1 /* Target-machine dependent code for the Intel 960
2 Copyright 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Contributed by Intel Corporation.
4 examine_prologue and other parts contributed by Wind River Systems.
6 This file is part of GDB.
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.
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.
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. */
27 #include "floatformat.h"
32 static CORE_ADDR next_insn (CORE_ADDR memaddr,
33 unsigned int *pword1, unsigned int *pword2);
35 /* Does the specified function use the "struct returning" convention
36 or the "value returning" convention? The "value returning" convention
37 almost invariably returns the entire value in registers. The
38 "struct returning" convention often returns the entire value in
39 memory, and passes a pointer (out of or into the function) saying
40 where the value (is or should go).
42 Since this sometimes depends on whether it was compiled with GCC,
43 this is also an argument. This is used in call_function to build a
44 stack, and in value_being_returned to print return values.
46 On i960, a structure is returned in registers g0-g3, if it will fit.
47 If it's more than 16 bytes long, g13 pointed to it on entry. */
50 i960_use_struct_convention (gcc_p, type)
54 return (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 16);
57 /* gdb960 is always running on a non-960 host. Check its characteristics.
58 This routine must be called as part of gdb initialization. */
65 static struct typestruct
67 int hostsize; /* Size of type on host */
68 int i960size; /* Size of type on i960 */
69 char *typename; /* Name of type, for error msg */
74 sizeof (short), 2, "short"
78 sizeof (int), 4, "int"
82 sizeof (long), 4, "long"
86 sizeof (float), 4, "float"
90 sizeof (double), 8, "double"
94 sizeof (char *), 4, "pointer"
98 #define TYPELEN (sizeof(types) / sizeof(struct typestruct))
100 /* Make sure that host type sizes are same as i960
102 for (i = 0; i < TYPELEN; i++)
104 if (types[i].hostsize != types[i].i960size)
106 printf_unfiltered ("sizeof(%s) != %d: PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK!\n",
107 types[i].typename, types[i].i960size);
113 /* Examine an i960 function prologue, recording the addresses at which
114 registers are saved explicitly by the prologue code, and returning
115 the address of the first instruction after the prologue (but not
116 after the instruction at address LIMIT, as explained below).
118 LIMIT places an upper bound on addresses of the instructions to be
119 examined. If the prologue code scan reaches LIMIT, the scan is
120 aborted and LIMIT is returned. This is used, when examining the
121 prologue for the current frame, to keep examine_prologue () from
122 claiming that a given register has been saved when in fact the
123 instruction that saves it has not yet been executed. LIMIT is used
124 at other times to stop the scan when we hit code after the true
125 function prologue (e.g. for the first source line) which might
126 otherwise be mistaken for function prologue.
128 The format of the function prologue matched by this routine is
129 derived from examination of the source to gcc960 1.21, particularly
130 the routine i960_function_prologue (). A "regular expression" for
131 the function prologue is given below:
135 (mov 0, g14) | (lda 0, g14))?
137 (mov[qtl]? g[0-15], r[4-15])*
138 ((addo [1-31], sp, sp) | (lda n(sp), sp))?
139 (st[qtl]? g[0-15], n(fp))*
152 /* Macros for extracting fields from i960 instructions. */
154 #define BITMASK(pos, width) (((0x1 << (width)) - 1) << (pos))
155 #define EXTRACT_FIELD(val, pos, width) ((val) >> (pos) & BITMASK (0, width))
157 #define REG_SRC1(insn) EXTRACT_FIELD (insn, 0, 5)
158 #define REG_SRC2(insn) EXTRACT_FIELD (insn, 14, 5)
159 #define REG_SRCDST(insn) EXTRACT_FIELD (insn, 19, 5)
160 #define MEM_SRCDST(insn) EXTRACT_FIELD (insn, 19, 5)
161 #define MEMA_OFFSET(insn) EXTRACT_FIELD (insn, 0, 12)
163 /* Fetch the instruction at ADDR, returning 0 if ADDR is beyond LIM or
164 is not the address of a valid instruction, the address of the next
165 instruction beyond ADDR otherwise. *PWORD1 receives the first word
166 of the instruction, and (for two-word instructions), *PWORD2 receives
169 #define NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN(addr, lim, pword1, pword2) \
170 (((addr) < (lim)) ? next_insn (addr, pword1, pword2) : 0)
173 examine_prologue (ip, limit, frame_addr, fsr)
174 register CORE_ADDR ip;
175 register CORE_ADDR limit;
176 CORE_ADDR frame_addr;
177 struct frame_saved_regs *fsr;
179 register CORE_ADDR next_ip;
180 register int src, dst;
181 register unsigned int *pcode;
182 unsigned int insn1, insn2;
184 int within_leaf_prologue;
186 static unsigned int varargs_prologue_code[] =
188 0x3507a00c, /* cmpobne 0x0, g14, LFn */
189 0x5cf01601, /* mov sp, g14 */
190 0x8c086030, /* lda 0x30(sp), sp */
191 0xb2879000, /* LFn: stq g0, (g14) */
192 0xb2a7a010, /* stq g4, 0x10(g14) */
193 0xb2c7a020 /* stq g8, 0x20(g14) */
196 /* Accept a leaf procedure prologue code fragment if present.
197 Note that ip might point to either the leaf or non-leaf
198 entry point; we look for the non-leaf entry point first: */
200 within_leaf_prologue = 0;
201 if ((next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2))
202 && ((insn1 & 0xfffff000) == 0x8cf00000 /* lda LRx, g14 (MEMA) */
203 || (insn1 & 0xfffffc60) == 0x8cf03000)) /* lda LRx, g14 (MEMB) */
205 within_leaf_prologue = 1;
206 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (next_ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
209 /* Now look for the prologue code at a leaf entry point: */
212 && (insn1 & 0xff87ffff) == 0x5c80161e /* mov g14, gx */
213 && REG_SRCDST (insn1) <= G0_REGNUM + 7)
215 within_leaf_prologue = 1;
216 if ((next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (next_ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2))
217 && (insn1 == 0x8cf00000 /* lda 0, g14 */
218 || insn1 == 0x5cf01e00)) /* mov 0, g14 */
221 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
222 within_leaf_prologue = 0;
226 /* If something that looks like the beginning of a leaf prologue
227 has been seen, but the remainder of the prologue is missing, bail.
228 We don't know what we've got. */
230 if (within_leaf_prologue)
233 /* Accept zero or more instances of "mov[qtl]? gx, ry", where y >= 4.
234 This may cause us to mistake the moving of a register
235 parameter to a local register for the saving of a callee-saved
236 register, but that can't be helped, since with the
237 "-fcall-saved" flag, any register can be made callee-saved. */
240 && (insn1 & 0xfc802fb0) == 0x5c000610
241 && (dst = REG_SRCDST (insn1)) >= (R0_REGNUM + 4))
243 src = REG_SRC1 (insn1);
244 size = EXTRACT_FIELD (insn1, 24, 2) + 1;
245 save_addr = frame_addr + ((dst - R0_REGNUM) * 4);
248 fsr->regs[src++] = save_addr;
252 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
255 /* Accept an optional "addo n, sp, sp" or "lda n(sp), sp". */
258 ((insn1 & 0xffffffe0) == 0x59084800 /* addo n, sp, sp */
259 || (insn1 & 0xfffff000) == 0x8c086000 /* lda n(sp), sp (MEMA) */
260 || (insn1 & 0xfffffc60) == 0x8c087400)) /* lda n(sp), sp (MEMB) */
263 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
266 /* Accept zero or more instances of "st[qtl]? gx, n(fp)".
267 This may cause us to mistake the copying of a register
268 parameter to the frame for the saving of a callee-saved
269 register, but that can't be helped, since with the
270 "-fcall-saved" flag, any register can be made callee-saved.
271 We can, however, refuse to accept a save of register g14,
272 since that is matched explicitly below. */
275 ((insn1 & 0xf787f000) == 0x9287e000 /* stl? gx, n(fp) (MEMA) */
276 || (insn1 & 0xf787fc60) == 0x9287f400 /* stl? gx, n(fp) (MEMB) */
277 || (insn1 & 0xef87f000) == 0xa287e000 /* st[tq] gx, n(fp) (MEMA) */
278 || (insn1 & 0xef87fc60) == 0xa287f400) /* st[tq] gx, n(fp) (MEMB) */
279 && ((src = MEM_SRCDST (insn1)) != G14_REGNUM))
281 save_addr = frame_addr + ((insn1 & BITMASK (12, 1))
282 ? insn2 : MEMA_OFFSET (insn1));
283 size = (insn1 & BITMASK (29, 1)) ? ((insn1 & BITMASK (28, 1)) ? 4 : 3)
284 : ((insn1 & BITMASK (27, 1)) ? 2 : 1);
287 fsr->regs[src++] = save_addr;
291 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
294 /* Accept the varargs prologue code if present. */
296 size = sizeof (varargs_prologue_code) / sizeof (int);
297 pcode = varargs_prologue_code;
298 while (size-- && next_ip && *pcode++ == insn1)
301 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
304 /* Accept an optional "st g14, n(fp)". */
307 ((insn1 & 0xfffff000) == 0x92f7e000 /* st g14, n(fp) (MEMA) */
308 || (insn1 & 0xfffffc60) == 0x92f7f400)) /* st g14, n(fp) (MEMB) */
310 fsr->regs[G14_REGNUM] = frame_addr + ((insn1 & BITMASK (12, 1))
311 ? insn2 : MEMA_OFFSET (insn1));
313 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
316 /* Accept zero or one instance of "mov g13, ry", where y >= 4.
317 This is saving the address where a struct should be returned. */
320 && (insn1 & 0xff802fbf) == 0x5c00061d
321 && (dst = REG_SRCDST (insn1)) >= (R0_REGNUM + 4))
323 save_addr = frame_addr + ((dst - R0_REGNUM) * 4);
324 fsr->regs[G0_REGNUM + 13] = save_addr;
326 #if 0 /* We'll need this once there is a subsequent instruction examined. */
327 next_ip = NEXT_PROLOGUE_INSN (ip, limit, &insn1, &insn2);
334 /* Given an ip value corresponding to the start of a function,
335 return the ip of the first instruction after the function
339 i960_skip_prologue (ip)
342 struct frame_saved_regs saved_regs_dummy;
343 struct symtab_and_line sal;
346 sal = find_pc_line (ip, 0);
347 limit = (sal.end) ? sal.end : 0xffffffff;
349 return (examine_prologue (ip, limit, (CORE_ADDR) 0, &saved_regs_dummy));
352 /* Put here the code to store, into a struct frame_saved_regs,
353 the addresses of the saved registers of frame described by FRAME_INFO.
354 This includes special registers such as pc and fp saved in special
355 ways in the stack frame. sp is even more special:
356 the address we return for it IS the sp for the next frame.
358 We cache the result of doing this in the frame_obstack, since it is
362 frame_find_saved_regs (fi, fsr)
363 struct frame_info *fi;
364 struct frame_saved_regs *fsr;
366 register CORE_ADDR next_addr;
367 register CORE_ADDR *saved_regs;
369 register struct frame_saved_regs *cache_fsr;
371 struct symtab_and_line sal;
376 cache_fsr = (struct frame_saved_regs *)
377 frame_obstack_alloc (sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs));
378 memset (cache_fsr, '\0', sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs));
381 /* Find the start and end of the function prologue. If the PC
382 is in the function prologue, we only consider the part that
383 has executed already. */
385 ip = get_pc_function_start (fi->pc);
386 sal = find_pc_line (ip, 0);
387 limit = (sal.end && sal.end < fi->pc) ? sal.end : fi->pc;
389 examine_prologue (ip, limit, fi->frame, cache_fsr);
391 /* Record the addresses at which the local registers are saved.
392 Strictly speaking, we should only do this for non-leaf procedures,
393 but no one will ever look at these values if it is a leaf procedure,
394 since local registers are always caller-saved. */
396 next_addr = (CORE_ADDR) fi->frame;
397 saved_regs = cache_fsr->regs;
398 for (regnum = R0_REGNUM; regnum <= R15_REGNUM; regnum++)
400 *saved_regs++ = next_addr;
404 cache_fsr->regs[FP_REGNUM] = cache_fsr->regs[PFP_REGNUM];
409 /* Fetch the value of the sp from memory every time, since it
410 is conceivable that it has changed since the cache was flushed.
411 This unfortunately undoes much of the savings from caching the
412 saved register values. I suggest adding an argument to
413 get_frame_saved_regs () specifying the register number we're
414 interested in (or -1 for all registers). This would be passed
415 through to FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS (), permitting more efficient
416 computation of saved register addresses (e.g., on the i960,
417 we don't have to examine the prologue to find local registers).
419 FIXME, we don't need to refetch this, since the cache is cleared
420 every time the child process is restarted. If GDB itself
421 modifies SP, it has to clear the cache by hand (does it?). -gnu */
423 fsr->regs[SP_REGNUM] = read_memory_integer (fsr->regs[SP_REGNUM], 4);
426 /* Return the address of the argument block for the frame
427 described by FI. Returns 0 if the address is unknown. */
430 frame_args_address (fi, must_be_correct)
431 struct frame_info *fi;
433 struct frame_saved_regs fsr;
436 /* If g14 was saved in the frame by the function prologue code, return
437 the saved value. If the frame is current and we are being sloppy,
438 return the value of g14. Otherwise, return zero. */
440 get_frame_saved_regs (fi, &fsr);
441 if (fsr.regs[G14_REGNUM])
442 ap = read_memory_integer (fsr.regs[G14_REGNUM], 4);
446 return 0; /* Don't cache this result */
447 if (get_next_frame (fi))
450 ap = read_register (G14_REGNUM);
454 fi->arg_pointer = ap; /* Cache it for next time */
458 /* Return the address of the return struct for the frame
459 described by FI. Returns 0 if the address is unknown. */
462 frame_struct_result_address (fi)
463 struct frame_info *fi;
465 struct frame_saved_regs fsr;
468 /* If the frame is non-current, check to see if g14 was saved in the
469 frame by the function prologue code; return the saved value if so,
470 zero otherwise. If the frame is current, return the value of g14.
472 FIXME, shouldn't this use the saved value as long as we are past
473 the function prologue, and only use the current value if we have
476 if (get_next_frame (fi))
478 get_frame_saved_regs (fi, &fsr);
479 if (fsr.regs[G13_REGNUM])
480 ap = read_memory_integer (fsr.regs[G13_REGNUM], 4);
485 ap = read_register (G13_REGNUM);
490 /* Return address to which the currently executing leafproc will return,
491 or 0 if ip is not in a leafproc (or if we can't tell if it is).
493 Do this by finding the starting address of the routine in which ip lies.
494 If the instruction there is "mov g14, gx" (where x is in [0,7]), this
495 is a leafproc and the return address is in register gx. Well, this is
496 true unless the return address points at a RET instruction in the current
497 procedure, which indicates that we have a 'dual entry' routine that
498 has been entered through the CALL entry point. */
502 CORE_ADDR ip; /* ip from currently executing function */
504 register struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
507 unsigned int insn1, insn2;
508 CORE_ADDR return_addr;
510 if ((msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (ip)) != NULL)
512 if ((p = strchr (SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol), '.')) && STREQ (p, ".lf"))
514 if (next_insn (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol), &insn1, &insn2)
515 && (insn1 & 0xff87ffff) == 0x5c80161e /* mov g14, gx */
516 && (dst = REG_SRCDST (insn1)) <= G0_REGNUM + 7)
518 /* Get the return address. If the "mov g14, gx"
519 instruction hasn't been executed yet, read
520 the return address from g14; otherwise, read it
521 from the register into which g14 was moved. */
524 read_register ((ip == SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol))
527 /* We know we are in a leaf procedure, but we don't know
528 whether the caller actually did a "bal" to the ".lf"
529 entry point, or a normal "call" to the non-leaf entry
530 point one instruction before. In the latter case, the
531 return address will be the address of a "ret"
532 instruction within the procedure itself. We test for
535 if (!next_insn (return_addr, &insn1, &insn2)
536 || (insn1 & 0xff000000) != 0xa000000 /* ret */
537 || lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (return_addr) != msymbol)
538 return (return_addr);
546 /* Immediately after a function call, return the saved pc.
547 Can't go through the frames for this because on some machines
548 the new frame is not set up until the new function executes
550 On the i960, the frame *is* set up immediately after the call,
551 unless the function is a leaf procedure. */
554 saved_pc_after_call (frame)
555 struct frame_info *frame;
559 saved_pc = leafproc_return (get_frame_pc (frame));
561 saved_pc = FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame);
566 /* Discard from the stack the innermost frame,
567 restoring all saved registers. */
570 i960_pop_frame (void)
572 register struct frame_info *current_fi, *prev_fi;
575 CORE_ADDR leaf_return_addr;
576 struct frame_saved_regs fsr;
577 char local_regs_buf[16 * 4];
579 current_fi = get_current_frame ();
581 /* First, undo what the hardware does when we return.
582 If this is a non-leaf procedure, restore local registers from
583 the save area in the calling frame. Otherwise, load the return
584 address obtained from leafproc_return () into the rip. */
586 leaf_return_addr = leafproc_return (current_fi->pc);
587 if (!leaf_return_addr)
589 /* Non-leaf procedure. Restore local registers, incl IP. */
590 prev_fi = get_prev_frame (current_fi);
591 read_memory (prev_fi->frame, local_regs_buf, sizeof (local_regs_buf));
592 write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (R0_REGNUM), local_regs_buf,
593 sizeof (local_regs_buf));
595 /* Restore frame pointer. */
596 write_register (FP_REGNUM, prev_fi->frame);
600 /* Leaf procedure. Just restore the return address into the IP. */
601 write_register (RIP_REGNUM, leaf_return_addr);
604 /* Now restore any global regs that the current function had saved. */
605 get_frame_saved_regs (current_fi, &fsr);
606 for (i = G0_REGNUM; i < G14_REGNUM; i++)
608 save_addr = fsr.regs[i];
610 write_register (i, read_memory_integer (save_addr, 4));
613 /* Flush the frame cache, create a frame for the new innermost frame,
614 and make it the current frame. */
616 flush_cached_frames ();
619 /* Given a 960 stop code (fault or trace), return the signal which
623 i960_fault_to_signal (fault)
629 return TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS; /* parallel fault */
631 return TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN;
633 return TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL; /* operation fault */
635 return TARGET_SIGNAL_FPE; /* arithmetic fault */
637 return TARGET_SIGNAL_FPE; /* floating point fault */
639 /* constraint fault. This appears not to distinguish between
640 a range constraint fault (which should be SIGFPE) and a privileged
641 fault (which should be SIGILL). */
643 return TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL;
646 return TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV; /* virtual memory fault */
648 /* protection fault. This is for an out-of-range argument to
649 "calls". I guess it also could be SIGILL. */
651 return TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV;
654 return TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS; /* machine fault */
656 return TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS; /* structural fault */
658 return TARGET_SIGNAL_ILL; /* type fault */
660 return TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN; /* reserved fault */
662 return TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS; /* process fault */
664 return TARGET_SIGNAL_SEGV; /* descriptor fault */
666 return TARGET_SIGNAL_BUS; /* event fault */
668 return TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN; /* reserved fault */
670 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* single-step trace */
672 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* branch trace */
674 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* call trace */
676 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* return trace */
678 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* pre-return trace */
680 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* supervisor call trace */
682 return TARGET_SIGNAL_TRAP; /* breakpoint trace */
684 return TARGET_SIGNAL_UNKNOWN;
688 /****************************************/
690 /****************************************/
698 static int /* returns instruction length: 4 or 8 */
699 mem (memaddr, word1, word2, noprint)
700 unsigned long memaddr;
701 unsigned long word1, word2;
702 int noprint; /* If TRUE, return instruction length, but
703 don't output any text. */
709 const char *reg1, *reg2, *reg3;
711 /* This lookup table is too sparse to make it worth typing in, but not
712 * so large as to make a sparse array necessary. We allocate the
713 * table at runtime, initialize all entries to empty, and copy the
714 * real ones in from an initialization table.
716 * NOTE: In this table, the meaning of 'numops' is:
718 * 2: 2 operands, load instruction
719 * -2: 2 operands, store instruction
721 static struct tabent *mem_tab = NULL;
722 /* Opcodes of 0x8X, 9X, aX, bX, and cX must be in the table. */
725 #define MEM_SIZ ((MEM_MAX-MEM_MIN+1) * sizeof(struct tabent))
760 mem_tab = (struct tabent *) xmalloc (MEM_SIZ);
761 memset (mem_tab, '\0', MEM_SIZ);
762 for (i = 0; mem_init[i].opcode != 0; i++)
764 j = mem_init[i].opcode - MEM_MIN;
765 mem_tab[j].name = mem_init[i].name;
766 mem_tab[j].numops = mem_init[i].numops;
770 i = ((word1 >> 24) & 0xff) - MEM_MIN;
771 mode = (word1 >> 10) & 0xf;
773 if ((mem_tab[i].name != NULL) /* Valid instruction */
774 && ((mode == 5) || (mode >= 12)))
775 { /* With 32-bit displacement */
790 /* Read the i960 instruction at 'memaddr' and return the address of
791 the next instruction after that, or 0 if 'memaddr' is not the
792 address of a valid instruction. The first word of the instruction
793 is stored at 'pword1', and the second word, if any, is stored at
797 next_insn (memaddr, pword1, pword2)
798 unsigned int *pword1, *pword2;
804 /* Read the two (potential) words of the instruction at once,
805 to eliminate the overhead of two calls to read_memory ().
806 FIXME: Loses if the first one is readable but the second is not
807 (e.g. last word of the segment). */
809 read_memory (memaddr, buf, 8);
810 *pword1 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
811 *pword2 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf + 4, 4);
813 /* Divide instruction set into classes based on high 4 bits of opcode */
815 switch ((*pword1 >> 28) & 0xf)
834 len = mem (memaddr, *pword1, *pword2, 1);
837 default: /* invalid instruction */
843 return memaddr + len;
848 /* 'start_frame' is a variable in the MON960 runtime startup routine
849 that contains the frame pointer of the 'start' routine (the routine
850 that calls 'main'). By reading its contents out of remote memory,
851 we can tell where the frame chain ends: backtraces should halt before
852 they display this frame. */
855 mon960_frame_chain_valid (chain, curframe)
857 struct frame_info *curframe;
860 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
862 /* crtmon960.o is an assembler module that is assumed to be linked
863 * first in an i80960 executable. It contains the true entry point;
864 * it performs startup up initialization and then calls 'main'.
866 * 'sf' is the name of a variable in crtmon960.o that is set
867 * during startup to the address of the first frame.
869 * 'a' is the address of that variable in 80960 memory.
871 static char sf[] = "start_frame";
875 chain &= ~0x3f; /* Zero low 6 bits because previous frame pointers
876 contain return status info in them. */
882 sym = lookup_symbol (sf, 0, VAR_NAMESPACE, (int *) NULL,
883 (struct symtab **) NULL);
886 a = SYMBOL_VALUE (sym);
890 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol (sf, NULL, NULL);
893 a = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol);
896 return (chain != read_memory_integer (a, 4));
901 _initialize_i960_tdep ()
905 tm_print_insn = print_insn_i960;