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[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-old/] [gdb-6.8/] [gdb/] [prologue-value.c] - Blame information for rev 24

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1 24 jeremybenn
/* Prologue value handling for GDB.
2
   Copyright 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
 
4
   This file is part of GDB.
5
 
6
   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7
   it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8
   the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
9
   (at your option) any later version.
10
 
11
   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12
   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13
   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
14
   GNU General Public License for more details.
15
 
16
   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17
   along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
18
 
19
#include "defs.h"
20
#include "gdb_string.h"
21
#include "gdb_assert.h"
22
#include "prologue-value.h"
23
#include "regcache.h"
24
 
25
 
26
/* Constructors.  */
27
 
28
pv_t
29
pv_unknown (void)
30
{
31
  pv_t v = { pvk_unknown, 0, 0 };
32
 
33
  return v;
34
}
35
 
36
 
37
pv_t
38
pv_constant (CORE_ADDR k)
39
{
40
  pv_t v;
41
 
42
  v.kind = pvk_constant;
43
  v.reg = -1;                   /* for debugging */
44
  v.k = k;
45
 
46
  return v;
47
}
48
 
49
 
50
pv_t
51
pv_register (int reg, CORE_ADDR k)
52
{
53
  pv_t v;
54
 
55
  v.kind = pvk_register;
56
  v.reg = reg;
57
  v.k = k;
58
 
59
  return v;
60
}
61
 
62
 
63
 
64
/* Arithmetic operations.  */
65
 
66
/* If one of *A and *B is a constant, and the other isn't, swap the
67
   values as necessary to ensure that *B is the constant.  This can
68
   reduce the number of cases we need to analyze in the functions
69
   below.  */
70
static void
71
constant_last (pv_t *a, pv_t *b)
72
{
73
  if (a->kind == pvk_constant
74
      && b->kind != pvk_constant)
75
    {
76
      pv_t temp = *a;
77
      *a = *b;
78
      *b = temp;
79
    }
80
}
81
 
82
 
83
pv_t
84
pv_add (pv_t a, pv_t b)
85
{
86
  constant_last (&a, &b);
87
 
88
  /* We can add a constant to a register.  */
89
  if (a.kind == pvk_register
90
      && b.kind == pvk_constant)
91
    return pv_register (a.reg, a.k + b.k);
92
 
93
  /* We can add a constant to another constant.  */
94
  else if (a.kind == pvk_constant
95
           && b.kind == pvk_constant)
96
    return pv_constant (a.k + b.k);
97
 
98
  /* Anything else we don't know how to add.  We don't have a
99
     representation for, say, the sum of two registers, or a multiple
100
     of a register's value (adding a register to itself).  */
101
  else
102
    return pv_unknown ();
103
}
104
 
105
 
106
pv_t
107
pv_add_constant (pv_t v, CORE_ADDR k)
108
{
109
  /* Rather than thinking of all the cases we can and can't handle,
110
     we'll just let pv_add take care of that for us.  */
111
  return pv_add (v, pv_constant (k));
112
}
113
 
114
 
115
pv_t
116
pv_subtract (pv_t a, pv_t b)
117
{
118
  /* This isn't quite the same as negating B and adding it to A, since
119
     we don't have a representation for the negation of anything but a
120
     constant.  For example, we can't negate { pvk_register, R1, 10 },
121
     but we do know that { pvk_register, R1, 10 } minus { pvk_register,
122
     R1, 5 } is { pvk_constant, <ignored>, 5 }.
123
 
124
     This means, for example, that we could subtract two stack
125
     addresses; they're both relative to the original SP.  Since the
126
     frame pointer is set based on the SP, its value will be the
127
     original SP plus some constant (probably zero), so we can use its
128
     value just fine, too.  */
129
 
130
  constant_last (&a, &b);
131
 
132
  /* We can subtract two constants.  */
133
  if (a.kind == pvk_constant
134
      && b.kind == pvk_constant)
135
    return pv_constant (a.k - b.k);
136
 
137
  /* We can subtract a constant from a register.  */
138
  else if (a.kind == pvk_register
139
           && b.kind == pvk_constant)
140
    return pv_register (a.reg, a.k - b.k);
141
 
142
  /* We can subtract a register from itself, yielding a constant.  */
143
  else if (a.kind == pvk_register
144
           && b.kind == pvk_register
145
           && a.reg == b.reg)
146
    return pv_constant (a.k - b.k);
147
 
148
  /* We don't know how to subtract anything else.  */
149
  else
150
    return pv_unknown ();
151
}
152
 
153
 
154
pv_t
155
pv_logical_and (pv_t a, pv_t b)
156
{
157
  constant_last (&a, &b);
158
 
159
  /* We can 'and' two constants.  */
160
  if (a.kind == pvk_constant
161
      && b.kind == pvk_constant)
162
    return pv_constant (a.k & b.k);
163
 
164
  /* We can 'and' anything with the constant zero.  */
165
  else if (b.kind == pvk_constant
166
           && b.k == 0)
167
    return pv_constant (0);
168
 
169
  /* We can 'and' anything with ~0.  */
170
  else if (b.kind == pvk_constant
171
           && b.k == ~ (CORE_ADDR) 0)
172
    return a;
173
 
174
  /* We can 'and' a register with itself.  */
175
  else if (a.kind == pvk_register
176
           && b.kind == pvk_register
177
           && a.reg == b.reg
178
           && a.k == b.k)
179
    return a;
180
 
181
  /* Otherwise, we don't know.  */
182
  else
183
    return pv_unknown ();
184
}
185
 
186
 
187
 
188
/* Examining prologue values.  */
189
 
190
int
191
pv_is_identical (pv_t a, pv_t b)
192
{
193
  if (a.kind != b.kind)
194
    return 0;
195
 
196
  switch (a.kind)
197
    {
198
    case pvk_unknown:
199
      return 1;
200
    case pvk_constant:
201
      return (a.k == b.k);
202
    case pvk_register:
203
      return (a.reg == b.reg && a.k == b.k);
204
    default:
205
      gdb_assert (0);
206
    }
207
}
208
 
209
 
210
int
211
pv_is_constant (pv_t a)
212
{
213
  return (a.kind == pvk_constant);
214
}
215
 
216
 
217
int
218
pv_is_register (pv_t a, int r)
219
{
220
  return (a.kind == pvk_register
221
          && a.reg == r);
222
}
223
 
224
 
225
int
226
pv_is_register_k (pv_t a, int r, CORE_ADDR k)
227
{
228
  return (a.kind == pvk_register
229
          && a.reg == r
230
          && a.k == k);
231
}
232
 
233
 
234
enum pv_boolean
235
pv_is_array_ref (pv_t addr, CORE_ADDR size,
236
                 pv_t array_addr, CORE_ADDR array_len,
237
                 CORE_ADDR elt_size,
238
                 int *i)
239
{
240
  /* Note that, since .k is a CORE_ADDR, and CORE_ADDR is unsigned, if
241
     addr is *before* the start of the array, then this isn't going to
242
     be negative...  */
243
  pv_t offset = pv_subtract (addr, array_addr);
244
 
245
  if (offset.kind == pvk_constant)
246
    {
247
      /* This is a rather odd test.  We want to know if the SIZE bytes
248
         at ADDR don't overlap the array at all, so you'd expect it to
249
         be an || expression: "if we're completely before || we're
250
         completely after".  But with unsigned arithmetic, things are
251
         different: since it's a number circle, not a number line, the
252
         right values for offset.k are actually one contiguous range.  */
253
      if (offset.k <= -size
254
          && offset.k >= array_len * elt_size)
255
        return pv_definite_no;
256
      else if (offset.k % elt_size != 0
257
               || size != elt_size)
258
        return pv_maybe;
259
      else
260
        {
261
          *i = offset.k / elt_size;
262
          return pv_definite_yes;
263
        }
264
    }
265
  else
266
    return pv_maybe;
267
}
268
 
269
 
270
 
271
/* Areas.  */
272
 
273
 
274
/* A particular value known to be stored in an area.
275
 
276
   Entries form a ring, sorted by unsigned offset from the area's base
277
   register's value.  Since entries can straddle the wrap-around point,
278
   unsigned offsets form a circle, not a number line, so the list
279
   itself is structured the same way --- there is no inherent head.
280
   The entry with the lowest offset simply follows the entry with the
281
   highest offset.  Entries may abut, but never overlap.  The area's
282
   'entry' pointer points to an arbitrary node in the ring.  */
283
struct area_entry
284
{
285
  /* Links in the doubly-linked ring.  */
286
  struct area_entry *prev, *next;
287
 
288
  /* Offset of this entry's address from the value of the base
289
     register.  */
290
  CORE_ADDR offset;
291
 
292
  /* The size of this entry.  Note that an entry may wrap around from
293
     the end of the address space to the beginning.  */
294
  CORE_ADDR size;
295
 
296
  /* The value stored here.  */
297
  pv_t value;
298
};
299
 
300
 
301
struct pv_area
302
{
303
  /* This area's base register.  */
304
  int base_reg;
305
 
306
  /* The mask to apply to addresses, to make the wrap-around happen at
307
     the right place.  */
308
  CORE_ADDR addr_mask;
309
 
310
  /* An element of the doubly-linked ring of entries, or zero if we
311
     have none.  */
312
  struct area_entry *entry;
313
};
314
 
315
 
316
struct pv_area *
317
make_pv_area (int base_reg)
318
{
319
  struct pv_area *a = (struct pv_area *) xmalloc (sizeof (*a));
320
 
321
  memset (a, 0, sizeof (*a));
322
 
323
  a->base_reg = base_reg;
324
  a->entry = 0;
325
 
326
  /* Remember that shift amounts equal to the type's width are
327
     undefined.  */
328
  a->addr_mask = ((((CORE_ADDR) 1
329
                   << (gdbarch_addr_bit (current_gdbarch) - 1)) - 1) << 1) | 1;
330
 
331
  return a;
332
}
333
 
334
 
335
/* Delete all entries from AREA.  */
336
static void
337
clear_entries (struct pv_area *area)
338
{
339
  struct area_entry *e = area->entry;
340
 
341
  if (e)
342
    {
343
      /* This needs to be a do-while loop, in order to actually
344
         process the node being checked for in the terminating
345
         condition.  */
346
      do
347
        {
348
          struct area_entry *next = e->next;
349
          xfree (e);
350
          e = next;
351
        }
352
      while (e != area->entry);
353
 
354
      area->entry = 0;
355
    }
356
}
357
 
358
 
359
void
360
free_pv_area (struct pv_area *area)
361
{
362
  clear_entries (area);
363
  xfree (area);
364
}
365
 
366
 
367
static void
368
do_free_pv_area_cleanup (void *arg)
369
{
370
  free_pv_area ((struct pv_area *) arg);
371
}
372
 
373
 
374
struct cleanup *
375
make_cleanup_free_pv_area (struct pv_area *area)
376
{
377
  return make_cleanup (do_free_pv_area_cleanup, (void *) area);
378
}
379
 
380
 
381
int
382
pv_area_store_would_trash (struct pv_area *area, pv_t addr)
383
{
384
  /* It may seem odd that pvk_constant appears here --- after all,
385
     that's the case where we know the most about the address!  But
386
     pv_areas are always relative to a register, and we don't know the
387
     value of the register, so we can't compare entry addresses to
388
     constants.  */
389
  return (addr.kind == pvk_unknown
390
          || addr.kind == pvk_constant
391
          || (addr.kind == pvk_register && addr.reg != area->base_reg));
392
}
393
 
394
 
395
/* Return a pointer to the first entry we hit in AREA starting at
396
   OFFSET and going forward.
397
 
398
   This may return zero, if AREA has no entries.
399
 
400
   And since the entries are a ring, this may return an entry that
401
   entirely preceeds OFFSET.  This is the correct behavior: depending
402
   on the sizes involved, we could still overlap such an area, with
403
   wrap-around.  */
404
static struct area_entry *
405
find_entry (struct pv_area *area, CORE_ADDR offset)
406
{
407
  struct area_entry *e = area->entry;
408
 
409
  if (! e)
410
    return 0;
411
 
412
  /* If the next entry would be better than the current one, then scan
413
     forward.  Since we use '<' in this loop, it always terminates.
414
 
415
     Note that, even setting aside the addr_mask stuff, we must not
416
     simplify this, in high school algebra fashion, to
417
     (e->next->offset < e->offset), because of the way < interacts
418
     with wrap-around.  We have to subtract offset from both sides to
419
     make sure both things we're comparing are on the same side of the
420
     discontinuity.  */
421
  while (((e->next->offset - offset) & area->addr_mask)
422
         < ((e->offset - offset) & area->addr_mask))
423
    e = e->next;
424
 
425
  /* If the previous entry would be better than the current one, then
426
     scan backwards.  */
427
  while (((e->prev->offset - offset) & area->addr_mask)
428
         < ((e->offset - offset) & area->addr_mask))
429
    e = e->prev;
430
 
431
  /* In case there's some locality to the searches, set the area's
432
     pointer to the entry we've found.  */
433
  area->entry = e;
434
 
435
  return e;
436
}
437
 
438
 
439
/* Return non-zero if the SIZE bytes at OFFSET would overlap ENTRY;
440
   return zero otherwise.  AREA is the area to which ENTRY belongs.  */
441
static int
442
overlaps (struct pv_area *area,
443
          struct area_entry *entry,
444
          CORE_ADDR offset,
445
          CORE_ADDR size)
446
{
447
  /* Think carefully about wrap-around before simplifying this.  */
448
  return (((entry->offset - offset) & area->addr_mask) < size
449
          || ((offset - entry->offset) & area->addr_mask) < entry->size);
450
}
451
 
452
 
453
void
454
pv_area_store (struct pv_area *area,
455
               pv_t addr,
456
               CORE_ADDR size,
457
               pv_t value)
458
{
459
  /* Remove any (potentially) overlapping entries.  */
460
  if (pv_area_store_would_trash (area, addr))
461
    clear_entries (area);
462
  else
463
    {
464
      CORE_ADDR offset = addr.k;
465
      struct area_entry *e = find_entry (area, offset);
466
 
467
      /* Delete all entries that we would overlap.  */
468
      while (e && overlaps (area, e, offset, size))
469
        {
470
          struct area_entry *next = (e->next == e) ? 0 : e->next;
471
          e->prev->next = e->next;
472
          e->next->prev = e->prev;
473
 
474
          xfree (e);
475
          e = next;
476
        }
477
 
478
      /* Move the area's pointer to the next remaining entry.  This
479
         will also zero the pointer if we've deleted all the entries.  */
480
      area->entry = e;
481
    }
482
 
483
  /* Now, there are no entries overlapping us, and area->entry is
484
     either zero or pointing at the closest entry after us.  We can
485
     just insert ourselves before that.
486
 
487
     But if we're storing an unknown value, don't bother --- that's
488
     the default.  */
489
  if (value.kind == pvk_unknown)
490
    return;
491
  else
492
    {
493
      CORE_ADDR offset = addr.k;
494
      struct area_entry *e = (struct area_entry *) xmalloc (sizeof (*e));
495
      e->offset = offset;
496
      e->size = size;
497
      e->value = value;
498
 
499
      if (area->entry)
500
        {
501
          e->prev = area->entry->prev;
502
          e->next = area->entry;
503
          e->prev->next = e->next->prev = e;
504
        }
505
      else
506
        {
507
          e->prev = e->next = e;
508
          area->entry = e;
509
        }
510
    }
511
}
512
 
513
 
514
pv_t
515
pv_area_fetch (struct pv_area *area, pv_t addr, CORE_ADDR size)
516
{
517
  /* If we have no entries, or we can't decide how ADDR relates to the
518
     entries we do have, then the value is unknown.  */
519
  if (! area->entry
520
      || pv_area_store_would_trash (area, addr))
521
    return pv_unknown ();
522
  else
523
    {
524
      CORE_ADDR offset = addr.k;
525
      struct area_entry *e = find_entry (area, offset);
526
 
527
      /* If this entry exactly matches what we're looking for, then
528
         we're set.  Otherwise, say it's unknown.  */
529
      if (e->offset == offset && e->size == size)
530
        return e->value;
531
      else
532
        return pv_unknown ();
533
    }
534
}
535
 
536
 
537
int
538
pv_area_find_reg (struct pv_area *area,
539
                  struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
540
                  int reg,
541
                  CORE_ADDR *offset_p)
542
{
543
  struct area_entry *e = area->entry;
544
 
545
  if (e)
546
    do
547
      {
548
        if (e->value.kind == pvk_register
549
            && e->value.reg == reg
550
            && e->value.k == 0
551
            && e->size == register_size (gdbarch, reg))
552
          {
553
            if (offset_p)
554
              *offset_p = e->offset;
555
            return 1;
556
          }
557
 
558
        e = e->next;
559
      }
560
    while (e != area->entry);
561
 
562
  return 0;
563
}
564
 
565
 
566
void
567
pv_area_scan (struct pv_area *area,
568
              void (*func) (void *closure,
569
                            pv_t addr,
570
                            CORE_ADDR size,
571
                            pv_t value),
572
              void *closure)
573
{
574
  struct area_entry *e = area->entry;
575
  pv_t addr;
576
 
577
  addr.kind = pvk_register;
578
  addr.reg = area->base_reg;
579
 
580
  if (e)
581
    do
582
      {
583
        addr.k = e->offset;
584
        func (closure, addr, e->size, e->value);
585
        e = e->next;
586
      }
587
    while (e != area->entry);
588
}

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