Now that all arches (for the most part) have moved over, move sim-stop.o,
sim-reason.o, and sim-reg.o to the common object list and out of all the
arch ports.
Other than the nice advantage of all sims having to declare one fewer
common function, this also fixes leakage in pretty much every sim.
Many were not freeing any resources, and a few were inconsistent as
to the ones they did. Now we have a single module that takes care of
all the logic for us.
Most of the non-cgen based ones could be deleted outright. The cgen
ones required adding a callback to the arch-specific cleanup func.
The few that still have close callbacks are to manage their internal
state.
We do not convert erc32, m32c, ppc, rl78, or rx as they do not use
the common sim core.
Since every target typedefs this the same way, move it to the common code.
We have to leave Blackfin behind here for now because of inter-dependencies
on types and headers: sim-base.h includes sim-model.h which needs types in
machs.h which needs types in bfim-sim.h which needs SIM_CPU.
Almost every target defines sim_cia the same way -- either using the
address_word type directly, or a type of equivalent size. The only
odd one out is sh64 (who has 32bit address_word and 64bit cia), and
even that case doesn't seem to make sense. We'll put off clean up
though of sh64 and at least set up a sensible default for everyone.
The CIA_{GET,SET} macros serve the same function as CPU_PC_{GET,SET}
except the latter adds a layer of indirection via the sim state. This
lets models set up different functions at runtime and doesn't reach so
directly into the arch-specific cpu state.
It also doesn't make sense to have two sets of macros that do exactly
the same thing, so lets standardize on the one that gets us more.
Now that all the targets are utilizing CPU_PC_{FETCH,STORE}, and the
cpu state is multicore, and the STATE_CPU defines match, we can move
it all to the common code.
A lot of cpu state is stored in global variables, as is memory handling.
The sim_size support needs unwinding at some point. But at least this
is an improvement on the status quo.
The build line was missing the normal BUILD_xxx flags. Once we added
that, we get warnings that weren't shown before. As we fix those, we
notice that the -d option segfaults because it tries to write readonly
memory. Fix that too as part of the const/prototype clean up.
Rather than manually include tconfig.h when we think we'll need it (which
is error prone as it can define symbols we expect from config.h), have it
be included directly by config.h. Since we know we have to include that
header everywhere already, this will make sure tconfig.h isn't missed.
It should also be fine as tconfig.h is supposed to be simple and only set
up a few core defines for the target.
This allows us to stop symlinking it in place all the time and just use
it straight out of the respective source directory.
We want people to stop using the run.c frontend, but it's hard to notice
when it's still set as the default. Lets flip things so nrun.c is the
default, and users of run.c will get an error by default. We turn that
error into a warning for existing sims so we don't break them -- this is
mostly meant for people starting new ports.
It seems that the implementation of the SH fabs and fneg insns in the
simulator is not correct. They use the FP_UNARY macro which checks the
FPSCR.PR setting and raises an exception if PR = 1 (double precision)
and the register number is not even (i.e. a valid DF reg number).
For normal unary FP insns this is fine. However, fneg and fabs perform
the same (integer) operations regardless of the FPSCR.PR setting.
This issue initially popped up here
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=63260
I've checked some of the failing tests mentioned in GCC PR 63260 above
with the patch applied and the failures go away.
sim/sh/ChangeLog (tiny patch):
* gencode.c (fabs, fneg): Implement as integer operation
instead of using the FP_UNARY macro.
Directories that don't use libtool need to add -ldl (on most *nix
hosts) to provide dlopen for libbfd.
config/
* plugins.m4 (AC_PLUGINS): If plugins are enabled, add -ldl to
LIBS via AC_SEARCH_LIBS.
gdb/
* acinclude.m4 (GDB_AC_CHECK_BFD): Don't add -ldl.
* config.in: Regenerate.
sim/ppc/
* configure.ac: Invoke AC_PLUGINS.
* config.in: Regenerate.
and regen lots of configure files.
It is rare for people to want to modify the cmd arg. In general, they
really shouldn't be, but a few still do. For those who misbehave, dupe
the string locally so they can bang on it.
Many of the simulators change the SIGINT handler.
E.g., moxie/interp.c:
sigsave = signal (SIGINT, interrupt);
However, this is unnecessary.
remote-sim.h already provides an API for asynchronously stopping
a sim; and both gdb and the drivers (run.c and nrun.c at least,
I didn't check the others) install a SIGINT handler which
calls this method.
URL: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16450
Reported-by: Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
This removes the last uses of PARAMS from sim.
2014-01-06 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
* README-HACKING: Don't use PARAMS.
* arm/wrapper.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* bfin/sim-main.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/callback.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/cgen-trace.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/run-sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/run.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-base.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-load.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-options.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-trace.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-trace.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* common/sim-utils.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/cr16_sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/gencode.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* cr16/simops.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/d10v_sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/gencode.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* d10v/simops.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/erc32.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/exec.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/float.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/func.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/sis.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* erc32/sis.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* mips/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* mips/sim-main.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* sh/interp.c: Don't use PARAMS.
* v850/sim-main.h: Don't use PARAMS.
* v850/v850_sim.h: Don't use PARAMS.
I noticed the sim code is using an old implementation of the maintainer logic.
I cut it over to the new macro (like gdb has been doing). In practice, it
makes no difference currently as nothing in the sim tree uses it, but I have a
follow up commit for the Blackfin tree that needs it.
Two modifications:
1. The addition of 2013 to the copyright year range for every file;
2. The use of a single year range, instead of potentially multiple
year ranges, as approved by the FSF.
Before POSIX standardized strsignal(), old systems would hide the
prototype unless the normal extension defines were enabled. So use
the AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS helper for that.
Then make sure we include string.h ourselves in nrun.c rather than
relying on implicit includes via other sim headers.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Lift the code that GDB is using to generate dependencies on the fly and
port it over to the sim. Now people shouldn't have to manually maintain
these in their Makefile's.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Automake likes to dump macros automatically used into the aclocal.m4
file, but the common/aclocal.m4 naming prevents that. So rename it
to the more normal "acinclude.m4" so the aclocal tool can work.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Now that the sourceware tree generally requires autoconf-2.64, update
the sim tree to require that too.
This allows us to drop the long standing SIM_AC_COMMON/common.m4
workaround as autoconf 2.64+ seems to work for me.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
For the ports that don't use the common/ subdir, we need to add stub funcs
to them to avoid build failures with gdb and command completion. These do
not implement the actual completion functionality ... any port that wants
that can either convert to the common/ subdir, or fill out the function on
their own time.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
As pointed out by Sandra Loosemore, a bunch of targets define sim_write
themselves instead of using the common/ code. So constify them too.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>