binutils-gdb/gdb/mn10300-tdep.c
Andrew Cagney ebba838619 Index: ChangeLog
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/src/src/gdb/ChangeLog,v
retrieving revision 1.3144
diff -u -r1.3144 ChangeLog
--- ChangeLog	23 Aug 2002 23:05:38 -0000	1.3144
+++ ChangeLog	23 Aug 2002 23:14:45 -0000
@@ -1,3 +1,53 @@
2002-08-23  Andrew Cagney  <cagney@redhat.com>

	* gdbarch.sh (STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Add regcache parameter.
	(DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): New method.
	(EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE): Make buffer parameter a void pointer.
	* gdbarch.h, gdbarch.c: Re-generate.

	* values.c (set_return_value): Pass current_regcache to
	STORE_RETURN_VALUE.
	* arch-utils.h (legacy_store_return_value): Declare.
	* arch-utils.c (legacy_store_return_value): New function.
	(legacy_extract_return_value): Update parameters.

	* config/pa/tm-hppa.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Rename
	STORE_RETURN_VALUE.
	* config/pa/tm-hppa64.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/sparc/tm-sparc.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/z8k/tm-z8k.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/sparc/tm-sparclet.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/mn10200/tm-mn10200.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/m68k/tm-linux.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/m68k/tm-delta68.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/m32r/tm-m32r.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/h8500/tm-h8500.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.
	* config/h8300/tm-h8300.h (DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE): Ditto.

	* m68hc11-tdep.c (m68hc11_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_extract_return_value): Update.
	* arch-utils.c (legacy_extract_return_value): Update.
	* frv-tdep.c (frv_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* cris-tdep.c (cris_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* d10v-tdep.c (d10v_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* rs6000-tdep.c (rs6000_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* m68k-tdep.c (m68k_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* mcore-tdep.c (mcore_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* mn10300-tdep.c (mn10300_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* s390-tdep.c (s390_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* sparc-tdep.c (sparc_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* sh-tdep.c (sh_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* x86-64-tdep.c (x86_64_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* v850-tdep.c (v850_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* avr-tdep.c (avr_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* ia64-tdep.c (ia64_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* ns32k-tdep.c (ns32k_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* vax-tdep.c (vax_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* alpha-tdep.c (alpha_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* arm-tdep.c (arm_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* mips-tdep.c (mips_gdbarch_init): Update.
	* i386-tdep.c (i386_gdbarch_init): Update.

Index: doc/ChangeLog
2002-08-21  Andrew Cagney  <cagney@redhat.com>

	* gdbint.texinfo (Target Architecture Definition): Update
	STORE_RETURN_VALUE, mention regcache.
2002-08-24 00:21:37 +00:00

1223 lines
36 KiB
C

/* Target-dependent code for the Matsushita MN10300 for GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 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 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.
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 "inferior.h"
#include "target.h"
#include "value.h"
#include "bfd.h"
#include "gdb_string.h"
#include "gdbcore.h"
#include "symfile.h"
#include "regcache.h"
#include "arch-utils.h"
#define D0_REGNUM 0
#define D2_REGNUM 2
#define D3_REGNUM 3
#define A0_REGNUM 4
#define A2_REGNUM 6
#define A3_REGNUM 7
#define MDR_REGNUM 10
#define PSW_REGNUM 11
#define LIR_REGNUM 12
#define LAR_REGNUM 13
#define MDRQ_REGNUM 14
#define E0_REGNUM 15
#define MCRH_REGNUM 26
#define MCRL_REGNUM 27
#define MCVF_REGNUM 28
enum movm_register_bits {
movm_exother_bit = 0x01,
movm_exreg1_bit = 0x02,
movm_exreg0_bit = 0x04,
movm_other_bit = 0x08,
movm_a3_bit = 0x10,
movm_a2_bit = 0x20,
movm_d3_bit = 0x40,
movm_d2_bit = 0x80
};
extern void _initialize_mn10300_tdep (void);
static CORE_ADDR mn10300_analyze_prologue (struct frame_info *fi,
CORE_ADDR pc);
/* mn10300 private data */
struct gdbarch_tdep
{
int am33_mode;
#define AM33_MODE (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch)->am33_mode)
};
/* Additional info used by the frame */
struct frame_extra_info
{
int status;
int stack_size;
};
static char *
register_name (int reg, char **regs, long sizeof_regs)
{
if (reg < 0 || reg >= sizeof_regs / sizeof (regs[0]))
return NULL;
else
return regs[reg];
}
static const char *
mn10300_generic_register_name (int reg)
{
static char *regs[] =
{ "d0", "d1", "d2", "d3", "a0", "a1", "a2", "a3",
"sp", "pc", "mdr", "psw", "lir", "lar", "", "",
"", "", "", "", "", "", "", "",
"", "", "", "", "", "", "", "fp"
};
return register_name (reg, regs, sizeof regs);
}
static const char *
am33_register_name (int reg)
{
static char *regs[] =
{ "d0", "d1", "d2", "d3", "a0", "a1", "a2", "a3",
"sp", "pc", "mdr", "psw", "lir", "lar", "",
"r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7",
"ssp", "msp", "usp", "mcrh", "mcrl", "mcvf", "", "", ""
};
return register_name (reg, regs, sizeof regs);
}
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *fi)
{
return read_memory_integer (read_register (SP_REGNUM), 4);
}
static void
mn10300_extract_return_value (struct type *type, char *regbuf, char *valbuf)
{
if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_PTR)
memcpy (valbuf, regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (4), TYPE_LENGTH (type));
else
memcpy (valbuf, regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (0), TYPE_LENGTH (type));
}
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_extract_struct_value_address (char *regbuf)
{
return extract_address (regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (4),
REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (4));
}
static void
mn10300_store_return_value (struct type *type, char *valbuf)
{
if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_PTR)
write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (4), valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
else
write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (0), valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
}
static struct frame_info *analyze_dummy_frame (CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR);
static struct frame_info *
analyze_dummy_frame (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR frame)
{
static struct frame_info *dummy = NULL;
if (dummy == NULL)
{
dummy = xmalloc (sizeof (struct frame_info));
dummy->saved_regs = xmalloc (SIZEOF_FRAME_SAVED_REGS);
dummy->extra_info = xmalloc (sizeof (struct frame_extra_info));
}
dummy->next = NULL;
dummy->prev = NULL;
dummy->pc = pc;
dummy->frame = frame;
dummy->extra_info->status = 0;
dummy->extra_info->stack_size = 0;
memset (dummy->saved_regs, '\000', SIZEOF_FRAME_SAVED_REGS);
mn10300_analyze_prologue (dummy, 0);
return dummy;
}
/* Values for frame_info.status */
#define MY_FRAME_IN_SP 0x1
#define MY_FRAME_IN_FP 0x2
#define NO_MORE_FRAMES 0x4
/* Should call_function allocate stack space for a struct return? */
static int
mn10300_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *type)
{
return (TYPE_NFIELDS (type) > 1 || TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8);
}
/* The breakpoint instruction must be the same size as the smallest
instruction in the instruction set.
The Matsushita mn10x00 processors have single byte instructions
so we need a single byte breakpoint. Matsushita hasn't defined
one, so we defined it ourselves. */
const static unsigned char *
mn10300_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR *bp_addr, int *bp_size)
{
static char breakpoint[] =
{0xff};
*bp_size = 1;
return breakpoint;
}
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. This is a helper
function for mn10300_analyze_prologue. */
static void
fix_frame_pointer (struct frame_info *fi, int stack_size)
{
if (fi && fi->next == NULL)
{
if (fi->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_SP)
fi->frame = read_sp () - stack_size;
else if (fi->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_FP)
fi->frame = read_register (A3_REGNUM);
}
}
/* Set offsets of registers saved by movm instruction.
This is a helper function for mn10300_analyze_prologue. */
static void
set_movm_offsets (struct frame_info *fi, int movm_args)
{
int offset = 0;
if (fi == NULL || movm_args == 0)
return;
if (movm_args & movm_other_bit)
{
/* The `other' bit leaves a blank area of four bytes at the
beginning of its block of saved registers, making it 32 bytes
long in total. */
fi->saved_regs[LAR_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 4;
fi->saved_regs[LIR_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 8;
fi->saved_regs[MDR_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 12;
fi->saved_regs[A0_REGNUM + 1] = fi->frame + offset + 16;
fi->saved_regs[A0_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 20;
fi->saved_regs[D0_REGNUM + 1] = fi->frame + offset + 24;
fi->saved_regs[D0_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 28;
offset += 32;
}
if (movm_args & movm_a3_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[A3_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset;
offset += 4;
}
if (movm_args & movm_a2_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[A2_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset;
offset += 4;
}
if (movm_args & movm_d3_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[D3_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset;
offset += 4;
}
if (movm_args & movm_d2_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[D2_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset;
offset += 4;
}
if (AM33_MODE)
{
if (movm_args & movm_exother_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[MCVF_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset;
fi->saved_regs[MCRL_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 4;
fi->saved_regs[MCRH_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 8;
fi->saved_regs[MDRQ_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 12;
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 1] = fi->frame + offset + 16;
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 0] = fi->frame + offset + 20;
offset += 24;
}
if (movm_args & movm_exreg1_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 7] = fi->frame + offset;
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 6] = fi->frame + offset + 4;
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 5] = fi->frame + offset + 8;
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 4] = fi->frame + offset + 12;
offset += 16;
}
if (movm_args & movm_exreg0_bit)
{
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 3] = fi->frame + offset;
fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 2] = fi->frame + offset + 4;
offset += 8;
}
}
}
/* The main purpose of this file is dealing with prologues to extract
information about stack frames and saved registers.
In gcc/config/mn13000/mn10300.c, the expand_prologue prologue
function is pretty readable, and has a nice explanation of how the
prologue is generated. The prologues generated by that code will
have the following form (NOTE: the current code doesn't handle all
this!):
+ If this is an old-style varargs function, then its arguments
need to be flushed back to the stack:
mov d0,(4,sp)
mov d1,(4,sp)
+ If we use any of the callee-saved registers, save them now.
movm [some callee-saved registers],(sp)
+ If we have any floating-point registers to save:
- Decrement the stack pointer to reserve space for the registers.
If the function doesn't need a frame pointer, we may combine
this with the adjustment that reserves space for the frame.
add -SIZE, sp
- Save the floating-point registers. We have two possible
strategies:
. Save them at fixed offset from the SP:
fmov fsN,(OFFSETN,sp)
fmov fsM,(OFFSETM,sp)
...
Note that, if OFFSETN happens to be zero, you'll get the
different opcode: fmov fsN,(sp)
. Or, set a0 to the start of the save area, and then use
post-increment addressing to save the FP registers.
mov sp, a0
add SIZE, a0
fmov fsN,(a0+)
fmov fsM,(a0+)
...
+ If the function needs a frame pointer, we set it here.
mov sp, a3
+ Now we reserve space for the stack frame proper. This could be
merged into the `add -SIZE, sp' instruction for FP saves up
above, unless we needed to set the frame pointer in the previous
step, or the frame is so large that allocating the whole thing at
once would put the FP register save slots out of reach of the
addressing mode (128 bytes).
add -SIZE, sp
One day we might keep the stack pointer constant, that won't
change the code for prologues, but it will make the frame
pointerless case much more common. */
/* Analyze the prologue to determine where registers are saved,
the end of the prologue, etc etc. Return the end of the prologue
scanned.
We store into FI (if non-null) several tidbits of information:
* stack_size -- size of this stack frame. Note that if we stop in
certain parts of the prologue/epilogue we may claim the size of the
current frame is zero. This happens when the current frame has
not been allocated yet or has already been deallocated.
* fsr -- Addresses of registers saved in the stack by this frame.
* status -- A (relatively) generic status indicator. It's a bitmask
with the following bits:
MY_FRAME_IN_SP: The base of the current frame is actually in
the stack pointer. This can happen for frame pointerless
functions, or cases where we're stopped in the prologue/epilogue
itself. For these cases mn10300_analyze_prologue will need up
update fi->frame before returning or analyzing the register
save instructions.
MY_FRAME_IN_FP: The base of the current frame is in the
frame pointer register ($a3).
NO_MORE_FRAMES: Set this if the current frame is "start" or
if the first instruction looks like mov <imm>,sp. This tells
frame chain to not bother trying to unwind past this frame. */
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_analyze_prologue (struct frame_info *fi, CORE_ADDR pc)
{
CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end, addr, stop;
CORE_ADDR stack_size;
int imm_size;
unsigned char buf[4];
int status, movm_args = 0;
char *name;
/* Use the PC in the frame if it's provided to look up the
start of this function. */
pc = (fi ? fi->pc : pc);
/* Find the start of this function. */
status = find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, &func_addr, &func_end);
/* Do nothing if we couldn't find the start of this function or if we're
stopped at the first instruction in the prologue. */
if (status == 0)
{
return pc;
}
/* If we're in start, then give up. */
if (strcmp (name, "start") == 0)
{
if (fi != NULL)
fi->extra_info->status = NO_MORE_FRAMES;
return pc;
}
/* At the start of a function our frame is in the stack pointer. */
if (fi)
fi->extra_info->status = MY_FRAME_IN_SP;
/* Get the next two bytes into buf, we need two because rets is a two
byte insn and the first isn't enough to uniquely identify it. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (pc, buf, 2);
if (status != 0)
return pc;
/* If we're physically on an "rets" instruction, then our frame has
already been deallocated. Note this can also be true for retf
and ret if they specify a size of zero.
In this case fi->frame is bogus, we need to fix it. */
if (fi && buf[0] == 0xf0 && buf[1] == 0xfc)
{
if (fi->next == NULL)
fi->frame = read_sp ();
return fi->pc;
}
/* Similarly if we're stopped on the first insn of a prologue as our
frame hasn't been allocated yet. */
if (fi && fi->pc == func_addr)
{
if (fi->next == NULL)
fi->frame = read_sp ();
return fi->pc;
}
/* Figure out where to stop scanning. */
stop = fi ? fi->pc : func_end;
/* Don't walk off the end of the function. */
stop = stop > func_end ? func_end : stop;
/* Start scanning on the first instruction of this function. */
addr = func_addr;
/* Suck in two bytes. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2);
if (status != 0)
{
fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0);
return addr;
}
/* First see if this insn sets the stack pointer from a register; if
so, it's probably the initialization of the stack pointer in _start,
so mark this as the bottom-most frame. */
if (buf[0] == 0xf2 && (buf[1] & 0xf3) == 0xf0)
{
if (fi)
fi->extra_info->status = NO_MORE_FRAMES;
return addr;
}
/* Now look for movm [regs],sp, which saves the callee saved registers.
At this time we don't know if fi->frame is valid, so we only note
that we encountered a movm instruction. Later, we'll set the entries
in fsr.regs as needed. */
if (buf[0] == 0xcf)
{
/* Extract the register list for the movm instruction. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (addr + 1, buf, 1);
movm_args = *buf;
addr += 2;
/* Quit now if we're beyond the stop point. */
if (addr >= stop)
{
/* Fix fi->frame since it's bogus at this point. */
if (fi && fi->next == NULL)
fi->frame = read_sp ();
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
/* Get the next two bytes so the prologue scan can continue. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2);
if (status != 0)
{
/* Fix fi->frame since it's bogus at this point. */
if (fi && fi->next == NULL)
fi->frame = read_sp ();
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
}
/* Now see if we set up a frame pointer via "mov sp,a3" */
if (buf[0] == 0x3f)
{
addr += 1;
/* The frame pointer is now valid. */
if (fi)
{
fi->extra_info->status |= MY_FRAME_IN_FP;
fi->extra_info->status &= ~MY_FRAME_IN_SP;
}
/* Quit now if we're beyond the stop point. */
if (addr >= stop)
{
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */
fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0);
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
/* Get two more bytes so scanning can continue. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2);
if (status != 0)
{
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */
fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0);
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
}
/* Next we should allocate the local frame. No more prologue insns
are found after allocating the local frame.
Search for add imm8,sp (0xf8feXX)
or add imm16,sp (0xfafeXXXX)
or add imm32,sp (0xfcfeXXXXXXXX).
If none of the above was found, then this prologue has no
additional stack. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2);
if (status != 0)
{
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */
fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0);
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
imm_size = 0;
if (buf[0] == 0xf8 && buf[1] == 0xfe)
imm_size = 1;
else if (buf[0] == 0xfa && buf[1] == 0xfe)
imm_size = 2;
else if (buf[0] == 0xfc && buf[1] == 0xfe)
imm_size = 4;
if (imm_size != 0)
{
/* Suck in imm_size more bytes, they'll hold the size of the
current frame. */
status = read_memory_nobpt (addr + 2, buf, imm_size);
if (status != 0)
{
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */
fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0);
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
/* Note the size of the stack in the frame info structure. */
stack_size = extract_signed_integer (buf, imm_size);
if (fi)
fi->extra_info->stack_size = stack_size;
/* We just consumed 2 + imm_size bytes. */
addr += 2 + imm_size;
/* No more prologue insns follow, so begin preparation to return. */
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */
fix_frame_pointer (fi, stack_size);
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
/* We never found an insn which allocates local stack space, regardless
this is the end of the prologue. */
/* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */
fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0);
/* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */
set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args);
return addr;
}
/* Function: saved_regs_size
Return the size in bytes of the register save area, based on the
saved_regs array in FI. */
static int
saved_regs_size (struct frame_info *fi)
{
int adjust = 0;
int i;
/* Reserve four bytes for every register saved. */
for (i = 0; i < NUM_REGS; i++)
if (fi->saved_regs[i])
adjust += 4;
/* If we saved LIR, then it's most likely we used a `movm'
instruction with the `other' bit set, in which case the SP is
decremented by an extra four bytes, "to simplify calculation
of the transfer area", according to the processor manual. */
if (fi->saved_regs[LIR_REGNUM])
adjust += 4;
return adjust;
}
/* Function: frame_chain
Figure out and return the caller's frame pointer given current
frame_info struct.
We don't handle dummy frames yet but we would probably just return the
stack pointer that was in use at the time the function call was made? */
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_frame_chain (struct frame_info *fi)
{
struct frame_info *dummy;
/* Walk through the prologue to determine the stack size,
location of saved registers, end of the prologue, etc. */
if (fi->extra_info->status == 0)
mn10300_analyze_prologue (fi, (CORE_ADDR) 0);
/* Quit now if mn10300_analyze_prologue set NO_MORE_FRAMES. */
if (fi->extra_info->status & NO_MORE_FRAMES)
return 0;
/* Now that we've analyzed our prologue, determine the frame
pointer for our caller.
If our caller has a frame pointer, then we need to
find the entry value of $a3 to our function.
If fsr.regs[A3_REGNUM] is nonzero, then it's at the memory
location pointed to by fsr.regs[A3_REGNUM].
Else it's still in $a3.
If our caller does not have a frame pointer, then his
frame base is fi->frame + -caller's stack size. */
/* The easiest way to get that info is to analyze our caller's frame.
So we set up a dummy frame and call mn10300_analyze_prologue to
find stuff for us. */
dummy = analyze_dummy_frame (FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi), fi->frame);
if (dummy->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_FP)
{
/* Our caller has a frame pointer. So find the frame in $a3 or
in the stack. */
if (fi->saved_regs[A3_REGNUM])
return (read_memory_integer (fi->saved_regs[A3_REGNUM], REGISTER_SIZE));
else
return read_register (A3_REGNUM);
}
else
{
int adjust = saved_regs_size (fi);
/* Our caller does not have a frame pointer. So his frame starts
at the base of our frame (fi->frame) + register save space
+ <his size>. */
return fi->frame + adjust + -dummy->extra_info->stack_size;
}
}
/* Function: skip_prologue
Return the address of the first inst past the prologue of the function. */
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc)
{
/* We used to check the debug symbols, but that can lose if
we have a null prologue. */
return mn10300_analyze_prologue (NULL, pc);
}
/* generic_pop_current_frame calls this function if the current
frame isn't a dummy frame. */
static void
mn10300_pop_frame_regular (struct frame_info *frame)
{
int regnum;
write_register (PC_REGNUM, FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
/* Restore any saved registers. */
for (regnum = 0; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++)
if (frame->saved_regs[regnum] != 0)
{
ULONGEST value;
value = read_memory_unsigned_integer (frame->saved_regs[regnum],
REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum));
write_register (regnum, value);
}
/* Actually cut back the stack. */
write_register (SP_REGNUM, FRAME_FP (frame));
/* Don't we need to set the PC?!? XXX FIXME. */
}
/* Function: pop_frame
This routine gets called when either the user uses the `return'
command, or the call dummy breakpoint gets hit. */
static void
mn10300_pop_frame (void)
{
/* This function checks for and handles generic dummy frames, and
calls back to our function for ordinary frames. */
generic_pop_current_frame (mn10300_pop_frame_regular);
/* Throw away any cached frame information. */
flush_cached_frames ();
}
/* Function: push_arguments
Setup arguments for a call to the target. Arguments go in
order on the stack. */
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_push_arguments (int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp,
int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
{
int argnum = 0;
int len = 0;
int stack_offset = 0;
int regsused = struct_return ? 1 : 0;
/* This should be a nop, but align the stack just in case something
went wrong. Stacks are four byte aligned on the mn10300. */
sp &= ~3;
/* Now make space on the stack for the args.
XXX This doesn't appear to handle pass-by-invisible reference
arguments. */
for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
{
int arg_length = (TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (args[argnum])) + 3) & ~3;
while (regsused < 2 && arg_length > 0)
{
regsused++;
arg_length -= 4;
}
len += arg_length;
}
/* Allocate stack space. */
sp -= len;
regsused = struct_return ? 1 : 0;
/* Push all arguments onto the stack. */
for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++)
{
int len;
char *val;
/* XXX Check this. What about UNIONS? */
if (TYPE_CODE (VALUE_TYPE (*args)) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
&& TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (*args)) > 8)
{
/* XXX Wrong, we want a pointer to this argument. */
len = TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (*args));
val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (*args);
}
else
{
len = TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (*args));
val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (*args);
}
while (regsused < 2 && len > 0)
{
write_register (regsused, extract_unsigned_integer (val, 4));
val += 4;
len -= 4;
regsused++;
}
while (len > 0)
{
write_memory (sp + stack_offset, val, 4);
len -= 4;
val += 4;
stack_offset += 4;
}
args++;
}
/* Make space for the flushback area. */
sp -= 8;
return sp;
}
/* Function: push_return_address (pc)
Set up the return address for the inferior function call.
Needed for targets where we don't actually execute a JSR/BSR instruction */
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_push_return_address (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR sp)
{
unsigned char buf[4];
store_unsigned_integer (buf, 4, CALL_DUMMY_ADDRESS ());
write_memory (sp - 4, buf, 4);
return sp - 4;
}
/* Function: store_struct_return (addr,sp)
Store the structure value return address for an inferior function
call. */
static void
mn10300_store_struct_return (CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR sp)
{
/* The structure return address is passed as the first argument. */
write_register (0, addr);
}
/* Function: frame_saved_pc
Find the caller of this frame. We do this by seeing if RP_REGNUM
is saved in the stack anywhere, otherwise we get it from the
registers. If the inner frame is a dummy frame, return its PC
instead of RP, because that's where "caller" of the dummy-frame
will be found. */
static CORE_ADDR
mn10300_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *fi)
{
int adjust = saved_regs_size (fi);
return (read_memory_integer (fi->frame + adjust, REGISTER_SIZE));
}
/* Function: mn10300_init_extra_frame_info
Setup the frame's frame pointer, pc, and frame addresses for saved
registers. Most of the work is done in mn10300_analyze_prologue().
Note that when we are called for the last frame (currently active frame),
that fi->pc and fi->frame will already be setup. However, fi->frame will
be valid only if this routine uses FP. For previous frames, fi-frame will
always be correct. mn10300_analyze_prologue will fix fi->frame if
it's not valid.
We can be called with the PC in the call dummy under two circumstances.
First, during normal backtracing, second, while figuring out the frame
pointer just prior to calling the target function (see run_stack_dummy). */
static void
mn10300_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *fi)
{
if (fi->next)
fi->pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi->next);
frame_saved_regs_zalloc (fi);
fi->extra_info = (struct frame_extra_info *)
frame_obstack_alloc (sizeof (struct frame_extra_info));
fi->extra_info->status = 0;
fi->extra_info->stack_size = 0;
mn10300_analyze_prologue (fi, 0);
}
/* This function's job is handled by init_extra_frame_info. */
static void
mn10300_frame_init_saved_regs (struct frame_info *frame)
{
}
/* Function: mn10300_virtual_frame_pointer
Return the register that the function uses for a frame pointer,
plus any necessary offset to be applied to the register before
any frame pointer offsets. */
static void
mn10300_virtual_frame_pointer (CORE_ADDR pc,
int *reg,
LONGEST *offset)
{
struct frame_info *dummy = analyze_dummy_frame (pc, 0);
/* Set up a dummy frame_info, Analyze the prolog and fill in the
extra info. */
/* Results will tell us which type of frame it uses. */
if (dummy->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_SP)
{
*reg = SP_REGNUM;
*offset = -(dummy->extra_info->stack_size);
}
else
{
*reg = A3_REGNUM;
*offset = 0;
}
}
static int
mn10300_reg_struct_has_addr (int gcc_p, struct type *type)
{
return (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8);
}
static struct type *
mn10300_register_virtual_type (int reg)
{
return builtin_type_int;
}
static int
mn10300_register_byte (int reg)
{
return (reg * 4);
}
static int
mn10300_register_virtual_size (int reg)
{
return 4;
}
static int
mn10300_register_raw_size (int reg)
{
return 4;
}
/* If DWARF2 is a register number appearing in Dwarf2 debug info, then
mn10300_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (DWARF2) is the corresponding GDB
register number. Why don't Dwarf2 and GDB use the same numbering?
Who knows? But since people have object files lying around with
the existing Dwarf2 numbering, and other people have written stubs
to work with the existing GDB, neither of them can change. So we
just have to cope. */
static int
mn10300_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (int dwarf2)
{
/* This table is supposed to be shaped like the REGISTER_NAMES
initializer in gcc/config/mn10300/mn10300.h. Registers which
appear in GCC's numbering, but have no counterpart in GDB's
world, are marked with a -1. */
static int dwarf2_to_gdb[] = {
0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, -1, 8,
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22
};
int gdb;
if (dwarf2 < 0
|| dwarf2 >= (sizeof (dwarf2_to_gdb) / sizeof (dwarf2_to_gdb[0]))
|| dwarf2_to_gdb[dwarf2] == -1)
internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
"bogus register number in debug info: %d", dwarf2);
return dwarf2_to_gdb[dwarf2];
}
static void
mn10300_print_register (const char *name, int regnum, int reg_width)
{
char *raw_buffer = alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE);
if (reg_width)
printf_filtered ("%*s: ", reg_width, name);
else
printf_filtered ("%s: ", name);
/* Get the data */
if (!frame_register_read (selected_frame, regnum, raw_buffer))
{
printf_filtered ("[invalid]");
return;
}
else
{
int byte;
if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
{
for (byte = REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum) - REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (regnum);
byte < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum);
byte++)
printf_filtered ("%02x", (unsigned char) raw_buffer[byte]);
}
else
{
for (byte = REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (regnum) - 1;
byte >= 0;
byte--)
printf_filtered ("%02x", (unsigned char) raw_buffer[byte]);
}
}
}
static void
mn10300_do_registers_info (int regnum, int fpregs)
{
if (regnum >= 0)
{
const char *name = REGISTER_NAME (regnum);
if (name == NULL || name[0] == '\0')
error ("Not a valid register for the current processor type");
mn10300_print_register (name, regnum, 0);
printf_filtered ("\n");
}
else
{
/* print registers in an array 4x8 */
int r;
int reg;
const int nr_in_row = 4;
const int reg_width = 4;
for (r = 0; r < NUM_REGS; r += nr_in_row)
{
int c;
int printing = 0;
int padding = 0;
for (c = r; c < r + nr_in_row; c++)
{
const char *name = REGISTER_NAME (c);
if (name != NULL && *name != '\0')
{
printing = 1;
while (padding > 0)
{
printf_filtered (" ");
padding--;
}
mn10300_print_register (name, c, reg_width);
printf_filtered (" ");
}
else
{
padding += (reg_width + 2 + 8 + 1);
}
}
if (printing)
printf_filtered ("\n");
}
}
}
/* Dump out the mn10300 speciic architecture information. */
static void
mn10300_dump_tdep (struct gdbarch *current_gdbarch, struct ui_file *file)
{
struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch);
fprintf_unfiltered (file, "mn10300_dump_tdep: am33_mode = %d\n",
tdep->am33_mode);
}
static struct gdbarch *
mn10300_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info,
struct gdbarch_list *arches)
{
static LONGEST mn10300_call_dummy_words[] = { 0 };
struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = NULL;
int am33_mode;
gdbarch_register_name_ftype *register_name;
int mach;
int num_regs;
arches = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches, &info);
if (arches != NULL)
return arches->gdbarch;
tdep = xmalloc (sizeof (struct gdbarch_tdep));
gdbarch = gdbarch_alloc (&info, tdep);
if (info.bfd_arch_info != NULL
&& info.bfd_arch_info->arch == bfd_arch_mn10300)
mach = info.bfd_arch_info->mach;
else
mach = 0;
switch (mach)
{
case 0:
case bfd_mach_mn10300:
am33_mode = 0;
register_name = mn10300_generic_register_name;
num_regs = 32;
break;
case bfd_mach_am33:
am33_mode = 1;
register_name = am33_register_name;
num_regs = 32;
break;
default:
internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
"mn10300_gdbarch_init: Unknown mn10300 variant");
return NULL; /* keep GCC happy. */
}
/* Registers. */
set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, num_regs);
set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, register_name);
set_gdbarch_register_size (gdbarch, 4);
set_gdbarch_register_bytes (gdbarch,
num_regs * gdbarch_register_size (gdbarch));
set_gdbarch_max_register_raw_size (gdbarch, 4);
set_gdbarch_register_raw_size (gdbarch, mn10300_register_raw_size);
set_gdbarch_register_byte (gdbarch, mn10300_register_byte);
set_gdbarch_max_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, 4);
set_gdbarch_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, mn10300_register_virtual_size);
set_gdbarch_register_virtual_type (gdbarch, mn10300_register_virtual_type);
set_gdbarch_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch, mn10300_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum);
set_gdbarch_do_registers_info (gdbarch, mn10300_do_registers_info);
set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch, 8);
set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch, 9);
set_gdbarch_fp_regnum (gdbarch, 31);
set_gdbarch_virtual_frame_pointer (gdbarch, mn10300_virtual_frame_pointer);
/* Breakpoints. */
set_gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch, mn10300_breakpoint_from_pc);
set_gdbarch_function_start_offset (gdbarch, 0);
set_gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch, 0);
/* Stack unwinding. */
set_gdbarch_get_saved_register (gdbarch, generic_unwind_get_saved_register);
set_gdbarch_frame_chain_valid (gdbarch, generic_file_frame_chain_valid);
set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, core_addr_lessthan);
set_gdbarch_frame_chain_valid (gdbarch, generic_file_frame_chain_valid);
set_gdbarch_saved_pc_after_call (gdbarch, mn10300_saved_pc_after_call);
set_gdbarch_init_extra_frame_info (gdbarch, mn10300_init_extra_frame_info);
set_gdbarch_init_frame_pc (gdbarch, init_frame_pc_noop);
set_gdbarch_frame_init_saved_regs (gdbarch, mn10300_frame_init_saved_regs);
set_gdbarch_frame_chain (gdbarch, mn10300_frame_chain);
set_gdbarch_frame_saved_pc (gdbarch, mn10300_frame_saved_pc);
set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_return_value (gdbarch, mn10300_extract_return_value);
set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_struct_value_address
(gdbarch, mn10300_extract_struct_value_address);
set_gdbarch_deprecated_store_return_value (gdbarch, mn10300_store_return_value);
set_gdbarch_store_struct_return (gdbarch, mn10300_store_struct_return);
set_gdbarch_pop_frame (gdbarch, mn10300_pop_frame);
set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, mn10300_skip_prologue);
set_gdbarch_frame_args_skip (gdbarch, 0);
set_gdbarch_frame_args_address (gdbarch, default_frame_address);
set_gdbarch_frame_locals_address (gdbarch, default_frame_address);
set_gdbarch_frame_num_args (gdbarch, frame_num_args_unknown);
/* That's right, we're using the stack pointer as our frame pointer. */
set_gdbarch_read_fp (gdbarch, generic_target_read_sp);
/* Calling functions in the inferior from GDB. */
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_p (gdbarch, 1);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset_p (gdbarch, 1);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset (gdbarch, 0);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_stack_adjust_p (gdbarch, 0);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_location (gdbarch, AT_ENTRY_POINT);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_address (gdbarch, entry_point_address);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_words (gdbarch, mn10300_call_dummy_words);
set_gdbarch_sizeof_call_dummy_words (gdbarch,
sizeof (mn10300_call_dummy_words));
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_length (gdbarch, 0);
set_gdbarch_fix_call_dummy (gdbarch, generic_fix_call_dummy);
set_gdbarch_call_dummy_start_offset (gdbarch, 0);
set_gdbarch_pc_in_call_dummy (gdbarch, pc_in_call_dummy_at_entry_point);
set_gdbarch_use_generic_dummy_frames (gdbarch, 1);
set_gdbarch_push_dummy_frame (gdbarch, generic_push_dummy_frame);
set_gdbarch_push_arguments (gdbarch, mn10300_push_arguments);
set_gdbarch_reg_struct_has_addr (gdbarch, mn10300_reg_struct_has_addr);
set_gdbarch_push_return_address (gdbarch, mn10300_push_return_address);
set_gdbarch_save_dummy_frame_tos (gdbarch, generic_save_dummy_frame_tos);
set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch, mn10300_use_struct_convention);
tdep->am33_mode = am33_mode;
return gdbarch;
}
void
_initialize_mn10300_tdep (void)
{
/* printf("_initialize_mn10300_tdep\n"); */
tm_print_insn = print_insn_mn10300;
register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_mn10300, mn10300_gdbarch_init);
}