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authorMichael Tiemann <tiemann@cygnus>1992-03-03 23:26:26 +0000
committerMichael Tiemann <tiemann@cygnus>1992-03-03 23:26:26 +0000
commitd747e0af3d41f19815ab972f6fc9527fbf52804a (patch)
tree127a95ef768c02faf0fc52a8faf780d007d4a8ee /gdb/i386-tdep.c
parentaf7fc066436916bb4861dda3a5b736beae4f55cc (diff)
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Tue Mar 3 15:11:52 1992 Michael Tiemann (tiemann@cygnus.com)
* All GDB files that #include defs.h: Removed stdio.h. (defs.h): #include stdio.h. This has been tested by building GDBs for all targets hosted on Sun4. None of the build problems were related to stdio.h inclusion. (n.b. many configurations don't build for other reasons.)
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/i386-tdep.c')
-rw-r--r--gdb/i386-tdep.c199
1 files changed, 189 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/i386-tdep.c b/gdb/i386-tdep.c
index 8b8fb84..ab56e62 100644
--- a/gdb/i386-tdep.c
+++ b/gdb/i386-tdep.c
@@ -17,18 +17,53 @@ You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
-#include <stdio.h>
#include "defs.h"
#include "frame.h"
#include "inferior.h"
#include "gdbcore.h"
+#ifdef USE_PROC_FS /* Target dependent support for /proc */
+#include <sys/procfs.h>
+#endif
+
+static long
+i386_get_frame_setup PARAMS ((int));
+
+static void
+i386_follow_jump PARAMS ((void));
+
+static void
+codestream_read PARAMS ((unsigned char *, int));
+
+static void
+codestream_seek PARAMS ((int));
+
+static unsigned char
+codestream_fill PARAMS ((int));
+
/* helper functions for tm-i386.h */
-/* stdio style buffering to minimize calls to ptrace */
+/* Stdio style buffering was used to minimize calls to ptrace, but this
+ buffering did not take into account that the code section being accessed
+ may not be an even number of buffers long (even if the buffer is only
+ sizeof(int) long). In cases where the code section size happened to
+ be a non-integral number of buffers long, attempting to read the last
+ buffer would fail. Simply using target_read_memory and ignoring errors,
+ rather than read_memory, is not the correct solution, since legitimate
+ access errors would then be totally ignored. To properly handle this
+ situation and continue to use buffering would require that this code
+ be able to determine the minimum code section size granularity (not the
+ alignment of the section itself, since the actual failing case that
+ pointed out this problem had a section alignment of 4 but was not a
+ multiple of 4 bytes long), on a target by target basis, and then
+ adjust it's buffer size accordingly. This is messy, but potentially
+ feasible. It probably needs the bfd library's help and support. For
+ now, the buffer size is set to 1. (FIXME -fnf) */
+
+#define CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ 1 /* Was sizeof(int), see note above. */
static CORE_ADDR codestream_next_addr;
static CORE_ADDR codestream_addr;
-static unsigned char codestream_buf[sizeof (int)];
+static unsigned char codestream_buf[CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ];
static int codestream_off;
static int codestream_cnt;
@@ -40,14 +75,15 @@ static int codestream_cnt;
static unsigned char
codestream_fill (peek_flag)
+ int peek_flag;
{
codestream_addr = codestream_next_addr;
- codestream_next_addr += sizeof (int);
+ codestream_next_addr += CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ;
codestream_off = 0;
- codestream_cnt = sizeof (int);
+ codestream_cnt = CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ;
read_memory (codestream_addr,
(unsigned char *)codestream_buf,
- sizeof (int));
+ CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ);
if (peek_flag)
return (codestream_peek());
@@ -57,8 +93,10 @@ codestream_fill (peek_flag)
static void
codestream_seek (place)
+ int place;
{
- codestream_next_addr = place & -sizeof (int);
+ codestream_next_addr = place / CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ;
+ codestream_next_addr *= CODESTREAM_BUFSIZ;
codestream_cnt = 0;
codestream_fill (1);
while (codestream_tell() != place)
@@ -68,6 +106,7 @@ codestream_seek (place)
static void
codestream_read (buf, count)
unsigned char *buf;
+ int count;
{
unsigned char *p;
int i;
@@ -77,7 +116,8 @@ codestream_read (buf, count)
}
/* next instruction is a jump, move to target */
-static
+
+static void
i386_follow_jump ()
{
int long_delta;
@@ -128,8 +168,10 @@ i386_follow_jump ()
* if entry sequence doesn't make sense, return -1, and leave
* codestream pointer random
*/
+
static long
i386_get_frame_setup (pc)
+ int pc;
{
unsigned char op;
@@ -254,7 +296,7 @@ i386_get_frame_setup (pc)
int
i386_frame_num_args (fi)
- struct frame_info fi;
+ struct frame_info *fi;
{
int retpc;
unsigned char op;
@@ -269,7 +311,7 @@ i386_frame_num_args (fi)
nameless arguments. */
return -1;
- pfi = get_prev_frame_info ((fi));
+ pfi = get_prev_frame_info (fi);
if (pfi == 0)
{
/* Note: this can happen if we are looking at the frame for
@@ -340,6 +382,7 @@ i386_frame_num_args (fi)
* next instruction will be a branch back to the start.
*/
+void
i386_frame_find_saved_regs (fip, fsrp)
struct frame_info *fip;
struct frame_saved_regs *fsrp;
@@ -391,7 +434,10 @@ i386_frame_find_saved_regs (fip, fsrp)
}
/* return pc of first real instruction */
+
+int
i386_skip_prologue (pc)
+ int pc;
{
unsigned char op;
int i;
@@ -418,6 +464,7 @@ i386_skip_prologue (pc)
return (codestream_tell ());
}
+void
i386_push_dummy_frame ()
{
CORE_ADDR sp = read_register (SP_REGNUM);
@@ -435,6 +482,7 @@ i386_push_dummy_frame ()
write_register (SP_REGNUM, sp);
}
+void
i386_pop_frame ()
{
FRAME frame = get_current_frame ();
@@ -465,3 +513,134 @@ i386_pop_frame ()
set_current_frame ( create_new_frame (read_register (FP_REGNUM),
read_pc ()));
}
+
+#ifdef USE_PROC_FS /* Target dependent support for /proc */
+
+/* The /proc interface divides the target machine's register set up into
+ two different sets, the general register set (gregset) and the floating
+ point register set (fpregset). For each set, there is an ioctl to get
+ the current register set and another ioctl to set the current values.
+
+ The actual structure passed through the ioctl interface is, of course,
+ naturally machine dependent, and is different for each set of registers.
+ For the i386 for example, the general register set is typically defined
+ by:
+
+ typedef int gregset_t[19]; (in <sys/regset.h>)
+
+ #define GS 0 (in <sys/reg.h>)
+ #define FS 1
+ ...
+ #define UESP 17
+ #define SS 18
+
+ and the floating point set by:
+
+ typedef struct fpregset
+ {
+ union
+ {
+ struct fpchip_state // fp extension state //
+ {
+ int state[27]; // 287/387 saved state //
+ int status; // status word saved at exception //
+ } fpchip_state;
+ struct fp_emul_space // for emulators //
+ {
+ char fp_emul[246];
+ char fp_epad[2];
+ } fp_emul_space;
+ int f_fpregs[62]; // union of the above //
+ } fp_reg_set;
+ long f_wregs[33]; // saved weitek state //
+ } fpregset_t;
+
+ These routines provide the packing and unpacking of gregset_t and
+ fpregset_t formatted data.
+
+ */
+
+/* This is a duplicate of the table in i386-xdep.c. */
+
+static int regmap[] =
+{
+ EAX, ECX, EDX, EBX,
+ UESP, EBP, ESI, EDI,
+ EIP, EFL, CS, SS,
+ DS, ES, FS, GS,
+};
+
+
+/* Given a pointer to a general register set in /proc format (gregset_t *),
+ unpack the register contents and supply them as gdb's idea of the current
+ register values. */
+
+void
+supply_gregset (gregsetp)
+ gregset_t *gregsetp;
+{
+ register int regno;
+ register greg_t *regp = (greg_t *) gregsetp;
+ extern int regmap[];
+
+ for (regno = 0 ; regno < NUM_REGS ; regno++)
+ {
+ supply_register (regno, (char *) (regp + regmap[regno]));
+ }
+}
+
+void
+fill_gregset (gregsetp, regno)
+ gregset_t *gregsetp;
+ int regno;
+{
+ int regi;
+ register greg_t *regp = (greg_t *) gregsetp;
+ extern char registers[];
+ extern int regmap[];
+
+ for (regi = 0 ; regi < NUM_REGS ; regi++)
+ {
+ if ((regno == -1) || (regno == regi))
+ {
+ *(regp + regmap[regno]) = *(int *) &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (regi)];
+ }
+ }
+}
+
+#if defined (FP0_REGNUM)
+
+/* Given a pointer to a floating point register set in /proc format
+ (fpregset_t *), unpack the register contents and supply them as gdb's
+ idea of the current floating point register values. */
+
+void
+supply_fpregset (fpregsetp)
+ fpregset_t *fpregsetp;
+{
+ register int regno;
+
+ /* FIXME: see m68k-tdep.c for an example, for the m68k. */
+}
+
+/* Given a pointer to a floating point register set in /proc format
+ (fpregset_t *), update the register specified by REGNO from gdb's idea
+ of the current floating point register set. If REGNO is -1, update
+ them all. */
+
+void
+fill_fpregset (fpregsetp, regno)
+ fpregset_t *fpregsetp;
+ int regno;
+{
+ int regi;
+ char *to;
+ char *from;
+ extern char registers[];
+
+ /* FIXME: see m68k-tdep.c for an example, for the m68k. */
+}
+
+#endif /* defined (FP0_REGNUM) */
+
+#endif /* USE_PROC_FS */