers are not supported in hardware"},
433 {0, NULL}
434 };
435
436 struct lsi_error lsi_error_table[] =
437 {
438 {E_BPT, "No such breakpoint number"},
439 {E_RGE, "Range is not supported"},
440 {E_QAL, "The requested qualifiers can not be used"},
441 {E_OUT, "Out of hardware resources"},
442 {E_NON, "Hardware breakpoint not supported"},
443 {0, NULL}
444 };
445
446 /* Set to 1 with the 'set monitor-warnings' command to enable printing
447 of warnings returned by PMON when hardware breakpoints are used. */
448 static int monitor_warnings;
449
450
451 static void
452 close_ports (void)
453 {
454 mips_is_open = 0;
455 serial_close (mips_desc);
456
457 if (udp_in_use)
458 {
459 serial_close (udp_desc);
460 udp_in_use = 0;
461 }
462 tftp_in_use = 0;
463 }
464
465 /* Handle low-level error that we can't recover from. Note that just
466 error()ing out from target_wait or some such low-level place will cause
467 all hell to break loose--the rest of GDB will tend to get left in an
468 inconsistent state. */
469
470 static NORETURN void
471 mips_error (char *string,...)
472 {
473 va_list args;
474
475 va_start (args, string);
476
477 target_terminal_ours ();
478 wrap_here (""); /* Force out any buffered output */
479 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
480 if (error_pre_print)
481 fputs_filtered (error_pre_print, gdb_stderr);
482 vfprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, string, args);
483 fprintf_filtered (gdb_stderr, "\n");
484 va_end (args);
485 gdb_flush (gdb_stderr);
486
487 /* Clean up in such a way that mips_close won't try to talk to the
488 board (it almost surely won't work since we weren't able to talk to
489 it). */
490 close_ports ();
491
492 printf_unfiltered ("Ending remote MIPS debugging.\n");
493 target_mourn_inferior ();
494
495 deprecated_throw_reason (RETURN_ERROR);
496 }
497
498 /* putc_readable - print a character, displaying non-printable chars in
499 ^x notation or in hex. */
500
501 static void
502 fputc_readable (int ch, struct ui_file *file)
503 {
504 if (ch == '\n')
505 fputc_unfiltered ('\n', file);
506 else if (ch == '\r')
507 fprintf_unfiltered (file, "\\r");
508 else if (ch < 0x20) /* ASCII control character */
509 fprintf_unfiltered (file, "^%c", ch + '@');
510 else if (ch >= 0x7f) /* non-ASCII characters (rubout or greater) */
511 fprintf_unfiltered (file, "[%02x]", ch & 0xff);
512 else
513 fputc_unfiltered (ch, file);
514 }
515
516
517 /* puts_readable - print a string, displaying non-printable chars in
518 ^x notation or in hex. */
519
520 static void
521 fputs_readable (const char *string, struct ui_file *file)
522 {
523 int c;
524
525 while ((c = *string++) != '\0')
526 fputc_readable (c, file);
527 }
528
529
530 /* Wait until STRING shows up in mips_desc. Returns 1 if successful, else 0 if
531 timed out. TIMEOUT specifies timeout value in seconds.
532 */
533
534 static int
535 mips_expect_timeout (const char *string, int timeout)
536 {
537 const char *p = string;
538
539 if (remote_debug)
540 {
541 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Expected \"");
542 fputs_readable (string, gdb_stdlog);
543 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "\", got \"");
544 }
545
546 immediate_quit++;
547 while (1)
548 {
549 int c;
550
551 /* Must use serial_readchar() here cuz mips_readchar would get
552 confused if we were waiting for the mips_monitor_prompt... */
553
554 c = serial_readchar (mips_desc, timeout);
555
556 if (c == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
557 {
558 if (remote_debug)
559 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "\": FAIL\n");
560 return 0;
561 }
562
563 if (remote_debug)
564 fputc_readable (c, gdb_stdlog);
565
566 if (c == *p++)
567 {
568 if (*p == '\0')
569 {
570 immediate_quit--;
571 if (remote_debug)
572 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "\": OK\n");
573 return 1;
574 }
575 }
576 else
577 {
578 p = string;
579 if (c == *p)
580 p++;
581 }
582 }
583 }
584
585 /* Wait until STRING shows up in mips_desc. Returns 1 if successful, else 0 if
586 timed out. The timeout value is hard-coded to 2 seconds. Use
587 mips_expect_timeout if a different timeout value is needed.
588 */
589
590 static int
591 mips_expect (const char *string)
592 {
593 return mips_expect_timeout (string, remote_timeout);
594 }
595
596 /* Read a character from the remote, aborting on error. Returns
597 SERIAL_TIMEOUT on timeout (since that's what serial_readchar()
598 returns). FIXME: If we see the string mips_monitor_prompt from the
599 board, then we are debugging on the main console port, and we have
600 somehow dropped out of remote debugging mode. In this case, we
601 automatically go back in to remote debugging mode. This is a hack,
602 put in because I can't find any way for a program running on the
603 remote board to terminate without also ending remote debugging
604 mode. I assume users won't have any trouble with this; for one
605 thing, the IDT documentation generally assumes that the remote
606 debugging port is not the console port. This is, however, very
607 convenient for DejaGnu when you only have one connected serial
608 port. */
609
610 static int
611 mips_readchar (int timeout)
612 {
613 int ch;
614 static int state = 0;
615 int mips_monitor_prompt_len = strlen (mips_monitor_prompt);
616
617 {
618 int i;
619
620 i = timeout;
621 if (i == -1 && watchdog > 0)
622 i = watchdog;
623 }
624
625 if (state == mips_monitor_prompt_len)
626 timeout = 1;
627 ch = serial_readchar (mips_desc, timeout);
628
629 if (ch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT && timeout == -1) /* Watchdog went off */
630 {
631 target_mourn_inferior ();
632 error ("Watchdog has expired. Target detached.\n");
633 }
634
635 if (ch == SERIAL_EOF)
636 mips_error ("End of file from remote");
637 if (ch == SERIAL_ERROR)
638 mips_error ("Error reading from remote: %s", safe_strerror (errno));
639 if (remote_debug > 1)
640 {
641 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
642 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
643 if (ch != SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
644 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Read '%c' %d 0x%x\n", ch, ch, ch);
645 else
646 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Timed out in read\n");
647 }
648
649 /* If we have seen mips_monitor_prompt and we either time out, or
650 we see a @ (which was echoed from a packet we sent), reset the
651 board as described above. The first character in a packet after
652 the SYN (which is not echoed) is always an @ unless the packet is
653 more than 64 characters long, which ours never are. */
654 if ((ch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT || ch == '@')
655 && state == mips_monitor_prompt_len
656 && !mips_initializing
657 && !mips_exiting)
658 {
659 if (remote_debug > 0)
660 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
661 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
662 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Reinitializing MIPS debugging mode\n");
663
664 mips_need_reply = 0;
665 mips_initialize ();
666
667 state = 0;
668
669 /* At this point, about the only thing we can do is abort the command
670 in progress and get back to command level as quickly as possible. */
671
672 error ("Remote board reset, debug protocol re-initialized.");
673 }
674
675 if (ch == mips_monitor_prompt[state])
676 ++state;
677 else
678 state = 0;
679
680 return ch;
681 }
682
683 /* Get a packet header, putting the data in the supplied buffer.
684 PGARBAGE is a pointer to the number of garbage characters received
685 so far. CH is the last character received. Returns 0 for success,
686 or -1 for timeout. */
687
688 static int
689 mips_receive_header (unsigned char *hdr, int *pgarbage, int ch, int timeout)
690 {
691 int i;
692
693 while (1)
694 {
695 /* Wait for a SYN. mips_syn_garbage is intended to prevent
696 sitting here indefinitely if the board sends us one garbage
697 character per second. ch may already have a value from the
698 last time through the loop. */
699 while (ch != SYN)
700 {
701 ch = mips_readchar (timeout);
702 if (ch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
703 return -1;
704 if (ch != SYN)
705 {
706 /* Printing the character here lets the user of gdb see
707 what the program is outputting, if the debugging is
708 being done on the console port. Don't use _filtered:
709 we can't deal with a QUIT out of target_wait and
710 buffered target output confuses the user. */
711 if (!mips_initializing || remote_debug > 0)
712 {
713 if (isprint (ch) || isspace (ch))
714 {
715 fputc_unfiltered (ch, gdb_stdtarg);
716 }
717 else
718 {
719 fputc_readable (ch, gdb_stdtarg);
720 }
721 gdb_flush (gdb_stdtarg);
722 }
723
724 /* Only count unprintable characters. */
725 if (! (isprint (ch) || isspace (ch)))
726 (*pgarbage) += 1;
727
728 if (mips_syn_garbage > 0
729 && *pgarbage > mips_syn_garbage)
730 mips_error ("Debug protocol failure: more than %d characters before a sync.",
731 mips_syn_garbage);
732 }
733 }
734
735 /* Get the packet header following the SYN. */
736 for (i = 1; i < HDR_LENGTH; i++)
737 {
738 ch = mips_readchar (timeout);
739 if (ch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
740 return -1;
741 /* Make sure this is a header byte. */
742 if (ch == SYN || !HDR_CHECK (ch))
743 break;
744
745 hdr[i] = ch;
746 }
747
748 /* If we got the complete header, we can return. Otherwise we
749 loop around and keep looking for SYN. */
750 if (i >= HDR_LENGTH)
751 return 0;
752 }
753 }
754
755 /* Get a packet header, putting the data in the supplied buffer.
756 PGARBAGE is a pointer to the number of garbage characters received
757 so far. The last character read is returned in *PCH. Returns 0
758 for success, -1 for timeout, -2 for error. */
759
760 static int
761 mips_receive_trailer (unsigned char *trlr, int *pgarbage, int *pch, int timeout)
762 {
763 int i;
764 int ch;
765
766 for (i = 0; i < TRLR_LENGTH; i++)
767 {
768 ch = mips_readchar (timeout);
769 *pch = ch;
770 if (ch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
771 return -1;
772 if (!TRLR_CHECK (ch))
773 return -2;
774 trlr[i] = ch;
775 }
776 return 0;
777 }
778
779 /* Get the checksum of a packet. HDR points to the packet header.
780 DATA points to the packet data. LEN is the length of DATA. */
781
782 static int
783 mips_cksum (const unsigned char *hdr, const unsigned char *data, int len)
784 {
785 const unsigned char *p;
786 int c;
787 int cksum;
788
789 cksum = 0;
790
791 /* The initial SYN is not included in the checksum. */
792 c = HDR_LENGTH - 1;
793 p = hdr + 1;
794 while (c-- != 0)
795 cksum += *p++;
796
797 c = len;
798 p = data;
799 while (c-- != 0)
800 cksum += *p++;
801
802 return cksum;
803 }
804
805 /* Send a packet containing the given ASCII string. */
806
807 static void
808 mips_send_packet (const char *s, int get_ack)
809 {
810 /* unsigned */ int len;
811 unsigned char *packet;
812 int cksum;
813 int try;
814
815 len = strlen (s);
816 if (len > DATA_MAXLEN)
817 mips_error ("MIPS protocol data packet too long: %s", s);
818
819 packet = (unsigned char *) alloca (HDR_LENGTH + len + TRLR_LENGTH + 1);
820
821 packet[HDR_INDX_SYN] = HDR_SET_SYN (1, len, mips_send_seq);
822 packet[HDR_INDX_TYPE_LEN] = HDR_SET_TYPE_LEN (1, len, mips_send_seq);
823 packet[HDR_INDX_LEN1] = HDR_SET_LEN1 (1, len, mips_send_seq);
824 packet[HDR_INDX_SEQ] = HDR_SET_SEQ (1, len, mips_send_seq);
825
826 memcpy (packet + HDR_LENGTH, s, len);
827
828 cksum = mips_cksum (packet, packet + HDR_LENGTH, len);
829 packet[HDR_LENGTH + len + TRLR_INDX_CSUM1] = TRLR_SET_CSUM1 (cksum);
830 packet[HDR_LENGTH + len + TRLR_INDX_CSUM2] = TRLR_SET_CSUM2 (cksum);
831 packet[HDR_LENGTH + len + TRLR_INDX_CSUM3] = TRLR_SET_CSUM3 (cksum);
832
833 /* Increment the sequence number. This will set mips_send_seq to
834 the sequence number we expect in the acknowledgement. */
835 mips_send_seq = (mips_send_seq + 1) % SEQ_MODULOS;
836
837 /* We can only have one outstanding data packet, so we just wait for
838 the acknowledgement here. Keep retransmitting the packet until
839 we get one, or until we've tried too many times. */
840 for (try = 0; try < mips_send_retries; try++)
841 {
842 int garbage;
843 int ch;
844
845 if (remote_debug > 0)
846 {
847 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
848 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
849 packet[HDR_LENGTH + len + TRLR_LENGTH] = '\0';
850 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Writing \"%s\"\n", packet + 1);
851 }
852
853 if (serial_write (mips_desc, packet,
854 HDR_LENGTH + len + TRLR_LENGTH) != 0)
855 mips_error ("write to target failed: %s", safe_strerror (errno));
856
857 if (!get_ack)
858 return;
859
860 garbage = 0;
861 ch = 0;
862 while (1)
863 {
864 unsigned char hdr[HDR_LENGTH + 1];
865 unsigned char trlr[TRLR_LENGTH + 1];
866 int err;
867 unsigned int seq;
868
869 /* Get the packet header. If we time out, resend the data
870 packet. */
871 err = mips_receive_header (hdr, &garbage, ch, mips_retransmit_wait);
872 if (err != 0)
873 break;
874
875 ch = 0;
876
877 /* If we get a data packet, assume it is a duplicate and
878 ignore it. FIXME: If the acknowledgement is lost, this
879 data packet may be the packet the remote sends after the
880 acknowledgement. */
881 if (HDR_IS_DATA (hdr))
882 {
883 int i;
884
885 /* Ignore any errors raised whilst attempting to ignore
886 packet. */
887
888 len = HDR_GET_LEN (hdr);
889
890 for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
891 {
892 int rch;
893
894 rch = mips_readchar (remote_timeout);
895 if (rch == SYN)
896 {
897 ch = SYN;
898 break;
899 }
900 if (rch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
901 break;
902 /* ignore the character */
903 }
904
905 if (i == len)
906 (void) mips_receive_trailer (trlr, &garbage, &ch,
907 remote_timeout);
908
909 /* We don't bother checking the checksum, or providing an
910 ACK to the packet. */
911 continue;
912 }
913
914 /* If the length is not 0, this is a garbled packet. */
915 if (HDR_GET_LEN (hdr) != 0)
916 continue;
917
918 /* Get the packet trailer. */
919 err = mips_receive_trailer (trlr, &garbage, &ch,
920 mips_retransmit_wait);
921
922 /* If we timed out, resend the data packet. */
923 if (err == -1)
924 break;
925
926 /* If we got a bad character, reread the header. */
927 if (err != 0)
928 continue;
929
930 /* If the checksum does not match the trailer checksum, this
931 is a bad packet; ignore it. */
932 if (mips_cksum (hdr, (unsigned char *) NULL, 0)
933 != TRLR_GET_CKSUM (trlr))
934 continue;
935
936 if (remote_debug > 0)
937 {
938 hdr[HDR_LENGTH] = '\0';
939 trlr[TRLR_LENGTH] = '\0';
940 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
941 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
942 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Got ack %d \"%s%s\"\n",
943 HDR_GET_SEQ (hdr), hdr + 1, trlr);
944 }
945
946 /* If this ack is for the current packet, we're done. */
947 seq = HDR_GET_SEQ (hdr);
948 if (seq == mips_send_seq)
949 return;
950
951 /* If this ack is for the last packet, resend the current
952 packet. */
953 if ((seq + 1) % SEQ_MODULOS == mips_send_seq)
954 break;
955
956 /* Otherwise this is a bad ack; ignore it. Increment the
957 garbage count to ensure that we do not stay in this loop
958 forever. */
959 ++garbage;
960 }
961 }
962
963 mips_error ("Remote did not acknowledge packet");
964 }
965
966 /* Receive and acknowledge a packet, returning the data in BUFF (which
967 should be DATA_MAXLEN + 1 bytes). The protocol documentation
968 implies that only the sender retransmits packets, so this code just
969 waits silently for a packet. It returns the length of the received
970 packet. If THROW_ERROR is nonzero, call error() on errors. If not,
971 don't print an error message and return -1. */
972
973 static int
974 mips_receive_packet (char *buff, int throw_error, int timeout)
975 {
976 int ch;
977 int garbage;
978 int len;
979 unsigned char ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_LENGTH + 1];
980 int cksum;
981
982 ch = 0;
983 garbage = 0;
984 while (1)
985 {
986 unsigned char hdr[HDR_LENGTH];
987 unsigned char trlr[TRLR_LENGTH];
988 int i;
989 int err;
990
991 if (mips_receive_header (hdr, &garbage, ch, timeout) != 0)
992 {
993 if (throw_error)
994 mips_error ("Timed out waiting for remote packet");
995 else
996 return -1;
997 }
998
999 ch = 0;
1000
1001 /* An acknowledgement is probably a duplicate; ignore it. */
1002 if (!HDR_IS_DATA (hdr))
1003 {
1004 len = HDR_GET_LEN (hdr);
1005 /* Check if the length is valid for an ACK, we may aswell
1006 try and read the remainder of the packet: */
1007 if (len == 0)
1008 {
1009 /* Ignore the error condition, since we are going to
1010 ignore the packet anyway. */
1011 (void) mips_receive_trailer (trlr, &garbage, &ch, timeout);
1012 }
1013 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1014 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1015 if (remote_debug > 0)
1016 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Ignoring unexpected ACK\n");
1017 continue;
1018 }
1019
1020 len = HDR_GET_LEN (hdr);
1021 for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
1022 {
1023 int rch;
1024
1025 rch = mips_readchar (timeout);
1026 if (rch == SYN)
1027 {
1028 ch = SYN;
1029 break;
1030 }
1031 if (rch == SERIAL_TIMEOUT)
1032 {
1033 if (throw_error)
1034 mips_error ("Timed out waiting for remote packet");
1035 else
1036 return -1;
1037 }
1038 buff[i] = rch;
1039 }
1040
1041 if (i < len)
1042 {
1043 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1044 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1045 if (remote_debug > 0)
1046 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1047 "Got new SYN after %d chars (wanted %d)\n",
1048 i, len);
1049 continue;
1050 }
1051
1052 err = mips_receive_trailer (trlr, &garbage, &ch, timeout);
1053 if (err == -1)
1054 {
1055 if (throw_error)
1056 mips_error ("Timed out waiting for packet");
1057 else
1058 return -1;
1059 }
1060 if (err == -2)
1061 {
1062 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1063 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1064 if (remote_debug > 0)
1065 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "Got SYN when wanted trailer\n");
1066 continue;
1067 }
1068
1069 /* If this is the wrong sequence number, ignore it. */
1070 if (HDR_GET_SEQ (hdr) != mips_receive_seq)
1071 {
1072 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1073 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1074 if (remote_debug > 0)
1075 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog,
1076 "Ignoring sequence number %d (want %d)\n",
1077 HDR_GET_SEQ (hdr), mips_receive_seq);
1078 continue;
1079 }
1080
1081 if (mips_cksum (hdr, buff, len) == TRLR_GET_CKSUM (trlr))
1082 break;
1083
1084 if (remote_debug > 0)
1085 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1086 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1087 printf_unfiltered ("Bad checksum; data %d, trailer %d\n",
1088 mips_cksum (hdr, buff, len),
1089 TRLR_GET_CKSUM (trlr));
1090
1091 /* The checksum failed. Send an acknowledgement for the
1092 previous packet to tell the remote to resend the packet. */
1093 ack[HDR_INDX_SYN] = HDR_SET_SYN (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1094 ack[HDR_INDX_TYPE_LEN] = HDR_SET_TYPE_LEN (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1095 ack[HDR_INDX_LEN1] = HDR_SET_LEN1 (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1096 ack[HDR_INDX_SEQ] = HDR_SET_SEQ (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1097
1098 cksum = mips_cksum (ack, (unsigned char *) NULL, 0);
1099
1100 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_INDX_CSUM1] = TRLR_SET_CSUM1 (cksum);
1101 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_INDX_CSUM2] = TRLR_SET_CSUM2 (cksum);
1102 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_INDX_CSUM3] = TRLR_SET_CSUM3 (cksum);
1103
1104 if (remote_debug > 0)
1105 {
1106 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_LENGTH] = '\0';
1107 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1108 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1109 printf_unfiltered ("Writing ack %d \"%s\"\n", mips_receive_seq,
1110 ack + 1);
1111 }
1112
1113 if (serial_write (mips_desc, ack, HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_LENGTH) != 0)
1114 {
1115 if (throw_error)
1116 mips_error ("write to target failed: %s", safe_strerror (errno));
1117 else
1118 return -1;
1119 }
1120 }
1121
1122 if (remote_debug > 0)
1123 {
1124 buff[len] = '\0';
1125 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1126 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1127 printf_unfiltered ("Got packet \"%s\"\n", buff);
1128 }
1129
1130 /* We got the packet. Send an acknowledgement. */
1131 mips_receive_seq = (mips_receive_seq + 1) % SEQ_MODULOS;
1132
1133 ack[HDR_INDX_SYN] = HDR_SET_SYN (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1134 ack[HDR_INDX_TYPE_LEN] = HDR_SET_TYPE_LEN (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1135 ack[HDR_INDX_LEN1] = HDR_SET_LEN1 (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1136 ack[HDR_INDX_SEQ] = HDR_SET_SEQ (0, 0, mips_receive_seq);
1137
1138 cksum = mips_cksum (ack, (unsigned char *) NULL, 0);
1139
1140 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_INDX_CSUM1] = TRLR_SET_CSUM1 (cksum);
1141 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_INDX_CSUM2] = TRLR_SET_CSUM2 (cksum);
1142 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_INDX_CSUM3] = TRLR_SET_CSUM3 (cksum);
1143
1144 if (remote_debug > 0)
1145 {
1146 ack[HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_LENGTH] = '\0';
1147 /* Don't use _filtered; we can't deal with a QUIT out of
1148 target_wait, and I think this might be called from there. */
1149 printf_unfiltered ("Writing ack %d \"%s\"\n", mips_receive_seq,
1150 ack + 1);
1151 }
1152
1153 if (serial_write (mips_desc, ack, HDR_LENGTH + TRLR_LENGTH) != 0)
1154 {
1155 if (throw_error)
1156 mips_error ("write to target failed: %s", safe_strerror (errno));
1157 else
1158 return -1;
1159 }
1160
1161 return len;
1162 }
1163 \f
1164 /* Optionally send a request to the remote system and optionally wait
1165 for the reply. This implements the remote debugging protocol,
1166 which is built on top of the packet protocol defined above. Each
1167 request has an ADDR argument and a DATA argument. The following
1168 requests are defined:
1169
1170 \0 don't send a request; just wait for a reply
1171 i read word from instruction space at ADDR
1172 d read word from data space at ADDR
1173 I write DATA to instruction space at ADDR
1174 D write DATA to data space at ADDR
1175 r read register number ADDR
1176 R set register number ADDR to value DATA
1177 c continue execution (if ADDR != 1, set pc to ADDR)
1178 s single step (if ADDR != 1, set pc to ADDR)
1179
1180 The read requests return the value requested. The write requests
1181 return the previous value in the changed location. The execution
1182 requests return a UNIX wait value (the approximate signal which
1183 caused execution to stop is in the upper eight bits).
1184
1185 If PERR is not NULL, this function waits for a reply. If an error
1186 occurs, it sets *PERR to 1 and sets errno according to what the
1187 target board reports. */
1188
1189 static ULONGEST
1190 mips_request (int cmd,
1191 ULONGEST addr,
1192 ULONGEST data,
1193 int *perr,
1194 int timeout,
1195 char *buff)
1196 {
1197 char myBuff[DATA_MAXLEN + 1];
1198 int len;
1199 int rpid;
1200 char rcmd;
1201 int rerrflg;
1202 unsigned long rresponse;
1203
1204 if (buff == (char *) NULL)
1205 buff = myBuff;
1206
1207 if (cmd != '\0')
1208 {
1209 if (mips_need_reply)
1210 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1211 _("mips_request: Trying to send command before reply"));
1212 sprintf (buff, "0x0 %c 0x%s 0x%s", cmd, paddr_nz (addr), paddr_nz (data));
1213 mips_send_packet (buff, 1);
1214 mips_need_reply = 1;
1215 }
1216
1217 if (perr == (int *) NULL)
1218 return 0;
1219
1220 if (!mips_need_reply)
1221 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
1222 _("mips_request: Trying to get reply before command"));
1223
1224 mips_need_reply = 0;
1225
1226 len = mips_receive_packet (buff, 1, timeout);
1227 buff[len] = '\0';
1228
1229 if (sscanf (buff, "0x%x %c 0x%x 0x%lx",
1230 &rpid, &rcmd, &rerrflg, &rresponse) != 4
1231 || (cmd != '\0' && rcmd != cmd))
1232 mips_error ("Bad response from remote board");
1233
1234 if (rerrflg != 0)
1235 {
1236 *perr = 1;
1237
1238 /* FIXME: This will returns MIPS errno numbers, which may or may
1239 not be the same as errno values used on other systems. If
1240 they stick to common errno values, they will be the same, but
1241 if they don't, they must be translated. */
1242 errno = rresponse;
1243
1244 return 0;
1245 }
1246
1247 *perr = 0;
1248 return rresponse;
1249 }
1250
1251 static void
1252 mips_initialize_cleanups (void *arg)
1253 {
1254 mips_initializing = 0;
1255 }
1256
1257 static void
1258 mips_exit_cleanups (void *arg)
1259 {
1260 mips_exiting = 0;
1261 }
1262
1263 static void
1264 mips_send_command (const char *cmd, int prompt)
1265 {
1266 serial_write (mips_desc, cmd, strlen (cmd));
1267 mips_expect (cmd);
1268 mips_expect ("\n");
1269 if (prompt)
1270 mips_expect (mips_monitor_prompt);
1271 }
1272
1273 /* Enter remote (dbx) debug mode: */
1274 static void
1275 mips_enter_debug (void)
1276 {
1277 /* Reset the sequence numbers, ready for the new debug sequence: */
1278 mips_send_seq = 0;
1279 mips_receive_seq = 0;
1280
1281 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
1282 mips_send_command ("debug\r", 0);
1283 else /* assume IDT monitor by default */
1284 mips_send_command ("db tty0\r", 0);
1285
1286 sleep (1);
1287 serial_write (mips_desc, "\r", sizeof "\r" - 1);
1288
1289 /* We don't need to absorb any spurious characters here, since the
1290 mips_receive_header will eat up a reasonable number of characters
1291 whilst looking for the SYN, however this avoids the "garbage"
1292 being displayed to the user. */
1293 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
1294 mips_expect ("\r");
1295
1296 {
1297 char buff[DATA_MAXLEN + 1];
1298 if (mips_receive_packet (buff, 1, 3) < 0)
1299 mips_error ("Failed to initialize (didn't receive packet).");
1300 }
1301 }
1302
1303 /* Exit remote (dbx) debug mode, returning to the monitor prompt: */
1304 static int
1305 mips_exit_debug (void)
1306 {
1307 int err;
1308 struct cleanup *old_cleanups = make_cleanup (mips_exit_cleanups, NULL);
1309
1310 mips_exiting = 1;
1311
1312 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
1313 {
1314 /* The DDB (NEC) and MiniRISC (LSI) versions of PMON exit immediately,
1315 so we do not get a reply to this command: */
1316 mips_request ('x', 0, 0, NULL, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1317 mips_need_reply = 0;
1318 if (!mips_expect (" break!"))
1319 return -1;
1320 }
1321 else
1322 mips_request ('x', 0, 0, &err, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1323
1324 if (!mips_expect (mips_monitor_prompt))
1325 return -1;
1326
1327 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
1328
1329 return 0;
1330 }
1331
1332 /* Initialize a new connection to the MIPS board, and make sure we are
1333 really connected. */
1334
1335 static void
1336 mips_initialize (void)
1337 {
1338 int err;
1339 struct cleanup *old_cleanups = make_cleanup (mips_initialize_cleanups, NULL);
1340 int j;
1341
1342 /* What is this code doing here? I don't see any way it can happen, and
1343 it might mean mips_initializing didn't get cleared properly.
1344 So I'll make it a warning. */
1345
1346 if (mips_initializing)
1347 {
1348 warning ("internal error: mips_initialize called twice");
1349 return;
1350 }
1351
1352 mips_wait_flag = 0;
1353 mips_initializing = 1;
1354
1355 /* At this point, the packit protocol isn't responding. We'll try getting
1356 into the monitor, and restarting the protocol. */
1357
1358 /* Force the system into the monitor. After this we *should* be at
1359 the mips_monitor_prompt. */
1360 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
1361 j = 0; /* start by checking if we are already at the prompt */
1362 else
1363 j = 1; /* start by sending a break */
1364 for (; j <= 4; j++)
1365 {
1366 switch (j)
1367 {
1368 case 0: /* First, try sending a CR */
1369 serial_flush_input (mips_desc);
1370 serial_write (mips_desc, "\r", 1);
1371 break;
1372 case 1: /* First, try sending a break */
1373 serial_send_break (mips_desc);
1374 break;
1375 case 2: /* Then, try a ^C */
1376 serial_write (mips_desc, "\003", 1);
1377 break;
1378 case 3: /* Then, try escaping from download */
1379 {
1380 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
1381 {
1382 char tbuff[7];
1383
1384 /* We shouldn't need to send multiple termination
1385 sequences, since the target performs line (or
1386 block) reads, and then processes those
1387 packets. In-case we were downloading a large packet
1388 we flush the output buffer before inserting a
1389 termination sequence. */
1390 serial_flush_output (mips_desc);
1391 sprintf (tbuff, "\r/E/E\r");
1392 serial_write (mips_desc, tbuff, 6);
1393 }
1394 else
1395 {
1396 char srec[10];
1397 int i;
1398
1399 /* We are possibly in binary download mode, having
1400 aborted in the middle of an S-record. ^C won't
1401 work because of binary mode. The only reliable way
1402 out is to send enough termination packets (8 bytes)
1403 to fill up and then overflow the largest size
1404 S-record (255 bytes in this case). This amounts to
1405 256/8 + 1 packets.
1406 */
1407
1408 mips_make_srec (srec, '7', 0, NULL, 0);
1409
1410 for (i = 1; i <= 33; i++)
1411 {
1412 serial_write (mips_desc, srec, 8);
1413
1414 if (serial_readchar (mips_desc, 0) >= 0)
1415 break; /* Break immediatly if we get something from
1416 the board. */
1417 }
1418 }
1419 }
1420 break;
1421 case 4:
1422 mips_error ("Failed to initialize.");
1423 }
1424
1425 if (mips_expect (mips_monitor_prompt))
1426 break;
1427 }
1428
1429 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
1430 {
1431 /* Sometimes PMON ignores the first few characters in the first
1432 command sent after a load. Sending a blank command gets
1433 around that. */
1434 mips_send_command ("\r", -1);
1435
1436 /* Ensure the correct target state: */
1437 if (mips_monitor != MON_LSI)
1438 mips_send_command ("set regsize 64\r", -1);
1439 mips_send_command ("set hostport tty0\r", -1);
1440 mips_send_command ("set brkcmd \"\"\r", -1);
1441 /* Delete all the current breakpoints: */
1442 mips_send_command ("db *\r", -1);
1443 /* NOTE: PMON does not have breakpoint support through the
1444 "debug" mode, only at the monitor command-line. */
1445 }
1446
1447 mips_enter_debug ();
1448
1449 /* Clear all breakpoints: */
1450 if ((mips_monitor == MON_IDT
1451 && mips_clear_breakpoint (-1, 0, BREAK_UNUSED) == 0)
1452 || mips_monitor == MON_LSI)
1453 monitor_supports_breakpoints = 1;
1454 else
1455 monitor_supports_breakpoints = 0;
1456
1457 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
1458
1459 /* If this doesn't call error, we have connected; we don't care if
1460 the request itself succeeds or fails. */
1461
1462 mips_request ('r', 0, 0, &err, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1463 }
1464
1465 /* Open a connection to the remote board. */
1466 static void
1467 common_open (struct target_ops *ops, char *name, int from_tty,
1468 enum mips_monitor_type new_monitor,
1469 const char *new_monitor_prompt)
1470 {
1471 char *ptype;
1472 char *serial_port_name;
1473 char *remote_name = 0;
1474 char *local_name = 0;
1475 char **argv;
1476
1477 if (name == 0)
1478 error (
1479 "To open a MIPS remote debugging connection, you need to specify what serial\n\
1480 device is attached to the target board (e.g., /dev/ttya).\n"
1481 "If you want to use TFTP to download to the board, specify the name of a\n"
1482 "temporary file to be used by GDB for downloads as the second argument.\n"
1483 "This filename must be in the form host:filename, where host is the name\n"
1484 "of the host running the TFTP server, and the file must be readable by the\n"
1485 "world. If the local name of the temporary file differs from the name as\n"
1486 "seen from the board via TFTP, specify that name as the third parameter.\n");
1487
1488 /* Parse the serial port name, the optional TFTP name, and the
1489 optional local TFTP name. */
1490 argv = gdb_buildargv (name);
1491 make_cleanup_freeargv (argv);
1492
1493 serial_port_name = xstrdup (argv[0]);
1494 if (argv[1]) /* remote TFTP name specified? */
1495 {
1496 remote_name = argv[1];
1497 if (argv[2]) /* local TFTP filename specified? */
1498 local_name = argv[2];
1499 }
1500
1501 target_preopen (from_tty);
1502
1503 if (mips_is_open)
1504 unpush_target (current_ops);
1505
1506 /* Open and initialize the serial port. */
1507 mips_desc = serial_open (serial_port_name);
1508 if (mips_desc == NULL)
1509 perror_with_name (serial_port_name);
1510
1511 if (baud_rate != -1)
1512 {
1513 if (serial_setbaudrate (mips_desc, baud_rate))
1514 {
1515 serial_close (mips_desc);
1516 perror_with_name (serial_port_name);
1517 }
1518 }
1519
1520 serial_raw (mips_desc);
1521
1522 /* Open and initialize the optional download port. If it is in the form
1523 hostname#portnumber, it's a UDP socket. If it is in the form
1524 hostname:filename, assume it's the TFTP filename that must be
1525 passed to the DDB board to tell it where to get the load file. */
1526 if (remote_name)
1527 {
1528 if (strchr (remote_name, '#'))
1529 {
1530 udp_desc = serial_open (remote_name);
1531 if (!udp_desc)
1532 perror_with_name ("Unable to open UDP port");
1533 udp_in_use = 1;
1534 }
1535 else
1536 {
1537 /* Save the remote and local names of the TFTP temp file. If
1538 the user didn't specify a local name, assume it's the same
1539 as the part of the remote name after the "host:". */
1540 if (tftp_name)
1541 xfree (tftp_name);
1542 if (tftp_localname)
1543 xfree (tftp_localname);
1544 if (local_name == NULL)
1545 if ((local_name = strchr (remote_name, ':')) != NULL)
1546 local_name++; /* skip over the colon */
1547 if (local_name == NULL)
1548 local_name = remote_name; /* local name same as remote name */
1549 tftp_name = xstrdup (remote_name);
1550 tftp_localname = xstrdup (local_name);
1551 tftp_in_use = 1;
1552 }
1553 }
1554
1555 current_ops = ops;
1556 mips_is_open = 1;
1557
1558 /* Reset the expected monitor prompt if it's never been set before. */
1559 if (mips_monitor_prompt == NULL)
1560 mips_monitor_prompt = xstrdup (new_monitor_prompt);
1561 mips_monitor = new_monitor;
1562
1563 mips_initialize ();
1564
1565 if (from_tty)
1566 printf_unfiltered ("Remote MIPS debugging using %s\n", serial_port_name);
1567
1568 /* Switch to using remote target now. */
1569 push_target (ops);
1570
1571 /* FIXME: Should we call start_remote here? */
1572
1573 /* Try to figure out the processor model if possible. */
1574 deprecated_mips_set_processor_regs_hack ();
1575
1576 /* This is really the job of start_remote however, that makes an
1577 assumption that the target is about to print out a status message
1578 of some sort. That doesn't happen here (in fact, it may not be
1579 possible to get the monitor to send the appropriate packet). */
1580
1581 reinit_frame_cache ();
1582 registers_changed ();
1583 stop_pc = read_pc ();
1584 print_stack_frame (get_selected_frame (NULL), 0, SRC_AND_LOC);
1585 xfree (serial_port_name);
1586 }
1587
1588 static void
1589 mips_open (char *name, int from_tty)
1590 {
1591 const char *monitor_prompt = NULL;
1592 if (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (target_gdbarch) != NULL
1593 && gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (target_gdbarch)->arch == bfd_arch_mips)
1594 {
1595 switch (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (target_gdbarch)->mach)
1596 {
1597 case bfd_mach_mips4100:
1598 case bfd_mach_mips4300:
1599 case bfd_mach_mips4600:
1600 case bfd_mach_mips4650:
1601 case bfd_mach_mips5000:
1602 monitor_prompt = "<RISQ> ";
1603 break;
1604 }
1605 }
1606 if (monitor_prompt == NULL)
1607 monitor_prompt = "<IDT>";
1608 common_open (&mips_ops, name, from_tty, MON_IDT, monitor_prompt);
1609 }
1610
1611 static void
1612 pmon_open (char *name, int from_tty)
1613 {
1614 common_open (&pmon_ops, name, from_tty, MON_PMON, "PMON> ");
1615 }
1616
1617 static void
1618 ddb_open (char *name, int from_tty)
1619 {
1620 common_open (&ddb_ops, name, from_tty, MON_DDB, "NEC010>");
1621 }
1622
1623 static void
1624 lsi_open (char *name, int from_tty)
1625 {
1626 int i;
1627
1628 /* Clear the LSI breakpoint table. */
1629 for (i = 0; i < MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS; i++)
1630 lsi_breakpoints[i].type = BREAK_UNUSED;
1631
1632 common_open (&lsi_ops, name, from_tty, MON_LSI, "PMON> ");
1633 }
1634
1635 /* Close a connection to the remote board. */
1636
1637 static void
1638 mips_close (int quitting)
1639 {
1640 if (mips_is_open)
1641 {
1642 /* Get the board out of remote debugging mode. */
1643 (void) mips_exit_debug ();
1644
1645 close_ports ();
1646 }
1647 }
1648
1649 /* Detach from the remote board. */
1650
1651 static void
1652 mips_detach (struct target_ops *ops, char *args, int from_tty)
1653 {
1654 if (args)
1655 error ("Argument given to \"detach\" when remotely debugging.");
1656
1657 pop_target ();
1658
1659 mips_close (1);
1660
1661 if (from_tty)
1662 printf_unfiltered ("Ending remote MIPS debugging.\n");
1663 }
1664
1665 /* Tell the target board to resume. This does not wait for a reply
1666 from the board, except in the case of single-stepping on LSI boards,
1667 where PMON does return a reply. */
1668
1669 static void
1670 mips_resume (ptid_t ptid, int step, enum target_signal siggnal)
1671 {
1672 int err;
1673
1674 /* LSI PMON requires returns a reply packet "0x1 s 0x0 0x57f" after
1675 a single step, so we wait for that. */
1676 mips_request (step ? 's' : 'c', 1, siggnal,
1677 mips_monitor == MON_LSI && step ? &err : (int *) NULL,
1678 mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1679 }
1680
1681 /* Return the signal corresponding to SIG, where SIG is the number which
1682 the MIPS protocol uses for the signal. */
1683 static enum target_signal
1684 mips_signal_from_protocol (int sig)
1685 {
1686 /* We allow a few more signals than the IDT board actually returns, on
1687 the theory that there is at least *some* hope that perhaps the numbering
1688 for these signals is widely agreed upon. */
1689 if (sig <= 0
1690 || sig > 31)
1691 return TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN;
1692
1693 /* Don't want to use target_signal_from_host because we are converting
1694 from MIPS signal numbers, not host ones. Our internal numbers
1695 match the MIPS numbers for the signals the board can return, which
1696 are: SIGINT, SIGSEGV, SIGBUS, SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGTRAP. */
1697 return (enum target_signal) sig;
1698 }
1699
1700 /* Wait until the remote stops, and return a wait status. */
1701
1702 static ptid_t
1703 mips_wait (struct target_ops *ops,
1704 ptid_t ptid, struct target_waitstatus *status)
1705 {
1706 int rstatus;
1707 int err;
1708 char buff[DATA_MAXLEN];
1709 int rpc, rfp, rsp;
1710 char flags[20];
1711 int nfields;
1712 int i;
1713
1714 interrupt_count = 0;
1715 hit_watchpoint = 0;
1716
1717 /* If we have not sent a single step or continue command, then the
1718 board is waiting for us to do something. Return a status
1719 indicating that it is stopped. */
1720 if (!mips_need_reply)
1721 {
1722 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
1723 status->value.sig = TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP;
1724 return inferior_ptid;
1725 }
1726
1727 /* No timeout; we sit here as long as the program continues to execute. */
1728 mips_wait_flag = 1;
1729 rstatus = mips_request ('\000', 0, 0, &err, -1, buff);
1730 mips_wait_flag = 0;
1731 if (err)
1732 mips_error ("Remote failure: %s", safe_strerror (errno));
1733
1734 /* On returning from a continue, the PMON monitor seems to start
1735 echoing back the messages we send prior to sending back the
1736 ACK. The code can cope with this, but to try and avoid the
1737 unnecessary serial traffic, and "spurious" characters displayed
1738 to the user, we cheat and reset the debug protocol. The problems
1739 seems to be caused by a check on the number of arguments, and the
1740 command length, within the monitor causing it to echo the command
1741 as a bad packet. */
1742 if (mips_monitor == MON_PMON)
1743 {
1744 mips_exit_debug ();
1745 mips_enter_debug ();
1746 }
1747
1748 /* See if we got back extended status. If so, pick out the pc, fp, sp, etc... */
1749
1750 nfields = sscanf (buff, "0x%*x %*c 0x%*x 0x%*x 0x%x 0x%x 0x%x 0x%*x %s",
1751 &rpc, &rfp, &rsp, flags);
1752 if (nfields >= 3)
1753 {
1754 struct regcache *regcache = get_current_regcache ();
1755 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
1756 char buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
1757
1758 store_unsigned_integer (buf,
1759 register_size
1760 (gdbarch, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)), rpc);
1761 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch), buf);
1762
1763 store_unsigned_integer
1764 (buf, register_size (gdbarch, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)), rfp);
1765 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, 30, buf); /* This register they are avoiding and so it is unnamed */
1766
1767 store_unsigned_integer (buf, register_size (gdbarch,
1768 gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch)), rsp);
1769 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch), buf);
1770
1771 store_unsigned_integer (buf,
1772 register_size (gdbarch,
1773 gdbarch_deprecated_fp_regnum
1774 (gdbarch)),
1775 0);
1776 regcache_raw_supply (regcache,
1777 gdbarch_deprecated_fp_regnum (gdbarch), buf);
1778
1779 if (nfields == 9)
1780 {
1781 int i;
1782
1783 for (i = 0; i <= 2; i++)
1784 if (flags[i] == 'r' || flags[i] == 'w')
1785 hit_watchpoint = 1;
1786 else if (flags[i] == '\000')
1787 break;
1788 }
1789 }
1790
1791 if (strcmp (target_shortname, "lsi") == 0)
1792 {
1793 #if 0
1794 /* If this is an LSI PMON target, see if we just hit a hardrdware watchpoint.
1795 Right now, PMON doesn't give us enough information to determine which
1796 breakpoint we hit. So we have to look up the PC in our own table
1797 of breakpoints, and if found, assume it's just a normal instruction
1798 fetch breakpoint, not a data watchpoint. FIXME when PMON
1799 provides some way to tell us what type of breakpoint it is. */
1800 int i;
1801 CORE_ADDR pc = read_pc ();
1802
1803 hit_watchpoint = 1;
1804 for (i = 0; i < MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS; i++)
1805 {
1806 if (lsi_breakpoints[i].addr == pc
1807 && lsi_breakpoints[i].type == BREAK_FETCH)
1808 {
1809 hit_watchpoint = 0;
1810 break;
1811 }
1812 }
1813 #else
1814 /* If a data breakpoint was hit, PMON returns the following packet:
1815 0x1 c 0x0 0x57f 0x1
1816 The return packet from an ordinary breakpoint doesn't have the
1817 extra 0x01 field tacked onto the end. */
1818 if (nfields == 1 && rpc == 1)
1819 hit_watchpoint = 1;
1820 #endif
1821 }
1822
1823 /* NOTE: The following (sig) numbers are defined by PMON:
1824 SPP_SIGTRAP 5 breakpoint
1825 SPP_SIGINT 2
1826 SPP_SIGSEGV 11
1827 SPP_SIGBUS 10
1828 SPP_SIGILL 4
1829 SPP_SIGFPE 8
1830 SPP_SIGTERM 15 */
1831
1832 /* Translate a MIPS waitstatus. We use constants here rather than WTERMSIG
1833 and so on, because the constants we want here are determined by the
1834 MIPS protocol and have nothing to do with what host we are running on. */
1835 if ((rstatus & 0xff) == 0)
1836 {
1837 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
1838 status->value.integer = (((rstatus) >> 8) & 0xff);
1839 }
1840 else if ((rstatus & 0xff) == 0x7f)
1841 {
1842 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_STOPPED;
1843 status->value.sig = mips_signal_from_protocol (((rstatus) >> 8) & 0xff);
1844
1845 /* If the stop PC is in the _exit function, assume
1846 we hit the 'break 0x3ff' instruction in _exit, so this
1847 is not a normal breakpoint. */
1848 if (strcmp (target_shortname, "lsi") == 0)
1849 {
1850 char *func_name;
1851 CORE_ADDR func_start;
1852 CORE_ADDR pc = read_pc ();
1853
1854 find_pc_partial_function (pc, &func_name, &func_start, NULL);
1855 if (func_name != NULL && strcmp (func_name, "_exit") == 0
1856 && func_start == pc)
1857 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_EXITED;
1858 }
1859 }
1860 else
1861 {
1862 status->kind = TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED;
1863 status->value.sig = mips_signal_from_protocol (rstatus & 0x7f);
1864 }
1865
1866 return inferior_ptid;
1867 }
1868
1869 /* We have to map between the register numbers used by gdb and the
1870 register numbers used by the debugging protocol. */
1871
1872 #define REGNO_OFFSET 96
1873
1874 static int
1875 mips_map_regno (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int regno)
1876 {
1877 if (regno < 32)
1878 return regno;
1879 if (regno >= mips_regnum (gdbarch)->fp0
1880 && regno < mips_regnum (gdbarch)->fp0 + 32)
1881 return regno - mips_regnum (gdbarch)->fp0 + 32;
1882 else if (regno == mips_regnum (gdbarch)->pc)
1883 return REGNO_OFFSET + 0;
1884 else if (regno == mips_regnum (gdbarch)->cause)
1885 return REGNO_OFFSET + 1;
1886 else if (regno == mips_regnum (gdbarch)->hi)
1887 return REGNO_OFFSET + 2;
1888 else if (regno == mips_regnum (gdbarch)->lo)
1889 return REGNO_OFFSET + 3;
1890 else if (regno == mips_regnum (gdbarch)->fp_control_status)
1891 return REGNO_OFFSET + 4;
1892 else if (regno == mips_regnum (gdbarch)->fp_implementation_revision)
1893 return REGNO_OFFSET + 5;
1894 else
1895 /* FIXME: Is there a way to get the status register? */
1896 return 0;
1897 }
1898
1899 /* Fetch the remote registers. */
1900
1901 static void
1902 mips_fetch_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno)
1903 {
1904 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
1905 unsigned LONGEST val;
1906 int err;
1907
1908 if (regno == -1)
1909 {
1910 for (regno = 0; regno < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch); regno++)
1911 mips_fetch_registers (regcache, regno);
1912 return;
1913 }
1914
1915 if (regno == gdbarch_deprecated_fp_regnum (gdbarch)
1916 || regno == MIPS_ZERO_REGNUM)
1917 /* gdbarch_deprecated_fp_regnum on the mips is a hack which is just
1918 supposed to read zero (see also mips-nat.c). */
1919 val = 0;
1920 else
1921 {
1922 /* If PMON doesn't support this register, don't waste serial
1923 bandwidth trying to read it. */
1924 int pmon_reg = mips_map_regno (gdbarch, regno);
1925 if (regno != 0 && pmon_reg == 0)
1926 val = 0;
1927 else
1928 {
1929 /* Unfortunately the PMON version in the Vr4300 board has been
1930 compiled without the 64bit register access commands. This
1931 means we cannot get hold of the full register width. */
1932 if (mips_monitor == MON_DDB)
1933 val = (unsigned) mips_request ('t', pmon_reg, 0,
1934 &err, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1935 else
1936 val = mips_request ('r', pmon_reg, 0,
1937 &err, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1938 if (err)
1939 mips_error ("Can't read register %d: %s", regno,
1940 safe_strerror (errno));
1941 }
1942 }
1943
1944 {
1945 char buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
1946
1947 /* We got the number the register holds, but gdb expects to see a
1948 value in the target byte ordering. */
1949 store_unsigned_integer (buf, register_size (gdbarch, regno), val);
1950 regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf);
1951 }
1952 }
1953
1954 /* Prepare to store registers. The MIPS protocol can store individual
1955 registers, so this function doesn't have to do anything. */
1956
1957 static void
1958 mips_prepare_to_store (struct regcache *regcache)
1959 {
1960 }
1961
1962 /* Store remote register(s). */
1963
1964 static void
1965 mips_store_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno)
1966 {
1967 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
1968 ULONGEST val;
1969 int err;
1970
1971 if (regno == -1)
1972 {
1973 for (regno = 0; regno < gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch); regno++)
1974 mips_store_registers (regcache, regno);
1975 return;
1976 }
1977
1978 regcache_cooked_read_unsigned (regcache, regno, &val);
1979 mips_request ('R', mips_map_regno (gdbarch, regno), val,
1980 &err, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1981 if (err)
1982 mips_error ("Can't write register %d: %s", regno, safe_strerror (errno));
1983 }
1984
1985 /* Fetch a word from the target board. */
1986
1987 static unsigned int
1988 mips_fetch_word (CORE_ADDR addr)
1989 {
1990 unsigned int val;
1991 int err;
1992
1993 val = mips_request ('d', addr, 0, &err, mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1994 if (err)
1995 {
1996 /* Data space failed; try instruction space. */
1997 val = mips_request ('i', addr, 0, &err,
1998 mips_receive_wait, NULL);
1999 if (err)
2000 mips_error ("Can't read address 0x%s: %s",
2001 paddr_nz (addr), safe_strerror (errno));
2002 }
2003 return val;
2004 }
2005
2006 /* Store a word to the target board. Returns errno code or zero for
2007 success. If OLD_CONTENTS is non-NULL, put the old contents of that
2008 memory location there. */
2009
2010 /* FIXME! make sure only 32-bit quantities get stored! */
2011 static int
2012 mips_store_word (CORE_ADDR addr, unsigned int val, char *old_contents)
2013 {
2014 int err;
2015 unsigned int oldcontents;
2016
2017 oldcontents = mips_request ('D', addr, val, &err,
2018 mips_receive_wait, NULL);
2019 if (err)
2020 {
2021 /* Data space failed; try instruction space. */
2022 oldcontents = mips_request ('I', addr, val, &err,
2023 mips_receive_wait, NULL);
2024 if (err)
2025 return errno;
2026 }
2027 if (old_contents != NULL)
2028 store_unsigned_integer (old_contents, 4, oldcontents);
2029 return 0;
2030 }
2031
2032 /* Read or write LEN bytes from inferior memory at MEMADDR,
2033 transferring to or from debugger address MYADDR. Write to inferior
2034 if SHOULD_WRITE is nonzero. Returns length of data written or
2035 read; 0 for error. Note that protocol gives us the correct value
2036 for a longword, since it transfers values in ASCII. We want the
2037 byte values, so we have to swap the longword values. */
2038
2039 static int mask_address_p = 1;
2040
2041 static int
2042 mips_xfer_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, gdb_byte *myaddr, int len, int write,
2043 struct mem_attrib *attrib, struct target_ops *target)
2044 {
2045 int i;
2046 CORE_ADDR addr;
2047 int count;
2048 char *buffer;
2049 int status;
2050
2051 /* PMON targets do not cope well with 64 bit addresses. Mask the
2052 value down to 32 bits. */
2053 if (mask_address_p)
2054 memaddr &= (CORE_ADDR) 0xffffffff;
2055
2056 /* Round starting address down to longword boundary. */
2057 addr = memaddr & ~3;
2058 /* Round ending address up; get number of longwords that makes. */
2059 count = (((memaddr + len) - addr) + 3) / 4;
2060 /* Allocate buffer of that many longwords. */
2061 buffer = alloca (count * 4);
2062
2063 if (write)
2064 {
2065 /* Fill start and end extra bytes of buffer with existing data. */
2066 if (addr != memaddr || len < 4)
2067 {
2068 /* Need part of initial word -- fetch it. */
2069 store_unsigned_integer (&buffer[0], 4, mips_fetch_word (addr));
2070 }
2071
2072 if (count > 1)
2073 {
2074 /* Need part of last word -- fetch it. FIXME: we do this even
2075 if we don't need it. */
2076 store_unsigned_integer (&buffer[(count - 1) * 4], 4,
2077 mips_fetch_word (addr + (count - 1) * 4));
2078 }
2079
2080 /* Copy data to be written over corresponding part of buffer */
2081
2082 memcpy ((char *) buffer + (memaddr & 3), myaddr, len);
2083
2084 /* Write the entire buffer. */
2085
2086 for (i = 0; i < count; i++, addr += 4)
2087 {
2088 status = mips_store_word (addr,
2089 extract_unsigned_integer (&buffer[i * 4], 4),
2090 NULL);
2091 /* Report each kilobyte (we download 32-bit words at a time) */
2092 if (i % 256 == 255)
2093 {
2094 printf_unfiltered ("*");
2095 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
2096 }
2097 if (status)
2098 {
2099 errno = status;
2100 return 0;
2101 }
2102 /* FIXME: Do we want a QUIT here? */
2103 }
2104 if (count >= 256)
2105 printf_unfiltered ("\n");
2106 }
2107 else
2108 {
2109 /* Read all the longwords */
2110 for (i = 0; i < count; i++, addr += 4)
2111 {
2112 store_unsigned_integer (&buffer[i * 4], 4, mips_fetch_word (addr));
2113 QUIT;
2114 }
2115
2116 /* Copy appropriate bytes out of the buffer. */
2117 memcpy (myaddr, buffer + (memaddr & 3), len);
2118 }
2119 return len;
2120 }
2121
2122 /* Print info on this target. */
2123
2124 static void
2125 mips_files_info (struct target_ops *ignore)
2126 {
2127 printf_unfiltered ("Debugging a MIPS board over a serial line.\n");
2128 }
2129
2130 /* Kill the process running on the board. This will actually only
2131 work if we are doing remote debugging over the console input. I
2132 think that if IDT/sim had the remote debug interrupt enabled on the
2133 right port, we could interrupt the process with a break signal. */
2134
2135 static void
2136 mips_kill (void)
2137 {
2138 if (!mips_wait_flag)
2139 return;
2140
2141 interrupt_count++;
2142
2143 if (interrupt_count >= 2)
2144 {
2145 interrupt_count = 0;
2146
2147 target_terminal_ours ();
2148
2149 if (query ("Interrupted while waiting for the program.\n\
2150 Give up (and stop debugging it)? "))
2151 {
2152 /* Clean up in such a way that mips_close won't try to talk to the
2153 board (it almost surely won't work since we weren't able to talk to
2154 it). */
2155 mips_wait_flag = 0;
2156 close_ports ();
2157
2158 printf_unfiltered ("Ending remote MIPS debugging.\n");
2159 target_mourn_inferior ();
2160
2161 deprecated_throw_reason (RETURN_QUIT);
2162 }
2163
2164 target_terminal_inferior ();
2165 }
2166
2167 if (remote_debug > 0)
2168 printf_unfiltered ("Sending break\n");
2169
2170 serial_send_break (mips_desc);
2171
2172 #if 0
2173 if (mips_is_open)
2174 {
2175 char cc;
2176
2177 /* Send a ^C. */
2178 cc = '\003';
2179 serial_write (mips_desc, &cc, 1);
2180 sleep (1);
2181 target_mourn_inferior ();
2182 }
2183 #endif
2184 }
2185
2186 /* Start running on the target board. */
2187
2188 static void
2189 mips_create_inferior (char *execfile, char *args, char **env, int from_tty)
2190 {
2191 CORE_ADDR entry_pt;
2192
2193 if (args && *args)
2194 {
2195 warning ("\
2196 Can't pass arguments to remote MIPS board; arguments ignored.");
2197 /* And don't try to use them on the next "run" command. */
2198 execute_command ("set args", 0);
2199 }
2200
2201 if (execfile == 0 || exec_bfd == 0)
2202 error ("No executable file specified");
2203
2204 entry_pt = (CORE_ADDR) bfd_get_start_address (exec_bfd);
2205
2206 init_wait_for_inferior ();
2207
2208 /* FIXME: Should we set inferior_ptid here? */
2209
2210 write_pc (entry_pt);
2211 }
2212
2213 /* Clean up after a process. Actually nothing to do. */
2214
2215 static void
2216 mips_mourn_inferior (void)
2217 {
2218 if (current_ops != NULL)
2219 unpush_target (current_ops);
2220 generic_mourn_inferior ();
2221 }
2222 \f
2223 /* We can write a breakpoint and read the shadow contents in one
2224 operation. */
2225
2226 /* Insert a breakpoint. On targets that don't have built-in
2227 breakpoint support, we read the contents of the target location and
2228 stash it, then overwrite it with a breakpoint instruction. ADDR is
2229 the target location in the target machine. BPT is the breakpoint
2230 being inserted or removed, which contains memory for saving the
2231 target contents. */
2232
2233 static int
2234 mips_insert_breakpoint (struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
2235 {
2236 if (monitor_supports_breakpoints)
2237 return mips_set_breakpoint (bp_tgt->placed_address, MIPS_INSN32_SIZE,
2238 BREAK_FETCH);
2239 else
2240 return memory_insert_breakpoint (bp_tgt);
2241 }
2242
2243 static int
2244 mips_remove_breakpoint (struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
2245 {
2246 if (monitor_supports_breakpoints)
2247 return mips_clear_breakpoint (bp_tgt->placed_address, MIPS_INSN32_SIZE,
2248 BREAK_FETCH);
2249 else
2250 return memory_remove_breakpoint (bp_tgt);
2251 }
2252
2253 /* Tell whether this target can support a hardware breakpoint. CNT
2254 is the number of hardware breakpoints already installed. This
2255 implements the TARGET_CAN_USE_HARDWARE_WATCHPOINT macro. */
2256
2257 int
2258 mips_can_use_watchpoint (int type, int cnt, int othertype)
2259 {
2260 return cnt < MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS && strcmp (target_shortname, "lsi") == 0;
2261 }
2262
2263
2264 /* Compute a don't care mask for the region bounding ADDR and ADDR + LEN - 1.
2265 This is used for memory ref breakpoints. */
2266
2267 static unsigned long
2268 calculate_mask (CORE_ADDR addr, int len)
2269 {
2270 unsigned long mask;
2271 int i;
2272
2273 mask = addr ^ (addr + len - 1);
2274
2275 for (i = 32; i >= 0; i--)
2276 if (mask == 0)
2277 break;
2278 else
2279 mask >>= 1;
2280
2281 mask = (unsigned long) 0xffffffff >> i;
2282
2283 return mask;
2284 }
2285
2286
2287 /* Set a data watchpoint. ADDR and LEN should be obvious. TYPE is 0
2288 for a write watchpoint, 1 for a read watchpoint, or 2 for a read/write
2289 watchpoint. */
2290
2291 int
2292 mips_insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type)
2293 {
2294 if (mips_set_breakpoint (addr, len, type))
2295 return -1;
2296
2297 return 0;
2298 }
2299
2300 int
2301 mips_remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type)
2302 {
2303 if (mips_clear_breakpoint (addr, len, type))
2304 return -1;
2305
2306 return 0;
2307 }
2308
2309 int
2310 mips_stopped_by_watchpoint (void)
2311 {
2312 return hit_watchpoint;
2313 }
2314
2315
2316 /* Insert a breakpoint. */
2317
2318 static int
2319 mips_set_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, enum break_type type)
2320 {
2321 return mips_common_breakpoint (1, addr, len, type);
2322 }
2323
2324
2325 /* Clear a breakpoint. */
2326
2327 static int
2328 mips_clear_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, enum break_type type)
2329 {
2330 return mips_common_breakpoint (0, addr, len, type);
2331 }
2332
2333
2334 /* Check the error code from the return packet for an LSI breakpoint
2335 command. If there's no error, just return 0. If it's a warning,
2336 print the warning text and return 0. If it's an error, print
2337 the error text and return 1. <ADDR> is the address of the breakpoint
2338 that was being set. <RERRFLG> is the error code returned by PMON.
2339 This is a helper function for mips_common_breakpoint. */
2340
2341 static int
2342 mips_check_lsi_error (CORE_ADDR addr, int rerrflg)
2343 {
2344 struct lsi_error *err;
2345 char *saddr = paddr_nz (addr); /* printable address string */
2346
2347 if (rerrflg == 0) /* no error */
2348 return 0;
2349
2350 /* Warnings can be ORed together, so check them all. */
2351 if (rerrflg & W_WARN)
2352 {
2353 if (monitor_warnings)
2354 {
2355 int found = 0;
2356 for (err = lsi_warning_table; err->code != 0; err++)
2357 {
2358 if ((err->code & rerrflg) == err->code)
2359 {
2360 found = 1;
2361 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\
2362 mips_common_breakpoint (0x%s): Warning: %s\n",
2363 saddr,
2364 err->string);
2365 }
2366 }
2367 if (!found)
2368 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\
2369 mips_common_breakpoint (0x%s): Unknown warning: 0x%x\n",
2370 saddr,
2371 rerrflg);
2372 }
2373 return 0;
2374 }
2375
2376 /* Errors are unique, i.e. can't be ORed together. */
2377 for (err = lsi_error_table; err->code != 0; err++)
2378 {
2379 if ((err->code & rerrflg) == err->code)
2380 {
2381 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\
2382 mips_common_breakpoint (0x%s): Error: %s\n",
2383 saddr,
2384 err->string);
2385 return 1;
2386 }
2387 }
2388 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\
2389 mips_common_breakpoint (0x%s): Unknown error: 0x%x\n",
2390 saddr,
2391 rerrflg);
2392 return 1;
2393 }
2394
2395
2396 /* This routine sends a breakpoint command to the remote target.
2397
2398 <SET> is 1 if setting a breakpoint, or 0 if clearing a breakpoint.
2399 <ADDR> is the address of the breakpoint.
2400 <LEN> the length of the region to break on.
2401 <TYPE> is the type of breakpoint:
2402 0 = write (BREAK_WRITE)
2403 1 = read (BREAK_READ)
2404 2 = read/write (BREAK_ACCESS)
2405 3 = instruction fetch (BREAK_FETCH)
2406
2407 Return 0 if successful; otherwise 1. */
2408
2409 static int
2410 mips_common_breakpoint (int set, CORE_ADDR addr, int len, enum break_type type)
2411 {
2412 char buf[DATA_MAXLEN + 1];
2413 char cmd, rcmd;
2414 int rpid, rerrflg, rresponse, rlen;
2415 int nfields;
2416
2417 addr = gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (target_gdbarch, addr);
2418
2419 if (mips_monitor == MON_LSI)
2420 {
2421 if (set == 0) /* clear breakpoint */
2422 {
2423 /* The LSI PMON "clear breakpoint" has this form:
2424 <pid> 'b' <bptn> 0x0
2425 reply:
2426 <pid> 'b' 0x0 <code>
2427
2428 <bptn> is a breakpoint number returned by an earlier 'B' command.
2429 Possible return codes: OK, E_BPT. */
2430
2431 int i;
2432
2433 /* Search for the breakpoint in the table. */
2434 for (i = 0; i < MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS; i++)
2435 if (lsi_breakpoints[i].type == type
2436 && lsi_breakpoints[i].addr == addr
2437 && lsi_breakpoints[i].len == len)
2438 break;
2439
2440 /* Clear the table entry and tell PMON to clear the breakpoint. */
2441 if (i == MAX_LSI_BREAKPOINTS)
2442 {
2443 warning ("\
2444 mips_common_breakpoint: Attempt to clear bogus breakpoint at %s\n",
2445 paddr_nz (addr));
2446 return 1;
2447 }
2448
2449 lsi_breakpoints[i].type = BREAK_UNUSED;
2450 sprintf (buf, "0x0 b 0x%x 0x0", i);
2451 mips_send_packet (buf, 1);
2452
2453 rlen = mips_receive_packet (buf, 1, mips_receive_wait);
2454 buf[rlen] = '\0';
2455
2456 nfields = sscanf (buf, "0x%x b 0x0 0x%x", &rpid, &rerrflg);
2457 if (nfields != 2)
2458 mips_error ("\
2459 mips_common_breakpoint: Bad response from remote board: %s",
2460 buf);
2461
2462 return (mips_check_lsi_error (addr, rerrflg));
2463 }
2464 else
2465 /* set a breakpoint */
2466 {
2467 /* The LSI PMON "set breakpoint" command has this form:
2468 <pid> 'B' <addr> 0x0
2469 reply:
2470 <pid> 'B' <bptn> <code>
2471
2472 The "set data breakpoint" command has this form:
2473
2474 <pid> 'A' <addr1> <type> [<addr2> [<value>]]
2475
2476 where: type= "0x1" = read
2477 "0x2" = write
2478 "0x3" = access (read or write)
2479
2480 The reply returns two values:
2481 bptn - a breakpoint number, which is a small integer with
2482 possible values of zero through 255.
2483 code - an error return code, a value of zero indicates a
2484 succesful completion, other values indicate various
2485 errors and warnings.
2486
2487 Possible return codes: OK, W_QAL, E_QAL, E_OUT, E_NON.
2488
2489 */
2490
2491 if (type == BREAK_FETCH) /* instruction breakpoint */
2492 {
2493 cmd = 'B';
2494 sprintf (buf, "0x0 B 0x%s 0x0", paddr_nz (addr));
2495 }
2496 else
2497 /* watchpoint */
2498 {
2499 cmd = 'A';
2500 sprintf (buf, "0x0 A 0x%s 0x%x 0x%s", paddr_nz (addr),
2501 type == BREAK_READ ? 1 : (type == BREAK_WRITE ? 2 : 3),
2502 paddr_nz (addr + len - 1));
2503 }
2504 mips_send_packet (buf, 1);
2505
2506 rlen = mips_receive_packet (buf, 1, mips_receive_wait);
2507 buf[rlen] = '\0';
2508
2509 nfields = sscanf (buf, "0x%x %c 0x%x 0x%x",
2510 &rpid, &rcmd, &rresponse, &rerrflg);
2511 if (nfields != 4 || rcmd != cmd || rresponse > 255)
2512 mips_error ("\
2513 mips_common_breakpoint: Bad response from remote board: %s",
2514 buf);
2515
2516 if (rerrflg != 0)
2517 if (mips_check_lsi_error (addr, rerrflg))
2518 return 1;
2519
2520 /* rresponse contains PMON's breakpoint number. Record the
2521 information for this breakpoint so we can clear it later. */
2522 lsi_breakpoints[rresponse].type = type;
2523 lsi_breakpoints[rresponse].addr = addr;
2524 lsi_breakpoints[rresponse].len = len;
2525
2526 return 0;
2527 }
2528 }
2529 else
2530 {
2531 /* On non-LSI targets, the breakpoint command has this form:
2532 0x0 <CMD> <ADDR> <MASK> <FLAGS>
2533 <MASK> is a don't care mask for addresses.
2534 <FLAGS> is any combination of `r', `w', or `f' for read/write/fetch.
2535 */
2536 unsigned long mask;
2537
2538 mask = calculate_mask (addr, len);
2539 addr &= ~mask;
2540
2541 if (set) /* set a breakpoint */
2542 {
2543 char *flags;
2544 switch (type)
2545 {
2546 case BREAK_WRITE: /* write */
2547 flags = "w";
2548 break;
2549 case BREAK_READ: /* read */
2550 flags = "r";
2551 break;
2552 case BREAK_ACCESS: /* read/write */
2553 flags = "rw";
2554 break;
2555 case BREAK_FETCH: /* fetch */
2556 flags = "f";
2557 break;
2558 default:
2559 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("failed internal consistency check"));
2560 }
2561
2562 cmd = 'B';
2563 sprintf (buf, "0x0 B 0x%s 0x%s %s", paddr_nz (addr),
2564 paddr_nz (mask), flags);
2565 }
2566 else
2567 {
2568 cmd = 'b';
2569 sprintf (buf, "0x0 b 0x%s", paddr_nz (addr));
2570 }
2571
2572 mips_send_packet (buf, 1);
2573
2574 rlen = mips_receive_packet (buf, 1, mips_receive_wait);
2575 buf[rlen] = '\0';
2576
2577 nfields = sscanf (buf, "0x%x %c 0x%x 0x%x",
2578 &rpid, &rcmd, &rerrflg, &rresponse);
2579
2580 if (nfields != 4 || rcmd != cmd)
2581 mips_error ("\
2582 mips_common_breakpoint: Bad response from remote board: %s",
2583 buf);
2584
2585 if (rerrflg != 0)
2586 {
2587 /* Ddb returns "0x0 b 0x16 0x0\000", whereas
2588 Cogent returns "0x0 b 0xffffffff 0x16\000": */
2589 if (mips_monitor == MON_DDB)
2590 rresponse = rerrflg;
2591 if (rresponse != 22) /* invalid argument */
2592 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "\
2593 mips_common_breakpoint (0x%s): Got error: 0x%x\n",
2594 paddr_nz (addr), rresponse);
2595 return 1;
2596 }
2597 }
2598 return 0;
2599 }
2600 \f
2601 static void
2602 send_srec (char *srec, int len, CORE_ADDR addr)
2603 {
2604 while (1)
2605 {
2606 int ch;
2607
2608 serial_write (mips_desc, srec, len);
2609
2610 ch = mips_readchar (remote_timeout);
2611
2612 switch (ch)
2613 {
2614 case SERIAL_TIMEOUT:
2615 error ("Timeout during download.");
2616 break;
2617 case 0x6: /* ACK */
2618 return;
2619 case 0x15: /* NACK */
2620 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Download got a NACK at byte 0x%s! Retrying.\n", paddr_nz (addr));
2621 continue;
2622 default:
2623 error ("Download got unexpected ack char: 0x%x, retrying.\n", ch);
2624 }
2625 }
2626 }
2627
2628 /* Download a binary file by converting it to S records. */
2629
2630 static void
2631 mips_load_srec (char *args)
2632 {
2633 bfd *abfd;
2634 asection *s;
2635 char *buffer, srec[1024];
2636 unsigned int i;
2637 unsigned int srec_frame = 200;
2638 int reclen;
2639 static int hashmark = 1;
2640
2641 buffer = alloca (srec_frame * 2 + 256);
2642
2643 abfd = bfd_openr (args, 0);
2644 if (!abfd)
2645 {
2646 printf_filtered ("Unable to open file %s\n", args);
2647 return;
2648 }
2649
2650 if (bfd_check_format (abfd, bfd_object) == 0)
2651 {
2652 printf_filtered ("File is not an object file\n");
2653 return;
2654 }
2655
2656 /* This actually causes a download in the IDT binary format: */
2657 mips_send_command (LOAD_CMD, 0);
2658
2659 for (s = abfd->sections; s; s = s->next)
2660 {
2661 if (s->flags & SEC_LOAD)
2662 {
2663 unsigned int numbytes;
2664
2665 /* FIXME! vma too small????? */
2666 printf_filtered ("%s\t: 0x%4lx .. 0x%4lx ", s->name,
2667 (long) s->vma,
2668 (long) (s->vma + bfd_get_section_size (s)));
2669 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
2670
2671 for (i = 0; i < bfd_get_section_size (s); i += numbytes)
2672 {
2673 numbytes = min (srec_frame, bfd_get_section_size (s) - i);
2674
2675 bfd_get_section_contents (abfd, s, buffer, i, numbytes);
2676
2677 reclen = mips_make_srec (srec, '3', s->vma + i,
2678 buffer, numbytes);
2679 send_srec (srec, reclen, s->vma + i);
2680
2681 if (deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook)
2682 deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook (s->name, i);
2683
2684 if (hashmark)
2685 {
2686 putchar_unfiltered ('#');
2687 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
2688 }
2689
2690 } /* Per-packet (or S-record) loop */
2691
2692 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
2693 } /* Loadable sections */
2694 }
2695 if (hashmark)
2696 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
2697
2698 /* Write a type 7 terminator record. no data for a type 7, and there
2699 is no data, so len is 0. */
2700
2701 reclen = mips_make_srec (srec, '7', abfd->start_address, NULL, 0);
2702
2703 send_srec (srec, reclen, abfd->start_address);
2704
2705 serial_flush_input (mips_desc);
2706 }
2707
2708 /*
2709 * mips_make_srec -- make an srecord. This writes each line, one at a
2710 * time, each with it's own header and trailer line.
2711 * An srecord looks like this:
2712 *
2713 * byte count-+ address
2714 * start ---+ | | data +- checksum
2715 * | | | |
2716 * S01000006F6B692D746573742E73726563E4
2717 * S315000448600000000000000000FC00005900000000E9
2718 * S31A0004000023C1400037DE00F023604000377B009020825000348D
2719 * S30B0004485A0000000000004E
2720 * S70500040000F6
2721 *
2722 * S<type><length><address><data><checksum>
2723 *
2724 * Where
2725 * - length
2726 * is the number of bytes following upto the checksum. Note that
2727 * this is not the number of chars following, since it takes two
2728 * chars to represent a byte.
2729 * - type
2730 * is one of:
2731 * 0) header record
2732 * 1) two byte address data record
2733 * 2) three byte address data record
2734 * 3) four byte address data record
2735 * 7) four byte address termination record
2736 * 8) three byte address termination record
2737 * 9) two byte address termination record
2738 *
2739 * - address
2740 * is the start address of the data following, or in the case of
2741 * a termination record, the start address of the image
2742 * - data
2743 * is the data.
2744 * - checksum
2745 * is the sum of all the raw byte data in the record, from the length
2746 * upwards, modulo 256 and subtracted from 255.
2747 *
2748 * This routine returns the length of the S-record.
2749 *
2750 */
2751
2752 static int
2753 mips_make_srec (char *buf, int type, CORE_ADDR memaddr, unsigned char *myaddr,
2754 int len)
2755 {
2756 unsigned char checksum;
2757 int i;
2758
2759 /* Create the header for the srec. addr_size is the number of bytes in the address,
2760 and 1 is the number of bytes in the count. */
2761
2762 /* FIXME!! bigger buf required for 64-bit! */
2763 buf[0] = 'S';
2764 buf[1] = type;
2765 buf[2] = len + 4 + 1; /* len + 4 byte address + 1 byte checksum */
2766 /* This assumes S3 style downloads (4byte addresses). There should
2767 probably be a check, or the code changed to make it more
2768 explicit. */
2769 buf[3] = memaddr >> 24;
2770 buf[4] = memaddr >> 16;
2771 buf[5] = memaddr >> 8;
2772 buf[6] = memaddr;
2773 memcpy (&buf[7], myaddr, len);
2774
2775 /* Note that the checksum is calculated on the raw data, not the
2776 hexified data. It includes the length, address and the data
2777 portions of the packet. */
2778 checksum = 0;
2779 buf += 2; /* Point at length byte */
2780 for (i = 0; i < len + 4 + 1; i++)
2781 checksum += *buf++;
2782
2783 *buf = ~checksum;
2784
2785 return len + 8;
2786 }
2787
2788 /* The following manifest controls whether we enable the simple flow
2789 control support provided by the monitor. If enabled the code will
2790 wait for an affirmative ACK between transmitting packets. */
2791 #define DOETXACK (1)
2792
2793 /* The PMON fast-download uses an encoded packet format constructed of
2794 3byte data packets (encoded as 4 printable ASCII characters), and
2795 escape sequences (preceded by a '/'):
2796
2797 'K' clear checksum
2798 'C' compare checksum (12bit value, not included in checksum calculation)
2799 'S' define symbol name (for addr) terminated with "," and padded to 4char boundary
2800 'Z' zero fill multiple of 3bytes
2801 'B' byte (12bit encoded value, of 8bit data)
2802 'A' address (36bit encoded value)
2803 'E' define entry as original address, and exit load
2804
2805 The packets are processed in 4 character chunks, so the escape
2806 sequences that do not have any data (or variable length data)
2807 should be padded to a 4 character boundary. The decoder will give
2808 an error if the complete message block size is not a multiple of
2809 4bytes (size of record).
2810
2811 The encoding of numbers is done in 6bit fields. The 6bit value is
2812 used to index into this string to get the specific character
2813 encoding for the value: */
2814 static char encoding[] = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789,.";
2815
2816 /* Convert the number of bits required into an encoded number, 6bits
2817 at a time (range 0..63). Keep a checksum if required (passed
2818 pointer non-NULL). The function returns the number of encoded
2819 characters written into the buffer. */
2820 static int
2821 pmon_makeb64 (unsigned long v, char *p, int n, int *chksum)
2822 {
2823 int count = (n / 6);
2824
2825 if ((n % 12) != 0)
2826 {
2827 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
2828 "Fast encoding bitcount must be a multiple of 12bits: %dbit%s\n", n, (n == 1) ? "" : "s");
2829 return (0);
2830 }
2831 if (n > 36)
2832 {
2833 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
2834 "Fast encoding cannot process more than 36bits at the moment: %dbits\n", n);
2835 return (0);
2836 }
2837
2838 /* Deal with the checksum: */
2839 if (chksum != NULL)
2840 {
2841 switch (n)
2842 {
2843 case 36:
2844 *chksum += ((v >> 24) & 0xFFF);
2845 case 24:
2846 *chksum += ((v >> 12) & 0xFFF);
2847 case 12:
2848 *chksum += ((v >> 0) & 0xFFF);
2849 }
2850 }
2851
2852 do
2853 {
2854 n -= 6;
2855 *p++ = encoding[(v >> n) & 0x3F];
2856 }
2857 while (n > 0);
2858
2859 return (count);
2860 }
2861
2862 /* Shorthand function (that could be in-lined) to output the zero-fill
2863 escape sequence into the data stream. */
2864 static int
2865 pmon_zeroset (int recsize, char **buff, int *amount, unsigned int *chksum)
2866 {
2867 int count;
2868
2869 sprintf (*buff, "/Z");
2870 count = pmon_makeb64 (*amount, (*buff + 2), 12, chksum);
2871 *buff += (count + 2);
2872 *amount = 0;
2873 return (recsize + count + 2);
2874 }
2875
2876 static int
2877 pmon_checkset (int recsize, char **buff, int *value)
2878 {
2879 int count;
2880
2881 /* Add the checksum (without updating the value): */
2882 sprintf (*buff, "/C");
2883 count = pmon_makeb64 (*value, (*buff + 2), 12, NULL);
2884 *buff += (count + 2);
2885 sprintf (*buff, "\n");
2886 *buff += 2; /* include zero terminator */
2887 /* Forcing a checksum validation clears the sum: */
2888 *value = 0;
2889 return (recsize + count + 3);
2890 }
2891
2892 /* Amount of padding we leave after at the end of the output buffer,
2893 for the checksum and line termination characters: */
2894 #define CHECKSIZE (4 + 4 + 4 + 2)
2895 /* zero-fill, checksum, transfer end and line termination space. */
2896
2897 /* The amount of binary data loaded from the object file in a single
2898 operation: */
2899 #define BINCHUNK (1024)
2900
2901 /* Maximum line of data accepted by the monitor: */
2902 #define MAXRECSIZE (550)
2903 /* NOTE: This constant depends on the monitor being used. This value
2904 is for PMON 5.x on the Cogent Vr4300 board. */
2905
2906 static void
2907 pmon_make_fastrec (char **outbuf, unsigned char *inbuf, int *inptr,
2908 int inamount, int *recsize, unsigned int *csum,
2909 unsigned int *zerofill)
2910 {
2911 int count = 0;
2912 char *p = *outbuf;
2913
2914 /* This is a simple check to ensure that our data will fit within
2915 the maximum allowable record size. Each record output is 4bytes
2916 in length. We must allow space for a pending zero fill command,
2917 the record, and a checksum record. */
2918 while ((*recsize < (MAXRECSIZE - CHECKSIZE)) && ((inamount - *inptr) > 0))
2919 {
2920 /* Process the binary data: */
2921 if ((inamount - *inptr) < 3)
2922 {
2923 if (*zerofill != 0)
2924 *recsize = pmon_zeroset (*recsize, &p, zerofill, csum);
2925 sprintf (p, "/B");
2926 count = pmon_makeb64 (inbuf[*inptr], &p[2], 12, csum);
2927 p += (2 + count);
2928 *recsize += (2 + count);
2929 (*inptr)++;
2930 }
2931 else
2932 {
2933 unsigned int value = ((inbuf[*inptr + 0] << 16) | (inbuf[*inptr + 1] << 8) | inbuf[*inptr + 2]);
2934 /* Simple check for zero data. TODO: A better check would be
2935 to check the last, and then the middle byte for being zero
2936 (if the first byte is not). We could then check for
2937 following runs of zeros, and if above a certain size it is
2938 worth the 4 or 8 character hit of the byte insertions used
2939 to pad to the start of the zeroes. NOTE: This also depends
2940 on the alignment at the end of the zero run. */
2941 if (value == 0x00000000)
2942 {
2943 (*zerofill)++;
2944 if (*zerofill == 0xFFF) /* 12bit counter */
2945 *recsize = pmon_zeroset (*recsize, &p, zerofill, csum);
2946 }
2947 else
2948 {
2949 if (*zerofill != 0)
2950 *recsize = pmon_zeroset (*recsize, &p, zerofill, csum);
2951 count = pmon_makeb64 (value, p, 24, csum);
2952 p += count;
2953 *recsize += count;
2954 }
2955 *inptr += 3;
2956 }
2957 }
2958
2959 *outbuf = p;
2960 return;
2961 }
2962
2963 static int
2964 pmon_check_ack (char *mesg)
2965 {
2966 #if defined(DOETXACK)
2967 int c;
2968
2969 if (!tftp_in_use)
2970 {
2971 c = serial_readchar (udp_in_use ? udp_desc : mips_desc,
2972 remote_timeout);
2973 if ((c == SERIAL_TIMEOUT) || (c != 0x06))
2974 {
2975 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
2976 "Failed to receive valid ACK for %s\n", mesg);
2977 return (-1); /* terminate the download */
2978 }
2979 }
2980 #endif /* DOETXACK */
2981 return (0);
2982 }
2983
2984 /* pmon_download - Send a sequence of characters to the PMON download port,
2985 which is either a serial port or a UDP socket. */
2986
2987 static void
2988 pmon_start_download (void)
2989 {
2990 if (tftp_in_use)
2991 {
2992 /* Create the temporary download file. */
2993 if ((tftp_file = fopen (tftp_localname, "w")) == NULL)
2994 perror_with_name (tftp_localname);
2995 }
2996 else
2997 {
2998 mips_send_command (udp_in_use ? LOAD_CMD_UDP : LOAD_CMD, 0);
2999 mips_expect ("Downloading from ");
3000 mips_expect (udp_in_use ? "udp" : "tty0");
3001 mips_expect (", ^C to abort\r\n");
3002 }
3003 }
3004
3005 static int
3006 mips_expect_download (char *string)
3007 {
3008 if (!mips_expect (string))
3009 {
3010 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Load did not complete successfully.\n");
3011 if (tftp_in_use)
3012 remove (tftp_localname); /* Remove temporary file */
3013 return 0;
3014 }
3015 else
3016 return 1;
3017 }
3018
3019 static void
3020 pmon_check_entry_address (char *entry_address, int final)
3021 {
3022 char hexnumber[9]; /* includes '\0' space */
3023 mips_expect_timeout (entry_address, tftp_in_use ? 15 : remote_timeout);
3024 sprintf (hexnumber, "%x", final);
3025 mips_expect (hexnumber);
3026 mips_expect ("\r\n");
3027 }
3028
3029 static int
3030 pmon_check_total (int bintotal)
3031 {
3032 char hexnumber[9]; /* includes '\0' space */
3033 mips_expect ("\r\ntotal = 0x");
3034 sprintf (hexnumber, "%x", bintotal);
3035 mips_expect (hexnumber);
3036 return mips_expect_download (" bytes\r\n");
3037 }
3038
3039 static void
3040 pmon_end_download (int final, int bintotal)
3041 {
3042 char hexnumber[9]; /* includes '\0' space */
3043
3044 if (tftp_in_use)
3045 {
3046 static char *load_cmd_prefix = "load -b -s ";
3047 char *cmd;
3048 struct stat stbuf;
3049
3050 /* Close off the temporary file containing the load data. */
3051 fclose (tftp_file);
3052 tftp_file = NULL;
3053
3054 /* Make the temporary file readable by the world. */
3055 if (stat (tftp_localname, &stbuf) == 0)
3056 chmod (tftp_localname, stbuf.st_mode | S_IROTH);
3057
3058 /* Must reinitialize the board to prevent PMON from crashing. */
3059 mips_send_command ("initEther\r", -1);
3060
3061 /* Send the load command. */
3062 cmd = xmalloc (strlen (load_cmd_prefix) + strlen (tftp_name) + 2);
3063 strcpy (cmd, load_cmd_prefix);
3064 strcat (cmd, tftp_name);
3065 strcat (cmd, "\r");
3066 mips_send_command (cmd, 0);
3067 xfree (cmd);
3068 if (!mips_expect_download ("Downloading from "))
3069 return;
3070 if (!mips_expect_download (tftp_name))
3071 return;
3072 if (!mips_expect_download (", ^C to abort\r\n"))
3073 return;
3074 }
3075
3076 /* Wait for the stuff that PMON prints after the load has completed.
3077 The timeout value for use in the tftp case (15 seconds) was picked
3078 arbitrarily but might be too small for really large downloads. FIXME. */
3079 switch (mips_monitor)
3080 {
3081 case MON_LSI:
3082 pmon_check_ack ("termination");
3083 pmon_check_entry_address ("Entry address is ", final);
3084 if (!pmon_check_total (bintotal))
3085 return;
3086 break;
3087 default:
3088 pmon_check_entry_address ("Entry Address = ", final);
3089 pmon_check_ack ("termination");
3090 if (!pmon_check_total (bintotal))
3091 return;
3092 break;
3093 }
3094
3095 if (tftp_in_use)
3096 remove (tftp_localname); /* Remove temporary file */
3097 }
3098
3099 static void
3100 pmon_download (char *buffer, int length)
3101 {
3102 if (tftp_in_use)
3103 fwrite (buffer, 1, length, tftp_file);
3104 else
3105 serial_write (udp_in_use ? udp_desc : mips_desc, buffer, length);
3106 }
3107
3108 static void
3109 pmon_load_fast (char *file)
3110 {
3111 bfd *abfd;
3112 asection *s;
3113 unsigned char *binbuf;
3114 char *buffer;
3115 int reclen;
3116 unsigned int csum = 0;
3117 int hashmark = !tftp_in_use;
3118 int bintotal = 0;
3119 int final = 0;
3120 int finished = 0;
3121
3122 buffer = (char *) xmalloc (MAXRECSIZE + 1);
3123 binbuf = (unsigned char *) xmalloc (BINCHUNK);
3124
3125 abfd = bfd_openr (file, 0);
3126 if (!abfd)
3127 {
3128 printf_filtered ("Unable to open file %s\n", file);
3129 return;
3130 }
3131
3132 if (bfd_check_format (abfd, bfd_object) == 0)
3133 {
3134 printf_filtered ("File is not an object file\n");
3135 return;
3136 }
3137
3138 /* Setup the required download state: */
3139 mips_send_command ("set dlproto etxack\r", -1);
3140 mips_send_command ("set dlecho off\r", -1);
3141 /* NOTE: We get a "cannot set variable" message if the variable is
3142 already defined to have the argument we give. The code doesn't
3143 care, since it just scans to the next prompt anyway. */
3144 /* Start the download: */
3145 pmon_start_download ();
3146
3147 /* Zero the checksum */
3148 sprintf (buffer, "/Kxx\n");
3149 reclen = strlen (buffer);
3150 pmon_download (buffer, reclen);
3151 finished = pmon_check_ack ("/Kxx");
3152
3153 for (s = abfd->sections; s && !finished; s = s->next)
3154 if (s->flags & SEC_LOAD) /* only deal with loadable sections */
3155 {
3156 bintotal += bfd_get_section_size (s);
3157 final = (s->vma + bfd_get_section_size (s));
3158
3159 printf_filtered ("%s\t: 0x%4x .. 0x%4x ", s->name, (unsigned int) s->vma,
3160 (unsigned int) (s->vma + bfd_get_section_size (s)));
3161 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
3162
3163 /* Output the starting address */
3164 sprintf (buffer, "/A");
3165 reclen = pmon_makeb64 (s->vma, &buffer[2], 36, &csum);
3166 buffer[2 + reclen] = '\n';
3167 buffer[3 + reclen] = '\0';
3168 reclen += 3; /* for the initial escape code and carriage return */
3169 pmon_download (buffer, reclen);
3170 finished = pmon_check_ack ("/A");
3171
3172 if (!finished)
3173 {
3174 unsigned int binamount;
3175 unsigned int zerofill = 0;
3176 char *bp = buffer;
3177 unsigned int i;
3178
3179 reclen = 0;
3180
3181 for (i = 0;
3182 i < bfd_get_section_size (s) && !finished;
3183 i += binamount)
3184 {
3185 int binptr = 0;
3186
3187 binamount = min (BINCHUNK, bfd_get_section_size (s) - i);
3188
3189 bfd_get_section_contents (abfd, s, binbuf, i, binamount);
3190
3191 /* This keeps a rolling checksum, until we decide to output
3192 the line: */
3193 for (; ((binamount - binptr) > 0);)
3194 {
3195 pmon_make_fastrec (&bp, binbuf, &binptr, binamount,
3196 &reclen, &csum, &zerofill);
3197 if (reclen >= (MAXRECSIZE - CHECKSIZE))
3198 {
3199 reclen = pmon_checkset (reclen, &bp, &csum);
3200 pmon_download (buffer, reclen);
3201 finished = pmon_check_ack ("data record");
3202 if (finished)
3203 {
3204 zerofill = 0; /* do not transmit pending zerofills */
3205 break;
3206 }
3207
3208 if (deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook)
3209 deprecated_ui_load_progress_hook (s->name, i);
3210
3211 if (hashmark)
3212 {
3213 putchar_unfiltered ('#');
3214 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
3215 }
3216
3217 bp = buffer;
3218 reclen = 0; /* buffer processed */
3219 }
3220 }
3221 }
3222
3223 /* Ensure no out-standing zerofill requests: */
3224 if (zerofill != 0)
3225 reclen = pmon_zeroset (reclen, &bp, &zerofill, &csum);
3226
3227 /* and then flush the line: */
3228 if (reclen > 0)
3229 {
3230 reclen = pmon_checkset (reclen, &bp, &csum);
3231 /* Currently pmon_checkset outputs the line terminator by
3232 default, so we write out the buffer so far: */
3233 pmon_download (buffer, reclen);
3234 finished = pmon_check_ack ("record remnant");
3235 }
3236 }
3237
3238 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
3239 }
3240
3241 /* Terminate the transfer. We know that we have an empty output
3242 buffer at this point. */
3243 sprintf (buffer, "/E/E\n"); /* include dummy padding characters */
3244 reclen = strlen (buffer);
3245 pmon_download (buffer, reclen);
3246
3247 if (finished)
3248 { /* Ignore the termination message: */
3249 serial_flush_input (udp_in_use ? udp_desc : mips_desc);
3250 }
3251 else
3252 { /* Deal with termination message: */
3253 pmon_end_download (final, bintotal);
3254 }
3255
3256 return;
3257 }
3258
3259 /* mips_load -- download a file. */
3260
3261 static void
3262 mips_load (char *file, int from_tty)
3263 {
3264 /* Get the board out of remote debugging mode. */
3265 if (mips_exit_debug ())
3266 error ("mips_load: Couldn't get into monitor mode.");
3267
3268 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
3269 pmon_load_fast (file);
3270 else
3271 mips_load_srec (file);
3272
3273 mips_initialize ();
3274
3275 /* Finally, make the PC point at the start address */
3276 if (mips_monitor != MON_IDT)
3277 {
3278 /* Work around problem where PMON monitor updates the PC after a load
3279 to a different value than GDB thinks it has. The following ensures
3280 that the write_pc() WILL update the PC value: */
3281 struct regcache *regcache = get_current_regcache ();
3282 regcache_set_valid_p (regcache,
3283 gdbarch_pc_regnum (get_regcache_arch (regcache)),
3284 0);
3285 }
3286 if (exec_bfd)
3287 write_pc (bfd_get_start_address (exec_bfd));
3288
3289 inferior_ptid = null_ptid; /* No process now */
3290
3291 /* This is necessary because many things were based on the PC at the time that
3292 we attached to the monitor, which is no longer valid now that we have loaded
3293 new code (and just changed the PC). Another way to do this might be to call
3294 normal_stop, except that the stack may not be valid, and things would get
3295 horribly confused... */
3296
3297 clear_symtab_users ();
3298 }
3299
3300
3301 /* Pass the command argument as a packet to PMON verbatim. */
3302
3303 static void
3304 pmon_command (char *args, int from_tty)
3305 {
3306 char buf[DATA_MAXLEN + 1];
3307 int rlen;
3308
3309 sprintf (buf, "0x0 %s", args);
3310 mips_send_packet (buf, 1);
3311 printf_filtered ("Send packet: %s\n", buf);
3312
3313 rlen = mips_receive_packet (buf, 1, mips_receive_wait);
3314 buf[rlen] = '\0';
3315 printf_filtered ("Received packet: %s\n", buf);
3316 }
3317 \f
3318 extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_remote_mips; /* -Wmissing-prototypes */
3319
3320 void
3321 _initialize_remote_mips (void)
3322 {
3323 /* Initialize the fields in mips_ops that are common to all four targets. */
3324 mips_ops.to_longname = "Remote MIPS debugging over serial line";
3325 mips_ops.to_close = mips_close;
3326 mips_ops.to_detach = mips_detach;
3327 mips_ops.to_resume = mips_resume;
3328 mips_ops.to_fetch_registers = mips_fetch_registers;
3329 mips_ops.to_store_registers = mips_store_registers;
3330 mips_ops.to_prepare_to_store = mips_prepare_to_store;
3331 mips_ops.deprecated_xfer_memory = mips_xfer_memory;
3332 mips_ops.to_files_info = mips_files_info;
3333 mips_ops.to_insert_breakpoint = mips_insert_breakpoint;
3334 mips_ops.to_remove_breakpoint = mips_remove_breakpoint;
3335 mips_ops.to_insert_watchpoint = mips_insert_watchpoint;
3336 mips_ops.to_remove_watchpoint = mips_remove_watchpoint;
3337 mips_ops.to_stopped_by_watchpoint = mips_stopped_by_watchpoint;
3338 mips_ops.to_can_use_hw_breakpoint = mips_can_use_watchpoint;
3339 mips_ops.to_kill = mips_kill;
3340 mips_ops.to_load = mips_load;
3341 mips_ops.to_create_inferior = mips_create_inferior;
3342 mips_ops.to_mourn_inferior = mips_mourn_inferior;
3343 mips_ops.to_log_command = serial_log_command;
3344 mips_ops.to_stratum = process_stratum;
3345 mips_ops.to_has_all_memory = 1;
3346 mips_ops.to_has_memory = 1;
3347 mips_ops.to_has_stack = 1;
3348 mips_ops.to_has_registers = 1;
3349 mips_ops.to_has_execution = 1;
3350 mips_ops.to_magic = OPS_MAGIC;
3351
3352 /* Copy the common fields to all four target vectors. */
3353 pmon_ops = ddb_ops = lsi_ops = mips_ops;
3354
3355 /* Initialize target-specific fields in the target vectors. */
3356 mips_ops.to_shortname = "mips";
3357 mips_ops.to_doc = "\
3358 Debug a board using the MIPS remote debugging protocol over a serial line.\n\
3359 The argument is the device it is connected to or, if it contains a colon,\n\
3360 HOST:PORT to access a board over a network";
3361 mips_ops.to_open = mips_open;
3362 mips_ops.to_wait = mips_wait;
3363
3364 pmon_ops.to_shortname = "pmon";
3365 pmon_ops.to_doc = "\
3366 Debug a board using the PMON MIPS remote debugging protocol over a serial\n\
3367 line. The argument is the device it is connected to or, if it contains a\n\
3368 colon, HOST:PORT to access a board over a network";
3369 pmon_ops.to_open = pmon_open;
3370 pmon_ops.to_wait = mips_wait;
3371
3372 ddb_ops.to_shortname = "ddb";
3373 ddb_ops.to_doc = "\
3374 Debug a board using the PMON MIPS remote debugging protocol over a serial\n\
3375 line. The first argument is the device it is connected to or, if it contains\n\
3376 a colon, HOST:PORT to access a board over a network. The optional second\n\
3377 parameter is the temporary file in the form HOST:FILENAME to be used for\n\
3378 TFTP downloads to the board. The optional third parameter is the local name\n\
3379 of the TFTP temporary file, if it differs from the filename seen by the board.";
3380 ddb_ops.to_open = ddb_open;
3381 ddb_ops.to_wait = mips_wait;
3382
3383 lsi_ops.to_shortname = "lsi";
3384 lsi_ops.to_doc = pmon_ops.to_doc;
3385 lsi_ops.to_open = lsi_open;
3386 lsi_ops.to_wait = mips_wait;
3387
3388 /* Add the targets. */
3389 add_target (&mips_ops);
3390 add_target (&pmon_ops);
3391 add_target (&ddb_ops);
3392 add_target (&lsi_ops);
3393
3394 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("timeout", no_class, &mips_receive_wait, _("\
3395 Set timeout in seconds for remote MIPS serial I/O."), _("\
3396 Show timeout in seconds for remote MIPS serial I/O."), NULL,
3397 NULL,
3398 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
3399 &setlist, &showlist);
3400
3401 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("retransmit-timeout", no_class,
3402 &mips_retransmit_wait, _("\
3403 Set retransmit timeout in seconds for remote MIPS serial I/O."), _("\
3404 Show retransmit timeout in seconds for remote MIPS serial I/O."), _("\
3405 This is the number of seconds to wait for an acknowledgement to a packet\n\
3406 before resending the packet."),
3407 NULL,
3408 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
3409 &setlist, &showlist);
3410
3411 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("syn-garbage-limit", no_class,
3412 &mips_syn_garbage, _("\
3413 Set the maximum number of characters to ignore when scanning for a SYN."), _("\
3414 Show the maximum number of characters to ignore when scanning for a SYN."), _("\
3415 This is the maximum number of characters GDB will ignore when trying to\n\
3416 synchronize with the remote system. A value of -1 means that there is no\n\
3417 limit. (Note that these characters are printed out even though they are\n\
3418 ignored.)"),
3419 NULL,
3420 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
3421 &setlist, &showlist);
3422
3423 add_setshow_string_cmd ("monitor-prompt", class_obscure,
3424 &mips_monitor_prompt, _("\
3425 Set the prompt that GDB expects from the monitor."), _("\
3426 Show the prompt that GDB expects from the monitor."), NULL,
3427 NULL,
3428 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
3429 &setlist, &showlist);
3430
3431 add_setshow_zinteger_cmd ("monitor-warnings", class_obscure,
3432 &monitor_warnings, _("\
3433 Set printing of monitor warnings."), _("\
3434 Show printing of monitor warnings."), _("\
3435 When enabled, monitor warnings about hardware breakpoints will be displayed."),
3436 NULL,
3437 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
3438 &setlist, &showlist);
3439
3440 add_com ("pmon", class_obscure, pmon_command,
3441 _("Send a packet to PMON (must be in debug mode)."));
3442
3443 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("mask-address", no_class, &mask_address_p, _("\
3444 Set zeroing of upper 32 bits of 64-bit addresses when talking to PMON targets."), _("\
3445 Show zeroing of upper 32 bits of 64-bit addresses when talking to PMON targets."), _("\
3446 Use \"on\" to enable the masking and \"off\" to disable it."),
3447 NULL,
3448 NULL, /* FIXME: i18n: */
3449 &setlist, &showlist);
3450 }
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