/* Parameters for target machine Intel 960, for GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Contributed by Intel Corporation. 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. */ /* Definitions to target GDB to any i960. */ #ifndef I80960 #define I80960 #endif #include "doublest.h" /* Hook for the SYMBOL_CLASS of a parameter when decoding DBX symbol information. In the i960, parameters can be stored as locals or as args, depending on the type of the debug record. From empirical observation, gcc960 uses N_LSYM to indicate arguments passed in registers and then copied immediately to the frame, and N_PSYM to indicate arguments passed in a g14-relative argument block. */ #define DBX_PARM_SYMBOL_CLASS(type) ((type == N_LSYM)? LOC_LOCAL_ARG: LOC_ARG) /* Byte order is configurable, but this machine runs little-endian. */ #define TARGET_BYTE_ORDER BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE /* Offset from address of function to start of its code. Zero on most machines. */ #define FUNCTION_START_OFFSET 0 /* Advance ip across any function entry prologue instructions to reach some "real" code. */ #define SKIP_PROLOGUE(ip) (i960_skip_prologue (ip)) extern CORE_ADDR i960_skip_prologue (); /* Immediately after a function call, return the saved ip. Can't always go through the frames for this because on some machines the new frame is not set up until the new function executes some instructions. */ #define SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL(frame) (saved_pc_after_call (frame)) extern CORE_ADDR saved_pc_after_call (); /* Stack grows upward */ #define INNER_THAN(lhs,rhs) ((lhs) > (rhs)) /* 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 40 /* Initializer for an array of names of registers. There should be NUM_REGS strings in this initializer. */ #define REGISTER_NAMES { \ /* 0 */ "pfp", "sp", "rip", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", \ /* 8 */ "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11", "r12", "r13", "r14", "r15",\ /* 16 */ "g0", "g1", "g2", "g3", "g4", "g5", "g6", "g7", \ /* 24 */ "g8", "g9", "g10", "g11", "g12", "g13", "g14", "fp", \ /* 32 */ "pcw", "ac", "tc", "ip", "fp0", "fp1", "fp2", "fp3",\ } /* Register numbers of various important registers (used to index into arrays of register names and register values). */ #define R0_REGNUM 0 /* First local register */ #define SP_REGNUM 1 /* Contains address of top of stack */ #define RIP_REGNUM 2 /* Return instruction pointer (local r2) */ #define R15_REGNUM 15 /* Last local register */ #define G0_REGNUM 16 /* First global register */ #define G13_REGNUM 29 /* g13 - holds struct return address */ #define G14_REGNUM 30 /* g14 - ptr to arg block / leafproc return address */ #define FP_REGNUM 31 /* Contains address of executing stack frame */ #define PCW_REGNUM 32 /* process control word */ #define ACW_REGNUM 33 /* arithmetic control word */ #define TCW_REGNUM 34 /* trace control word */ #define IP_REGNUM 35 /* instruction pointer */ #define FP0_REGNUM 36 /* First floating point register */ /* Some registers have more than one name */ #define PC_REGNUM IP_REGNUM /* GDB refers to ip as the Program Counter */ #define PFP_REGNUM R0_REGNUM /* Previous frame pointer */ /* Total amount of space needed to store our copies of the machine's register state, the array `registers'. */ #define REGISTER_BYTES ((36*4) + (4*10)) /* Index within `registers' of the first byte of the space for register N. */ #define REGISTER_BYTE(N) ( (N) < FP0_REGNUM ? \ (4*(N)) : ((10*(N)) - (6*FP0_REGNUM)) ) /* The i960 has register windows, sort of. */ #define HAVE_REGISTER_WINDOWS /* Is this register part of the register window system? A yes answer implies that 1) The name of this register will not be the same in other frames, and 2) This register is automatically "saved" upon subroutine calls and thus there is no need to search more than one stack frame for it. On the i960, in fact, the name of this register in another frame is "mud" -- there is no overlap between the windows. Each window is simply saved into the stack (true for our purposes, after having been flushed; normally they reside on-chip and are restored from on-chip without ever going to memory). */ #define REGISTER_IN_WINDOW_P(regnum) ((regnum) <= R15_REGNUM) /* Number of bytes of storage in the actual machine representation for register N. On the i960, all regs are 4 bytes except for floating point, which are 10. NINDY only sends us 8 byte values for these, which is a pain, but VxWorks handles this correctly, so we must. */ #define REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(N) ( (N) < FP0_REGNUM ? 4 : 10 ) /* Number of bytes of storage in the program's representation for register N. */ #define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE(N) ( (N) < FP0_REGNUM ? 4 : 8 ) /* Largest value REGISTER_RAW_SIZE can have. */ #define MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 10 /* Largest value REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE can have. */ #define MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE 8 #include "floatformat.h" #define TARGET_LONG_DOUBLE_FORMAT &floatformat_i960_ext /* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type of data in register N. */ struct type *i960_register_type (int regnum); #define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE(N) i960_register_type (N) /* Macros for understanding function return values... */ /* Does the specified function use the "struct returning" convention or the "value returning" convention? The "value returning" convention almost invariably returns the entire value in registers. The "struct returning" convention often returns the entire value in memory, and passes a pointer (out of or into the function) saying where the value (is or should go). Since this sometimes depends on whether it was compiled with GCC, this is also an argument. This is used in call_function to build a stack, and in value_being_returned to print return values. On i960, a structure is returned in registers g0-g3, if it will fit. If it's more than 16 bytes long, g13 pointed to it on entry. */ extern use_struct_convention_fn i960_use_struct_convention; #define USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION(gcc_p, type) i960_use_struct_convention (gcc_p, type) /* 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. This is only called if USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION for this type is 0. On the i960 we just take as many bytes as we need from G0 through G3. */ #define EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,REGBUF,VALBUF) \ memcpy(VALBUF, REGBUF+REGISTER_BYTE(G0_REGNUM), TYPE_LENGTH (TYPE)) /* If USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION produces a 1, 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). Address of where to put structure was passed in in global register g13 on entry. God knows what's in g13 now. The (..., 0) below is to make it appear to return a value, though actually all it does is call error(). */ #define EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS(REGBUF) \ (error("Don't know where large structure is returned on i960"), 0) /* Write into appropriate registers a function return value of type TYPE, given in virtual format, for "value returning" functions. For 'return' command: not (yet) implemented for i960. */ #define STORE_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,VALBUF) \ error ("Returning values from functions is not implemented in i960 gdb") /* 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) \ error ("Returning values from functions is not implemented in i960 gdb") /* 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. However, if FRAME_CHAIN_VALID returns zero, it means the given frame is the outermost one and has no caller. */ /* We cache information about saved registers in the frame structure, to save us from having to re-scan function prologues every time a register in a non-current frame is accessed. */ #define EXTRA_FRAME_INFO \ struct frame_saved_regs *fsr; \ CORE_ADDR arg_pointer; /* Zero the frame_saved_regs pointer when the frame is initialized, so that FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS () will know to allocate and initialize a frame_saved_regs struct the first time it is called. Set the arg_pointer to -1, which is not valid; 0 and other values indicate real, cached values. */ #define INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO(fromleaf, fi) \ ((fi)->fsr = 0, (fi)->arg_pointer = -1) /* On the i960, we get the chain pointer by reading the PFP saved on the stack and clearing the status bits. */ #define FRAME_CHAIN(thisframe) \ (read_memory_integer (FRAME_FP(thisframe), 4) & ~0xf) /* FRAME_CHAIN_VALID returns zero if the given frame is the outermost one and has no caller. On the i960, each various target system type must define FRAME_CHAIN_VALID, since it differs between NINDY and VxWorks, the two currently supported targets types. We leave it undefined here. */ /* 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. */ CORE_ADDR leafproc_return (CORE_ADDR ip); #define FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION(FI) \ (leafproc_return ((FI)->pc) != 0) /* Note that in the i960 architecture the return pointer is saved in the *caller's* stack frame. Make sure to zero low-order bits because of bug in 960CA A-step part (instruction addresses should always be word-aligned anyway). */ #define FRAME_SAVED_PC(frame) \ ((read_memory_integer(FRAME_CHAIN(frame)+8,4)) & ~3) /* On the i960, FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS should return the value of g14 as passed into the frame, if known. We need a function for this. We cache this value in the frame info if we've already looked it up. */ #define FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS(fi) \ (((fi)->arg_pointer != -1)? (fi)->arg_pointer: frame_args_address (fi, 0)) extern CORE_ADDR frame_args_address (); /* i960-tdep.c */ /* This is the same except it should return 0 when it does not really know where the args are, rather than guessing. This value is not cached since it is only used infrequently. */ #define FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS_CORRECT(fi) (frame_args_address (fi, 1)) #define FRAME_LOCALS_ADDRESS(fi) (fi)->frame /* Set NUMARGS to the number of args passed to a frame. Can return -1, meaning no way to tell. */ #define FRAME_NUM_ARGS(fi) (-1) /* Return number of bytes at start of arglist that are not really args. */ #define FRAME_ARGS_SKIP 0 /* Produce the positions of the saved registers in a stack frame. */ #define FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS(frame_info_addr, sr) \ frame_find_saved_regs (frame_info_addr, &sr) extern void frame_find_saved_regs (); /* See i960-tdep.c */ /* Things needed for making calls to functions in the inferior process */ /* Push an empty stack frame, to record the current ip, etc. Not (yet?) implemented for i960. */ #define PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME \ error("Function calls into the inferior process are not supported on the i960") /* Discard from the stack the innermost frame, restoring all registers. */ void i960_pop_frame (void); #define POP_FRAME \ i960_pop_frame () /* This sequence of words is the instructions callx 0x00000000 fmark */ /* #define CALL_DUMMY { 0x86003000, 0x00000000, 0x66003e00 } */ /* #define CALL_DUMMY_START_OFFSET 0 *//* Start execution at beginning of dummy */ /* Indicate that we don't support calling inferior child functions. */ #undef CALL_DUMMY /* Insert the specified number of args and function address into a call sequence of the above form stored at 'dummyname'. Ignore arg count on i960. */ /* #define FIX_CALL_DUMMY(dummyname, fun, nargs) *(((int *)dummyname)+1) = fun */ #undef FIX_CALL_DUMMY /* Interface definitions for kernel debugger KDB */ /* (Not relevant to i960.) */