/* Target machine sub-parameters for SPARC, for GDB, the GNU debugger. This is included by other tm-*.h files to define SPARC cpu-related info. Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Contributed by Michael Tiemann (tiemann@mcc.com) 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. */ #ifdef __STDC__ struct frame_info; struct type; struct value; #endif #define TARGET_BYTE_ORDER BIG_ENDIAN /* Floating point is IEEE compatible. */ #define IEEE_FLOAT /* If an argument is declared "register", Sun cc will keep it in a register, never saving it onto the stack. So we better not believe the "p" symbol descriptor stab. */ #define USE_REGISTER_NOT_ARG /* When passing a structure to a function, Sun cc passes the address not the structure itself. It (under SunOS4) creates two symbols, which we need to combine to a LOC_REGPARM. Gcc version two (as of 1.92) behaves like sun cc. REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR is smart enough to distinguish between Sun cc, gcc version 1 and gcc version 2. */ #define REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR(gcc_p,type) (gcc_p != 1) /* Sun /bin/cc gets this right as of SunOS 4.1.x. We need to define BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION to get this right now that the code which detects gcc2_compiled. is broken. This loses for SunOS 4.0.x and earlier. */ #define BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION 1 /* For acc, there's no need to correct LBRAC entries by guessing how they should work. In fact, this is harmful because the LBRAC entries now all appear at the end of the function, not intermixed with the SLINE entries. n_opt_found detects acc for Solaris binaries; function_stab_type detects acc for SunOS4 binaries. For binary from SunOS4 /bin/cc, need to correct LBRAC's. For gcc, like acc, don't correct. */ #define SUN_FIXED_LBRAC_BUG \ (n_opt_found \ || function_stab_type == N_STSYM \ || function_stab_type == N_GSYM \ || processing_gcc_compilation) /* Do variables in the debug stabs occur after the N_LBRAC or before it? acc: after, gcc: before, SunOS4 /bin/cc: before. */ #define VARIABLES_INSIDE_BLOCK(desc, gcc_p) \ (!(gcc_p) \ && (n_opt_found \ || function_stab_type == N_STSYM \ || function_stab_type == N_GSYM)) /* 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. SKIP_PROLOGUE_FRAMELESS_P advances the PC past some of the prologue, but stops as soon as it knows that the function has a frame. Its result is equal to its input PC if the function is frameless, unequal otherwise. */ #define SKIP_PROLOGUE(pc) \ { pc = skip_prologue (pc, 0); } #define SKIP_PROLOGUE_FRAMELESS_P(pc) \ { pc = skip_prologue (pc, 1); } extern CORE_ADDR skip_prologue PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, int)); /* 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. */ /* On the Sun 4 under SunOS, the compile will leave a fake insn which encodes the structure size being returned. If we detect such a fake insn, step past it. */ #define PC_ADJUST(pc) sparc_pc_adjust(pc) extern CORE_ADDR sparc_pc_adjust PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR)); #define SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL(frame) PC_ADJUST (read_register (RP_REGNUM)) /* Stack grows downward. */ #define INNER_THAN < /* Stack must be aligned on 64-bit boundaries when synthesizing function calls. */ #define STACK_ALIGN(ADDR) (((ADDR) + 7) & -8) /* Sequence of bytes for breakpoint instruction (ta 1). */ #define BREAKPOINT {0x91, 0xd0, 0x20, 0x01} /* Amount PC must be decremented by after a breakpoint. This is often the number of bytes in BREAKPOINT but not always. */ #define DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK 0 /* Nonzero if instruction at PC is a return instruction. */ /* For SPARC, this is either a "jmpl %o7+8,%g0" or "jmpl %i7+8,%g0". Note: this does not work for functions returning structures under SunOS. v9 does not have such critters though. */ #define ABOUT_TO_RETURN(pc) \ ((read_memory_integer (pc, 4)|0x00040000) == 0x81c7e008) /* 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 */ #define NUM_REGS 72 /* Initializer for an array of names of registers. There should be NUM_REGS strings in this initializer. */ #define REGISTER_NAMES \ { "g0", "g1", "g2", "g3", "g4", "g5", "g6", "g7", \ "o0", "o1", "o2", "o3", "o4", "o5", "sp", "o7", \ "l0", "l1", "l2", "l3", "l4", "l5", "l6", "l7", \ "i0", "i1", "i2", "i3", "i4", "i5", "fp", "i7", \ \ "f0", "f1", "f2", "f3", "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", \ "f8", "f9", "f10", "f11", "f12", "f13", "f14", "f15", \ "f16", "f17", "f18", "f19", "f20", "f21", "f22", "f23", \ "f24", "f25", "f26", "f27", "f28", "f29", "f30", "f31", \ \ "y", "psr", "wim", "tbr", "pc", "npc", "fpsr", "cpsr" } /* 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 G0_REGNUM 0 /* %g0 */ #define G1_REGNUM 1 /* %g1 */ #define O0_REGNUM 8 /* %o0 */ #define SP_REGNUM 14 /* Contains address of top of stack, \ which is also the bottom of the frame. */ #define RP_REGNUM 15 /* Contains return address value, *before* \ any windows get switched. */ #define O7_REGNUM 15 /* Last local reg not saved on stack frame */ #define L0_REGNUM 16 /* First local reg that's saved on stack frame rather than in machine registers */ #define I0_REGNUM 24 /* %i0 */ #define FP_REGNUM 30 /* Contains address of executing stack frame */ #define I7_REGNUM 31 /* Last local reg saved on stack frame */ #define FP0_REGNUM 32 /* Floating point register 0 */ #define Y_REGNUM 64 /* Temp register for multiplication, etc. */ #define PS_REGNUM 65 /* Contains processor status */ #define PS_FLAG_CARRY 0x100000 /* Carry bit in PS */ #define WIM_REGNUM 66 /* Window Invalid Mask (not really supported) */ #define TBR_REGNUM 67 /* Trap Base Register (not really supported) */ #define PC_REGNUM 68 /* Contains program counter */ #define NPC_REGNUM 69 /* Contains next PC */ #define FPS_REGNUM 70 /* Floating point status register */ #define CPS_REGNUM 71 /* Coprocessor status register */ /* Total amount of space needed to store our copies of the machine's register state, the array `registers'. On the sparc, `registers' contains the ins and locals, even though they are saved on the stack rather than with the other registers, and this causes hair and confusion in places like pop_frame. It might be better to remove the ins and locals from `registers', make sure that get_saved_register can get them from the stack (even in the innermost frame), and make this the way to access them. For the frame pointer we would do that via TARGET_READ_FP. On the other hand, that is likely to be confusing or worse for flat frames. */ #define REGISTER_BYTES (32*4+32*4+8*4) /* Index within `registers' of the first byte of the space for register N. */ /* ?? */ #define REGISTER_BYTE(N) ((N)*4) /* We need to override GET_SAVED_REGISTER so that we can deal with the way outs change into ins in different frames. HAVE_REGISTER_WINDOWS can't deal with this case and also handle flat frames at the same time. */ #define GET_SAVED_REGISTER 1 /* Number of bytes of storage in the actual machine representation for register N. */ /* On the SPARC, all regs are 4 bytes. */ #define REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(N) (4) /* Number of bytes of storage in the program's representation for register N. */ /* On the SPARC, all regs are 4 bytes. */ #define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE(N) (4) /* Largest value REGISTER_RAW_SIZE can have. */ #define MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 8 /* 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) \ ((N) < 32 ? builtin_type_int : (N) < 64 ? builtin_type_float : \ builtin_type_int) /* Writing to %g0 is a noop (not an error or exception or anything like that, however). */ #define CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER(regno) ((regno) == G0_REGNUM) /* Store the address of the place in which to copy the structure the subroutine will return. This is called from call_function_by_hand. The ultimate mystery is, tho, what is the value "16"? */ #define STORE_STRUCT_RETURN(ADDR, SP) \ { char val[4]; \ store_unsigned_integer (val, 4, (ADDR)); \ write_memory ((SP)+(16*4), val, 4); } /* 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) \ sparc_extract_return_value(TYPE, REGBUF, VALBUF) extern void sparc_extract_return_value PARAMS ((struct type *, char [], char *)); /* Write into appropriate registers a function return value of type TYPE, given in virtual format. */ #define STORE_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,VALBUF) \ sparc_store_return_value(TYPE, VALBUF) extern void sparc_store_return_value PARAMS ((struct type *, char *)); /* 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) \ (sparc_extract_struct_value_address (REGBUF)) extern CORE_ADDR sparc_extract_struct_value_address PARAMS ((char [REGISTER_BYTES])); /* 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. */ /* In the case of the Sun 4, the frame-chain's nominal address is held in the frame pointer register. On the Sun4, the frame (in %fp) is %sp for the previous frame. From the previous frame's %sp, we can find the previous frame's %fp: it is in the save area just above the previous frame's %sp. If we are setting up an arbitrary frame, we'll need to know where it ends. Hence the following. This part of the frame cache structure should be checked before it is assumed that this frame's bottom is in the stack pointer. If there isn't a frame below this one, the bottom of this frame is in the stack pointer. If there is a frame below this one, and the frame pointers are identical, it's a leaf frame and the bottoms are the same also. Otherwise the bottom of this frame is the top of the next frame. The bottom field is misnamed, since it might imply that memory from bottom to frame contains this frame. That need not be true if stack frames are allocated in different segments (e.g. some on a stack, some on a heap in the data segment). GCC 2.6 and later can generate ``flat register window'' code that makes frames by explicitly saving those registers that need to be saved. %i7 is used as the frame pointer, and the frame is laid out so that flat and non-flat calls can be intermixed freely within a program. Unfortunately for GDB, this means it must detect and record the flatness of frames. Since the prologue in a flat frame also tells us where fp and pc have been stashed (the frame is of variable size, so their location is not fixed), it's convenient to record them in the frame info. */ #define EXTRA_FRAME_INFO \ CORE_ADDR bottom; \ int in_prologue; \ int flat; \ /* Following fields only relevant for flat frames. */ \ CORE_ADDR pc_addr; \ CORE_ADDR fp_addr; \ /* Add this to ->frame to get the value of the stack pointer at the */ \ /* time of the register saves. */ \ int sp_offset; #define INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO(fromleaf, fci) \ sparc_init_extra_frame_info (fromleaf, fci) extern void sparc_init_extra_frame_info PARAMS((int, struct frame_info *)); #define PRINT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO(fi) \ { \ if ((fi) && (fi)->flat) \ printf_filtered (" flat, pc saved at 0x%x, fp saved at 0x%x\n", \ (fi)->pc_addr, (fi)->fp_addr); \ } #define FRAME_CHAIN(thisframe) (sparc_frame_chain (thisframe)) extern CORE_ADDR sparc_frame_chain PARAMS ((struct frame_info *)); /* INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO needs the PC to detect flat frames. */ #define INIT_FRAME_PC(fromleaf, prev) /* nothing */ #define INIT_FRAME_PC_FIRST(fromleaf, prev) \ (prev)->pc = ((fromleaf) ? SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL ((prev)->next) : \ (prev)->next ? FRAME_SAVED_PC ((prev)->next) : read_pc ()); /* 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_look_for_prologue(FI) /* The location of I0 w.r.t SP. This is actually dependent on how the system's window overflow/underflow routines are written. Most vendors save the L regs followed by the I regs (at the higher address). Some vendors get it wrong. */ #define FRAME_SAVED_L0 0 #define FRAME_SAVED_I0 (8 * REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (L0_REGNUM)) /* Where is the PC for a specific frame */ #define FRAME_SAVED_PC(FRAME) sparc_frame_saved_pc (FRAME) extern CORE_ADDR sparc_frame_saved_pc PARAMS ((struct frame_info *)); /* If the argument is on the stack, it will be here. */ #define FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS(fi) ((fi)->frame) #define FRAME_STRUCT_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 68 /* Things needed for making the inferior call functions. */ /* * First of all, let me give my opinion of what the DUMMY_FRAME * actually looks like. * * | | * | | * + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - +<-- fp (level 0) * | | * | | * | | * | | * | Frame of innermost program | * | function | * | | * | | * | | * | | * | | * |---------------------------------|<-- sp (level 0), fp (c) * | | * DUMMY | fp0-31 | * | | * | ------ |<-- fp - 0x80 * FRAME | g0-7 |<-- fp - 0xa0 * | i0-7 |<-- fp - 0xc0 * | other |<-- fp - 0xe0 * | ? | * | ? | * |---------------------------------|<-- sp' = fp - 0x140 * | | * xcution start | | * sp' + 0x94 -->| CALL_DUMMY (x code) | * | | * | | * |---------------------------------|<-- sp'' = fp - 0x200 * | align sp to 8 byte boundary | * | ==> args to fn <== | * Room for | | * i & l's + agg | CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST = 0x0x44| * |---------------------------------|<-- final sp (variable) * | | * | Where function called will | * | build frame. | * | | * | | * * I understand everything in this picture except what the space * between fp - 0xe0 and fp - 0x140 is used for. Oh, and I don't * understand why there's a large chunk of CALL_DUMMY that never gets * executed (its function is superceeded by PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME; they * are designed to do the same thing). * * PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME saves the registers above sp' and pushes the * register file stack down one. * * call_function then writes CALL_DUMMY, pushes the args onto the * stack, and adjusts the stack pointer. * * run_stack_dummy then starts execution (in the middle of * CALL_DUMMY, as directed by call_function). */ /* Push an empty stack frame, to record the current PC, etc. */ #define PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME sparc_push_dummy_frame () #define POP_FRAME sparc_pop_frame () void sparc_push_dummy_frame PARAMS ((void)), sparc_pop_frame PARAMS ((void)); #ifndef CALL_DUMMY /* This sequence of words is the instructions 0: mov %g1, %fp 4: save %sp, %g0, %sp 8: mov %g2, %fp 12: mov %g3, %i7 16: ld [%sp+0x58],%o5 20: ld [%sp+0x54],%o4 24: ld [%sp+0x50],%o3 28: ld [%sp+0x4c],%o2 32: ld [%sp+0x48],%o1 36: call 0x00000000 40: ld [%sp+0x44],%o0 44: nop 48: ta 1 52: nop NOTES: * the first four instructions are necessary only on the simulator. * this is a multiple of 8 (not only 4) bytes. * the `call' insn is a relative, not an absolute call. * the `nop' at the end is needed to keep the trap from clobbering things (if NPC pointed to garbage instead). */ #define CALL_DUMMY { 0xbc100001, 0x9de38000, 0xbc100002, 0xbe100003, \ 0xda03a058, 0xd803a054, 0xd603a050, 0xd403a04c, \ 0xd203a048, 0x40000000, 0xd003a044, 0x01000000, \ 0x91d02001, 0x01000000 } /* Size of the call dummy in bytes. */ #define CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH 56 /* Offset within call dummy of first instruction to execute. */ #define CALL_DUMMY_START_OFFSET 0 /* Offset within CALL_DUMMY of the 'call' instruction. */ #define CALL_DUMMY_CALL_OFFSET (CALL_DUMMY_START_OFFSET + 36) /* Offset within CALL_DUMMY of the 'ta 1' instruction. */ #define CALL_DUMMY_BREAKPOINT_OFFSET (CALL_DUMMY_START_OFFSET + 48) #define CALL_DUMMY_STACK_ADJUST 68 #endif /* Insert the specified number of args and function address into a call sequence of the above form stored at DUMMYNAME. */ #define FIX_CALL_DUMMY(dummyname, pc, fun, nargs, args, type, gcc_p) \ sparc_fix_call_dummy (dummyname, pc, fun, type, gcc_p) void sparc_fix_call_dummy PARAMS ((char *dummy, CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR fun, struct type *value_type, int using_gcc)); /* The Sparc returns long doubles on the stack. */ #define RETURN_VALUE_ON_STACK(TYPE) \ (TYPE_CODE(TYPE) == TYPE_CODE_FLT \ && TYPE_LENGTH(TYPE) > 8) /* Sparc has no reliable single step ptrace call */ #define NO_SINGLE_STEP 1 /* We need more arguments in a frame specification for the "frame" or "info frame" command. */ #define SETUP_ARBITRARY_FRAME(argc, argv) setup_arbitrary_frame (argc, argv) extern struct frame_info *setup_arbitrary_frame PARAMS ((int, CORE_ADDR *)); /* To print every pair of float registers as a double, we use this hook. We also print the condition code registers in a readable format (FIXME: can expand this to all control regs). */ #undef PRINT_REGISTER_HOOK #define PRINT_REGISTER_HOOK(regno) \ sparc_print_register_hook (regno) extern void sparc_print_register_hook PARAMS ((int regno)); /* Optimization for storing registers to the inferior. The hook DO_DEFERRED_STORES actually executes any deferred stores. It is called any time we are going to proceed the child, or read its registers. The hook CLEAR_DEFERRED_STORES is called when we want to throw away the inferior process, e.g. when it dies or we kill it. FIXME, this does not handle remote debugging cleanly. */ extern int deferred_stores; #define DO_DEFERRED_STORES \ if (deferred_stores) \ target_store_registers (-2); #define CLEAR_DEFERRED_STORES \ deferred_stores = 0; /* If the current gcc for for this target does not produce correct debugging information for float parameters, both prototyped and unprototyped, then define this macro. This forces gdb to always assume that floats are passed as doubles and then converted in the callee. */ #define COERCE_FLOAT_TO_DOUBLE 1 /* Select the sparc disassembler */ #define TM_PRINT_INSN_MACH bfd_mach_sparc /* Arguments smaller than an int must promoted to ints when synthesizing function calls. */ #define PUSH_ARGUMENTS(nargs, args, sp, struct_return, struct_addr) \ sp = sparc_push_arguments((nargs), (args), (sp), (struct_return), (struct_addr)) extern CORE_ADDR sparc_push_arguments PARAMS ((int, struct value **, CORE_ADDR, int, CORE_ADDR));