old-cross-binutils/gdb/sparc-xdep.c
Michael Tiemann d747e0af3d Tue Mar 3 15:11:52 1992 Michael Tiemann (tiemann@cygnus.com)
* All GDB files that #include defs.h: Removed stdio.h.
	(defs.h): #include stdio.h.

This has been tested by building GDBs for all targets hosted on Sun4.
None of the build problems were related to stdio.h inclusion.  (n.b.
many configurations don't build for other reasons.)
1992-03-03 23:26:26 +00:00

303 lines
9.8 KiB
C
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

/* Host-dependent code for SPARC host systems, for GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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. */
/* This code only compiles when we have the definitions in tm-sparc.h. */
#define TM_FILE_OVERRIDE
#include "defs.h"
#include "tm-sparc.h"
#include "inferior.h"
#include "target.h"
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/ptrace.h>
#include <machine/reg.h>
#include "gdbcore.h"
#include <sys/core.h>
extern char register_valid[];
/* We don't store all registers immediately when requested, since they
get sent over in large chunks anyway. Instead, we accumulate most
of the changes and send them over once. "deferred_stores" keeps
track of which sets of registers we have locally-changed copies of,
so we only need send the groups that have changed. */
#define INT_REGS 1
#define STACK_REGS 2
#define FP_REGS 4
int deferred_stores = 0; /* Cumulates stores we want to do eventually. */
/* Fetch one or more registers from the inferior. REGNO == -1 to get
them all. We actually fetch more than requested, when convenient,
marking them as valid so we won't fetch them again. */
void
fetch_inferior_registers (regno)
int regno;
{
struct regs inferior_registers;
struct fp_status inferior_fp_registers;
int i;
/* We should never be called with deferred stores, because a prerequisite
for writing regs is to have fetched them all (PREPARE_TO_STORE), sigh. */
if (deferred_stores) abort();
DO_DEFERRED_STORES;
/* Global and Out regs are fetched directly, as well as the control
registers. If we're getting one of the in or local regs,
and the stack pointer has not yet been fetched,
we have to do that first, since they're found in memory relative
to the stack pointer. */
if (regno < O7_REGNUM /* including -1 */
|| regno >= Y_REGNUM
|| (!register_valid[SP_REGNUM] && regno < I7_REGNUM))
{
if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, inferior_pid, &inferior_registers))
perror("ptrace_getregs");
registers[REGISTER_BYTE (0)] = 0;
bcopy (&inferior_registers.r_g1, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (1)], 15 * REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (G0_REGNUM));
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PS_REGNUM)] = inferior_registers.r_ps;
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PC_REGNUM)] = inferior_registers.r_pc;
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (NPC_REGNUM)] = inferior_registers.r_npc;
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (Y_REGNUM)] = inferior_registers.r_y;
for (i = G0_REGNUM; i <= O7_REGNUM; i++)
register_valid[i] = 1;
register_valid[Y_REGNUM] = 1;
register_valid[PS_REGNUM] = 1;
register_valid[PC_REGNUM] = 1;
register_valid[NPC_REGNUM] = 1;
/* If we don't set these valid, read_register_bytes() rereads
all the regs every time it is called! FIXME. */
register_valid[WIM_REGNUM] = 1; /* Not true yet, FIXME */
register_valid[TBR_REGNUM] = 1; /* Not true yet, FIXME */
register_valid[FPS_REGNUM] = 1; /* Not true yet, FIXME */
register_valid[CPS_REGNUM] = 1; /* Not true yet, FIXME */
}
/* Floating point registers */
if (regno == -1 || (regno >= FP0_REGNUM && regno <= FP0_REGNUM + 31))
{
if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, inferior_pid, &inferior_fp_registers))
perror("ptrace_getfpregs");
bcopy (&inferior_fp_registers, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM)],
sizeof inferior_fp_registers.fpu_fr);
/* bcopy (&inferior_fp_registers.Fpu_fsr,
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (FPS_REGNUM)],
sizeof (FPU_FSR_TYPE)); FIXME??? -- gnu@cyg */
for (i = FP0_REGNUM; i <= FP0_REGNUM+31; i++)
register_valid[i] = 1;
register_valid[FPS_REGNUM] = 1;
}
/* These regs are saved on the stack by the kernel. Only read them
all (16 ptrace calls!) if we really need them. */
if (regno == -1)
{
target_xfer_memory (*(CORE_ADDR*)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (SP_REGNUM)],
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (L0_REGNUM)],
16*REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (L0_REGNUM), 0);
for (i = L0_REGNUM; i <= I7_REGNUM; i++)
register_valid[i] = 1;
}
else if (regno >= L0_REGNUM && regno <= I7_REGNUM)
{
CORE_ADDR sp = *(CORE_ADDR*)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (SP_REGNUM)];
i = REGISTER_BYTE (regno);
if (register_valid[regno])
printf("register %d valid and read\n", regno);
target_xfer_memory (sp + i - REGISTER_BYTE (L0_REGNUM),
&registers[i], REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno), 0);
register_valid[regno] = 1;
}
}
/* Store our register values back into the inferior.
If REGNO is -1, do this for all registers.
Otherwise, REGNO specifies which register (so we can save time). */
void
store_inferior_registers (regno)
int regno;
{
struct regs inferior_registers;
struct fp_status inferior_fp_registers;
int wanna_store = INT_REGS + STACK_REGS + FP_REGS;
/* First decide which pieces of machine-state we need to modify.
Default for regno == -1 case is all pieces. */
if (regno >= 0)
if (FP0_REGNUM <= regno && regno < FP0_REGNUM + 32)
{
wanna_store = FP_REGS;
}
else
{
if (regno == SP_REGNUM)
wanna_store = INT_REGS + STACK_REGS;
else if (regno < L0_REGNUM || regno > I7_REGNUM)
wanna_store = INT_REGS;
else
wanna_store = STACK_REGS;
}
/* See if we're forcing the stores to happen now, or deferring. */
if (regno == -2)
{
wanna_store = deferred_stores;
deferred_stores = 0;
}
else
{
if (wanna_store == STACK_REGS)
{
/* Fall through and just store one stack reg. If we deferred
it, we'd have to store them all, or remember more info. */
}
else
{
deferred_stores |= wanna_store;
return;
}
}
if (wanna_store & STACK_REGS)
{
CORE_ADDR sp = *(CORE_ADDR *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (SP_REGNUM)];
if (regno < 0 || regno == SP_REGNUM)
{
if (!register_valid[L0_REGNUM+5]) abort();
target_xfer_memory (sp,
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (L0_REGNUM)],
16*REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (L0_REGNUM), 1);
}
else
{
if (!register_valid[regno]) abort();
target_xfer_memory (sp + REGISTER_BYTE (regno) - REGISTER_BYTE (L0_REGNUM),
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)],
REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno), 1);
}
}
if (wanna_store & INT_REGS)
{
if (!register_valid[G1_REGNUM]) abort();
bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (G1_REGNUM)],
&inferior_registers.r_g1, 15 * REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (G1_REGNUM));
inferior_registers.r_ps =
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PS_REGNUM)];
inferior_registers.r_pc =
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PC_REGNUM)];
inferior_registers.r_npc =
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (NPC_REGNUM)];
inferior_registers.r_y =
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (Y_REGNUM)];
if (0 != ptrace (PTRACE_SETREGS, inferior_pid, &inferior_registers))
perror("ptrace_setregs");
}
if (wanna_store & FP_REGS)
{
if (!register_valid[FP0_REGNUM+9]) abort();
bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM)],
&inferior_fp_registers,
sizeof inferior_fp_registers.fpu_fr);
/* bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (FPS_REGNUM)],
&inferior_fp_registers.Fpu_fsr,
sizeof (FPU_FSR_TYPE));
****/
if (0 !=
ptrace (PTRACE_SETFPREGS, inferior_pid, &inferior_fp_registers))
perror("ptrace_setfpregs");
}
}
void
fetch_core_registers (core_reg_sect, core_reg_size, which, reg_addr)
char *core_reg_sect;
unsigned core_reg_size;
int which;
unsigned int reg_addr; /* Unused in this version */
{
if (which == 0) {
/* Integer registers */
#define gregs ((struct regs *)core_reg_sect)
/* G0 *always* holds 0. */
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (0)] = 0;
/* The globals and output registers. */
bcopy (&gregs->r_g1,
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (G1_REGNUM)],
15 * REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (G1_REGNUM));
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PS_REGNUM)] = gregs->r_ps;
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PC_REGNUM)] = gregs->r_pc;
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (NPC_REGNUM)] = gregs->r_npc;
*(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (Y_REGNUM)] = gregs->r_y;
/* My best guess at where to get the locals and input
registers is exactly where they usually are, right above
the stack pointer. If the core dump was caused by a bus error
from blowing away the stack pointer (as is possible) then this
won't work, but it's worth the try. */
{
int sp;
sp = *(int *)&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (SP_REGNUM)];
if (0 != target_read_memory (sp, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (L0_REGNUM)],
16 * REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (L0_REGNUM)))
{
/* fprintf so user can still use gdb */
fprintf (stderr,
"Couldn't read input and local registers from core file\n");
}
}
} else if (which == 2) {
/* Floating point registers */
#define fpuregs ((struct fpu *) core_reg_sect)
if (core_reg_size >= sizeof (struct fpu))
{
bcopy (fpuregs->fpu_regs,
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM)],
sizeof (fpuregs->fpu_regs));
bcopy (&fpuregs->fpu_fsr,
&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (FPS_REGNUM)],
sizeof (FPU_FSR_TYPE));
}
else
fprintf (stderr, "Couldn't read float regs from core file\n");
}
}