binutils-gdb/gdbserver/linux-aarch64-ipa.cc

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Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
2015-09-21 16:01:04 +02:00
/* GNU/Linux/AArch64 specific low level interface, for the in-process
agent library for GDB.
Copyright (C) 2015-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
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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 "server.h"
IPA: Add alloc_jump_pad_buffer target hook. Targets may have various requirements on the required location of the jump pad area. Currently IPA allocates it at the lowest possible address, so that it is reachable by branches from the executable. However, this fails on powerpc, which has executable link address (0x10000000) much larger than branch reach (+/- 32MiB). This makes jump pad buffer allocation a target hook instead. The current implementations are as follows: - i386 and s390: Branches can reach anywhere, so just mmap it. This avoids the linear search dance. - x86_64: Branches have +/-2GiB of reach, and executable is loaded low, so just call mmap with MAP_32BIT. Likewise avoids the linear search. - aarch64: Branches have +-128MiB of reach, executable loaded at 4MiB. Do a linear search from 4MiB-size downwards to page_size. - s390x: Branches have +-4GiB of reach, executable loaded at 2GiB. Do like on aarch64. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> and <sys/auxv.h> includes. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> include. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-i386-ipa.c (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-s390-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> and <sys/auxv.h> includes. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * tracepoint.c (getauxval) [!HAVE_GETAUXVAL]: New function. (initialize_tracepoint): Delegate to alloc_jump_pad_buffer. * tracepoint.h (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New prototype. (getauxval) [!HAVE_GETAUXVAL]: New prototype.
2016-03-13 00:30:11 +01:00
#include <sys/mman.h>
Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
2015-09-21 16:01:04 +02:00
#include "tracepoint.h"
#include <elf.h>
IPA: Add alloc_jump_pad_buffer target hook. Targets may have various requirements on the required location of the jump pad area. Currently IPA allocates it at the lowest possible address, so that it is reachable by branches from the executable. However, this fails on powerpc, which has executable link address (0x10000000) much larger than branch reach (+/- 32MiB). This makes jump pad buffer allocation a target hook instead. The current implementations are as follows: - i386 and s390: Branches can reach anywhere, so just mmap it. This avoids the linear search dance. - x86_64: Branches have +/-2GiB of reach, and executable is loaded low, so just call mmap with MAP_32BIT. Likewise avoids the linear search. - aarch64: Branches have +-128MiB of reach, executable loaded at 4MiB. Do a linear search from 4MiB-size downwards to page_size. - s390x: Branches have +-4GiB of reach, executable loaded at 2GiB. Do like on aarch64. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> and <sys/auxv.h> includes. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> include. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-i386-ipa.c (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-s390-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> and <sys/auxv.h> includes. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * tracepoint.c (getauxval) [!HAVE_GETAUXVAL]: New function. (initialize_tracepoint): Delegate to alloc_jump_pad_buffer. * tracepoint.h (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New prototype. (getauxval) [!HAVE_GETAUXVAL]: New prototype.
2016-03-13 00:30:11 +01:00
#ifdef HAVE_GETAUXVAL
#include <sys/auxv.h>
#endif
#include "linux-aarch64-tdesc.h"
Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
2015-09-21 16:01:04 +02:00
/* Each register saved by the jump pad is in a 16 byte cell. */
#define FT_CR_SIZE 16
#define FT_CR_FPCR 0
#define FT_CR_FPSR 1
#define FT_CR_CPSR 2
#define FT_CR_PC 3
#define FT_CR_SP 4
#define FT_CR_X0 5
#define FT_CR_GPR(n) (FT_CR_X0 + (n))
#define FT_CR_FPR(n) (FT_CR_GPR (31) + (n))
/* Mapping between registers collected by the jump pad and GDB's register
array layout used by regcache.
See linux-aarch64-low.c (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad) for
more details. */
static const int aarch64_ft_collect_regmap[] = {
FT_CR_GPR (0),
FT_CR_GPR (1),
FT_CR_GPR (2),
FT_CR_GPR (3),
FT_CR_GPR (4),
FT_CR_GPR (5),
FT_CR_GPR (6),
FT_CR_GPR (7),
FT_CR_GPR (8),
FT_CR_GPR (9),
FT_CR_GPR (10),
FT_CR_GPR (11),
FT_CR_GPR (12),
FT_CR_GPR (13),
FT_CR_GPR (14),
FT_CR_GPR (15),
FT_CR_GPR (16),
FT_CR_GPR (17),
FT_CR_GPR (18),
FT_CR_GPR (19),
FT_CR_GPR (20),
FT_CR_GPR (21),
FT_CR_GPR (22),
FT_CR_GPR (23),
FT_CR_GPR (24),
FT_CR_GPR (25),
FT_CR_GPR (26),
FT_CR_GPR (27),
FT_CR_GPR (28),
/* FP */
FT_CR_GPR (29),
/* LR */
FT_CR_GPR (30),
FT_CR_SP,
FT_CR_PC,
FT_CR_CPSR,
FT_CR_FPR (0),
FT_CR_FPR (1),
FT_CR_FPR (2),
FT_CR_FPR (3),
FT_CR_FPR (4),
FT_CR_FPR (5),
FT_CR_FPR (6),
FT_CR_FPR (7),
FT_CR_FPR (8),
FT_CR_FPR (9),
FT_CR_FPR (10),
FT_CR_FPR (11),
FT_CR_FPR (12),
FT_CR_FPR (13),
FT_CR_FPR (14),
FT_CR_FPR (15),
FT_CR_FPR (16),
FT_CR_FPR (17),
FT_CR_FPR (18),
FT_CR_FPR (19),
FT_CR_FPR (20),
FT_CR_FPR (21),
FT_CR_FPR (22),
FT_CR_FPR (23),
FT_CR_FPR (24),
FT_CR_FPR (25),
FT_CR_FPR (26),
FT_CR_FPR (27),
FT_CR_FPR (28),
FT_CR_FPR (29),
FT_CR_FPR (30),
FT_CR_FPR (31),
FT_CR_FPSR,
FT_CR_FPCR
};
#define AARCH64_NUM_FT_COLLECT_GREGS \
(sizeof (aarch64_ft_collect_regmap) / sizeof(aarch64_ft_collect_regmap[0]))
/* Fill in REGCACHE with registers saved by the jump pad in BUF. */
void
supply_fast_tracepoint_registers (struct regcache *regcache,
const unsigned char *buf)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < AARCH64_NUM_FT_COLLECT_GREGS; i++)
supply_register (regcache, i,
((char *) buf)
+ (aarch64_ft_collect_regmap[i] * FT_CR_SIZE));
}
gdbserver/IPA: Export some functions via global function pointers. On powerpc64, qSymbol for a function returns the function code address, and not the descriptor address. Since we emit code calling gdb_collect and some other functions, we need the descriptor (no way to know the proper TOC address without it). To get the descriptor address, make global function pointer variables in the IPA pointing to the relevant functions and read them instead of asking for them directly via qSymbol. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: Rename gdb_agent_get_raw_reg to get_raw_reg. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Likewise. * linux-i386-ipa.c: Likewise. * linux-s390-ipa.c: Likewise. * tracepoint.c: IPA-export gdb_collect_ptr instead of gdb_collect, ditto for get_raw_reg_ptr, get_trace_state_variable_value_ptr, set_trace_state_variable_value_ptr. (struct ipa_sym_addresses): Likewise. (symbol_list): Likewise. (install_fast_tracepoint): Dereference gdb_collect_ptr instead of accessing gdb_collect directly. (gdb_collect_ptr_type): New typedef. (get_raw_reg_ptr_type): New typedef. (get_trace_state_variable_value_ptr_type): New typedef. (set_trace_state_variable_value_ptr_type): New typedef. (gdb_collect_ptr): New global. (get_raw_reg_ptr): New global. (get_trace_state_variable_value_ptr): New global. (set_trace_state_variable_value_ptr): New global. (get_raw_reg_func_addr): Dereference get_raw_reg_ptr instead of accessing get_raw_reg directly. (get_get_tsv_func_addr): Likewise for get_trace_state_variable_value_ptr. (get_set_tsv_func_addr): Likewise for set_trace_state_variable_value_ptr. * tracepoint.h: Rename gdb_agent_get_raw_reg to get_raw_reg.
2016-03-11 15:51:29 +01:00
ULONGEST
get_raw_reg (const unsigned char *raw_regs, int regnum)
Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
2015-09-21 16:01:04 +02:00
{
if (regnum >= AARCH64_NUM_FT_COLLECT_GREGS)
return 0;
return *(ULONGEST *) (raw_regs
+ aarch64_ft_collect_regmap[regnum] * FT_CR_SIZE);
}
[PR gdb/13808] gdb.trace: Pass tdesc selected in gdbserver to IPA. If gdbserver and IPA are using different tdesc, they will disagree about 'R' trace packet size. This results in mangled traces. To make sure they pick the same tdesc, gdbserver pokes the tdesc (specified as an index in a target-specific list) into a global variable in IPA. In theory, IPA could find out the tdesc on its own, but that may be complex (in particular, I don't know how to tell whether we have LAST_BREAK on s390 without messing with ptrace), and we'd have to duplicate the logic. Tested on i386 and x86_64. On i386, it fixes two FAILs in ftrace.exp. On x86_64, these failures have been KFAILed - one of them works now, but the other now fails due to an unrelated reason (ugh). gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: PR gdb/13808 * Makefile.in: Add i386-*-linux-ipa.o and amd64-*-linux-ipa.o. * configure.srv: Ditto. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Add "linux-x86-tdesc.h" include. (init_registers_amd64_linux): Remove prototype. (tdesc_amd64_linux): Remove declaration. (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment, initialize remaining tdescs. * linux-i386-ipa.c: Add "linux-x86-tdesc.h" include. (init_registers_i386_linux): Remove prototype. (tdesc_i386_linux): Remove declaration. (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment, initialize remaining tdescs. * linux-low.c (linux_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function. (linux_target_ops): wire in linux_get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops): Add get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-x86-low.c: Move tdesc declarations to linux-x86-tdesc.h. (x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function. (the_low_target): Wire in x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-x86-tdesc.h: New file. * target.h (struct target_ops): Add get_ipa_tdesc_idx. (target_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New macro. * tracepoint.c (ipa_tdesc_idx): New macro. (struct ipa_sym_addresses): Add addr_ipa_tdesc_idx. (symbol_list): Add ipa_tdesc_idx. (cmd_qtstart): Write ipa_tdesc_idx in the target. (ipa_tdesc): Remove. (ipa_tdesc_idx): New variable. (get_context_regcache): Use get_ipa_tdesc. (gdb_collect): Ditto. (gdb_probe): Ditto. * tracepoint.h (get_ipa_tdesc): New prototype. (ipa_tdesc): Remove. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: PR gdb/13808 * gdb.trace/ftrace.exp (test_fast_tracepoints): Remove kfail.
2016-02-21 21:44:48 +01:00
/* Return target_desc to use for IPA, given the tdesc index passed by
gdbserver. Index is ignored, since we have only one tdesc
at the moment. SVE and pauth not yet supported. */
[PR gdb/13808] gdb.trace: Pass tdesc selected in gdbserver to IPA. If gdbserver and IPA are using different tdesc, they will disagree about 'R' trace packet size. This results in mangled traces. To make sure they pick the same tdesc, gdbserver pokes the tdesc (specified as an index in a target-specific list) into a global variable in IPA. In theory, IPA could find out the tdesc on its own, but that may be complex (in particular, I don't know how to tell whether we have LAST_BREAK on s390 without messing with ptrace), and we'd have to duplicate the logic. Tested on i386 and x86_64. On i386, it fixes two FAILs in ftrace.exp. On x86_64, these failures have been KFAILed - one of them works now, but the other now fails due to an unrelated reason (ugh). gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: PR gdb/13808 * Makefile.in: Add i386-*-linux-ipa.o and amd64-*-linux-ipa.o. * configure.srv: Ditto. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Add "linux-x86-tdesc.h" include. (init_registers_amd64_linux): Remove prototype. (tdesc_amd64_linux): Remove declaration. (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment, initialize remaining tdescs. * linux-i386-ipa.c: Add "linux-x86-tdesc.h" include. (init_registers_i386_linux): Remove prototype. (tdesc_i386_linux): Remove declaration. (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment, initialize remaining tdescs. * linux-low.c (linux_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function. (linux_target_ops): wire in linux_get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops): Add get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-x86-low.c: Move tdesc declarations to linux-x86-tdesc.h. (x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function. (the_low_target): Wire in x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-x86-tdesc.h: New file. * target.h (struct target_ops): Add get_ipa_tdesc_idx. (target_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New macro. * tracepoint.c (ipa_tdesc_idx): New macro. (struct ipa_sym_addresses): Add addr_ipa_tdesc_idx. (symbol_list): Add ipa_tdesc_idx. (cmd_qtstart): Write ipa_tdesc_idx in the target. (ipa_tdesc): Remove. (ipa_tdesc_idx): New variable. (get_context_regcache): Use get_ipa_tdesc. (gdb_collect): Ditto. (gdb_probe): Ditto. * tracepoint.h (get_ipa_tdesc): New prototype. (ipa_tdesc): Remove. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: PR gdb/13808 * gdb.trace/ftrace.exp (test_fast_tracepoints): Remove kfail.
2016-02-21 21:44:48 +01:00
const struct target_desc *
get_ipa_tdesc (int idx)
{
return aarch64_linux_read_description (0, false);
[PR gdb/13808] gdb.trace: Pass tdesc selected in gdbserver to IPA. If gdbserver and IPA are using different tdesc, they will disagree about 'R' trace packet size. This results in mangled traces. To make sure they pick the same tdesc, gdbserver pokes the tdesc (specified as an index in a target-specific list) into a global variable in IPA. In theory, IPA could find out the tdesc on its own, but that may be complex (in particular, I don't know how to tell whether we have LAST_BREAK on s390 without messing with ptrace), and we'd have to duplicate the logic. Tested on i386 and x86_64. On i386, it fixes two FAILs in ftrace.exp. On x86_64, these failures have been KFAILed - one of them works now, but the other now fails due to an unrelated reason (ugh). gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: PR gdb/13808 * Makefile.in: Add i386-*-linux-ipa.o and amd64-*-linux-ipa.o. * configure.srv: Ditto. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Add "linux-x86-tdesc.h" include. (init_registers_amd64_linux): Remove prototype. (tdesc_amd64_linux): Remove declaration. (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment, initialize remaining tdescs. * linux-i386-ipa.c: Add "linux-x86-tdesc.h" include. (init_registers_i386_linux): Remove prototype. (tdesc_i386_linux): Remove declaration. (get_ipa_tdesc): New function. (initialize_low_tracepoint): Remove ipa_tdesc assignment, initialize remaining tdescs. * linux-low.c (linux_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function. (linux_target_ops): wire in linux_get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-low.h (struct linux_target_ops): Add get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-x86-low.c: Move tdesc declarations to linux-x86-tdesc.h. (x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New function. (the_low_target): Wire in x86_get_ipa_tdesc_idx. * linux-x86-tdesc.h: New file. * target.h (struct target_ops): Add get_ipa_tdesc_idx. (target_get_ipa_tdesc_idx): New macro. * tracepoint.c (ipa_tdesc_idx): New macro. (struct ipa_sym_addresses): Add addr_ipa_tdesc_idx. (symbol_list): Add ipa_tdesc_idx. (cmd_qtstart): Write ipa_tdesc_idx in the target. (ipa_tdesc): Remove. (ipa_tdesc_idx): New variable. (get_context_regcache): Use get_ipa_tdesc. (gdb_collect): Ditto. (gdb_probe): Ditto. * tracepoint.h (get_ipa_tdesc): New prototype. (ipa_tdesc): Remove. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: PR gdb/13808 * gdb.trace/ftrace.exp (test_fast_tracepoints): Remove kfail.
2016-02-21 21:44:48 +01:00
}
IPA: Add alloc_jump_pad_buffer target hook. Targets may have various requirements on the required location of the jump pad area. Currently IPA allocates it at the lowest possible address, so that it is reachable by branches from the executable. However, this fails on powerpc, which has executable link address (0x10000000) much larger than branch reach (+/- 32MiB). This makes jump pad buffer allocation a target hook instead. The current implementations are as follows: - i386 and s390: Branches can reach anywhere, so just mmap it. This avoids the linear search dance. - x86_64: Branches have +/-2GiB of reach, and executable is loaded low, so just call mmap with MAP_32BIT. Likewise avoids the linear search. - aarch64: Branches have +-128MiB of reach, executable loaded at 4MiB. Do a linear search from 4MiB-size downwards to page_size. - s390x: Branches have +-4GiB of reach, executable loaded at 2GiB. Do like on aarch64. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> and <sys/auxv.h> includes. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-amd64-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> include. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-i386-ipa.c (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * linux-s390-ipa.c: Add <sys/mman.h> and <sys/auxv.h> includes. (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New function. * tracepoint.c (getauxval) [!HAVE_GETAUXVAL]: New function. (initialize_tracepoint): Delegate to alloc_jump_pad_buffer. * tracepoint.h (alloc_jump_pad_buffer): New prototype. (getauxval) [!HAVE_GETAUXVAL]: New prototype.
2016-03-13 00:30:11 +01:00
/* Allocate buffer for the jump pads. The branch instruction has a reach
of +/- 128MiB, and the executable is loaded at 0x400000 (4MiB).
To maximize the area of executable that can use tracepoints, try
allocating at 0x400000 - size initially, decreasing until we hit
a free area. */
void *
alloc_jump_pad_buffer (size_t size)
{
uintptr_t addr;
uintptr_t exec_base = getauxval (AT_PHDR);
int pagesize;
void *res;
if (exec_base == 0)
exec_base = 0x400000;
pagesize = sysconf (_SC_PAGE_SIZE);
if (pagesize == -1)
perror_with_name ("sysconf");
addr = exec_base - size;
/* size should already be page-aligned, but this can't hurt. */
addr &= ~(pagesize - 1);
/* Search for a free area. If we hit 0, we're out of luck. */
for (; addr; addr -= pagesize)
{
/* No MAP_FIXED - we don't want to zap someone's mapping. */
res = mmap ((void *) addr, size,
PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE | PROT_EXEC,
MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
/* If we got what we wanted, return. */
if ((uintptr_t) res == addr)
return res;
/* If we got a mapping, but at a wrong address, undo it. */
if (res != MAP_FAILED)
munmap (res, size);
}
return NULL;
}
Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
2015-09-21 16:01:04 +02:00
void
initialize_low_tracepoint (void)
{
/* SVE and pauth not yet supported. */
aarch64_linux_read_description (0, false);
Add support for fast tracepoints This patch adds support for fast tracepoints for aarch64-linux. With this implementation, a tracepoint can only be placed in a +/- 128MB range of the jump pad. This is due to the unconditional branch instruction being limited to a (26 bit << 2) offset from the current PC. Three target operations are implemented: - target_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad Building the jump pad the biggest change of this patch. We need to add functions to emit all instructions needed to save and restore the current state when the tracepoint is hit. As well as implementing a lock and creating a collecting_t object identifying the current thread. Steps performed by the jump pad: * Save the current state on the stack. * Push a collecting_t object on the stack. We read the special tpidr_el0 system register to get the thread ID. * Spin-lock on the shared memory location of all tracing threads. We write the address of our collecting_t object there once we have the lock. * Call gdb_collect. * Release the lock. * Restore the state. * Execute the replaced instruction which will have been relocated. * Jump back to the program. - target_get_thread_area As implemented in ps_get_thread_area, target_get_thread_area uses ptrace to fetch the NT_ARM_TLS register. At the architecture level, NT_ARM_TLS represents the tpidr_el0 system register. So this ptrace call (if lwpid is the current thread): ~~~ ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGSET, lwpid, NT_ARM_TLS, &iovec); ~~~ Is equivalent to the following instruction: ~~~ msr x0, tpidr_el0 ~~~ This instruction is used when creating the collecting_t object that GDBserver can read to know if a given thread is currently tracing. So target_get_thread_area must get the same thread IDs as what the jump pad writes into its collecting_t object. - target_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len This just returns 4. gdb/gdbserver/ChangeLog: * Makefile.in (linux-aarch64-ipa.o, aarch64-ipa.o): New rules. * configure.srv (aarch64*-*-linux*): Add linux-aarch64-ipa.o and aarch64-ipa.o. * linux-aarch64-ipa.c: New file. * linux-aarch64-low.c: Include arch/aarch64-insn.h, inttypes.h and endian.h. (aarch64_get_thread_area): New target method. (extract_signed_bitfield): New helper function. (aarch64_decode_ldr_literal): New function. (enum aarch64_opcodes): New enum. (struct aarch64_register): New struct. (struct aarch64_operand): New struct. (x0): New static global. (x1): Likewise. (x2): Likewise. (x3): Likewise. (x4): Likewise. (w2): Likewise. (ip0): Likewise. (sp): Likewise. (xzr): Likewise. (aarch64_register): New helper function. (register_operand): Likewise. (immediate_operand): Likewise. (struct aarch64_memory_operand): New struct. (offset_memory_operand): New helper function. (preindex_memory_operand): Likewise. (enum aarch64_system_control_registers): New enum. (ENCODE): New macro. (emit_insn): New helper function. (emit_b): New function. (emit_bcond): Likewise. (emit_cb): Likewise. (emit_tb): Likewise. (emit_blr): Likewise. (emit_stp): Likewise. (emit_ldp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_stp_q_offset): Likewise. (emit_load_store): Likewise. (emit_ldr): Likewise. (emit_ldrsw): Likewise. (emit_str): Likewise. (emit_ldaxr): Likewise. (emit_stxr): Likewise. (emit_stlr): Likewise. (emit_data_processing_reg): Likewise. (emit_data_processing): Likewise. (emit_add): Likewise. (emit_sub): Likewise. (emit_mov): Likewise. (emit_movk): Likewise. (emit_mov_addr): Likewise. (emit_mrs): Likewise. (emit_msr): Likewise. (emit_sevl): Likewise. (emit_wfe): Likewise. (append_insns): Likewise. (can_encode_int32_in): New helper function. (aarch64_relocate_instruction): New function. (aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad): Likewise. (aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len): Likewise. (struct linux_target_ops): Install aarch64_get_thread_area, aarch64_install_fast_tracepoint_jump_pad and aarch64_get_min_fast_tracepoint_insn_len.
2015-09-21 16:01:04 +02:00
}