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author | Jim Blandy <jimb@codesourcery.com> | 2001-10-10 21:22:44 +0000 |
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committer | Jim Blandy <jimb@codesourcery.com> | 2001-10-10 21:22:44 +0000 |
commit | 4eab1e18e948b6f7c97702389d55c6d069a6a8db (patch) | |
tree | b476b733fdbebac1ce80fb1ddcd8abe2cdde5919 /gdb | |
parent | 290394d6070206df9ecda222a16355d859c7e840 (diff) | |
download | gdb-4eab1e18e948b6f7c97702389d55c6d069a6a8db.zip gdb-4eab1e18e948b6f7c97702389d55c6d069a6a8db.tar.gz gdb-4eab1e18e948b6f7c97702389d55c6d069a6a8db.tar.bz2 |
* mn10300-tdep.c (mn10300_analyze_prologue): Doc fixes.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/ChangeLog | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/mn10300-tdep.c | 66 |
2 files changed, 59 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/ChangeLog b/gdb/ChangeLog index 393c6c1..7e52cf5 100644 --- a/gdb/ChangeLog +++ b/gdb/ChangeLog @@ -1,3 +1,7 @@ +2001-10-10 Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com> + + * mn10300-tdep.c (mn10300_analyze_prologue): Doc fixes. + 2001-10-10 Keith Seitz <keiths@redhat.com> * varobj.c (cplus_value_of_child): Deal with a failure diff --git a/gdb/mn10300-tdep.c b/gdb/mn10300-tdep.c index 472e260..1e684f8 100644 --- a/gdb/mn10300-tdep.c +++ b/gdb/mn10300-tdep.c @@ -291,16 +291,59 @@ set_movm_offsets (struct frame_info *fi, int movm_args) /* The main purpose of this file is dealing with prologues to extract information about stack frames and saved registers. - For reference here's how prologues look on the mn10300: + In gcc/config/mn13000/mn10300.c, the expand_prologue prologue + function is pretty readable, and has a nice explanation of how the + prologue is generated. The prologues generated by that code will + have the following form: - With frame pointer: - movm [d2,d3,a2,a3],sp - mov sp,a3 - add <size>,sp + + If this is an old-style varargs function, then its arguments + need to be flushed back to the stack: + + mov d0,(4,sp) + mov d1,(4,sp) - Without frame pointer: - movm [d2,d3,a2,a3],sp (if needed) - add <size>,sp + + If we use any of the callee-saved registers, save them now. + + movm [some callee-saved registers],(sp) + + + If we have any floating-point registers to save: + + - Decrement the stack pointer to reserve space for the registers. + If the function doesn't need a frame pointer, we may combine + this with the adjustment that reserves space for the frame. + + add -SIZE, sp + + - Save the floating-point registers. We have two possible + strategies: + + . Save them at fixed offset from the SP: + + fmov fsN,(OFFSETN,sp) + fmov fsM,(OFFSETM,sp) + ... + + . Or, set a0 to the start of the save area, and then use + post-increment addressing to save the FP registers. + + mov sp, a0 + add SIZE, a0 + fmov fsN,(a0+) + fmov fsM,(a0+) + ... + + + If the function needs a frame pointer, we set it here. + + mov sp, a3 + + + Now we reserve space for the stack frame proper. This could be + merged into the `add -SIZE, sp' instruction for FP saves up + above, unless we needed to set the frame pointer in the previous + step, or the frame is so large that allocating the whole thing at + once would put the FP register save slots out of reach of the + addressing mode (128 bytes). + + add -SIZE, sp One day we might keep the stack pointer constant, that won't change the code for prologues, but it will make the frame @@ -330,7 +373,7 @@ set_movm_offsets (struct frame_info *fi, int movm_args) save instructions. MY_FRAME_IN_FP: The base of the current frame is in the - frame pointer register ($a2). + frame pointer register ($a3). NO_MORE_FRAMES: Set this if the current frame is "start" or if the first instruction looks like mov <imm>,sp. This tells @@ -416,8 +459,9 @@ mn10300_analyze_prologue (struct frame_info *fi, CORE_ADDR pc) return addr; } - /* First see if this insn sets the stack pointer; if so, it's something - we won't understand, so quit now. */ + /* First see if this insn sets the stack pointer from a register; if + so, it's probably the initialization of the stack pointer in _start, + so mark this as the bottom-most frame. */ if (buf[0] == 0xf2 && (buf[1] & 0xf3) == 0xf0) { if (fi) |