-/* Target-dependent code for the Acorn Risc Machine (ARM).
- Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995-1999
+/* Common target dependent code for GDB on ARM systems.
+ Copyright 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-This file is part of GDB.
+ This file is part of GDB.
-This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
-(at your option) any later version.
+ This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
+ it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
+ the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
+ (at your option) any later version.
-This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-GNU General Public License for more details.
+ This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
+ but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
+ MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
+ GNU General Public License for more details.
-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. */
+ 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. */
#include "defs.h"
#include "frame.h"
#include "symfile.h"
#include "gdb_string.h"
#include "coff/internal.h" /* Internal format of COFF symbols in BFD */
+#include "dis-asm.h" /* For register flavors. */
+
+extern void _initialize_arm_tdep (void);
+
+/* Number of different reg name sets (options). */
+static int num_flavor_options;
+
+/* We have more registers than the disassembler as gdb can print the value
+ of special registers as well.
+ The general register names are overwritten by whatever is being used by
+ the disassembler at the moment. We also adjust the case of cpsr and fps. */
+
+/* Initial value: Register names used in ARM's ISA documentation. */
+static char * arm_register_name_strings[] =
+{"r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", /* 0 1 2 3 */
+ "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", /* 4 5 6 7 */
+ "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11", /* 8 9 10 11 */
+ "r12", "sp", "lr", "pc", /* 12 13 14 15 */
+ "f0", "f1", "f2", "f3", /* 16 17 18 19 */
+ "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", /* 20 21 22 23 */
+ "fps", "cpsr" }; /* 24 25 */
+char **arm_register_names = arm_register_name_strings;
+
+/* Valid register name flavors. */
+static char **valid_flavors;
+
+/* Disassembly flavor to use. Default to "std" register names. */
+static char *disassembly_flavor;
+static int current_option; /* Index to that option in the opcodes table. */
+
+/* This is used to keep the bfd arch_info in sync with the disassembly
+ flavor. */
+static void set_disassembly_flavor_sfunc(char *, int,
+ struct cmd_list_element *);
+static void set_disassembly_flavor (void);
+
+static void convert_from_extended (void *ptr, void *dbl);
+
+/* Define other aspects of the stack frame. We keep the offsets of
+ all saved registers, 'cause we need 'em a lot! We also keep the
+ current size of the stack frame, and the offset of the frame
+ pointer from the stack pointer (for frameless functions, and when
+ we're still in the prologue of a function with a frame) */
+
+struct frame_extra_info
+ {
+ struct frame_saved_regs fsr;
+ int framesize;
+ int frameoffset;
+ int framereg;
+ };
-/*
- The following macros are actually wrong. Neither arm nor thumb can
- or should set the lsb on addr.
- The thumb addresses are mod 2, so (addr & 2) would be a good heuristic
- to use when checking for thumb (see arm_pc_is_thumb() below).
- Unfortunately, something else depends on these (incorrect) macros, so
- fixing them actually breaks gdb. I didn't have time to investigate. Z.R.
-*/
-/* Thumb function addresses are odd (bit 0 is set). Here are some
- macros to test, set, or clear bit 0 of addresses. */
+/* Addresses for calling Thumb functions have the bit 0 set.
+ Here are some macros to test, set, or clear bit 0 of addresses. */
#define IS_THUMB_ADDR(addr) ((addr) & 1)
#define MAKE_THUMB_ADDR(addr) ((addr) | 1)
#define UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR(addr) ((addr) & ~1)
-/* Macros to round N up or down to the next A boundary; A must be
- a power of two. */
-#define ROUND_DOWN(n,a) ((n) & ~((a) - 1))
-#define ROUND_UP(n,a) (((n) + (a) - 1) & ~((a) - 1))
-
-/* Should call_function allocate stack space for a struct return? */
-/* The system C compiler uses a similar structure return convention to gcc */
+#define SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST(buffer,len) \
+ do \
+ { \
+ if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER != HOST_BYTE_ORDER) \
+ { \
+ char tmp; \
+ char *p = (char *)(buffer); \
+ char *q = ((char *)(buffer)) + len - 1; \
+ for (; p < q; p++, q--) \
+ { \
+ tmp = *q; \
+ *q = *p; \
+ *p = tmp; \
+ } \
+ } \
+ } \
+ while (0)
+
+/* Will a function return an aggregate type in memory or in a
+ register? Return 0 if an aggregate type can be returned in a
+ register, 1 if it must be returned in memory. */
+
int
-arm_use_struct_convention (gcc_p, type)
- int gcc_p;
- struct type *type;
+arm_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *type)
{
- return (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 4);
+ int nRc;
+ register enum type_code code;
+
+ /* In the ARM ABI, "integer" like aggregate types are returned in
+ registers. For an aggregate type to be integer like, its size
+ must be less than or equal to REGISTER_SIZE and the offset of
+ each addressable subfield must be zero. Note that bit fields are
+ not addressable, and all addressable subfields of unions always
+ start at offset zero.
+
+ This function is based on the behaviour of GCC 2.95.1.
+ See: gcc/arm.c: arm_return_in_memory() for details.
+
+ Note: All versions of GCC before GCC 2.95.2 do not set up the
+ parameters correctly for a function returning the following
+ structure: struct { float f;}; This should be returned in memory,
+ not a register. Richard Earnshaw sent me a patch, but I do not
+ know of any way to detect if a function like the above has been
+ compiled with the correct calling convention. */
+
+ /* All aggregate types that won't fit in a register must be returned
+ in memory. */
+ if (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > REGISTER_SIZE)
+ {
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ /* The only aggregate types that can be returned in a register are
+ structs and unions. Arrays must be returned in memory. */
+ code = TYPE_CODE (type);
+ if ((TYPE_CODE_STRUCT != code) && (TYPE_CODE_UNION != code))
+ {
+ return 1;
+ }
+
+ /* Assume all other aggregate types can be returned in a register.
+ Run a check for structures, unions and arrays. */
+ nRc = 0;
+
+ if ((TYPE_CODE_STRUCT == code) || (TYPE_CODE_UNION == code))
+ {
+ int i;
+ /* Need to check if this struct/union is "integer" like. For
+ this to be true, its size must be less than or equal to
+ REGISTER_SIZE and the offset of each addressable subfield
+ must be zero. Note that bit fields are not addressable, and
+ unions always start at offset zero. If any of the subfields
+ is a floating point type, the struct/union cannot be an
+ integer type. */
+
+ /* For each field in the object, check:
+ 1) Is it FP? --> yes, nRc = 1;
+ 2) Is it addressable (bitpos != 0) and
+ not packed (bitsize == 0)?
+ --> yes, nRc = 1
+ */
+
+ for (i = 0; i < TYPE_NFIELDS (type); i++)
+ {
+ enum type_code field_type_code;
+ field_type_code = TYPE_CODE (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, i));
+
+ /* Is it a floating point type field? */
+ if (field_type_code == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
+ {
+ nRc = 1;
+ break;
+ }
+
+ /* If bitpos != 0, then we have to care about it. */
+ if (TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, i) != 0)
+ {
+ /* Bitfields are not addressable. If the field bitsize is
+ zero, then the field is not packed. Hence it cannot be
+ a bitfield or any other packed type. */
+ if (TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, i) == 0)
+ {
+ nRc = 1;
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ return nRc;
}
int
-arm_frame_chain_valid (chain, thisframe)
- CORE_ADDR chain;
- struct frame_info *thisframe;
+arm_frame_chain_valid (CORE_ADDR chain, struct frame_info *thisframe)
{
-#define LOWEST_PC 0x20 /* the first 0x20 bytes are the trap vectors. */
return (chain != 0 && (FRAME_SAVED_PC (thisframe) >= LOWEST_PC));
}
int arm_apcs_32 = 1;
-/* Flag set by arm_fix_call_dummy that tells whether the target function
- is a Thumb function. This flag is checked by arm_push_arguments.
- FIXME: Change the PUSH_ARGUMENTS macro (and its use in valops.c) to
- pass the function address as an additional parameter. */
+/* Flag set by arm_fix_call_dummy that tells whether the target
+ function is a Thumb function. This flag is checked by
+ arm_push_arguments. FIXME: Change the PUSH_ARGUMENTS macro (and
+ its use in valops.c) to pass the function address as an additional
+ parameter. */
static int target_is_thumb;
-/* Flag set by arm_fix_call_dummy that tells whether the calling function
- is a Thumb function. This flag is checked by arm_pc_is_thumb
- and arm_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset. */
+/* Flag set by arm_fix_call_dummy that tells whether the calling
+ function is a Thumb function. This flag is checked by
+ arm_pc_is_thumb and arm_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset. */
static int caller_is_thumb;
-/* Tell if the program counter value in MEMADDR is in a Thumb function. */
+/* Determine if the program counter specified in MEMADDR is in a Thumb
+ function. */
int
-arm_pc_is_thumb (memaddr)
- bfd_vma memaddr;
+arm_pc_is_thumb (bfd_vma memaddr)
{
- struct minimal_symbol * sym;
- CORE_ADDR sp;
+ struct minimal_symbol *sym;
- /* If bit 0 of the address is set, assume this is a Thumb address. */
+ /* If bit 0 of the address is set, assume this is a Thumb address. */
if (IS_THUMB_ADDR (memaddr))
return 1;
- /* Thumb function have a "special" bit set in minimal symbols */
+ /* Thumb functions have a "special" bit set in minimal symbols. */
sym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (memaddr);
if (sym)
{
- return (MSYMBOL_IS_SPECIAL(sym));
+ return (MSYMBOL_IS_SPECIAL (sym));
}
else
- return 0;
+ {
+ return 0;
+ }
}
-/* Tell if the program counter value in MEMADDR is in a call dummy that
- is being called from a Thumb function. */
+/* Determine if the program counter specified in MEMADDR is in a call
+ dummy being called from a Thumb function. */
int
-arm_pc_is_thumb_dummy (memaddr)
- bfd_vma memaddr;
+arm_pc_is_thumb_dummy (bfd_vma memaddr)
{
- CORE_ADDR sp = read_sp();
-
- if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (memaddr, sp, sp+64))
+ CORE_ADDR sp = read_sp ();
+
+ /* FIXME: Until we switch for the new call dummy macros, this heuristic
+ is the best we can do. We are trying to determine if the pc is on
+ the stack, which (hopefully) will only happen in a call dummy.
+ We hope the current stack pointer is not so far alway from the dummy
+ frame location (true if we have not pushed large data structures or
+ gone too many levels deep) and that our 1024 is not enough to consider
+ code regions as part of the stack (true for most practical purposes) */
+ if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (memaddr, sp, sp + 1024))
return caller_is_thumb;
else
return 0;
}
CORE_ADDR
-arm_addr_bits_remove (val)
- CORE_ADDR val;
+arm_addr_bits_remove (CORE_ADDR val)
{
if (arm_pc_is_thumb (val))
return (val & (arm_apcs_32 ? 0xfffffffe : 0x03fffffe));
}
CORE_ADDR
-arm_saved_pc_after_call (frame)
- struct frame_info *frame;
+arm_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *frame)
{
return ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_register (LR_REGNUM));
}
+int
+arm_frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info *fi)
+{
+ CORE_ADDR func_start, after_prologue;
+ int frameless;
+
+ func_start = (get_pc_function_start ((fi)->pc) + FUNCTION_START_OFFSET);
+ after_prologue = SKIP_PROLOGUE (func_start);
+
+ /* There are some frameless functions whose first two instructions
+ follow the standard APCS form, in which case after_prologue will
+ be func_start + 8. */
+
+ frameless = (after_prologue < func_start + 12);
+ return frameless;
+}
+
/* A typical Thumb prologue looks like this:
- push {r7, lr}
- add sp, sp, #-28
- add r7, sp, #12
+ push {r7, lr}
+ add sp, sp, #-28
+ add r7, sp, #12
Sometimes the latter instruction may be replaced by:
- mov r7, sp
-*/
+ mov r7, sp
+
+ or like this:
+ push {r7, lr}
+ mov r7, sp
+ sub sp, #12
+
+ or, on tpcs, like this:
+ sub sp,#16
+ push {r7, lr}
+ (many instructions)
+ mov r7, sp
+ sub sp, #12
+
+ There is always one instruction of three classes:
+ 1 - push
+ 2 - setting of r7
+ 3 - adjusting of sp
+
+ When we have found at least one of each class we are done with the prolog.
+ Note that the "sub sp, #NN" before the push does not count.
+ */
static CORE_ADDR
-thumb_skip_prologue (pc)
- CORE_ADDR pc;
+thumb_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc)
{
CORE_ADDR current_pc;
+ int findmask = 0; /* findmask:
+ bit 0 - push { rlist }
+ bit 1 - mov r7, sp OR add r7, sp, #imm (setting of r7)
+ bit 2 - sub sp, #simm OR add sp, #simm (adjusting of sp)
+ */
- for (current_pc = pc; current_pc < pc + 20; current_pc += 2)
+ for (current_pc = pc; current_pc < pc + 40; current_pc += 2)
{
unsigned short insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 2);
- if ( (insn & 0xfe00) != 0xb400 /* push {..., r7, lr} */
- && (insn & 0xff00) != 0xb000 /* add sp, #simm */
- && (insn & 0xff00) != 0xaf00 /* add r7, sp, #imm */
- && insn != 0x466f /* mov r7, sp */
- && (insn & 0xffc0) != 0x4640) /* mov r0-r7, r8-r15 */
- break;
+ if ((insn & 0xfe00) == 0xb400) /* push { rlist } */
+ {
+ findmask |= 1; /* push found */
+ }
+ else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xb000) /* add sp, #simm OR sub sp, #simm */
+ {
+ if ((findmask & 1) == 0) /* before push ? */
+ continue;
+ else
+ findmask |= 4; /* add/sub sp found */
+ }
+ else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xaf00) /* add r7, sp, #imm */
+ {
+ findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
+ }
+ else if (insn == 0x466f) /* mov r7, sp */
+ {
+ findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
+ }
+ else
+ continue; /* something in the prolog that we don't care about or some
+ instruction from outside the prolog scheduled here for optimization */
}
return current_pc;
}
-/* APCS (ARM procedure call standard) defines the following prologue:
+/* The APCS (ARM Procedure Call Standard) defines the following
+ prologue:
- mov ip, sp
- [stmfd sp!, {a1,a2,a3,a4}]
- stmfd sp!, {...,fp,ip,lr,pc}
- [stfe f7, [sp, #-12]!]
- [stfe f6, [sp, #-12]!]
- [stfe f5, [sp, #-12]!]
- [stfe f4, [sp, #-12]!]
- sub fp, ip, #nn // nn == 20 or 4 depending on second ins
-*/
+ mov ip, sp
+ [stmfd sp!, {a1,a2,a3,a4}]
+ stmfd sp!, {...,fp,ip,lr,pc}
+ [stfe f7, [sp, #-12]!]
+ [stfe f6, [sp, #-12]!]
+ [stfe f5, [sp, #-12]!]
+ [stfe f4, [sp, #-12]!]
+ sub fp, ip, #nn @@ nn == 20 or 4 depending on second insn */
CORE_ADDR
-arm_skip_prologue (pc)
- CORE_ADDR pc;
+arm_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc)
{
unsigned long inst;
CORE_ADDR skip_pc;
CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end;
struct symtab_and_line sal;
- /* See what the symbol table says. */
- if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, NULL, & func_addr, & func_end))
+ /* See what the symbol table says. */
+
+ if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, NULL, &func_addr, &func_end))
{
sal = find_pc_line (func_addr, 0);
- if (sal.line != 0 && sal.end < func_end)
+ if ((sal.line != 0) && (sal.end < func_end))
return sal.end;
}
by disassembling the instructions. */
skip_pc = pc;
inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
- if (inst != 0xe1a0c00d) /* mov ip, sp */
+ if (inst != 0xe1a0c00d) /* mov ip, sp */
return pc;
skip_pc += 4;
inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
- if ((inst & 0xfffffff0) == 0xe92d0000) /* stmfd sp!,{a1,a2,a3,a4} */
+ if ((inst & 0xfffffff0) == 0xe92d0000) /* stmfd sp!,{a1,a2,a3,a4} */
{
skip_pc += 4;
inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
}
- if ((inst & 0xfffff800) != 0xe92dd800) /* stmfd sp!,{...,fp,ip,lr,pc} */
+ if ((inst & 0xfffff800) != 0xe92dd800) /* stmfd sp!,{...,fp,ip,lr,pc} */
return pc;
skip_pc += 4;
inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
/* Any insns after this point may float into the code, if it makes
- for better instruction scheduling, so we skip them only if
- we find them, but still consdier the function to be frame-ful */
+ for better instruction scheduling, so we skip them only if we
+ find them, but still consdier the function to be frame-ful. */
- /* We may have either one sfmfd instruction here, or several stfe insns,
- depending on the version of floating point code we support. */
- if ((inst & 0xffbf0fff) == 0xec2d0200) /* sfmfd fn, <cnt>, [sp]! */
+ /* We may have either one sfmfd instruction here, or several stfe
+ insns, depending on the version of floating point code we
+ support. */
+ if ((inst & 0xffbf0fff) == 0xec2d0200) /* sfmfd fn, <cnt>, [sp]! */
{
skip_pc += 4;
inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
}
else
{
- while ((inst & 0xffff8fff) == 0xed6d0103) /* stfe fn, [sp, #-12]! */
- {
- skip_pc += 4;
- inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
- }
+ while ((inst & 0xffff8fff) == 0xed6d0103) /* stfe fn, [sp, #-12]! */
+ {
+ skip_pc += 4;
+ inst = read_memory_integer (skip_pc, 4);
+ }
}
- if ((inst & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24cb000) /* sub fp, ip, #nn */
+ if ((inst & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24cb000) /* sub fp, ip, #nn */
skip_pc += 4;
return skip_pc;
}
-
-
-
+/* *INDENT-OFF* */
/* Function: thumb_scan_prologue (helper function for arm_scan_prologue)
This function decodes a Thumb function prologue to determine:
1) the size of the stack frame
4) the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
This information is stored in the "extra" fields of the frame_info.
- A typical Thumb function prologue might look like this:
- push {r7, lr}
- sub sp, #28,
- add r7, sp, #12
- Which would create this stack frame (offsets relative to FP)
+ A typical Thumb function prologue would create this stack frame
+ (offsets relative to FP)
old SP -> 24 stack parameters
20 LR
16 R7
R7 -> 0 local variables (16 bytes)
SP -> -12 additional stack space (12 bytes)
The frame size would thus be 36 bytes, and the frame offset would be
- 12 bytes. The frame register is R7. */
-
+ 12 bytes. The frame register is R7.
+
+ The comments for thumb_skip_prolog() describe the algorithm we use to detect
+ the end of the prolog */
+/* *INDENT-ON* */
+
static void
-thumb_scan_prologue (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+thumb_scan_prologue (struct frame_info *fi)
{
CORE_ADDR prologue_start;
CORE_ADDR prologue_end;
CORE_ADDR current_pc;
- int saved_reg[16]; /* which register has been copied to register n? */
- int i;
+ int saved_reg[16]; /* which register has been copied to register n? */
+ int findmask = 0; /* findmask:
+ bit 0 - push { rlist }
+ bit 1 - mov r7, sp OR add r7, sp, #imm (setting of r7)
+ bit 2 - sub sp, #simm OR add sp, #simm (adjusting of sp)
+ */
+ int i;
- if (find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, NULL, & prologue_start, & prologue_end))
+ if (find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, NULL, &prologue_start, &prologue_end))
{
struct symtab_and_line sal = find_pc_line (prologue_start, 0);
- if (sal.line == 0) /* no line info, use current PC */
+ if (sal.line == 0) /* no line info, use current PC */
prologue_end = fi->pc;
else if (sal.end < prologue_end) /* next line begins after fn end */
- prologue_end = sal.end; /* (probably means no prologue) */
+ prologue_end = sal.end; /* (probably means no prologue) */
}
else
- prologue_end = prologue_start + 40; /* We're in the boondocks: allow for */
- /* 16 pushes, an add, and "mv fp,sp" */
+ prologue_end = prologue_start + 40; /* We're in the boondocks: allow for */
+ /* 16 pushes, an add, and "mv fp,sp" */
prologue_end = min (prologue_end, fi->pc);
saved_reg[i] = i;
/* Search the prologue looking for instructions that set up the
- frame pointer, adjust the stack pointer, and save registers. */
+ frame pointer, adjust the stack pointer, and save registers.
+ Do this until all basic prolog instructions are found. */
fi->framesize = 0;
- for (current_pc = prologue_start; current_pc < prologue_end; current_pc += 2)
+ for (current_pc = prologue_start;
+ (current_pc < prologue_end) && ((findmask & 7) != 7);
+ current_pc += 2)
{
unsigned short insn;
int regno;
insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 2);
- if ((insn & 0xfe00) == 0xb400) /* push { rlist } */
+ if ((insn & 0xfe00) == 0xb400) /* push { rlist } */
{
+ int mask;
+ findmask |= 1; /* push found */
/* Bits 0-7 contain a mask for registers R0-R7. Bit 8 says
whether to save LR (R14). */
- int mask = (insn & 0xff) | ((insn & 0x100) << 6);
+ mask = (insn & 0xff) | ((insn & 0x100) << 6);
/* Calculate offsets of saved R0-R7 and LR. */
for (regno = LR_REGNUM; regno >= 0; regno--)
if (mask & (1 << regno))
- {
+ {
fi->framesize += 4;
fi->fsr.regs[saved_reg[regno]] = -(fi->framesize);
saved_reg[regno] = regno; /* reset saved register map */
}
}
- else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xb000) /* add sp, #simm */
+ else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xb000) /* add sp, #simm OR sub sp, #simm */
{
- offset = (insn & 0x7f) << 2; /* get scaled offset */
- if (insn & 0x80) /* is it signed? */
- offset = -offset;
+ if ((findmask & 1) == 0) /* before push ? */
+ continue;
+ else
+ findmask |= 4; /* add/sub sp found */
+
+ offset = (insn & 0x7f) << 2; /* get scaled offset */
+ if (insn & 0x80) /* is it signed? (==subtracting) */
+ {
+ fi->frameoffset += offset;
+ offset = -offset;
+ }
fi->framesize -= offset;
}
else if ((insn & 0xff00) == 0xaf00) /* add r7, sp, #imm */
{
+ findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
fi->framereg = THUMB_FP_REGNUM;
- fi->frameoffset = (insn & 0xff) << 2; /* get scaled offset */
+ fi->frameoffset = (insn & 0xff) << 2; /* get scaled offset */
}
else if (insn == 0x466f) /* mov r7, sp */
{
+ findmask |= 2; /* setting of r7 found */
fi->framereg = THUMB_FP_REGNUM;
fi->frameoffset = 0;
saved_reg[THUMB_FP_REGNUM] = SP_REGNUM;
}
else if ((insn & 0xffc0) == 0x4640) /* mov r0-r7, r8-r15 */
{
- int lo_reg = insn & 7; /* dest. register (r0-r7) */
+ int lo_reg = insn & 7; /* dest. register (r0-r7) */
int hi_reg = ((insn >> 3) & 7) + 8; /* source register (r8-15) */
- saved_reg[lo_reg] = hi_reg; /* remember hi reg was saved */
+ saved_reg[lo_reg] = hi_reg; /* remember hi reg was saved */
}
else
- break; /* anything else isn't prologue */
+ continue; /* something in the prolog that we don't care about or some
+ instruction from outside the prolog scheduled here for optimization */
}
}
-/* Function: check_prologue_cache
- Check if prologue for this frame's PC has already been scanned.
- If it has, copy the relevant information about that prologue and
+/* Check if prologue for this frame's PC has already been scanned. If
+ it has, copy the relevant information about that prologue and
return non-zero. Otherwise do not copy anything and return zero.
The information saved in the cache includes:
- * the frame register number;
- * the size of the stack frame;
- * the offsets of saved regs (relative to the old SP); and
- * the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
-
- The cache contains only one entry, since this is adequate
- for the typical sequence of prologue scan requests we get.
- When performing a backtrace, GDB will usually ask to scan
- the same function twice in a row (once to get the frame chain,
- and once to fill in the extra frame information).
-*/
+ * the frame register number;
+ * the size of the stack frame;
+ * the offsets of saved regs (relative to the old SP); and
+ * the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
+
+ The cache contains only one entry, since this is adequate for the
+ typical sequence of prologue scan requests we get. When performing
+ a backtrace, GDB will usually ask to scan the same function twice
+ in a row (once to get the frame chain, and once to fill in the
+ extra frame information). */
static struct frame_info prologue_cache;
static int
-check_prologue_cache (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+check_prologue_cache (struct frame_info *fi)
{
int i;
}
-/* Function: save_prologue_cache
- Copy the prologue information from fi to the prologue cache.
-*/
+/* Copy the prologue information from fi to the prologue cache. */
static void
-save_prologue_cache (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+save_prologue_cache (struct frame_info *fi)
{
int i;
- prologue_cache.pc = fi->pc;
- prologue_cache.framereg = fi->framereg;
- prologue_cache.framesize = fi->framesize;
+ prologue_cache.pc = fi->pc;
+ prologue_cache.framereg = fi->framereg;
+ prologue_cache.framesize = fi->framesize;
prologue_cache.frameoffset = fi->frameoffset;
-
+
for (i = 0; i <= NUM_REGS; i++)
prologue_cache.fsr.regs[i] = fi->fsr.regs[i];
}
-/* Function: arm_scan_prologue
- This function decodes an ARM function prologue to determine:
- 1) the size of the stack frame
- 2) which registers are saved on it
- 3) the offsets of saved regs
- 4) the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
+/* This function decodes an ARM function prologue to determine:
+ 1) the size of the stack frame
+ 2) which registers are saved on it
+ 3) the offsets of saved regs
+ 4) the offset from the stack pointer to the frame pointer
This information is stored in the "extra" fields of the frame_info.
- A typical Arm function prologue might look like this:
- mov ip, sp
- stmfd sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc}
- sub fp, ip, #4
- sub sp, sp, #16
+ There are two basic forms for the ARM prologue. The fixed argument
+ function call will look like:
+
+ mov ip, sp
+ stmfd sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc}
+ sub fp, ip, #4
+ [sub sp, sp, #4]
+
Which would create this stack frame (offsets relative to FP):
- IP -> 4 (caller's stack)
- FP -> 0 PC (points to address of stmfd instruction + 12 in callee)
- -4 LR (return address in caller)
- -8 IP (copy of caller's SP)
- -12 FP (caller's FP)
- SP -> -28 Local variables
+ IP -> 4 (caller's stack)
+ FP -> 0 PC (points to address of stmfd instruction + 8 in callee)
+ -4 LR (return address in caller)
+ -8 IP (copy of caller's SP)
+ -12 FP (caller's FP)
+ SP -> -28 Local variables
+
The frame size would thus be 32 bytes, and the frame offset would be
- 28 bytes. */
+ 28 bytes. The stmfd call can also save any of the vN registers it
+ plans to use, which increases the frame size accordingly.
+
+ Note: The stored PC is 8 off of the STMFD instruction that stored it
+ because the ARM Store instructions always store PC + 8 when you read
+ the PC register.
+
+ A variable argument function call will look like:
+
+ mov ip, sp
+ stmfd sp!, {a1, a2, a3, a4}
+ stmfd sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc}
+ sub fp, ip, #20
+
+ Which would create this stack frame (offsets relative to FP):
+ IP -> 20 (caller's stack)
+ 16 A4
+ 12 A3
+ 8 A2
+ 4 A1
+ FP -> 0 PC (points to address of stmfd instruction + 8 in callee)
+ -4 LR (return address in caller)
+ -8 IP (copy of caller's SP)
+ -12 FP (caller's FP)
+ SP -> -28 Local variables
+
+ The frame size would thus be 48 bytes, and the frame offset would be
+ 28 bytes.
+
+ There is another potential complication, which is that the optimizer
+ will try to separate the store of fp in the "stmfd" instruction from
+ the "sub fp, ip, #NN" instruction. Almost anything can be there, so
+ we just key on the stmfd, and then scan for the "sub fp, ip, #NN"...
+
+ Also, note, the original version of the ARM toolchain claimed that there
+ should be an
+
+ instruction at the end of the prologue. I have never seen GCC produce
+ this, and the ARM docs don't mention it. We still test for it below in
+ case it happens...
+
+ */
static void
-arm_scan_prologue (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+arm_scan_prologue (struct frame_info *fi)
{
int regno, sp_offset, fp_offset;
CORE_ADDR prologue_start, prologue_end, current_pc;
return;
/* Assume there is no frame until proven otherwise. */
- fi->framereg = SP_REGNUM;
- fi->framesize = 0;
+ fi->framereg = SP_REGNUM;
+ fi->framesize = 0;
fi->frameoffset = 0;
/* Check for Thumb prologue. */
in the function and the first source line. */
struct symtab_and_line sal = find_pc_line (prologue_start, 0);
- if (sal.line == 0) /* no line info, use current PC */
+ if (sal.line == 0) /* no line info, use current PC */
prologue_end = fi->pc;
else if (sal.end < prologue_end) /* next line begins after fn end */
- prologue_end = sal.end; /* (probably means no prologue) */
+ prologue_end = sal.end; /* (probably means no prologue) */
}
else
{
/* Get address of the stmfd in the prologue of the callee; the saved
- PC is the address of the stmfd + 12. */
- prologue_start = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE(read_memory_integer (fi->frame, 4)) - 12;
- prologue_end = prologue_start + 40; /* FIXME: should be big enough */
+ PC is the address of the stmfd + 8. */
+ prologue_start = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_memory_integer (fi->frame, 4))
+ - 8;
+ prologue_end = prologue_start + 64; /* This is all the insn's
+ that could be in the prologue,
+ plus room for 5 insn's inserted
+ by the scheduler. */
}
/* Now search the prologue looking for instructions that set up the
- frame pointer, adjust the stack pointer, and save registers. */
+ frame pointer, adjust the stack pointer, and save registers.
+
+ Be careful, however, and if it doesn't look like a prologue,
+ don't try to scan it. If, for instance, a frameless function
+ begins with stmfd sp!, then we will tell ourselves there is
+ a frame, which will confuse stack traceback, as well ad"finish"
+ and other operations that rely on a knowledge of the stack
+ traceback.
+
+ In the APCS, the prologue should start with "mov ip, sp" so
+ if we don't see this as the first insn, we will stop. */
sp_offset = fp_offset = 0;
- for (current_pc = prologue_start; current_pc < prologue_end; current_pc += 4)
- {
- unsigned int insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 4);
- if ((insn & 0xffff0000) == 0xe92d0000) /* stmfd sp!, {..., r7, lr} */
+ if (read_memory_unsigned_integer (prologue_start, 4)
+ == 0xe1a0c00d) /* mov ip, sp */
+ {
+ for (current_pc = prologue_start + 4; current_pc < prologue_end;
+ current_pc += 4)
{
- int mask = insn & 0xffff;
+ unsigned int insn = read_memory_unsigned_integer (current_pc, 4);
- /* Calculate offsets of saved registers. */
- for (regno = PC_REGNUM; regno >= 0; regno--)
- if (mask & (1 << regno))
- {
- sp_offset -= 4;
- fi->fsr.regs[regno] = sp_offset;
- }
- }
- else if ((insn & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24cb000) /* sub fp, ip #n */
- {
- unsigned imm = insn & 0xff; /* immediate value */
- unsigned rot = (insn & 0xf00) >> 7; /* rotate amount */
- imm = (imm >> rot) | (imm << (32-rot));
- fp_offset = -imm;
- fi->framereg = FP_REGNUM;
- }
- else if ((insn & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24dd000) /* sub sp, sp #n */
- {
- unsigned imm = insn & 0xff; /* immediate value */
- unsigned rot = (insn & 0xf00) >> 7; /* rotate amount */
- imm = (imm >> rot) | (imm << (32-rot));
- sp_offset -= imm;
- }
- else if ((insn & 0xffff7fff) == 0xed6d0103) /* stfe f?, [sp, -#c]! */
- {
- sp_offset -= 12;
- regno = F0_REGNUM + ((insn >> 12) & 0x07);
- fi->fsr.regs[regno] = sp_offset;
+ if ((insn & 0xffff0000) == 0xe92d0000)
+ /* stmfd sp!, {..., fp, ip, lr, pc}
+ or
+ stmfd sp!, {a1, a2, a3, a4} */
+ {
+ int mask = insn & 0xffff;
+
+ /* Calculate offsets of saved registers. */
+ for (regno = PC_REGNUM; regno >= 0; regno--)
+ if (mask & (1 << regno))
+ {
+ sp_offset -= 4;
+ fi->fsr.regs[regno] = sp_offset;
+ }
+ }
+ else if ((insn & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24cb000) /* sub fp, ip #n */
+ {
+ unsigned imm = insn & 0xff; /* immediate value */
+ unsigned rot = (insn & 0xf00) >> 7; /* rotate amount */
+ imm = (imm >> rot) | (imm << (32 - rot));
+ fp_offset = -imm;
+ fi->framereg = FP_REGNUM;
+ }
+ else if ((insn & 0xfffff000) == 0xe24dd000) /* sub sp, sp #n */
+ {
+ unsigned imm = insn & 0xff; /* immediate value */
+ unsigned rot = (insn & 0xf00) >> 7; /* rotate amount */
+ imm = (imm >> rot) | (imm << (32 - rot));
+ sp_offset -= imm;
+ }
+ else if ((insn & 0xffff7fff) == 0xed6d0103) /* stfe f?, [sp, -#c]! */
+ {
+ sp_offset -= 12;
+ regno = F0_REGNUM + ((insn >> 12) & 0x07);
+ fi->fsr.regs[regno] = sp_offset;
+ }
+ else if ((insn & 0xffbf0fff) == 0xec2d0200) /* sfmfd f0, 4, [sp!] */
+ {
+ int n_saved_fp_regs;
+ unsigned int fp_start_reg, fp_bound_reg;
+
+ if ((insn & 0x800) == 0x800) /* N0 is set */
+ {
+ if ((insn & 0x40000) == 0x40000) /* N1 is set */
+ n_saved_fp_regs = 3;
+ else
+ n_saved_fp_regs = 1;
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ if ((insn & 0x40000) == 0x40000) /* N1 is set */
+ n_saved_fp_regs = 2;
+ else
+ n_saved_fp_regs = 4;
+ }
+
+ fp_start_reg = F0_REGNUM + ((insn >> 12) & 0x7);
+ fp_bound_reg = fp_start_reg + n_saved_fp_regs;
+ for (; fp_start_reg < fp_bound_reg; fp_start_reg++)
+ {
+ sp_offset -= 12;
+ fi->fsr.regs[fp_start_reg++] = sp_offset;
+ }
+ }
+ else
+ /* The optimizer might shove anything into the prologue,
+ so we just skip what we don't recognize. */
+ continue;
}
- else if (insn == 0xe1a0c00d) /* mov ip, sp */
- continue;
- else
- break; /* not a recognized prologue instruction */
}
/* The frame size is just the negative of the offset (from the original SP)
[new FP] - [new SP]. */
fi->framesize = -sp_offset;
fi->frameoffset = fp_offset - sp_offset;
-
+
save_prologue_cache (fi);
}
-
-/* Function: find_callers_reg
- Find REGNUM on the stack. Otherwise, it's in an active register. One thing
- we might want to do here is to check REGNUM against the clobber mask, and
- somehow flag it as invalid if it isn't saved on the stack somewhere. This
- would provide a graceful failure mode when trying to get the value of
- caller-saves registers for an inner frame. */
+/* Find REGNUM on the stack. Otherwise, it's in an active register.
+ One thing we might want to do here is to check REGNUM against the
+ clobber mask, and somehow flag it as invalid if it isn't saved on
+ the stack somewhere. This would provide a graceful failure mode
+ when trying to get the value of caller-saves registers for an inner
+ frame. */
static CORE_ADDR
-arm_find_callers_reg (fi, regnum)
- struct frame_info * fi;
- int regnum;
+arm_find_callers_reg (struct frame_info *fi, int regnum)
{
for (; fi; fi = fi->next)
-
-#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
+
+#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
return generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, regnum);
else
#endif
- if (fi->fsr.regs[regnum] != 0)
- return read_memory_integer (fi->fsr.regs[regnum],
- REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(regnum));
+ if (fi->fsr.regs[regnum] != 0)
+ return read_memory_integer (fi->fsr.regs[regnum],
+ REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum));
return read_register (regnum);
}
-
-
+/* *INDENT-OFF* */
/* Function: frame_chain
Given a GDB frame, determine the address of the calling function's frame.
This will be used to create a new GDB frame struct, and then
read_memory_integer ((thisframe)->frame - 12, 4) :\
0)
*/
+/* *INDENT-ON* */
CORE_ADDR
-arm_frame_chain (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+arm_frame_chain (struct frame_info *fi)
{
-#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
+#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
CORE_ADDR fn_start, callers_pc, fp;
/* is this a dummy frame? */
if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
- return fi->frame; /* dummy frame same as caller's frame */
+ return fi->frame; /* dummy frame same as caller's frame */
/* is caller-of-this a dummy frame? */
- callers_pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC(fi); /* find out who called us: */
+ callers_pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi); /* find out who called us: */
fp = arm_find_callers_reg (fi, FP_REGNUM);
- if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (callers_pc, fp, fp))
- return fp; /* dummy frame's frame may bear no relation to ours */
+ if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (callers_pc, fp, fp))
+ return fp; /* dummy frame's frame may bear no relation to ours */
if (find_pc_partial_function (fi->pc, 0, &fn_start, 0))
if (fn_start == entry_point_address ())
- return 0; /* in _start fn, don't chain further */
+ return 0; /* in _start fn, don't chain further */
#endif
CORE_ADDR caller_pc, fn_start;
struct frame_info caller_fi;
frame register number. */
if (arm_pc_is_thumb (caller_pc) != arm_pc_is_thumb (fi->pc))
{
- memset (& caller_fi, 0, sizeof (caller_fi));
+ memset (&caller_fi, 0, sizeof (caller_fi));
caller_fi.pc = caller_pc;
- arm_scan_prologue (& caller_fi);
+ arm_scan_prologue (&caller_fi);
framereg = caller_fi.framereg;
}
return fi->frame + fi->framesize;
}
-/* Function: init_extra_frame_info
- This function actually figures out the frame address for a given pc and
- sp. This is tricky because we sometimes don't use an explicit
- frame pointer, and the previous stack pointer isn't necessarily recorded
- on the stack. The only reliable way to get this info is to
- examine the prologue. */
+/* This function actually figures out the frame address for a given pc
+ and sp. This is tricky because we sometimes don't use an explicit
+ frame pointer, and the previous stack pointer isn't necessarily
+ recorded on the stack. The only reliable way to get this info is
+ to examine the prologue. FROMLEAF is a little confusing, it means
+ this is the next frame up the chain AFTER a frameless function. If
+ this is true, then the frame value for this frame is still in the
+ fp register. */
void
-arm_init_extra_frame_info (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+arm_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *fi)
{
int reg;
memset (fi->fsr.regs, '\000', sizeof fi->fsr.regs);
-#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
+#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
{
/* We need to setup fi->frame here because run_stack_dummy gets it wrong
- by assuming it's always FP. */
- fi->frame = generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, SP_REGNUM);
- fi->framesize = 0;
+ by assuming it's always FP. */
+ fi->frame = generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, SP_REGNUM);
+ fi->framesize = 0;
fi->frameoffset = 0;
return;
}
- else
+ else
#endif
{
arm_scan_prologue (fi);
- if (!fi->next) /* this is the innermost frame? */
+ if (!fi->next)
+ /* this is the innermost frame? */
fi->frame = read_register (fi->framereg);
- else /* not the innermost frame */
- /* If we have an FP, the callee saved it. */
- if (fi->framereg == FP_REGNUM || fi->framereg == THUMB_FP_REGNUM)
+ else if (fi->framereg == FP_REGNUM || fi->framereg == THUMB_FP_REGNUM)
+ {
+ /* not the innermost frame */
+ /* If we have an FP, the callee saved it. */
if (fi->next->fsr.regs[fi->framereg] != 0)
- fi->frame = read_memory_integer (fi->next->fsr.regs[fi->framereg],
- 4);
+ fi->frame =
+ read_memory_integer (fi->next->fsr.regs[fi->framereg], 4);
+ else if (fromleaf)
+ /* If we were called by a frameless fn. then our frame is
+ still in the frame pointer register on the board... */
+ fi->frame = read_fp ();
+ }
- /* Calculate actual addresses of saved registers using offsets determined
- by arm_scan_prologue. */
+ /* Calculate actual addresses of saved registers using offsets
+ determined by arm_scan_prologue. */
for (reg = 0; reg < NUM_REGS; reg++)
if (fi->fsr.regs[reg] != 0)
fi->fsr.regs[reg] += fi->frame + fi->framesize - fi->frameoffset;
}
-/* Function: frame_saved_pc
- Find the caller of this frame. We do this by seeing if LR_REGNUM is saved
- in the stack anywhere, otherwise we get it from the registers.
+/* Find the caller of this frame. We do this by seeing if LR_REGNUM
+ is saved in the stack anywhere, otherwise we get it from the
+ registers.
The old definition of this function was a macro:
- #define FRAME_SAVED_PC(FRAME) \
- ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_memory_integer ((FRAME)->frame - 4, 4))
-*/
+ #define FRAME_SAVED_PC(FRAME) \
+ ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_memory_integer ((FRAME)->frame - 4, 4)) */
CORE_ADDR
-arm_frame_saved_pc (fi)
- struct frame_info * fi;
+arm_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *fi)
{
-#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
+#if 0 /* FIXME: enable this code if we convert to new call dummy scheme. */
if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi->pc, fi->frame, fi->frame))
return generic_read_register_dummy (fi->pc, fi->frame, PC_REGNUM);
else
}
}
-
/* Return the frame address. On ARM, it is R11; on Thumb it is R7.
Examine the Program Status Register to decide which state we're in. */
CORE_ADDR
-arm_target_read_fp ()
+arm_target_read_fp (void)
{
if (read_register (PS_REGNUM) & 0x20) /* Bit 5 is Thumb state bit */
return read_register (THUMB_FP_REGNUM); /* R7 if Thumb */
else
- return read_register (FP_REGNUM); /* R11 if ARM */
+ return read_register (FP_REGNUM); /* R11 if ARM */
}
+/* Calculate the frame offsets of the saved registers (ARM version). */
-/* Calculate the frame offsets of the saved registers (ARM version). */
void
-arm_frame_find_saved_regs (fi, regaddr)
- struct frame_info *fi;
- struct frame_saved_regs *regaddr;
+arm_frame_find_saved_regs (struct frame_info *fi,
+ struct frame_saved_regs *regaddr)
{
memcpy (regaddr, &fi->fsr, sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs));
}
-
void
-arm_push_dummy_frame ()
+arm_push_dummy_frame (void)
{
CORE_ADDR old_sp = read_register (SP_REGNUM);
CORE_ADDR sp = old_sp;
/* stmdb sp!, {r0-r10, fp, ip, lr, pc} */
prologue_start = sp = push_word (sp, 0xe92ddfff);
- /* push a pointer to the dummy prologue + 12, because when
- stm instruction stores the PC, it stores the address of the stm
+ /* Push a pointer to the dummy prologue + 12, because when stm
+ instruction stores the PC, it stores the address of the stm
instruction itself plus 12. */
fp = sp = push_word (sp, prologue_start + 12);
- sp = push_word (sp, read_register (PC_REGNUM)); /* FIXME: was PS_REGNUM */
+ sp = push_word (sp, read_register (PC_REGNUM)); /* FIXME: was PS_REGNUM */
sp = push_word (sp, old_sp);
sp = push_word (sp, read_register (FP_REGNUM));
-
- for (regnum = 10; regnum >= 0; regnum --)
+
+ for (regnum = 10; regnum >= 0; regnum--)
sp = push_word (sp, read_register (regnum));
-
+
write_register (FP_REGNUM, fp);
write_register (THUMB_FP_REGNUM, fp);
write_register (SP_REGNUM, sp);
}
/* Fix up the call dummy, based on whether the processor is currently
- in Thumb or ARM mode, and whether the target function is Thumb
- or ARM. There are three different situations requiring three
+ in Thumb or ARM mode, and whether the target function is Thumb or
+ ARM. There are three different situations requiring three
different dummies:
* ARM calling ARM: uses the call dummy in tm-arm.h, which has already
- been copied into the dummy parameter to this function.
+ been copied into the dummy parameter to this function.
* ARM calling Thumb: uses the call dummy in tm-arm.h, but with the
- "mov pc,r4" instruction patched to be a "bx r4" instead.
+ "mov pc,r4" instruction patched to be a "bx r4" instead.
* Thumb calling anything: uses the Thumb dummy defined below, which
- works for calling both ARM and Thumb functions.
+ works for calling both ARM and Thumb functions.
- All three call dummies expect to receive the target function address
- in R4, with the low bit set if it's a Thumb function.
-*/
+ All three call dummies expect to receive the target function
+ address in R4, with the low bit set if it's a Thumb function. */
void
-arm_fix_call_dummy (dummy, pc, fun, nargs, args, type, gcc_p)
- char * dummy;
- CORE_ADDR pc;
- CORE_ADDR fun;
- int nargs;
- value_ptr * args;
- struct type * type;
- int gcc_p;
+arm_fix_call_dummy (char *dummy, CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR fun, int nargs,
+ value_ptr *args, struct type *type, int gcc_p)
{
static short thumb_dummy[4] =
{
- 0xf000, 0xf801, /* bl label */
- 0xdf18, /* swi 24 */
- 0x4720, /* label: bx r4 */
+ 0xf000, 0xf801, /* bl label */
+ 0xdf18, /* swi 24 */
+ 0x4720, /* label: bx r4 */
};
static unsigned long arm_bx_r4 = 0xe12fff14; /* bx r4 instruction */
/* Set flag indicating whether the current PC is in a Thumb function. */
- caller_is_thumb = arm_pc_is_thumb (read_pc());
+ caller_is_thumb = arm_pc_is_thumb (read_pc ());
- /* If the target function is Thumb, set the low bit of the function address.
- And if the CPU is currently in ARM mode, patch the second instruction
- of call dummy to use a BX instruction to switch to Thumb mode. */
+ /* If the target function is Thumb, set the low bit of the function
+ address. And if the CPU is currently in ARM mode, patch the
+ second instruction of call dummy to use a BX instruction to
+ switch to Thumb mode. */
target_is_thumb = arm_pc_is_thumb (fun);
if (target_is_thumb)
{
}
}
- /* Put the target address in r4; the call dummy will copy this to the PC. */
+ /* Put the target address in r4; the call dummy will copy this to
+ the PC. */
write_register (4, fun);
}
-
/* Return the offset in the call dummy of the instruction that needs
- to have a breakpoint placed on it. This is the offset of the 'swi 24'
- instruction, which is no longer actually used, but simply acts
+ to have a breakpoint placed on it. This is the offset of the 'swi
+ 24' instruction, which is no longer actually used, but simply acts
as a place-holder now.
- This implements the CALL_DUMMY_BREAK_OFFSET macro.
-*/
+ This implements the CALL_DUMMY_BREAK_OFFSET macro. */
int
-arm_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset ()
+arm_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset (void)
{
if (caller_is_thumb)
return 4;
return 8;
}
+/* Note: ScottB
+
+ This function does not support passing parameters using the FPA
+ variant of the APCS. It passes any floating point arguments in the
+ general registers and/or on the stack. */
CORE_ADDR
-arm_push_arguments(nargs, args, sp, struct_return, struct_addr)
- int nargs;
- value_ptr * args;
- CORE_ADDR sp;
- int struct_return;
- CORE_ADDR struct_addr;
+arm_push_arguments (int nargs, value_ptr * args, CORE_ADDR sp,
+ int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
{
- int argreg;
- int float_argreg;
- int argnum;
- int stack_offset;
- struct stack_arg {
- char *val;
+ char *fp;
+ int argnum, argreg, nstack_size;
+
+ /* Walk through the list of args and determine how large a temporary
+ stack is required. Need to take care here as structs may be
+ passed on the stack, and we have to to push them. */
+ nstack_size = -4 * REGISTER_SIZE; /* Some arguments go into A1-A4. */
+ if (struct_return) /* The struct address goes in A1. */
+ nstack_size += REGISTER_SIZE;
+
+ /* Walk through the arguments and add their size to nstack_size. */
+ for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
+ {
int len;
- int offset;
- };
- struct stack_arg *stack_args =
- (struct stack_arg*)alloca (nargs * sizeof (struct stack_arg));
- int nstack_args = 0;
+ struct type *arg_type;
+
+ arg_type = check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (args[argnum]));
+ len = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type);
+ /* ANSI C code passes float arguments as integers, K&R code
+ passes float arguments as doubles. Correct for this here. */
+ if (TYPE_CODE_FLT == TYPE_CODE (arg_type) && REGISTER_SIZE == len)
+ nstack_size += FP_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE;
+ else
+ nstack_size += len;
+ }
+
+ /* Allocate room on the stack, and initialize our stack frame
+ pointer. */
+ fp = NULL;
+ if (nstack_size > 0)
+ {
+ sp -= nstack_size;
+ fp = (char *) sp;
+ }
- /* Initialize the integer and float register pointers. */
+ /* Initialize the integer argument register pointer. */
argreg = A1_REGNUM;
- float_argreg = F0_REGNUM;
- /* the struct_return pointer occupies the first parameter-passing reg */
+ /* The struct_return pointer occupies the first parameter passing
+ register. */
if (struct_return)
- write_register (argreg++, struct_addr);
-
- /* The offset onto the stack at which we will start copying parameters
- (after the registers are used up) begins at 16 in the old ABI.
- This leaves room for the "home" area for register parameters. */
- stack_offset = REGISTER_SIZE * 4;
+ write_register (argreg++, struct_addr);
- /* Process args from left to right. Store as many as allowed in
- registers, save the rest to be pushed on the stack */
- for(argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
+ /* Process arguments from left to right. Store as many as allowed
+ in the parameter passing registers (A1-A4), and save the rest on
+ the temporary stack. */
+ for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
{
- char * val;
- value_ptr arg = args[argnum];
- struct type * arg_type = check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (arg));
- struct type * target_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (arg_type);
- int len = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type);
- enum type_code typecode = TYPE_CODE (arg_type);
- CORE_ADDR regval;
- int newarg;
-
- val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (arg);
-
- /* If the argument is a pointer to a function, and it's a Thumb
+ int len;
+ char *val;
+ double dbl_arg;
+ CORE_ADDR regval;
+ enum type_code typecode;
+ struct type *arg_type, *target_type;
+
+ arg_type = check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (args[argnum]));
+ target_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (arg_type);
+ len = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type);
+ typecode = TYPE_CODE (arg_type);
+ val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (args[argnum]);
+
+ /* ANSI C code passes float arguments as integers, K&R code
+ passes float arguments as doubles. The .stabs record for
+ for ANSI prototype floating point arguments records the
+ type as FP_INTEGER, while a K&R style (no prototype)
+ .stabs records the type as FP_FLOAT. In this latter case
+ the compiler converts the float arguments to double before
+ calling the function. */
+ if (TYPE_CODE_FLT == typecode && REGISTER_SIZE == len)
+ {
+ float f;
+ double d;
+ char * bufo = (char *) &d;
+ char * bufd = (char *) &dbl_arg;
+
+ len = sizeof (double);
+ f = *(float *) val;
+ SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST (&f, sizeof (float)); /* adjust endianess */
+ d = f;
+ /* We must revert the longwords so they get loaded into the
+ the right registers. */
+ memcpy (bufd, bufo + len / 2, len / 2);
+ SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST (bufd, len / 2); /* adjust endianess */
+ memcpy (bufd + len / 2, bufo, len / 2);
+ SWAP_TARGET_AND_HOST (bufd + len / 2, len / 2); /* adjust endianess */
+ val = (char *) &dbl_arg;
+ }
+#if 1
+ /* I don't know why this code was disable. The only logical use
+ for a function pointer is to call that function, so setting
+ the mode bit is perfectly fine. FN */
+ /* If the argument is a pointer to a function, and it is a Thumb
function, set the low bit of the pointer. */
- if (typecode == TYPE_CODE_PTR
- && target_type != NULL
- && TYPE_CODE (target_type) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC)
+ if (TYPE_CODE_PTR == typecode
+ && NULL != target_type
+ && TYPE_CODE_FUNC == TYPE_CODE (target_type))
{
- regval = extract_address (val, len);
+ CORE_ADDR regval = extract_address (val, len);
if (arm_pc_is_thumb (regval))
store_address (val, len, MAKE_THUMB_ADDR (regval));
}
-
-#define MAPCS_FLOAT 0 /* --mapcs-float not implemented by the compiler yet */
-#if MAPCS_FLOAT
- /* Up to four floating point arguments can be passed in floating
- point registers on ARM (not on Thumb). */
- if (typecode == TYPE_CODE_FLT
- && float_argreg <= ARM_LAST_FP_ARG_REGNUM
- && !target_is_thumb)
- {
- /* This is a floating point value that fits entirely
- in a single register. */
- regval = extract_address (val, len);
- write_register (float_argreg++, regval);
- }
- else
#endif
+ /* Copy the argument to general registers or the stack in
+ register-sized pieces. Large arguments are split between
+ registers and stack. */
+ while (len > 0)
{
- /* Copy the argument to general registers or the stack in
- register-sized pieces. Large arguments are split between
- registers and stack. */
- while (len > 0)
+ int partial_len = len < REGISTER_SIZE ? len : REGISTER_SIZE;
+
+ if (argreg <= ARM_LAST_ARG_REGNUM)
{
- if (argreg <= ARM_LAST_ARG_REGNUM)
- {
- int partial_len = len < REGISTER_SIZE ? len : REGISTER_SIZE;
- regval = extract_address (val, partial_len);
-
- /* It's a simple argument being passed in a general
- register. */
- write_register (argreg, regval);
- argreg++;
- len -= partial_len;
- val += partial_len;
- }
- else
- {
- /* keep for later pushing */
- stack_args[nstack_args].val = val;
- stack_args[nstack_args++].len = len;
- break;
- }
+ /* It's an argument being passed in a general register. */
+ regval = extract_address (val, partial_len);
+ write_register (argreg++, regval);
}
+ else
+ {
+ /* Push the arguments onto the stack. */
+ write_memory ((CORE_ADDR) fp, val, REGISTER_SIZE);
+ fp += REGISTER_SIZE;
+ }
+
+ len -= partial_len;
+ val += partial_len;
}
}
- /* now do the real stack pushing, process args right to left */
- while(nstack_args--)
- {
- sp -= stack_args[nstack_args].len;
- write_memory(sp, stack_args[nstack_args].val,
- stack_args[nstack_args].len);
- }
/* Return adjusted stack pointer. */
return sp;
}
void
-arm_pop_frame ()
+arm_pop_frame (void)
{
- struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame();
int regnum;
- CORE_ADDR old_SP;
+ struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame ();
+
+ if (!PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY(frame->pc, frame->frame, read_fp()))
+ {
+ CORE_ADDR old_SP;
- old_SP = read_register (frame->framereg);
- for (regnum = 0; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++)
- if (frame->fsr.regs[regnum] != 0)
- write_register (regnum,
+ old_SP = read_register (frame->framereg);
+ for (regnum = 0; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++)
+ if (frame->fsr.regs[regnum] != 0)
+ write_register (regnum,
read_memory_integer (frame->fsr.regs[regnum], 4));
- write_register (PC_REGNUM, FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
- write_register (SP_REGNUM, old_SP);
+ write_register (PC_REGNUM, FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
+ write_register (SP_REGNUM, old_SP);
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ CORE_ADDR sp;
+
+ sp = read_register (FP_REGNUM);
+ sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR); /* we don't care about this first word */
+
+ write_register (PC_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
+ sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
+ write_register (SP_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
+ sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
+ write_register (FP_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
+ sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
+
+ for (regnum = 10; regnum >= 0; regnum--)
+ {
+ write_register (regnum, read_memory_integer (sp, 4));
+ sp -= sizeof(CORE_ADDR);
+ }
+ }
flush_cached_frames ();
}
static void
-print_fpu_flags (flags)
- int flags;
+print_fpu_flags (int flags)
{
- if (flags & (1 << 0)) fputs ("IVO ", stdout);
- if (flags & (1 << 1)) fputs ("DVZ ", stdout);
- if (flags & (1 << 2)) fputs ("OFL ", stdout);
- if (flags & (1 << 3)) fputs ("UFL ", stdout);
- if (flags & (1 << 4)) fputs ("INX ", stdout);
- putchar ('\n');
+ if (flags & (1 << 0))
+ fputs ("IVO ", stdout);
+ if (flags & (1 << 1))
+ fputs ("DVZ ", stdout);
+ if (flags & (1 << 2))
+ fputs ("OFL ", stdout);
+ if (flags & (1 << 3))
+ fputs ("UFL ", stdout);
+ if (flags & (1 << 4))
+ fputs ("INX ", stdout);
+ putchar ('\n');
}
void
-arm_float_info ()
+arm_float_info (void)
{
- register unsigned long status = read_register (FPS_REGNUM);
- int type;
-
- type = (status >> 24) & 127;
- printf ("%s FPU type %d\n",
- (status & (1<<31)) ? "Hardware" : "Software",
- type);
- fputs ("mask: ", stdout);
- print_fpu_flags (status >> 16);
- fputs ("flags: ", stdout);
- print_fpu_flags (status);
+ register unsigned long status = read_register (FPS_REGNUM);
+ int type;
+
+ type = (status >> 24) & 127;
+ printf ("%s FPU type %d\n",
+ (status & (1 << 31)) ? "Hardware" : "Software",
+ type);
+ fputs ("mask: ", stdout);
+ print_fpu_flags (status >> 16);
+ fputs ("flags: ", stdout);
+ print_fpu_flags (status);
}
-static char *original_register_names[] =
-{ "a1", "a2", "a3", "a4", /* 0 1 2 3 */
- "v1", "v2", "v3", "v4", /* 4 5 6 7 */
- "v5", "v6", "sl", "fp", /* 8 9 10 11 */
- "ip", "sp", "lr", "pc", /* 12 13 14 15 */
- "f0", "f1", "f2", "f3", /* 16 17 18 19 */
- "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", /* 20 21 22 23 */
- "fps","ps" } /* 24 25 */;
-
-/* These names are the ones which gcc emits, and
- I find them less confusing. Toggle between them
- using the `othernames' command. */
-static char *additional_register_names[] =
-{ "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", /* 0 1 2 3 */
- "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", /* 4 5 6 7 */
- "r8", "r9", "sl", "fp", /* 8 9 10 11 */
- "ip", "sp", "lr", "pc", /* 12 13 14 15 */
- "f0", "f1", "f2", "f3", /* 16 17 18 19 */
- "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", /* 20 21 22 23 */
- "fps","ps" } /* 24 25 */;
-
-char **arm_register_names = original_register_names;
+#if 0
+/* FIXME: The generated assembler works but sucks. Instead of using
+ r0, r1 it pushes them on the stack, then loads them into r3, r4 and
+ uses those registers. I must be missing something. ScottB */
+void
+convert_from_extended (void *ptr, void *dbl)
+{
+ __asm__ ("
+ ldfe f0,[%0]
+ stfd f0,[%1] "
+: /* no output */
+: "r" (ptr), "r" (dbl));
+}
+void
+convert_to_extended (void *dbl, void *ptr)
+{
+ __asm__ ("
+ ldfd f0,[%0]
+ stfe f0,[%1] "
+: /* no output */
+: "r" (dbl), "r" (ptr));
+}
+#else
static void
-arm_othernames ()
+convert_from_extended (void *ptr, void *dbl)
+{
+ *(double *) dbl = *(double *) ptr;
+}
+
+void
+convert_to_extended (void *dbl, void *ptr)
+{
+ *(double *) ptr = *(double *) dbl;
+}
+#endif
+
+/* Nonzero if register N requires conversion from raw format to
+ virtual format. */
+
+int
+arm_register_convertible (unsigned int regnum)
{
- static int toggle;
- arm_register_names = (toggle
- ? additional_register_names
- : original_register_names);
- toggle = !toggle;
+ return ((regnum - F0_REGNUM) < 8);
}
-/* FIXME: Fill in with the 'right thing', see asm
- template in arm-convert.s */
+/* Convert data from raw format for register REGNUM in buffer FROM to
+ virtual format with type TYPE in buffer TO. */
-void
-convert_from_extended (ptr, dbl)
- void * ptr;
- double * dbl;
+void
+arm_register_convert_to_virtual (unsigned int regnum, struct type *type,
+ void *from, void *to)
{
- *dbl = *(double*)ptr;
+ double val;
+
+ convert_from_extended (from, &val);
+ store_floating (to, TYPE_LENGTH (type), val);
}
-void
-convert_to_extended (dbl, ptr)
- void * ptr;
- double * dbl;
+/* Convert data from virtual format with type TYPE in buffer FROM to
+ raw format for register REGNUM in buffer TO. */
+
+void
+arm_register_convert_to_raw (unsigned int regnum, struct type *type,
+ void *from, void *to)
{
- *(double*)ptr = *dbl;
+ double val = extract_floating (from, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
+
+ convert_to_extended (&val, to);
}
static int
-condition_true (cond, status_reg)
- unsigned long cond;
- unsigned long status_reg;
+condition_true (unsigned long cond, unsigned long status_reg)
{
if (cond == INST_AL || cond == INST_NV)
return 1;
#define ARM_PC_32 1
static unsigned long
-shifted_reg_val (inst, carry, pc_val, status_reg)
- unsigned long inst;
- int carry;
- unsigned long pc_val;
- unsigned long status_reg;
+shifted_reg_val (unsigned long inst, int carry, unsigned long pc_val,
+ unsigned long status_reg)
{
unsigned long res, shift;
int rm = bits (inst, 0, 3);
unsigned long shifttype = bits (inst, 5, 6);
-
- if (bit(inst, 4))
+
+ if (bit (inst, 4))
{
int rs = bits (inst, 8, 11);
shift = (rs == 15 ? pc_val + 8 : read_register (rs)) & 0xFF;
}
else
shift = bits (inst, 7, 11);
-
- res = (rm == 15
+
+ res = (rm == 15
? ((pc_val | (ARM_PC_32 ? 0 : status_reg))
- + (bit (inst, 4) ? 12 : 8))
+ + (bit (inst, 4) ? 12 : 8))
: read_register (rm));
switch (shifttype)
{
- case 0: /* LSL */
+ case 0: /* LSL */
res = shift >= 32 ? 0 : res << shift;
break;
-
- case 1: /* LSR */
+
+ case 1: /* LSR */
res = shift >= 32 ? 0 : res >> shift;
break;
- case 2: /* ASR */
- if (shift >= 32) shift = 31;
+ case 2: /* ASR */
+ if (shift >= 32)
+ shift = 31;
res = ((res & 0x80000000L)
? ~((~res) >> shift) : res >> shift);
break;
- case 3: /* ROR/RRX */
+ case 3: /* ROR/RRX */
shift &= 31;
if (shift == 0)
res = (res >> 1) | (carry ? 0x80000000L : 0);
else
- res = (res >> shift) | (res << (32-shift));
+ res = (res >> shift) | (res << (32 - shift));
break;
}
return res & 0xffffffff;
}
-
/* Return number of 1-bits in VAL. */
static int
-bitcount (val)
- unsigned long val;
+bitcount (unsigned long val)
{
int nbits;
for (nbits = 0; val != 0; nbits++)
- val &= val - 1; /* delete rightmost 1-bit in val */
+ val &= val - 1; /* delete rightmost 1-bit in val */
return nbits;
}
-
static CORE_ADDR
-thumb_get_next_pc (pc)
- CORE_ADDR pc;
+thumb_get_next_pc (CORE_ADDR pc)
{
- unsigned long pc_val = ((unsigned long)pc) + 4; /* PC after prefetch */
+ unsigned long pc_val = ((unsigned long) pc) + 4; /* PC after prefetch */
unsigned short inst1 = read_memory_integer (pc, 2);
- CORE_ADDR nextpc = pc + 2; /* default is next instruction */
+ CORE_ADDR nextpc = pc + 2; /* default is next instruction */
unsigned long offset;
if ((inst1 & 0xff00) == 0xbd00) /* pop {rlist, pc} */
else if ((inst1 & 0xf000) == 0xd000) /* conditional branch */
{
unsigned long status = read_register (PS_REGNUM);
- unsigned long cond = bits (inst1, 8, 11);
+ unsigned long cond = bits (inst1, 8, 11);
if (cond != 0x0f && condition_true (cond, status)) /* 0x0f = SWI */
nextpc = pc_val + (sbits (inst1, 0, 7) << 1);
}
else if ((inst1 & 0xf800) == 0xf000) /* long branch with link */
{
unsigned short inst2 = read_memory_integer (pc + 2, 2);
- offset = (sbits (inst1, 0, 10) << 12) + (bits (inst2, 0, 10) << 1);
+ offset = (sbits (inst1, 0, 10) << 12) + (bits (inst2, 0, 10) << 1);
nextpc = pc_val + offset;
}
return nextpc;
}
-
CORE_ADDR
-arm_get_next_pc (pc)
- CORE_ADDR pc;
+arm_get_next_pc (CORE_ADDR pc)
{
unsigned long pc_val;
unsigned long this_instr;
pc_val = (unsigned long) pc;
this_instr = read_memory_integer (pc, 4);
status = read_register (PS_REGNUM);
- nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) (pc_val + 4); /* Default case */
+ nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) (pc_val + 4); /* Default case */
if (condition_true (bits (this_instr, 28, 31), status))
{
switch (bits (this_instr, 24, 27))
{
- case 0x0: case 0x1: /* data processing */
- case 0x2: case 0x3:
+ case 0x0:
+ case 0x1: /* data processing */
+ case 0x2:
+ case 0x3:
{
unsigned long operand1, operand2, result = 0;
unsigned long rn;
int c;
-
+
if (bits (this_instr, 12, 15) != 15)
break;
if (bits (this_instr, 22, 25) == 0
- && bits (this_instr, 4, 7) == 9) /* multiply */
+ && bits (this_instr, 4, 7) == 9) /* multiply */
error ("Illegal update to pc in instruction");
/* Multiply into PC */
c = (status & FLAG_C) ? 1 : 0;
rn = bits (this_instr, 16, 19);
operand1 = (rn == 15) ? pc_val + 8 : read_register (rn);
-
+
if (bit (this_instr, 25))
{
unsigned long immval = bits (this_instr, 0, 7);
unsigned long rotate = 2 * bits (this_instr, 8, 11);
- operand2 = ((immval >> rotate) | (immval << (32-rotate)))
- & 0xffffffff;
+ operand2 = ((immval >> rotate) | (immval << (32 - rotate)))
+ & 0xffffffff;
}
- else /* operand 2 is a shifted register */
+ else /* operand 2 is a shifted register */
operand2 = shifted_reg_val (this_instr, c, pc_val, status);
-
+
switch (bits (this_instr, 21, 24))
{
- case 0x0: /*and*/
+ case 0x0: /*and */
result = operand1 & operand2;
break;
- case 0x1: /*eor*/
+ case 0x1: /*eor */
result = operand1 ^ operand2;
break;
- case 0x2: /*sub*/
+ case 0x2: /*sub */
result = operand1 - operand2;
break;
- case 0x3: /*rsb*/
+ case 0x3: /*rsb */
result = operand2 - operand1;
break;
- case 0x4: /*add*/
+ case 0x4: /*add */
result = operand1 + operand2;
break;
- case 0x5: /*adc*/
+ case 0x5: /*adc */
result = operand1 + operand2 + c;
break;
- case 0x6: /*sbc*/
+ case 0x6: /*sbc */
result = operand1 - operand2 + c;
break;
- case 0x7: /*rsc*/
+ case 0x7: /*rsc */
result = operand2 - operand1 + c;
break;
- case 0x8: case 0x9: case 0xa: case 0xb: /* tst, teq, cmp, cmn */
+ case 0x8:
+ case 0x9:
+ case 0xa:
+ case 0xb: /* tst, teq, cmp, cmn */
result = (unsigned long) nextpc;
break;
- case 0xc: /*orr*/
+ case 0xc: /*orr */
result = operand1 | operand2;
break;
- case 0xd: /*mov*/
+ case 0xd: /*mov */
/* Always step into a function. */
result = operand2;
- break;
+ break;
- case 0xe: /*bic*/
+ case 0xe: /*bic */
result = operand1 & ~operand2;
break;
- case 0xf: /*mvn*/
+ case 0xf: /*mvn */
result = ~operand2;
break;
}
error ("Infinite loop detected");
break;
}
-
- case 0x4: case 0x5: /* data transfer */
- case 0x6: case 0x7:
+
+ case 0x4:
+ case 0x5: /* data transfer */
+ case 0x6:
+ case 0x7:
if (bit (this_instr, 20))
{
/* load */
if (bits (this_instr, 12, 15) == 15)
{
/* rd == pc */
- unsigned long rn;
+ unsigned long rn;
unsigned long base;
-
+
if (bit (this_instr, 22))
error ("Illegal update to pc in instruction");
/* pre-indexed */
int c = (status & FLAG_C) ? 1 : 0;
unsigned long offset =
- (bit (this_instr, 25)
- ? shifted_reg_val (this_instr, c, pc_val)
- : bits (this_instr, 0, 11));
+ (bit (this_instr, 25)
+ ? shifted_reg_val (this_instr, c, pc_val, status)
+ : bits (this_instr, 0, 11));
if (bit (this_instr, 23))
base += offset;
else
base -= offset;
}
- nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer ((CORE_ADDR) base,
+ nextpc = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer ((CORE_ADDR) base,
4);
-
+
nextpc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (nextpc);
if (nextpc == pc)
}
}
break;
-
- case 0x8: case 0x9: /* block transfer */
+
+ case 0x8:
+ case 0x9: /* block transfer */
if (bit (this_instr, 20))
{
/* LDM */
/* up */
unsigned long reglist = bits (this_instr, 0, 14);
offset = bitcount (reglist) * 4;
- if (bit (this_instr, 24)) /* pre */
+ if (bit (this_instr, 24)) /* pre */
offset += 4;
}
else if (bit (this_instr, 24))
offset = -4;
-
+
{
- unsigned long rn_val =
- read_register (bits (this_instr, 16, 19));
+ unsigned long rn_val =
+ read_register (bits (this_instr, 16, 19));
nextpc =
(CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer ((CORE_ADDR) (rn_val
- + offset),
+ + offset),
4);
}
nextpc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (nextpc);
}
}
break;
-
- case 0xb: /* branch & link */
- case 0xa: /* branch */
+
+ case 0xb: /* branch & link */
+ case 0xa: /* branch */
{
nextpc = BranchDest (pc, this_instr);
error ("Infinite loop detected");
break;
}
-
- case 0xc: case 0xd:
- case 0xe: /* coproc ops */
- case 0xf: /* SWI */
+
+ case 0xc:
+ case 0xd:
+ case 0xe: /* coproc ops */
+ case 0xf: /* SWI */
break;
default:
#include "libcoff.h"
static int
-gdb_print_insn_arm (memaddr, info)
- bfd_vma memaddr;
- disassemble_info * info;
+gdb_print_insn_arm (bfd_vma memaddr, disassemble_info *info)
{
if (arm_pc_is_thumb (memaddr))
{
- static asymbol * asym;
- static combined_entry_type ce;
- static struct coff_symbol_struct csym;
- static struct _bfd fake_bfd;
- static bfd_target fake_target;
+ static asymbol *asym;
+ static combined_entry_type ce;
+ static struct coff_symbol_struct csym;
+ static struct _bfd fake_bfd;
+ static bfd_target fake_target;
if (csym.native == NULL)
{
solely so that the code in print_insn_little_arm() and
print_insn_big_arm() in opcodes/arm-dis.c will detect the presence
of a Thumb symbol and switch to decoding Thumb instructions. */
-
- fake_target.flavour = bfd_target_coff_flavour;
- fake_bfd.xvec = & fake_target;
+
+ fake_target.flavour = bfd_target_coff_flavour;
+ fake_bfd.xvec = &fake_target;
ce.u.syment.n_sclass = C_THUMBEXTFUNC;
- csym.native = & ce;
- csym.symbol.the_bfd = & fake_bfd;
- csym.symbol.name = "fake";
- asym = (asymbol *) & csym;
+ csym.native = &ce;
+ csym.symbol.the_bfd = &fake_bfd;
+ csym.symbol.name = "fake";
+ asym = (asymbol *) & csym;
}
-
+
memaddr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (memaddr);
- info->symbols = & asym;
+ info->symbols = &asym;
}
else
info->symbols = NULL;
-
+
if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
return print_insn_big_arm (memaddr, info);
else
return print_insn_little_arm (memaddr, info);
}
-/* Sequence of bytes for breakpoint instruction. */
-#define ARM_LE_BREAKPOINT {0xFE,0xDE,0xFF,0xE7} /* Recognized illegal opcodes */
-#define ARM_BE_BREAKPOINT {0xE7,0xFF,0xDE,0xFE}
-#define THUMB_LE_BREAKPOINT {0xfe,0xdf}
-#define THUMB_BE_BREAKPOINT {0xdf,0xfe}
-
-/* The following has been superseded by BREAKPOINT_FOR_PC, but
- is defined merely to keep mem-break.c happy. */
-#define LITTLE_BREAKPOINT ARM_LE_BREAKPOINT
-#define BIG_BREAKPOINT ARM_BE_BREAKPOINT
-
-/* This function implements the BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC macro. It uses the program
- counter value to determine whether a 16- or 32-bit breakpoint should be
- used. It returns a pointer to a string of bytes that encode a breakpoint
- instruction, stores the length of the string to *lenptr, and adjusts pc
- (if necessary) to point to the actual memory location where the
+/* This function implements the BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC macro. It uses the
+ program counter value to determine whether a 16-bit or 32-bit
+ breakpoint should be used. It returns a pointer to a string of
+ bytes that encode a breakpoint instruction, stores the length of
+ the string to *lenptr, and adjusts the program counter (if
+ necessary) to point to the actual memory location where the
breakpoint should be inserted. */
unsigned char *
-arm_breakpoint_from_pc (pcptr, lenptr)
- CORE_ADDR * pcptr;
- int * lenptr;
+arm_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR *pcptr, int *lenptr)
{
if (arm_pc_is_thumb (*pcptr) || arm_pc_is_thumb_dummy (*pcptr))
{
if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
- {
- static char thumb_breakpoint[] = THUMB_BE_BREAKPOINT;
- *pcptr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (*pcptr);
- *lenptr = sizeof (thumb_breakpoint);
- return thumb_breakpoint;
- }
+ {
+ static char thumb_breakpoint[] = THUMB_BE_BREAKPOINT;
+ *pcptr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (*pcptr);
+ *lenptr = sizeof (thumb_breakpoint);
+ return thumb_breakpoint;
+ }
else
- {
- static char thumb_breakpoint[] = THUMB_LE_BREAKPOINT;
- *pcptr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (*pcptr);
- *lenptr = sizeof (thumb_breakpoint);
- return thumb_breakpoint;
- }
+ {
+ static char thumb_breakpoint[] = THUMB_LE_BREAKPOINT;
+ *pcptr = UNMAKE_THUMB_ADDR (*pcptr);
+ *lenptr = sizeof (thumb_breakpoint);
+ return thumb_breakpoint;
+ }
}
else
{
if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN)
- {
- static char arm_breakpoint[] = ARM_BE_BREAKPOINT;
- *lenptr = sizeof (arm_breakpoint);
- return arm_breakpoint;
- }
+ {
+ static char arm_breakpoint[] = ARM_BE_BREAKPOINT;
+ *lenptr = sizeof (arm_breakpoint);
+ return arm_breakpoint;
+ }
else
- {
- static char arm_breakpoint[] = ARM_LE_BREAKPOINT;
- *lenptr = sizeof (arm_breakpoint);
- return arm_breakpoint;
- }
+ {
+ static char arm_breakpoint[] = ARM_LE_BREAKPOINT;
+ *lenptr = sizeof (arm_breakpoint);
+ return arm_breakpoint;
+ }
}
}
-/* Return non-zero if the PC is inside a call thunk (aka stub or trampoline).
- This implements the IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE macro. */
+
+/* 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. */
+
+void
+arm_extract_return_value (struct type *type,
+ char regbuf[REGISTER_BYTES],
+ char *valbuf)
+{
+ if (TYPE_CODE_FLT == TYPE_CODE (type))
+ convert_from_extended (®buf[REGISTER_BYTE (F0_REGNUM)], valbuf);
+ else
+ memcpy (valbuf, ®buf[REGISTER_BYTE (A1_REGNUM)], TYPE_LENGTH (type));
+}
+
+/* Return non-zero if the PC is inside a thumb call thunk. */
int
-arm_in_call_stub (pc, name)
- CORE_ADDR pc;
- char * name;
+arm_in_call_stub (CORE_ADDR pc, char *name)
{
CORE_ADDR start_addr;
- /* Find the starting address of the function containing the PC. If the
- caller didn't give us a name, look it up at the same time. */
+ /* Find the starting address of the function containing the PC. If
+ the caller didn't give us a name, look it up at the same time. */
if (find_pc_partial_function (pc, name ? NULL : &name, &start_addr, NULL) == 0)
return 0;
return strncmp (name, "_call_via_r", 11) == 0;
}
-
-/* If PC is in a Thumb call or return stub, return the address of the target
- PC, which is in a register. The thunk functions are called _called_via_xx,
- where x is the register name. The possible names are r0-r9, sl, fp, ip,
- sp, and lr. */
+/* If PC is in a Thumb call or return stub, return the address of the
+ target PC, which is in a register. The thunk functions are called
+ _called_via_xx, where x is the register name. The possible names
+ are r0-r9, sl, fp, ip, sp, and lr. */
CORE_ADDR
-arm_skip_stub (pc)
- CORE_ADDR pc;
+arm_skip_stub (CORE_ADDR pc)
{
- char * name;
+ char *name;
CORE_ADDR start_addr;
/* Find the starting address and name of the function containing the PC. */
/* Call thunks always start with "_call_via_". */
if (strncmp (name, "_call_via_", 10) == 0)
{
- /* Use the name suffix to determine which register contains
- the target PC. */
- static char *table[15] =
- { "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7",
- "r8", "r9", "sl", "fp", "ip", "sp", "lr"
- };
+ /* Use the name suffix to determine which register contains the
+ target PC. */
+ static char *table[15] =
+ {"r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7",
+ "r8", "r9", "sl", "fp", "ip", "sp", "lr"
+ };
int regno;
for (regno = 0; regno <= 14; regno++)
if (strcmp (&name[10], table[regno]) == 0)
return read_register (regno);
}
- return 0; /* not a stub */
+
+ return 0; /* not a stub */
+}
+
+/* If the user changes the register disassembly flavor used for info register
+ and other commands, we have to also switch the flavor used in opcodes
+ for disassembly output.
+ This function is run in the set disassembly_flavor command, and does that. */
+
+static void
+set_disassembly_flavor_sfunc (char *args, int from_tty,
+ struct cmd_list_element *c)
+{
+ set_disassembly_flavor ();
+}
+\f
+static void
+set_disassembly_flavor (void)
+{
+ const char *setname, *setdesc, **regnames;
+ int numregs, j;
+
+ /* Find the flavor that the user wants in the opcodes table. */
+ int current = 0;
+ numregs = get_arm_regnames (current, &setname, &setdesc, ®names);
+ while ((disassembly_flavor != setname)
+ && (current < num_flavor_options))
+ get_arm_regnames (++current, &setname, &setdesc, ®names);
+ current_option = current;
+
+ /* Fill our copy. */
+ for (j = 0; j < numregs; j++)
+ arm_register_names[j] = (char *) regnames[j];
+
+ /* Adjust case. */
+ if (isupper (*regnames[PC_REGNUM]))
+ {
+ arm_register_names[FPS_REGNUM] = "FPS";
+ arm_register_names[PS_REGNUM] = "CPSR";
+ }
+ else
+ {
+ arm_register_names[FPS_REGNUM] = "fps";
+ arm_register_names[PS_REGNUM] = "cpsr";
+ }
+
+ /* Synchronize the disassembler. */
+ set_arm_regname_option (current);
}
+/* arm_othernames implements the "othernames" command. This is kind
+ of hacky, and I prefer the set-show disassembly-flavor which is
+ also used for the x86 gdb. I will keep this around, however, in
+ case anyone is actually using it. */
+
+static void
+arm_othernames (char *names, int n)
+{
+ /* Circle through the various flavors. */
+ current_option = (current_option + 1) % num_flavor_options;
+
+ disassembly_flavor = valid_flavors[current_option];
+ set_disassembly_flavor ();
+}
void
-_initialize_arm_tdep ()
+_initialize_arm_tdep (void)
{
+ struct ui_file *stb;
+ long length;
+ struct cmd_list_element *new_cmd;
+ const char *setname, *setdesc, **regnames;
+ int numregs, i, j;
+ static char *helptext;
+
tm_print_insn = gdb_print_insn_arm;
- add_com ("othernames", class_obscure, arm_othernames,
- "Switch to the other set of register names.");
+ /* Get the number of possible sets of register names defined in opcodes. */
+ num_flavor_options = get_arm_regname_num_options ();
+
+ /* Sync the opcode insn printer with our register viewer: */
+ parse_arm_disassembler_option ("reg-names-std");
+
+ /* Begin creating the help text. */
+ stb = mem_fileopen ();
+ fprintf_unfiltered (stb, "Set the disassembly flavor.\n\
+The valid values are:\n");
+
+ /* Initialize the array that will be passed to add_set_enum_cmd(). */
+ valid_flavors = xmalloc ((num_flavor_options + 1) * sizeof (char *));
+ for (i = 0; i < num_flavor_options; i++)
+ {
+ numregs = get_arm_regnames (i, &setname, &setdesc, ®names);
+ valid_flavors[i] = (char *) setname;
+ fprintf_unfiltered (stb, "%s - %s\n", setname,
+ setdesc);
+ /* Copy the default names (if found) and synchronize disassembler. */
+ if (!strcmp (setname, "std"))
+ {
+ disassembly_flavor = (char *) setname;
+ current_option = i;
+ for (j = 0; j < numregs; j++)
+ arm_register_names[j] = (char *) regnames[j];
+ set_arm_regname_option (i);
+ }
+ }
+ /* Mark the end of valid options. */
+ valid_flavors[num_flavor_options] = NULL;
+
+ /* Finish the creation of the help text. */
+ fprintf_unfiltered (stb, "The default is \"std\".");
+ helptext = ui_file_xstrdup (stb, &length);
+ ui_file_delete (stb);
+
+ /* Add the disassembly-flavor command */
+ new_cmd = add_set_enum_cmd ("disassembly-flavor", no_class,
+ valid_flavors,
+ (char *) &disassembly_flavor,
+ helptext,
+ &setlist);
+ new_cmd->function.sfunc = set_disassembly_flavor_sfunc;
+ add_show_from_set (new_cmd, &showlist);
/* ??? Maybe this should be a boolean. */
add_show_from_set (add_set_cmd ("apcs32", no_class,
- var_zinteger, (char *)&arm_apcs_32,
+ var_zinteger, (char *) &arm_apcs_32,
"Set usage of ARM 32-bit mode.\n", &setlist),
- & showlist);
+ &showlist);
+
+ /* Add the deprecated "othernames" command */
+ add_com ("othernames", class_obscure, arm_othernames,
+ "Switch to the next set of register names.");
}
-/* Test whether the coff symbol specific value corresponds to a Thumb function */
+/* Test whether the coff symbol specific value corresponds to a Thumb
+ function. */
+
int
-coff_sym_is_thumb(int val)
+coff_sym_is_thumb (int val)
{
- return (val == C_THUMBEXT ||
- val == C_THUMBSTAT ||
- val == C_THUMBEXTFUNC ||
- val == C_THUMBSTATFUNC ||
- val == C_THUMBLABEL);
+ return (val == C_THUMBEXT ||
+ val == C_THUMBSTAT ||
+ val == C_THUMBEXTFUNC ||
+ val == C_THUMBSTATFUNC ||
+ val == C_THUMBLABEL);
}