old-cross-binutils/gdb/config/pa/tm-hppa.h

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/* Parameters for execution on any Hewlett-Packard PA-RISC machine.
Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by the Center for Software Science at the
University of Utah (pa-gdb-bugs@cs.utah.edu).
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., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/* Target system byte order. */
#define TARGET_BYTE_ORDER BIG_ENDIAN
/* Get at various relevent fields of an instruction word. */
#define MASK_5 0x1f
#define MASK_11 0x7ff
#define MASK_14 0x3fff
#define MASK_21 0x1fffff
/* This macro gets bit fields using HP's numbering (MSB = 0) */
#define GET_FIELD(X, FROM, TO) \
((X) >> 31 - (TO) & (1 << ((TO) - (FROM) + 1)) - 1)
/* Watch out for NaNs */
#define IEEE_FLOAT
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/* On the PA, any pass-by-value structure > 8 bytes is actually
passed via a pointer regardless of its type or the compiler
used. */
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#define REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR(gcc_p,type) \
(TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8)
/* Offset from address of function to start of its code.
Zero on most machines. */
#define FUNCTION_START_OFFSET 0
/* Advance PC across any function entry prologue instructions
to reach some "real" code. */
#define SKIP_PROLOGUE(pc) pc = skip_prologue (pc)
/* If PC is in some function-call trampoline code, return the PC
where the function itself actually starts. If not, return NULL. */
#define SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE(pc) skip_trampoline_code (pc, NULL)
/* Return non-zero if we are in an appropriate trampoline. */
#define IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE(pc, name) \
in_solib_call_trampoline (pc, name)
#define IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE(pc, name) \
in_solib_return_trampoline (pc, name)
/* For some stupid reason find_pc_partial_function wants to treat
trampoline symbols differently.
In a nutshell, find_pc_partial_fucntion sets the low address for
the function to the PC value that was passed in if the PC value
passed in is a mst_trampoline symbol.
This causes wait_for_inferior to execute code for stepping over
or around a function (stop_pc == stop_func_start). This is
extremely bad when we're stepping through a return from a shared
library back to user code (which on the PA uses trampolines). */
#define INHIBIT_SUNSOLIB_TRANSFER_TABLE_HACK
/* Immediately after a function call, return the saved pc.
Can't go through the frames for this because on some machines
the new frame is not set up until the new function executes
some instructions. */
#undef SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL
#define SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL(frame) saved_pc_after_call (frame)
/* Stack grows upward */
#define INNER_THAN >
/* Sequence of bytes for breakpoint instruction. */
#define BREAKPOINT {0x00, 0x01, 0x00, 0x04}
/* Amount PC must be decremented by after a breakpoint.
This is often the number of bytes in BREAKPOINT
but not always.
Not on the PA-RISC */
#define DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK 0
/* return instruction is bv r0(rp) or bv,n r0(rp)*/
#define ABOUT_TO_RETURN(pc) ((read_memory_integer (pc, 4) | 0x2) == 0xE840C002)
/* Say how long (ordinary) registers are. This is a piece of bogosity
used in push_word and a few other places; REGISTER_RAW_SIZE is the
real way to know how big a register is. */
#define REGISTER_SIZE 4
/* Number of machine registers */
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#define NUM_REGS 128
/* Initializer for an array of names of registers.
There should be NUM_REGS strings in this initializer. */
#define REGISTER_NAMES \
{"flags", "r1", "rp", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", "r8", "r9", \
"r10", "r11", "r12", "r13", "r14", "r15", "r16", "r17", "r18", "r19", \
"r20", "r21", "r22", "r23", "r24", "r25", "r26", "dp", "ret0", "ret1", \
"sp", "r31", "sar", "pcoqh", "pcsqh", "pcoqt", "pcsqt", \
"eiem", "iir", "isr", "ior", "ipsw", "goto", "sr4", "sr0", "sr1", "sr2", \
"sr3", "sr5", "sr6", "sr7", "cr0", "cr8", "cr9", "ccr", "cr12", "cr13", \
"cr24", "cr25", "cr26", "mpsfu_high", "mpsfu_low", "mpsfu_ovflo", "pad", \
"fpsr", "fpe1", "fpe2", "fpe3", "fpe4", "fpe5", "fpe6", "fpe7", \
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"fr4", "fr4R", "fr5", "fr5R", "fr6", "fr6R", "fr7", "fr7R", \
"fr8", "fr8R", "fr9", "fr9R", "fr10", "fr10R", "fr11", "fr11R", \
"fr12", "fr12R", "fr13", "fr13R", "fr14", "fr14R", "fr15", "fr15R", \
"fr16", "fr16R", "fr17", "fr17R", "fr18", "fr18R", "fr19", "fr19R", \
"fr20", "fr20R", "fr21", "fr21R", "fr22", "fr22R", "fr23", "fr23R", \
"fr24", "fr24R", "fr25", "fr25R", "fr26", "fr26R", "fr27", "fr27R", \
"fr28", "fr28R", "fr29", "fr29R", "fr30", "fr30R", "fr31", "fr31R"}
/* Register numbers of various important registers.
Note that some of these values are "real" register numbers,
and correspond to the general registers of the machine,
and some are "phony" register numbers which are too large
to be actual register numbers as far as the user is concerned
but do serve to get the desired values when passed to read_register. */
#define FLAGS_REGNUM 0 /* Various status flags */
#define RP_REGNUM 2 /* return pointer */
#define FP_REGNUM 3 /* Contains address of executing stack */
/* frame */
#define SP_REGNUM 30 /* Contains address of top of stack */
#define SAR_REGNUM 32 /* shift amount register */
#define IPSW_REGNUM 41 /* processor status word. ? */
#define PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM 33 /* instruction offset queue head */
#define PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM 34 /* instruction space queue head */
#define PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM 35 /* instruction offset queue tail */
#define PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM 36 /* instruction space queue tail */
#define FP0_REGNUM 64 /* floating point reg. 0 */
#define FP4_REGNUM 72
/* compatibility with the rest of gdb. */
#define PC_REGNUM PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM
#define NPC_REGNUM PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM
/* When fetching register values from an inferior or a core file,
clean them up using this macro. BUF is a char pointer to
the raw value of the register in the registers[] array. */
#define CLEAN_UP_REGISTER_VALUE(regno, buf) \
do { \
if ((regno) == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || (regno) == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) \
(buf)[3] &= ~0x3; \
} while (0)
/* Define DO_REGISTERS_INFO() to do machine-specific formatting
of register dumps. */
#define DO_REGISTERS_INFO(_regnum, fp) pa_do_registers_info (_regnum, fp)
/* PA specific macro to see if the current instruction is nullified. */
#define INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED ((int)read_register (IPSW_REGNUM) & 0x00200000)
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/* Number of bytes of storage in the actual machine representation
for register N. On the PA-RISC, all regs are 4 bytes, including
the FP registers (they're accessed as two 4 byte halves). */
#define REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(N) 4
/* Total amount of space needed to store our copies of the machine's
register state, the array `registers'. */
#define REGISTER_BYTES (NUM_REGS * 4)
/* Index within `registers' of the first byte of the space for
register N. */
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#define REGISTER_BYTE(N) (N) * 4
/* Number of bytes of storage in the program's representation
for register N. */
#define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE(N) REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(N)
/* Largest value REGISTER_RAW_SIZE can have. */
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#define MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 4
/* Largest value REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE can have. */
#define MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE 8
/* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type
of data in register N. */
#define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE(N) \
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((N) < FP4_REGNUM ? builtin_type_int : builtin_type_float)
/* Store the address of the place in which to copy the structure the
subroutine will return. This is called from call_function. */
#define STORE_STRUCT_RETURN(ADDR, SP) {write_register (28, (ADDR)); }
/* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
a function return value of type TYPE, and copy that, in virtual format,
into VALBUF. */
#define EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,REGBUF,VALBUF) \
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memcpy (VALBUF, (REGBUF) + REGISTER_BYTE(TYPE_LENGTH(TYPE) > 4 ? \
FP4_REGNUM :28), TYPE_LENGTH (TYPE))
/* Write into appropriate registers a function return value
of type TYPE, given in virtual format. */
#define STORE_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,VALBUF) \
write_register_bytes ((TYPE_LENGTH(TYPE) > 4 \
? REGISTER_BYTE (FP4_REGNUM) \
: REGISTER_BYTE (28)), \
(VALBUF), TYPE_LENGTH (TYPE))
/* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
the address in which a function should return its structure value,
as a CORE_ADDR (or an expression that can be used as one). */
#define EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS(REGBUF) (*(int *)((REGBUF) + 28))
/*
* This macro defines the register numbers (from REGISTER_NAMES) that
* are effectively unavailable to the user through ptrace(). It allows
* us to include the whole register set in REGISTER_NAMES (inorder to
* better support remote debugging). If it is used in
* fetch/store_inferior_registers() gdb will not complain about I/O errors
* on fetching these registers. If all registers in REGISTER_NAMES
* are available, then return false (0).
*/
#define CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER(regno) \
((regno) == 0) || \
((regno) == PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM) || \
((regno) >= PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM && (regno) < IPSW_REGNUM) || \
((regno) > IPSW_REGNUM && (regno) < FP4_REGNUM)
#define INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO(fromleaf, frame) init_extra_frame_info (fromleaf, frame)
/* Describe the pointer in each stack frame to the previous stack frame
(its caller). */
/* FRAME_CHAIN takes a frame's nominal address
and produces the frame's chain-pointer.
FRAME_CHAIN_COMBINE takes the chain pointer and the frame's nominal address
and produces the nominal address of the caller frame.
However, if FRAME_CHAIN_VALID returns zero,
it means the given frame is the outermost one and has no caller.
In that case, FRAME_CHAIN_COMBINE is not used. */
/* In the case of the PA-RISC, the frame's nominal address
is the address of a 4-byte word containing the calling frame's
address (previous FP). */
#define FRAME_CHAIN(thisframe) frame_chain (thisframe)
#define FRAME_CHAIN_VALID(chain, thisframe) \
frame_chain_valid (chain, thisframe)
#define FRAME_CHAIN_COMBINE(chain, thisframe) (chain)
/* Define other aspects of the stack frame. */
/* A macro that tells us whether the function invocation represented
by FI does not have a frame on the stack associated with it. If it
does not, FRAMELESS is set to 1, else 0. */
#define FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION(FI, FRAMELESS) \
(FRAMELESS) = frameless_function_invocation(FI)
#define FRAME_SAVED_PC(FRAME) frame_saved_pc (FRAME)
#define FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS(fi) ((fi)->frame)
#define FRAME_LOCALS_ADDRESS(fi) ((fi)->frame)
/* Set VAL to the number of args passed to frame described by FI.
Can set VAL to -1, meaning no way to tell. */
/* We can't tell how many args there are
now that the C compiler delays popping them. */
#define FRAME_NUM_ARGS(val,fi) (val = -1)
/* Return number of bytes at start of arglist that are not really args. */
#define FRAME_ARGS_SKIP 0
#define FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS(frame_info, frame_saved_regs) \
hppa_frame_find_saved_regs (frame_info, &frame_saved_regs)
/* Things needed for making the inferior call functions. */
/* Push an empty stack frame, to record the current PC, etc. */
#define PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME push_dummy_frame ()
/* Discard from the stack the innermost frame,
restoring all saved registers. */
#define POP_FRAME hppa_pop_frame ()
/* This sequence of words is the instructions
; Call stack frame has already been built by gdb. Since we could be calling
; a varargs function, and we do not have the benefit of a stub to put things in
; the right place, we load the first 4 word of arguments into both the general
; and fp registers.
call_dummy
ldw -36(sp), arg0
ldw -40(sp), arg1
ldw -44(sp), arg2
ldw -48(sp), arg3
ldo -36(sp), r1
fldws 0(0, r1), fr4
fldds -4(0, r1), fr5
fldws -8(0, r1), fr6
fldds -12(0, r1), fr7
ldil 0, r22 ; target will be placed here.
ldo 0(r22), r22
ldsid (0,r22), r4
ldil 0, r1 ; _sr4export will be placed here.
ldo 0(r1), r1
ldsid (0,r1), r20
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combt,=,n r4, r20, text_space ; If target is in data space, do a
ble 0(sr5, r22) ; "normal" procedure call
copy r31, r2
break 4, 8
mtsp r21, sr0
ble,n 0(sr0, r22)
text_space ; Otherwise, go through _sr4export,
ble (sr4, r1) ; which will return back here.
stw 31,-24(r30)
break 4, 8
mtsp r21, sr0
ble,n 0(sr0, r22)
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nop ; To avoid kernel bugs
nop ; and keep the dummy 8 byte aligned
The dummy decides if the target is in text space or data space. If
it's in data space, there's no problem because the target can
return back to the dummy. However, if the target is in text space,
the dummy calls the secret, undocumented routine _sr4export, which
calls a function in text space and can return to any space. Instead
of including fake instructions to represent saved registers, we
know that the frame is associated with the call dummy and treat it
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specially.
The trailing NOPs are needed to avoid a bug in HPUX, BSD and OSF1
kernels. If the memory at the location pointed to by the PC is
0xffffffff then a ptrace step call will fail (even if the instruction
is nullified).
The code to pop a dummy frame single steps three instructions
starting with the last mtsp. This includes the nullified "instruction"
following the ble (which is uninitialized junk). If the
"instruction" following the last BLE is 0xffffffff, then the ptrace
will fail and the dummy frame is not correctly popped.
By placing a NOP in the delay slot of the BLE instruction we can be
sure that we never try to execute a 0xffffffff instruction and
avoid the kernel bug. The second NOP is needed to keep the call
dummy 8 byte aligned. */
#define CALL_DUMMY {0x4BDA3FB9, 0x4BD93FB1, 0x4BD83FA9, 0x4BD73FA1,\
0x37C13FB9, 0x24201004, 0x2C391005, 0x24311006,\
0x2C291007, 0x22C00000, 0x36D60000, 0x02C010A4,\
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0x20200000, 0x34210000, 0x002010b4, 0x82842022,\
0xe6c06000, 0x081f0242, 0x00010004, 0x00151820,\
0xe6c00002, 0xe4202000, 0x6bdf3fd1, 0x00010004,\
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0x00151820, 0xe6c00002, 0x08000240, 0x08000240}
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#define CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH 112
#define CALL_DUMMY_START_OFFSET 0
/*
* Insert the specified number of args and function address
* into a call sequence of the above form stored at DUMMYNAME.
*
* On the hppa we need to call the stack dummy through $$dyncall.
* Therefore our version of FIX_CALL_DUMMY takes an extra argument,
* real_pc, which is the location where gdb should start up the
* inferior to do the function call.
*/
#define FIX_CALL_DUMMY hppa_fix_call_dummy
CORE_ADDR hppa_fix_call_dummy();
#define PUSH_ARGUMENTS(nargs, args, sp, struct_return, struct_addr) \
sp = hppa_push_arguments(nargs, args, sp, struct_return, struct_addr)
/* The low two bits of the PC on the PA contain the privilege level. Some
genius implementing a (non-GCC) compiler apparently decided this means
that "addresses" in a text section therefore include a privilege level,
and thus symbol tables should contain these bits. This seems like a
bonehead thing to do--anyway, it seems to work for our purposes to just
ignore those bits. */
#define SMASH_TEXT_ADDRESS(addr) ((addr) &= ~0x3)
#define GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA
#define BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION 1
/*
* Unwind table and descriptor.
*/
struct unwind_table_entry {
unsigned int region_start;
unsigned int region_end;
unsigned int Cannot_unwind : 1;
unsigned int Millicode : 1;
unsigned int Millicode_save_sr0 : 1;
unsigned int Region_description : 2;
unsigned int reserved1 : 1;
unsigned int Entry_SR : 1;
unsigned int Entry_FR : 4; /* number saved */
unsigned int Entry_GR : 5; /* number saved */
unsigned int Args_stored : 1;
unsigned int Variable_Frame : 1;
unsigned int Separate_Package_Body : 1;
unsigned int Frame_Extension_Millicode:1;
unsigned int Stack_Overflow_Check : 1;
unsigned int Two_Instruction_SP_Increment:1;
unsigned int Ada_Region : 1;
/* Use this field to store a stub unwind type. */
#define stub_type reserved2
unsigned int reserved2 : 4;
unsigned int Save_SP : 1;
unsigned int Save_RP : 1;
unsigned int Save_MRP_in_frame : 1;
unsigned int extn_ptr_defined : 1;
unsigned int Cleanup_defined : 1;
unsigned int MPE_XL_interrupt_marker: 1;
unsigned int HP_UX_interrupt_marker: 1;
unsigned int Large_frame : 1;
unsigned int reserved4 : 2;
unsigned int Total_frame_size : 27;
};
/* HP linkers also generate unwinds for various linker-generated stubs.
GDB reads in the stubs from the $UNWIND_END$ subspace, then
"converts" them into normal unwind entries using some of the reserved
fields to store the stub type. */
struct stub_unwind_entry
{
/* The offset within the executable for the associated stub. */
unsigned stub_offset;
/* The type of stub this unwind entry describes. */
char type;
/* Unknown. Not needed by GDB at this time. */
char prs_info;
/* Length (in instructions) of the associated stub. */
short stub_length;
};
/* Sizes (in bytes) of the native unwind entries. */
#define UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE 16
#define STUB_UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE 8
/* The gaps represent linker stubs used in MPE and space for future
expansion. */
enum unwind_stub_types
{
LONG_BRANCH = 1,
PARAMETER_RELOCATION = 2,
EXPORT = 10,
IMPORT = 11,
};
/* Info about the unwind table associated with an object file. This is hung
off of the objfile->obj_private pointer, and is allocated in the objfile's
psymbol obstack. This allows us to have unique unwind info for each
executable and shared library that we are debugging. */
struct obj_unwind_info {
struct unwind_table_entry *table; /* Pointer to unwind info */
struct unwind_table_entry *cache; /* Pointer to last entry we found */
int last; /* Index of last entry */
};
#define OBJ_UNWIND_INFO(obj) ((struct obj_unwind_info *)obj->obj_private)
extern CORE_ADDR target_read_pc PARAMS ((int));
extern void target_write_pc PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, int));
#define TARGET_READ_PC(pid) target_read_pc (pid)
#define TARGET_WRITE_PC(v,pid) target_write_pc (v,pid)
/* For a number of horrible reasons we may have to adjust the location
of variables on the stack. Ugh. */
#define HPREAD_ADJUST_STACK_ADDRESS(ADDR) hpread_adjust_stack_address(ADDR)
extern int hpread_adjust_stack_address PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));