/* GNU/Linux on ARM target support.
- Copyright 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
+ Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GDB.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
- Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
- Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
+ Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
+ Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */
#include "defs.h"
#include "target.h"
#include "value.h"
#include "gdbtypes.h"
+#include "floatformat.h"
+#include "gdbcore.h"
+#include "frame.h"
+#include "regcache.h"
+#include "doublest.h"
+#include "solib-svr4.h"
+#include "osabi.h"
+#include "regset.h"
+#include "trad-frame.h"
+#include "tramp-frame.h"
+
+#include "arm-tdep.h"
+#include "arm-linux-tdep.h"
+#include "glibc-tdep.h"
+
+#include "gdb_string.h"
+
+extern int arm_apcs_32;
+
+/* Under ARM GNU/Linux the traditional way of performing a breakpoint
+ is to execute a particular software interrupt, rather than use a
+ particular undefined instruction to provoke a trap. Upon exection
+ of the software interrupt the kernel stops the inferior with a
+ SIGTRAP, and wakes the debugger. */
+
+static const char arm_linux_arm_le_breakpoint[] = { 0x01, 0x00, 0x9f, 0xef };
+
+static const char arm_linux_arm_be_breakpoint[] = { 0xef, 0x9f, 0x00, 0x01 };
+
+/* However, the EABI syscall interface (new in Nov. 2005) does not look at
+ the operand of the swi if old-ABI compatibility is disabled. Therefore,
+ use an undefined instruction instead. This is supported as of kernel
+ version 2.5.70 (May 2003), so should be a safe assumption for EABI
+ binaries. */
+
+static const char eabi_linux_arm_le_breakpoint[] = { 0xf0, 0x01, 0xf0, 0xe7 };
+
+static const char eabi_linux_arm_be_breakpoint[] = { 0xe7, 0xf0, 0x01, 0xf0 };
+
+/* All the kernels which support Thumb support using a specific undefined
+ instruction for the Thumb breakpoint. */
+
+static const char arm_linux_thumb_be_breakpoint[] = {0xde, 0x01};
+
+static const char arm_linux_thumb_le_breakpoint[] = {0x01, 0xde};
+
+/* Description of the longjmp buffer. */
+#define ARM_LINUX_JB_ELEMENT_SIZE INT_REGISTER_SIZE
+#define ARM_LINUX_JB_PC 21
+
+/*
+ Dynamic Linking on ARM GNU/Linux
+ --------------------------------
+
+ Note: PLT = procedure linkage table
+ GOT = global offset table
+
+ As much as possible, ELF dynamic linking defers the resolution of
+ jump/call addresses until the last minute. The technique used is
+ inspired by the i386 ELF design, and is based on the following
+ constraints.
+
+ 1) The calling technique should not force a change in the assembly
+ code produced for apps; it MAY cause changes in the way assembly
+ code is produced for position independent code (i.e. shared
+ libraries).
+
+ 2) The technique must be such that all executable areas must not be
+ modified; and any modified areas must not be executed.
+
+ To do this, there are three steps involved in a typical jump:
+
+ 1) in the code
+ 2) through the PLT
+ 3) using a pointer from the GOT
+
+ When the executable or library is first loaded, each GOT entry is
+ initialized to point to the code which implements dynamic name
+ resolution and code finding. This is normally a function in the
+ program interpreter (on ARM GNU/Linux this is usually
+ ld-linux.so.2, but it does not have to be). On the first
+ invocation, the function is located and the GOT entry is replaced
+ with the real function address. Subsequent calls go through steps
+ 1, 2 and 3 and end up calling the real code.
+
+ 1) In the code:
+
+ b function_call
+ bl function_call
+
+ This is typical ARM code using the 26 bit relative branch or branch
+ and link instructions. The target of the instruction
+ (function_call is usually the address of the function to be called.
+ In position independent code, the target of the instruction is
+ actually an entry in the PLT when calling functions in a shared
+ library. Note that this call is identical to a normal function
+ call, only the target differs.
+
+ 2) In the PLT:
+
+ The PLT is a synthetic area, created by the linker. It exists in
+ both executables and libraries. It is an array of stubs, one per
+ imported function call. It looks like this:
+
+ PLT[0]:
+ str lr, [sp, #-4]! @push the return address (lr)
+ ldr lr, [pc, #16] @load from 6 words ahead
+ add lr, pc, lr @form an address for GOT[0]
+ ldr pc, [lr, #8]! @jump to the contents of that addr
+
+ The return address (lr) is pushed on the stack and used for
+ calculations. The load on the second line loads the lr with
+ &GOT[3] - . - 20. The addition on the third leaves:
+
+ lr = (&GOT[3] - . - 20) + (. + 8)
+ lr = (&GOT[3] - 12)
+ lr = &GOT[0]
+
+ On the fourth line, the pc and lr are both updated, so that:
+
+ pc = GOT[2]
+ lr = &GOT[0] + 8
+ = &GOT[2]
+
+ NOTE: PLT[0] borrows an offset .word from PLT[1]. This is a little
+ "tight", but allows us to keep all the PLT entries the same size.
+
+ PLT[n+1]:
+ ldr ip, [pc, #4] @load offset from gotoff
+ add ip, pc, ip @add the offset to the pc
+ ldr pc, [ip] @jump to that address
+ gotoff: .word GOT[n+3] - .
+
+ The load on the first line, gets an offset from the fourth word of
+ the PLT entry. The add on the second line makes ip = &GOT[n+3],
+ which contains either a pointer to PLT[0] (the fixup trampoline) or
+ a pointer to the actual code.
+
+ 3) In the GOT:
+
+ The GOT contains helper pointers for both code (PLT) fixups and
+ data fixups. The first 3 entries of the GOT are special. The next
+ M entries (where M is the number of entries in the PLT) belong to
+ the PLT fixups. The next D (all remaining) entries belong to
+ various data fixups. The actual size of the GOT is 3 + M + D.
+
+ The GOT is also a synthetic area, created by the linker. It exists
+ in both executables and libraries. When the GOT is first
+ initialized , all the GOT entries relating to PLT fixups are
+ pointing to code back at PLT[0].
+
+ The special entries in the GOT are:
+
+ GOT[0] = linked list pointer used by the dynamic loader
+ GOT[1] = pointer to the reloc table for this module
+ GOT[2] = pointer to the fixup/resolver code
+
+ The first invocation of function call comes through and uses the
+ fixup/resolver code. On the entry to the fixup/resolver code:
+
+ ip = &GOT[n+3]
+ lr = &GOT[2]
+ stack[0] = return address (lr) of the function call
+ [r0, r1, r2, r3] are still the arguments to the function call
+
+ This is enough information for the fixup/resolver code to work
+ with. Before the fixup/resolver code returns, it actually calls
+ the requested function and repairs &GOT[n+3]. */
+
+/* The constants below were determined by examining the following files
+ in the linux kernel sources:
+
+ arch/arm/kernel/signal.c
+ - see SWI_SYS_SIGRETURN and SWI_SYS_RT_SIGRETURN
+ include/asm-arm/unistd.h
+ - see __NR_sigreturn, __NR_rt_sigreturn, and __NR_SYSCALL_BASE */
+
+#define ARM_LINUX_SIGRETURN_INSTR 0xef900077
+#define ARM_LINUX_RT_SIGRETURN_INSTR 0xef9000ad
+
+/* For ARM EABI, the syscall number is not in the SWI instruction
+ (instead it is loaded into r7). We recognize the pattern that
+ glibc uses... alternatively, we could arrange to do this by
+ function name, but they are not always exported. */
+#define ARM_SET_R7_SIGRETURN 0xe3a07077
+#define ARM_SET_R7_RT_SIGRETURN 0xe3a070ad
+#define ARM_EABI_SYSCALL 0xef000000
+
+static void
+arm_linux_sigtramp_cache (struct frame_info *next_frame,
+ struct trad_frame_cache *this_cache,
+ CORE_ADDR func, int regs_offset)
+{
+ CORE_ADDR sp = frame_unwind_register_unsigned (next_frame, ARM_SP_REGNUM);
+ CORE_ADDR base = sp + regs_offset;
+ int i;
+
+ for (i = 0; i < 16; i++)
+ trad_frame_set_reg_addr (this_cache, i, base + i * 4);
+
+ trad_frame_set_reg_addr (this_cache, ARM_PS_REGNUM, base + 16 * 4);
+
+ /* The VFP or iWMMXt registers may be saved on the stack, but there's
+ no reliable way to restore them (yet). */
+
+ /* Save a frame ID. */
+ trad_frame_set_id (this_cache, frame_id_build (sp, func));
+}
+
+/* There are a couple of different possible stack layouts that
+ we need to support.
+
+ Before version 2.6.18, the kernel used completely independent
+ layouts for non-RT and RT signals. For non-RT signals the stack
+ began directly with a struct sigcontext. For RT signals the stack
+ began with two redundant pointers (to the siginfo and ucontext),
+ and then the siginfo and ucontext.
+
+ As of version 2.6.18, the non-RT signal frame layout starts with
+ a ucontext and the RT signal frame starts with a siginfo and then
+ a ucontext. Also, the ucontext now has a designated save area
+ for coprocessor registers.
+
+ For RT signals, it's easy to tell the difference: we look for
+ pinfo, the pointer to the siginfo. If it has the expected
+ value, we have an old layout. If it doesn't, we have the new
+ layout.
+
+ For non-RT signals, it's a bit harder. We need something in one
+ layout or the other with a recognizable offset and value. We can't
+ use the return trampoline, because ARM usually uses SA_RESTORER,
+ in which case the stack return trampoline is not filled in.
+ We can't use the saved stack pointer, because sigaltstack might
+ be in use. So for now we guess the new layout... */
+
+/* There are three words (trap_no, error_code, oldmask) in
+ struct sigcontext before r0. */
+#define ARM_SIGCONTEXT_R0 0xc
+
+/* There are five words (uc_flags, uc_link, and three for uc_stack)
+ in the ucontext_t before the sigcontext. */
+#define ARM_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT 0x14
+
+/* There are three elements in an rt_sigframe before the ucontext:
+ pinfo, puc, and info. The first two are pointers and the third
+ is a struct siginfo, with size 128 bytes. We could follow puc
+ to the ucontext, but it's simpler to skip the whole thing. */
+#define ARM_OLD_RT_SIGFRAME_SIGINFO 0x8
+#define ARM_OLD_RT_SIGFRAME_UCONTEXT 0x88
-#ifdef GET_LONGJMP_TARGET
+#define ARM_NEW_RT_SIGFRAME_UCONTEXT 0x80
-/* Figure out where the longjmp will land. We expect that we have
- just entered longjmp and haven't yet altered r0, r1, so the
- arguments are still in the registers. (A1_REGNUM) points at the
- jmp_buf structure from which we extract the pc (JB_PC) that we will
- land at. The pc is copied into ADDR. This routine returns true on
- success. */
+#define ARM_NEW_SIGFRAME_MAGIC 0x5ac3c35a
-#define LONGJMP_TARGET_SIZE sizeof(int)
-#define JB_ELEMENT_SIZE sizeof(int)
-#define JB_SL 18
-#define JB_FP 19
-#define JB_SP 20
-#define JB_PC 21
+static void
+arm_linux_sigreturn_init (const struct tramp_frame *self,
+ struct frame_info *next_frame,
+ struct trad_frame_cache *this_cache,
+ CORE_ADDR func)
+{
+ CORE_ADDR sp = frame_unwind_register_unsigned (next_frame, ARM_SP_REGNUM);
+ ULONGEST uc_flags = read_memory_unsigned_integer (sp, 4);
+
+ if (uc_flags == ARM_NEW_SIGFRAME_MAGIC)
+ arm_linux_sigtramp_cache (next_frame, this_cache, func,
+ ARM_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT
+ + ARM_SIGCONTEXT_R0);
+ else
+ arm_linux_sigtramp_cache (next_frame, this_cache, func,
+ ARM_SIGCONTEXT_R0);
+}
+
+static void
+arm_linux_rt_sigreturn_init (const struct tramp_frame *self,
+ struct frame_info *next_frame,
+ struct trad_frame_cache *this_cache,
+ CORE_ADDR func)
+{
+ CORE_ADDR sp = frame_unwind_register_unsigned (next_frame, ARM_SP_REGNUM);
+ ULONGEST pinfo = read_memory_unsigned_integer (sp, 4);
+
+ if (pinfo == sp + ARM_OLD_RT_SIGFRAME_SIGINFO)
+ arm_linux_sigtramp_cache (next_frame, this_cache, func,
+ ARM_OLD_RT_SIGFRAME_UCONTEXT
+ + ARM_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT
+ + ARM_SIGCONTEXT_R0);
+ else
+ arm_linux_sigtramp_cache (next_frame, this_cache, func,
+ ARM_NEW_RT_SIGFRAME_UCONTEXT
+ + ARM_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT
+ + ARM_SIGCONTEXT_R0);
+}
+
+static struct tramp_frame arm_linux_sigreturn_tramp_frame = {
+ SIGTRAMP_FRAME,
+ 4,
+ {
+ { ARM_LINUX_SIGRETURN_INSTR, -1 },
+ { TRAMP_SENTINEL_INSN }
+ },
+ arm_linux_sigreturn_init
+};
+
+static struct tramp_frame arm_linux_rt_sigreturn_tramp_frame = {
+ SIGTRAMP_FRAME,
+ 4,
+ {
+ { ARM_LINUX_RT_SIGRETURN_INSTR, -1 },
+ { TRAMP_SENTINEL_INSN }
+ },
+ arm_linux_rt_sigreturn_init
+};
+
+static struct tramp_frame arm_eabi_linux_sigreturn_tramp_frame = {
+ SIGTRAMP_FRAME,
+ 4,
+ {
+ { ARM_SET_R7_SIGRETURN, -1 },
+ { ARM_EABI_SYSCALL, -1 },
+ { TRAMP_SENTINEL_INSN }
+ },
+ arm_linux_sigreturn_init
+};
+
+static struct tramp_frame arm_eabi_linux_rt_sigreturn_tramp_frame = {
+ SIGTRAMP_FRAME,
+ 4,
+ {
+ { ARM_SET_R7_RT_SIGRETURN, -1 },
+ { ARM_EABI_SYSCALL, -1 },
+ { TRAMP_SENTINEL_INSN }
+ },
+ arm_linux_rt_sigreturn_init
+};
+
+/* Core file and register set support. */
+
+#define ARM_LINUX_SIZEOF_GREGSET (18 * INT_REGISTER_SIZE)
+
+void
+arm_linux_supply_gregset (const struct regset *regset,
+ struct regcache *regcache,
+ int regnum, const void *gregs_buf, size_t len)
+{
+ const gdb_byte *gregs = gregs_buf;
+ int regno;
+ CORE_ADDR reg_pc;
+ gdb_byte pc_buf[INT_REGISTER_SIZE];
+
+ for (regno = ARM_A1_REGNUM; regno < ARM_PC_REGNUM; regno++)
+ if (regnum == -1 || regnum == regno)
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * regno);
+
+ if (regnum == ARM_PS_REGNUM || regnum == -1)
+ {
+ if (arm_apcs_32)
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, ARM_PS_REGNUM,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_CPSR_REGNUM);
+ else
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, ARM_PS_REGNUM,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_PC_REGNUM);
+ }
+
+ if (regnum == ARM_PC_REGNUM || regnum == -1)
+ {
+ reg_pc = extract_unsigned_integer (gregs
+ + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_PC_REGNUM,
+ INT_REGISTER_SIZE);
+ reg_pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (reg_pc);
+ store_unsigned_integer (pc_buf, INT_REGISTER_SIZE, reg_pc);
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, ARM_PC_REGNUM, pc_buf);
+ }
+}
+
+void
+arm_linux_collect_gregset (const struct regset *regset,
+ const struct regcache *regcache,
+ int regnum, void *gregs_buf, size_t len)
+{
+ gdb_byte *gregs = gregs_buf;
+ int regno;
+
+ for (regno = ARM_A1_REGNUM; regno < ARM_PC_REGNUM; regno++)
+ if (regnum == -1 || regnum == regno)
+ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * regno);
+
+ if (regnum == ARM_PS_REGNUM || regnum == -1)
+ {
+ if (arm_apcs_32)
+ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, ARM_PS_REGNUM,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_CPSR_REGNUM);
+ else
+ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, ARM_PS_REGNUM,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_PC_REGNUM);
+ }
+
+ if (regnum == ARM_PC_REGNUM || regnum == -1)
+ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, ARM_PC_REGNUM,
+ gregs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_PC_REGNUM);
+}
+
+/* Support for register format used by the NWFPE FPA emulator. */
+
+#define typeNone 0x00
+#define typeSingle 0x01
+#define typeDouble 0x02
+#define typeExtended 0x03
+
+void
+supply_nwfpe_register (struct regcache *regcache, int regno,
+ const gdb_byte *regs)
+{
+ const gdb_byte *reg_data;
+ gdb_byte reg_tag;
+ gdb_byte buf[FP_REGISTER_SIZE];
+
+ reg_data = regs + (regno - ARM_F0_REGNUM) * FP_REGISTER_SIZE;
+ reg_tag = regs[(regno - ARM_F0_REGNUM) + NWFPE_TAGS_OFFSET];
+ memset (buf, 0, FP_REGISTER_SIZE);
+
+ switch (reg_tag)
+ {
+ case typeSingle:
+ memcpy (buf, reg_data, 4);
+ break;
+ case typeDouble:
+ memcpy (buf, reg_data + 4, 4);
+ memcpy (buf + 4, reg_data, 4);
+ break;
+ case typeExtended:
+ /* We want sign and exponent, then least significant bits,
+ then most significant. NWFPE does sign, most, least. */
+ memcpy (buf, reg_data, 4);
+ memcpy (buf + 4, reg_data + 8, 4);
+ memcpy (buf + 8, reg_data + 4, 4);
+ break;
+ default:
+ break;
+ }
+
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf);
+}
-int
-arm_get_longjmp_target (CORE_ADDR * pc)
+void
+collect_nwfpe_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int regno,
+ gdb_byte *regs)
{
- CORE_ADDR jb_addr;
- char buf[LONGJMP_TARGET_SIZE];
+ gdb_byte *reg_data;
+ gdb_byte reg_tag;
+ gdb_byte buf[FP_REGISTER_SIZE];
- jb_addr = read_register (A1_REGNUM);
+ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, buf);
- if (target_read_memory (jb_addr + JB_PC * JB_ELEMENT_SIZE, buf,
- LONGJMP_TARGET_SIZE))
- return 0;
+ /* NOTE drow/2006-06-07: This code uses the tag already in the
+ register buffer. I've preserved that when moving the code
+ from the native file to the target file. But this doesn't
+ always make sense. */
- *pc = extract_address (buf, LONGJMP_TARGET_SIZE);
- return 1;
+ reg_data = regs + (regno - ARM_F0_REGNUM) * FP_REGISTER_SIZE;
+ reg_tag = regs[(regno - ARM_F0_REGNUM) + NWFPE_TAGS_OFFSET];
+
+ switch (reg_tag)
+ {
+ case typeSingle:
+ memcpy (reg_data, buf, 4);
+ break;
+ case typeDouble:
+ memcpy (reg_data, buf + 4, 4);
+ memcpy (reg_data + 4, buf, 4);
+ break;
+ case typeExtended:
+ memcpy (reg_data, buf, 4);
+ memcpy (reg_data + 4, buf + 8, 4);
+ memcpy (reg_data + 8, buf + 4, 4);
+ break;
+ default:
+ break;
+ }
}
-#endif /* GET_LONGJMP_TARGET */
+void
+arm_linux_supply_nwfpe (const struct regset *regset,
+ struct regcache *regcache,
+ int regnum, const void *regs_buf, size_t len)
+{
+ const gdb_byte *regs = regs_buf;
+ int regno;
+
+ if (regnum == ARM_FPS_REGNUM || regnum == -1)
+ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, ARM_FPS_REGNUM,
+ regs + NWFPE_FPSR_OFFSET);
-/* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
- a function return value of type TYPE, and copy that, in virtual format,
- into VALBUF. */
+ for (regno = ARM_F0_REGNUM; regno <= ARM_F7_REGNUM; regno++)
+ if (regnum == -1 || regnum == regno)
+ supply_nwfpe_register (regcache, regno, regs);
+}
void
-arm_linux_extract_return_value (struct type *type,
- char regbuf[REGISTER_BYTES],
- char *valbuf)
+arm_linux_collect_nwfpe (const struct regset *regset,
+ const struct regcache *regcache,
+ int regnum, void *regs_buf, size_t len)
{
- /* ScottB: This needs to be looked at to handle the different
- floating point emulators on ARM Linux. Right now the code
- assumes that fetch inferior registers does the right thing for
- GDB. I suspect this won't handle NWFPE registers correctly, nor
- will the default ARM version (arm_extract_return_value()). */
-
- int regnum = (TYPE_CODE_FLT == TYPE_CODE (type)) ? F0_REGNUM : A1_REGNUM;
- memcpy (valbuf, ®buf[REGISTER_BYTE (regnum)], TYPE_LENGTH (type));
+ gdb_byte *regs = regs_buf;
+ int regno;
+
+ for (regno = ARM_F0_REGNUM; regno <= ARM_F7_REGNUM; regno++)
+ if (regnum == -1 || regnum == regno)
+ collect_nwfpe_register (regcache, regno, regs);
+
+ if (regnum == ARM_FPS_REGNUM || regnum == -1)
+ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, ARM_FPS_REGNUM,
+ regs + INT_REGISTER_SIZE * ARM_FPS_REGNUM);
+}
+
+/* Return the appropriate register set for the core section identified
+ by SECT_NAME and SECT_SIZE. */
+
+static const struct regset *
+arm_linux_regset_from_core_section (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
+ const char *sect_name, size_t sect_size)
+{
+ struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
+
+ if (strcmp (sect_name, ".reg") == 0
+ && sect_size == ARM_LINUX_SIZEOF_GREGSET)
+ {
+ if (tdep->gregset == NULL)
+ tdep->gregset = regset_alloc (gdbarch, arm_linux_supply_gregset,
+ arm_linux_collect_gregset);
+ return tdep->gregset;
+ }
+
+ if (strcmp (sect_name, ".reg2") == 0
+ && sect_size == ARM_LINUX_SIZEOF_NWFPE)
+ {
+ if (tdep->fpregset == NULL)
+ tdep->fpregset = regset_alloc (gdbarch, arm_linux_supply_nwfpe,
+ arm_linux_collect_nwfpe);
+ return tdep->fpregset;
+ }
+
+ return NULL;
+}
+
+static void
+arm_linux_init_abi (struct gdbarch_info info,
+ struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
+{
+ struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
+
+ tdep->lowest_pc = 0x8000;
+ if (info.byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
+ {
+ if (tdep->arm_abi == ARM_ABI_AAPCS)
+ tdep->arm_breakpoint = eabi_linux_arm_be_breakpoint;
+ else
+ tdep->arm_breakpoint = arm_linux_arm_be_breakpoint;
+ tdep->thumb_breakpoint = arm_linux_thumb_be_breakpoint;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if (tdep->arm_abi == ARM_ABI_AAPCS)
+ tdep->arm_breakpoint = eabi_linux_arm_le_breakpoint;
+ else
+ tdep->arm_breakpoint = arm_linux_arm_le_breakpoint;
+ tdep->thumb_breakpoint = arm_linux_thumb_le_breakpoint;
+ }
+ tdep->arm_breakpoint_size = sizeof (arm_linux_arm_le_breakpoint);
+ tdep->thumb_breakpoint_size = sizeof (arm_linux_thumb_le_breakpoint);
+
+ if (tdep->fp_model == ARM_FLOAT_AUTO)
+ tdep->fp_model = ARM_FLOAT_FPA;
+
+ tdep->jb_pc = ARM_LINUX_JB_PC;
+ tdep->jb_elt_size = ARM_LINUX_JB_ELEMENT_SIZE;
+
+ set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets
+ (gdbarch, svr4_ilp32_fetch_link_map_offsets);
+
+ /* Shared library handling. */
+ set_gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code (gdbarch, find_solib_trampoline_target);
+ set_gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver (gdbarch, glibc_skip_solib_resolver);
+
+ /* Enable TLS support. */
+ set_gdbarch_fetch_tls_load_module_address (gdbarch,
+ svr4_fetch_objfile_link_map);
+
+ tramp_frame_prepend_unwinder (gdbarch,
+ &arm_linux_sigreturn_tramp_frame);
+ tramp_frame_prepend_unwinder (gdbarch,
+ &arm_linux_rt_sigreturn_tramp_frame);
+ tramp_frame_prepend_unwinder (gdbarch,
+ &arm_eabi_linux_sigreturn_tramp_frame);
+ tramp_frame_prepend_unwinder (gdbarch,
+ &arm_eabi_linux_rt_sigreturn_tramp_frame);
+
+ /* Core file support. */
+ set_gdbarch_regset_from_core_section (gdbarch,
+ arm_linux_regset_from_core_section);
}
void
_initialize_arm_linux_tdep (void)
{
+ gdbarch_register_osabi (bfd_arch_arm, 0, GDB_OSABI_LINUX,
+ arm_linux_init_abi);
}