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c906108c | 1 | /* Target-dependent code for the Matsushita MN10300 for GDB, the GNU debugger. |
cda5a58a AC |
2 | |
3 | Copyright 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software | |
4 | Foundation, Inc. | |
c906108c | 5 | |
c5aa993b | 6 | This file is part of GDB. |
c906108c | 7 | |
c5aa993b JM |
8 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
9 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
10 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or | |
11 | (at your option) any later version. | |
c906108c | 12 | |
c5aa993b JM |
13 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
14 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
15 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
16 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
c906108c | 17 | |
c5aa993b JM |
18 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
19 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | |
20 | Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, | |
21 | Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ | |
c906108c SS |
22 | |
23 | #include "defs.h" | |
24 | #include "frame.h" | |
25 | #include "inferior.h" | |
26 | #include "obstack.h" | |
27 | #include "target.h" | |
28 | #include "value.h" | |
29 | #include "bfd.h" | |
30 | #include "gdb_string.h" | |
31 | #include "gdbcore.h" | |
32 | #include "symfile.h" | |
4e052eda | 33 | #include "regcache.h" |
ad8fe2ce | 34 | #include "arch-utils.h" |
c906108c | 35 | |
6ca173e3 AC |
36 | #define D0_REGNUM 0 |
37 | #define D2_REGNUM 2 | |
38 | #define D3_REGNUM 3 | |
39 | #define A0_REGNUM 4 | |
40 | #define A2_REGNUM 6 | |
41 | #define A3_REGNUM 7 | |
42 | #define MDR_REGNUM 10 | |
43 | #define PSW_REGNUM 11 | |
44 | #define LIR_REGNUM 12 | |
45 | #define LAR_REGNUM 13 | |
46 | #define MDRQ_REGNUM 14 | |
47 | #define E0_REGNUM 15 | |
48 | #define MCRH_REGNUM 26 | |
49 | #define MCRL_REGNUM 27 | |
50 | #define MCVF_REGNUM 28 | |
51 | ||
52 | enum movm_register_bits { | |
53 | movm_exother_bit = 0x01, | |
54 | movm_exreg1_bit = 0x02, | |
55 | movm_exreg0_bit = 0x04, | |
56 | movm_other_bit = 0x08, | |
57 | movm_a3_bit = 0x10, | |
58 | movm_a2_bit = 0x20, | |
59 | movm_d3_bit = 0x40, | |
60 | movm_d2_bit = 0x80 | |
61 | }; | |
62 | ||
c2c6d25f | 63 | extern void _initialize_mn10300_tdep (void); |
a14ed312 KB |
64 | static CORE_ADDR mn10300_analyze_prologue (struct frame_info *fi, |
65 | CORE_ADDR pc); | |
c906108c | 66 | |
91225883 AC |
67 | /* mn10300 private data */ |
68 | struct gdbarch_tdep | |
69 | { | |
70 | int am33_mode; | |
71 | #define AM33_MODE (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch)->am33_mode) | |
72 | }; | |
73 | ||
c906108c SS |
74 | /* Additional info used by the frame */ |
75 | ||
76 | struct frame_extra_info | |
c5aa993b JM |
77 | { |
78 | int status; | |
79 | int stack_size; | |
80 | }; | |
c906108c | 81 | |
0f71a2f6 | 82 | |
91225883 AC |
83 | static char * |
84 | register_name (int reg, char **regs, long sizeof_regs) | |
c2d11a7d | 85 | { |
91225883 AC |
86 | if (reg < 0 || reg >= sizeof_regs / sizeof (regs[0])) |
87 | return NULL; | |
88 | else | |
89 | return regs[reg]; | |
90 | } | |
91 | ||
fa88f677 | 92 | static const char * |
91225883 | 93 | mn10300_generic_register_name (int reg) |
0f71a2f6 | 94 | { |
91225883 AC |
95 | static char *regs[] = |
96 | { "d0", "d1", "d2", "d3", "a0", "a1", "a2", "a3", | |
97 | "sp", "pc", "mdr", "psw", "lir", "lar", "", "", | |
98 | "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", | |
99 | "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "fp" | |
100 | }; | |
101 | return register_name (reg, regs, sizeof regs); | |
0f71a2f6 JM |
102 | } |
103 | ||
91225883 | 104 | |
fa88f677 | 105 | static const char * |
91225883 AC |
106 | am33_register_name (int reg) |
107 | { | |
108 | static char *regs[] = | |
109 | { "d0", "d1", "d2", "d3", "a0", "a1", "a2", "a3", | |
110 | "sp", "pc", "mdr", "psw", "lir", "lar", "", | |
111 | "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", | |
112 | "ssp", "msp", "usp", "mcrh", "mcrl", "mcvf", "", "", "" | |
113 | }; | |
114 | return register_name (reg, regs, sizeof regs); | |
115 | } | |
116 | ||
2ac51b36 | 117 | static CORE_ADDR |
fba45db2 | 118 | mn10300_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *fi) |
0f71a2f6 JM |
119 | { |
120 | return read_memory_integer (read_register (SP_REGNUM), 4); | |
121 | } | |
122 | ||
c064f384 | 123 | static void |
fba45db2 | 124 | mn10300_extract_return_value (struct type *type, char *regbuf, char *valbuf) |
0f71a2f6 JM |
125 | { |
126 | if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_PTR) | |
127 | memcpy (valbuf, regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (4), TYPE_LENGTH (type)); | |
128 | else | |
129 | memcpy (valbuf, regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (0), TYPE_LENGTH (type)); | |
130 | } | |
131 | ||
2ac51b36 | 132 | static CORE_ADDR |
fba45db2 | 133 | mn10300_extract_struct_value_address (char *regbuf) |
0f71a2f6 JM |
134 | { |
135 | return extract_address (regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (4), | |
136 | REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (4)); | |
137 | } | |
138 | ||
2ac51b36 | 139 | static void |
fba45db2 | 140 | mn10300_store_return_value (struct type *type, char *valbuf) |
0f71a2f6 JM |
141 | { |
142 | if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_PTR) | |
143 | write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (4), valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (type)); | |
144 | else | |
145 | write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (0), valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (type)); | |
146 | } | |
147 | ||
a14ed312 | 148 | static struct frame_info *analyze_dummy_frame (CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR); |
c906108c | 149 | static struct frame_info * |
fba45db2 | 150 | analyze_dummy_frame (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR frame) |
c906108c SS |
151 | { |
152 | static struct frame_info *dummy = NULL; | |
153 | if (dummy == NULL) | |
154 | { | |
155 | dummy = xmalloc (sizeof (struct frame_info)); | |
156 | dummy->saved_regs = xmalloc (SIZEOF_FRAME_SAVED_REGS); | |
157 | dummy->extra_info = xmalloc (sizeof (struct frame_extra_info)); | |
158 | } | |
159 | dummy->next = NULL; | |
160 | dummy->prev = NULL; | |
161 | dummy->pc = pc; | |
162 | dummy->frame = frame; | |
163 | dummy->extra_info->status = 0; | |
164 | dummy->extra_info->stack_size = 0; | |
165 | memset (dummy->saved_regs, '\000', SIZEOF_FRAME_SAVED_REGS); | |
166 | mn10300_analyze_prologue (dummy, 0); | |
167 | return dummy; | |
168 | } | |
169 | ||
170 | /* Values for frame_info.status */ | |
171 | ||
172 | #define MY_FRAME_IN_SP 0x1 | |
173 | #define MY_FRAME_IN_FP 0x2 | |
174 | #define NO_MORE_FRAMES 0x4 | |
175 | ||
176 | ||
177 | /* Should call_function allocate stack space for a struct return? */ | |
2ac51b36 | 178 | static int |
fba45db2 | 179 | mn10300_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *type) |
c906108c SS |
180 | { |
181 | return (TYPE_NFIELDS (type) > 1 || TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8); | |
182 | } | |
183 | ||
184 | /* The breakpoint instruction must be the same size as the smallest | |
185 | instruction in the instruction set. | |
186 | ||
187 | The Matsushita mn10x00 processors have single byte instructions | |
188 | so we need a single byte breakpoint. Matsushita hasn't defined | |
189 | one, so we defined it ourselves. */ | |
190 | ||
f4f9705a | 191 | const static unsigned char * |
fba45db2 | 192 | mn10300_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR *bp_addr, int *bp_size) |
c906108c | 193 | { |
c5aa993b JM |
194 | static char breakpoint[] = |
195 | {0xff}; | |
c906108c SS |
196 | *bp_size = 1; |
197 | return breakpoint; | |
198 | } | |
199 | ||
200 | ||
201 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. This is a helper | |
202 | function for mn10300_analyze_prologue. */ | |
203 | ||
204 | static void | |
fba45db2 | 205 | fix_frame_pointer (struct frame_info *fi, int stack_size) |
c906108c SS |
206 | { |
207 | if (fi && fi->next == NULL) | |
208 | { | |
209 | if (fi->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_SP) | |
210 | fi->frame = read_sp () - stack_size; | |
211 | else if (fi->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_FP) | |
212 | fi->frame = read_register (A3_REGNUM); | |
213 | } | |
214 | } | |
215 | ||
216 | ||
217 | /* Set offsets of registers saved by movm instruction. | |
218 | This is a helper function for mn10300_analyze_prologue. */ | |
219 | ||
220 | static void | |
fba45db2 | 221 | set_movm_offsets (struct frame_info *fi, int movm_args) |
c906108c SS |
222 | { |
223 | int offset = 0; | |
224 | ||
225 | if (fi == NULL || movm_args == 0) | |
226 | return; | |
227 | ||
ae83b20d JB |
228 | if (movm_args & movm_other_bit) |
229 | { | |
230 | /* The `other' bit leaves a blank area of four bytes at the | |
231 | beginning of its block of saved registers, making it 32 bytes | |
232 | long in total. */ | |
233 | fi->saved_regs[LAR_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 4; | |
234 | fi->saved_regs[LIR_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 8; | |
235 | fi->saved_regs[MDR_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 12; | |
236 | fi->saved_regs[A0_REGNUM + 1] = fi->frame + offset + 16; | |
237 | fi->saved_regs[A0_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 20; | |
238 | fi->saved_regs[D0_REGNUM + 1] = fi->frame + offset + 24; | |
239 | fi->saved_regs[D0_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 28; | |
240 | offset += 32; | |
241 | } | |
242 | if (movm_args & movm_a3_bit) | |
c906108c SS |
243 | { |
244 | fi->saved_regs[A3_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset; | |
245 | offset += 4; | |
246 | } | |
ae83b20d | 247 | if (movm_args & movm_a2_bit) |
c906108c SS |
248 | { |
249 | fi->saved_regs[A2_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset; | |
250 | offset += 4; | |
251 | } | |
ae83b20d | 252 | if (movm_args & movm_d3_bit) |
c906108c SS |
253 | { |
254 | fi->saved_regs[D3_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset; | |
255 | offset += 4; | |
256 | } | |
ae83b20d | 257 | if (movm_args & movm_d2_bit) |
c906108c SS |
258 | { |
259 | fi->saved_regs[D2_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset; | |
260 | offset += 4; | |
261 | } | |
ae83b20d | 262 | if (AM33_MODE) |
c2d11a7d | 263 | { |
ae83b20d JB |
264 | if (movm_args & movm_exother_bit) |
265 | { | |
266 | fi->saved_regs[MCVF_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset; | |
267 | fi->saved_regs[MCRL_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 4; | |
268 | fi->saved_regs[MCRH_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 8; | |
269 | fi->saved_regs[MDRQ_REGNUM] = fi->frame + offset + 12; | |
270 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 1] = fi->frame + offset + 16; | |
271 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 0] = fi->frame + offset + 20; | |
272 | offset += 24; | |
273 | } | |
274 | if (movm_args & movm_exreg1_bit) | |
275 | { | |
276 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 7] = fi->frame + offset; | |
277 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 6] = fi->frame + offset + 4; | |
278 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 5] = fi->frame + offset + 8; | |
279 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 4] = fi->frame + offset + 12; | |
280 | offset += 16; | |
281 | } | |
282 | if (movm_args & movm_exreg0_bit) | |
283 | { | |
284 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 3] = fi->frame + offset; | |
285 | fi->saved_regs[E0_REGNUM + 2] = fi->frame + offset + 4; | |
286 | offset += 8; | |
287 | } | |
c2d11a7d | 288 | } |
c906108c SS |
289 | } |
290 | ||
291 | ||
292 | /* The main purpose of this file is dealing with prologues to extract | |
293 | information about stack frames and saved registers. | |
294 | ||
4eab1e18 JB |
295 | In gcc/config/mn13000/mn10300.c, the expand_prologue prologue |
296 | function is pretty readable, and has a nice explanation of how the | |
297 | prologue is generated. The prologues generated by that code will | |
03a0cf8a JB |
298 | have the following form (NOTE: the current code doesn't handle all |
299 | this!): | |
c906108c | 300 | |
4eab1e18 JB |
301 | + If this is an old-style varargs function, then its arguments |
302 | need to be flushed back to the stack: | |
303 | ||
304 | mov d0,(4,sp) | |
305 | mov d1,(4,sp) | |
c906108c | 306 | |
4eab1e18 JB |
307 | + If we use any of the callee-saved registers, save them now. |
308 | ||
309 | movm [some callee-saved registers],(sp) | |
310 | ||
311 | + If we have any floating-point registers to save: | |
312 | ||
313 | - Decrement the stack pointer to reserve space for the registers. | |
314 | If the function doesn't need a frame pointer, we may combine | |
315 | this with the adjustment that reserves space for the frame. | |
316 | ||
317 | add -SIZE, sp | |
318 | ||
319 | - Save the floating-point registers. We have two possible | |
320 | strategies: | |
321 | ||
322 | . Save them at fixed offset from the SP: | |
323 | ||
324 | fmov fsN,(OFFSETN,sp) | |
325 | fmov fsM,(OFFSETM,sp) | |
326 | ... | |
327 | ||
03a0cf8a JB |
328 | Note that, if OFFSETN happens to be zero, you'll get the |
329 | different opcode: fmov fsN,(sp) | |
330 | ||
4eab1e18 JB |
331 | . Or, set a0 to the start of the save area, and then use |
332 | post-increment addressing to save the FP registers. | |
333 | ||
334 | mov sp, a0 | |
335 | add SIZE, a0 | |
336 | fmov fsN,(a0+) | |
337 | fmov fsM,(a0+) | |
338 | ... | |
339 | ||
340 | + If the function needs a frame pointer, we set it here. | |
341 | ||
342 | mov sp, a3 | |
343 | ||
344 | + Now we reserve space for the stack frame proper. This could be | |
345 | merged into the `add -SIZE, sp' instruction for FP saves up | |
346 | above, unless we needed to set the frame pointer in the previous | |
347 | step, or the frame is so large that allocating the whole thing at | |
348 | once would put the FP register save slots out of reach of the | |
349 | addressing mode (128 bytes). | |
350 | ||
351 | add -SIZE, sp | |
c906108c SS |
352 | |
353 | One day we might keep the stack pointer constant, that won't | |
354 | change the code for prologues, but it will make the frame | |
355 | pointerless case much more common. */ | |
c5aa993b | 356 | |
c906108c SS |
357 | /* Analyze the prologue to determine where registers are saved, |
358 | the end of the prologue, etc etc. Return the end of the prologue | |
359 | scanned. | |
360 | ||
361 | We store into FI (if non-null) several tidbits of information: | |
362 | ||
c5aa993b JM |
363 | * stack_size -- size of this stack frame. Note that if we stop in |
364 | certain parts of the prologue/epilogue we may claim the size of the | |
365 | current frame is zero. This happens when the current frame has | |
366 | not been allocated yet or has already been deallocated. | |
c906108c | 367 | |
c5aa993b | 368 | * fsr -- Addresses of registers saved in the stack by this frame. |
c906108c | 369 | |
c5aa993b JM |
370 | * status -- A (relatively) generic status indicator. It's a bitmask |
371 | with the following bits: | |
c906108c | 372 | |
c5aa993b JM |
373 | MY_FRAME_IN_SP: The base of the current frame is actually in |
374 | the stack pointer. This can happen for frame pointerless | |
375 | functions, or cases where we're stopped in the prologue/epilogue | |
376 | itself. For these cases mn10300_analyze_prologue will need up | |
377 | update fi->frame before returning or analyzing the register | |
378 | save instructions. | |
c906108c | 379 | |
c5aa993b | 380 | MY_FRAME_IN_FP: The base of the current frame is in the |
4eab1e18 | 381 | frame pointer register ($a3). |
c906108c | 382 | |
c5aa993b JM |
383 | NO_MORE_FRAMES: Set this if the current frame is "start" or |
384 | if the first instruction looks like mov <imm>,sp. This tells | |
385 | frame chain to not bother trying to unwind past this frame. */ | |
c906108c SS |
386 | |
387 | static CORE_ADDR | |
fba45db2 | 388 | mn10300_analyze_prologue (struct frame_info *fi, CORE_ADDR pc) |
c906108c SS |
389 | { |
390 | CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end, addr, stop; | |
391 | CORE_ADDR stack_size; | |
392 | int imm_size; | |
393 | unsigned char buf[4]; | |
394 | int status, movm_args = 0; | |
395 | char *name; | |
396 | ||
397 | /* Use the PC in the frame if it's provided to look up the | |
398 | start of this function. */ | |
399 | pc = (fi ? fi->pc : pc); | |
400 | ||
401 | /* Find the start of this function. */ | |
402 | status = find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, &func_addr, &func_end); | |
403 | ||
404 | /* Do nothing if we couldn't find the start of this function or if we're | |
405 | stopped at the first instruction in the prologue. */ | |
406 | if (status == 0) | |
43ff13b4 JM |
407 | { |
408 | return pc; | |
409 | } | |
c906108c SS |
410 | |
411 | /* If we're in start, then give up. */ | |
412 | if (strcmp (name, "start") == 0) | |
413 | { | |
414 | if (fi != NULL) | |
415 | fi->extra_info->status = NO_MORE_FRAMES; | |
416 | return pc; | |
417 | } | |
418 | ||
419 | /* At the start of a function our frame is in the stack pointer. */ | |
420 | if (fi) | |
421 | fi->extra_info->status = MY_FRAME_IN_SP; | |
422 | ||
423 | /* Get the next two bytes into buf, we need two because rets is a two | |
424 | byte insn and the first isn't enough to uniquely identify it. */ | |
425 | status = read_memory_nobpt (pc, buf, 2); | |
426 | if (status != 0) | |
427 | return pc; | |
428 | ||
429 | /* If we're physically on an "rets" instruction, then our frame has | |
430 | already been deallocated. Note this can also be true for retf | |
431 | and ret if they specify a size of zero. | |
432 | ||
433 | In this case fi->frame is bogus, we need to fix it. */ | |
434 | if (fi && buf[0] == 0xf0 && buf[1] == 0xfc) | |
435 | { | |
436 | if (fi->next == NULL) | |
437 | fi->frame = read_sp (); | |
438 | return fi->pc; | |
439 | } | |
440 | ||
441 | /* Similarly if we're stopped on the first insn of a prologue as our | |
442 | frame hasn't been allocated yet. */ | |
443 | if (fi && fi->pc == func_addr) | |
444 | { | |
445 | if (fi->next == NULL) | |
446 | fi->frame = read_sp (); | |
447 | return fi->pc; | |
448 | } | |
449 | ||
450 | /* Figure out where to stop scanning. */ | |
451 | stop = fi ? fi->pc : func_end; | |
452 | ||
453 | /* Don't walk off the end of the function. */ | |
454 | stop = stop > func_end ? func_end : stop; | |
455 | ||
456 | /* Start scanning on the first instruction of this function. */ | |
457 | addr = func_addr; | |
458 | ||
459 | /* Suck in two bytes. */ | |
460 | status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2); | |
461 | if (status != 0) | |
462 | { | |
463 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0); | |
464 | return addr; | |
465 | } | |
466 | ||
4eab1e18 JB |
467 | /* First see if this insn sets the stack pointer from a register; if |
468 | so, it's probably the initialization of the stack pointer in _start, | |
469 | so mark this as the bottom-most frame. */ | |
c906108c SS |
470 | if (buf[0] == 0xf2 && (buf[1] & 0xf3) == 0xf0) |
471 | { | |
472 | if (fi) | |
473 | fi->extra_info->status = NO_MORE_FRAMES; | |
474 | return addr; | |
475 | } | |
476 | ||
477 | /* Now look for movm [regs],sp, which saves the callee saved registers. | |
478 | ||
479 | At this time we don't know if fi->frame is valid, so we only note | |
480 | that we encountered a movm instruction. Later, we'll set the entries | |
481 | in fsr.regs as needed. */ | |
482 | if (buf[0] == 0xcf) | |
483 | { | |
484 | /* Extract the register list for the movm instruction. */ | |
485 | status = read_memory_nobpt (addr + 1, buf, 1); | |
486 | movm_args = *buf; | |
487 | ||
488 | addr += 2; | |
489 | ||
490 | /* Quit now if we're beyond the stop point. */ | |
491 | if (addr >= stop) | |
492 | { | |
493 | /* Fix fi->frame since it's bogus at this point. */ | |
494 | if (fi && fi->next == NULL) | |
495 | fi->frame = read_sp (); | |
496 | ||
497 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
498 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
499 | return addr; | |
500 | } | |
501 | ||
502 | /* Get the next two bytes so the prologue scan can continue. */ | |
503 | status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2); | |
504 | if (status != 0) | |
505 | { | |
506 | /* Fix fi->frame since it's bogus at this point. */ | |
507 | if (fi && fi->next == NULL) | |
508 | fi->frame = read_sp (); | |
509 | ||
510 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
511 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
512 | return addr; | |
513 | } | |
514 | } | |
515 | ||
516 | /* Now see if we set up a frame pointer via "mov sp,a3" */ | |
517 | if (buf[0] == 0x3f) | |
518 | { | |
519 | addr += 1; | |
520 | ||
521 | /* The frame pointer is now valid. */ | |
522 | if (fi) | |
523 | { | |
524 | fi->extra_info->status |= MY_FRAME_IN_FP; | |
525 | fi->extra_info->status &= ~MY_FRAME_IN_SP; | |
526 | } | |
527 | ||
528 | /* Quit now if we're beyond the stop point. */ | |
529 | if (addr >= stop) | |
530 | { | |
531 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */ | |
532 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0); | |
533 | ||
534 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
535 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
536 | return addr; | |
537 | } | |
538 | ||
539 | /* Get two more bytes so scanning can continue. */ | |
540 | status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2); | |
541 | if (status != 0) | |
542 | { | |
543 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */ | |
544 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0); | |
545 | ||
546 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
547 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
548 | return addr; | |
549 | } | |
550 | } | |
c5aa993b | 551 | |
c906108c SS |
552 | /* Next we should allocate the local frame. No more prologue insns |
553 | are found after allocating the local frame. | |
c5aa993b | 554 | |
c906108c | 555 | Search for add imm8,sp (0xf8feXX) |
c5aa993b JM |
556 | or add imm16,sp (0xfafeXXXX) |
557 | or add imm32,sp (0xfcfeXXXXXXXX). | |
558 | ||
c906108c SS |
559 | If none of the above was found, then this prologue has no |
560 | additional stack. */ | |
561 | ||
562 | status = read_memory_nobpt (addr, buf, 2); | |
563 | if (status != 0) | |
564 | { | |
565 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */ | |
566 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0); | |
567 | ||
568 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
569 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
570 | return addr; | |
571 | } | |
572 | ||
573 | imm_size = 0; | |
574 | if (buf[0] == 0xf8 && buf[1] == 0xfe) | |
575 | imm_size = 1; | |
576 | else if (buf[0] == 0xfa && buf[1] == 0xfe) | |
577 | imm_size = 2; | |
578 | else if (buf[0] == 0xfc && buf[1] == 0xfe) | |
579 | imm_size = 4; | |
580 | ||
581 | if (imm_size != 0) | |
582 | { | |
583 | /* Suck in imm_size more bytes, they'll hold the size of the | |
584 | current frame. */ | |
585 | status = read_memory_nobpt (addr + 2, buf, imm_size); | |
586 | if (status != 0) | |
587 | { | |
588 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */ | |
589 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0); | |
590 | ||
591 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
592 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
593 | return addr; | |
594 | } | |
595 | ||
596 | /* Note the size of the stack in the frame info structure. */ | |
597 | stack_size = extract_signed_integer (buf, imm_size); | |
598 | if (fi) | |
599 | fi->extra_info->stack_size = stack_size; | |
600 | ||
601 | /* We just consumed 2 + imm_size bytes. */ | |
602 | addr += 2 + imm_size; | |
603 | ||
604 | /* No more prologue insns follow, so begin preparation to return. */ | |
605 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */ | |
606 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, stack_size); | |
607 | ||
608 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
609 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
610 | return addr; | |
611 | } | |
612 | ||
613 | /* We never found an insn which allocates local stack space, regardless | |
614 | this is the end of the prologue. */ | |
615 | /* Fix fi->frame if it's bogus at this point. */ | |
616 | fix_frame_pointer (fi, 0); | |
617 | ||
618 | /* Note if/where callee saved registers were saved. */ | |
619 | set_movm_offsets (fi, movm_args); | |
620 | return addr; | |
621 | } | |
c5aa993b | 622 | |
ae83b20d JB |
623 | |
624 | /* Function: saved_regs_size | |
625 | Return the size in bytes of the register save area, based on the | |
626 | saved_regs array in FI. */ | |
627 | static int | |
628 | saved_regs_size (struct frame_info *fi) | |
629 | { | |
630 | int adjust = 0; | |
631 | int i; | |
632 | ||
633 | /* Reserve four bytes for every register saved. */ | |
634 | for (i = 0; i < NUM_REGS; i++) | |
635 | if (fi->saved_regs[i]) | |
636 | adjust += 4; | |
637 | ||
638 | /* If we saved LIR, then it's most likely we used a `movm' | |
639 | instruction with the `other' bit set, in which case the SP is | |
640 | decremented by an extra four bytes, "to simplify calculation | |
641 | of the transfer area", according to the processor manual. */ | |
642 | if (fi->saved_regs[LIR_REGNUM]) | |
643 | adjust += 4; | |
644 | ||
645 | return adjust; | |
646 | } | |
647 | ||
648 | ||
c906108c SS |
649 | /* Function: frame_chain |
650 | Figure out and return the caller's frame pointer given current | |
651 | frame_info struct. | |
652 | ||
653 | We don't handle dummy frames yet but we would probably just return the | |
654 | stack pointer that was in use at the time the function call was made? */ | |
655 | ||
2ac51b36 | 656 | static CORE_ADDR |
fba45db2 | 657 | mn10300_frame_chain (struct frame_info *fi) |
c906108c SS |
658 | { |
659 | struct frame_info *dummy; | |
660 | /* Walk through the prologue to determine the stack size, | |
661 | location of saved registers, end of the prologue, etc. */ | |
662 | if (fi->extra_info->status == 0) | |
c5aa993b | 663 | mn10300_analyze_prologue (fi, (CORE_ADDR) 0); |
c906108c SS |
664 | |
665 | /* Quit now if mn10300_analyze_prologue set NO_MORE_FRAMES. */ | |
666 | if (fi->extra_info->status & NO_MORE_FRAMES) | |
667 | return 0; | |
668 | ||
669 | /* Now that we've analyzed our prologue, determine the frame | |
670 | pointer for our caller. | |
671 | ||
c5aa993b JM |
672 | If our caller has a frame pointer, then we need to |
673 | find the entry value of $a3 to our function. | |
674 | ||
675 | If fsr.regs[A3_REGNUM] is nonzero, then it's at the memory | |
676 | location pointed to by fsr.regs[A3_REGNUM]. | |
c906108c | 677 | |
c5aa993b | 678 | Else it's still in $a3. |
c906108c | 679 | |
c5aa993b JM |
680 | If our caller does not have a frame pointer, then his |
681 | frame base is fi->frame + -caller's stack size. */ | |
c906108c | 682 | |
c906108c SS |
683 | /* The easiest way to get that info is to analyze our caller's frame. |
684 | So we set up a dummy frame and call mn10300_analyze_prologue to | |
685 | find stuff for us. */ | |
686 | dummy = analyze_dummy_frame (FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi), fi->frame); | |
687 | ||
688 | if (dummy->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_FP) | |
689 | { | |
690 | /* Our caller has a frame pointer. So find the frame in $a3 or | |
691 | in the stack. */ | |
692 | if (fi->saved_regs[A3_REGNUM]) | |
693 | return (read_memory_integer (fi->saved_regs[A3_REGNUM], REGISTER_SIZE)); | |
694 | else | |
695 | return read_register (A3_REGNUM); | |
696 | } | |
697 | else | |
698 | { | |
ae83b20d | 699 | int adjust = saved_regs_size (fi); |
c906108c SS |
700 | |
701 | /* Our caller does not have a frame pointer. So his frame starts | |
c5aa993b JM |
702 | at the base of our frame (fi->frame) + register save space |
703 | + <his size>. */ | |
c906108c SS |
704 | return fi->frame + adjust + -dummy->extra_info->stack_size; |
705 | } | |
706 | } | |
707 | ||
708 | /* Function: skip_prologue | |
709 | Return the address of the first inst past the prologue of the function. */ | |
710 | ||
2ac51b36 | 711 | static CORE_ADDR |
fba45db2 | 712 | mn10300_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc) |
c906108c SS |
713 | { |
714 | /* We used to check the debug symbols, but that can lose if | |
715 | we have a null prologue. */ | |
716 | return mn10300_analyze_prologue (NULL, pc); | |
717 | } | |
718 | ||
ee9f9641 JB |
719 | /* generic_pop_current_frame calls this function if the current |
720 | frame isn't a dummy frame. */ | |
721 | static void | |
722 | mn10300_pop_frame_regular (struct frame_info *frame) | |
c906108c SS |
723 | { |
724 | int regnum; | |
725 | ||
ee9f9641 | 726 | write_register (PC_REGNUM, FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame)); |
c906108c | 727 | |
ee9f9641 JB |
728 | /* Restore any saved registers. */ |
729 | for (regnum = 0; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++) | |
730 | if (frame->saved_regs[regnum] != 0) | |
731 | { | |
732 | ULONGEST value; | |
c906108c | 733 | |
ee9f9641 JB |
734 | value = read_memory_unsigned_integer (frame->saved_regs[regnum], |
735 | REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum)); | |
736 | write_register (regnum, value); | |
737 | } | |
c906108c | 738 | |
ee9f9641 JB |
739 | /* Actually cut back the stack. */ |
740 | write_register (SP_REGNUM, FRAME_FP (frame)); | |
c906108c | 741 | |
ee9f9641 JB |
742 | /* Don't we need to set the PC?!? XXX FIXME. */ |
743 | } | |
744 | ||
745 | /* Function: pop_frame | |
746 | This routine gets called when either the user uses the `return' | |
747 | command, or the call dummy breakpoint gets hit. */ | |
748 | static void | |
749 | mn10300_pop_frame (void) | |
750 | { | |
751 | /* This function checks for and handles generic dummy frames, and | |
752 | calls back to our function for ordinary frames. */ | |
753 | generic_pop_current_frame (mn10300_pop_frame_regular); | |
c906108c SS |
754 | |
755 | /* Throw away any cached frame information. */ | |
756 | flush_cached_frames (); | |
757 | } | |
758 | ||
759 | /* Function: push_arguments | |
760 | Setup arguments for a call to the target. Arguments go in | |
761 | order on the stack. */ | |
762 | ||
2ac51b36 | 763 | static CORE_ADDR |
91225883 AC |
764 | mn10300_push_arguments (int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp, |
765 | int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr) | |
c906108c SS |
766 | { |
767 | int argnum = 0; | |
768 | int len = 0; | |
769 | int stack_offset = 0; | |
770 | int regsused = struct_return ? 1 : 0; | |
771 | ||
772 | /* This should be a nop, but align the stack just in case something | |
773 | went wrong. Stacks are four byte aligned on the mn10300. */ | |
774 | sp &= ~3; | |
775 | ||
776 | /* Now make space on the stack for the args. | |
777 | ||
778 | XXX This doesn't appear to handle pass-by-invisible reference | |
779 | arguments. */ | |
780 | for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++) | |
781 | { | |
782 | int arg_length = (TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (args[argnum])) + 3) & ~3; | |
783 | ||
784 | while (regsused < 2 && arg_length > 0) | |
785 | { | |
786 | regsused++; | |
787 | arg_length -= 4; | |
788 | } | |
789 | len += arg_length; | |
790 | } | |
791 | ||
792 | /* Allocate stack space. */ | |
793 | sp -= len; | |
794 | ||
795 | regsused = struct_return ? 1 : 0; | |
796 | /* Push all arguments onto the stack. */ | |
797 | for (argnum = 0; argnum < nargs; argnum++) | |
798 | { | |
799 | int len; | |
800 | char *val; | |
801 | ||
802 | /* XXX Check this. What about UNIONS? */ | |
803 | if (TYPE_CODE (VALUE_TYPE (*args)) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT | |
804 | && TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (*args)) > 8) | |
805 | { | |
806 | /* XXX Wrong, we want a pointer to this argument. */ | |
c5aa993b JM |
807 | len = TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (*args)); |
808 | val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (*args); | |
c906108c SS |
809 | } |
810 | else | |
811 | { | |
812 | len = TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (*args)); | |
c5aa993b | 813 | val = (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (*args); |
c906108c SS |
814 | } |
815 | ||
816 | while (regsused < 2 && len > 0) | |
817 | { | |
818 | write_register (regsused, extract_unsigned_integer (val, 4)); | |
819 | val += 4; | |
820 | len -= 4; | |
821 | regsused++; | |
822 | } | |
823 | ||
824 | while (len > 0) | |
825 | { | |
826 | write_memory (sp + stack_offset, val, 4); | |
827 | len -= 4; | |
828 | val += 4; | |
829 | stack_offset += 4; | |
830 | } | |
831 | ||
832 | args++; | |
833 | } | |
834 | ||
835 | /* Make space for the flushback area. */ | |
836 | sp -= 8; | |
837 | return sp; | |
838 | } | |
839 | ||
840 | /* Function: push_return_address (pc) | |
841 | Set up the return address for the inferior function call. | |
842 | Needed for targets where we don't actually execute a JSR/BSR instruction */ | |
c5aa993b | 843 | |
2ac51b36 | 844 | static CORE_ADDR |
fba45db2 | 845 | mn10300_push_return_address (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR sp) |
c906108c SS |
846 | { |
847 | unsigned char buf[4]; | |
848 | ||
849 | store_unsigned_integer (buf, 4, CALL_DUMMY_ADDRESS ()); | |
850 | write_memory (sp - 4, buf, 4); | |
851 | return sp - 4; | |
852 | } | |
853 | ||
854 | /* Function: store_struct_return (addr,sp) | |
855 | Store the structure value return address for an inferior function | |
856 | call. */ | |
c5aa993b | 857 | |
2ac51b36 | 858 | static void |
fba45db2 | 859 | mn10300_store_struct_return (CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR sp) |
c906108c SS |
860 | { |
861 | /* The structure return address is passed as the first argument. */ | |
862 | write_register (0, addr); | |
c906108c | 863 | } |
c5aa993b | 864 | |
c906108c SS |
865 | /* Function: frame_saved_pc |
866 | Find the caller of this frame. We do this by seeing if RP_REGNUM | |
867 | is saved in the stack anywhere, otherwise we get it from the | |
868 | registers. If the inner frame is a dummy frame, return its PC | |
869 | instead of RP, because that's where "caller" of the dummy-frame | |
870 | will be found. */ | |
871 | ||
2ac51b36 | 872 | static CORE_ADDR |
fba45db2 | 873 | mn10300_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *fi) |
c906108c | 874 | { |
ae83b20d | 875 | int adjust = saved_regs_size (fi); |
c906108c SS |
876 | |
877 | return (read_memory_integer (fi->frame + adjust, REGISTER_SIZE)); | |
878 | } | |
879 | ||
c906108c SS |
880 | /* Function: mn10300_init_extra_frame_info |
881 | Setup the frame's frame pointer, pc, and frame addresses for saved | |
882 | registers. Most of the work is done in mn10300_analyze_prologue(). | |
883 | ||
884 | Note that when we are called for the last frame (currently active frame), | |
885 | that fi->pc and fi->frame will already be setup. However, fi->frame will | |
886 | be valid only if this routine uses FP. For previous frames, fi-frame will | |
887 | always be correct. mn10300_analyze_prologue will fix fi->frame if | |
888 | it's not valid. | |
889 | ||
890 | We can be called with the PC in the call dummy under two circumstances. | |
891 | First, during normal backtracing, second, while figuring out the frame | |
892 | pointer just prior to calling the target function (see run_stack_dummy). */ | |
893 | ||
2ac51b36 | 894 | static void |
ad8fe2ce | 895 | mn10300_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *fi) |
c906108c SS |
896 | { |
897 | if (fi->next) | |
898 | fi->pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (fi->next); | |
899 | ||
900 | frame_saved_regs_zalloc (fi); | |
901 | fi->extra_info = (struct frame_extra_info *) | |
902 | frame_obstack_alloc (sizeof (struct frame_extra_info)); | |
903 | ||
904 | fi->extra_info->status = 0; | |
905 | fi->extra_info->stack_size = 0; | |
906 | ||
907 | mn10300_analyze_prologue (fi, 0); | |
908 | } | |
909 | ||
ad8fe2ce JB |
910 | |
911 | /* This function's job is handled by init_extra_frame_info. */ | |
2ac51b36 | 912 | static void |
ad8fe2ce JB |
913 | mn10300_frame_init_saved_regs (struct frame_info *frame) |
914 | { | |
915 | } | |
916 | ||
917 | ||
c906108c SS |
918 | /* Function: mn10300_virtual_frame_pointer |
919 | Return the register that the function uses for a frame pointer, | |
920 | plus any necessary offset to be applied to the register before | |
921 | any frame pointer offsets. */ | |
922 | ||
39d4ef09 AC |
923 | static void |
924 | mn10300_virtual_frame_pointer (CORE_ADDR pc, | |
925 | int *reg, | |
926 | LONGEST *offset) | |
c906108c SS |
927 | { |
928 | struct frame_info *dummy = analyze_dummy_frame (pc, 0); | |
929 | /* Set up a dummy frame_info, Analyze the prolog and fill in the | |
930 | extra info. */ | |
931 | /* Results will tell us which type of frame it uses. */ | |
932 | if (dummy->extra_info->status & MY_FRAME_IN_SP) | |
933 | { | |
c5aa993b | 934 | *reg = SP_REGNUM; |
c906108c SS |
935 | *offset = -(dummy->extra_info->stack_size); |
936 | } | |
937 | else | |
938 | { | |
c5aa993b | 939 | *reg = A3_REGNUM; |
c906108c SS |
940 | *offset = 0; |
941 | } | |
942 | } | |
c5aa993b | 943 | |
91225883 AC |
944 | static int |
945 | mn10300_reg_struct_has_addr (int gcc_p, struct type *type) | |
c906108c | 946 | { |
91225883 AC |
947 | return (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8); |
948 | } | |
c906108c | 949 | |
f6df245f AC |
950 | static struct type * |
951 | mn10300_register_virtual_type (int reg) | |
952 | { | |
953 | return builtin_type_int; | |
954 | } | |
955 | ||
956 | static int | |
957 | mn10300_register_byte (int reg) | |
958 | { | |
959 | return (reg * 4); | |
960 | } | |
961 | ||
962 | static int | |
963 | mn10300_register_virtual_size (int reg) | |
964 | { | |
965 | return 4; | |
966 | } | |
967 | ||
968 | static int | |
969 | mn10300_register_raw_size (int reg) | |
970 | { | |
971 | return 4; | |
972 | } | |
973 | ||
23436510 JB |
974 | /* If DWARF2 is a register number appearing in Dwarf2 debug info, then |
975 | mn10300_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (DWARF2) is the corresponding GDB | |
976 | register number. Why don't Dwarf2 and GDB use the same numbering? | |
977 | Who knows? But since people have object files lying around with | |
978 | the existing Dwarf2 numbering, and other people have written stubs | |
979 | to work with the existing GDB, neither of them can change. So we | |
980 | just have to cope. */ | |
981 | static int | |
982 | mn10300_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (int dwarf2) | |
983 | { | |
984 | /* This table is supposed to be shaped like the REGISTER_NAMES | |
985 | initializer in gcc/config/mn10300/mn10300.h. Registers which | |
986 | appear in GCC's numbering, but have no counterpart in GDB's | |
987 | world, are marked with a -1. */ | |
988 | static int dwarf2_to_gdb[] = { | |
989 | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, -1, 8, | |
990 | 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 | |
991 | }; | |
992 | int gdb; | |
993 | ||
994 | if (dwarf2 < 0 | |
995 | || dwarf2 >= (sizeof (dwarf2_to_gdb) / sizeof (dwarf2_to_gdb[0])) | |
996 | || dwarf2_to_gdb[dwarf2] == -1) | |
997 | internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, | |
998 | "bogus register number in debug info: %d", dwarf2); | |
999 | ||
1000 | return dwarf2_to_gdb[dwarf2]; | |
1001 | } | |
1002 | ||
f6df245f AC |
1003 | static void |
1004 | mn10300_print_register (const char *name, int regnum, int reg_width) | |
1005 | { | |
1006 | char *raw_buffer = alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE); | |
1007 | ||
1008 | if (reg_width) | |
1009 | printf_filtered ("%*s: ", reg_width, name); | |
1010 | else | |
1011 | printf_filtered ("%s: ", name); | |
1012 | ||
1013 | /* Get the data */ | |
cda5a58a | 1014 | if (!frame_register_read (selected_frame, regnum, raw_buffer)) |
f6df245f AC |
1015 | { |
1016 | printf_filtered ("[invalid]"); | |
1017 | return; | |
1018 | } | |
1019 | else | |
1020 | { | |
1021 | int byte; | |
d7449b42 | 1022 | if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
f6df245f AC |
1023 | { |
1024 | for (byte = REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum) - REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (regnum); | |
1025 | byte < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum); | |
1026 | byte++) | |
1027 | printf_filtered ("%02x", (unsigned char) raw_buffer[byte]); | |
1028 | } | |
1029 | else | |
1030 | { | |
1031 | for (byte = REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (regnum) - 1; | |
1032 | byte >= 0; | |
1033 | byte--) | |
1034 | printf_filtered ("%02x", (unsigned char) raw_buffer[byte]); | |
1035 | } | |
1036 | } | |
1037 | } | |
1038 | ||
1039 | static void | |
1040 | mn10300_do_registers_info (int regnum, int fpregs) | |
1041 | { | |
1042 | if (regnum >= 0) | |
1043 | { | |
1044 | const char *name = REGISTER_NAME (regnum); | |
1045 | if (name == NULL || name[0] == '\0') | |
1046 | error ("Not a valid register for the current processor type"); | |
1047 | mn10300_print_register (name, regnum, 0); | |
1048 | printf_filtered ("\n"); | |
1049 | } | |
1050 | else | |
1051 | { | |
1052 | /* print registers in an array 4x8 */ | |
1053 | int r; | |
1054 | int reg; | |
1055 | const int nr_in_row = 4; | |
1056 | const int reg_width = 4; | |
1057 | for (r = 0; r < NUM_REGS; r += nr_in_row) | |
1058 | { | |
1059 | int c; | |
1060 | int printing = 0; | |
1061 | int padding = 0; | |
1062 | for (c = r; c < r + nr_in_row; c++) | |
1063 | { | |
1064 | const char *name = REGISTER_NAME (c); | |
1065 | if (name != NULL && *name != '\0') | |
1066 | { | |
1067 | printing = 1; | |
1068 | while (padding > 0) | |
1069 | { | |
1070 | printf_filtered (" "); | |
1071 | padding--; | |
1072 | } | |
1073 | mn10300_print_register (name, c, reg_width); | |
1074 | printf_filtered (" "); | |
1075 | } | |
1076 | else | |
1077 | { | |
1078 | padding += (reg_width + 2 + 8 + 1); | |
1079 | } | |
1080 | } | |
1081 | if (printing) | |
1082 | printf_filtered ("\n"); | |
1083 | } | |
1084 | } | |
1085 | } | |
1086 | ||
91225883 | 1087 | /* Dump out the mn10300 speciic architecture information. */ |
c906108c | 1088 | |
91225883 AC |
1089 | static void |
1090 | mn10300_dump_tdep (struct gdbarch *current_gdbarch, struct ui_file *file) | |
1091 | { | |
1092 | struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch); | |
1093 | fprintf_unfiltered (file, "mn10300_dump_tdep: am33_mode = %d\n", | |
1094 | tdep->am33_mode); | |
1095 | } | |
c2d11a7d | 1096 | |
91225883 AC |
1097 | static struct gdbarch * |
1098 | mn10300_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info, | |
1099 | struct gdbarch_list *arches) | |
1100 | { | |
ad8fe2ce | 1101 | static LONGEST mn10300_call_dummy_words[] = { 0 }; |
91225883 AC |
1102 | struct gdbarch *gdbarch; |
1103 | struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = NULL; | |
1104 | int am33_mode; | |
1105 | gdbarch_register_name_ftype *register_name; | |
1106 | int mach; | |
1107 | int num_regs; | |
1108 | ||
1109 | arches = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches, &info); | |
1110 | if (arches != NULL) | |
1111 | return arches->gdbarch; | |
1112 | tdep = xmalloc (sizeof (struct gdbarch_tdep)); | |
1113 | gdbarch = gdbarch_alloc (&info, tdep); | |
1114 | ||
1115 | if (info.bfd_arch_info != NULL | |
f6df245f | 1116 | && info.bfd_arch_info->arch == bfd_arch_mn10300) |
91225883 AC |
1117 | mach = info.bfd_arch_info->mach; |
1118 | else | |
1119 | mach = 0; | |
1120 | switch (mach) | |
1121 | { | |
1122 | case 0: | |
f6df245f | 1123 | case bfd_mach_mn10300: |
91225883 AC |
1124 | am33_mode = 0; |
1125 | register_name = mn10300_generic_register_name; | |
1126 | num_regs = 32; | |
1127 | break; | |
1128 | case bfd_mach_am33: | |
c2d11a7d | 1129 | am33_mode = 1; |
91225883 AC |
1130 | register_name = am33_register_name; |
1131 | num_regs = 32; | |
1132 | break; | |
1133 | default: | |
8e65ff28 AC |
1134 | internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, |
1135 | "mn10300_gdbarch_init: Unknown mn10300 variant"); | |
91225883 | 1136 | return NULL; /* keep GCC happy. */ |
c2d11a7d | 1137 | } |
c906108c | 1138 | |
584f96a8 JB |
1139 | /* Registers. */ |
1140 | set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, num_regs); | |
1141 | set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, register_name); | |
f6df245f | 1142 | set_gdbarch_register_size (gdbarch, 4); |
584f96a8 JB |
1143 | set_gdbarch_register_bytes (gdbarch, |
1144 | num_regs * gdbarch_register_size (gdbarch)); | |
f6df245f | 1145 | set_gdbarch_max_register_raw_size (gdbarch, 4); |
584f96a8 | 1146 | set_gdbarch_register_raw_size (gdbarch, mn10300_register_raw_size); |
f6df245f | 1147 | set_gdbarch_register_byte (gdbarch, mn10300_register_byte); |
584f96a8 | 1148 | set_gdbarch_max_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, 4); |
f6df245f | 1149 | set_gdbarch_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, mn10300_register_virtual_size); |
584f96a8 | 1150 | set_gdbarch_register_virtual_type (gdbarch, mn10300_register_virtual_type); |
23436510 | 1151 | set_gdbarch_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch, mn10300_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum); |
f6df245f | 1152 | set_gdbarch_do_registers_info (gdbarch, mn10300_do_registers_info); |
a15525c1 AC |
1153 | set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch, 8); |
1154 | set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch, 9); | |
ad8fe2ce | 1155 | set_gdbarch_fp_regnum (gdbarch, 31); |
39d4ef09 | 1156 | set_gdbarch_virtual_frame_pointer (gdbarch, mn10300_virtual_frame_pointer); |
584f96a8 JB |
1157 | |
1158 | /* Breakpoints. */ | |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1159 | set_gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch, mn10300_breakpoint_from_pc); |
1160 | set_gdbarch_function_start_offset (gdbarch, 0); | |
1161 | set_gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch, 0); | |
584f96a8 JB |
1162 | |
1163 | /* Stack unwinding. */ | |
1164 | set_gdbarch_get_saved_register (gdbarch, generic_get_saved_register); | |
1165 | set_gdbarch_frame_chain_valid (gdbarch, generic_file_frame_chain_valid); | |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1166 | set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, core_addr_lessthan); |
1167 | set_gdbarch_frame_chain_valid (gdbarch, generic_file_frame_chain_valid); | |
1168 | set_gdbarch_saved_pc_after_call (gdbarch, mn10300_saved_pc_after_call); | |
1169 | set_gdbarch_init_extra_frame_info (gdbarch, mn10300_init_extra_frame_info); | |
f096a152 | 1170 | set_gdbarch_init_frame_pc (gdbarch, init_frame_pc_noop); |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1171 | set_gdbarch_frame_init_saved_regs (gdbarch, mn10300_frame_init_saved_regs); |
1172 | set_gdbarch_frame_chain (gdbarch, mn10300_frame_chain); | |
1173 | set_gdbarch_frame_saved_pc (gdbarch, mn10300_frame_saved_pc); | |
26e9b323 AC |
1174 | set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_return_value (gdbarch, mn10300_extract_return_value); |
1175 | set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_struct_value_address | |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1176 | (gdbarch, mn10300_extract_struct_value_address); |
1177 | set_gdbarch_store_return_value (gdbarch, mn10300_store_return_value); | |
1178 | set_gdbarch_store_struct_return (gdbarch, mn10300_store_struct_return); | |
ee9f9641 | 1179 | set_gdbarch_pop_frame (gdbarch, mn10300_pop_frame); |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1180 | set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, mn10300_skip_prologue); |
1181 | set_gdbarch_frame_args_skip (gdbarch, 0); | |
1182 | set_gdbarch_frame_args_address (gdbarch, default_frame_address); | |
1183 | set_gdbarch_frame_locals_address (gdbarch, default_frame_address); | |
1184 | set_gdbarch_frame_num_args (gdbarch, frame_num_args_unknown); | |
1185 | /* That's right, we're using the stack pointer as our frame pointer. */ | |
1186 | set_gdbarch_read_fp (gdbarch, generic_target_read_sp); | |
584f96a8 JB |
1187 | |
1188 | /* Calling functions in the inferior from GDB. */ | |
1189 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_p (gdbarch, 1); | |
bf4b70a5 JB |
1190 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset_p (gdbarch, 1); |
1191 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset (gdbarch, 0); | |
584f96a8 | 1192 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_stack_adjust_p (gdbarch, 0); |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1193 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_location (gdbarch, AT_ENTRY_POINT); |
1194 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_address (gdbarch, entry_point_address); | |
1195 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_words (gdbarch, mn10300_call_dummy_words); | |
1196 | set_gdbarch_sizeof_call_dummy_words (gdbarch, | |
1197 | sizeof (mn10300_call_dummy_words)); | |
1198 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_length (gdbarch, 0); | |
1199 | set_gdbarch_fix_call_dummy (gdbarch, generic_fix_call_dummy); | |
1200 | set_gdbarch_call_dummy_start_offset (gdbarch, 0); | |
82d983b6 | 1201 | set_gdbarch_pc_in_call_dummy (gdbarch, pc_in_call_dummy_at_entry_point); |
584f96a8 | 1202 | set_gdbarch_use_generic_dummy_frames (gdbarch, 1); |
ad8fe2ce | 1203 | set_gdbarch_push_dummy_frame (gdbarch, generic_push_dummy_frame); |
584f96a8 JB |
1204 | set_gdbarch_push_arguments (gdbarch, mn10300_push_arguments); |
1205 | set_gdbarch_reg_struct_has_addr (gdbarch, mn10300_reg_struct_has_addr); | |
1206 | set_gdbarch_push_return_address (gdbarch, mn10300_push_return_address); | |
1207 | set_gdbarch_save_dummy_frame_tos (gdbarch, generic_save_dummy_frame_tos); | |
ad8fe2ce JB |
1208 | set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch, mn10300_use_struct_convention); |
1209 | ||
91225883 AC |
1210 | tdep->am33_mode = am33_mode; |
1211 | ||
1212 | return gdbarch; | |
1213 | } | |
1214 | ||
c906108c | 1215 | void |
fba45db2 | 1216 | _initialize_mn10300_tdep (void) |
c906108c SS |
1217 | { |
1218 | /* printf("_initialize_mn10300_tdep\n"); */ | |
1219 | ||
1220 | tm_print_insn = print_insn_mn10300; | |
1221 | ||
91225883 | 1222 | register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_mn10300, mn10300_gdbarch_init); |
c906108c | 1223 | } |