/* IBM RS/6000 host-dependent code for GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1989, 1991 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 2 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, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ #include "defs.h" #include "frame.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "symtab.h" #include "target.h" #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include extern int errno; extern int attach_flag; /* Conversion from gdb-to-system special purpose register numbers.. */ static int special_regs[] = { IAR, /* PC_REGNUM */ MSR, /* PS_REGNUM */ CR, /* CR_REGNUM */ LR, /* LR_REGNUM */ CTR, /* CTR_REGNUM */ XER, /* XER_REGNUM */ MQ /* MQ_REGNUM */ }; /* Nonzero if we just simulated a single step break. */ extern int one_stepped; extern char register_valid[]; extern struct obstack frame_cache_obstack; void fetch_inferior_registers (regno) int regno; { int ii; extern char registers[]; if (regno < 0) { /* for all registers */ /* read 32 general purpose registers. */ for (ii=0; ii < 32; ++ii) *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (ii)] = ptrace (PT_READ_GPR, inferior_pid, ii, 0, 0); /* read general purpose floating point registers. */ for (ii=0; ii < 32; ++ii) ptrace (PT_READ_FPR, inferior_pid, (int*)®isters [REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM+ii)], FPR0+ii, 0); /* read special registers. */ for (ii=0; ii <= LAST_SP_REGNUM-FIRST_SP_REGNUM; ++ii) *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (FIRST_SP_REGNUM+ii)] = ptrace (PT_READ_GPR, inferior_pid, special_regs[ii], 0, 0); registers_fetched (); return; } /* else an individual register is addressed. */ else if (regno < FP0_REGNUM) { /* a GPR */ *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)] = ptrace (PT_READ_GPR, inferior_pid, regno, 0, 0); } else if (regno <= FPLAST_REGNUM) { /* a FPR */ ptrace (PT_READ_FPR, inferior_pid, (int*)®isters [REGISTER_BYTE (regno)], (regno-FP0_REGNUM+FPR0), 0); } else if (regno <= LAST_SP_REGNUM) { /* a special register */ *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)] = ptrace (PT_READ_GPR, inferior_pid, special_regs[regno-FIRST_SP_REGNUM], 0, 0); } else fprintf (stderr, "gdb error: register no %d not implemented.\n", regno); register_valid [regno] = 1; } /* Store our register values back into the inferior. If REGNO is -1, do this for all registers. Otherwise, REGNO specifies which register (so we can save time). */ void store_inferior_registers (regno) int regno; { extern char registers[]; errno = 0; if (regno == -1) { /* for all registers.. */ int ii; /* execute one dummy instruction (which is a breakpoint) in inferior process. So give kernel a chance to do internal house keeping. Otherwise the following ptrace(2) calls will mess up user stack since kernel will get confused about the bottom of the stack (%sp) */ exec_one_dummy_insn (); /* write general purpose registers first! */ for ( ii=GPR0; ii<=GPR31; ++ii) { ptrace (PT_WRITE_GPR, inferior_pid, ii, *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (ii)], 0); if ( errno ) { perror ("ptrace write_gpr"); errno = 0; } } /* write floating point registers now. */ for ( ii=0; ii < 32; ++ii) { ptrace (PT_WRITE_FPR, inferior_pid, (int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM+ii)], FPR0+ii, 0); if ( errno ) { perror ("ptrace write_fpr"); errno = 0; } } /* write special registers. */ for (ii=0; ii <= LAST_SP_REGNUM-FIRST_SP_REGNUM; ++ii) { ptrace (PT_WRITE_GPR, inferior_pid, special_regs[ii], *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (FIRST_SP_REGNUM+ii)], 0); if ( errno ) { perror ("ptrace write_gpr"); errno = 0; } } } /* else, a specific register number is given... */ else if (regno < FP0_REGNUM) { /* a GPR */ ptrace (PT_WRITE_GPR, inferior_pid, regno, *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)], 0); } else if (regno <= FPLAST_REGNUM) { /* a FPR */ ptrace (PT_WRITE_FPR, inferior_pid, (int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)], regno-FP0_REGNUM+FPR0, 0); } else if (regno <= LAST_SP_REGNUM) { /* a special register */ ptrace (PT_WRITE_GPR, inferior_pid, special_regs [regno-FIRST_SP_REGNUM], *(int*)®isters[REGISTER_BYTE (regno)], 0); } else fprintf (stderr, "Gdb error: register no %d not implemented.\n", regno); if ( errno ) { perror ("ptrace write"); errno = 0; } } void fetch_core_registers (core_reg_sect, core_reg_size, which, reg_addr) char *core_reg_sect; unsigned core_reg_size; int which; unsigned int reg_addr; /* Unused in this version */ { /* fetch GPRs and special registers from the first register section in core bfd. */ if (which == 0) { /* copy GPRs first. */ bcopy (core_reg_sect, registers, 32 * 4); /* gdb's internal register template and bfd's register section layout should share a common include file. FIXMEmgo */ /* then comes special registes. They are supposed to be in the same order in gdb template and bfd `.reg' section. */ core_reg_sect += (32 * 4); bcopy (core_reg_sect, ®isters [REGISTER_BYTE (FIRST_SP_REGNUM)], (LAST_SP_REGNUM - FIRST_SP_REGNUM + 1) * 4); } /* fetch floating point registers from register section 2 in core bfd. */ else if (which == 2) bcopy (core_reg_sect, ®isters [REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM)], 32 * 8); else fprintf (stderr, "Gdb error: unknown parameter to fetch_core_registers().\n"); } frameless_function_invocation (fi) struct frame_info *fi; { CORE_ADDR func_start; struct aix_framedata fdata; func_start = get_pc_function_start (fi->pc) + FUNCTION_START_OFFSET; /* If we failed to find the start of the function, it is a mistake to inspect the instructions. */ if (!func_start) return 0; function_frame_info (func_start, &fdata); return fdata.frameless; } /* If saved registers of frame FI are not known yet, read and cache them. &FDATAP contains aix_framedata; TDATAP can be NULL, in which case the framedata are read. */ static void frame_get_cache_fsr (fi, fdatap) struct frame_info *fi; struct aix_framedata *fdatap; { int ii; CORE_ADDR frame_addr; struct aix_framedata work_fdata; if (fi->cache_fsr) return; if (fdatap = NULL) { fdatap = &work_fdata; function_frame_info (get_pc_function_start (fi->pc), fdatap); } fi->cache_fsr = (struct frame_saved_regs *) obstack_alloc (&frame_cache_obstack, sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs)); bzero (fi->cache_fsr, sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs)); if (fi->prev && fi->prev->frame) frame_addr = fi->prev->frame; else frame_addr = read_memory_integer (fi->frame, 4); /* if != -1, fdatap->saved_fpr is the smallest number of saved_fpr. All fpr's from saved_fpr to fp31 are saved right underneath caller stack pointer, starting from fp31 first. */ if (fdatap->saved_fpr >= 0) { for (ii=31; ii >= fdatap->saved_fpr; --ii) fi->cache_fsr->regs [FP0_REGNUM + ii] = frame_addr - ((32 - ii) * 8); frame_addr -= (32 - fdatap->saved_fpr) * 8; } /* if != -1, fdatap->saved_gpr is the smallest number of saved_gpr. All gpr's from saved_gpr to gpr31 are saved right under saved fprs, starting from r31 first. */ if (fdatap->saved_gpr >= 0) for (ii=31; ii >= fdatap->saved_gpr; --ii) fi->cache_fsr->regs [ii] = frame_addr - ((32 - ii) * 4); } /* Return the address of a frame. This is the inital %sp value when the frame was first allocated. For functions calling alloca(), it might be saved in an alloca register. */ CORE_ADDR frame_initial_stack_address (fi) struct frame_info *fi; { CORE_ADDR tmpaddr; struct aix_framedata fdata; struct frame_info *callee_fi; /* if the initial stack pointer (frame address) of this frame is known, just return it. */ if (fi->initial_sp) return fi->initial_sp; /* find out if this function is using an alloca register.. */ function_frame_info (get_pc_function_start (fi->pc), &fdata); /* if saved registers of this frame are not known yet, read and cache them. */ if (!fi->cache_fsr) frame_get_cache_fsr (fi, &fdata); /* If no alloca register used, then fi->frame is the value of the %sp for this frame, and it is good enough. */ if (fdata.alloca_reg < 0) { fi->initial_sp = fi->frame; return fi->initial_sp; } /* This function has an alloca register. If this is the top-most frame (with the lowest address), the value in alloca register is good. */ if (!fi->next) return fi->initial_sp = read_register (fdata.alloca_reg); /* Otherwise, this is a caller frame. Callee has usually already saved registers, but there are exceptions (such as when the callee has no parameters). Find the address in which caller's alloca register is saved. */ for (callee_fi = fi->next; callee_fi; callee_fi = callee_fi->next) { if (!callee_fi->cache_fsr) frame_get_cache_fsr (fi, NULL); /* this is the address in which alloca register is saved. */ tmpaddr = callee_fi->cache_fsr->regs [fdata.alloca_reg]; if (tmpaddr) { fi->initial_sp = read_memory_integer (tmpaddr, 4); return fi->initial_sp; } /* Go look into deeper levels of the frame chain to see if any one of the callees has saved alloca register. */ } /* If alloca register was not saved, by the callee (or any of its callees) then the value in the register is still good. */ return fi->initial_sp = read_register (fdata.alloca_reg); } /* aixcoff_relocate_symtab - hook for symbol table relocation. also reads shared libraries.. */ aixcoff_relocate_symtab (pid) unsigned int pid; { #define MAX_LOAD_SEGS 64 /* maximum number of load segments */ struct ld_info *ldi; int temp; ldi = (void *) alloca(MAX_LOAD_SEGS * sizeof (*ldi)); /* According to my humble theory, aixcoff has some timing problems and when the user stack grows, kernel doesn't update stack info in time and ptrace calls step on user stack. That is why we sleep here a little, and give kernel to update its internals. */ usleep (36000); errno = 0; ptrace(PT_LDINFO, pid, ldi, MAX_LOAD_SEGS * sizeof(*ldi), ldi); if (errno) { perror_with_name ("ptrace ldinfo"); return 0; } vmap_ldinfo(ldi); do { add_text_to_loadinfo (ldi->ldinfo_textorg, ldi->ldinfo_dataorg); } while (ldi->ldinfo_next && (ldi = (void *) (ldi->ldinfo_next + (char *) ldi))); #if 0 /* Now that we've jumbled things around, re-sort them. */ sort_minimal_symbols (); #endif /* relocate the exec and core sections as well. */ vmap_exec (); } /* Keep an array of load segment information and their TOC table addresses. This info will be useful when calling a shared library function by hand. */ typedef struct { unsigned long textorg, dataorg, toc_offset; } LoadInfo; #define LOADINFOLEN 10 static LoadInfo *loadInfo = NULL; static int loadInfoLen = 0; static int loadInfoTocIndex = 0; int aix_loadInfoTextIndex = 0; xcoff_init_loadinfo () { loadInfoTocIndex = 0; aix_loadInfoTextIndex = 0; if (loadInfoLen == 0) { loadInfo = (void*) xmalloc (sizeof (LoadInfo) * LOADINFOLEN); loadInfoLen = LOADINFOLEN; } } free_loadinfo () { if (loadInfo) free (loadInfo); loadInfo = NULL; loadInfoLen = 0; loadInfoTocIndex = 0; aix_loadInfoTextIndex = 0; } xcoff_add_toc_to_loadinfo (unsigned long tocaddr) { while (loadInfoTocIndex >= loadInfoLen) { loadInfoLen += LOADINFOLEN; loadInfo = (void*) xrealloc (loadInfo, sizeof(LoadInfo) * loadInfoLen); } loadInfo [loadInfoTocIndex++].toc_offset = tocaddr; } add_text_to_loadinfo (unsigned long textaddr, unsigned long dataaddr) { while (aix_loadInfoTextIndex >= loadInfoLen) { loadInfoLen += LOADINFOLEN; loadInfo = (void*) xrealloc (loadInfo, sizeof(LoadInfo) * loadInfoLen); } loadInfo [aix_loadInfoTextIndex].textorg = textaddr; loadInfo [aix_loadInfoTextIndex].dataorg = dataaddr; ++aix_loadInfoTextIndex; } unsigned long find_toc_address (unsigned long pc) { int ii, toc_entry, tocbase = 0; for (ii=0; ii < aix_loadInfoTextIndex; ++ii) if (pc > loadInfo [ii].textorg && loadInfo [ii].textorg > tocbase) { toc_entry = ii; tocbase = loadInfo [ii].textorg; } return loadInfo [toc_entry].dataorg + loadInfo [toc_entry].toc_offset; } /* execute one dummy breakpoint instruction. This way we give kernel a chance to do some housekeeping and update inferior's internal data, including u_area. */ exec_one_dummy_insn () { #define DUMMY_INSN_ADDR (TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE)+0x200 unsigned long shadow; unsigned int status, pid; /* We plant one dummy breakpoint into DUMMY_INSN_ADDR address. We assume that this address will never be executed again by the real code. */ target_insert_breakpoint (DUMMY_INSN_ADDR, &shadow); errno = 0; ptrace (PT_CONTINUE, inferior_pid, DUMMY_INSN_ADDR, 0, 0); if (errno) perror ("pt_continue"); do { pid = wait (&status); } while (pid != inferior_pid); target_remove_breakpoint (DUMMY_INSN_ADDR, &shadow); } #if 0 *** not needed anymore *** /* Return the number of initial trap signals we need to ignore once the inferior process starts running. This will be `2' for aix-3.1, `3' for aix-3.2 */ int aix_starting_inferior_traps () { struct utsname unamebuf; if (uname (&unamebuf) == -1) fatal ("uname(3) failed."); /* Assume the future versions will behave like 3.2 and return '3' for anything other than 3.1x. The extra trap in 3.2 is the "trap after the program is loaded" signal. */ if (unamebuf.version[0] == '3' && unamebuf.release[0] == '1') return 2; else return 3; } #endif