URL
https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc_me/openrisc_me/trunk
Subversion Repositories openrisc_me
[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-src/] [gdb-6.8/] [gdb/] [ppc-linux-nat.c] - Rev 450
Go to most recent revision | Compare with Previous | Blame | View Log
/* PPC GNU/Linux native support. Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #include "defs.h" #include "gdb_string.h" #include "frame.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "gdbcore.h" #include "regcache.h" #include "gdb_assert.h" #include "target.h" #include "linux-nat.h" #include <stdint.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/param.h> #include <signal.h> #include <sys/user.h> #include <sys/ioctl.h> #include "gdb_wait.h" #include <fcntl.h> #include <sys/procfs.h> #include <sys/ptrace.h> /* Prototypes for supply_gregset etc. */ #include "gregset.h" #include "ppc-tdep.h" /* Glibc's headers don't define PTRACE_GETVRREGS so we cannot use a configure time check. Some older glibc's (for instance 2.2.1) don't have a specific powerpc version of ptrace.h, and fall back on a generic one. In such cases, sys/ptrace.h defines PTRACE_GETFPXREGS and PTRACE_SETFPXREGS to the same numbers that ppc kernel's asm/ptrace.h defines PTRACE_GETVRREGS and PTRACE_SETVRREGS to be. This also makes a configury check pretty much useless. */ /* These definitions should really come from the glibc header files, but Glibc doesn't know about the vrregs yet. */ #ifndef PTRACE_GETVRREGS #define PTRACE_GETVRREGS 18 #define PTRACE_SETVRREGS 19 #endif /* Similarly for the ptrace requests for getting / setting the SPE registers (ev0 -- ev31, acc, and spefscr). See the description of gdb_evrregset_t for details. */ #ifndef PTRACE_GETEVRREGS #define PTRACE_GETEVRREGS 20 #define PTRACE_SETEVRREGS 21 #endif /* Similarly for the hardware watchpoint support. */ #ifndef PTRACE_GET_DEBUGREG #define PTRACE_GET_DEBUGREG 25 #endif #ifndef PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG #define PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG 26 #endif #ifndef PTRACE_GETSIGINFO #define PTRACE_GETSIGINFO 0x4202 #endif /* This oddity is because the Linux kernel defines elf_vrregset_t as an array of 33 16 bytes long elements. I.e. it leaves out vrsave. However the PTRACE_GETVRREGS and PTRACE_SETVRREGS requests return the vrsave as an extra 4 bytes at the end. I opted for creating a flat array of chars, so that it is easier to manipulate for gdb. There are 32 vector registers 16 bytes longs, plus a VSCR register which is only 4 bytes long, but is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity. Up to here we have the elf_vrregset_t structure. Appended to this there is space for the VRSAVE register: 4 bytes. Even though this vrsave register is not included in the regset typedef, it is handled by the ptrace requests. Note that GNU/Linux doesn't support little endian PPC hardware, therefore the offset at which the real value of the VSCR register is located will be always 12 bytes. The layout is like this (where x is the actual value of the vscr reg): */ /* *INDENT-OFF* */ /* |.|.|.|.|.....|.|.|.|.||.|.|.|x||.| <-------> <-------><-------><-> VR0 VR31 VSCR VRSAVE */ /* *INDENT-ON* */ #define SIZEOF_VRREGS 33*16+4 typedef char gdb_vrregset_t[SIZEOF_VRREGS]; /* On PPC processors that support the the Signal Processing Extension (SPE) APU, the general-purpose registers are 64 bits long. However, the ordinary Linux kernel PTRACE_PEEKUSER / PTRACE_POKEUSER ptrace calls only access the lower half of each register, to allow them to behave the same way they do on non-SPE systems. There's a separate pair of calls, PTRACE_GETEVRREGS / PTRACE_SETEVRREGS, that read and write the top halves of all the general-purpose registers at once, along with some SPE-specific registers. GDB itself continues to claim the general-purpose registers are 32 bits long. It has unnamed raw registers that hold the upper halves of the gprs, and the the full 64-bit SIMD views of the registers, 'ev0' -- 'ev31', are pseudo-registers that splice the top and bottom halves together. This is the structure filled in by PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and written to the inferior's registers by PTRACE_SETEVRREGS. */ struct gdb_evrregset_t { unsigned long evr[32]; unsigned long long acc; unsigned long spefscr; }; /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETVRREGS and PTRACE_SETVRREGS requests, for reading and writing the Altivec registers. Zero if we've tried one of them and gotten an error. */ int have_ptrace_getvrregs = 1; /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and PTRACE_SETEVRREGS requests, for reading and writing the SPE registers. Zero if we've tried one of them and gotten an error. */ int have_ptrace_getsetevrregs = 1; /* *INDENT-OFF* */ /* registers layout, as presented by the ptrace interface: PT_R0, PT_R1, PT_R2, PT_R3, PT_R4, PT_R5, PT_R6, PT_R7, PT_R8, PT_R9, PT_R10, PT_R11, PT_R12, PT_R13, PT_R14, PT_R15, PT_R16, PT_R17, PT_R18, PT_R19, PT_R20, PT_R21, PT_R22, PT_R23, PT_R24, PT_R25, PT_R26, PT_R27, PT_R28, PT_R29, PT_R30, PT_R31, PT_FPR0, PT_FPR0 + 2, PT_FPR0 + 4, PT_FPR0 + 6, PT_FPR0 + 8, PT_FPR0 + 10, PT_FPR0 + 12, PT_FPR0 + 14, PT_FPR0 + 16, PT_FPR0 + 18, PT_FPR0 + 20, PT_FPR0 + 22, PT_FPR0 + 24, PT_FPR0 + 26, PT_FPR0 + 28, PT_FPR0 + 30, PT_FPR0 + 32, PT_FPR0 + 34, PT_FPR0 + 36, PT_FPR0 + 38, PT_FPR0 + 40, PT_FPR0 + 42, PT_FPR0 + 44, PT_FPR0 + 46, PT_FPR0 + 48, PT_FPR0 + 50, PT_FPR0 + 52, PT_FPR0 + 54, PT_FPR0 + 56, PT_FPR0 + 58, PT_FPR0 + 60, PT_FPR0 + 62, PT_NIP, PT_MSR, PT_CCR, PT_LNK, PT_CTR, PT_XER, PT_MQ */ /* *INDENT_ON * */ static int ppc_register_u_addr (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int regno) { int u_addr = -1; struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: This is the word size used by the ptrace interface, and not the wordsize of the program's ABI. */ int wordsize = sizeof (long); /* General purpose registers occupy 1 slot each in the buffer */ if (regno >= tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum && regno < tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + ppc_num_gprs) u_addr = ((regno - tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + PT_R0) * wordsize); /* Floating point regs: eight bytes each in both 32- and 64-bit ptrace interfaces. Thus, two slots each in 32-bit interface, one slot each in 64-bit interface. */ if (tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum >= 0 && regno >= tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum && regno < tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum + ppc_num_fprs) u_addr = (PT_FPR0 * wordsize) + ((regno - tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum) * 8); /* UISA special purpose registers: 1 slot each */ if (regno == gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)) u_addr = PT_NIP * wordsize; if (regno == tdep->ppc_lr_regnum) u_addr = PT_LNK * wordsize; if (regno == tdep->ppc_cr_regnum) u_addr = PT_CCR * wordsize; if (regno == tdep->ppc_xer_regnum) u_addr = PT_XER * wordsize; if (regno == tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum) u_addr = PT_CTR * wordsize; #ifdef PT_MQ if (regno == tdep->ppc_mq_regnum) u_addr = PT_MQ * wordsize; #endif if (regno == tdep->ppc_ps_regnum) u_addr = PT_MSR * wordsize; if (tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum >= 0 && regno == tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum) { /* NOTE: cagney/2005-02-08: On some 64-bit GNU/Linux systems the kernel headers incorrectly contained the 32-bit definition of PT_FPSCR. For the 32-bit definition, floating-point registers occupy two 32-bit "slots", and the FPSCR lives in the secondhalf of such a slot-pair (hence +1). For 64-bit, the FPSCR instead occupies the full 64-bit 2-word-slot and hence no adjustment is necessary. Hack around this. */ if (wordsize == 8 && PT_FPSCR == (48 + 32 + 1)) u_addr = (48 + 32) * wordsize; else u_addr = PT_FPSCR * wordsize; } return u_addr; } /* The Linux kernel ptrace interface for AltiVec registers uses the registers set mechanism, as opposed to the interface for all the other registers, that stores/fetches each register individually. */ static void fetch_altivec_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno) { int ret; int offset = 0; gdb_vrregset_t regs; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, ®s); if (ret < 0) { if (errno == EIO) { have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0; return; } perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec register")); } /* VSCR is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity, but it is really 4 bytes long on the hardware. We deal only with the lower 4 bytes of the vector. VRSAVE is at the end of the array in a 4 bytes slot, so there is no need to define an offset for it. */ if (regno == (tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - 1)) offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, regs + (regno - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum) * vrregsize + offset); } /* Fetch the top 32 bits of TID's general-purpose registers and the SPE-specific registers, and place the results in EVRREGSET. If we don't support PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, then just fill EVRREGSET with zeros. All the logic to deal with whether or not the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and PTRACE_SETEVRREGS requests are supported is isolated here, and in set_spe_registers. */ static void get_spe_registers (int tid, struct gdb_evrregset_t *evrregset) { if (have_ptrace_getsetevrregs) { if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, tid, 0, evrregset) >= 0) return; else { /* EIO means that the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS request isn't supported; we just return zeros. */ if (errno == EIO) have_ptrace_getsetevrregs = 0; else /* Anything else needs to be reported. */ perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch SPE registers")); } } memset (evrregset, 0, sizeof (*evrregset)); } /* Supply values from TID for SPE-specific raw registers: the upper halves of the GPRs, the accumulator, and the spefscr. REGNO must be the number of an upper half register, acc, spefscr, or -1 to supply the values of all registers. */ static void fetch_spe_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno) { struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); struct gdb_evrregset_t evrregs; gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.evr[0]) == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum)); gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.acc) == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum)); gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.spefscr) == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum)); get_spe_registers (tid, &evrregs); if (regno == -1) { int i; for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++) regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + i, &evrregs.evr[i]); } else if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum <= regno && regno < tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + ppc_num_gprs) regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, &evrregs.evr[regno - tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum]); if (regno == -1 || regno == tdep->ppc_acc_regnum) regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum, &evrregs.acc); if (regno == -1 || regno == tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum) regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum, &evrregs.spefscr); } static void fetch_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno) { struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); /* This isn't really an address. But ptrace thinks of it as one. */ CORE_ADDR regaddr = ppc_register_u_addr (gdbarch, regno); int bytes_transferred; unsigned int offset; /* Offset of registers within the u area. */ char buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE]; if (altivec_register_p (gdbarch, regno)) { /* If this is the first time through, or if it is not the first time through, and we have comfirmed that there is kernel support for such a ptrace request, then go and fetch the register. */ if (have_ptrace_getvrregs) { fetch_altivec_register (regcache, tid, regno); return; } /* If we have discovered that there is no ptrace support for AltiVec registers, fall through and return zeroes, because regaddr will be -1 in this case. */ } else if (spe_register_p (gdbarch, regno)) { fetch_spe_register (regcache, tid, regno); return; } if (regaddr == -1) { memset (buf, '\0', register_size (gdbarch, regno)); /* Supply zeroes */ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf); return; } /* Read the raw register using sizeof(long) sized chunks. On a 32-bit platform, 64-bit floating-point registers will require two transfers. */ for (bytes_transferred = 0; bytes_transferred < register_size (gdbarch, regno); bytes_transferred += sizeof (long)) { errno = 0; *(long *) &buf[bytes_transferred] = ptrace (PTRACE_PEEKUSER, tid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) regaddr, 0); regaddr += sizeof (long); if (errno != 0) { char message[128]; sprintf (message, "reading register %s (#%d)", gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, regno), regno); perror_with_name (message); } } /* Now supply the register. Keep in mind that the regcache's idea of the register's size may not be a multiple of sizeof (long). */ if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE) { /* Little-endian values are always found at the left end of the bytes transferred. */ regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf); } else if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) { /* Big-endian values are found at the right end of the bytes transferred. */ size_t padding = (bytes_transferred - register_size (gdbarch, regno)); regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf + padding); } else internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("fetch_register: unexpected byte order: %d"), gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch)); } static void supply_vrregset (struct regcache *regcache, gdb_vrregset_t *vrregsetp) { int i; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); int num_of_vrregs = tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + 1; int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum); int offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum); for (i = 0; i < num_of_vrregs; i++) { /* The last 2 registers of this set are only 32 bit long, not 128. However an offset is necessary only for VSCR because it occupies a whole vector, while VRSAVE occupies a full 4 bytes slot. */ if (i == (num_of_vrregs - 2)) regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i, *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize + offset); else regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i, *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize); } } static void fetch_altivec_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int tid) { int ret; gdb_vrregset_t regs; ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, ®s); if (ret < 0) { if (errno == EIO) { have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0; return; } perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec registers")); } supply_vrregset (regcache, ®s); } static void fetch_ppc_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int tid) { int i; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + i); if (tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum >= 0) for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_fprs; i++) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum + i); fetch_register (regcache, tid, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)); if (tdep->ppc_ps_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ps_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_cr_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_cr_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_lr_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_lr_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_xer_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_xer_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_mq_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_mq_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum != -1) fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum); if (have_ptrace_getvrregs) if (tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum != -1 && tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum != -1) fetch_altivec_registers (regcache, tid); if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum >= 0) fetch_spe_register (regcache, tid, -1); } /* Fetch registers from the child process. Fetch all registers if regno == -1, otherwise fetch all general registers or all floating point registers depending upon the value of regno. */ static void ppc_linux_fetch_inferior_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno) { /* Overload thread id onto process id */ int tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid); /* No thread id, just use process id */ if (tid == 0) tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); if (regno == -1) fetch_ppc_registers (regcache, tid); else fetch_register (regcache, tid, regno); } /* Store one register. */ static void store_altivec_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno) { int ret; int offset = 0; gdb_vrregset_t regs; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, ®s); if (ret < 0) { if (errno == EIO) { have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0; return; } perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec register")); } /* VSCR is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity, but it is really 4 bytes long on the hardware. */ if (regno == (tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - 1)) offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum); regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, regs + (regno - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum) * vrregsize + offset); ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETVRREGS, tid, 0, ®s); if (ret < 0) perror_with_name (_("Unable to store AltiVec register")); } /* Assuming TID referrs to an SPE process, set the top halves of TID's general-purpose registers and its SPE-specific registers to the values in EVRREGSET. If we don't support PTRACE_SETEVRREGS, do nothing. All the logic to deal with whether or not the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and PTRACE_SETEVRREGS requests are supported is isolated here, and in get_spe_registers. */ static void set_spe_registers (int tid, struct gdb_evrregset_t *evrregset) { if (have_ptrace_getsetevrregs) { if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETEVRREGS, tid, 0, evrregset) >= 0) return; else { /* EIO means that the PTRACE_SETEVRREGS request isn't supported; we fail silently, and don't try the call again. */ if (errno == EIO) have_ptrace_getsetevrregs = 0; else /* Anything else needs to be reported. */ perror_with_name (_("Unable to set SPE registers")); } } } /* Write GDB's value for the SPE-specific raw register REGNO to TID. If REGNO is -1, write the values of all the SPE-specific registers. */ static void store_spe_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno) { struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); struct gdb_evrregset_t evrregs; gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.evr[0]) == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum)); gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.acc) == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum)); gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.spefscr) == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum)); if (regno == -1) /* Since we're going to write out every register, the code below should store to every field of evrregs; if that doesn't happen, make it obvious by initializing it with suspicious values. */ memset (&evrregs, 42, sizeof (evrregs)); else /* We can only read and write the entire EVR register set at a time, so to write just a single register, we do a read-modify-write maneuver. */ get_spe_registers (tid, &evrregs); if (regno == -1) { int i; for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++) regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + i, &evrregs.evr[i]); } else if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum <= regno && regno < tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + ppc_num_gprs) regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, &evrregs.evr[regno - tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum]); if (regno == -1 || regno == tdep->ppc_acc_regnum) regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum, &evrregs.acc); if (regno == -1 || regno == tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum) regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum, &evrregs.spefscr); /* Write back the modified register set. */ set_spe_registers (tid, &evrregs); } static void store_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno) { struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); /* This isn't really an address. But ptrace thinks of it as one. */ CORE_ADDR regaddr = ppc_register_u_addr (gdbarch, regno); int i; size_t bytes_to_transfer; char buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE]; if (altivec_register_p (gdbarch, regno)) { store_altivec_register (regcache, tid, regno); return; } else if (spe_register_p (gdbarch, regno)) { store_spe_register (regcache, tid, regno); return; } if (regaddr == -1) return; /* First collect the register. Keep in mind that the regcache's idea of the register's size may not be a multiple of sizeof (long). */ memset (buf, 0, sizeof buf); bytes_to_transfer = align_up (register_size (gdbarch, regno), sizeof (long)); if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE) { /* Little-endian values always sit at the left end of the buffer. */ regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, buf); } else if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) { /* Big-endian values sit at the right end of the buffer. */ size_t padding = (bytes_to_transfer - register_size (gdbarch, regno)); regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, buf + padding); } for (i = 0; i < bytes_to_transfer; i += sizeof (long)) { errno = 0; ptrace (PTRACE_POKEUSER, tid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) regaddr, *(long *) &buf[i]); regaddr += sizeof (long); if (errno == EIO && regno == tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum) { /* Some older kernel versions don't allow fpscr to be written. */ continue; } if (errno != 0) { char message[128]; sprintf (message, "writing register %s (#%d)", gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, regno), regno); perror_with_name (message); } } } static void fill_vrregset (const struct regcache *regcache, gdb_vrregset_t *vrregsetp) { int i; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); int num_of_vrregs = tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + 1; int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum); int offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum); for (i = 0; i < num_of_vrregs; i++) { /* The last 2 registers of this set are only 32 bit long, not 128, but only VSCR is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity. */ if (i == (num_of_vrregs - 2)) regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i, *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize + offset); else regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i, *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize); } } static void store_altivec_registers (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid) { int ret; gdb_vrregset_t regs; ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, ®s); if (ret < 0) { if (errno == EIO) { have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0; return; } perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get AltiVec registers")); } fill_vrregset (regcache, ®s); if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETVRREGS, tid, 0, ®s) < 0) perror_with_name (_("Couldn't write AltiVec registers")); } static void store_ppc_registers (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid) { int i; struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache); struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + i); if (tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum >= 0) for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_fprs; i++) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum + i); store_register (regcache, tid, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch)); if (tdep->ppc_ps_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ps_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_cr_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_cr_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_lr_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_lr_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_xer_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_xer_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_mq_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_mq_regnum); if (tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum != -1) store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum); if (have_ptrace_getvrregs) if (tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum != -1 && tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum != -1) store_altivec_registers (regcache, tid); if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum >= 0) store_spe_register (regcache, tid, -1); } static int ppc_linux_check_watch_resources (int type, int cnt, int ot) { int tid; ptid_t ptid = inferior_ptid; /* DABR (data address breakpoint register) is optional for PPC variants. Some variants have one DABR, others have none. So CNT can't be larger than 1. */ if (cnt > 1) return 0; /* We need to know whether ptrace supports PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG and whether the target has DABR. If either answer is no, the ptrace call will return -1. Fail in that case. */ tid = TIDGET (ptid); if (tid == 0) tid = PIDGET (ptid); if (ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, tid, 0, 0) == -1) return 0; return 1; } static int ppc_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len) { /* Handle sub-8-byte quantities. */ if (len <= 0) return 0; /* addr+len must fall in the 8 byte watchable region. */ if ((addr + len) > (addr & ~7) + 8) return 0; return 1; } /* The cached DABR value, to install in new threads. */ static long saved_dabr_value; /* Set a watchpoint of type TYPE at address ADDR. */ static int ppc_linux_insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int rw) { struct lwp_info *lp; ptid_t ptid; long dabr_value; dabr_value = addr & ~7; switch (rw) { case hw_read: /* Set read and translate bits. */ dabr_value |= 5; break; case hw_write: /* Set write and translate bits. */ dabr_value |= 6; break; case hw_access: /* Set read, write and translate bits. */ dabr_value |= 7; break; } saved_dabr_value = dabr_value; ALL_LWPS (lp, ptid) if (ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, TIDGET (ptid), 0, saved_dabr_value) < 0) return -1; return 0; } static int ppc_linux_remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int rw) { struct lwp_info *lp; ptid_t ptid; long dabr_value = 0; saved_dabr_value = 0; ALL_LWPS (lp, ptid) if (ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, TIDGET (ptid), 0, saved_dabr_value) < 0) return -1; return 0; } static void ppc_linux_new_thread (ptid_t ptid) { ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, TIDGET (ptid), 0, saved_dabr_value); } static int ppc_linux_stopped_data_address (struct target_ops *target, CORE_ADDR *addr_p) { struct siginfo *siginfo_p; siginfo_p = linux_nat_get_siginfo (inferior_ptid); if (siginfo_p->si_signo != SIGTRAP || (siginfo_p->si_code & 0xffff) != 0x0004 /* TRAP_HWBKPT */) return 0; *addr_p = (CORE_ADDR) (uintptr_t) siginfo_p->si_addr; return 1; } static int ppc_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint (void) { CORE_ADDR addr; return ppc_linux_stopped_data_address (¤t_target, &addr); } static void ppc_linux_store_inferior_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int regno) { /* Overload thread id onto process id */ int tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid); /* No thread id, just use process id */ if (tid == 0) tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); if (regno >= 0) store_register (regcache, tid, regno); else store_ppc_registers (regcache, tid); } /* Functions for transferring registers between a gregset_t or fpregset_t (see sys/ucontext.h) and gdb's regcache. The word size is that used by the ptrace interface, not the current program's ABI. eg. If a powerpc64-linux gdb is being used to debug a powerpc32-linux app, we read or write 64-bit gregsets. This is to suit the host libthread_db. */ void supply_gregset (struct regcache *regcache, const gdb_gregset_t *gregsetp) { const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_gregset (sizeof (long)); ppc_supply_gregset (regset, regcache, -1, gregsetp, sizeof (*gregsetp)); } void fill_gregset (const struct regcache *regcache, gdb_gregset_t *gregsetp, int regno) { const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_gregset (sizeof (long)); if (regno == -1) memset (gregsetp, 0, sizeof (*gregsetp)); ppc_collect_gregset (regset, regcache, regno, gregsetp, sizeof (*gregsetp)); } void supply_fpregset (struct regcache *regcache, const gdb_fpregset_t * fpregsetp) { const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_fpregset (); ppc_supply_fpregset (regset, regcache, -1, fpregsetp, sizeof (*fpregsetp)); } void fill_fpregset (const struct regcache *regcache, gdb_fpregset_t *fpregsetp, int regno) { const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_fpregset (); ppc_collect_fpregset (regset, regcache, regno, fpregsetp, sizeof (*fpregsetp)); } static const struct target_desc * ppc_linux_read_description (struct target_ops *ops) { if (have_ptrace_getsetevrregs) { struct gdb_evrregset_t evrregset; int tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid); if (tid == 0) tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, tid, 0, &evrregset) >= 0) return tdesc_powerpc_e500; else { /* EIO means that the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS request isn't supported. */ if (errno == EIO) return NULL; else /* Anything else needs to be reported. */ perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch SPE registers")); } } return NULL; } void _initialize_ppc_linux_nat (void); void _initialize_ppc_linux_nat (void) { struct target_ops *t; /* Fill in the generic GNU/Linux methods. */ t = linux_target (); /* Add our register access methods. */ t->to_fetch_registers = ppc_linux_fetch_inferior_registers; t->to_store_registers = ppc_linux_store_inferior_registers; /* Add our watchpoint methods. */ t->to_can_use_hw_breakpoint = ppc_linux_check_watch_resources; t->to_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint = ppc_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint; t->to_insert_watchpoint = ppc_linux_insert_watchpoint; t->to_remove_watchpoint = ppc_linux_remove_watchpoint; t->to_stopped_by_watchpoint = ppc_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint; t->to_stopped_data_address = ppc_linux_stopped_data_address; t->to_read_description = ppc_linux_read_description; /* Register the target. */ linux_nat_add_target (t); linux_nat_set_new_thread (t, ppc_linux_new_thread); }
Go to most recent revision | Compare with Previous | Blame | View Log