The bfin/msp430 ports already had trace logic set up for reading/writing
cpu registers, albeit using different unrelated levels (core & vpu). Add
a proper register class for these and for other ports.
This helper macro has largely the same behavior as libiberty's lbasename.
There is a slight nuance related to colons, but it's not clear what the
point of that is, and the code implies that it just wants the basename.
Since --trace-debug is for people hacking on the sim sources rather than
people just using the sim, default it to off. This matches the behavior
of other debug knobs we have.
Since we always include the raw syscall number when tracing, also
including it in the name when it's unknown is redundant. Simplify
the code by using a constant string.
The new helpers for walking the maps tested the wrong value for exiting
the for loop. This caused crashes when looking up entries that were not
in the map.
Many ports have the same sim syscall logic, so add some helpers to handle
all the common details. The arches still have to deal with the unpacking
and packing of the syscall arguments, but the rest of the sim<->callback
glue is now shared.
When tracing, we often want to display the human readable name for the
various syscall/errno values. Rather than make each target duplicate
the lookup, extend the existing maps to include the string directly,
and add helper functions to look up the constants.
While most targets are autogenerated (from libgloss), the bfin/cris
targets have custom maps for the Linux ABI which need to be updated
by hand.
The Blackfin port had some TRACE_xxx macros for easily logging trace data.
Use these as a base for common ones that have a simple form and match the
existing sets of helper macros.
The cgen code declares some macros/funcs using the trace_xxx prefix, but
the code isn't generic and only works with cgen targets. This is blocking
the creation of new common trace functions.
Let's blindly add cgen_xxx prefixes to all these symbols. Some already
use this convention to avoid conflicts, so it makes sense to align them.
In the future we might want to move some to the common trace core, but
one thing at a time.
First we convert the ETRACE_P to STRACE_EVENTS_P. This means we move from
using the sim_events.trace storage to the common sim_state_base.trace_data
array. With that deleted, the common trace init code can be simplified so
the sim state works the same as the sim cpu.
Now that libgloss has a header tracking the syscalls for this arch, we
can update the database to include it for the symbolic constants/maps.
Then we can switch the mcore syscall callbacks over to the common ones.
Since newlib no longer shares the same repo as binutils/gdb, we have to go
searching further afield to locate the sources. We still look at the top
level for newlib, but if that is not found, we also try up one dir outside
of this source tree. It sucks, but better than the status quo (no workie).
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.
The old run frontend had a --version option, but the new common
sim-options file does not. Restore support for that so we can
get version info out of `run` when using the new frontend.
Now that all targets have been converted to nrun, we can finally punt
this old inconsistent interface.
A few stray references to the old run were sprinkled about; clean them
up in the process.
We leave behind the run(1) man page mostly so that we get it updated for
the new nrun interface.
With newer versions of gcc (5.x), the extern inline we're using with the
cgen-{mem,ops} modules no longer work. Since this code really wants the
gnu inline semantics, use that attribute explicitly.
With newer versions of gcc (5.x), the extern inline we're using with the
sim-arange module no longer works. Since this code really wants the gnu
inline semantics, use that attribute explicitly.
Reported-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Joel Sherrill <joel.sherrill@oarcorp.com>
The profile code was using STATE_WATCHPOINTS to get access to the PC, but
we already have a standard method for getting the pc, so switch to that.
This assumes that sizeof_pc is the same size as sim_cia, but we already
assume this in places by way of sim_pc_{get,set}, and this is how it's
documented in the sim-base.h API.
The current default handling for the --enable-sim-hardware option ends up
forcing the value to whatever is set as the first argument when calling
the macro (by virtue of how autoconf works). Relocate the setup code to
the 4th parameter of the AC_ARG_ENABLE macro to fix it.
This was caused by the simplification work in 1517bd2742.
Reported-by: Hans-Peter Nilsson <hans-peter.nilsson@axis.com>
If dv-sockser is available, lets add it to the common SIM_HW_OBJS
variable so it is always included automatically. Now ports do not
have to shoe horn it in directly themselves. It does mean it will
be compiled for targets that don't explicitly use it, but that's
really what we want anyways.
This lets ports assume that the dv-sockser API is always available if
they want to. This way we don't have to do an abort at configure time
and it makes the resulting code a bit simpler.
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.