| /* Renesas M32C target-dependent code for GDB, the GNU debugger. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2004-2021 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/sim-m32c.h" |
| #include "gdbtypes.h" |
| #include "regcache.h" |
| #include "arch-utils.h" |
| #include "frame.h" |
| #include "frame-unwind.h" |
| #include "symtab.h" |
| #include "gdbcore.h" |
| #include "value.h" |
| #include "reggroups.h" |
| #include "prologue-value.h" |
| #include "objfiles.h" |
| |
| |
| /* The m32c tdep structure. */ |
| |
| static struct reggroup *m32c_dma_reggroup; |
| |
| /* The type of a function that moves the value of REG between CACHE or |
| BUF --- in either direction. */ |
| typedef enum register_status (m32c_write_reg_t) (struct m32c_reg *reg, |
| struct regcache *cache, |
| const gdb_byte *buf); |
| |
| typedef enum register_status (m32c_read_reg_t) (struct m32c_reg *reg, |
| readable_regcache *cache, |
| gdb_byte *buf); |
| |
| struct m32c_reg |
| { |
| /* The name of this register. */ |
| const char *name; |
| |
| /* Its type. */ |
| struct type *type; |
| |
| /* The architecture this register belongs to. */ |
| struct gdbarch *arch; |
| |
| /* Its GDB register number. */ |
| int num; |
| |
| /* Its sim register number. */ |
| int sim_num; |
| |
| /* Its DWARF register number, or -1 if it doesn't have one. */ |
| int dwarf_num; |
| |
| /* Register group memberships. */ |
| unsigned int general_p : 1; |
| unsigned int dma_p : 1; |
| unsigned int system_p : 1; |
| unsigned int save_restore_p : 1; |
| |
| /* Functions to read its value from a regcache, and write its value |
| to a regcache. */ |
| m32c_read_reg_t *read; |
| m32c_write_reg_t *write; |
| |
| /* Data for READ and WRITE functions. The exact meaning depends on |
| the specific functions selected; see the comments for those |
| functions. */ |
| struct m32c_reg *rx, *ry; |
| int n; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* An overestimate of the number of raw and pseudoregisters we will |
| have. The exact answer depends on the variant of the architecture |
| at hand, but we can use this to declare statically allocated |
| arrays, and bump it up when needed. */ |
| #define M32C_MAX_NUM_REGS (75) |
| |
| /* The largest assigned DWARF register number. */ |
| #define M32C_MAX_DWARF_REGNUM (40) |
| |
| |
| struct gdbarch_tdep |
| { |
| /* All the registers for this variant, indexed by GDB register |
| number, and the number of registers present. */ |
| struct m32c_reg regs[M32C_MAX_NUM_REGS]; |
| |
| /* The number of valid registers. */ |
| int num_regs; |
| |
| /* Interesting registers. These are pointers into REGS. */ |
| struct m32c_reg *pc, *flg; |
| struct m32c_reg *r0, *r1, *r2, *r3, *a0, *a1; |
| struct m32c_reg *r2r0, *r3r2r1r0, *r3r1r2r0; |
| struct m32c_reg *sb, *fb, *sp; |
| |
| /* A table indexed by DWARF register numbers, pointing into |
| REGS. */ |
| struct m32c_reg *dwarf_regs[M32C_MAX_DWARF_REGNUM + 1]; |
| |
| /* Types for this architecture. We can't use the builtin_type_foo |
| types, because they're not initialized when building a gdbarch |
| structure. */ |
| struct type *voyd, *ptr_voyd, *func_voyd; |
| struct type *uint8, *uint16; |
| struct type *int8, *int16, *int32, *int64; |
| |
| /* The types for data address and code address registers. */ |
| struct type *data_addr_reg_type, *code_addr_reg_type; |
| |
| /* The number of bytes a return address pushed by a 'jsr' instruction |
| occupies on the stack. */ |
| int ret_addr_bytes; |
| |
| /* The number of bytes an address register occupies on the stack |
| when saved by an 'enter' or 'pushm' instruction. */ |
| int push_addr_bytes; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* Types. */ |
| |
| static void |
| make_types (struct gdbarch *arch) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| unsigned long mach = gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (arch)->mach; |
| int data_addr_reg_bits, code_addr_reg_bits; |
| char type_name[50]; |
| |
| #if 0 |
| /* This is used to clip CORE_ADDR values, so this value is |
| appropriate both on the m32c, where pointers are 32 bits long, |
| and on the m16c, where pointers are sixteen bits long, but there |
| may be code above the 64k boundary. */ |
| set_gdbarch_addr_bit (arch, 24); |
| #else |
| /* GCC uses 32 bits for addrs in the dwarf info, even though |
| only 16/24 bits are used. Setting addr_bit to 24 causes |
| errors in reading the dwarf addresses. */ |
| set_gdbarch_addr_bit (arch, 32); |
| #endif |
| |
| set_gdbarch_int_bit (arch, 16); |
| switch (mach) |
| { |
| case bfd_mach_m16c: |
| data_addr_reg_bits = 16; |
| code_addr_reg_bits = 24; |
| set_gdbarch_ptr_bit (arch, 16); |
| tdep->ret_addr_bytes = 3; |
| tdep->push_addr_bytes = 2; |
| break; |
| |
| case bfd_mach_m32c: |
| data_addr_reg_bits = 24; |
| code_addr_reg_bits = 24; |
| set_gdbarch_ptr_bit (arch, 32); |
| tdep->ret_addr_bytes = 4; |
| tdep->push_addr_bytes = 4; |
| break; |
| |
| default: |
| gdb_assert_not_reached ("unexpected mach"); |
| } |
| |
| /* The builtin_type_mumble variables are sometimes uninitialized when |
| this is called, so we avoid using them. */ |
| tdep->voyd = arch_type (arch, TYPE_CODE_VOID, TARGET_CHAR_BIT, "void"); |
| tdep->ptr_voyd |
| = arch_pointer_type (arch, gdbarch_ptr_bit (arch), NULL, tdep->voyd); |
| tdep->func_voyd = lookup_function_type (tdep->voyd); |
| |
| xsnprintf (type_name, sizeof (type_name), "%s_data_addr_t", |
| gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (arch)->printable_name); |
| tdep->data_addr_reg_type |
| = arch_pointer_type (arch, data_addr_reg_bits, type_name, tdep->voyd); |
| |
| xsnprintf (type_name, sizeof (type_name), "%s_code_addr_t", |
| gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (arch)->printable_name); |
| tdep->code_addr_reg_type |
| = arch_pointer_type (arch, code_addr_reg_bits, type_name, tdep->func_voyd); |
| |
| tdep->uint8 = arch_integer_type (arch, 8, 1, "uint8_t"); |
| tdep->uint16 = arch_integer_type (arch, 16, 1, "uint16_t"); |
| tdep->int8 = arch_integer_type (arch, 8, 0, "int8_t"); |
| tdep->int16 = arch_integer_type (arch, 16, 0, "int16_t"); |
| tdep->int32 = arch_integer_type (arch, 32, 0, "int32_t"); |
| tdep->int64 = arch_integer_type (arch, 64, 0, "int64_t"); |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| /* Register set. */ |
| |
| static const char * |
| m32c_register_name (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int num) |
| { |
| return gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch)->regs[num].name; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static struct type * |
| m32c_register_type (struct gdbarch *arch, int reg_nr) |
| { |
| return gdbarch_tdep (arch)->regs[reg_nr].type; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_register_sim_regno (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int reg_nr) |
| { |
| return gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch)->regs[reg_nr].sim_num; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_debug_info_reg_to_regnum (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int reg_nr) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); |
| if (0 <= reg_nr && reg_nr <= M32C_MAX_DWARF_REGNUM |
| && tdep->dwarf_regs[reg_nr]) |
| return tdep->dwarf_regs[reg_nr]->num; |
| else |
| /* The DWARF CFI code expects to see -1 for invalid register |
| numbers. */ |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_register_reggroup_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int regnum, |
| struct reggroup *group) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); |
| struct m32c_reg *reg = &tdep->regs[regnum]; |
| |
| /* The anonymous raw registers aren't in any groups. */ |
| if (! reg->name) |
| return 0; |
| |
| if (group == all_reggroup) |
| return 1; |
| |
| if (group == general_reggroup |
| && reg->general_p) |
| return 1; |
| |
| if (group == m32c_dma_reggroup |
| && reg->dma_p) |
| return 1; |
| |
| if (group == system_reggroup |
| && reg->system_p) |
| return 1; |
| |
| /* Since the m32c DWARF register numbers refer to cooked registers, not |
| raw registers, and frame_pop depends on the save and restore groups |
| containing registers the DWARF CFI will actually mention, our save |
| and restore groups are cooked registers, not raw registers. (This is |
| why we can't use the default reggroup function.) */ |
| if ((group == save_reggroup |
| || group == restore_reggroup) |
| && reg->save_restore_p) |
| return 1; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Register move functions. We declare them here using |
| m32c_{read,write}_reg_t to check the types. */ |
| static m32c_read_reg_t m32c_raw_read; |
| static m32c_read_reg_t m32c_banked_read; |
| static m32c_read_reg_t m32c_sb_read; |
| static m32c_read_reg_t m32c_part_read; |
| static m32c_read_reg_t m32c_cat_read; |
| static m32c_read_reg_t m32c_r3r2r1r0_read; |
| |
| static m32c_write_reg_t m32c_raw_write; |
| static m32c_write_reg_t m32c_banked_write; |
| static m32c_write_reg_t m32c_sb_write; |
| static m32c_write_reg_t m32c_part_write; |
| static m32c_write_reg_t m32c_cat_write; |
| static m32c_write_reg_t m32c_r3r2r1r0_write; |
| |
| /* Copy the value of the raw register REG from CACHE to BUF. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_raw_read (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache, gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| return cache->raw_read (reg->num, buf); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Copy the value of the raw register REG from BUF to CACHE. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_raw_write (struct m32c_reg *reg, struct regcache *cache, |
| const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| cache->raw_write (reg->num, buf); |
| |
| return REG_VALID; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Return the value of the 'flg' register in CACHE. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_read_flg (readable_regcache *cache) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (cache->arch ()); |
| ULONGEST flg; |
| |
| cache->raw_read (tdep->flg->num, &flg); |
| return flg & 0xffff; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Evaluate the real register number of a banked register. */ |
| static struct m32c_reg * |
| m32c_banked_register (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache) |
| { |
| return ((m32c_read_flg (cache) & reg->n) ? reg->ry : reg->rx); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of a banked register from CACHE to BUF. |
| If the value of the 'flg' register in CACHE has any of the bits |
| masked in REG->n set, then read REG->ry. Otherwise, read |
| REG->rx. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_banked_read (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache, gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| struct m32c_reg *bank_reg = m32c_banked_register (reg, cache); |
| return cache->raw_read (bank_reg->num, buf); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of a banked register from BUF to CACHE. |
| If the value of the 'flg' register in CACHE has any of the bits |
| masked in REG->n set, then write REG->ry. Otherwise, write |
| REG->rx. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_banked_write (struct m32c_reg *reg, struct regcache *cache, |
| const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| struct m32c_reg *bank_reg = m32c_banked_register (reg, cache); |
| cache->raw_write (bank_reg->num, buf); |
| |
| return REG_VALID; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of SB from CACHE to BUF. On bfd_mach_m32c, SB is a |
| banked register; on bfd_mach_m16c, it's not. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_sb_read (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache, gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| if (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (reg->arch)->mach == bfd_mach_m16c) |
| return m32c_raw_read (reg->rx, cache, buf); |
| else |
| return m32c_banked_read (reg, cache, buf); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of SB from BUF to CACHE. On bfd_mach_m32c, SB is a |
| banked register; on bfd_mach_m16c, it's not. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_sb_write (struct m32c_reg *reg, struct regcache *cache, const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| if (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (reg->arch)->mach == bfd_mach_m16c) |
| m32c_raw_write (reg->rx, cache, buf); |
| else |
| m32c_banked_write (reg, cache, buf); |
| |
| return REG_VALID; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Assuming REG uses m32c_part_read and m32c_part_write, set *OFFSET_P |
| and *LEN_P to the offset and length, in bytes, of the part REG |
| occupies in its underlying register. The offset is from the |
| lower-addressed end, regardless of the architecture's endianness. |
| (The M32C family is always little-endian, but let's keep those |
| assumptions out of here.) */ |
| static void |
| m32c_find_part (struct m32c_reg *reg, int *offset_p, int *len_p) |
| { |
| /* The length of the containing register, of which REG is one part. */ |
| int containing_len = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->rx->type); |
| |
| /* The length of one "element" in our imaginary array. */ |
| int elt_len = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->type); |
| |
| /* The offset of REG's "element" from the least significant end of |
| the containing register. */ |
| int elt_offset = reg->n * elt_len; |
| |
| /* If we extend off the end, trim the length of the element. */ |
| if (elt_offset + elt_len > containing_len) |
| { |
| elt_len = containing_len - elt_offset; |
| /* We shouldn't be declaring partial registers that go off the |
| end of their containing registers. */ |
| gdb_assert (elt_len > 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* Flip the offset around if we're big-endian. */ |
| if (gdbarch_byte_order (reg->arch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
| elt_offset = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->rx->type) - elt_offset - elt_len; |
| |
| *offset_p = elt_offset; |
| *len_p = elt_len; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of a partial register (r0h, intbl, etc.) from CACHE |
| to BUF. Treating the value of the register REG->rx as an array of |
| REG->type values, where higher indices refer to more significant |
| bits, read the value of the REG->n'th element. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_part_read (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache, gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| int offset, len; |
| |
| memset (buf, 0, TYPE_LENGTH (reg->type)); |
| m32c_find_part (reg, &offset, &len); |
| return cache->cooked_read_part (reg->rx->num, offset, len, buf); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of a banked register from BUF to CACHE. |
| Treating the value of the register REG->rx as an array of REG->type |
| values, where higher indices refer to more significant bits, write |
| the value of the REG->n'th element. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_part_write (struct m32c_reg *reg, struct regcache *cache, |
| const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| int offset, len; |
| |
| m32c_find_part (reg, &offset, &len); |
| cache->cooked_write_part (reg->rx->num, offset, len, buf); |
| |
| return REG_VALID; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of REG from CACHE to BUF. REG's value is the |
| concatenation of the values of the registers REG->rx and REG->ry, |
| with REG->rx contributing the more significant bits. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_cat_read (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache, gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| int high_bytes = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->rx->type); |
| int low_bytes = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->ry->type); |
| enum register_status status; |
| |
| gdb_assert (TYPE_LENGTH (reg->type) == high_bytes + low_bytes); |
| |
| if (gdbarch_byte_order (reg->arch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
| { |
| status = cache->cooked_read (reg->rx->num, buf); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (reg->ry->num, buf + high_bytes); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| status = cache->cooked_read (reg->rx->num, buf + low_bytes); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (reg->ry->num, buf); |
| } |
| return status; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Move the value of REG from CACHE to BUF. REG's value is the |
| concatenation of the values of the registers REG->rx and REG->ry, |
| with REG->rx contributing the more significant bits. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_cat_write (struct m32c_reg *reg, struct regcache *cache, |
| const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| int high_bytes = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->rx->type); |
| int low_bytes = TYPE_LENGTH (reg->ry->type); |
| |
| gdb_assert (TYPE_LENGTH (reg->type) == high_bytes + low_bytes); |
| |
| if (gdbarch_byte_order (reg->arch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
| { |
| cache->cooked_write (reg->rx->num, buf); |
| cache->cooked_write (reg->ry->num, buf + high_bytes); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| cache->cooked_write (reg->rx->num, buf + low_bytes); |
| cache->cooked_write (reg->ry->num, buf); |
| } |
| |
| return REG_VALID; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Copy the value of the raw register REG from CACHE to BUF. REG is |
| the concatenation (from most significant to least) of r3, r2, r1, |
| and r0. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_r3r2r1r0_read (struct m32c_reg *reg, readable_regcache *cache, gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (reg->arch); |
| int len = TYPE_LENGTH (tdep->r0->type); |
| enum register_status status; |
| |
| if (gdbarch_byte_order (reg->arch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
| { |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r0->num, buf + len * 3); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r1->num, buf + len * 2); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r2->num, buf + len * 1); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r3->num, buf); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r0->num, buf); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r1->num, buf + len * 1); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r2->num, buf + len * 2); |
| if (status == REG_VALID) |
| status = cache->cooked_read (tdep->r3->num, buf + len * 3); |
| } |
| |
| return status; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Copy the value of the raw register REG from BUF to CACHE. REG is |
| the concatenation (from most significant to least) of r3, r2, r1, |
| and r0. */ |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_r3r2r1r0_write (struct m32c_reg *reg, struct regcache *cache, |
| const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (reg->arch); |
| int len = TYPE_LENGTH (tdep->r0->type); |
| |
| if (gdbarch_byte_order (reg->arch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
| { |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r0->num, buf + len * 3); |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r1->num, buf + len * 2); |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r2->num, buf + len * 1); |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r3->num, buf); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r0->num, buf); |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r1->num, buf + len * 1); |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r2->num, buf + len * 2); |
| cache->cooked_write (tdep->r3->num, buf + len * 3); |
| } |
| |
| return REG_VALID; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static enum register_status |
| m32c_pseudo_register_read (struct gdbarch *arch, |
| readable_regcache *cache, |
| int cookednum, |
| gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| struct m32c_reg *reg; |
| |
| gdb_assert (0 <= cookednum && cookednum < tdep->num_regs); |
| gdb_assert (arch == cache->arch ()); |
| gdb_assert (arch == tdep->regs[cookednum].arch); |
| reg = &tdep->regs[cookednum]; |
| |
| return reg->read (reg, cache, buf); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static void |
| m32c_pseudo_register_write (struct gdbarch *arch, |
| struct regcache *cache, |
| int cookednum, |
| const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| struct m32c_reg *reg; |
| |
| gdb_assert (0 <= cookednum && cookednum < tdep->num_regs); |
| gdb_assert (arch == cache->arch ()); |
| gdb_assert (arch == tdep->regs[cookednum].arch); |
| reg = &tdep->regs[cookednum]; |
| |
| reg->write (reg, cache, buf); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Add a register with the given fields to the end of ARCH's table. |
| Return a pointer to the newly added register. */ |
| static struct m32c_reg * |
| add_reg (struct gdbarch *arch, |
| const char *name, |
| struct type *type, |
| int sim_num, |
| m32c_read_reg_t *read, |
| m32c_write_reg_t *write, |
| struct m32c_reg *rx, |
| struct m32c_reg *ry, |
| int n) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| struct m32c_reg *r = &tdep->regs[tdep->num_regs]; |
| |
| gdb_assert (tdep->num_regs < M32C_MAX_NUM_REGS); |
| |
| r->name = name; |
| r->type = type; |
| r->arch = arch; |
| r->num = tdep->num_regs; |
| r->sim_num = sim_num; |
| r->dwarf_num = -1; |
| r->general_p = 0; |
| r->dma_p = 0; |
| r->system_p = 0; |
| r->save_restore_p = 0; |
| r->read = read; |
| r->write = write; |
| r->rx = rx; |
| r->ry = ry; |
| r->n = n; |
| |
| tdep->num_regs++; |
| |
| return r; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Record NUM as REG's DWARF register number. */ |
| static void |
| set_dwarf_regnum (struct m32c_reg *reg, int num) |
| { |
| gdb_assert (num < M32C_MAX_NUM_REGS); |
| |
| /* Update the reg->DWARF mapping. Only count the first number |
| assigned to this register. */ |
| if (reg->dwarf_num == -1) |
| reg->dwarf_num = num; |
| |
| /* Update the DWARF->reg mapping. */ |
| gdbarch_tdep (reg->arch)->dwarf_regs[num] = reg; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Mark REG as a general-purpose register, and return it. */ |
| static struct m32c_reg * |
| mark_general (struct m32c_reg *reg) |
| { |
| reg->general_p = 1; |
| return reg; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Mark REG as a DMA register. */ |
| static void |
| mark_dma (struct m32c_reg *reg) |
| { |
| reg->dma_p = 1; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Mark REG as a SYSTEM register, and return it. */ |
| static struct m32c_reg * |
| mark_system (struct m32c_reg *reg) |
| { |
| reg->system_p = 1; |
| return reg; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Mark REG as a save-restore register, and return it. */ |
| static struct m32c_reg * |
| mark_save_restore (struct m32c_reg *reg) |
| { |
| reg->save_restore_p = 1; |
| return reg; |
| } |
| |
| |
| #define FLAGBIT_B 0x0010 |
| #define FLAGBIT_U 0x0080 |
| |
| /* Handy macros for declaring registers. These all evaluate to |
| pointers to the register declared. Macros that define two |
| registers evaluate to a pointer to the first. */ |
| |
| /* A raw register named NAME, with type TYPE and sim number SIM_NUM. */ |
| #define R(name, type, sim_num) \ |
| (add_reg (arch, (name), (type), (sim_num), \ |
| m32c_raw_read, m32c_raw_write, NULL, NULL, 0)) |
| |
| /* The simulator register number for a raw register named NAME. */ |
| #define SIM(name) (m32c_sim_reg_ ## name) |
| |
| /* A raw unsigned 16-bit data register named NAME. |
| NAME should be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define R16U(name) \ |
| (R(#name, tdep->uint16, SIM (name))) |
| |
| /* A raw data address register named NAME. |
| NAME should be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define RA(name) \ |
| (R(#name, tdep->data_addr_reg_type, SIM (name))) |
| |
| /* A raw code address register named NAME. NAME should |
| be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define RC(name) \ |
| (R(#name, tdep->code_addr_reg_type, SIM (name))) |
| |
| /* A pair of raw registers named NAME0 and NAME1, with type TYPE. |
| NAME should be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define RP(name, type) \ |
| (R(#name "0", (type), SIM (name ## 0)), \ |
| R(#name "1", (type), SIM (name ## 1)) - 1) |
| |
| /* A raw banked general-purpose data register named NAME. |
| NAME should be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define RBD(name) \ |
| (R(NULL, tdep->int16, SIM (name ## _bank0)), \ |
| R(NULL, tdep->int16, SIM (name ## _bank1)) - 1) |
| |
| /* A raw banked data address register named NAME. |
| NAME should be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define RBA(name) \ |
| (R(NULL, tdep->data_addr_reg_type, SIM (name ## _bank0)), \ |
| R(NULL, tdep->data_addr_reg_type, SIM (name ## _bank1)) - 1) |
| |
| /* A cooked register named NAME referring to a raw banked register |
| from the bank selected by the current value of FLG. RAW_PAIR |
| should be a pointer to the first register in the banked pair. |
| NAME must be an identifier, not a string. */ |
| #define CB(name, raw_pair) \ |
| (add_reg (arch, #name, (raw_pair)->type, 0, \ |
| m32c_banked_read, m32c_banked_write, \ |
| (raw_pair), (raw_pair + 1), FLAGBIT_B)) |
| |
| /* A pair of registers named NAMEH and NAMEL, of type TYPE, that |
| access the top and bottom halves of the register pointed to by |
| NAME. NAME should be an identifier. */ |
| #define CHL(name, type) \ |
| (add_reg (arch, #name "h", (type), 0, \ |
| m32c_part_read, m32c_part_write, name, NULL, 1), \ |
| add_reg (arch, #name "l", (type), 0, \ |
| m32c_part_read, m32c_part_write, name, NULL, 0) - 1) |
| |
| /* A register constructed by concatenating the two registers HIGH and |
| LOW, whose name is HIGHLOW and whose type is TYPE. */ |
| #define CCAT(high, low, type) \ |
| (add_reg (arch, #high #low, (type), 0, \ |
| m32c_cat_read, m32c_cat_write, (high), (low), 0)) |
| |
| /* Abbreviations for marking register group membership. */ |
| #define G(reg) (mark_general (reg)) |
| #define S(reg) (mark_system (reg)) |
| #define DMA(reg) (mark_dma (reg)) |
| |
| |
| /* Construct the register set for ARCH. */ |
| static void |
| make_regs (struct gdbarch *arch) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| int mach = gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (arch)->mach; |
| int num_raw_regs; |
| int num_cooked_regs; |
| |
| struct m32c_reg *r0; |
| struct m32c_reg *r1; |
| struct m32c_reg *r2; |
| struct m32c_reg *r3; |
| struct m32c_reg *a0; |
| struct m32c_reg *a1; |
| struct m32c_reg *fb; |
| struct m32c_reg *sb; |
| struct m32c_reg *sp; |
| struct m32c_reg *r0hl; |
| struct m32c_reg *r1hl; |
| struct m32c_reg *r2r0; |
| struct m32c_reg *r3r1; |
| struct m32c_reg *r3r1r2r0; |
| struct m32c_reg *r3r2r1r0; |
| struct m32c_reg *a1a0; |
| |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_r0_pair = RBD (r0); |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_r1_pair = RBD (r1); |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_r2_pair = RBD (r2); |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_r3_pair = RBD (r3); |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_a0_pair = RBA (a0); |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_a1_pair = RBA (a1); |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_fb_pair = RBA (fb); |
| |
| /* sb is banked on the bfd_mach_m32c, but not on bfd_mach_m16c. |
| We always declare both raw registers, and deal with the distinction |
| in the pseudoregister. */ |
| struct m32c_reg *raw_sb_pair = RBA (sb); |
| |
| struct m32c_reg *usp = S (RA (usp)); |
| struct m32c_reg *isp = S (RA (isp)); |
| struct m32c_reg *intb = S (RC (intb)); |
| struct m32c_reg *pc = G (RC (pc)); |
| struct m32c_reg *flg = G (R16U (flg)); |
| |
| if (mach == bfd_mach_m32c) |
| { |
| S (R16U (svf)); |
| S (RC (svp)); |
| S (RC (vct)); |
| |
| DMA (RP (dmd, tdep->uint8)); |
| DMA (RP (dct, tdep->uint16)); |
| DMA (RP (drc, tdep->uint16)); |
| DMA (RP (dma, tdep->data_addr_reg_type)); |
| DMA (RP (dsa, tdep->data_addr_reg_type)); |
| DMA (RP (dra, tdep->data_addr_reg_type)); |
| } |
| |
| num_raw_regs = tdep->num_regs; |
| |
| r0 = G (CB (r0, raw_r0_pair)); |
| r1 = G (CB (r1, raw_r1_pair)); |
| r2 = G (CB (r2, raw_r2_pair)); |
| r3 = G (CB (r3, raw_r3_pair)); |
| a0 = G (CB (a0, raw_a0_pair)); |
| a1 = G (CB (a1, raw_a1_pair)); |
| fb = G (CB (fb, raw_fb_pair)); |
| |
| /* sb is banked on the bfd_mach_m32c, but not on bfd_mach_m16c. |
| Specify custom read/write functions that do the right thing. */ |
| sb = G (add_reg (arch, "sb", raw_sb_pair->type, 0, |
| m32c_sb_read, m32c_sb_write, |
| raw_sb_pair, raw_sb_pair + 1, 0)); |
| |
| /* The current sp is either usp or isp, depending on the value of |
| the FLG register's U bit. */ |
| sp = G (add_reg (arch, "sp", usp->type, 0, |
| m32c_banked_read, m32c_banked_write, |
| isp, usp, FLAGBIT_U)); |
| |
| r0hl = CHL (r0, tdep->int8); |
| r1hl = CHL (r1, tdep->int8); |
| CHL (r2, tdep->int8); |
| CHL (r3, tdep->int8); |
| CHL (intb, tdep->int16); |
| |
| r2r0 = CCAT (r2, r0, tdep->int32); |
| r3r1 = CCAT (r3, r1, tdep->int32); |
| r3r1r2r0 = CCAT (r3r1, r2r0, tdep->int64); |
| |
| r3r2r1r0 |
| = add_reg (arch, "r3r2r1r0", tdep->int64, 0, |
| m32c_r3r2r1r0_read, m32c_r3r2r1r0_write, NULL, NULL, 0); |
| |
| if (mach == bfd_mach_m16c) |
| a1a0 = CCAT (a1, a0, tdep->int32); |
| else |
| a1a0 = NULL; |
| |
| num_cooked_regs = tdep->num_regs - num_raw_regs; |
| |
| tdep->pc = pc; |
| tdep->flg = flg; |
| tdep->r0 = r0; |
| tdep->r1 = r1; |
| tdep->r2 = r2; |
| tdep->r3 = r3; |
| tdep->r2r0 = r2r0; |
| tdep->r3r2r1r0 = r3r2r1r0; |
| tdep->r3r1r2r0 = r3r1r2r0; |
| tdep->a0 = a0; |
| tdep->a1 = a1; |
| tdep->sb = sb; |
| tdep->fb = fb; |
| tdep->sp = sp; |
| |
| /* Set up the DWARF register table. */ |
| memset (tdep->dwarf_regs, 0, sizeof (tdep->dwarf_regs)); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r0hl + 1, 0x01); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r0hl + 0, 0x02); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r1hl + 1, 0x03); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r1hl + 0, 0x04); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r0, 0x05); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r1, 0x06); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r2, 0x07); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r3, 0x08); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (a0, 0x09); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (a1, 0x0a); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (fb, 0x0b); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (sp, 0x0c); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (pc, 0x0d); /* GCC's invention */ |
| set_dwarf_regnum (sb, 0x13); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r2r0, 0x15); |
| set_dwarf_regnum (r3r1, 0x16); |
| if (a1a0) |
| set_dwarf_regnum (a1a0, 0x17); |
| |
| /* Enumerate the save/restore register group. |
| |
| The regcache_save and regcache_restore functions apply their read |
| function to each register in this group. |
| |
| Since frame_pop supplies frame_unwind_register as its read |
| function, the registers meaningful to the Dwarf unwinder need to |
| be in this group. |
| |
| On the other hand, when we make inferior calls, save_inferior_status |
| and restore_inferior_status use them to preserve the current register |
| values across the inferior call. For this, you'd kind of like to |
| preserve all the raw registers, to protect the interrupted code from |
| any sort of bank switching the callee might have done. But we handle |
| those cases so badly anyway --- for example, it matters whether we |
| restore FLG before or after we restore the general-purpose registers, |
| but there's no way to express that --- that it isn't worth worrying |
| about. |
| |
| We omit control registers like inthl: if you call a function that |
| changes those, it's probably because you wanted that change to be |
| visible to the interrupted code. */ |
| mark_save_restore (r0); |
| mark_save_restore (r1); |
| mark_save_restore (r2); |
| mark_save_restore (r3); |
| mark_save_restore (a0); |
| mark_save_restore (a1); |
| mark_save_restore (sb); |
| mark_save_restore (fb); |
| mark_save_restore (sp); |
| mark_save_restore (pc); |
| mark_save_restore (flg); |
| |
| set_gdbarch_num_regs (arch, num_raw_regs); |
| set_gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (arch, num_cooked_regs); |
| set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (arch, pc->num); |
| set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (arch, sp->num); |
| set_gdbarch_register_name (arch, m32c_register_name); |
| set_gdbarch_register_type (arch, m32c_register_type); |
| set_gdbarch_pseudo_register_read (arch, m32c_pseudo_register_read); |
| set_gdbarch_pseudo_register_write (arch, m32c_pseudo_register_write); |
| set_gdbarch_register_sim_regno (arch, m32c_register_sim_regno); |
| set_gdbarch_stab_reg_to_regnum (arch, m32c_debug_info_reg_to_regnum); |
| set_gdbarch_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (arch, m32c_debug_info_reg_to_regnum); |
| set_gdbarch_register_reggroup_p (arch, m32c_register_reggroup_p); |
| |
| reggroup_add (arch, general_reggroup); |
| reggroup_add (arch, all_reggroup); |
| reggroup_add (arch, save_reggroup); |
| reggroup_add (arch, restore_reggroup); |
| reggroup_add (arch, system_reggroup); |
| reggroup_add (arch, m32c_dma_reggroup); |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| /* Breakpoints. */ |
| constexpr gdb_byte m32c_break_insn[] = { 0x00 }; /* brk */ |
| |
| typedef BP_MANIPULATION (m32c_break_insn) m32c_breakpoint; |
| |
| |
| /* Prologue analysis. */ |
| |
| enum m32c_prologue_kind |
| { |
| /* This function uses a frame pointer. */ |
| prologue_with_frame_ptr, |
| |
| /* This function has no frame pointer. */ |
| prologue_sans_frame_ptr, |
| |
| /* This function sets up the stack, so its frame is the first |
| frame on the stack. */ |
| prologue_first_frame |
| }; |
| |
| struct m32c_prologue |
| { |
| /* For consistency with the DWARF 2 .debug_frame info generated by |
| GCC, a frame's CFA is the address immediately after the saved |
| return address. */ |
| |
| /* The architecture for which we generated this prologue info. */ |
| struct gdbarch *arch; |
| |
| enum m32c_prologue_kind kind; |
| |
| /* If KIND is prologue_with_frame_ptr, this is the offset from the |
| CFA to where the frame pointer points. This is always zero or |
| negative. */ |
| LONGEST frame_ptr_offset; |
| |
| /* If KIND is prologue_sans_frame_ptr, the offset from the CFA to |
| the stack pointer --- always zero or negative. |
| |
| Calling this a "size" is a bit misleading, but given that the |
| stack grows downwards, using offsets for everything keeps one |
| from going completely sign-crazy: you never change anything's |
| sign for an ADD instruction; always change the second operand's |
| sign for a SUB instruction; and everything takes care of |
| itself. |
| |
| Functions that use alloca don't have a constant frame size. But |
| they always have frame pointers, so we must use that to find the |
| CFA (and perhaps to unwind the stack pointer). */ |
| LONGEST frame_size; |
| |
| /* The address of the first instruction at which the frame has been |
| set up and the arguments are where the debug info says they are |
| --- as best as we can tell. */ |
| CORE_ADDR prologue_end; |
| |
| /* reg_offset[R] is the offset from the CFA at which register R is |
| saved, or 1 if register R has not been saved. (Real values are |
| always zero or negative.) */ |
| LONGEST reg_offset[M32C_MAX_NUM_REGS]; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* The longest I've seen, anyway. */ |
| #define M32C_MAX_INSN_LEN (9) |
| |
| /* Processor state, for the prologue analyzer. */ |
| struct m32c_pv_state |
| { |
| struct gdbarch *arch; |
| pv_t r0, r1, r2, r3; |
| pv_t a0, a1; |
| pv_t sb, fb, sp; |
| pv_t pc; |
| struct pv_area *stack; |
| |
| /* Bytes from the current PC, the address they were read from, |
| and the address of the next unconsumed byte. */ |
| gdb_byte insn[M32C_MAX_INSN_LEN]; |
| CORE_ADDR scan_pc, next_addr; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* Push VALUE on STATE's stack, occupying SIZE bytes. Return zero if |
| all went well, or non-zero if simulating the action would trash our |
| state. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_pv_push (struct m32c_pv_state *state, pv_t value, int size) |
| { |
| if (state->stack->store_would_trash (state->sp)) |
| return 1; |
| |
| state->sp = pv_add_constant (state->sp, -size); |
| state->stack->store (state->sp, size, value); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| enum srcdest_kind |
| { |
| srcdest_reg, |
| srcdest_partial_reg, |
| srcdest_mem |
| }; |
| |
| /* A source or destination location for an m16c or m32c |
| instruction. */ |
| struct srcdest |
| { |
| /* If srcdest_reg, the location is a register pointed to by REG. |
| If srcdest_partial_reg, the location is part of a register pointed |
| to by REG. We don't try to handle this too well. |
| If srcdest_mem, the location is memory whose address is ADDR. */ |
| enum srcdest_kind kind; |
| pv_t *reg, addr; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* Return the SIZE-byte value at LOC in STATE. */ |
| static pv_t |
| m32c_srcdest_fetch (struct m32c_pv_state *state, struct srcdest loc, int size) |
| { |
| if (loc.kind == srcdest_mem) |
| return state->stack->fetch (loc.addr, size); |
| else if (loc.kind == srcdest_partial_reg) |
| return pv_unknown (); |
| else |
| return *loc.reg; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Write VALUE, a SIZE-byte value, to LOC in STATE. Return zero if |
| all went well, or non-zero if simulating the store would trash our |
| state. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_srcdest_store (struct m32c_pv_state *state, struct srcdest loc, |
| pv_t value, int size) |
| { |
| if (loc.kind == srcdest_mem) |
| { |
| if (state->stack->store_would_trash (loc.addr)) |
| return 1; |
| state->stack->store (loc.addr, size, value); |
| } |
| else if (loc.kind == srcdest_partial_reg) |
| *loc.reg = pv_unknown (); |
| else |
| *loc.reg = value; |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_sign_ext (int v, int bits) |
| { |
| int mask = 1 << (bits - 1); |
| return (v ^ mask) - mask; |
| } |
| |
| static unsigned int |
| m32c_next_byte (struct m32c_pv_state *st) |
| { |
| gdb_assert (st->next_addr - st->scan_pc < sizeof (st->insn)); |
| return st->insn[st->next_addr++ - st->scan_pc]; |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_udisp8 (struct m32c_pv_state *st) |
| { |
| return m32c_next_byte (st); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_sdisp8 (struct m32c_pv_state *st) |
| { |
| return m32c_sign_ext (m32c_next_byte (st), 8); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_udisp16 (struct m32c_pv_state *st) |
| { |
| int low = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| int high = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| |
| return low + (high << 8); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_sdisp16 (struct m32c_pv_state *st) |
| { |
| int low = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| int high = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| |
| return m32c_sign_ext (low + (high << 8), 16); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_udisp24 (struct m32c_pv_state *st) |
| { |
| int low = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| int mid = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| int high = m32c_next_byte (st); |
| |
| return low + (mid << 8) + (high << 16); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Extract the 'source' field from an m32c MOV.size:G-format instruction. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_get_src23 (unsigned char *i) |
| { |
| return (((i[0] & 0x70) >> 2) |
| | ((i[1] & 0x30) >> 4)); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Extract the 'dest' field from an m32c MOV.size:G-format instruction. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_get_dest23 (unsigned char *i) |
| { |
| return (((i[0] & 0x0e) << 1) |
| | ((i[1] & 0xc0) >> 6)); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static struct srcdest |
| m32c_decode_srcdest4 (struct m32c_pv_state *st, |
| int code, int size) |
| { |
| struct srcdest sd; |
| |
| if (code < 6) |
| sd.kind = (size == 2 ? srcdest_reg : srcdest_partial_reg); |
| else |
| sd.kind = srcdest_mem; |
| |
| sd.addr = pv_unknown (); |
| sd.reg = 0; |
| |
| switch (code) |
| { |
| case 0x0: sd.reg = &st->r0; break; |
| case 0x1: sd.reg = (size == 1 ? &st->r0 : &st->r1); break; |
| case 0x2: sd.reg = (size == 1 ? &st->r1 : &st->r2); break; |
| case 0x3: sd.reg = (size == 1 ? &st->r1 : &st->r3); break; |
| |
| case 0x4: sd.reg = &st->a0; break; |
| case 0x5: sd.reg = &st->a1; break; |
| |
| case 0x6: sd.addr = st->a0; break; |
| case 0x7: sd.addr = st->a1; break; |
| |
| case 0x8: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a0, m32c_udisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0x9: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a1, m32c_udisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0xa: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->sb, m32c_udisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0xb: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->fb, m32c_sdisp8 (st)); break; |
| |
| case 0xc: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a0, m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0xd: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a1, m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0xe: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->sb, m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0xf: sd.addr = pv_constant (m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| |
| default: |
| gdb_assert_not_reached ("unexpected srcdest4"); |
| } |
| |
| return sd; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static struct srcdest |
| m32c_decode_sd23 (struct m32c_pv_state *st, int code, int size, int ind) |
| { |
| struct srcdest sd; |
| |
| sd.addr = pv_unknown (); |
| sd.reg = 0; |
| |
| switch (code) |
| { |
| case 0x12: |
| case 0x13: |
| case 0x10: |
| case 0x11: |
| sd.kind = (size == 1) ? srcdest_partial_reg : srcdest_reg; |
| break; |
| |
| case 0x02: |
| case 0x03: |
| sd.kind = (size == 4) ? srcdest_reg : srcdest_partial_reg; |
| break; |
| |
| default: |
| sd.kind = srcdest_mem; |
| break; |
| |
| } |
| |
| switch (code) |
| { |
| case 0x12: sd.reg = &st->r0; break; |
| case 0x13: sd.reg = &st->r1; break; |
| case 0x10: sd.reg = ((size == 1) ? &st->r0 : &st->r2); break; |
| case 0x11: sd.reg = ((size == 1) ? &st->r1 : &st->r3); break; |
| case 0x02: sd.reg = &st->a0; break; |
| case 0x03: sd.reg = &st->a1; break; |
| |
| case 0x00: sd.addr = st->a0; break; |
| case 0x01: sd.addr = st->a1; break; |
| case 0x04: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a0, m32c_udisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0x05: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a1, m32c_udisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0x06: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->sb, m32c_udisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0x07: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->fb, m32c_sdisp8 (st)); break; |
| case 0x08: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a0, m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0x09: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a1, m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0x0a: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->sb, m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0x0b: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->fb, m32c_sdisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0x0c: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a0, m32c_udisp24 (st)); break; |
| case 0x0d: sd.addr = pv_add_constant (st->a1, m32c_udisp24 (st)); break; |
| case 0x0f: sd.addr = pv_constant (m32c_udisp16 (st)); break; |
| case 0x0e: sd.addr = pv_constant (m32c_udisp24 (st)); break; |
| default: |
| gdb_assert_not_reached ("unexpected sd23"); |
| } |
| |
| if (ind) |
| { |
| sd.addr = m32c_srcdest_fetch (st, sd, 4); |
| sd.kind = srcdest_mem; |
| } |
| |
| return sd; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* The r16c and r32c machines have instructions with similar |
| semantics, but completely different machine language encodings. So |
| we break out the semantics into their own functions, and leave |
| machine-specific decoding in m32c_analyze_prologue. |
| |
| The following functions all expect their arguments already decoded, |
| and they all return zero if analysis should continue past this |
| instruction, or non-zero if analysis should stop. */ |
| |
| |
| /* Simulate an 'enter SIZE' instruction in STATE. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_pv_enter (struct m32c_pv_state *state, int size) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (state->arch); |
| |
| /* If simulating this store would require us to forget |
| everything we know about the stack frame in the name of |
| accuracy, it would be better to just quit now. */ |
| if (state->stack->store_would_trash (state->sp)) |
| return 1; |
| |
| if (m32c_pv_push (state, state->fb, tdep->push_addr_bytes)) |
| return 1; |
| state->fb = state->sp; |
| state->sp = pv_add_constant (state->sp, -size); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_pv_pushm_one (struct m32c_pv_state *state, pv_t reg, |
| int bit, int src, int size) |
| { |
| if (bit & src) |
| { |
| if (m32c_pv_push (state, reg, size)) |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Simulate a 'pushm SRC' instruction in STATE. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_pv_pushm (struct m32c_pv_state *state, int src) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (state->arch); |
| |
| /* The bits in SRC indicating which registers to save are: |
| r0 r1 r2 r3 a0 a1 sb fb */ |
| return |
| ( m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->fb, 0x01, src, tdep->push_addr_bytes) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->sb, 0x02, src, tdep->push_addr_bytes) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->a1, 0x04, src, tdep->push_addr_bytes) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->a0, 0x08, src, tdep->push_addr_bytes) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->r3, 0x10, src, 2) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->r2, 0x20, src, 2) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->r1, 0x40, src, 2) |
| || m32c_pv_pushm_one (state, state->r0, 0x80, src, 2)); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return non-zero if VALUE is the first incoming argument register. */ |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_is_1st_arg_reg (struct m32c_pv_state *state, pv_t value) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (state->arch); |
| return (value.kind == pvk_register |
| && (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (state->arch)->mach == bfd_mach_m16c |
| ? (value.reg == tdep->r1->num) |
| : (value.reg == tdep->r0->num)) |
| && value.k == 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return non-zero if VALUE is an incoming argument register. */ |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_is_arg_reg (struct m32c_pv_state *state, pv_t value) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (state->arch); |
| return (value.kind == pvk_register |
| && (gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (state->arch)->mach == bfd_mach_m16c |
| ? (value.reg == tdep->r1->num || value.reg == tdep->r2->num) |
| : (value.reg == tdep->r0->num)) |
| && value.k == 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return non-zero if a store of VALUE to LOC is probably spilling an |
| argument register to its stack slot in STATE. Such instructions |
| should be included in the prologue, if possible. |
| |
| The store is a spill if: |
| - the value being stored is the original value of an argument register; |
| - the value has not already been stored somewhere in STACK; and |
| - LOC is a stack slot (e.g., a memory location whose address is |
| relative to the original value of the SP). */ |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_is_arg_spill (struct m32c_pv_state *st, |
| struct srcdest loc, |
| pv_t value) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (st->arch); |
| |
| return (m32c_is_arg_reg (st, value) |
| && loc.kind == srcdest_mem |
| && pv_is_register (loc.addr, tdep->sp->num) |
| && ! st->stack->find_reg (st->arch, value.reg, 0)); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return non-zero if a store of VALUE to LOC is probably |
| copying the struct return address into an address register |
| for immediate use. This is basically a "spill" into the |
| address register, instead of onto the stack. |
| |
| The prerequisites are: |
| - value being stored is original value of the FIRST arg register; |
| - value has not already been stored on stack; and |
| - LOC is an address register (a0 or a1). */ |
| |
| static int |
| m32c_is_struct_return (struct m32c_pv_state *st, |
| struct srcdest loc, |
| pv_t value) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (st->arch); |
| |
| return (m32c_is_1st_arg_reg (st, value) |
| && !st->stack->find_reg (st->arch, value.reg, 0) |
| && loc.kind == srcdest_reg |
| && (pv_is_register (*loc.reg, tdep->a0->num) |
| || pv_is_register (*loc.reg, tdep->a1->num))); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return non-zero if a 'pushm' saving the registers indicated by SRC |
| was a register save: |
| - all the named registers should have their original values, and |
| - the stack pointer should be at a constant offset from the |
| original stack pointer. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_pushm_is_reg_save (struct m32c_pv_state *st, int src) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (st->arch); |
| /* The bits in SRC indicating which registers to save are: |
| r0 r1 r2 r3 a0 a1 sb fb */ |
| return |
| (pv_is_register (st->sp, tdep->sp->num) |
| && (! (src & 0x01) || pv_is_register_k (st->fb, tdep->fb->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x02) || pv_is_register_k (st->sb, tdep->sb->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x04) || pv_is_register_k (st->a1, tdep->a1->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x08) || pv_is_register_k (st->a0, tdep->a0->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x10) || pv_is_register_k (st->r3, tdep->r3->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x20) || pv_is_register_k (st->r2, tdep->r2->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x40) || pv_is_register_k (st->r1, tdep->r1->num, 0)) |
| && (! (src & 0x80) || pv_is_register_k (st->r0, tdep->r0->num, 0))); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Function for finding saved registers in a 'struct pv_area'; we pass |
| this to pv_area::scan. |
| |
| If VALUE is a saved register, ADDR says it was saved at a constant |
| offset from the frame base, and SIZE indicates that the whole |
| register was saved, record its offset in RESULT_UNTYPED. */ |
| static void |
| check_for_saved (void *prologue_untyped, pv_t addr, CORE_ADDR size, pv_t value) |
| { |
| struct m32c_prologue *prologue = (struct m32c_prologue *) prologue_untyped; |
| struct gdbarch *arch = prologue->arch; |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| |
| /* Is this the unchanged value of some register being saved on the |
| stack? */ |
| if (value.kind == pvk_register |
| && value.k == 0 |
| && pv_is_register (addr, tdep->sp->num)) |
| { |
| /* Some registers require special handling: they're saved as a |
| larger value than the register itself. */ |
| CORE_ADDR saved_size = register_size (arch, value.reg); |
| |
| if (value.reg == tdep->pc->num) |
| saved_size = tdep->ret_addr_bytes; |
| else if (register_type (arch, value.reg) |
| == tdep->data_addr_reg_type) |
| saved_size = tdep->push_addr_bytes; |
| |
| if (size == saved_size) |
| { |
| /* Find which end of the saved value corresponds to our |
| register. */ |
| if (gdbarch_byte_order (arch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG) |
| prologue->reg_offset[value.reg] |
| = (addr.k + saved_size - register_size (arch, value.reg)); |
| else |
| prologue->reg_offset[value.reg] = addr.k; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Analyze the function prologue for ARCH at START, going no further |
| than LIMIT, and place a description of what we found in |
| PROLOGUE. */ |
| static void |
| m32c_analyze_prologue (struct gdbarch *arch, |
| CORE_ADDR start, CORE_ADDR limit, |
| struct m32c_prologue *prologue) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (arch); |
| unsigned long mach = gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (arch)->mach; |
| CORE_ADDR after_last_frame_related_insn; |
| struct m32c_pv_state st; |
| |
| st.arch = arch; |
| st.r0 = pv_register (tdep->r0->num, 0); |
| st.r1 = pv_register (tdep->r1->num, 0); |
| st.r2 = pv_register (tdep->r2->num, 0); |
| st.r3 = pv_register (tdep->r3->num, 0); |
| st.a0 = pv_register (tdep->a0->num, 0); |
| st.a1 = pv_register (tdep->a1->num, 0); |
| st.sb = pv_register (tdep->sb->num, 0); |
| st.fb = pv_register (tdep->fb->num, 0); |
| st.sp = pv_register (tdep->sp->num, 0); |
| st.pc = pv_register (tdep->pc->num, 0); |
| pv_area stack (tdep->sp->num, gdbarch_addr_bit (arch)); |
| st.stack = &stack; |
| |
| /* Record that the call instruction has saved the return address on |
| the stack. */ |
| m32c_pv_push (&st, st.pc, tdep->ret_addr_bytes); |
| |
| memset (prologue, 0, sizeof (*prologue)); |
| prologue->arch = arch; |
| { |
| int i; |
| for (i = 0; i < M32C_MAX_NUM_REGS; i++) |
| prologue->reg_offset[i] = 1; |
| } |
| |
| st.scan_pc = after_last_frame_related_insn = start; |
| |
| while (st.scan_pc < limit) |
| { |
| pv_t pre_insn_fb = st.fb; |
| pv_t pre_insn_sp = st.sp; |
| |
| /* In theory we could get in trouble by trying to read ahead |
| here, when we only know we're expecting one byte. In |
| practice I doubt anyone will care, and it makes the rest of |
| the code easier. */ |
| if (target_read_memory (st.scan_pc, st.insn, sizeof (st.insn))) |
| /* If we can't fetch the instruction from memory, stop here |
| and hope for the best. */ |
| break; |
| st.next_addr = st.scan_pc; |
| |
| /* The assembly instructions are written as they appear in the |
| section of the processor manuals that describe the |
| instruction encodings. |
| |
| When a single assembly language instruction has several |
| different machine-language encodings, the manual |
| distinguishes them by a number in parens, before the |
| mnemonic. Those numbers are included, as well. |
| |
| The srcdest decoding instructions have the same names as the |
| analogous functions in the simulator. */ |
| if (mach == bfd_mach_m16c) |
| { |
| /* (1) ENTER #imm8 */ |
| if (st.insn[0] == 0x7c && st.insn[1] == 0xf2) |
| { |
| if (m32c_pv_enter (&st, st.insn[2])) |
| break; |
| st.next_addr += 3; |
| } |
| /* (1) PUSHM src */ |
| else if (st.insn[0] == 0xec) |
| { |
| int src = st.insn[1]; |
| if (m32c_pv_pushm (&st, src)) |
| break; |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| |
| if (m32c_pushm_is_reg_save (&st, src)) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| } |
| |
| /* (6) MOV.size:G src, dest */ |
| else if ((st.insn[0] & 0xfe) == 0x72) |
| { |
| int size = (st.insn[0] & 0x01) ? 2 : 1; |
| struct srcdest src; |
| struct srcdest dest; |
| pv_t src_value; |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| |
| src |
| = m32c_decode_srcdest4 (&st, (st.insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf, size); |
| dest |
| = m32c_decode_srcdest4 (&st, st.insn[1] & 0xf, size); |
| src_value = m32c_srcdest_fetch (&st, src, size); |
| |
| if (m32c_is_arg_spill (&st, dest, src_value)) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| else if (m32c_is_struct_return (&st, dest, src_value)) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| |
| if (m32c_srcdest_store (&st, dest, src_value, size)) |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| /* (1) LDC #IMM16, sp */ |
| else if (st.insn[0] == 0xeb |
| && st.insn[1] == 0x50) |
| { |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| st.sp = pv_constant (m32c_udisp16 (&st)); |
| } |
| |
| else |
| /* We've hit some instruction we don't know how to simulate. |
| Strictly speaking, we should set every value we're |
| tracking to "unknown". But we'll be optimistic, assume |
| that we have enough information already, and stop |
| analysis here. */ |
| break; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| int src_indirect = 0; |
| int dest_indirect = 0; |
| int i = 0; |
| |
| gdb_assert (mach == bfd_mach_m32c); |
| |
| /* Check for prefix bytes indicating indirect addressing. */ |
| if (st.insn[0] == 0x41) |
| { |
| src_indirect = 1; |
| i++; |
| } |
| else if (st.insn[0] == 0x09) |
| { |
| dest_indirect = 1; |
| i++; |
| } |
| else if (st.insn[0] == 0x49) |
| { |
| src_indirect = dest_indirect = 1; |
| i++; |
| } |
| |
| /* (1) ENTER #imm8 */ |
| if (st.insn[i] == 0xec) |
| { |
| if (m32c_pv_enter (&st, st.insn[i + 1])) |
| break; |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| } |
| |
| /* (1) PUSHM src */ |
| else if (st.insn[i] == 0x8f) |
| { |
| int src = st.insn[i + 1]; |
| if (m32c_pv_pushm (&st, src)) |
| break; |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| |
| if (m32c_pushm_is_reg_save (&st, src)) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| } |
| |
| /* (7) MOV.size:G src, dest */ |
| else if ((st.insn[i] & 0x80) == 0x80 |
| && (st.insn[i + 1] & 0x0f) == 0x0b |
| && m32c_get_src23 (&st.insn[i]) < 20 |
| && m32c_get_dest23 (&st.insn[i]) < 20) |
| { |
| struct srcdest src; |
| struct srcdest dest; |
| pv_t src_value; |
| int bw = st.insn[i] & 0x01; |
| int size = bw ? 2 : 1; |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| |
| src |
| = m32c_decode_sd23 (&st, m32c_get_src23 (&st.insn[i]), |
| size, src_indirect); |
| dest |
| = m32c_decode_sd23 (&st, m32c_get_dest23 (&st.insn[i]), |
| size, dest_indirect); |
| src_value = m32c_srcdest_fetch (&st, src, size); |
| |
| if (m32c_is_arg_spill (&st, dest, src_value)) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| |
| if (m32c_srcdest_store (&st, dest, src_value, size)) |
| break; |
| } |
| /* (2) LDC #IMM24, sp */ |
| else if (st.insn[i] == 0xd5 |
| && st.insn[i + 1] == 0x29) |
| { |
| st.next_addr += 2; |
| st.sp = pv_constant (m32c_udisp24 (&st)); |
| } |
| else |
| /* We've hit some instruction we don't know how to simulate. |
| Strictly speaking, we should set every value we're |
| tracking to "unknown". But we'll be optimistic, assume |
| that we have enough information already, and stop |
| analysis here. */ |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| /* If this instruction changed the FB or decreased the SP (i.e., |
| allocated more stack space), then this may be a good place to |
| declare the prologue finished. However, there are some |
| exceptions: |
| |
| - If the instruction just changed the FB back to its original |
| value, then that's probably a restore instruction. The |
| prologue should definitely end before that. |
| |
| - If the instruction increased the value of the SP (that is, |
| shrunk the frame), then it's probably part of a frame |
| teardown sequence, and the prologue should end before |
| that. */ |
| |
| if (! pv_is_identical (st.fb, pre_insn_fb)) |
| { |
| if (! pv_is_register_k (st.fb, tdep->fb->num, 0)) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| } |
| else if (! pv_is_identical (st.sp, pre_insn_sp)) |
| { |
| /* The comparison of the constants looks odd, there, because |
| .k is unsigned. All it really means is that the SP is |
| lower than it was before the instruction. */ |
| if ( pv_is_register (pre_insn_sp, tdep->sp->num) |
| && pv_is_register (st.sp, tdep->sp->num) |
| && ((pre_insn_sp.k - st.sp.k) < (st.sp.k - pre_insn_sp.k))) |
| after_last_frame_related_insn = st.next_addr; |
| } |
| |
| st.scan_pc = st.next_addr; |
| } |
| |
| /* Did we load a constant value into the stack pointer? */ |
| if (pv_is_constant (st.sp)) |
| prologue->kind = prologue_first_frame; |
| |
| /* Alternatively, did we initialize the frame pointer? Remember |
| that the CFA is the address after the return address. */ |
| if (pv_is_register (st.fb, tdep->sp->num)) |
| { |
| prologue->kind = prologue_with_frame_ptr; |
| prologue->frame_ptr_offset = st.fb.k; |
| } |
| |
| /* Is the frame size a known constant? Remember that frame_size is |
| actually the offset from the CFA to the SP (i.e., a negative |
| value). */ |
| else if (pv_is_register (st.sp, tdep->sp->num)) |
| { |
| prologue->kind = prologue_sans_frame_ptr; |
| prologue->frame_size = st.sp.k; |
| } |
| |
| /* We haven't been able to make sense of this function's frame. Treat |
| it as the first frame. */ |
| else |
| prologue->kind = prologue_first_frame; |
| |
| /* Record where all the registers were saved. */ |
| st.stack->scan (check_for_saved, (void *) prologue); |
| |
| prologue->prologue_end = after_last_frame_related_insn; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static CORE_ADDR |
| m32c_skip_prologue (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR ip) |
| { |
| const char *name; |
| CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end, sal_end; |
| struct m32c_prologue p; |
| |
| /* Try to find the extent of the function that contains IP. */ |
| if (! find_pc_partial_function (ip, &name, &func_addr, &func_end)) |
| return ip; |
| |
| /* Find end by prologue analysis. */ |
| m32c_analyze_prologue (gdbarch, ip, func_end, &p); |
| /* Find end by line info. */ |
| sal_end = skip_prologue_using_sal (gdbarch, ip); |
| /* Return whichever is lower. */ |
| if (sal_end != 0 && sal_end != ip && sal_end < p.prologue_end) |
| return sal_end; |
| else |
| return p.prologue_end; |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| /* Stack unwinding. */ |
| |
| static struct m32c_prologue * |
| m32c_analyze_frame_prologue (struct frame_info *this_frame, |
| void **this_prologue_cache) |
| { |
| if (! *this_prologue_cache) |
| { |
| CORE_ADDR func_start = get_frame_func (this_frame); |
| CORE_ADDR stop_addr = get_frame_pc (this_frame); |
| |
| /* If we couldn't find any function containing the PC, then |
| just initialize the prologue cache, but don't do anything. */ |
| if (! func_start) |
| stop_addr = func_start; |
| |
| *this_prologue_cache = FRAME_OBSTACK_ZALLOC (struct m32c_prologue); |
| m32c_analyze_prologue (get_frame_arch (this_frame), |
| func_start, stop_addr, |
| (struct m32c_prologue *) *this_prologue_cache); |
| } |
| |
| return (struct m32c_prologue *) *this_prologue_cache; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static CORE_ADDR |
| m32c_frame_base (struct frame_info *this_frame, |
| void **this_prologue_cache) |
| { |
| struct m32c_prologue *p |
| = m32c_analyze_frame_prologue (this_frame, this_prologue_cache); |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (get_frame_arch (this_frame)); |
| |
| /* In functions that use alloca, the distance between the stack |
| pointer and the frame base varies dynamically, so we can't use |
| the SP plus static information like prologue analysis to find the |
| frame base. However, such functions must have a frame pointer, |
| to be able to restore the SP on exit. So whenever we do have a |
| frame pointer, use that to find the base. */ |
| switch (p->kind) |
| { |
| case prologue_with_frame_ptr: |
| { |
| CORE_ADDR fb |
| = get_frame_register_unsigned (this_frame, tdep->fb->num); |
| return fb - p->frame_ptr_offset; |
| } |
| |
| case prologue_sans_frame_ptr: |
| { |
| CORE_ADDR sp |
| = get_frame_register_unsigned (this_frame, tdep->sp->num); |
| return sp - p->frame_size; |
| } |
| |
| case prologue_first_frame: |
| return 0; |
| |
| default: |
| gdb_assert_not_reached ("unexpected prologue kind"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| static void |
| m32c_this_id (struct frame_info *this_frame, |
| void **this_prologue_cache, |
| struct frame_id *this_id) |
| { |
| CORE_ADDR base = m32c_frame_base (this_frame, this_prologue_cache); |
| |
| if (base) |
| *this_id = frame_id_build (base, get_frame_func (this_frame)); |
| /* Otherwise, leave it unset, and that will terminate the backtrace. */ |
| } |
| |
| |
| static struct value * |
| m32c_prev_register (struct frame_info *this_frame, |
| void **this_prologue_cache, int regnum) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (get_frame_arch (this_frame)); |
| struct m32c_prologue *p |
| = m32c_analyze_frame_prologue (this_frame, this_prologue_cache); |
| CORE_ADDR frame_base = m32c_frame_base (this_frame, this_prologue_cache); |
| |
| if (regnum == tdep->sp->num) |
| return frame_unwind_got_constant (this_frame, regnum, frame_base); |
| |
| /* If prologue analysis says we saved this register somewhere, |
| return a description of the stack slot holding it. */ |
| if (p->reg_offset[regnum] != 1) |
| return frame_unwind_got_memory (this_frame, regnum, |
| frame_base + p->reg_offset[regnum]); |
| |
| /* Otherwise, presume we haven't changed the value of this |
| register, and get it from the next frame. */ |
| return frame_unwind_got_register (this_frame, regnum, regnum); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static const struct frame_unwind m32c_unwind = { |
| "m32c prologue", |
| NORMAL_FRAME, |
| default_frame_unwind_stop_reason, |
| m32c_this_id, |
| m32c_prev_register, |
| NULL, |
| default_frame_sniffer |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* Inferior calls. */ |
| |
| /* The calling conventions, according to GCC: |
| |
| r8c, m16c |
| --------- |
| First arg may be passed in r1l or r1 if it (1) fits (QImode or |
| HImode), (2) is named, and (3) is an integer or pointer type (no |
| structs, floats, etc). Otherwise, it's passed on the stack. |
| |
| Second arg may be passed in r2, same restrictions (but not QImode), |
| even if the first arg is passed on the stack. |
| |
| Third and further args are passed on the stack. No padding is |
| used, stack "alignment" is 8 bits. |
| |
| m32cm, m32c |
| ----------- |
| |
| First arg may be passed in r0l or r0, same restrictions as above. |
| |
| Second and further args are passed on the stack. Padding is used |
| after QImode parameters (i.e. lower-addressed byte is the value, |
| higher-addressed byte is the padding), stack "alignment" is 16 |
| bits. */ |
| |
| |
| /* Return true if TYPE is a type that can be passed in registers. (We |
| ignore the size, and pay attention only to the type code; |
| acceptable sizes depends on which register is being considered to |
| hold it.) */ |
| static int |
| m32c_reg_arg_type (struct type *type) |
| { |
| enum type_code code = type->code (); |
| |
| return (code == TYPE_CODE_INT |
| || code == TYPE_CODE_ENUM |
| || code == TYPE_CODE_PTR |
| || TYPE_IS_REFERENCE (type) |
| || code == TYPE_CODE_BOOL |
| || code == TYPE_CODE_CHAR); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static CORE_ADDR |
| m32c_push_dummy_call (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct value *function, |
| struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR bp_addr, int nargs, |
| struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp, |
| function_call_return_method return_method, |
| CORE_ADDR struct_addr) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); |
| enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch); |
| unsigned long mach = gdbarch_bfd_arch_info (gdbarch)->mach; |
| CORE_ADDR cfa; |
| int i; |
| |
| /* The number of arguments given in this function's prototype, or |
| zero if it has a non-prototyped function type. The m32c ABI |
| passes arguments mentioned in the prototype differently from |
| those in the ellipsis of a varargs function, or from those passed |
| to a non-prototyped function. */ |
| int num_prototyped_args = 0; |
| |
| { |
| struct type *func_type = value_type (function); |
| |
| /* Dereference function pointer types. */ |
| if (func_type->code () == TYPE_CODE_PTR) |
| func_type = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (func_type); |
| |
| gdb_assert (func_type->code () == TYPE_CODE_FUNC || |
| func_type->code () == TYPE_CODE_METHOD); |
| |
| #if 0 |
| /* The ABI description in gcc/config/m32c/m32c.abi says that |
| we need to handle prototyped and non-prototyped functions |
| separately, but the code in GCC doesn't actually do so. */ |
| if (TYPE_PROTOTYPED (func_type)) |
| #endif |
| num_prototyped_args = func_type->num_fields (); |
| } |
| |
| /* First, if the function returns an aggregate by value, push a |
| pointer to a buffer for it. This doesn't affect the way |
| subsequent arguments are allocated to registers. */ |
| if (return_method == return_method_struct) |
| { |
| int ptr_len = TYPE_LENGTH (tdep->ptr_voyd); |
| sp -= ptr_len; |
| write_memory_unsigned_integer (sp, ptr_len, byte_order, struct_addr); |
| } |
| |
| /* Push the arguments. */ |
| for (i = nargs - 1; i >= 0; i--) |
| { |
| struct value *arg = args[i]; |
| const gdb_byte *arg_bits = value_contents (arg); |
| struct type *arg_type = value_type (arg); |
| ULONGEST arg_size = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type); |
| |
| /* Can it go in r1 or r1l (for m16c) or r0 or r0l (for m32c)? */ |
| if (i == 0 |
| && arg_size <= 2 |
| && i < num_prototyped_args |
| && m32c_reg_arg_type (arg_type)) |
| { |
| /* Extract and re-store as an integer as a terse way to make |
| sure it ends up in the least significant end of r1. (GDB |
| should avoid assuming endianness, even on uni-endian |
| processors.) */ |
| ULONGEST u = extract_unsigned_integer (arg_bits, arg_size, |
| byte_order); |
| struct m32c_reg *reg = (mach == bfd_mach_m16c) ? tdep->r1 : tdep->r0; |
| regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, reg->num, u); |
| } |
| |
| /* Can it go in r2? */ |
| else if (mach == bfd_mach_m16c |
| && i == 1 |
| && arg_size == 2 |
| && i < num_prototyped_args |
| && m32c_reg_arg_type (arg_type)) |
| regcache->cooked_write (tdep->r2->num, arg_bits); |
| |
| /* Everything else goes on the stack. */ |
| else |
| { |
| sp -= arg_size; |
| |
| /* Align the stack. */ |
| if (mach == bfd_mach_m32c) |
| sp &= ~1; |
| |
| write_memory (sp, arg_bits, arg_size); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* This is the CFA we use to identify the dummy frame. */ |
| cfa = sp; |
| |
| /* Push the return address. */ |
| sp -= tdep->ret_addr_bytes; |
| write_memory_unsigned_integer (sp, tdep->ret_addr_bytes, byte_order, |
| bp_addr); |
| |
| /* Update the stack pointer. */ |
| regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, tdep->sp->num, sp); |
| |
| /* We need to borrow an odd trick from the i386 target here. |
| |
| The value we return from this function gets used as the stack |
| address (the CFA) for the dummy frame's ID. The obvious thing is |
| to return the new TOS. However, that points at the return |
| address, saved on the stack, which is inconsistent with the CFA's |
| described by GCC's DWARF 2 .debug_frame information: DWARF 2 |
| .debug_frame info uses the address immediately after the saved |
| return address. So you end up with a dummy frame whose CFA |
| points at the return address, but the frame for the function |
| being called has a CFA pointing after the return address: the |
| younger CFA is *greater than* the older CFA. The sanity checks |
| in frame.c don't like that. |
| |
| So we try to be consistent with the CFA's used by DWARF 2. |
| Having a dummy frame and a real frame with the *same* CFA is |
| tolerable. */ |
| return cfa; |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| /* Return values. */ |
| |
| /* Return value conventions, according to GCC: |
| |
| r8c, m16c |
| --------- |
| |
| QImode in r0l |
| HImode in r0 |
| SImode in r2r0 |
| near pointer in r0 |
| far pointer in r2r0 |
| |
| Aggregate values (regardless of size) are returned by pushing a |
| pointer to a temporary area on the stack after the args are pushed. |
| The function fills in this area with the value. Note that this |
| pointer on the stack does not affect how register arguments, if any, |
| are configured. |
| |
| m32cm, m32c |
| ----------- |
| Same. */ |
| |
| /* Return non-zero if values of type TYPE are returned by storing them |
| in a buffer whose address is passed on the stack, ahead of the |
| other arguments. */ |
| static int |
| m32c_return_by_passed_buf (struct type *type) |
| { |
| enum type_code code = type->code (); |
| |
| return (code == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT |
| || code == TYPE_CODE_UNION); |
| } |
| |
| static enum return_value_convention |
| m32c_return_value (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, |
| struct value *function, |
| struct type *valtype, |
| struct regcache *regcache, |
| gdb_byte *readbuf, |
| const gdb_byte *writebuf) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); |
| enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch); |
| enum return_value_convention conv; |
| ULONGEST valtype_len = TYPE_LENGTH (valtype); |
| |
| if (m32c_return_by_passed_buf (valtype)) |
| conv = RETURN_VALUE_STRUCT_CONVENTION; |
| else |
| conv = RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION; |
| |
| if (readbuf) |
| { |
| /* We should never be called to find values being returned by |
| RETURN_VALUE_STRUCT_CONVENTION. Those can't be located, |
| unless we made the call ourselves. */ |
| gdb_assert (conv == RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION); |
| |
| gdb_assert (valtype_len <= 8); |
| |
| /* Anything that fits in r0 is returned there. */ |
| if (valtype_len <= TYPE_LENGTH (tdep->r0->type)) |
| { |
| ULONGEST u; |
| regcache_cooked_read_unsigned (regcache, tdep->r0->num, &u); |
| store_unsigned_integer (readbuf, valtype_len, byte_order, u); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Everything else is passed in mem0, using as many bytes as |
| needed. This is not what the Renesas tools do, but it's |
| what GCC does at the moment. */ |
| struct bound_minimal_symbol mem0 |
| = lookup_minimal_symbol ("mem0", NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (! mem0.minsym) |
| error (_("The return value is stored in memory at 'mem0', " |
| "but GDB cannot find\n" |
| "its address.")); |
| read_memory (BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (mem0), readbuf, valtype_len); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (writebuf) |
| { |
| /* We should never be called to store values to be returned |
| using RETURN_VALUE_STRUCT_CONVENTION. We have no way of |
| finding the buffer, unless we made the call ourselves. */ |
| gdb_assert (conv == RETURN_VALUE_REGISTER_CONVENTION); |
| |
| gdb_assert (valtype_len <= 8); |
| |
| /* Anything that fits in r0 is returned there. */ |
| if (valtype_len <= TYPE_LENGTH (tdep->r0->type)) |
| { |
| ULONGEST u = extract_unsigned_integer (writebuf, valtype_len, |
| byte_order); |
| regcache_cooked_write_unsigned (regcache, tdep->r0->num, u); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Everything else is passed in mem0, using as many bytes as |
| needed. This is not what the Renesas tools do, but it's |
| what GCC does at the moment. */ |
| struct bound_minimal_symbol mem0 |
| = lookup_minimal_symbol ("mem0", NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (! mem0.minsym) |
| error (_("The return value is stored in memory at 'mem0', " |
| "but GDB cannot find\n" |
| " its address.")); |
| write_memory (BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (mem0), writebuf, valtype_len); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return conv; |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| /* Trampolines. */ |
| |
| /* The m16c and m32c use a trampoline function for indirect function |
| calls. An indirect call looks like this: |
| |
| ... push arguments ... |
| ... push target function address ... |
| jsr.a m32c_jsri16 |
| |
| The code for m32c_jsri16 looks like this: |
| |
| m32c_jsri16: |
| |
| # Save return address. |
| pop.w m32c_jsri_ret |
| pop.b m32c_jsri_ret+2 |
| |
| # Store target function address. |
| pop.w m32c_jsri_addr |
| |
| # Re-push return address. |
| push.b m32c_jsri_ret+2 |
| push.w m32c_jsri_ret |
| |
| # Call the target function. |
| jmpi.a m32c_jsri_addr |
| |
| Without further information, GDB will treat calls to m32c_jsri16 |
| like calls to any other function. Since m32c_jsri16 doesn't have |
| debugging information, that normally means that GDB sets a step- |
| resume breakpoint and lets the program continue --- which is not |
| what the user wanted. (Giving the trampoline debugging info |
| doesn't help: the user expects the program to stop in the function |
| their program is calling, not in some trampoline code they've never |
| seen before.) |
| |
| The gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code method tells GDB how to step |
| through such trampoline functions transparently to the user. When |
| given the address of a trampoline function's first instruction, |
| gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code should return the address of the first |
| instruction of the function really being called. If GDB decides it |
| wants to step into that function, it will set a breakpoint there |
| and silently continue to it. |
| |
| We recognize the trampoline by name, and extract the target address |
| directly from the stack. This isn't great, but recognizing by its |
| code sequence seems more fragile. */ |
| |
| static CORE_ADDR |
| m32c_skip_trampoline_code (struct frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR stop_pc) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_frame_arch (frame); |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); |
| enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch); |
| |
| /* It would be nicer to simply look up the addresses of known |
| trampolines once, and then compare stop_pc with them. However, |
| we'd need to ensure that that cached address got invalidated when |
| someone loaded a new executable, and I'm not quite sure of the |
| best way to do that. find_pc_partial_function does do some |
| caching, so we'll see how this goes. */ |
| const char *name; |
| CORE_ADDR start, end; |
| |
| if (find_pc_partial_function (stop_pc, &name, &start, &end)) |
| { |
| /* Are we stopped at the beginning of the trampoline function? */ |
| if (strcmp (name, "m32c_jsri16") == 0 |
| && stop_pc == start) |
| { |
| /* Get the stack pointer. The return address is at the top, |
| and the target function's address is just below that. We |
| know it's a two-byte address, since the trampoline is |
| m32c_jsri*16*. */ |
| CORE_ADDR sp = get_frame_sp (get_current_frame ()); |
| CORE_ADDR target |
| = read_memory_unsigned_integer (sp + tdep->ret_addr_bytes, |
| 2, byte_order); |
| |
| /* What we have now is the address of a jump instruction. |
| What we need is the destination of that jump. |
| The opcode is 1 byte, and the destination is the next 3 bytes. */ |
| |
| target = read_memory_unsigned_integer (target + 1, 3, byte_order); |
| return target; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Address/pointer conversions. */ |
| |
| /* On the m16c, there is a 24-bit address space, but only a very few |
| instructions can generate addresses larger than 0xffff: jumps, |
| jumps to subroutines, and the lde/std (load/store extended) |
| instructions. |
| |
| Since GCC can only support one size of pointer, we can't have |
| distinct 'near' and 'far' pointer types; we have to pick one size |
| for everything. If we wanted to use 24-bit pointers, then GCC |
| would have to use lde and ste for all memory references, which |
| would be terrible for performance and code size. So the GNU |
| toolchain uses 16-bit pointers for everything, and gives up the |
| ability to have pointers point outside the first 64k of memory. |
| |
| However, as a special hack, we let the linker place functions at |
| addresses above 0xffff, as long as it also places a trampoline in |
| the low 64k for every function whose address is taken. Each |
| trampoline consists of a single jmp.a instruction that jumps to the |
| function's real entry point. Pointers to functions can be 16 bits |
| long, even though the functions themselves are at higher addresses: |
| the pointers refer to the trampolines, not the functions. |
| |
| This complicates things for GDB, however: given the address of a |
| function (from debug info or linker symbols, say) which could be |
| anywhere in the 24-bit address space, how can we find an |
| appropriate 16-bit value to use as a pointer to it? |
| |
| If the linker has not generated a trampoline for the function, |
| we're out of luck. Well, I guess we could malloc some space and |
| write a jmp.a instruction to it, but I'm not going to get into that |
| at the moment. |
| |
| If the linker has generated a trampoline for the function, then it |
| also emitted a symbol for the trampoline: if the function's linker |
| symbol is named NAME, then the function's trampoline's linker |
| symbol is named NAME.plt. |
| |
| So, given a code address: |
| - We try to find a linker symbol at that address. |
| - If we find such a symbol named NAME, we look for a linker symbol |
| named NAME.plt. |
| - If we find such a symbol, we assume it is a trampoline, and use |
| its address as the pointer value. |
| |
| And, given a function pointer: |
| - We try to find a linker symbol at that address named NAME.plt. |
| - If we find such a symbol, we look for a linker symbol named NAME. |
| - If we find that, we provide that as the function's address. |
| - If any of the above steps fail, we return the original address |
| unchanged; it might really be a function in the low 64k. |
| |
| See? You *knew* there was a reason you wanted to be a computer |
| programmer! :) */ |
| |
| static void |
| m32c_m16c_address_to_pointer (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, |
| struct type *type, gdb_byte *buf, CORE_ADDR addr) |
| { |
| enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch); |
| enum type_code target_code; |
| gdb_assert (type->code () == TYPE_CODE_PTR || TYPE_IS_REFERENCE (type)); |
| |
| target_code = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)->code (); |
| |
| if (target_code == TYPE_CODE_FUNC || target_code == TYPE_CODE_METHOD) |
| { |
| const char *func_name; |
| char *tramp_name; |
| struct bound_minimal_symbol tramp_msym; |
| |
| /* Try to find a linker symbol at this address. */ |
| struct bound_minimal_symbol func_msym |
| = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (addr); |
| |
| if (! func_msym.minsym) |
| error (_("Cannot convert code address %s to function pointer:\n" |
| "couldn't find a symbol at that address, to find trampoline."), |
| paddress (gdbarch, addr)); |
| |
| func_name = func_msym.minsym->linkage_name (); |
| tramp_name = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (func_name) + 5); |
| strcpy (tramp_name, func_name); |
| strcat (tramp_name, ".plt"); |
| |
| /* Try to find a linker symbol for the trampoline. */ |
| tramp_msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (tramp_name, NULL, NULL); |
| |
| /* We've either got another copy of the name now, or don't need |
| the name any more. */ |
| xfree (tramp_name); |
| |
| if (! tramp_msym.minsym) |
| { |
| CORE_ADDR ptrval; |
| |
| /* No PLT entry found. Mask off the upper bits of the address |
| to make a pointer. As noted in the warning to the user |
| below, this value might be useful if converted back into |
| an address by GDB, but will otherwise, almost certainly, |
| be garbage. |
| |
| Using this masked result does seem to be useful |
| in gdb.cp/cplusfuncs.exp in which ~40 FAILs turn into |
| PASSes. These results appear to be correct as well. |
| |
| We print a warning here so that the user can make a |
| determination about whether the result is useful or not. */ |
| ptrval = addr & 0xffff; |
| |
| warning (_("Cannot convert code address %s to function pointer:\n" |
| "couldn't find trampoline named '%s.plt'.\n" |
| "Returning pointer value %s instead; this may produce\n" |
| "a useful result if converted back into an address by GDB,\n" |
| "but will most likely not be useful otherwise."), |
| paddress (gdbarch, addr), func_name, |
| paddress (gdbarch, ptrval)); |
| |
| addr = ptrval; |
| |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* The trampoline's address is our pointer. */ |
| addr = BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (tramp_msym); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| store_unsigned_integer (buf, TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order, addr); |
| } |
| |
| |
| static CORE_ADDR |
| m32c_m16c_pointer_to_address (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, |
| struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf) |
| { |
| enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch); |
| CORE_ADDR ptr; |
| enum type_code target_code; |
| |
| gdb_assert (type->code () == TYPE_CODE_PTR || TYPE_IS_REFERENCE (type)); |
| |
| ptr = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, TYPE_LENGTH (type), byte_order); |
| |
| target_code = TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type)->code (); |
| |
| if (target_code == TYPE_CODE_FUNC || target_code == TYPE_CODE_METHOD) |
| { |
| /* See if there is a minimal symbol at that address whose name is |
| "NAME.plt". */ |
| struct bound_minimal_symbol ptr_msym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (ptr); |
| |
| if (ptr_msym.minsym) |
| { |
| const char *ptr_msym_name = ptr_msym.minsym->linkage_name (); |
| int len = strlen (ptr_msym_name); |
| |
| if (len > 4 |
| && strcmp (ptr_msym_name + len - 4, ".plt") == 0) |
| { |
| struct bound_minimal_symbol func_msym; |
| /* We have a .plt symbol; try to find the symbol for the |
| corresponding function. |
| |
| Since the trampoline contains a jump instruction, we |
| could also just extract the jump's target address. I |
| don't see much advantage one way or the other. */ |
| char *func_name = (char *) xmalloc (len - 4 + 1); |
| memcpy (func_name, ptr_msym_name, len - 4); |
| func_name[len - 4] = '\0'; |
| func_msym |
| = lookup_minimal_symbol (func_name, NULL, NULL); |
| |
| /* If we do have such a symbol, return its value as the |
| function's true address. */ |
| if (func_msym.minsym) |
| ptr = BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (func_msym); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| int aspace; |
| |
| for (aspace = 1; aspace <= 15; aspace++) |
| { |
| ptr_msym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc ((aspace << 16) | ptr); |
| |
| if (ptr_msym.minsym) |
| ptr |= aspace << 16; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return ptr; |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| m32c_virtual_frame_pointer (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc, |
| int *frame_regnum, |
| LONGEST *frame_offset) |
| { |
| const char *name; |
| CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end; |
| struct m32c_prologue p; |
| |
| struct regcache *regcache = get_current_regcache (); |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); |
| |
| if (!find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, &func_addr, &func_end)) |
| internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, |
| _("No virtual frame pointer available")); |
| |
| m32c_analyze_prologue (gdbarch, func_addr, pc, &p); |
| switch (p.kind) |
| { |
| case prologue_with_frame_ptr: |
| *frame_regnum = m32c_banked_register (tdep->fb, regcache)->num; |
| *frame_offset = p.frame_ptr_offset; |
| break; |
| case prologue_sans_frame_ptr: |
| *frame_regnum = m32c_banked_register (tdep->sp, regcache)->num; |
| *frame_offset = p.frame_size; |
| break; |
| default: |
| *frame_regnum = m32c_banked_register (tdep->sp, regcache)->num; |
| *frame_offset = 0; |
| break; |
| } |
| /* Sanity check */ |
| if (*frame_regnum > gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch)) |
| internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, |
| _("No virtual frame pointer available")); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Initialization. */ |
| |
| static struct gdbarch * |
| m32c_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches) |
| { |
| struct gdbarch *gdbarch; |
| struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep; |
| unsigned long mach = info.bfd_arch_info->mach; |
| |
| /* Find a candidate among the list of architectures we've created |
| already. */ |
| for (arches = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches, &info); |
| arches != NULL; |
| arches = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches->next, &info)) |
| return arches->gdbarch; |
| |
| tdep = XCNEW (struct gdbarch_tdep); |
| gdbarch = gdbarch_alloc (&info, tdep); |
| |
| /* Essential types. */ |
| make_types (gdbarch); |
| |
| /* Address/pointer conversions. */ |
| if (mach == bfd_mach_m16c) |
| { |
| set_gdbarch_address_to_pointer (gdbarch, m32c_m16c_address_to_pointer); |
| set_gdbarch_pointer_to_address (gdbarch, m32c_m16c_pointer_to_address); |
| } |
| |
| /* Register set. */ |
| make_regs (gdbarch); |
| |
| /* Breakpoints. */ |
| set_gdbarch_breakpoint_kind_from_pc (gdbarch, m32c_breakpoint::kind_from_pc); |
| set_gdbarch_sw_breakpoint_from_kind (gdbarch, m32c_breakpoint::bp_from_kind); |
| |
| /* Prologue analysis and unwinding. */ |
| set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, core_addr_lessthan); |
| set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, m32c_skip_prologue); |
| #if 0 |
| /* I'm dropping the dwarf2 sniffer because it has a few problems. |
| They may be in the dwarf2 cfi code in GDB, or they may be in |
| the debug info emitted by the upstream toolchain. I don't |
| know which, but I do know that the prologue analyzer works better. |
| MVS 04/13/06 */ |
| dwarf2_append_sniffers (gdbarch); |
| #endif |
| frame_unwind_append_unwinder (gdbarch, &m32c_unwind); |
| |
| /* Inferior calls. */ |
| set_gdbarch_push_dummy_call (gdbarch, m32c_push_dummy_call); |
| set_gdbarch_return_value (gdbarch, m32c_return_value); |
| |
| /* Trampolines. */ |
| set_gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code (gdbarch, m32c_skip_trampoline_code); |
| |
| set_gdbarch_virtual_frame_pointer (gdbarch, m32c_virtual_frame_pointer); |
| |
| /* m32c function boundary addresses are not necessarily even. |
| Therefore, the `vbit', which indicates a pointer to a virtual |
| member function, is stored in the delta field, rather than as |
| the low bit of a function pointer address. |
| |
| In order to verify this, see the definition of |
| TARGET_PTRMEMFUNC_VBIT_LOCATION in gcc/defaults.h along with the |
| definition of FUNCTION_BOUNDARY in gcc/config/m32c/m32c.h. */ |
| set_gdbarch_vbit_in_delta (gdbarch, 1); |
| |
| return gdbarch; |
| } |
| |
| void _initialize_m32c_tdep (); |
| void |
| _initialize_m32c_tdep () |
| { |
| register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_m32c, m32c_gdbarch_init); |
| |
| m32c_dma_reggroup = reggroup_new ("dma", USER_REGGROUP); |
| } |