old-cross-binutils/gdb/arm-tdep.h
Richard Earnshaw 7bbcf28307 * arm-tdep.h (ARM_MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE): Define.
(ARM_MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE): Define.
* arm-tdep.c (arm_store_return_value): Use them.
Use FP_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE when setting the FPA return value.
* remote-rdp.c (remote_rdp_fetch_register): Use
ARM_MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE.
(remote_rdp_store_register): Likewise.
2002-05-07 12:58:51 +00:00

179 lines
6.1 KiB
C

/* Common target dependent code for GDB on ARM systems.
Copyright 2002 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., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
/* 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. */
enum gdb_regnum {
ARM_A1_REGNUM = 0, /* first integer-like argument */
ARM_A4_REGNUM = 3, /* last integer-like argument */
ARM_AP_REGNUM = 11,
ARM_SP_REGNUM = 13, /* Contains address of top of stack */
ARM_LR_REGNUM = 14, /* address to return to from a function call */
ARM_PC_REGNUM = 15, /* Contains program counter */
ARM_F0_REGNUM = 16, /* first floating point register */
ARM_F3_REGNUM = 19, /* last floating point argument register */
ARM_F7_REGNUM = 23, /* last floating point register */
ARM_FPS_REGNUM = 24, /* floating point status register */
ARM_PS_REGNUM = 25, /* Contains processor status */
ARM_FP_REGNUM = 11, /* Frame register in ARM code, if used. */
THUMB_FP_REGNUM = 7, /* Frame register in Thumb code, if used. */
ARM_NUM_ARG_REGS = 4,
ARM_LAST_ARG_REGNUM = ARM_A4_REGNUM,
ARM_NUM_FP_ARG_REGS = 4,
ARM_LAST_FP_ARG_REGNUM = ARM_F3_REGNUM
};
/* Used in target-specific code when we need to know the size of the
largest type of register we need to handle. */
#define ARM_MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 12
#define ARM_MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE 8
/* Size of integer registers. */
#define INT_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 4
#define INT_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE 4
/* Say how long FP registers are. Used for documentation purposes and
code readability in this header. IEEE extended doubles are 80
bits. DWORD aligned they use 96 bits. */
#define FP_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 12
/* GCC doesn't support long doubles (extended IEEE values). The FP
register virtual size is therefore 64 bits. Used for documentation
purposes and code readability in this header. */
#define FP_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE 8
/* Status registers are the same size as general purpose registers.
Used for documentation purposes and code readability in this
header. */
#define STATUS_REGISTER_SIZE 4
/* Number of machine registers. The only define actually required
is NUM_REGS. The other definitions are used for documentation
purposes and code readability. */
/* For 26 bit ARM code, a fake copy of the PC is placed in register 25 (PS)
(and called PS for processor status) so the status bits can be cleared
from the PC (register 15). For 32 bit ARM code, a copy of CPSR is placed
in PS. */
#define NUM_FREGS 8 /* Number of floating point registers. */
#define NUM_SREGS 2 /* Number of status registers. */
#define NUM_GREGS 16 /* Number of general purpose registers. */
/* Instruction condition field values. */
#define INST_EQ 0x0
#define INST_NE 0x1
#define INST_CS 0x2
#define INST_CC 0x3
#define INST_MI 0x4
#define INST_PL 0x5
#define INST_VS 0x6
#define INST_VC 0x7
#define INST_HI 0x8
#define INST_LS 0x9
#define INST_GE 0xa
#define INST_LT 0xb
#define INST_GT 0xc
#define INST_LE 0xd
#define INST_AL 0xe
#define INST_NV 0xf
#define FLAG_N 0x80000000
#define FLAG_Z 0x40000000
#define FLAG_C 0x20000000
#define FLAG_V 0x10000000
/* ABI variants that we know about. If you add to this enum, please
update the table of names in tm-arm.c. */
enum arm_abi
{
ARM_ABI_UNKNOWN = 0,
ARM_ABI_EABI_V1,
ARM_ABI_EABI_V2,
ARM_ABI_LINUX,
ARM_ABI_NETBSD_AOUT,
ARM_ABI_NETBSD_ELF,
ARM_ABI_APCS,
ARM_ABI_FREEBSD,
ARM_ABI_WINCE,
ARM_ABI_INVALID /* Keep this last. */
};
/* Type of floating-point code in use by inferior. There are really 3 models
that are traditionally supported (plus the endianness issue), but gcc can
only generate 2 of those. The third is APCS_FLOAT, where arguments to
functions are passed in floating-point registers.
In addition to the traditional models, VFP adds two more. */
enum arm_float_model
{
ARM_FLOAT_SOFT,
ARM_FLOAT_FPA,
ARM_FLOAT_SOFT_VFP,
ARM_FLOAT_VFP
};
/* Target-dependent structure in gdbarch. */
struct gdbarch_tdep
{
enum arm_abi arm_abi; /* OS/ABI of inferior. */
const char *abi_name; /* Name of the above. */
enum arm_float_model fp_model; /* Floating point calling conventions. */
CORE_ADDR lowest_pc; /* Lowest address at which instructions
will appear. */
const char *arm_breakpoint; /* Breakpoint pattern for an ARM insn. */
int arm_breakpoint_size; /* And its size. */
const char *thumb_breakpoint; /* Breakpoint pattern for an ARM insn. */
int thumb_breakpoint_size; /* And its size. */
int jb_pc; /* Offset to PC value in jump buffer.
If this is negative, longjmp support
will be disabled. */
size_t jb_elt_size; /* And the size of each entry in the buf. */
};
#ifndef LOWEST_PC
#define LOWEST_PC (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch)->lowest_pc)
#endif
/* Prototypes for internal interfaces needed by more than one MD file. */
int arm_pc_is_thumb_dummy (CORE_ADDR);
int arm_pc_is_thumb (CORE_ADDR);
CORE_ADDR thumb_get_next_pc (CORE_ADDR);
CORE_ADDR arm_get_next_pc (CORE_ADDR);
/* How a OS variant tells the ARM generic code that it can handle an ABI
type. */
void
arm_gdbarch_register_os_abi (enum arm_abi abi,
void (*init_abi)(struct gdbarch_info,
struct gdbarch *));