binutils-gdb/gdb/riscv-tdep.h

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/* Target-dependent header for the RISC-V architecture, for GDB, the
GNU Debugger.
Copyright (C) 2018-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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 3 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.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#ifndef RISCV_TDEP_H
#define RISCV_TDEP_H
gdb/riscv: Add target description support This commit adds target description support for riscv. I've used the split feature approach for specifying the architectural features, and the CSR feature is auto-generated from the riscv-opc.h header file. If the target doesn't provide a suitable target description then GDB will build one by looking at the bfd headers. This commit does not implement target description creation for the Linux or FreeBSD native targets, both of these will need to add read_description methods into their respective target classes, which probe the target features, and then call riscv_create_target_description to build a suitable target description. Until this is done Linux and FreeBSD will get the same default target description based on the bfd that bare-metal targets get. I've only added feature descriptions for 32 and 64 bit registers, 128 bit registers (for RISC-V) are not supported in the reset of GDB yet. This commit removes the special reading of the MISA register in order to establish the target features, this was only used for figuring out the f-register size, and even that wasn't done consistently. We now rely on the target to tell us what size of registers it has (or look in the BFD as a last resort). The result of this is that we should now support RV64 targets with 32-bit float, though I have not extensively tested this combination yet. * Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add arch/riscv.o. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add arch/riscv.h. * arch/riscv.c: New file. * arch/riscv.h: New file. * configure.tgt: Add cpu_obs list of riscv, move riscv-tdep.o into this list, and add arch/riscv.o. * features/Makefile: Add riscv features. * features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-cpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-csr.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-csr.xml: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-fpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-cpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-csr.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-csr.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-fpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/rebuild-csr-xml.sh: New file. * riscv-tdep.c: Add 'arch/riscv.h' include. (riscv_gdb_reg_names): Delete. (csr_reggroup): New global. (struct riscv_register_alias): Delete. (struct riscv_register_feature): New structure. (riscv_register_aliases): Delete. (riscv_xreg_feature): New global. (riscv_freg_feature): New global. (riscv_virtual_feature): New global. (riscv_csr_feature): New global. (riscv_create_csr_aliases): New function. (riscv_read_misa_reg): Delete. (riscv_has_feature): Delete. (riscv_isa_xlen): Simplify, just return cached xlen. (riscv_isa_flen): Simplify, just return cached flen. (riscv_has_fp_abi): Update for changes in struct gdbarch_tdep. (riscv_register_name): Update to make use of tdesc_register_name. Look up xreg and freg names in the new globals riscv_xreg_feature and riscv_freg_feature. Don't supply csr aliases here. (riscv_fpreg_q_type): Delete. (riscv_register_type): Use tdesc_register_type in almost all cases, override the returned type in a few specific cases only. (riscv_print_one_register_info): Handle errors reading registers. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Use tdesc_register_in_reggroup_p for registers that are otherwise unknown to GDB. Also check the csr_reggroup. (riscv_print_registers_info): Remove assert about upper register number, and use gdbarch_register_reggroup_p instead of short-cutting. (riscv_find_default_target_description): New function. (riscv_check_tdesc_feature): New function. (riscv_add_reggroups): New function. (riscv_setup_register_aliases): New function. (riscv_init_reggroups): New function. (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Add calls to setup CSR aliases, and setup register groups. Register new riscv debug variable. * riscv-tdep.h: Add 'arch/riscv.h' include. (struct gdbarch_tdep): Remove abi union, and add riscv_gdbarch_features field. Remove cached quad floating point type, and provide initialisation for double type field. * target-descriptions.c (maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd): Add riscv to the list of targets using the feature based target descriptions. * NEWS: Mention target description support. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (Standard Target Features): Add RISC-V Features sub-section.
2018-10-29 23:10:52 +08:00
#include "arch/riscv.h"
#include "gdbarch.h"
gdb/riscv: Add target description support This commit adds target description support for riscv. I've used the split feature approach for specifying the architectural features, and the CSR feature is auto-generated from the riscv-opc.h header file. If the target doesn't provide a suitable target description then GDB will build one by looking at the bfd headers. This commit does not implement target description creation for the Linux or FreeBSD native targets, both of these will need to add read_description methods into their respective target classes, which probe the target features, and then call riscv_create_target_description to build a suitable target description. Until this is done Linux and FreeBSD will get the same default target description based on the bfd that bare-metal targets get. I've only added feature descriptions for 32 and 64 bit registers, 128 bit registers (for RISC-V) are not supported in the reset of GDB yet. This commit removes the special reading of the MISA register in order to establish the target features, this was only used for figuring out the f-register size, and even that wasn't done consistently. We now rely on the target to tell us what size of registers it has (or look in the BFD as a last resort). The result of this is that we should now support RV64 targets with 32-bit float, though I have not extensively tested this combination yet. * Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add arch/riscv.o. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add arch/riscv.h. * arch/riscv.c: New file. * arch/riscv.h: New file. * configure.tgt: Add cpu_obs list of riscv, move riscv-tdep.o into this list, and add arch/riscv.o. * features/Makefile: Add riscv features. * features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-cpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-csr.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-csr.xml: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-fpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-cpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-csr.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-csr.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-fpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/rebuild-csr-xml.sh: New file. * riscv-tdep.c: Add 'arch/riscv.h' include. (riscv_gdb_reg_names): Delete. (csr_reggroup): New global. (struct riscv_register_alias): Delete. (struct riscv_register_feature): New structure. (riscv_register_aliases): Delete. (riscv_xreg_feature): New global. (riscv_freg_feature): New global. (riscv_virtual_feature): New global. (riscv_csr_feature): New global. (riscv_create_csr_aliases): New function. (riscv_read_misa_reg): Delete. (riscv_has_feature): Delete. (riscv_isa_xlen): Simplify, just return cached xlen. (riscv_isa_flen): Simplify, just return cached flen. (riscv_has_fp_abi): Update for changes in struct gdbarch_tdep. (riscv_register_name): Update to make use of tdesc_register_name. Look up xreg and freg names in the new globals riscv_xreg_feature and riscv_freg_feature. Don't supply csr aliases here. (riscv_fpreg_q_type): Delete. (riscv_register_type): Use tdesc_register_type in almost all cases, override the returned type in a few specific cases only. (riscv_print_one_register_info): Handle errors reading registers. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Use tdesc_register_in_reggroup_p for registers that are otherwise unknown to GDB. Also check the csr_reggroup. (riscv_print_registers_info): Remove assert about upper register number, and use gdbarch_register_reggroup_p instead of short-cutting. (riscv_find_default_target_description): New function. (riscv_check_tdesc_feature): New function. (riscv_add_reggroups): New function. (riscv_setup_register_aliases): New function. (riscv_init_reggroups): New function. (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Add calls to setup CSR aliases, and setup register groups. Register new riscv debug variable. * riscv-tdep.h: Add 'arch/riscv.h' include. (struct gdbarch_tdep): Remove abi union, and add riscv_gdbarch_features field. Remove cached quad floating point type, and provide initialisation for double type field. * target-descriptions.c (maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd): Add riscv to the list of targets using the feature based target descriptions. * NEWS: Mention target description support. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (Standard Target Features): Add RISC-V Features sub-section.
2018-10-29 23:10:52 +08:00
/* RiscV register numbers. */
enum
{
RISCV_ZERO_REGNUM = 0, /* Read-only register, always 0. */
RISCV_RA_REGNUM = 1, /* Return Address. */
RISCV_SP_REGNUM = 2, /* Stack Pointer. */
RISCV_GP_REGNUM = 3, /* Global Pointer. */
RISCV_TP_REGNUM = 4, /* Thread Pointer. */
RISCV_FP_REGNUM = 8, /* Frame Pointer. */
RISCV_A0_REGNUM = 10, /* First argument. */
RISCV_A1_REGNUM = 11, /* Second argument. */
RISCV_A7_REGNUM = 17, /* Seventh argument. */
RISCV_PC_REGNUM = 32, /* Program Counter. */
RISCV_NUM_INTEGER_REGS = 32,
RISCV_FIRST_FP_REGNUM = 33, /* First Floating Point Register */
RISCV_FA0_REGNUM = 43,
RISCV_FA1_REGNUM = RISCV_FA0_REGNUM + 1,
RISCV_LAST_FP_REGNUM = 64, /* Last Floating Point Register */
RISCV_FIRST_CSR_REGNUM = 65, /* First CSR */
[PATCH v2 0/9] RISC-V: Support version controling for ISA standard extensions and CSR 1. Remove the -mriscv-isa-version and --with-riscv-isa-version options. We can still use -march to choose the version for each extensions, so there is no need to add these. 2. Change the arguments of options from [1p9|1p9p1|...] to [1.9|1.9.1|...]. Unlike the architecture string has specified by spec, ther is no need to do the same thing for options. 3. Spilt the patches to reduce the burdens of review. [PATCH 3/7] RISC-V: Support new GAS options and configure options to set ISA versions to [PATCH v2 3/9] RISC-V: Support GAS option -misa-spec to set ISA versions [PATCH v2 4/9] RISC-V: Support configure options to set ISA versions by default. [PATCH 4/7] RISC-V: Support version checking for CSR according to privilege version. to [PATCH v2 5/9] RISC-V: Support version checking for CSR according to privilege spec version. [PATCH v2 6/9] RISC-V: Support configure option to choose the privilege spec version. 4. Use enum class rather than string to compare the choosen ISA spec in opcodes/riscv-opc.c. The behavior is same as comparing the choosen privilege spec. include * opcode/riscv.h: Include "bfd.h" to support bfd_boolean. (enum riscv_isa_spec_class): New enum class. All supported ISA spec belong to one of the class (struct riscv_ext_version): New structure holds version information for the specific ISA. * opcode/riscv-opc.h (DECLARE_CSR): There are two version information, define_version and abort_version. The define_version means which privilege spec is started to define the CSR, and the abort_version means which privilege spec is started to abort the CSR. If the CSR is valid for the newest spec, then the abort_version should be PRIV_SPEC_CLASS_DRAFT. (DECLARE_CSR_ALIAS): Same as DECLARE_CSR, but only for the obselete CSR. * opcode/riscv.h (enum riscv_priv_spec_class): New enum class. Define the current supported privilege spec versions. (struct riscv_csr_extra): Add new fields to store more information about the CSR. We use these information to find the suitable CSR address when user choosing a specific privilege spec. binutils * dwarf.c: Updated since DECLARE_CSR is changed. opcodes * riscv-opc.c (riscv_ext_version_table): The table used to store all information about the supported spec and the corresponding ISA versions. Currently, only Zicsr is supported to verify the correctness of Z sub extension settings. Others will be supported in the future patches. (struct isa_spec_t, isa_specs): List for all supported ISA spec classes and the corresponding strings. (riscv_get_isa_spec_class): New function. Get the corresponding ISA spec class by giving a ISA spec string. * riscv-opc.c (struct priv_spec_t): New structure. (struct priv_spec_t priv_specs): List for all supported privilege spec classes and the corresponding strings. (riscv_get_priv_spec_class): New function. Get the corresponding privilege spec class by giving a spec string. (riscv_get_priv_spec_name): New function. Get the corresponding privilege spec string by giving a CSR version class. * riscv-dis.c: Updated since DECLARE_CSR is changed. * riscv-dis.c: Add new disassembler option -Mpriv-spec to dump the CSR according to the chosen version. Build a hash table riscv_csr_hash to store the valid CSR for the chosen pirv verison. Dump the direct CSR address rather than it's name if it is invalid. (parse_riscv_dis_option_without_args): New function. Parse the options without arguments. (parse_riscv_dis_option): Call parse_riscv_dis_option_without_args to parse the options without arguments first, and then handle the options with arguments. Add the new option -Mpriv-spec, which has argument. * riscv-dis.c (print_riscv_disassembler_options): Add description about the new OBJDUMP option. ld * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-01.d: Updated priv attributes according to the -mpriv-spec option. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-02.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-arch-03.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-priv-spec-a.s: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-priv-spec-b.s: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-priv-spec.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-stack-align.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-strict-align-01.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-strict-align-02.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-strict-align-03.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-strict-align-04.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-riscv-elf/attr-merge-strict-align-05.d: Likewise. bfd * elfxx-riscv.h (riscv_parse_subset_t): Add new callback function get_default_version. It is used to find the default version for the specific extension. * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_parsing_subset_version): Remove the parameters default_major_version and default_minor_version. Add new bfd_boolean parameter *use_default_version. Set it to TRUE if we need to call the callback rps->get_default_version to find the default version. (riscv_parse_std_ext): Call rps->get_default_version if we fail to find the default version in riscv_parsing_subset_version, and then call riscv_add_subset to add the subset into subset list. (riscv_parse_prefixed_ext): Likewise. (riscv_std_z_ext_strtab): Support Zicsr extensions. * elfnn-riscv.c (riscv_merge_std_ext): Use strcasecmp to compare the strings rather than characters. riscv_merge_arch_attr_info): The callback function get_default_version is only needed for assembler, so set it to NULL int the linker. * elfxx-riscv.c (riscv_estimate_digit): Remove the static. * elfxx-riscv.h: Updated. gas * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-read-only-01.s: Updated. * config/tc-riscv.c (default_arch_with_ext, default_isa_spec): Static variables which are used to set the ISA extensions. You can use -march (or ELF build attributes) and -misa-spec to set them, respectively. (ext_version_hash): The hash table used to handle the extensions with versions. (init_ext_version_hash): Initialize the ext_version_hash according to riscv_ext_version_table. (riscv_get_default_ext_version): The callback function of riscv_parse_subset_t. According to the choosed ISA spec, get the default version for the specific extension. (riscv_set_arch): Set the callback function. (enum options, struct option md_longopts): Add new option -misa-spec. (md_parse_option): Do not call riscv_set_arch for -march. We will call it later in riscv_after_parse_args. Call riscv_get_isa_spec_class to set default_isa_spec class. (riscv_after_parse_args): Call init_ext_version_hash to initialize the ext_version_hash, and then call riscv_set_arch to set the architecture with versions according to default_arch_with_ext. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-02.d: Set 0p0 as default version for x extensions. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-03.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-09.d: New testcase. For i-ext, we already set it's version to 2p1 by march, so no need to use the default 2p2 version. For m-ext, we do not set the version by -march and ELF arch attribute, so set the default 2p0 to it. For zicsr, it is not defined in ISA spec 2p2, so set 0p0 to it. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-10.d: New testcase. The version of zicsr is 2p0 according to ISA spec 20191213. * config/tc-riscv.c (DEFAULT_RISCV_ARCH_WITH_EXT) (DEFAULT_RISCV_ISA_SPEC): Default configure option settings. You can set them by configure options --with-arch and --with-isa-spec, respectively. (riscv_set_default_isa_spec): New function used to set the default ISA spec. (md_parse_option): Call riscv_set_default_isa_spec rather than call riscv_get_isa_spec_class directly. (riscv_after_parse_args): If the -isa-spec is not set, then we set the default ISA spec according to DEFAULT_RISCV_ISA_SPEC by calling riscv_set_default_isa_spec. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-01.d: Add -misa-spec=2.2, since the --with-isa-spec may be set to different ISA spec. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-02.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-03.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-04.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-05.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-06.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-07.d: Likewise. * configure.ac: Add configure options, --with-arch and --with-isa-spec. * configure: Regenerated. * config.in: Regenerated. * config/tc-riscv.c (default_priv_spec): Static variable which is used to check if the CSR is valid for the chosen privilege spec. You can use -mpriv-spec to set it. (enum reg_class): We now get the CSR address from csr_extra_hash rather than reg_names_hash. Therefore, move RCLASS_CSR behind RCLASS_MAX. (riscv_init_csr_hashes): Only need to initialize one hash table csr_extra_hash. (riscv_csr_class_check): Change the return type to void. Don't check the ISA dependency if -mcsr-check isn't set. (riscv_csr_version_check): New function. Check and find the CSR address from csr_extra_hash, according to default_priv_spec. Report warning for the invalid CSR if -mcsr-check is set. (reg_csr_lookup_internal): Updated. (reg_lookup_internal): Likewise. (md_begin): Updated since DECLARE_CSR and DECLARE_CSR_ALIAS are changed. (enum options, struct option md_longopts): Add new GAS option -mpriv-spec. (md_parse_option): Call riscv_set_default_priv_version to set default_priv_spec. (riscv_after_parse_args): If -mpriv-spec isn't set, then set the default privilege spec to the newest one. (enum riscv_csr_class, struct riscv_csr_extra): Move them to include/opcode/riscv.h. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-fext.d: This test case just want to check the ISA dependency for CSR, so fix the spec version by adding -mpriv-spec=1.11. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-fext.l: Likewise. There are some version warnings for the test case. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-read-only-01.d: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-read-only-01.l: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-read-only-02.d: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-rv32-only.d: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-rv32-only.l: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9.d: New test case. Check whether the CSR is valid when privilege version 1.9 is choosed. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9.l: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9p1.d: New test case. Check whether the CSR is valid when privilege version 1.9.1 is choosed. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9p1.l: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p10.d: New test case. Check whether the CSR is valid when privilege version 1.10 is choosed. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p10.l: Likewise. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p11.d: New test case. Check whether the CSR is valid when privilege version 1.11 is choosed. * gas/testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p11.l: Likewise. * config/tc-riscv.c (DEFAULT_RISCV_ISA_SPEC): Default configure option setting. You can set it by configure option --with-priv-spec. (riscv_set_default_priv_spec): New function used to set the default privilege spec. (md_parse_option): Call riscv_set_default_priv_spec rather than call riscv_get_priv_spec_class directly. (riscv_after_parse_args): If -mpriv-spec isn't set, then we set the default privilege spec according to DEFAULT_RISCV_PRIV_SPEC by calling riscv_set_default_priv_spec. * testsuite/gas/riscv/csr-dw-regnums.d: Add -mpriv-spec=1.11, since the --with-priv-spec may be set to different privilege spec. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg.d: Likewise. * configure.ac: Add configure option --with-priv-spec. * configure: Regenerated. * config.in: Regenerated. * config/tc-riscv.c (explicit_attr): Rename explicit_arch_attr to explicit_attr. Set it to TRUE if any ELF attribute is found. (riscv_set_default_priv_spec): Try to set the default_priv_spec if the priv attributes are set. (md_assemble): Set the default_priv_spec according to the priv attributes when we start to assemble instruction. (riscv_write_out_attrs): Rename riscv_write_out_arch_attr to riscv_write_out_attrs. Update the arch and priv attributes. If we don't set the corresponding ELF attributes, then try to output the default ones. (riscv_set_public_attributes): If any ELF attribute or -march-attr options is set (explicit_attr is TRUE), then call riscv_write_out_attrs to update the arch and priv attributes. (s_riscv_attribute): Make sure all arch and priv attributes are set before any instruction. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-01.d: Update the priv attributes if any ELF attribute or -march-attr is set. If the priv attributes are not set, then try to update them by the default setting (-mpriv-spec or --with-priv-spec). * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-02.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-03.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-04.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-06.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-07.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-08.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-09.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-10.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-unknown.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-05.d: Likewise. Also, the priv spec set by priv attributes must be supported. * testsuite/gas/riscv/attribute-05.s: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9.d: Likewise. Updated priv attributes according to the -mpriv-spec option. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p9p1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p10.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-fail-version-1p11.d: Likewise. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg.d: Removed. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p9.d: New test case. Dump the CSR according to the priv spec 1.9. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p9p1.d: New test case. Dump the CSR according to the priv spec 1.9.1. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p10.d: New test case. Dump the CSR according to the priv spec 1.10. * testsuite/gas/riscv/priv-reg-version-1p11.d: New test case. Dump the CSR according to the priv spec 1.11. * config/tc-riscv.c (md_show_usage): Add descriptions about the new GAS options. * doc/c-riscv.texi: Likewise.
2020-05-21 00:22:48 +08:00
#define DECLARE_CSR(name, num, class, define_version, abort_version) \
RISCV_ ## num ## _REGNUM = RISCV_FIRST_CSR_REGNUM + num,
#include "opcode/riscv-opc.h"
#undef DECLARE_CSR
RISCV_LAST_CSR_REGNUM = 4160,
RISCV_CSR_LEGACY_MISA_REGNUM = 0xf10 + RISCV_FIRST_CSR_REGNUM,
RISCV_PRIV_REGNUM = 4161,
gdb/riscv: add support for vector registers in target descriptions This commit adds support to RISC-V GDB for vector registers in the incoming target description. The vector registers should be described in a feature called "org.gnu.gdb.riscv.vector", and should contain the register v0 to v31. There's no restriction on the size or type of these registers, so the target description can set these up as it requires. However, if the target feature is present then all of the registers must be present, and they must all be the same size, these requirements are, I believe, inline with the RISC-V vector extension. The DWARF register numbers for the vector registers have been added, and the code to map between GDB's internal numbering and the DWARF numbering has been updated. I have not yet added a feature/riscv/*.xml file for the vector extension, the consequence of this is that we can't, right now, detect vector registers on a native target, this patch is all about supporting vectors on a remote target. It is worth noting that I don't actually have access to a RISC-V target with vectors, so the only testing that this patch has had has been done using 'set tdesc filename ....' to load a target description to which I have manually added the vector feature. This has shown that the vector register feature can be successfully parsed, and that the registers show up in the expected register groups. Additionally, the RISC-V vector extension is currently at v0.10, which is also the v1.0 draft release. However, this extension is not yet finalised. It is possible (but unlikely I think) that the register set could change between now and the final release of the vector extension. If this were to happen then we would potentially end up changing the requirements for the new org.gnu.gdb.riscv.vector feature. I really don't think it is likely that the register set will change this late in the process, and even if it did, changing the feature requirements will not be a problem as far as I am concerned (when the alternative is GDB just continues without this feature for now). gdb/ChangeLog: * NEWS: Mention new target feature name. * arch/riscv.c (riscv_create_target_description): GDB doesn't currently create target descriptions containing vector registers. * arch/riscv.h (struct riscv_gdbarch_features) <vlen>: New member variable. <operator==>: Also compare vlen. <hash>: Also include vlen. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_feature_name_vector): New static global. (struct riscv_vector_feature): New struct. (riscv_vector_feature): New static global. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Ensure vector registers are part of the 'all' group, and part of the 'vector' group. (riscv_dwarf_reg_to_regnum): Handle vector registers. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Check vector register feature. * riscv-tdep.h: Add vector registers to GDB's internal register numbers, and to the DWARF register numbers. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (RISC-V Features): Mention vector register feature.
2021-05-04 18:41:09 +08:00
RISCV_V0_REGNUM,
RISCV_V31_REGNUM = RISCV_V0_REGNUM + 31,
RISCV_LAST_REGNUM = RISCV_V31_REGNUM
};
/* RiscV DWARF register numbers. */
enum
{
RISCV_DWARF_REGNUM_X0 = 0,
RISCV_DWARF_REGNUM_X31 = 31,
RISCV_DWARF_REGNUM_F0 = 32,
RISCV_DWARF_REGNUM_F31 = 63,
gdb/riscv: add support for vector registers in target descriptions This commit adds support to RISC-V GDB for vector registers in the incoming target description. The vector registers should be described in a feature called "org.gnu.gdb.riscv.vector", and should contain the register v0 to v31. There's no restriction on the size or type of these registers, so the target description can set these up as it requires. However, if the target feature is present then all of the registers must be present, and they must all be the same size, these requirements are, I believe, inline with the RISC-V vector extension. The DWARF register numbers for the vector registers have been added, and the code to map between GDB's internal numbering and the DWARF numbering has been updated. I have not yet added a feature/riscv/*.xml file for the vector extension, the consequence of this is that we can't, right now, detect vector registers on a native target, this patch is all about supporting vectors on a remote target. It is worth noting that I don't actually have access to a RISC-V target with vectors, so the only testing that this patch has had has been done using 'set tdesc filename ....' to load a target description to which I have manually added the vector feature. This has shown that the vector register feature can be successfully parsed, and that the registers show up in the expected register groups. Additionally, the RISC-V vector extension is currently at v0.10, which is also the v1.0 draft release. However, this extension is not yet finalised. It is possible (but unlikely I think) that the register set could change between now and the final release of the vector extension. If this were to happen then we would potentially end up changing the requirements for the new org.gnu.gdb.riscv.vector feature. I really don't think it is likely that the register set will change this late in the process, and even if it did, changing the feature requirements will not be a problem as far as I am concerned (when the alternative is GDB just continues without this feature for now). gdb/ChangeLog: * NEWS: Mention new target feature name. * arch/riscv.c (riscv_create_target_description): GDB doesn't currently create target descriptions containing vector registers. * arch/riscv.h (struct riscv_gdbarch_features) <vlen>: New member variable. <operator==>: Also compare vlen. <hash>: Also include vlen. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_feature_name_vector): New static global. (struct riscv_vector_feature): New struct. (riscv_vector_feature): New static global. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Ensure vector registers are part of the 'all' group, and part of the 'vector' group. (riscv_dwarf_reg_to_regnum): Handle vector registers. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Check vector register feature. * riscv-tdep.h: Add vector registers to GDB's internal register numbers, and to the DWARF register numbers. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (RISC-V Features): Mention vector register feature.
2021-05-04 18:41:09 +08:00
RISCV_DWARF_REGNUM_V0 = 96,
RISCV_DWARF_REGNUM_V31 = 127,
RISCV_DWARF_FIRST_CSR = 4096,
RISCV_DWARF_LAST_CSR = 8191,
};
/* RISC-V specific per-architecture information. */
struct riscv_gdbarch_tdep : gdbarch_tdep_base
{
gdb/riscv: Split ISA and ABI features The goal of this commit is to allow RV64 binaries compiled for the 'F' extension to run on a target that supports both the 'F' and 'D' extensions. The 'D' extension depends on the 'F' extension and chapter 9 of the RISC-V ISA manual implies that running a program compiled for 'F' on a 'D' target should be fine. To support this the gdbarch now holds two feature sets, one represents the features that are present on the target, and one represents the features requested in the ELF flags. The existing error checks are relaxed slightly to allow binaries compiled for 32-bit 'F' extension to run on targets with the 64-bit 'D' extension. A new set of functions called riscv_abi_{xlen,flen} are added to compliment the existing riscv_isa_{xlen,flen}, and some callers to the isa functions now call the abi functions when that is appropriate. In riscv_call_arg_struct two asserts are removed, these asserts no longer make sense. The asserts were both like this: gdb_assert (TYPE_LENGTH (ainfo->type) <= (cinfo->flen + cinfo->xlen)); And were made in two cases, when passing structures like these: struct { integer field1; float field2; }; or, struct { float field1; integer field2; }; When running on an RV64 target which only has 32-bit float then the integer field could be 64-bits, while if the float field is 32-bits the overall size of the structure can be 128-bits (with 32-bits of padding). In this case the assertion would fail, however, the code isn't incorrect, so its safe to just remove the assertion. This was tested by running on an RV64IMFDC target using a compiler configured for RV64IMFC, and comparing the results with those obtained when using a compiler configured for RV64IMFDC. The only regressions I see (now) are in gdb.base/store.exp and are related too different code generation choices GCC makes between the two targets. Finally, this commit does not make any attempt to support running binaries compiled for RV32 on an RV64 target, though nothing in here should prevent that being supported in the future. gdb/ChangeLog: * arch/riscv.h (struct riscv_gdbarch_features) <hw_float_abi>: Delete. <operator==>: Update with for removed field. <hash>: Likewise. * riscv-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep) <features>: Renamed to... <isa_features>: ...this. <abi_features>: New field. (riscv_isa_flen): Update comment. (riscv_abi_xlen): New declaration. (riscv_abi_flen): New declaration. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_isa_xlen): Update to get answer from isa_features. (riscv_abi_xlen): New function. (riscv_isa_flen): Update to get answer from isa_features. (riscv_abi_flen): New function. (riscv_has_fp_abi): Update to get answer from abi_features. (riscv_call_info::riscv_call_info): Use abi xlen and flen, not isa xlen and flen. (riscv_call_info) <xlen, flen>: Update comment. (riscv_call_arg_struct): Remove invalid assertions (riscv_features_from_gdbarch_info): Update now hw_float_abi field is removed. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Gather isa features and abi features separately, ensure both match on the gdbarch when reusing an old gdbarch. Relax an error check to allow 32-bit abi float to run on a target with 64-bit float hardware.
2018-12-14 01:59:12 +08:00
/* Features about the target hardware that impact how the gdbarch is
configured. Two gdbarch instances are compatible only if this field
matches. */
struct riscv_gdbarch_features isa_features;
/* Features about the abi that impact how the gdbarch is configured. Two
gdbarch instances are compatible only if this field matches. */
struct riscv_gdbarch_features abi_features;
/* ISA-specific data types. */
gdb/riscv: Add target description support This commit adds target description support for riscv. I've used the split feature approach for specifying the architectural features, and the CSR feature is auto-generated from the riscv-opc.h header file. If the target doesn't provide a suitable target description then GDB will build one by looking at the bfd headers. This commit does not implement target description creation for the Linux or FreeBSD native targets, both of these will need to add read_description methods into their respective target classes, which probe the target features, and then call riscv_create_target_description to build a suitable target description. Until this is done Linux and FreeBSD will get the same default target description based on the bfd that bare-metal targets get. I've only added feature descriptions for 32 and 64 bit registers, 128 bit registers (for RISC-V) are not supported in the reset of GDB yet. This commit removes the special reading of the MISA register in order to establish the target features, this was only used for figuring out the f-register size, and even that wasn't done consistently. We now rely on the target to tell us what size of registers it has (or look in the BFD as a last resort). The result of this is that we should now support RV64 targets with 32-bit float, though I have not extensively tested this combination yet. * Makefile.in (ALL_TARGET_OBS): Add arch/riscv.o. (HFILES_NO_SRCDIR): Add arch/riscv.h. * arch/riscv.c: New file. * arch/riscv.h: New file. * configure.tgt: Add cpu_obs list of riscv, move riscv-tdep.o into this list, and add arch/riscv.o. * features/Makefile: Add riscv features. * features/riscv/32bit-cpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-cpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-csr.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-csr.xml: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-fpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/32bit-fpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-cpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-cpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-csr.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-csr.xml: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-fpu.c: New file. * features/riscv/64bit-fpu.xml: New file. * features/riscv/rebuild-csr-xml.sh: New file. * riscv-tdep.c: Add 'arch/riscv.h' include. (riscv_gdb_reg_names): Delete. (csr_reggroup): New global. (struct riscv_register_alias): Delete. (struct riscv_register_feature): New structure. (riscv_register_aliases): Delete. (riscv_xreg_feature): New global. (riscv_freg_feature): New global. (riscv_virtual_feature): New global. (riscv_csr_feature): New global. (riscv_create_csr_aliases): New function. (riscv_read_misa_reg): Delete. (riscv_has_feature): Delete. (riscv_isa_xlen): Simplify, just return cached xlen. (riscv_isa_flen): Simplify, just return cached flen. (riscv_has_fp_abi): Update for changes in struct gdbarch_tdep. (riscv_register_name): Update to make use of tdesc_register_name. Look up xreg and freg names in the new globals riscv_xreg_feature and riscv_freg_feature. Don't supply csr aliases here. (riscv_fpreg_q_type): Delete. (riscv_register_type): Use tdesc_register_type in almost all cases, override the returned type in a few specific cases only. (riscv_print_one_register_info): Handle errors reading registers. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Use tdesc_register_in_reggroup_p for registers that are otherwise unknown to GDB. Also check the csr_reggroup. (riscv_print_registers_info): Remove assert about upper register number, and use gdbarch_register_reggroup_p instead of short-cutting. (riscv_find_default_target_description): New function. (riscv_check_tdesc_feature): New function. (riscv_add_reggroups): New function. (riscv_setup_register_aliases): New function. (riscv_init_reggroups): New function. (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Add calls to setup CSR aliases, and setup register groups. Register new riscv debug variable. * riscv-tdep.h: Add 'arch/riscv.h' include. (struct gdbarch_tdep): Remove abi union, and add riscv_gdbarch_features field. Remove cached quad floating point type, and provide initialisation for double type field. * target-descriptions.c (maint_print_c_tdesc_cmd): Add riscv to the list of targets using the feature based target descriptions. * NEWS: Mention target description support. gdb/doc/ChangeLog: * gdb.texinfo (Standard Target Features): Add RISC-V Features sub-section.
2018-10-29 23:10:52 +08:00
struct type *riscv_fpreg_d_type = nullptr;
gdb/riscv: Record information about unknown tdesc registers Making use of the previous commit, record information about unknown registers in the target description, and use this to resolve two issues. 1. Some targets (QEMU) are reporting three register fflags, frm, and fcsr, twice, once in the FPU feature, and once in the CSR feature. GDB does create two registers with identical names, but this is (sort of) fine, we only ever use the first one, and as both registers access the same target state things basically work OK. The only real problem is that the register names show up twice in 'info registers all' output. In this commit we spot the duplicates of these registers and then return NULL when asked for the name of these registers. This causes GDB to hide these registers from the user, fixing this problem. 2. Some targets (QEMU) advertise CSRs that GDB then can't read. The problem is these targets also say these CSRs are part of the save/restore register groups. This means that before an inferior call GDB tries to save all of these CSRs, and a failure to read one causes the inferior call to be abandoned. We already work around this issue to some degree, known CSRs are removed from the save/restore groups, despite what the target might say. However, any unknown CSRs are (currently) not removed in this way. After this commit we keep a log of the register numbers for all unknown CSRs, then when asked about the register groups, we override the group information for unknown CSRs, removing them from the save and restore groups. gdb/ChangeLog: * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_register_name): Return NULL for duplicate fflags, frm, and fcsr registers. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Remove unknown CSRs from save and restore groups. (riscv_tdesc_unknown_reg): New function. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Pass riscv_tdesc_unknown_reg to tdesc_use_registers. * riscv-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep): Add unknown_csrs_first_regnum, unknown_csrs_count, duplicate_fflags_regnum, duplicate_frm_regnum, and duplicate_fcsr_regnum fields. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.arch/riscv-tdesc-regs.exp: Extend test case.
2020-06-16 21:53:12 +08:00
gdb/riscv: better support for fflags and frm registers First, some background on the RISC-V registers fflags, frm, and fcsr. These three registers all relate to the floating-point status and control mechanism on RISC-V. The fcsr is the floatint-point control status register, and consists of two parts, the flags (bits 0 to 4) and the rounding-mode (bits 5 to 7). The fcsr register is just one of many control/status registers (or CSRs) available on RISC-V. The fflags and frm registers are also CSRs. These CSRs are aliases for the relevant parts of the fcsr register. So fflags is an alias for bits 0 to 4 of fcsr, and frm is an alias for bits 5 to 7 of fcsr. This means that a user can change the floating-point rounding mode either, by writing a complete new value into fcsr, or by writing just the rounding mode into frm. How this impacts on GDB is like this: a target description could, legitimately include all three registers, fcsr, fflags, and frm. The QEMU target currently does this, and this makes sense. The target is emulating the complete system, and has all three CSRs available, so why not tell GDB about this. In contrast, the RISC-V native Linux target only has access to the fcsr. This is because the ptrace data structure that the kernel uses for reading and writing floating point state only contains a copy of the fcsr, after all, this one field really contains both the fflags and frm fields, so why carry around duplicate data. So, we might expect that the target description for the RISC-V native Linux GDB would only contain the fcsr register. Unfortunately, this is not the case. The RISC-V native Linux target uses GDB's builtin target descriptions by calling riscv_lookup_target_description, this will then add an fpu feature from gdb/features/riscv, either 32bit-fpu.xml or 64bit-fpu.xml. The problem, is that these features include an entry for fcsr, fflags, and frm. This means that GDB expects the target to handle reading and writing these registers. And the RISC-V native Linux target currently doesn't. In riscv_linux_nat_target::store_registers and riscv_linux_nat_target::fetch_registers only the fcsr register is handled, this means that, for RISC-V native Linux, the fflags and frm registers always show up as <unavailable> - they are present in the target description, but the target doesn't know how to access the registers. A final complication relating to these floating pointer CSRs is which target description feature the registers appear in. These registers are CSRs, so it would seem sensible that these registers should appear in the CSR target description feature. However, when I first added RISC-V target description support, I was using a RISC-V simulator that didn't support any CSRs other than the floating point related ones. This simulator bundled all the float related CSRs into the fpu target feature. This didn't feel completely unreasonable to me, and so I had GDB check for these registers in either target feature. In this commit I make some changes relating to how GDB handles the three floating point CSR: 1. Remove fflags and frm from 32bit-fpu.xml and 64bit-fpu.xml. This means that the default RISC-V target description (which RISC-V native FreeBSD), and the target descriptions created for RISC-V native Linux, will not include these registers. There's nothing stopping some other target (e.g. QEMU) from continuing to include all three of these CSRs, the code in riscv-tdep.c continues to check for all three of these registers, and will handle them correctly if they are present. 2. If a target supplied fcsr, but does not supply fflags and/or frm, then RISC-V GDB will now create two pseudo registers in order to emulate the two missing CSRs. These new pseudo-registers do the obvious thing of just reading and writing the fcsr register. 3. With the new pseudo-registers we can no longer make use of the GDB register numbers RISCV_CSR_FFLAGS_REGNUM and RISCV_CSR_FRM_REGNUM. These will be the numbers used if the target supplies the registers in its target description, but, if GDB falls back to using pseudo-registers, then new, unique numbers will be used. To handle this I've added riscv_gdbarch_tdep::fflags_regnum and riscv_gdbarch_tdep::frm_regnum, I've then updated the RISC-V code to compare against these fields. When adding the pseudo-register support, it is important that the pseudo-register numbers are calculated after the call to tdesc_use_registers. This is because we don't know the total number of physical registers until after this call, and the psuedo-register numbers must follow on from the real (target supplied) registers. I've updated some tests to include more testing of the fflags and frm registers, as well as adding a new test.
2022-08-12 01:38:53 +08:00
/* The location of these registers, set to -2 by default so we don't
match against -1 which is frequently used to mean "all registers",
e.g. in the regcache supply/collect code. */
int fflags_regnum = -2;
int frm_regnum = -2;
gdb/riscv: Record information about unknown tdesc registers Making use of the previous commit, record information about unknown registers in the target description, and use this to resolve two issues. 1. Some targets (QEMU) are reporting three register fflags, frm, and fcsr, twice, once in the FPU feature, and once in the CSR feature. GDB does create two registers with identical names, but this is (sort of) fine, we only ever use the first one, and as both registers access the same target state things basically work OK. The only real problem is that the register names show up twice in 'info registers all' output. In this commit we spot the duplicates of these registers and then return NULL when asked for the name of these registers. This causes GDB to hide these registers from the user, fixing this problem. 2. Some targets (QEMU) advertise CSRs that GDB then can't read. The problem is these targets also say these CSRs are part of the save/restore register groups. This means that before an inferior call GDB tries to save all of these CSRs, and a failure to read one causes the inferior call to be abandoned. We already work around this issue to some degree, known CSRs are removed from the save/restore groups, despite what the target might say. However, any unknown CSRs are (currently) not removed in this way. After this commit we keep a log of the register numbers for all unknown CSRs, then when asked about the register groups, we override the group information for unknown CSRs, removing them from the save and restore groups. gdb/ChangeLog: * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_register_name): Return NULL for duplicate fflags, frm, and fcsr registers. (riscv_register_reggroup_p): Remove unknown CSRs from save and restore groups. (riscv_tdesc_unknown_reg): New function. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Pass riscv_tdesc_unknown_reg to tdesc_use_registers. * riscv-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep): Add unknown_csrs_first_regnum, unknown_csrs_count, duplicate_fflags_regnum, duplicate_frm_regnum, and duplicate_fcsr_regnum fields. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.arch/riscv-tdesc-regs.exp: Extend test case.
2020-06-16 21:53:12 +08:00
/* Use for tracking unknown CSRs in the target description.
UNKNOWN_CSRS_FIRST_REGNUM is the number assigned to the first unknown
CSR. All other unknown CSRs will be assigned sequential numbers after
this, with UNKNOWN_CSRS_COUNT being the total number of unknown CSRs. */
int unknown_csrs_first_regnum = -1;
int unknown_csrs_count = 0;
/* Some targets (QEMU) are reporting three registers twice in the target
description they send. These three register numbers, when not set to
-1, are for the duplicate copies of these registers. */
int duplicate_fflags_regnum = -1;
int duplicate_frm_regnum = -1;
int duplicate_fcsr_regnum = -1;
/* Return the expected next PC assuming FRAME is stopped at a syscall
instruction. */
CORE_ADDR (*syscall_next_pc) (frame_info_ptr frame) = nullptr;
};
/* Return the width in bytes of the general purpose registers for GDBARCH.
Possible return values are 4, 8, or 16 for RiscV variants RV32, RV64, or
RV128. */
extern int riscv_isa_xlen (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
gdb/riscv: Split ISA and ABI features The goal of this commit is to allow RV64 binaries compiled for the 'F' extension to run on a target that supports both the 'F' and 'D' extensions. The 'D' extension depends on the 'F' extension and chapter 9 of the RISC-V ISA manual implies that running a program compiled for 'F' on a 'D' target should be fine. To support this the gdbarch now holds two feature sets, one represents the features that are present on the target, and one represents the features requested in the ELF flags. The existing error checks are relaxed slightly to allow binaries compiled for 32-bit 'F' extension to run on targets with the 64-bit 'D' extension. A new set of functions called riscv_abi_{xlen,flen} are added to compliment the existing riscv_isa_{xlen,flen}, and some callers to the isa functions now call the abi functions when that is appropriate. In riscv_call_arg_struct two asserts are removed, these asserts no longer make sense. The asserts were both like this: gdb_assert (TYPE_LENGTH (ainfo->type) <= (cinfo->flen + cinfo->xlen)); And were made in two cases, when passing structures like these: struct { integer field1; float field2; }; or, struct { float field1; integer field2; }; When running on an RV64 target which only has 32-bit float then the integer field could be 64-bits, while if the float field is 32-bits the overall size of the structure can be 128-bits (with 32-bits of padding). In this case the assertion would fail, however, the code isn't incorrect, so its safe to just remove the assertion. This was tested by running on an RV64IMFDC target using a compiler configured for RV64IMFC, and comparing the results with those obtained when using a compiler configured for RV64IMFDC. The only regressions I see (now) are in gdb.base/store.exp and are related too different code generation choices GCC makes between the two targets. Finally, this commit does not make any attempt to support running binaries compiled for RV32 on an RV64 target, though nothing in here should prevent that being supported in the future. gdb/ChangeLog: * arch/riscv.h (struct riscv_gdbarch_features) <hw_float_abi>: Delete. <operator==>: Update with for removed field. <hash>: Likewise. * riscv-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep) <features>: Renamed to... <isa_features>: ...this. <abi_features>: New field. (riscv_isa_flen): Update comment. (riscv_abi_xlen): New declaration. (riscv_abi_flen): New declaration. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_isa_xlen): Update to get answer from isa_features. (riscv_abi_xlen): New function. (riscv_isa_flen): Update to get answer from isa_features. (riscv_abi_flen): New function. (riscv_has_fp_abi): Update to get answer from abi_features. (riscv_call_info::riscv_call_info): Use abi xlen and flen, not isa xlen and flen. (riscv_call_info) <xlen, flen>: Update comment. (riscv_call_arg_struct): Remove invalid assertions (riscv_features_from_gdbarch_info): Update now hw_float_abi field is removed. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Gather isa features and abi features separately, ensure both match on the gdbarch when reusing an old gdbarch. Relax an error check to allow 32-bit abi float to run on a target with 64-bit float hardware.
2018-12-14 01:59:12 +08:00
/* Return the width in bytes of the hardware floating point registers for
GDBARCH. If this architecture has no floating point registers, then
return 0. Possible values are 4, 8, or 16 for depending on which of
single, double or quad floating point support is available. */
extern int riscv_isa_flen (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
gdb/riscv: Split ISA and ABI features The goal of this commit is to allow RV64 binaries compiled for the 'F' extension to run on a target that supports both the 'F' and 'D' extensions. The 'D' extension depends on the 'F' extension and chapter 9 of the RISC-V ISA manual implies that running a program compiled for 'F' on a 'D' target should be fine. To support this the gdbarch now holds two feature sets, one represents the features that are present on the target, and one represents the features requested in the ELF flags. The existing error checks are relaxed slightly to allow binaries compiled for 32-bit 'F' extension to run on targets with the 64-bit 'D' extension. A new set of functions called riscv_abi_{xlen,flen} are added to compliment the existing riscv_isa_{xlen,flen}, and some callers to the isa functions now call the abi functions when that is appropriate. In riscv_call_arg_struct two asserts are removed, these asserts no longer make sense. The asserts were both like this: gdb_assert (TYPE_LENGTH (ainfo->type) <= (cinfo->flen + cinfo->xlen)); And were made in two cases, when passing structures like these: struct { integer field1; float field2; }; or, struct { float field1; integer field2; }; When running on an RV64 target which only has 32-bit float then the integer field could be 64-bits, while if the float field is 32-bits the overall size of the structure can be 128-bits (with 32-bits of padding). In this case the assertion would fail, however, the code isn't incorrect, so its safe to just remove the assertion. This was tested by running on an RV64IMFDC target using a compiler configured for RV64IMFC, and comparing the results with those obtained when using a compiler configured for RV64IMFDC. The only regressions I see (now) are in gdb.base/store.exp and are related too different code generation choices GCC makes between the two targets. Finally, this commit does not make any attempt to support running binaries compiled for RV32 on an RV64 target, though nothing in here should prevent that being supported in the future. gdb/ChangeLog: * arch/riscv.h (struct riscv_gdbarch_features) <hw_float_abi>: Delete. <operator==>: Update with for removed field. <hash>: Likewise. * riscv-tdep.h (struct gdbarch_tdep) <features>: Renamed to... <isa_features>: ...this. <abi_features>: New field. (riscv_isa_flen): Update comment. (riscv_abi_xlen): New declaration. (riscv_abi_flen): New declaration. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_isa_xlen): Update to get answer from isa_features. (riscv_abi_xlen): New function. (riscv_isa_flen): Update to get answer from isa_features. (riscv_abi_flen): New function. (riscv_has_fp_abi): Update to get answer from abi_features. (riscv_call_info::riscv_call_info): Use abi xlen and flen, not isa xlen and flen. (riscv_call_info) <xlen, flen>: Update comment. (riscv_call_arg_struct): Remove invalid assertions (riscv_features_from_gdbarch_info): Update now hw_float_abi field is removed. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Gather isa features and abi features separately, ensure both match on the gdbarch when reusing an old gdbarch. Relax an error check to allow 32-bit abi float to run on a target with 64-bit float hardware.
2018-12-14 01:59:12 +08:00
/* Return the width in bytes of the general purpose register abi for
GDBARCH. This can be equal to, or less than RISCV_ISA_XLEN and reflects
how the binary was compiled rather than the hardware that is available.
It is possible that a binary compiled for RV32 is being run on an RV64
target, in which case the isa xlen is 8-bytes, and the abi xlen is
4-bytes. This will impact how inferior functions are called. */
extern int riscv_abi_xlen (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
/* Return the width in bytes of the floating point register abi for
GDBARCH. This reflects how the binary was compiled rather than the
hardware that is available. It is possible that a binary is compiled
for single precision floating point, and then run on a target with
double precision floating point. A return value of 0 indicates that no
floating point abi is in use (floating point arguments will be passed
in integer registers) other possible return value are 4, 8, or 16 as
with RISCV_ISA_FLEN. */
extern int riscv_abi_flen (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
gdb/riscv: rewrite target description validation, add rv32e support This commit started as adding rv32e support to gdb. The rv32e architecture is a cut-down rv32i, it only has 16 x-registers compared to the usual 32, and an rv32e target should not have any floating point registers. In order to add this I needed to adjust the target description validation checks that are performed from riscv_gdbarch_init, and I finally got fed up with the current scheme of doing these checks and rewrote this code. Unfortunately the rv32e changes are currently mixed in with the rewrite of the validation scheme. I could split these apart if anyone is really interested in seeing these two ideas as separate patches. The main idea behind this change is that where previously I tried to have a purely data driven approach, a set of tables one for each expected feature, and then a single generic function that would validate a feature given a table, I have created a new class for each feature. Each class has its own check member function which allows the logic for how to check each feature to be different. I think the new scheme is much easier to follow. There are some other changes that I made to the validation code as part of this commit. I've relaxed some of the checks related to the floating point CSRs. Previously the 3 CSRs fflags, frm, and fcsr all had to be present in either the fpu feature or the csr feature. This requirement is now relaxed, if the CSRs are not present then gdb will not reject the target description. My thinking here is that there's no gdb functionality that specifically requires these registers, and so, if a target offers a description without these registers nothing else in gdb should stop working. And as part of the rv32e support targets now only have to provide the first 16 x-registers and $pc. The second half of the x-registers (x16 -> x31) are now optional. gdb/ChangeLog: * arch/riscv.c: Include 'rv32e-xregs.c'. (riscv_create_target_description): Update to handle rv32e. * arch/riscv.h (struct riscv_gdbarch_features) <embedded>: New member variable. <operator==>: Update to account for new field. <hash>: Likewise. * features/Makefile (FEATURE_XMLFILES): Add riscv/rv32e-xregs.xml. * features/riscv/rv32e-xregs.c: Generated. * features/riscv/rv32e-xregs.xml: New file. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_debug_breakpoints): Move from later in the file. (riscv_debug_infcall): Likewise. (riscv_debug_unwinder): Likewise. (riscv_debug_gdbarch): Likewise. (enum riscv_register_required_status): Delete. (struct riscv_register_feature): Add constructor, delete default constructor, copy, and assign constructors. (struct riscv_register_feature::register_info) <required>: Delete. <check>: Update comment and arguments. (struct riscv_register_feature) <name>: Change to member function. <prefer_first_name>: Delete. <tdesc_feature>: New member function. <registers>: Rename to... <m_registers>: ...this. <m_feature_name>: New member variable. (riscv_register_feature::register_info::check): Update arguments. (riscv_xreg_feature): Rewrite as class, create a single static instance of the class. (riscv_freg_feature): Likewise. (riscv_virtual_feature): Likewise. (riscv_csr_feature): Likewise. (riscv_create_csr_aliases): Has become a member function inside riscv_csr_feature class. (riscv_abi_embedded): New function definition. (riscv_register_name): Adjust to use new feature objects. (struct riscv_call_info) <riscv_call_info>: Check for rv32e abi, and adjust available argument registers. (riscv_features_from_gdbarch_info): Check for EF_RISCV_RVE flag. (riscv_check_tdesc_feature): Delete. (riscv_tdesc_unknown_reg): Adjust to use new feature objects. (riscv_gdbarch_init): Delete target description checking code, and instead call to the new feature objects to perform the checks. Reorder handling of no abi information case, allows small code simplification. (_initialize_riscv_tdep): Remove call, this is now done in the riscv_csr_feature constructor. * riscv-tdep.h (riscv_abi_embedded): Declare.
2020-11-24 02:03:32 +08:00
/* Return true if GDBARCH is using the embedded x-regs abi, that is the
target only has 16 x-registers, which includes a reduced number of
argument registers. */
extern bool riscv_abi_embedded (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
2018-08-09 01:53:12 +08:00
/* Single step based on where the current instruction will take us. */
extern std::vector<CORE_ADDR> riscv_software_single_step
(struct regcache *regcache);
2018-08-09 01:53:12 +08:00
gdb/riscv: use a single regset supply function for riscv fbsd & linux The RISC-V x0 register is hard-coded to zero. As such neither Linux or FreeBSD supply the value of the register x0 in their core dump files. For FreeBSD we take care of this by manually supplying the value of x0 in riscv_fbsd_supply_gregset, however we don't do this for Linux. As a result after loading a core file on Linux we see this behaviour: (gdb) p $x0 $1 = <unavailable> In this commit I make riscv_fbsd_supply_gregset a common function that can be shared between RISC-V for FreeBSD and Linux, this resolves the above issue. There is a similar problem for the two registers `fflags` and `frm`. These two floating point related CSRs are a little weird. They are separate CSRs in the RISC-V specification, but are actually sub-fields of the `fcsr` CSR. As a result neither Linux or FreeBSD supply the `fflags` or `frm` registers as separate fields in their core dumps, and so, after restoring a core dump these register are similarly unavailable. In this commit I supply `fflags` and `frm` by first asking for the value of `fcsr`, extracting the two fields, and using these to supply the values for `fflags` and `frm`. gdb/ChangeLog: * riscv-fbsd-tdep.c (riscv_fbsd_supply_gregset): Delete. (riscv_fbsd_gregset): Use riscv_supply_regset. (riscv_fbsd_fpregset): Likewise. * riscv-linux-tdep.c (riscv_linux_gregset): Likewise. (riscv_linux_fregset): Likewise. * riscv-tdep.c (riscv_supply_regset): Define new function. * riscv-tdep.h (riscv_supply_regset): Declare new function.
2020-12-02 23:10:06 +08:00
/* Supply register REGNUM from the buffer REGS (length LEN) into
REGCACHE. REGSET describes the layout of the buffer. If REGNUM is -1
then all registers described by REGSET are supplied.
The register RISCV_ZERO_REGNUM should not be described by REGSET,
however, this register (which always has the value 0) will be supplied
by this function if requested.
The registers RISCV_CSR_FFLAGS_REGNUM and RISCV_CSR_FRM_REGNUM should
not be described by REGSET, however, these register will be provided if
requested assuming either:
(a) REGCACHE already contains the value of RISCV_CSR_FCSR_REGNUM, or
(b) REGSET describes the location of RISCV_CSR_FCSR_REGNUM in the REGS
buffer.
This function can be used as the supply function for either x-regs or
f-regs when loading corefiles, and doesn't care which abi is currently
in use. */
extern void riscv_supply_regset (const struct regset *regset,
struct regcache *regcache, int regnum,
const void *regs, size_t len);
/* The names of the RISC-V target description features. */
extern const char *riscv_feature_name_csr;
#endif /* RISCV_TDEP_H */