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[/] [or1k/] [trunk/] [gdb-5.3/] [gdb/] [config/] [pa/] [tm-hppa.h] - Blame information for rev 1765

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1 1181 sfurman
/* Parameters for execution on any Hewlett-Packard PA-RISC machine.
2
   Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
3
   1998, 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
 
5
   Contributed by the Center for Software Science at the
6
   University of Utah (pa-gdb-bugs@cs.utah.edu).
7
 
8
   This file is part of GDB.
9
 
10
   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11
   it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12
   the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
13
   (at your option) any later version.
14
 
15
   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16
   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17
   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
18
   GNU General Public License for more details.
19
 
20
   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21
   along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
22
   Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
23
   Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.  */
24
 
25
#include "regcache.h"
26
 
27
/* Forward declarations of some types we use in prototypes */
28
 
29
struct frame_info;
30
struct frame_saved_regs;
31
struct value;
32
struct type;
33
struct inferior_status;
34
 
35
/* By default assume we don't have to worry about software floating point.  */
36
#ifndef SOFT_FLOAT
37
#define SOFT_FLOAT 0
38
#endif
39
 
40
/* Get at various relevent fields of an instruction word. */
41
 
42
#define MASK_5 0x1f
43
#define MASK_11 0x7ff
44
#define MASK_14 0x3fff
45
#define MASK_21 0x1fffff
46
 
47
/* This macro gets bit fields using HP's numbering (MSB = 0) */
48
#ifndef GET_FIELD
49
#define GET_FIELD(X, FROM, TO) \
50
  ((X) >> (31 - (TO)) & ((1 << ((TO) - (FROM) + 1)) - 1))
51
#endif
52
 
53
/* On the PA, any pass-by-value structure > 8 bytes is actually
54
   passed via a pointer regardless of its type or the compiler
55
   used.  */
56
 
57
#define REG_STRUCT_HAS_ADDR(gcc_p,type) \
58
  (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8)
59
 
60
/* Offset from address of function to start of its code.
61
   Zero on most machines.  */
62
 
63
#define FUNCTION_START_OFFSET 0
64
 
65
/* Advance PC across any function entry prologue instructions
66
   to reach some "real" code.  */
67
 
68
extern CORE_ADDR hppa_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR);
69
#define SKIP_PROLOGUE(pc) (hppa_skip_prologue (pc))
70
 
71
/* If PC is in some function-call trampoline code, return the PC
72
   where the function itself actually starts.  If not, return NULL.  */
73
 
74
#define SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE(pc) skip_trampoline_code (pc, NULL)
75
extern CORE_ADDR skip_trampoline_code (CORE_ADDR, char *);
76
 
77
/* Return non-zero if we are in an appropriate trampoline. */
78
 
79
#define IN_SOLIB_CALL_TRAMPOLINE(pc, name) \
80
   in_solib_call_trampoline (pc, name)
81
extern int in_solib_call_trampoline (CORE_ADDR, char *);
82
 
83
#define IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE(pc, name) \
84
  in_solib_return_trampoline (pc, name)
85
extern int in_solib_return_trampoline (CORE_ADDR, char *);
86
 
87
/* Immediately after a function call, return the saved pc.
88
   Can't go through the frames for this because on some machines
89
   the new frame is not set up until the new function executes
90
   some instructions.  */
91
 
92
#undef  SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL
93
#define SAVED_PC_AFTER_CALL(frame) saved_pc_after_call (frame)
94
extern CORE_ADDR saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *);
95
 
96
/* Stack grows upward */
97
#define INNER_THAN(lhs,rhs) ((lhs) > (rhs))
98
 
99
/* elz: adjust the quantity to the next highest value which is 64-bit aligned.
100
   This is used in valops.c, when the sp is adjusted.
101
   On hppa the sp must always be kept 64-bit aligned */
102
 
103
#define STACK_ALIGN(arg) ( ((arg)%8) ? (((arg)+7)&-8) : (arg))
104
#define EXTRA_STACK_ALIGNMENT_NEEDED 0
105
 
106
/* Sequence of bytes for breakpoint instruction.  */
107
 
108
#define BREAKPOINT {0x00, 0x01, 0x00, 0x04}
109
#define BREAKPOINT32 0x10004
110
 
111
/* Amount PC must be decremented by after a breakpoint.
112
   This is often the number of bytes in BREAKPOINT
113
   but not always.
114
 
115
   Not on the PA-RISC */
116
 
117
#define DECR_PC_AFTER_BREAK 0
118
 
119
/* Sometimes we may pluck out a minimal symbol that has a negative
120
   address.
121
 
122
   An example of this occurs when an a.out is linked against a foo.sl.
123
   The foo.sl defines a global bar(), and the a.out declares a signature
124
   for bar().  However, the a.out doesn't directly call bar(), but passes
125
   its address in another call.
126
 
127
   If you have this scenario and attempt to "break bar" before running,
128
   gdb will find a minimal symbol for bar() in the a.out.  But that
129
   symbol's address will be negative.  What this appears to denote is
130
   an index backwards from the base of the procedure linkage table (PLT)
131
   into the data linkage table (DLT), the end of which is contiguous
132
   with the start of the PLT.  This is clearly not a valid address for
133
   us to set a breakpoint on.
134
 
135
   Note that one must be careful in how one checks for a negative address.
136
   0xc0000000 is a legitimate address of something in a shared text
137
   segment, for example.  Since I don't know what the possible range
138
   is of these "really, truly negative" addresses that come from the
139
   minimal symbols, I'm resorting to the gross hack of checking the
140
   top byte of the address for all 1's.  Sigh.
141
 */
142
#define PC_REQUIRES_RUN_BEFORE_USE(pc) \
143
  (! target_has_stack && (pc & 0xFF000000))
144
 
145
/* return instruction is bv r0(rp) or bv,n r0(rp) */
146
 
147
#define ABOUT_TO_RETURN(pc) ((read_memory_integer (pc, 4) | 0x2) == 0xE840C002)
148
 
149
/* Say how long (ordinary) registers are.  This is a piece of bogosity
150
   used in push_word and a few other places; REGISTER_RAW_SIZE is the
151
   real way to know how big a register is.  */
152
 
153
#define REGISTER_SIZE 4
154
 
155
/* Number of machine registers */
156
 
157
#define NUM_REGS 128
158
 
159
/* Initializer for an array of names of registers.
160
   There should be NUM_REGS strings in this initializer.
161
   They are in rows of eight entries  */
162
 
163
#define REGISTER_NAMES  \
164
 {"flags",  "r1",      "rp",      "r3",    "r4",     "r5",      "r6",     "r7",    \
165
  "r8",     "r9",      "r10",     "r11",   "r12",    "r13",     "r14",    "r15",   \
166
  "r16",    "r17",     "r18",     "r19",   "r20",    "r21",     "r22",    "r23",   \
167
  "r24",    "r25",     "r26",     "dp",    "ret0",   "ret1",    "sp",     "r31",   \
168
  "sar",    "pcoqh",   "pcsqh",   "pcoqt", "pcsqt",  "eiem",    "iir",    "isr",   \
169
  "ior",    "ipsw",    "goto",    "sr4",   "sr0",    "sr1",     "sr2",    "sr3",   \
170
  "sr5",    "sr6",     "sr7",     "cr0",   "cr8",    "cr9",     "ccr",    "cr12",  \
171
  "cr13",   "cr24",    "cr25",    "cr26",  "mpsfu_high","mpsfu_low","mpsfu_ovflo","pad",\
172
  "fpsr",    "fpe1",   "fpe2",    "fpe3",  "fpe4",   "fpe5",    "fpe6",   "fpe7",  \
173
  "fr4",     "fr4R",   "fr5",     "fr5R",  "fr6",    "fr6R",    "fr7",    "fr7R",  \
174
  "fr8",     "fr8R",   "fr9",     "fr9R",  "fr10",   "fr10R",   "fr11",   "fr11R", \
175
  "fr12",    "fr12R",  "fr13",    "fr13R", "fr14",   "fr14R",   "fr15",   "fr15R", \
176
  "fr16",    "fr16R",  "fr17",    "fr17R", "fr18",   "fr18R",   "fr19",   "fr19R", \
177
  "fr20",    "fr20R",  "fr21",    "fr21R", "fr22",   "fr22R",   "fr23",   "fr23R", \
178
  "fr24",    "fr24R",  "fr25",    "fr25R", "fr26",   "fr26R",   "fr27",   "fr27R", \
179
  "fr28",    "fr28R",  "fr29",    "fr29R", "fr30",   "fr30R",   "fr31",   "fr31R"}
180
 
181
/* Register numbers of various important registers.
182
   Note that some of these values are "real" register numbers,
183
   and correspond to the general registers of the machine,
184
   and some are "phony" register numbers which are too large
185
   to be actual register numbers as far as the user is concerned
186
   but do serve to get the desired values when passed to read_register.  */
187
 
188
#define R0_REGNUM 0             /* Doesn't actually exist, used as base for
189
                                   other r registers.  */
190
#define FLAGS_REGNUM 0          /* Various status flags */
191
#define RP_REGNUM 2             /* return pointer */
192
#define FP_REGNUM 3             /* Contains address of executing stack */
193
                                /* frame */
194
#define SP_REGNUM 30            /* Contains address of top of stack */
195
#define SAR_REGNUM 32           /* Shift Amount Register */
196
#define IPSW_REGNUM 41          /* Interrupt Processor Status Word */
197
#define PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM 33     /* instruction offset queue head */
198
#define PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM 34     /* instruction space queue head */
199
#define PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM 35     /* instruction offset queue tail */
200
#define PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM 36     /* instruction space queue tail */
201
#define EIEM_REGNUM 37          /* External Interrupt Enable Mask */
202
#define IIR_REGNUM 38           /* Interrupt Instruction Register */
203
#define IOR_REGNUM 40           /* Interrupt Offset Register */
204
#define SR4_REGNUM 43           /* space register 4 */
205
#define RCR_REGNUM 51           /* Recover Counter (also known as cr0) */
206
#define CCR_REGNUM 54           /* Coprocessor Configuration Register */
207
#define TR0_REGNUM 57           /* Temporary Registers (cr24 -> cr31) */
208
#define CR27_REGNUM 60          /* Base register for thread-local storage, cr27 */
209
#define FP0_REGNUM 64           /* floating point reg. 0 (fspr) */
210
#define FP4_REGNUM 72
211
 
212
#define ARG0_REGNUM 26          /* The first argument of a callee. */
213
#define ARG1_REGNUM 25          /* The second argument of a callee. */
214
#define ARG2_REGNUM 24          /* The third argument of a callee. */
215
#define ARG3_REGNUM 23          /* The fourth argument of a callee. */
216
 
217
/* compatibility with the rest of gdb. */
218
#define PC_REGNUM PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM
219
#define NPC_REGNUM PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM
220
 
221
/*
222
 * Processor Status Word Masks
223
 */
224
 
225
#define PSW_T   0x01000000      /* Taken Branch Trap Enable */
226
#define PSW_H   0x00800000      /* Higher-Privilege Transfer Trap Enable */
227
#define PSW_L   0x00400000      /* Lower-Privilege Transfer Trap Enable */
228
#define PSW_N   0x00200000      /* PC Queue Front Instruction Nullified */
229
#define PSW_X   0x00100000      /* Data Memory Break Disable */
230
#define PSW_B   0x00080000      /* Taken Branch in Previous Cycle */
231
#define PSW_C   0x00040000      /* Code Address Translation Enable */
232
#define PSW_V   0x00020000      /* Divide Step Correction */
233
#define PSW_M   0x00010000      /* High-Priority Machine Check Disable */
234
#define PSW_CB  0x0000ff00      /* Carry/Borrow Bits */
235
#define PSW_R   0x00000010      /* Recovery Counter Enable */
236
#define PSW_Q   0x00000008      /* Interruption State Collection Enable */
237
#define PSW_P   0x00000004      /* Protection ID Validation Enable */
238
#define PSW_D   0x00000002      /* Data Address Translation Enable */
239
#define PSW_I   0x00000001      /* External, Power Failure, Low-Priority */
240
                                /* Machine Check Interruption Enable */
241
 
242
/* When fetching register values from an inferior or a core file,
243
   clean them up using this macro.  BUF is a char pointer to
244
   the raw value of the register in the registers[] array.  */
245
 
246
#define DEPRECATED_CLEAN_UP_REGISTER_VALUE(regno, buf) \
247
  do {  \
248
    if ((regno) == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || (regno) == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) \
249
      (buf)[sizeof(CORE_ADDR) -1] &= ~0x3; \
250
  } while (0)
251
 
252
/* Define DO_REGISTERS_INFO() to do machine-specific formatting
253
   of register dumps. */
254
 
255
#define DO_REGISTERS_INFO(_regnum, fp) pa_do_registers_info (_regnum, fp)
256
extern void pa_do_registers_info (int, int);
257
 
258
#if 0
259
#define STRCAT_REGISTER(regnum, fpregs, stream, precision) pa_do_strcat_registers_info (regnum, fpregs, stream, precision)
260
extern void pa_do_strcat_registers_info (int, int, struct ui_file *, enum precision_type);
261
#endif
262
 
263
/* PA specific macro to see if the current instruction is nullified. */
264
#ifndef INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED
265
#define INSTRUCTION_NULLIFIED \
266
    (((int)read_register (IPSW_REGNUM) & 0x00200000) && \
267
     !((int)read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM) & 0x2))
268
#endif
269
 
270
/* Number of bytes of storage in the actual machine representation
271
   for register N.  On the PA-RISC, all regs are 4 bytes, including
272
   the FP registers (they're accessed as two 4 byte halves).  */
273
 
274
#define REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(N) 4
275
 
276
/* Total amount of space needed to store our copies of the machine's
277
   register state, the array `registers'.  */
278
#define REGISTER_BYTES (NUM_REGS * 4)
279
 
280
/* Index within `registers' of the first byte of the space for
281
   register N.  */
282
 
283
#define REGISTER_BYTE(N) (N) * 4
284
 
285
/* Number of bytes of storage in the program's representation
286
   for register N. */
287
 
288
#define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE(N) REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(N)
289
 
290
/* Largest value REGISTER_RAW_SIZE can have.  */
291
 
292
#define MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE 4
293
 
294
/* Largest value REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE can have.  */
295
 
296
#define MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE 8
297
 
298
/* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type
299
   of data in register N.  */
300
 
301
#define REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE(N) \
302
 ((N) < FP4_REGNUM ? builtin_type_int : builtin_type_float)
303
 
304
/* Store the address of the place in which to copy the structure the
305
   subroutine will return.  This is called from call_function. */
306
 
307
#define STORE_STRUCT_RETURN(ADDR, SP) {write_register (28, (ADDR)); }
308
 
309
/* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
310
   a function return value of type TYPE, and copy that, in virtual format,
311
   into VALBUF.  */
312
 
313
void hppa_extract_return_value (struct type *type, char *regbuf, char *valbuf);
314
#define DEPRECATED_EXTRACT_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,REGBUF,VALBUF) \
315
  hppa_extract_return_value (TYPE, REGBUF, VALBUF);
316
 
317
 /* elz: decide whether the function returning a value of type type
318
    will put it on the stack or in the registers.
319
    The pa calling convention says that:
320
    register 28 (called ret0 by gdb) contains any ASCII char,
321
    and any non_floating point value up to 32-bits.
322
    reg 28 and 29 contain non-floating point up tp 64 bits and larger
323
    than 32 bits. (higer order word in reg 28).
324
    fr4: floating point up to 64 bits
325
    sr1: space identifier (32-bit)
326
    stack: any lager than 64-bit, with the address in r28
327
  */
328
extern use_struct_convention_fn hppa_use_struct_convention;
329
#define USE_STRUCT_CONVENTION(gcc_p,type) hppa_use_struct_convention (gcc_p,type)
330
 
331
/* Write into appropriate registers a function return value
332
   of type TYPE, given in virtual format.  */
333
 
334
 
335
extern void hppa_store_return_value (struct type *type, char *valbuf);
336
#define DEPRECATED_STORE_RETURN_VALUE(TYPE,VALBUF) \
337
  hppa_store_return_value (TYPE, VALBUF);
338
 
339
/* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
340
   the address in which a function should return its structure value,
341
   as a CORE_ADDR (or an expression that can be used as one).  */
342
 
343
#define DEPRECATED_EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS(REGBUF) \
344
  (*(int *)((REGBUF) + REGISTER_BYTE (28)))
345
 
346
/* elz: Return a large value, which is stored on the stack at addr.
347
   This is defined only for the hppa, at this moment.  The above macro
348
   DEPRECATED_EXTRACT_STRUCT_VALUE_ADDRESS is not called anymore,
349
   because it assumes that on exit from a called function which
350
   returns a large structure on the stack, the address of the ret
351
   structure is still in register 28. Unfortunately this register is
352
   usually overwritten by the called function itself, on hppa. This is
353
   specified in the calling convention doc. As far as I know, the only
354
   way to get the return value is to have the caller tell us where it
355
   told the callee to put it, rather than have the callee tell us.  */
356
struct value *hppa_value_returned_from_stack (register struct type *valtype,
357
                                              CORE_ADDR addr);
358
#define VALUE_RETURNED_FROM_STACK(valtype,addr) \
359
  hppa_value_returned_from_stack (valtype, addr)
360
 
361
/*
362
 * This macro defines the register numbers (from REGISTER_NAMES) that
363
 * are effectively unavailable to the user through ptrace().  It allows
364
 * us to include the whole register set in REGISTER_NAMES (inorder to
365
 * better support remote debugging).  If it is used in
366
 * fetch/store_inferior_registers() gdb will not complain about I/O errors
367
 * on fetching these registers.  If all registers in REGISTER_NAMES
368
 * are available, then return false (0).
369
 */
370
 
371
#define CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER(regno)            \
372
                   ((regno) == 0) ||     \
373
                   ((regno) == PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM) || \
374
                   ((regno) >= PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM && (regno) < IPSW_REGNUM) ||  \
375
                   ((regno) > IPSW_REGNUM && (regno) < FP4_REGNUM)
376
 
377
#define INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO(fromleaf, frame) init_extra_frame_info (fromleaf, frame)
378
extern void init_extra_frame_info (int, struct frame_info *);
379
 
380
/* Describe the pointer in each stack frame to the previous stack frame
381
   (its caller).  */
382
 
383
/* FRAME_CHAIN takes a frame's nominal address and produces the
384
   frame's chain-pointer.  */
385
 
386
/* In the case of the PA-RISC, the frame's nominal address
387
   is the address of a 4-byte word containing the calling frame's
388
   address (previous FP).  */
389
 
390
#define FRAME_CHAIN(thisframe) frame_chain (thisframe)
391
extern CORE_ADDR frame_chain (struct frame_info *);
392
 
393
extern int hppa_frame_chain_valid (CORE_ADDR, struct frame_info *);
394
#define FRAME_CHAIN_VALID(chain, thisframe) hppa_frame_chain_valid (chain, thisframe)
395
 
396
/* Define other aspects of the stack frame.  */
397
 
398
/* A macro that tells us whether the function invocation represented
399
   by FI does not have a frame on the stack associated with it.  If it
400
   does not, FRAMELESS is set to 1, else 0.  */
401
#define FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION(FI) \
402
  (frameless_function_invocation (FI))
403
extern int frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info *);
404
 
405
extern CORE_ADDR hppa_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *frame);
406
#define FRAME_SAVED_PC(FRAME) hppa_frame_saved_pc (FRAME)
407
 
408
#define FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS(fi) ((fi)->frame)
409
 
410
#define FRAME_LOCALS_ADDRESS(fi) ((fi)->frame)
411
/* Set VAL to the number of args passed to frame described by FI.
412
   Can set VAL to -1, meaning no way to tell.  */
413
 
414
/* We can't tell how many args there are
415
   now that the C compiler delays popping them.  */
416
#define FRAME_NUM_ARGS(fi) (-1)
417
 
418
/* Return number of bytes at start of arglist that are not really args.  */
419
 
420
#define FRAME_ARGS_SKIP 0
421
 
422
#define FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS(frame_info, frame_saved_regs) \
423
  hppa_frame_find_saved_regs (frame_info, &frame_saved_regs)
424
extern void
425
hppa_frame_find_saved_regs (struct frame_info *, struct frame_saved_regs *);
426
 
427
 
428
/* Things needed for making the inferior call functions.  */
429
 
430
/* Push an empty stack frame, to record the current PC, etc. */
431
 
432
#define PUSH_DUMMY_FRAME push_dummy_frame (inf_status)
433
extern void push_dummy_frame (struct inferior_status *);
434
 
435
/* Discard from the stack the innermost frame,
436
   restoring all saved registers.  */
437
#define POP_FRAME  hppa_pop_frame ()
438
extern void hppa_pop_frame (void);
439
 
440
#define INSTRUCTION_SIZE 4
441
 
442
#ifndef PA_LEVEL_0
443
 
444
/* Non-level zero PA's have space registers (but they don't always have
445
   floating-point, do they????  */
446
 
447
/* This sequence of words is the instructions
448
 
449
   ; Call stack frame has already been built by gdb. Since we could be calling
450
   ; a varargs function, and we do not have the benefit of a stub to put things in
451
   ; the right place, we load the first 4 word of arguments into both the general
452
   ; and fp registers.
453
   call_dummy
454
   ldw -36(sp), arg0
455
   ldw -40(sp), arg1
456
   ldw -44(sp), arg2
457
   ldw -48(sp), arg3
458
   ldo -36(sp), r1
459
   fldws 0(0, r1), fr4
460
   fldds -4(0, r1), fr5
461
   fldws -8(0, r1), fr6
462
   fldds -12(0, r1), fr7
463
   ldil 0, r22                  ; FUNC_LDIL_OFFSET must point here
464
   ldo 0(r22), r22                      ; FUNC_LDO_OFFSET must point here
465
   ldsid (0,r22), r4
466
   ldil 0, r1                   ; SR4EXPORT_LDIL_OFFSET must point here
467
   ldo 0(r1), r1                        ; SR4EXPORT_LDO_OFFSET must point here
468
   ldsid (0,r1), r20
469
   combt,=,n r4, r20, text_space        ; If target is in data space, do a
470
   ble 0(sr5, r22)                      ; "normal" procedure call
471
   copy r31, r2
472
   break 4, 8
473
   mtsp r21, sr0
474
   ble,n 0(sr0, r22)
475
   text_space                           ; Otherwise, go through _sr4export,
476
   ble (sr4, r1)                        ; which will return back here.
477
   stw r31,-24(r30)
478
   break 4, 8
479
   mtsp r21, sr0
480
   ble,n 0(sr0, r22)
481
   nop                          ; To avoid kernel bugs
482
   nop                          ; and keep the dummy 8 byte aligned
483
 
484
   The dummy decides if the target is in text space or data space. If
485
   it's in data space, there's no problem because the target can
486
   return back to the dummy. However, if the target is in text space,
487
   the dummy calls the secret, undocumented routine _sr4export, which
488
   calls a function in text space and can return to any space. Instead
489
   of including fake instructions to represent saved registers, we
490
   know that the frame is associated with the call dummy and treat it
491
   specially.
492
 
493
   The trailing NOPs are needed to avoid a bug in HPUX, BSD and OSF1
494
   kernels.   If the memory at the location pointed to by the PC is
495
   0xffffffff then a ptrace step call will fail (even if the instruction
496
   is nullified).
497
 
498
   The code to pop a dummy frame single steps three instructions
499
   starting with the last mtsp.  This includes the nullified "instruction"
500
   following the ble (which is uninitialized junk).  If the
501
   "instruction" following the last BLE is 0xffffffff, then the ptrace
502
   will fail and the dummy frame is not correctly popped.
503
 
504
   By placing a NOP in the delay slot of the BLE instruction we can be
505
   sure that we never try to execute a 0xffffffff instruction and
506
   avoid the kernel bug.  The second NOP is needed to keep the call
507
   dummy 8 byte aligned.  */
508
 
509
/* Define offsets into the call dummy for the target function address */
510
#define FUNC_LDIL_OFFSET (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 9)
511
#define FUNC_LDO_OFFSET (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 10)
512
 
513
/* Define offsets into the call dummy for the _sr4export address */
514
#define SR4EXPORT_LDIL_OFFSET (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 12)
515
#define SR4EXPORT_LDO_OFFSET (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 13)
516
 
517
#define CALL_DUMMY {0x4BDA3FB9, 0x4BD93FB1, 0x4BD83FA9, 0x4BD73FA1,\
518
                    0x37C13FB9, 0x24201004, 0x2C391005, 0x24311006,\
519
                    0x2C291007, 0x22C00000, 0x36D60000, 0x02C010A4,\
520
                    0x20200000, 0x34210000, 0x002010b4, 0x82842022,\
521
                    0xe6c06000, 0x081f0242, 0x00010004, 0x00151820,\
522
                    0xe6c00002, 0xe4202000, 0x6bdf3fd1, 0x00010004,\
523
                    0x00151820, 0xe6c00002, 0x08000240, 0x08000240}
524
 
525
#define CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 28)
526
#define REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE 16
527
 
528
#else /* defined PA_LEVEL_0 */
529
 
530
/* This is the call dummy for a level 0 PA.  Level 0's don't have space
531
   registers (or floating point?), so we skip all that inter-space call stuff,
532
   and avoid touching the fp regs.
533
 
534
   call_dummy
535
 
536
   ldw -36(%sp), %arg0
537
   ldw -40(%sp), %arg1
538
   ldw -44(%sp), %arg2
539
   ldw -48(%sp), %arg3
540
   ldil 0, %r31                 ; FUNC_LDIL_OFFSET must point here
541
   ldo 0(%r31), %r31            ; FUNC_LDO_OFFSET must point here
542
   ble 0(%sr0, %r31)
543
   copy %r31, %r2
544
   break 4, 8
545
   nop                          ; restore_pc_queue expects these
546
   bv,n 0(%r22)                 ; instructions to be here...
547
   nop
548
 */
549
 
550
/* Define offsets into the call dummy for the target function address */
551
#define FUNC_LDIL_OFFSET (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 4)
552
#define FUNC_LDO_OFFSET (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 5)
553
 
554
#define CALL_DUMMY {0x4bda3fb9, 0x4bd93fb1, 0x4bd83fa9, 0x4bd73fa1,\
555
                    0x23e00000, 0x37ff0000, 0xe7e00000, 0x081f0242,\
556
                    0x00010004, 0x08000240, 0xeac0c002, 0x08000240}
557
 
558
#define CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH (INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 12)
559
 
560
#endif
561
 
562
#define CALL_DUMMY_START_OFFSET 0
563
 
564
/* If we've reached a trap instruction within the call dummy, then
565
   we'll consider that to mean that we've reached the call dummy's
566
   end after its successful completion. */
567
#define CALL_DUMMY_HAS_COMPLETED(pc, sp, frame_address) \
568
  (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY((pc), (sp), (frame_address)) && \
569
   (read_memory_integer((pc), 4) == BREAKPOINT32))
570
 
571
/*
572
 * Insert the specified number of args and function address
573
 * into a call sequence of the above form stored at DUMMYNAME.
574
 *
575
 * On the hppa we need to call the stack dummy through $$dyncall.
576
 * Therefore our version of FIX_CALL_DUMMY takes an extra argument,
577
 * real_pc, which is the location where gdb should start up the
578
 * inferior to do the function call.
579
 */
580
 
581
#define FIX_CALL_DUMMY hppa_fix_call_dummy
582
 
583
extern CORE_ADDR
584
hppa_fix_call_dummy (char *, CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR, int,
585
                     struct value **, struct type *, int);
586
 
587
#define PUSH_ARGUMENTS(nargs, args, sp, struct_return, struct_addr) \
588
  (hppa_push_arguments((nargs), (args), (sp), (struct_return), (struct_addr)))
589
extern CORE_ADDR
590
hppa_push_arguments (int, struct value **, CORE_ADDR, int, CORE_ADDR);
591
 
592
/* The low two bits of the PC on the PA contain the privilege level.  Some
593
   genius implementing a (non-GCC) compiler apparently decided this means
594
   that "addresses" in a text section therefore include a privilege level,
595
   and thus symbol tables should contain these bits.  This seems like a
596
   bonehead thing to do--anyway, it seems to work for our purposes to just
597
   ignore those bits.  */
598
#define SMASH_TEXT_ADDRESS(addr) ((addr) &= ~0x3)
599
 
600
#define GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA
601
 
602
#define BELIEVE_PCC_PROMOTION 1
603
 
604
/*
605
 * Unwind table and descriptor.
606
 */
607
 
608
struct unwind_table_entry
609
  {
610
    CORE_ADDR region_start;
611
    CORE_ADDR region_end;
612
 
613
    unsigned int Cannot_unwind:1;       /* 0 */
614
    unsigned int Millicode:1;   /* 1 */
615
    unsigned int Millicode_save_sr0:1;  /* 2 */
616
    unsigned int Region_description:2;  /* 3..4 */
617
    unsigned int reserved1:1;   /* 5 */
618
    unsigned int Entry_SR:1;    /* 6 */
619
    unsigned int Entry_FR:4;    /* number saved *//* 7..10 */
620
    unsigned int Entry_GR:5;    /* number saved *//* 11..15 */
621
    unsigned int Args_stored:1; /* 16 */
622
    unsigned int Variable_Frame:1;      /* 17 */
623
    unsigned int Separate_Package_Body:1;       /* 18 */
624
    unsigned int Frame_Extension_Millicode:1;   /* 19 */
625
    unsigned int Stack_Overflow_Check:1;        /* 20 */
626
    unsigned int Two_Instruction_SP_Increment:1;        /* 21 */
627
    unsigned int Ada_Region:1;  /* 22 */
628
    unsigned int cxx_info:1;    /* 23 */
629
    unsigned int cxx_try_catch:1;       /* 24 */
630
    unsigned int sched_entry_seq:1;     /* 25 */
631
    unsigned int reserved2:1;   /* 26 */
632
    unsigned int Save_SP:1;     /* 27 */
633
    unsigned int Save_RP:1;     /* 28 */
634
    unsigned int Save_MRP_in_frame:1;   /* 29 */
635
    unsigned int extn_ptr_defined:1;    /* 30 */
636
    unsigned int Cleanup_defined:1;     /* 31 */
637
 
638
    unsigned int MPE_XL_interrupt_marker:1;     /* 0 */
639
    unsigned int HP_UX_interrupt_marker:1;      /* 1 */
640
    unsigned int Large_frame:1; /* 2 */
641
    unsigned int Pseudo_SP_Set:1;       /* 3 */
642
    unsigned int reserved4:1;   /* 4 */
643
    unsigned int Total_frame_size:27;   /* 5..31 */
644
 
645
    /* This is *NOT* part of an actual unwind_descriptor in an object
646
       file.  It is *ONLY* part of the "internalized" descriptors that
647
       we create from those in a file.
648
     */
649
    struct
650
      {
651
        unsigned int stub_type:4;       /* 0..3 */
652
        unsigned int padding:28;        /* 4..31 */
653
      }
654
    stub_unwind;
655
  };
656
 
657
/* HP linkers also generate unwinds for various linker-generated stubs.
658
   GDB reads in the stubs from the $UNWIND_END$ subspace, then
659
   "converts" them into normal unwind entries using some of the reserved
660
   fields to store the stub type.  */
661
 
662
struct stub_unwind_entry
663
  {
664
    /* The offset within the executable for the associated stub.  */
665
    unsigned stub_offset;
666
 
667
    /* The type of stub this unwind entry describes.  */
668
    char type;
669
 
670
    /* Unknown.  Not needed by GDB at this time.  */
671
    char prs_info;
672
 
673
    /* Length (in instructions) of the associated stub.  */
674
    short stub_length;
675
  };
676
 
677
/* Sizes (in bytes) of the native unwind entries.  */
678
#define UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE 16
679
#define STUB_UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE 8
680
 
681
/* The gaps represent linker stubs used in MPE and space for future
682
   expansion.  */
683
enum unwind_stub_types
684
  {
685
    LONG_BRANCH = 1,
686
    PARAMETER_RELOCATION = 2,
687
    EXPORT = 10,
688
    IMPORT = 11,
689
    IMPORT_SHLIB = 12,
690
  };
691
 
692
/* We use the objfile->obj_private pointer for two things:
693
 
694
 * 1.  An unwind table;
695
 *
696
 * 2.  A pointer to any associated shared library object.
697
 *
698
 * #defines are used to help refer to these objects.
699
 */
700
 
701
/* Info about the unwind table associated with an object file.
702
 
703
 * This is hung off of the "objfile->obj_private" pointer, and
704
 * is allocated in the objfile's psymbol obstack.  This allows
705
 * us to have unique unwind info for each executable and shared
706
 * library that we are debugging.
707
 */
708
struct obj_unwind_info
709
  {
710
    struct unwind_table_entry *table;   /* Pointer to unwind info */
711
    struct unwind_table_entry *cache;   /* Pointer to last entry we found */
712
    int last;                   /* Index of last entry */
713
  };
714
 
715
typedef struct obj_private_struct
716
  {
717
    struct obj_unwind_info *unwind_info;        /* a pointer */
718
    struct so_list *so_info;    /* a pointer  */
719
    CORE_ADDR dp;
720
  }
721
obj_private_data_t;
722
 
723
#if 0
724
extern void target_write_pc (CORE_ADDR, int);
725
extern CORE_ADDR target_read_pc (int);
726
extern CORE_ADDR skip_trampoline_code (CORE_ADDR, char *);
727
#endif
728
 
729
#define TARGET_READ_PC(pid) target_read_pc (pid)
730
extern CORE_ADDR target_read_pc (ptid_t);
731
 
732
#define TARGET_WRITE_PC(v,pid) target_write_pc (v,pid)
733
extern void target_write_pc (CORE_ADDR, ptid_t);
734
 
735
#define TARGET_READ_FP() target_read_fp (PIDGET (inferior_ptid))
736
extern CORE_ADDR target_read_fp (int);
737
 
738
/* For a number of horrible reasons we may have to adjust the location
739
   of variables on the stack.  Ugh.  */
740
#define HPREAD_ADJUST_STACK_ADDRESS(ADDR) hpread_adjust_stack_address(ADDR)
741
 
742
extern int hpread_adjust_stack_address (CORE_ADDR);
743
 
744
/* If the current gcc for for this target does not produce correct debugging
745
   information for float parameters, both prototyped and unprototyped, then
746
   define this macro.  This forces gdb to  always assume that floats are
747
   passed as doubles and then converted in the callee.
748
 
749
   For the pa, it appears that the debug info marks the parameters as
750
   floats regardless of whether the function is prototyped, but the actual
751
   values are passed as doubles for the non-prototyped case and floats for
752
   the prototyped case.  Thus we choose to make the non-prototyped case work
753
   for C and break the prototyped case, since the non-prototyped case is
754
   probably much more common.  (FIXME). */
755
 
756
#define COERCE_FLOAT_TO_DOUBLE(formal, actual) (current_language -> la_language == language_c)
757
 
758
/* Here's how to step off a permanent breakpoint.  */
759
#define SKIP_PERMANENT_BREAKPOINT (hppa_skip_permanent_breakpoint)
760
extern void hppa_skip_permanent_breakpoint (void);
761
 
762
/* On HP-UX, certain system routines (millicode) have names beginning
763
   with $ or $$, e.g. $$dyncall, which handles inter-space procedure
764
   calls on PA-RISC.  Tell the expression parser to check for those
765
   when parsing tokens that begin with "$".  */
766
#define SYMBOLS_CAN_START_WITH_DOLLAR (1)

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