#!/bin/sh -u # Architecture commands for GDB, the GNU debugger. # # Copyright (C) 1998-2020 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 . # Make certain that the script is not running in an internationalized # environment. LANG=C ; export LANG LC_ALL=C ; export LC_ALL # Format of the input table read="class returntype function formal actual staticdefault predefault postdefault invalid_p print garbage_at_eol" do_read () { comment="" class="" # On some SH's, 'read' trims leading and trailing whitespace by # default (e.g., bash), while on others (e.g., dash), it doesn't. # Set IFS to empty to disable the trimming everywhere. # shellcheck disable=SC2162 while IFS='' read line do if test "${line}" = "" then continue elif test "${line}" = "#" -a "${comment}" = "" then continue elif expr "${line}" : "#" > /dev/null then comment="${comment} ${line}" else # The semantics of IFS varies between different SH's. Some # treat ``;;' as three fields while some treat it as just two. # Work around this by eliminating ``;;'' .... line="$(echo "${line}" | sed -e 's/;;/; ;/g' -e 's/;;/; ;/g')" OFS="${IFS}" ; IFS="[;]" eval read "${read}" <&2 kill $$ exit 1 fi # .... and then going back through each field and strip out those # that ended up with just that space character. for r in ${read} do if eval test "\"\${${r}}\" = ' '" then eval "${r}=" fi done case "${class}" in m ) staticdefault="${predefault:-}" ;; M ) staticdefault="0" ;; * ) test "${staticdefault}" || staticdefault=0 ;; esac case "${class}" in F | V | M ) case "${invalid_p:-}" in "" ) if test -n "${predefault}" then #invalid_p="gdbarch->${function} == ${predefault}" predicate="gdbarch->${function:-} != ${predefault}" elif class_is_variable_p then predicate="gdbarch->${function} != 0" elif class_is_function_p then predicate="gdbarch->${function} != NULL" fi ;; * ) echo "Predicate function ${function} with invalid_p." 1>&2 kill $$ exit 1 ;; esac esac #NOT YET: See gdbarch.log for basic verification of # database break fi done if [ -n "${class}" ] then true else false fi } fallback_default_p () { { [ -n "${postdefault:-}" ] && [ "x${invalid_p}" != "x0" ]; } \ || { [ -n "${predefault}" ] && [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ]; } } class_is_variable_p () { case "${class}" in *v* | *V* ) true ;; * ) false ;; esac } class_is_function_p () { case "${class}" in *f* | *F* | *m* | *M* ) true ;; * ) false ;; esac } class_is_multiarch_p () { case "${class}" in *m* | *M* ) true ;; * ) false ;; esac } class_is_predicate_p () { case "${class}" in *F* | *V* | *M* ) true ;; * ) false ;; esac } class_is_info_p () { case "${class}" in *i* ) true ;; * ) false ;; esac } # dump out/verify the doco for field in ${read} do case ${field} in class ) : ;; # # -> line disable # f -> function # hiding a function # F -> function + predicate # hiding a function + predicate to test function validity # v -> variable # hiding a variable # V -> variable + predicate # hiding a variable + predicate to test variables validity # i -> set from info # hiding something from the ``struct info'' object # m -> multi-arch function # hiding a multi-arch function (parameterised with the architecture) # M -> multi-arch function + predicate # hiding a multi-arch function + predicate to test function validity returntype ) : ;; # For functions, the return type; for variables, the data type function ) : ;; # For functions, the member function name; for variables, the # variable name. Member function names are always prefixed with # ``gdbarch_'' for name-space purity. formal ) : ;; # The formal argument list. It is assumed that the formal # argument list includes the actual name of each list element. # A function with no arguments shall have ``void'' as the # formal argument list. actual ) : ;; # The list of actual arguments. The arguments specified shall # match the FORMAL list given above. Functions with out # arguments leave this blank. staticdefault ) : ;; # To help with the GDB startup a static gdbarch object is # created. STATICDEFAULT is the value to insert into that # static gdbarch object. Since this a static object only # simple expressions can be used. # If STATICDEFAULT is empty, zero is used. predefault ) : ;; # An initial value to assign to MEMBER of the freshly # malloc()ed gdbarch object. After initialization, the # freshly malloc()ed object is passed to the target # architecture code for further updates. # If PREDEFAULT is empty, zero is used. # A non-empty PREDEFAULT, an empty POSTDEFAULT and a zero # INVALID_P are specified, PREDEFAULT will be used as the # default for the non- multi-arch target. # A zero PREDEFAULT function will force the fallback to call # internal_error(). # Variable declarations can refer to ``gdbarch'' which will # contain the current architecture. Care should be taken. postdefault ) : ;; # A value to assign to MEMBER of the new gdbarch object should # the target architecture code fail to change the PREDEFAULT # value. # If POSTDEFAULT is empty, no post update is performed. # If both INVALID_P and POSTDEFAULT are non-empty then # INVALID_P will be used to determine if MEMBER should be # changed to POSTDEFAULT. # If a non-empty POSTDEFAULT and a zero INVALID_P are # specified, POSTDEFAULT will be used as the default for the # non- multi-arch target (regardless of the value of # PREDEFAULT). # You cannot specify both a zero INVALID_P and a POSTDEFAULT. # Variable declarations can refer to ``gdbarch'' which # will contain the current architecture. Care should be # taken. invalid_p ) : ;; # A predicate equation that validates MEMBER. Non-zero is # returned if the code creating the new architecture failed to # initialize MEMBER or the initialized the member is invalid. # If POSTDEFAULT is non-empty then MEMBER will be updated to # that value. If POSTDEFAULT is empty then internal_error() # is called. # If INVALID_P is empty, a check that MEMBER is no longer # equal to PREDEFAULT is used. # The expression ``0'' disables the INVALID_P check making # PREDEFAULT a legitimate value. # See also PREDEFAULT and POSTDEFAULT. print ) : ;; # An optional expression that convers MEMBER to a value # suitable for formatting using %s. # If PRINT is empty, core_addr_to_string_nz (for CORE_ADDR) # or plongest (anything else) is used. garbage_at_eol ) : ;; # Catches stray fields. *) echo "Bad field ${field}" exit 1;; esac done function_list () { # See below (DOCO) for description of each field cat <printable_name # i;enum bfd_endian;byte_order;;;BFD_ENDIAN_BIG i;enum bfd_endian;byte_order_for_code;;;BFD_ENDIAN_BIG # i;enum gdb_osabi;osabi;;;GDB_OSABI_UNKNOWN # i;const struct target_desc *;target_desc;;;;;;;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->target_desc) # Number of bits in a short or unsigned short for the target machine. v;int;short_bit;;;8 * sizeof (short);2*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 # Number of bits in an int or unsigned int for the target machine. v;int;int_bit;;;8 * sizeof (int);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 # Number of bits in a long or unsigned long for the target machine. v;int;long_bit;;;8 * sizeof (long);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 # Number of bits in a long long or unsigned long long for the target # machine. v;int;long_long_bit;;;8 * sizeof (LONGEST);2*gdbarch->long_bit;;0 # The ABI default bit-size and format for "half", "float", "double", and # "long double". These bit/format pairs should eventually be combined # into a single object. For the moment, just initialize them as a pair. # Each format describes both the big and little endian layouts (if # useful). v;int;half_bit;;;16;2*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 v;const struct floatformat **;half_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_half;;pformat (gdbarch->half_format) v;int;float_bit;;;8 * sizeof (float);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 v;const struct floatformat **;float_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_single;;pformat (gdbarch->float_format) v;int;double_bit;;;8 * sizeof (double);8*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 v;const struct floatformat **;double_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_double;;pformat (gdbarch->double_format) v;int;long_double_bit;;;8 * sizeof (long double);8*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 v;const struct floatformat **;long_double_format;;;;;floatformats_ieee_double;;pformat (gdbarch->long_double_format) # The ABI default bit-size for "wchar_t". wchar_t is a built-in type # starting with C++11. v;int;wchar_bit;;;8 * sizeof (wchar_t);4*TARGET_CHAR_BIT;;0 # One if \`wchar_t' is signed, zero if unsigned. v;int;wchar_signed;;;1;-1;1 # Returns the floating-point format to be used for values of length LENGTH. # NAME, if non-NULL, is the type name, which may be used to distinguish # different target formats of the same length. m;const struct floatformat **;floatformat_for_type;const char *name, int length;name, length;0;default_floatformat_for_type;;0 # For most targets, a pointer on the target and its representation as an # address in GDB have the same size and "look the same". For such a # target, you need only set gdbarch_ptr_bit and gdbarch_addr_bit # / addr_bit will be set from it. # # If gdbarch_ptr_bit and gdbarch_addr_bit are different, you'll probably # also need to set gdbarch_dwarf2_addr_size, gdbarch_pointer_to_address and # gdbarch_address_to_pointer as well. # # ptr_bit is the size of a pointer on the target v;int;ptr_bit;;;8 * sizeof (void*);gdbarch->int_bit;;0 # addr_bit is the size of a target address as represented in gdb v;int;addr_bit;;;8 * sizeof (void*);0;gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch); # # dwarf2_addr_size is the target address size as used in the Dwarf debug # info. For .debug_frame FDEs, this is supposed to be the target address # size from the associated CU header, and which is equivalent to the # DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE as defined by the target specific GCC back-end. # Unfortunately there is no good way to determine this value. Therefore # dwarf2_addr_size simply defaults to the target pointer size. # # dwarf2_addr_size is not used for .eh_frame FDEs, which are generally # defined using the target's pointer size so far. # # Note that dwarf2_addr_size only needs to be redefined by a target if the # GCC back-end defines a DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE other than the target pointer size, # and if Dwarf versions < 4 need to be supported. v;int;dwarf2_addr_size;;;sizeof (void*);0;gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT; # # One if \`char' acts like \`signed char', zero if \`unsigned char'. v;int;char_signed;;;1;-1;1 # F;CORE_ADDR;read_pc;readable_regcache *regcache;regcache F;void;write_pc;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR val;regcache, val # Function for getting target's idea of a frame pointer. FIXME: GDB's # whole scheme for dealing with "frames" and "frame pointers" needs a # serious shakedown. m;void;virtual_frame_pointer;CORE_ADDR pc, int *frame_regnum, LONGEST *frame_offset;pc, frame_regnum, frame_offset;0;legacy_virtual_frame_pointer;;0 # M;enum register_status;pseudo_register_read;readable_regcache *regcache, int cookednum, gdb_byte *buf;regcache, cookednum, buf # Read a register into a new struct value. If the register is wholly # or partly unavailable, this should call mark_value_bytes_unavailable # as appropriate. If this is defined, then pseudo_register_read will # never be called. M;struct value *;pseudo_register_read_value;readable_regcache *regcache, int cookednum;regcache, cookednum M;void;pseudo_register_write;struct regcache *regcache, int cookednum, const gdb_byte *buf;regcache, cookednum, buf # v;int;num_regs;;;0;-1 # This macro gives the number of pseudo-registers that live in the # register namespace but do not get fetched or stored on the target. # These pseudo-registers may be aliases for other registers, # combinations of other registers, or they may be computed by GDB. v;int;num_pseudo_regs;;;0;0;;0 # Assemble agent expression bytecode to collect pseudo-register REG. # Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise. M;int;ax_pseudo_register_collect;struct agent_expr *ax, int reg;ax, reg # Assemble agent expression bytecode to push the value of pseudo-register # REG on the interpreter stack. # Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise. M;int;ax_pseudo_register_push_stack;struct agent_expr *ax, int reg;ax, reg # Some targets/architectures can do extra processing/display of # segmentation faults. E.g., Intel MPX boundary faults. # Call the architecture dependent function to handle the fault. # UIOUT is the output stream where the handler will place information. M;void;handle_segmentation_fault;struct ui_out *uiout;uiout # GDB's standard (or well known) register numbers. These can map onto # a real register or a pseudo (computed) register or not be defined at # all (-1). # gdbarch_sp_regnum will hopefully be replaced by UNWIND_SP. v;int;sp_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0 v;int;pc_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0 v;int;ps_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0 v;int;fp0_regnum;;;0;-1;;0 # Convert stab register number (from \`r\' declaration) to a gdb REGNUM. m;int;stab_reg_to_regnum;int stab_regnr;stab_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0 # Provide a default mapping from a ecoff register number to a gdb REGNUM. m;int;ecoff_reg_to_regnum;int ecoff_regnr;ecoff_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0 # Convert from an sdb register number to an internal gdb register number. m;int;sdb_reg_to_regnum;int sdb_regnr;sdb_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0 # Provide a default mapping from a DWARF2 register number to a gdb REGNUM. # Return -1 for bad REGNUM. Note: Several targets get this wrong. m;int;dwarf2_reg_to_regnum;int dwarf2_regnr;dwarf2_regnr;;no_op_reg_to_regnum;;0 m;const char *;register_name;int regnr;regnr;;0 # Return the type of a register specified by the architecture. Only # the register cache should call this function directly; others should # use "register_type". M;struct type *;register_type;int reg_nr;reg_nr # Generate a dummy frame_id for THIS_FRAME assuming that the frame is # a dummy frame. A dummy frame is created before an inferior call, # the frame_id returned here must match the frame_id that was built # for the inferior call. Usually this means the returned frame_id's # stack address should match the address returned by # gdbarch_push_dummy_call, and the returned frame_id's code address # should match the address at which the breakpoint was set in the dummy # frame. m;struct frame_id;dummy_id;struct frame_info *this_frame;this_frame;;default_dummy_id;;0 # Implement DUMMY_ID and PUSH_DUMMY_CALL, then delete # deprecated_fp_regnum. v;int;deprecated_fp_regnum;;;-1;-1;;0 M;CORE_ADDR;push_dummy_call;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;function, regcache, bp_addr, nargs, args, sp, return_method, struct_addr v;int;call_dummy_location;;;;AT_ENTRY_POINT;;0 M;CORE_ADDR;push_dummy_code;CORE_ADDR sp, CORE_ADDR funaddr, struct value **args, int nargs, struct type *value_type, CORE_ADDR *real_pc, CORE_ADDR *bp_addr, struct regcache *regcache;sp, funaddr, args, nargs, value_type, real_pc, bp_addr, regcache # Return true if the code of FRAME is writable. m;int;code_of_frame_writable;struct frame_info *frame;frame;;default_code_of_frame_writable;;0 m;void;print_registers_info;struct ui_file *file, struct frame_info *frame, int regnum, int all;file, frame, regnum, all;;default_print_registers_info;;0 m;void;print_float_info;struct ui_file *file, struct frame_info *frame, const char *args;file, frame, args;;default_print_float_info;;0 M;void;print_vector_info;struct ui_file *file, struct frame_info *frame, const char *args;file, frame, args # MAP a GDB RAW register number onto a simulator register number. See # also include/...-sim.h. m;int;register_sim_regno;int reg_nr;reg_nr;;legacy_register_sim_regno;;0 m;int;cannot_fetch_register;int regnum;regnum;;cannot_register_not;;0 m;int;cannot_store_register;int regnum;regnum;;cannot_register_not;;0 # Determine the address where a longjmp will land and save this address # in PC. Return nonzero on success. # # FRAME corresponds to the longjmp frame. F;int;get_longjmp_target;struct frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR *pc;frame, pc # v;int;believe_pcc_promotion;;;;;;; # m;int;convert_register_p;int regnum, struct type *type;regnum, type;0;generic_convert_register_p;;0 f;int;register_to_value;struct frame_info *frame, int regnum, struct type *type, gdb_byte *buf, int *optimizedp, int *unavailablep;frame, regnum, type, buf, optimizedp, unavailablep;0 f;void;value_to_register;struct frame_info *frame, int regnum, struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf;frame, regnum, type, buf;0 # Construct a value representing the contents of register REGNUM in # frame FRAME_ID, interpreted as type TYPE. The routine needs to # allocate and return a struct value with all value attributes # (but not the value contents) filled in. m;struct value *;value_from_register;struct type *type, int regnum, struct frame_id frame_id;type, regnum, frame_id;;default_value_from_register;;0 # m;CORE_ADDR;pointer_to_address;struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf;type, buf;;unsigned_pointer_to_address;;0 m;void;address_to_pointer;struct type *type, gdb_byte *buf, CORE_ADDR addr;type, buf, addr;;unsigned_address_to_pointer;;0 M;CORE_ADDR;integer_to_address;struct type *type, const gdb_byte *buf;type, buf # Return the return-value convention that will be used by FUNCTION # to return a value of type VALTYPE. FUNCTION may be NULL in which # case the return convention is computed based only on VALTYPE. # # If READBUF is not NULL, extract the return value and save it in this buffer. # # If WRITEBUF is not NULL, it contains a return value which will be # stored into the appropriate register. This can be used when we want # to force the value returned by a function (see the "return" command # for instance). M;enum return_value_convention;return_value;struct value *function, struct type *valtype, struct regcache *regcache, gdb_byte *readbuf, const gdb_byte *writebuf;function, valtype, regcache, readbuf, writebuf # Return true if the return value of function is stored in the first hidden # parameter. In theory, this feature should be language-dependent, specified # by language and its ABI, such as C++. Unfortunately, compiler may # implement it to a target-dependent feature. So that we need such hook here # to be aware of this in GDB. m;int;return_in_first_hidden_param_p;struct type *type;type;;default_return_in_first_hidden_param_p;;0 m;CORE_ADDR;skip_prologue;CORE_ADDR ip;ip;0;0 M;CORE_ADDR;skip_main_prologue;CORE_ADDR ip;ip # On some platforms, a single function may provide multiple entry points, # e.g. one that is used for function-pointer calls and a different one # that is used for direct function calls. # In order to ensure that breakpoints set on the function will trigger # no matter via which entry point the function is entered, a platform # may provide the skip_entrypoint callback. It is called with IP set # to the main entry point of a function (as determined by the symbol table), # and should return the address of the innermost entry point, where the # actual breakpoint needs to be set. Note that skip_entrypoint is used # by GDB common code even when debugging optimized code, where skip_prologue # is not used. M;CORE_ADDR;skip_entrypoint;CORE_ADDR ip;ip f;int;inner_than;CORE_ADDR lhs, CORE_ADDR rhs;lhs, rhs;0;0 m;const gdb_byte *;breakpoint_from_pc;CORE_ADDR *pcptr, int *lenptr;pcptr, lenptr;0;default_breakpoint_from_pc;;0 # Return the breakpoint kind for this target based on *PCPTR. m;int;breakpoint_kind_from_pc;CORE_ADDR *pcptr;pcptr;;0; # Return the software breakpoint from KIND. KIND can have target # specific meaning like the Z0 kind parameter. # SIZE is set to the software breakpoint's length in memory. m;const gdb_byte *;sw_breakpoint_from_kind;int kind, int *size;kind, size;;NULL;;0 # Return the breakpoint kind for this target based on the current # processor state (e.g. the current instruction mode on ARM) and the # *PCPTR. In default, it is gdbarch->breakpoint_kind_from_pc. m;int;breakpoint_kind_from_current_state;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR *pcptr;regcache, pcptr;0;default_breakpoint_kind_from_current_state;;0 M;CORE_ADDR;adjust_breakpoint_address;CORE_ADDR bpaddr;bpaddr m;int;memory_insert_breakpoint;struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt;bp_tgt;0;default_memory_insert_breakpoint;;0 m;int;memory_remove_breakpoint;struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt;bp_tgt;0;default_memory_remove_breakpoint;;0 v;CORE_ADDR;decr_pc_after_break;;;0;;;0 # A function can be addressed by either it's "pointer" (possibly a # descriptor address) or "entry point" (first executable instruction). # The method "convert_from_func_ptr_addr" converting the former to the # latter. gdbarch_deprecated_function_start_offset is being used to implement # a simplified subset of that functionality - the function's address # corresponds to the "function pointer" and the function's start # corresponds to the "function entry point" - and hence is redundant. v;CORE_ADDR;deprecated_function_start_offset;;;0;;;0 # Return the remote protocol register number associated with this # register. Normally the identity mapping. m;int;remote_register_number;int regno;regno;;default_remote_register_number;;0 # Fetch the target specific address used to represent a load module. F;CORE_ADDR;fetch_tls_load_module_address;struct objfile *objfile;objfile # Return the thread-local address at OFFSET in the thread-local # storage for the thread PTID and the shared library or executable # file given by LM_ADDR. If that block of thread-local storage hasn't # been allocated yet, this function may throw an error. LM_ADDR may # be zero for statically linked multithreaded inferiors. M;CORE_ADDR;get_thread_local_address;ptid_t ptid, CORE_ADDR lm_addr, CORE_ADDR offset;ptid, lm_addr, offset # v;CORE_ADDR;frame_args_skip;;;0;;;0 m;CORE_ADDR;unwind_pc;struct frame_info *next_frame;next_frame;;default_unwind_pc;;0 m;CORE_ADDR;unwind_sp;struct frame_info *next_frame;next_frame;;default_unwind_sp;;0 # DEPRECATED_FRAME_LOCALS_ADDRESS as been replaced by the per-frame # frame-base. Enable frame-base before frame-unwind. F;int;frame_num_args;struct frame_info *frame;frame # M;CORE_ADDR;frame_align;CORE_ADDR address;address m;int;stabs_argument_has_addr;struct type *type;type;;default_stabs_argument_has_addr;;0 v;int;frame_red_zone_size # m;CORE_ADDR;convert_from_func_ptr_addr;CORE_ADDR addr, struct target_ops *targ;addr, targ;;convert_from_func_ptr_addr_identity;;0 # On some machines there are bits in addresses which are not really # part of the address, but are used by the kernel, the hardware, etc. # for special purposes. gdbarch_addr_bits_remove takes out any such bits so # we get a "real" address such as one would find in a symbol table. # This is used only for addresses of instructions, and even then I'm # not sure it's used in all contexts. It exists to deal with there # being a few stray bits in the PC which would mislead us, not as some # sort of generic thing to handle alignment or segmentation (it's # possible it should be in TARGET_READ_PC instead). m;CORE_ADDR;addr_bits_remove;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;core_addr_identity;;0 # On some machines, not all bits of an address word are significant. # For example, on AArch64, the top bits of an address known as the "tag" # are ignored by the kernel, the hardware, etc. and can be regarded as # additional data associated with the address. v;int;significant_addr_bit;;;;;;0 # FIXME/cagney/2001-01-18: This should be split in two. A target method that # indicates if the target needs software single step. An ISA method to # implement it. # # FIXME/cagney/2001-01-18: The logic is backwards. It should be asking if the # target can single step. If not, then implement single step using breakpoints. # # Return a vector of addresses on which the software single step # breakpoints should be inserted. NULL means software single step is # not used. # Multiple breakpoints may be inserted for some instructions such as # conditional branch. However, each implementation must always evaluate # the condition and only put the breakpoint at the branch destination if # the condition is true, so that we ensure forward progress when stepping # past a conditional branch to self. F;std::vector;software_single_step;struct regcache *regcache;regcache # Return non-zero if the processor is executing a delay slot and a # further single-step is needed before the instruction finishes. M;int;single_step_through_delay;struct frame_info *frame;frame # FIXME: cagney/2003-08-28: Need to find a better way of selecting the # disassembler. Perhaps objdump can handle it? f;int;print_insn;bfd_vma vma, struct disassemble_info *info;vma, info;;default_print_insn;;0 f;CORE_ADDR;skip_trampoline_code;struct frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR pc;frame, pc;;generic_skip_trampoline_code;;0 # If in_solib_dynsym_resolve_code() returns true, and SKIP_SOLIB_RESOLVER # evaluates non-zero, this is the address where the debugger will place # a step-resume breakpoint to get us past the dynamic linker. m;CORE_ADDR;skip_solib_resolver;CORE_ADDR pc;pc;;generic_skip_solib_resolver;;0 # Some systems also have trampoline code for returning from shared libs. m;int;in_solib_return_trampoline;CORE_ADDR pc, const char *name;pc, name;;generic_in_solib_return_trampoline;;0 # Return true if PC lies inside an indirect branch thunk. m;bool;in_indirect_branch_thunk;CORE_ADDR pc;pc;;default_in_indirect_branch_thunk;;0 # A target might have problems with watchpoints as soon as the stack # frame of the current function has been destroyed. This mostly happens # as the first action in a function's epilogue. stack_frame_destroyed_p() # is defined to return a non-zero value if either the given addr is one # instruction after the stack destroying instruction up to the trailing # return instruction or if we can figure out that the stack frame has # already been invalidated regardless of the value of addr. Targets # which don't suffer from that problem could just let this functionality # untouched. m;int;stack_frame_destroyed_p;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;0;generic_stack_frame_destroyed_p;;0 # Process an ELF symbol in the minimal symbol table in a backend-specific # way. Normally this hook is supposed to do nothing, however if required, # then this hook can be used to apply tranformations to symbols that are # considered special in some way. For example the MIPS backend uses it # to interpret \`st_other' information to mark compressed code symbols so # that they can be treated in the appropriate manner in the processing of # the main symbol table and DWARF-2 records. F;void;elf_make_msymbol_special;asymbol *sym, struct minimal_symbol *msym;sym, msym f;void;coff_make_msymbol_special;int val, struct minimal_symbol *msym;val, msym;;default_coff_make_msymbol_special;;0 # Process a symbol in the main symbol table in a backend-specific way. # Normally this hook is supposed to do nothing, however if required, # then this hook can be used to apply tranformations to symbols that # are considered special in some way. This is currently used by the # MIPS backend to make sure compressed code symbols have the ISA bit # set. This in turn is needed for symbol values seen in GDB to match # the values used at the runtime by the program itself, for function # and label references. f;void;make_symbol_special;struct symbol *sym, struct objfile *objfile;sym, objfile;;default_make_symbol_special;;0 # Adjust the address retrieved from a DWARF-2 record other than a line # entry in a backend-specific way. Normally this hook is supposed to # return the address passed unchanged, however if that is incorrect for # any reason, then this hook can be used to fix the address up in the # required manner. This is currently used by the MIPS backend to make # sure addresses in FDE, range records, etc. referring to compressed # code have the ISA bit set, matching line information and the symbol # table. f;CORE_ADDR;adjust_dwarf2_addr;CORE_ADDR pc;pc;;default_adjust_dwarf2_addr;;0 # Adjust the address updated by a line entry in a backend-specific way. # Normally this hook is supposed to return the address passed unchanged, # however in the case of inconsistencies in these records, this hook can # be used to fix them up in the required manner. This is currently used # by the MIPS backend to make sure all line addresses in compressed code # are presented with the ISA bit set, which is not always the case. This # in turn ensures breakpoint addresses are correctly matched against the # stop PC. f;CORE_ADDR;adjust_dwarf2_line;CORE_ADDR addr, int rel;addr, rel;;default_adjust_dwarf2_line;;0 v;int;cannot_step_breakpoint;;;0;0;;0 # See comment in target.h about continuable, steppable and # non-steppable watchpoints. v;int;have_nonsteppable_watchpoint;;;0;0;;0 F;int;address_class_type_flags;int byte_size, int dwarf2_addr_class;byte_size, dwarf2_addr_class M;const char *;address_class_type_flags_to_name;int type_flags;type_flags # Execute vendor-specific DWARF Call Frame Instruction. OP is the instruction. # FS are passed from the generic execute_cfa_program function. m;bool;execute_dwarf_cfa_vendor_op;gdb_byte op, struct dwarf2_frame_state *fs;op, fs;;default_execute_dwarf_cfa_vendor_op;;0 # Return the appropriate type_flags for the supplied address class. # This function should return 1 if the address class was recognized and # type_flags was set, zero otherwise. M;int;address_class_name_to_type_flags;const char *name, int *type_flags_ptr;name, type_flags_ptr # Is a register in a group m;int;register_reggroup_p;int regnum, struct reggroup *reggroup;regnum, reggroup;;default_register_reggroup_p;;0 # Fetch the pointer to the ith function argument. F;CORE_ADDR;fetch_pointer_argument;struct frame_info *frame, int argi, struct type *type;frame, argi, type # Iterate over all supported register notes in a core file. For each # supported register note section, the iterator must call CB and pass # CB_DATA unchanged. If REGCACHE is not NULL, the iterator can limit # the supported register note sections based on the current register # values. Otherwise it should enumerate all supported register note # sections. M;void;iterate_over_regset_sections;iterate_over_regset_sections_cb *cb, void *cb_data, const struct regcache *regcache;cb, cb_data, regcache # Create core file notes M;char *;make_corefile_notes;bfd *obfd, int *note_size;obfd, note_size # Find core file memory regions M;int;find_memory_regions;find_memory_region_ftype func, void *data;func, data # Read offset OFFSET of TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES formatted shared libraries list from # core file into buffer READBUF with length LEN. Return the number of bytes read # (zero indicates failure). # failed, otherwise, return the red length of READBUF. M;ULONGEST;core_xfer_shared_libraries;gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len;readbuf, offset, len # Read offset OFFSET of TARGET_OBJECT_LIBRARIES_AIX formatted shared # libraries list from core file into buffer READBUF with length LEN. # Return the number of bytes read (zero indicates failure). M;ULONGEST;core_xfer_shared_libraries_aix;gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len;readbuf, offset, len # How the core target converts a PTID from a core file to a string. M;std::string;core_pid_to_str;ptid_t ptid;ptid # How the core target extracts the name of a thread from a core file. M;const char *;core_thread_name;struct thread_info *thr;thr # Read offset OFFSET of TARGET_OBJECT_SIGNAL_INFO signal information # from core file into buffer READBUF with length LEN. Return the number # of bytes read (zero indicates EOF, a negative value indicates failure). M;LONGEST;core_xfer_siginfo;gdb_byte *readbuf, ULONGEST offset, ULONGEST len; readbuf, offset, len # BFD target to use when generating a core file. V;const char *;gcore_bfd_target;;;0;0;;;pstring (gdbarch->gcore_bfd_target) # If the elements of C++ vtables are in-place function descriptors rather # than normal function pointers (which may point to code or a descriptor), # set this to one. v;int;vtable_function_descriptors;;;0;0;;0 # Set if the least significant bit of the delta is used instead of the least # significant bit of the pfn for pointers to virtual member functions. v;int;vbit_in_delta;;;0;0;;0 # Advance PC to next instruction in order to skip a permanent breakpoint. f;void;skip_permanent_breakpoint;struct regcache *regcache;regcache;default_skip_permanent_breakpoint;default_skip_permanent_breakpoint;;0 # The maximum length of an instruction on this architecture in bytes. V;ULONGEST;max_insn_length;;;0;0 # Copy the instruction at FROM to TO, and make any adjustments # necessary to single-step it at that address. # # REGS holds the state the thread's registers will have before # executing the copied instruction; the PC in REGS will refer to FROM, # not the copy at TO. The caller should update it to point at TO later. # # Return a pointer to data of the architecture's choice to be passed # to gdbarch_displaced_step_fixup. Or, return NULL to indicate that # the instruction's effects have been completely simulated, with the # resulting state written back to REGS. # # For a general explanation of displaced stepping and how GDB uses it, # see the comments in infrun.c. # # The TO area is only guaranteed to have space for # gdbarch_max_insn_length (arch) bytes, so this function must not # write more bytes than that to that area. # # If you do not provide this function, GDB assumes that the # architecture does not support displaced stepping. # # If the instruction cannot execute out of line, return NULL. The # core falls back to stepping past the instruction in-line instead in # that case. M;displaced_step_closure_up;displaced_step_copy_insn;CORE_ADDR from, CORE_ADDR to, struct regcache *regs;from, to, regs # Return true if GDB should use hardware single-stepping to execute # the displaced instruction identified by CLOSURE. If false, # GDB will simply restart execution at the displaced instruction # location, and it is up to the target to ensure GDB will receive # control again (e.g. by placing a software breakpoint instruction # into the displaced instruction buffer). # # The default implementation returns false on all targets that # provide a gdbarch_software_single_step routine, and true otherwise. m;int;displaced_step_hw_singlestep;struct displaced_step_closure *closure;closure;;default_displaced_step_hw_singlestep;;0 # Fix up the state resulting from successfully single-stepping a # displaced instruction, to give the result we would have gotten from # stepping the instruction in its original location. # # REGS is the register state resulting from single-stepping the # displaced instruction. # # CLOSURE is the result from the matching call to # gdbarch_displaced_step_copy_insn. # # If you provide gdbarch_displaced_step_copy_insn.but not this # function, then GDB assumes that no fixup is needed after # single-stepping the instruction. # # For a general explanation of displaced stepping and how GDB uses it, # see the comments in infrun.c. M;void;displaced_step_fixup;struct displaced_step_closure *closure, CORE_ADDR from, CORE_ADDR to, struct regcache *regs;closure, from, to, regs;;NULL # Return the address of an appropriate place to put displaced # instructions while we step over them. There need only be one such # place, since we're only stepping one thread over a breakpoint at a # time. # # For a general explanation of displaced stepping and how GDB uses it, # see the comments in infrun.c. m;CORE_ADDR;displaced_step_location;void;;;NULL;;(! gdbarch->displaced_step_location) != (! gdbarch->displaced_step_copy_insn) # Relocate an instruction to execute at a different address. OLDLOC # is the address in the inferior memory where the instruction to # relocate is currently at. On input, TO points to the destination # where we want the instruction to be copied (and possibly adjusted) # to. On output, it points to one past the end of the resulting # instruction(s). The effect of executing the instruction at TO shall # be the same as if executing it at FROM. For example, call # instructions that implicitly push the return address on the stack # should be adjusted to return to the instruction after OLDLOC; # relative branches, and other PC-relative instructions need the # offset adjusted; etc. M;void;relocate_instruction;CORE_ADDR *to, CORE_ADDR from;to, from;;NULL # Refresh overlay mapped state for section OSECT. F;void;overlay_update;struct obj_section *osect;osect M;const struct target_desc *;core_read_description;struct target_ops *target, bfd *abfd;target, abfd # Handle special encoding of static variables in stabs debug info. F;const char *;static_transform_name;const char *name;name # Set if the address in N_SO or N_FUN stabs may be zero. v;int;sofun_address_maybe_missing;;;0;0;;0 # Parse the instruction at ADDR storing in the record execution log # the registers REGCACHE and memory ranges that will be affected when # the instruction executes, along with their current values. # Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise. M;int;process_record;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR addr;regcache, addr # Save process state after a signal. # Return -1 if something goes wrong, 0 otherwise. M;int;process_record_signal;struct regcache *regcache, enum gdb_signal signal;regcache, signal # Signal translation: translate inferior's signal (target's) number # into GDB's representation. The implementation of this method must # be host independent. IOW, don't rely on symbols of the NAT_FILE # header (the nm-*.h files), the host header, or similar # headers. This is mainly used when cross-debugging core files --- # "Live" targets hide the translation behind the target interface # (target_wait, target_resume, etc.). M;enum gdb_signal;gdb_signal_from_target;int signo;signo # Signal translation: translate the GDB's internal signal number into # the inferior's signal (target's) representation. The implementation # of this method must be host independent. IOW, don't rely on symbols # of the NAT_FILE header (the nm-*.h files), the host # header, or similar headers. # Return the target signal number if found, or -1 if the GDB internal # signal number is invalid. M;int;gdb_signal_to_target;enum gdb_signal signal;signal # Extra signal info inspection. # # Return a type suitable to inspect extra signal information. M;struct type *;get_siginfo_type;void; # Record architecture-specific information from the symbol table. M;void;record_special_symbol;struct objfile *objfile, asymbol *sym;objfile, sym # Function for the 'catch syscall' feature. # Get architecture-specific system calls information from registers. M;LONGEST;get_syscall_number;thread_info *thread;thread # The filename of the XML syscall for this architecture. v;const char *;xml_syscall_file;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->xml_syscall_file) # Information about system calls from this architecture v;struct syscalls_info *;syscalls_info;;;0;0;;0;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->syscalls_info) # SystemTap related fields and functions. # A NULL-terminated array of prefixes used to mark an integer constant # on the architecture's assembly. # For example, on x86 integer constants are written as: # # \$10 ;; integer constant 10 # # in this case, this prefix would be the character \`\$\'. v;const char *const *;stap_integer_prefixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_integer_prefixes) # A NULL-terminated array of suffixes used to mark an integer constant # on the architecture's assembly. v;const char *const *;stap_integer_suffixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_integer_suffixes) # A NULL-terminated array of prefixes used to mark a register name on # the architecture's assembly. # For example, on x86 the register name is written as: # # \%eax ;; register eax # # in this case, this prefix would be the character \`\%\'. v;const char *const *;stap_register_prefixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_prefixes) # A NULL-terminated array of suffixes used to mark a register name on # the architecture's assembly. v;const char *const *;stap_register_suffixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_suffixes) # A NULL-terminated array of prefixes used to mark a register # indirection on the architecture's assembly. # For example, on x86 the register indirection is written as: # # \(\%eax\) ;; indirecting eax # # in this case, this prefix would be the charater \`\(\'. # # Please note that we use the indirection prefix also for register # displacement, e.g., \`4\(\%eax\)\' on x86. v;const char *const *;stap_register_indirection_prefixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_indirection_prefixes) # A NULL-terminated array of suffixes used to mark a register # indirection on the architecture's assembly. # For example, on x86 the register indirection is written as: # # \(\%eax\) ;; indirecting eax # # in this case, this prefix would be the charater \`\)\'. # # Please note that we use the indirection suffix also for register # displacement, e.g., \`4\(\%eax\)\' on x86. v;const char *const *;stap_register_indirection_suffixes;;;0;0;;0;pstring_list (gdbarch->stap_register_indirection_suffixes) # Prefix(es) used to name a register using GDB's nomenclature. # # For example, on PPC a register is represented by a number in the assembly # language (e.g., \`10\' is the 10th general-purpose register). However, # inside GDB this same register has an \`r\' appended to its name, so the 10th # register would be represented as \`r10\' internally. v;const char *;stap_gdb_register_prefix;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->stap_gdb_register_prefix) # Suffix used to name a register using GDB's nomenclature. v;const char *;stap_gdb_register_suffix;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->stap_gdb_register_suffix) # Check if S is a single operand. # # Single operands can be: # \- Literal integers, e.g. \`\$10\' on x86 # \- Register access, e.g. \`\%eax\' on x86 # \- Register indirection, e.g. \`\(\%eax\)\' on x86 # \- Register displacement, e.g. \`4\(\%eax\)\' on x86 # # This function should check for these patterns on the string # and return 1 if some were found, or zero otherwise. Please try to match # as much info as you can from the string, i.e., if you have to match # something like \`\(\%\', do not match just the \`\(\'. M;int;stap_is_single_operand;const char *s;s # Function used to handle a "special case" in the parser. # # A "special case" is considered to be an unknown token, i.e., a token # that the parser does not know how to parse. A good example of special # case would be ARM's register displacement syntax: # # [R0, #4] ;; displacing R0 by 4 # # Since the parser assumes that a register displacement is of the form: # # # # it means that it will not be able to recognize and parse this odd syntax. # Therefore, we should add a special case function that will handle this token. # # This function should generate the proper expression form of the expression # using GDB\'s internal expression mechanism (e.g., \`write_exp_elt_opcode\' # and so on). It should also return 1 if the parsing was successful, or zero # if the token was not recognized as a special token (in this case, returning # zero means that the special parser is deferring the parsing to the generic # parser), and should advance the buffer pointer (p->arg). M;int;stap_parse_special_token;struct stap_parse_info *p;p # Perform arch-dependent adjustments to a register name. # # In very specific situations, it may be necessary for the register # name present in a SystemTap probe's argument to be handled in a # special way. For example, on i386, GCC may over-optimize the # register allocation and use smaller registers than necessary. In # such cases, the client that is reading and evaluating the SystemTap # probe (ourselves) will need to actually fetch values from the wider # version of the register in question. # # To illustrate the example, consider the following probe argument # (i386): # # 4@%ax # # This argument says that its value can be found at the %ax register, # which is a 16-bit register. However, the argument's prefix says # that its type is "uint32_t", which is 32-bit in size. Therefore, in # this case, GDB should actually fetch the probe's value from register # %eax, not %ax. In this scenario, this function would actually # replace the register name from %ax to %eax. # # The rationale for this can be found at PR breakpoints/24541. M;std::string;stap_adjust_register;struct stap_parse_info *p, const std::string \®name, int regnum;p, regname, regnum # DTrace related functions. # The expression to compute the NARTGth+1 argument to a DTrace USDT probe. # NARG must be >= 0. M;void;dtrace_parse_probe_argument;struct expr_builder *builder, int narg;builder, narg # True if the given ADDR does not contain the instruction sequence # corresponding to a disabled DTrace is-enabled probe. M;int;dtrace_probe_is_enabled;CORE_ADDR addr;addr # Enable a DTrace is-enabled probe at ADDR. M;void;dtrace_enable_probe;CORE_ADDR addr;addr # Disable a DTrace is-enabled probe at ADDR. M;void;dtrace_disable_probe;CORE_ADDR addr;addr # True if the list of shared libraries is one and only for all # processes, as opposed to a list of shared libraries per inferior. # This usually means that all processes, although may or may not share # an address space, will see the same set of symbols at the same # addresses. v;int;has_global_solist;;;0;0;;0 # On some targets, even though each inferior has its own private # address space, the debug interface takes care of making breakpoints # visible to all address spaces automatically. For such cases, # this property should be set to true. v;int;has_global_breakpoints;;;0;0;;0 # True if inferiors share an address space (e.g., uClinux). m;int;has_shared_address_space;void;;;default_has_shared_address_space;;0 # True if a fast tracepoint can be set at an address. m;int;fast_tracepoint_valid_at;CORE_ADDR addr, std::string *msg;addr, msg;;default_fast_tracepoint_valid_at;;0 # Guess register state based on tracepoint location. Used for tracepoints # where no registers have been collected, but there's only one location, # allowing us to guess the PC value, and perhaps some other registers. # On entry, regcache has all registers marked as unavailable. m;void;guess_tracepoint_registers;struct regcache *regcache, CORE_ADDR addr;regcache, addr;;default_guess_tracepoint_registers;;0 # Return the "auto" target charset. f;const char *;auto_charset;void;;default_auto_charset;default_auto_charset;;0 # Return the "auto" target wide charset. f;const char *;auto_wide_charset;void;;default_auto_wide_charset;default_auto_wide_charset;;0 # If non-empty, this is a file extension that will be opened in place # of the file extension reported by the shared library list. # # This is most useful for toolchains that use a post-linker tool, # where the names of the files run on the target differ in extension # compared to the names of the files GDB should load for debug info. v;const char *;solib_symbols_extension;;;;;;;pstring (gdbarch->solib_symbols_extension) # If true, the target OS has DOS-based file system semantics. That # is, absolute paths include a drive name, and the backslash is # considered a directory separator. v;int;has_dos_based_file_system;;;0;0;;0 # Generate bytecodes to collect the return address in a frame. # Since the bytecodes run on the target, possibly with GDB not even # connected, the full unwinding machinery is not available, and # typically this function will issue bytecodes for one or more likely # places that the return address may be found. m;void;gen_return_address;struct agent_expr *ax, struct axs_value *value, CORE_ADDR scope;ax, value, scope;;default_gen_return_address;;0 # Implement the "info proc" command. M;void;info_proc;const char *args, enum info_proc_what what;args, what # Implement the "info proc" command for core files. Noe that there # are two "info_proc"-like methods on gdbarch -- one for core files, # one for live targets. M;void;core_info_proc;const char *args, enum info_proc_what what;args, what # Iterate over all objfiles in the order that makes the most sense # for the architecture to make global symbol searches. # # CB is a callback function where OBJFILE is the objfile to be searched, # and CB_DATA a pointer to user-defined data (the same data that is passed # when calling this gdbarch method). The iteration stops if this function # returns nonzero. # # CB_DATA is a pointer to some user-defined data to be passed to # the callback. # # If not NULL, CURRENT_OBJFILE corresponds to the objfile being # inspected when the symbol search was requested. m;void;iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order;iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order_cb_ftype *cb, void *cb_data, struct objfile *current_objfile;cb, cb_data, current_objfile;0;default_iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order;;0 # Ravenscar arch-dependent ops. v;struct ravenscar_arch_ops *;ravenscar_ops;;;NULL;NULL;;0;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->ravenscar_ops) # Return non-zero if the instruction at ADDR is a call; zero otherwise. m;int;insn_is_call;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;default_insn_is_call;;0 # Return non-zero if the instruction at ADDR is a return; zero otherwise. m;int;insn_is_ret;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;default_insn_is_ret;;0 # Return non-zero if the instruction at ADDR is a jump; zero otherwise. m;int;insn_is_jump;CORE_ADDR addr;addr;;default_insn_is_jump;;0 # Return true if there's a program/permanent breakpoint planted in # memory at ADDRESS, return false otherwise. m;bool;program_breakpoint_here_p;CORE_ADDR address;address;;default_program_breakpoint_here_p;;0 # Read one auxv entry from *READPTR, not reading locations >= ENDPTR. # Return 0 if *READPTR is already at the end of the buffer. # Return -1 if there is insufficient buffer for a whole entry. # Return 1 if an entry was read into *TYPEP and *VALP. M;int;auxv_parse;gdb_byte **readptr, gdb_byte *endptr, CORE_ADDR *typep, CORE_ADDR *valp;readptr, endptr, typep, valp # Print the description of a single auxv entry described by TYPE and VAL # to FILE. m;void;print_auxv_entry;struct ui_file *file, CORE_ADDR type, CORE_ADDR val;file, type, val;;default_print_auxv_entry;;0 # Find the address range of the current inferior's vsyscall/vDSO, and # write it to *RANGE. If the vsyscall's length can't be determined, a # range with zero length is returned. Returns true if the vsyscall is # found, false otherwise. m;int;vsyscall_range;struct mem_range *range;range;;default_vsyscall_range;;0 # Allocate SIZE bytes of PROT protected page aligned memory in inferior. # PROT has GDB_MMAP_PROT_* bitmask format. # Throw an error if it is not possible. Returned address is always valid. f;CORE_ADDR;infcall_mmap;CORE_ADDR size, unsigned prot;size, prot;;default_infcall_mmap;;0 # Deallocate SIZE bytes of memory at ADDR in inferior from gdbarch_infcall_mmap. # Print a warning if it is not possible. f;void;infcall_munmap;CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR size;addr, size;;default_infcall_munmap;;0 # Return string (caller has to use xfree for it) with options for GCC # to produce code for this target, typically "-m64", "-m32" or "-m31". # These options are put before CU's DW_AT_producer compilation options so that # they can override it. m;std::string;gcc_target_options;void;;;default_gcc_target_options;;0 # Return a regular expression that matches names used by this # architecture in GNU configury triplets. The result is statically # allocated and must not be freed. The default implementation simply # returns the BFD architecture name, which is correct in nearly every # case. m;const char *;gnu_triplet_regexp;void;;;default_gnu_triplet_regexp;;0 # Return the size in 8-bit bytes of an addressable memory unit on this # architecture. This corresponds to the number of 8-bit bytes associated to # each address in memory. m;int;addressable_memory_unit_size;void;;;default_addressable_memory_unit_size;;0 # Functions for allowing a target to modify its disassembler options. v;const char *;disassembler_options_implicit;;;0;0;;0;pstring (gdbarch->disassembler_options_implicit) v;char **;disassembler_options;;;0;0;;0;pstring_ptr (gdbarch->disassembler_options) v;const disasm_options_and_args_t *;valid_disassembler_options;;;0;0;;0;host_address_to_string (gdbarch->valid_disassembler_options) # Type alignment override method. Return the architecture specific # alignment required for TYPE. If there is no special handling # required for TYPE then return the value 0, GDB will then apply the # default rules as laid out in gdbtypes.c:type_align. m;ULONGEST;type_align;struct type *type;type;;default_type_align;;0 # Return a string containing any flags for the given PC in the given FRAME. f;std::string;get_pc_address_flags;frame_info *frame, CORE_ADDR pc;frame, pc;;default_get_pc_address_flags;;0 EOF } # # The .log file # exec > gdbarch.log function_list | while do_read do cat <&2 kill $$ exit 1 fi if [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ] && [ -n "${postdefault}" ] then echo "Error: postdefault is useless when invalid_p=0" 1>&2 kill $$ exit 1 fi if class_is_multiarch_p then if class_is_predicate_p ; then : elif test "x${predefault}" = "x" then echo "Error: pure multi-arch function ${function} must have a predefault" 1>&2 kill $$ exit 1 fi fi echo "" done exec 1>&2 copyright () { cat <. */ /* This file was created with the aid of \`\`gdbarch.sh''. */ EOF } # # The .h file # exec > new-gdbarch.h copyright cat < #include "frame.h" #include "dis-asm.h" #include "gdb_obstack.h" #include "infrun.h" #include "osabi.h" struct floatformat; struct ui_file; struct value; struct objfile; struct obj_section; struct minimal_symbol; struct regcache; struct reggroup; struct regset; struct disassemble_info; struct target_ops; struct obstack; struct bp_target_info; struct target_desc; struct symbol; struct syscall; struct agent_expr; struct axs_value; struct stap_parse_info; struct expr_builder; struct ravenscar_arch_ops; struct mem_range; struct syscalls_info; struct thread_info; struct ui_out; #include "regcache.h" /* The architecture associated with the inferior through the connection to the target. The architecture vector provides some information that is really a property of the inferior, accessed through a particular target: ptrace operations; the layout of certain RSP packets; the solib_ops vector; etc. To differentiate architecture accesses to per-inferior/target properties from per-thread/per-frame/per-objfile properties, accesses to per-inferior/target properties should be made through this gdbarch. */ /* This is a convenience wrapper for 'current_inferior ()->gdbarch'. */ extern struct gdbarch *target_gdbarch (void); /* Callback type for the 'iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order' gdbarch method. */ typedef int (iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order_cb_ftype) (struct objfile *objfile, void *cb_data); /* Callback type for regset section iterators. The callback usually invokes the REGSET's supply or collect method, to which it must pass a buffer - for collects this buffer will need to be created using COLLECT_SIZE, for supply the existing buffer being read from should be at least SUPPLY_SIZE. SECT_NAME is a BFD section name, and HUMAN_NAME is used for diagnostic messages. CB_DATA should have been passed unchanged through the iterator. */ typedef void (iterate_over_regset_sections_cb) (const char *sect_name, int supply_size, int collect_size, const struct regset *regset, const char *human_name, void *cb_data); /* For a function call, does the function return a value using a normal value return or a structure return - passing a hidden argument pointing to storage. For the latter, there are two cases: language-mandated structure return and target ABI structure return. */ enum function_call_return_method { /* Standard value return. */ return_method_normal = 0, /* Language ABI structure return. This is handled by passing the return location as the first parameter to the function, even preceding "this". */ return_method_hidden_param, /* Target ABI struct return. This is target-specific; for instance, on ia64 the first argument is passed in out0 but the hidden structure return pointer would normally be passed in r8. */ return_method_struct, }; EOF # function typedef's printf "\n" printf "\n" printf "/* The following are pre-initialized by GDBARCH. */\n" function_list | while do_read do if class_is_info_p then printf "\n" printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function" printf "/* set_gdbarch_%s() - not applicable - pre-initialized. */\n" "$function" fi done # function typedef's printf "\n" printf "\n" printf "/* The following are initialized by the target dependent code. */\n" function_list | while do_read do if [ -n "${comment}" ] then echo "${comment}" | sed \ -e '2 s,#,/*,' \ -e '3,$ s,#, ,' \ -e '$ s,$, */,' fi if class_is_predicate_p then printf "\n" printf "extern int gdbarch_%s_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$function" fi if class_is_variable_p then printf "\n" printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function" printf "extern void set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s %s);\n" "$function" "$returntype" "$function" fi if class_is_function_p then printf "\n" if [ "x${formal}" = "xvoid" ] && class_is_multiarch_p then printf "typedef %s (gdbarch_%s_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function" elif class_is_multiarch_p then printf "typedef %s (gdbarch_%s_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s);\n" "$returntype" "$function" "$formal" else printf "typedef %s (gdbarch_%s_ftype) (%s);\n" "$returntype" "$function" "$formal" fi if [ "x${formal}" = "xvoid" ] then printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);\n" "$returntype" "$function" else printf "extern %s gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s);\n" "$returntype" "$function" "$formal" fi printf "extern void set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, gdbarch_%s_ftype *%s);\n" "$function" "$function" "$function" fi done # close it off cat <gdbarch can used to access values from the previously selected architecture for this architecture family. The INIT function shall return any of: NULL - indicating that it doesn't recognize the selected architecture; an existing \`\`struct gdbarch'' from the ARCHES list - indicating that the new architecture is just a synonym for an earlier architecture (see gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info()); a newly created \`\`struct gdbarch'' - that describes the selected architecture (see gdbarch_alloc()). The DUMP_TDEP function shall print out all target specific values. Care should be taken to ensure that the function works in both the multi-arch and non- multi-arch cases. */ struct gdbarch_list { struct gdbarch *gdbarch; struct gdbarch_list *next; }; struct gdbarch_info { /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */ const struct bfd_arch_info *bfd_arch_info; /* Use default: BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN (NB: is not ZERO). */ enum bfd_endian byte_order; enum bfd_endian byte_order_for_code; /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */ bfd *abfd; /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */ union { /* Architecture-specific information. The generic form for targets that have extra requirements. */ struct gdbarch_tdep_info *tdep_info; /* Architecture-specific target description data. Numerous targets need only this, so give them an easy way to hold it. */ struct tdesc_arch_data *tdesc_data; /* SPU file system ID. This is a single integer, so using the generic form would only complicate code. Other targets may reuse this member if suitable. */ int *id; }; /* Use default: GDB_OSABI_UNINITIALIZED (-1). */ enum gdb_osabi osabi; /* Use default: NULL (ZERO). */ const struct target_desc *target_desc; }; typedef struct gdbarch *(gdbarch_init_ftype) (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches); typedef void (gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct ui_file *file); /* DEPRECATED - use gdbarch_register() */ extern void register_gdbarch_init (enum bfd_architecture architecture, gdbarch_init_ftype *); extern void gdbarch_register (enum bfd_architecture architecture, gdbarch_init_ftype *, gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *); /* Return a freshly allocated, NULL terminated, array of the valid architecture names. Since architectures are registered during the _initialize phase this function only returns useful information once initialization has been completed. */ extern const char **gdbarch_printable_names (void); /* Helper function. Search the list of ARCHES for a GDBARCH that matches the information provided by INFO. */ extern struct gdbarch_list *gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (struct gdbarch_list *arches, const struct gdbarch_info *info); /* Helper function. Create a preliminary \`\`struct gdbarch''. Perform basic initialization using values obtained from the INFO and TDEP parameters. set_gdbarch_*() functions are called to complete the initialization of the object. */ extern struct gdbarch *gdbarch_alloc (const struct gdbarch_info *info, struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep); /* Helper function. Free a partially-constructed \`\`struct gdbarch''. It is assumed that the caller freeds the \`\`struct gdbarch_tdep''. */ extern void gdbarch_free (struct gdbarch *); /* Get the obstack owned by ARCH. */ extern obstack *gdbarch_obstack (gdbarch *arch); /* Helper function. Allocate memory from the \`\`struct gdbarch'' obstack. The memory is freed when the corresponding architecture is also freed. */ #define GDBARCH_OBSTACK_CALLOC(GDBARCH, NR, TYPE) \ obstack_calloc (gdbarch_obstack ((GDBARCH)), (NR)) #define GDBARCH_OBSTACK_ZALLOC(GDBARCH, TYPE) \ obstack_zalloc (gdbarch_obstack ((GDBARCH))) /* Duplicate STRING, returning an equivalent string that's allocated on the obstack associated with GDBARCH. The string is freed when the corresponding architecture is also freed. */ extern char *gdbarch_obstack_strdup (struct gdbarch *arch, const char *string); /* Helper function. Force an update of the current architecture. The actual architecture selected is determined by INFO, \`\`(gdb) set architecture'' et.al., the existing architecture and BFD's default architecture. INFO should be initialized to zero and then selected fields should be updated. Returns non-zero if the update succeeds. */ extern int gdbarch_update_p (struct gdbarch_info info); /* Helper function. Find an architecture matching info. INFO should be initialized using gdbarch_info_init, relevant fields set, and then finished using gdbarch_info_fill. Returns the corresponding architecture, or NULL if no matching architecture was found. */ extern struct gdbarch *gdbarch_find_by_info (struct gdbarch_info info); /* Helper function. Set the target gdbarch to "gdbarch". */ extern void set_target_gdbarch (struct gdbarch *gdbarch); /* Register per-architecture data-pointer. Reserve space for a per-architecture data-pointer. An identifier for the reserved data-pointer is returned. That identifer should be saved in a local static variable. Memory for the per-architecture data shall be allocated using gdbarch_obstack_zalloc. That memory will be deleted when the corresponding architecture object is deleted. When a previously created architecture is re-selected, the per-architecture data-pointer for that previous architecture is restored. INIT() is not re-called. Multiple registrarants for any architecture are allowed (and strongly encouraged). */ struct gdbarch_data; typedef void *(gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype) (struct obstack *obstack); extern struct gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data_register_pre_init (gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype *init); typedef void *(gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch); extern struct gdbarch_data *gdbarch_data_register_post_init (gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype *init); extern void deprecated_set_gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct gdbarch_data *data, void *pointer); extern void *gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct gdbarch_data *); /* Set the dynamic target-system-dependent parameters (architecture, byte-order, ...) using information found in the BFD. */ extern void set_gdbarch_from_file (bfd *); /* Initialize the current architecture to the "first" one we find on our list. */ extern void initialize_current_architecture (void); /* gdbarch trace variable */ extern unsigned int gdbarch_debug; extern void gdbarch_dump (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct ui_file *file); /* Return the number of cooked registers (raw + pseudo) for ARCH. */ static inline int gdbarch_num_cooked_regs (gdbarch *arch) { return gdbarch_num_regs (arch) + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (arch); } #endif EOF exec 1>&2 ../move-if-change new-gdbarch.h gdbarch.h rm -f new-gdbarch.h # # C file # exec > new-gdbarch.c copyright cat <name; } static const char * pstring (const char *string) { if (string == NULL) return "(null)"; return string; } static const char * pstring_ptr (char **string) { if (string == NULL || *string == NULL) return "(null)"; return *string; } /* Helper function to print a list of strings, represented as "const char *const *". The list is printed comma-separated. */ static const char * pstring_list (const char *const *list) { static char ret[100]; const char *const *p; size_t offset = 0; if (list == NULL) return "(null)"; ret[0] = '\0'; for (p = list; *p != NULL && offset < sizeof (ret); ++p) { size_t s = xsnprintf (ret + offset, sizeof (ret) - offset, "%s, ", *p); offset += 2 + s; } if (offset > 0) { gdb_assert (offset - 2 < sizeof (ret)); ret[offset - 2] = '\0'; } return ret; } EOF # gdbarch open the gdbarch object printf "\n" printf "/* Maintain the struct gdbarch object. */\n" printf "\n" printf "struct gdbarch\n" printf "{\n" printf " /* Has this architecture been fully initialized? */\n" printf " int initialized_p;\n" printf "\n" printf " /* An obstack bound to the lifetime of the architecture. */\n" printf " struct obstack *obstack;\n" printf "\n" printf " /* basic architectural information. */\n" function_list | while do_read do if class_is_info_p then printf " %s %s;\n" "$returntype" "$function" fi done printf "\n" printf " /* target specific vector. */\n" printf " struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep;\n" printf " gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *dump_tdep;\n" printf "\n" printf " /* per-architecture data-pointers. */\n" printf " unsigned nr_data;\n" printf " void **data;\n" printf "\n" cat <obstack = obstack; alloc_gdbarch_data (gdbarch); gdbarch->tdep = tdep; EOF printf "\n" function_list | while do_read do if class_is_info_p then printf " gdbarch->%s = info->%s;\n" "$function" "$function" fi done printf "\n" printf " /* Force the explicit initialization of these. */\n" function_list | while do_read do if class_is_function_p || class_is_variable_p then if [ -n "${predefault}" ] && [ "x${predefault}" != "x0" ] then printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$predefault" fi fi done cat <obstack; } /* See gdbarch.h. */ char * gdbarch_obstack_strdup (struct gdbarch *arch, const char *string) { return obstack_strdup (arch->obstack, string); } /* Free a gdbarch struct. This should never happen in normal operation --- once you've created a gdbarch, you keep it around. However, if an architecture's init function encounters an error building the structure, it may need to clean up a partially constructed gdbarch. */ void gdbarch_free (struct gdbarch *arch) { struct obstack *obstack; gdb_assert (arch != NULL); gdb_assert (!arch->initialized_p); obstack = arch->obstack; obstack_free (obstack, 0); /* Includes the ARCH. */ xfree (obstack); } EOF # verify a new architecture cat <byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN) log.puts ("\n\tbyte-order"); if (gdbarch->bfd_arch_info == NULL) log.puts ("\n\tbfd_arch_info"); /* Check those that need to be defined for the given multi-arch level. */ EOF function_list | while do_read do if class_is_function_p || class_is_variable_p then if [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ] then printf " /* Skip verify of %s, invalid_p == 0 */\n" "$function" elif class_is_predicate_p then printf " /* Skip verify of %s, has predicate. */\n" "$function" # FIXME: See do_read for potential simplification elif [ -n "${invalid_p}" ] && [ -n "${postdefault}" ] then printf " if (%s)\n" "$invalid_p" printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$postdefault" elif [ -n "${predefault}" ] && [ -n "${postdefault}" ] then printf " if (gdbarch->%s == %s)\n" "$function" "$predefault" printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$postdefault" elif [ -n "${postdefault}" ] then printf " if (gdbarch->%s == 0)\n" "$function" printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$postdefault" elif [ -n "${invalid_p}" ] then printf " if (%s)\n" "$invalid_p" printf " log.puts (\"\\\\n\\\\t%s\");\n" "$function" elif [ -n "${predefault}" ] then printf " if (gdbarch->%s == %s)\n" "$function" "$predefault" printf " log.puts (\"\\\\n\\\\t%s\");\n" "$function" fi fi done cat <\\\\n\",\n" "$function" printf " host_address_to_string (gdbarch->%s));\n" "$function" else # It is a variable case "${print}:${returntype}" in :CORE_ADDR ) fmt="%s" print="core_addr_to_string_nz (gdbarch->${function})" ;; :* ) fmt="%s" print="plongest (gdbarch->${function})" ;; * ) fmt="%s" ;; esac printf " fprintf_unfiltered (file,\n" printf " \"gdbarch_dump: %s = %s\\\\n\",\n" "$function" "$fmt" printf " %s);\n" "$print" fi done cat <dump_tdep != NULL) gdbarch->dump_tdep (gdbarch, file); } EOF # GET/SET printf "\n" cat <= 2) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_tdep called\\n"); return gdbarch->tdep; } EOF printf "\n" function_list | while do_read do if class_is_predicate_p then printf "\n" printf "int\n" printf "gdbarch_%s_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function" printf "{\n" printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n" printf " return %s;\n" "$predicate" printf "}\n" fi if class_is_function_p then printf "\n" printf "%s\n" "$returntype" if [ "x${formal}" = "xvoid" ] then printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function" else printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, %s)\n" "$function" "$formal" fi printf "{\n" printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n" printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch->%s != NULL);\n" "$function" if class_is_predicate_p && test -n "${predefault}" then # Allow a call to a function with a predicate. printf " /* Do not check predicate: %s, allow call. */\n" "$predicate" fi printf " if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)\n" printf " fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, \"gdbarch_%s called\\\\n\");\n" "$function" if [ "x${actual:-}" = "x-" ] || [ "x${actual:-}" = "x" ] then if class_is_multiarch_p then params="gdbarch" else params="" fi else if class_is_multiarch_p then params="gdbarch, ${actual}" else params="${actual}" fi fi if [ "x${returntype}" = "xvoid" ] then printf " gdbarch->%s (%s);\n" "$function" "$params" else printf " return gdbarch->%s (%s);\n" "$function" "$params" fi printf "}\n" printf "\n" printf "void\n" printf "set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,\n" "$function" printf " %s gdbarch_%s_ftype %s)\n" "$(echo "$function" | sed -e 's/./ /g')" "$function" "$function" printf "{\n" printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$function" printf "}\n" elif class_is_variable_p then printf "\n" printf "%s\n" "$returntype" printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function" printf "{\n" printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n" if [ "x${invalid_p}" = "x0" ] then printf " /* Skip verify of %s, invalid_p == 0 */\n" "$function" elif [ -n "${invalid_p}" ] then printf " /* Check variable is valid. */\n" printf " gdb_assert (!(%s));\n" "$invalid_p" elif [ -n "${predefault}" ] then printf " /* Check variable changed from pre-default. */\n" printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch->%s != %s);\n" "$function" "$predefault" fi printf " if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)\n" printf " fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, \"gdbarch_%s called\\\\n\");\n" "$function" printf " return gdbarch->%s;\n" "$function" printf "}\n" printf "\n" printf "void\n" printf "set_gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,\n" "$function" printf " %s %s %s)\n" "$(echo "$function" | sed -e 's/./ /g')" "$returntype" "$function" printf "{\n" printf " gdbarch->%s = %s;\n" "$function" "$function" printf "}\n" elif class_is_info_p then printf "\n" printf "%s\n" "$returntype" printf "gdbarch_%s (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)\n" "$function" printf "{\n" printf " gdb_assert (gdbarch != NULL);\n" printf " if (gdbarch_debug >= 2)\n" printf " fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, \"gdbarch_%s called\\\\n\");\n" "$function" printf " return gdbarch->%s;\n" "$function" printf "}\n" fi done # All the trailing guff cat <next); (*curr) = XNEW (struct gdbarch_data_registration); (*curr)->next = NULL; (*curr)->data = XNEW (struct gdbarch_data); (*curr)->data->index = gdbarch_data_registry.nr++; (*curr)->data->pre_init = pre_init; (*curr)->data->post_init = post_init; (*curr)->data->init_p = 1; return (*curr)->data; } struct gdbarch_data * gdbarch_data_register_pre_init (gdbarch_data_pre_init_ftype *pre_init) { return gdbarch_data_register (pre_init, NULL); } struct gdbarch_data * gdbarch_data_register_post_init (gdbarch_data_post_init_ftype *post_init) { return gdbarch_data_register (NULL, post_init); } /* Create/delete the gdbarch data vector. */ static void alloc_gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch) { gdb_assert (gdbarch->data == NULL); gdbarch->nr_data = gdbarch_data_registry.nr; gdbarch->data = GDBARCH_OBSTACK_CALLOC (gdbarch, gdbarch->nr_data, void *); } /* Initialize the current value of the specified per-architecture data-pointer. */ void deprecated_set_gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct gdbarch_data *data, void *pointer) { gdb_assert (data->index < gdbarch->nr_data); gdb_assert (gdbarch->data[data->index] == NULL); gdb_assert (data->pre_init == NULL); gdbarch->data[data->index] = pointer; } /* Return the current value of the specified per-architecture data-pointer. */ void * gdbarch_data (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, struct gdbarch_data *data) { gdb_assert (data->index < gdbarch->nr_data); if (gdbarch->data[data->index] == NULL) { /* The data-pointer isn't initialized, call init() to get a value. */ if (data->pre_init != NULL) /* Mid architecture creation: pass just the obstack, and not the entire architecture, as that way it isn't possible for pre-init code to refer to undefined architecture fields. */ gdbarch->data[data->index] = data->pre_init (gdbarch->obstack); else if (gdbarch->initialized_p && data->post_init != NULL) /* Post architecture creation: pass the entire architecture (as all fields are valid), but be careful to also detect recursive references. */ { gdb_assert (data->init_p); data->init_p = 0; gdbarch->data[data->index] = data->post_init (gdbarch); data->init_p = 1; } else /* The architecture initialization hasn't completed - punt - hope that the caller knows what they are doing. Once deprecated_set_gdbarch_data has been initialized, this can be changed to an internal error. */ return NULL; gdb_assert (gdbarch->data[data->index] != NULL); } return gdbarch->data[data->index]; } /* Keep a registry of the architectures known by GDB. */ struct gdbarch_registration { enum bfd_architecture bfd_architecture; gdbarch_init_ftype *init; gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *dump_tdep; struct gdbarch_list *arches; struct gdbarch_registration *next; }; static struct gdbarch_registration *gdbarch_registry = NULL; static void append_name (const char ***buf, int *nr, const char *name) { *buf = XRESIZEVEC (const char *, *buf, *nr + 1); (*buf)[*nr] = name; *nr += 1; } const char ** gdbarch_printable_names (void) { /* Accumulate a list of names based on the registed list of architectures. */ int nr_arches = 0; const char **arches = NULL; struct gdbarch_registration *rego; for (rego = gdbarch_registry; rego != NULL; rego = rego->next) { const struct bfd_arch_info *ap; ap = bfd_lookup_arch (rego->bfd_architecture, 0); if (ap == NULL) internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("gdbarch_architecture_names: multi-arch unknown")); do { append_name (&arches, &nr_arches, ap->printable_name); ap = ap->next; } while (ap != NULL); } append_name (&arches, &nr_arches, NULL); return arches; } void gdbarch_register (enum bfd_architecture bfd_architecture, gdbarch_init_ftype *init, gdbarch_dump_tdep_ftype *dump_tdep) { struct gdbarch_registration **curr; const struct bfd_arch_info *bfd_arch_info; /* Check that BFD recognizes this architecture */ bfd_arch_info = bfd_lookup_arch (bfd_architecture, 0); if (bfd_arch_info == NULL) { internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("gdbarch: Attempt to register " "unknown architecture (%d)"), bfd_architecture); } /* Check that we haven't seen this architecture before. */ for (curr = &gdbarch_registry; (*curr) != NULL; curr = &(*curr)->next) { if (bfd_architecture == (*curr)->bfd_architecture) internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("gdbarch: Duplicate registration " "of architecture (%s)"), bfd_arch_info->printable_name); } /* log it */ if (gdbarch_debug) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "register_gdbarch_init (%s, %s)\n", bfd_arch_info->printable_name, host_address_to_string (init)); /* Append it */ (*curr) = XNEW (struct gdbarch_registration); (*curr)->bfd_architecture = bfd_architecture; (*curr)->init = init; (*curr)->dump_tdep = dump_tdep; (*curr)->arches = NULL; (*curr)->next = NULL; } void register_gdbarch_init (enum bfd_architecture bfd_architecture, gdbarch_init_ftype *init) { gdbarch_register (bfd_architecture, init, NULL); } /* Look for an architecture using gdbarch_info. */ struct gdbarch_list * gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (struct gdbarch_list *arches, const struct gdbarch_info *info) { for (; arches != NULL; arches = arches->next) { if (info->bfd_arch_info != arches->gdbarch->bfd_arch_info) continue; if (info->byte_order != arches->gdbarch->byte_order) continue; if (info->osabi != arches->gdbarch->osabi) continue; if (info->target_desc != arches->gdbarch->target_desc) continue; return arches; } return NULL; } /* Find an architecture that matches the specified INFO. Create a new architecture if needed. Return that new architecture. */ struct gdbarch * gdbarch_find_by_info (struct gdbarch_info info) { struct gdbarch *new_gdbarch; struct gdbarch_registration *rego; /* Fill in missing parts of the INFO struct using a number of sources: "set ..."; INFOabfd supplied; and the global defaults. */ gdbarch_info_fill (&info); /* Must have found some sort of architecture. */ gdb_assert (info.bfd_arch_info != NULL); if (gdbarch_debug) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.bfd_arch_info %s\n", (info.bfd_arch_info != NULL ? info.bfd_arch_info->printable_name : "(null)")); fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.byte_order %d (%s)\n", info.byte_order, (info.byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG ? "big" : info.byte_order == BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE ? "little" : "default")); fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.osabi %d (%s)\n", info.osabi, gdbarch_osabi_name (info.osabi)); fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.abfd %s\n", host_address_to_string (info.abfd)); fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: info.tdep_info %s\n", host_address_to_string (info.tdep_info)); } /* Find the tdep code that knows about this architecture. */ for (rego = gdbarch_registry; rego != NULL; rego = rego->next) if (rego->bfd_architecture == info.bfd_arch_info->arch) break; if (rego == NULL) { if (gdbarch_debug) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: " "No matching architecture\n"); return 0; } /* Ask the tdep code for an architecture that matches "info". */ new_gdbarch = rego->init (info, rego->arches); /* Did the tdep code like it? No. Reject the change and revert to the old architecture. */ if (new_gdbarch == NULL) { if (gdbarch_debug) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: " "Target rejected architecture\n"); return NULL; } /* Is this a pre-existing architecture (as determined by already being initialized)? Move it to the front of the architecture list (keeping the list sorted Most Recently Used). */ if (new_gdbarch->initialized_p) { struct gdbarch_list **list; struct gdbarch_list *self; if (gdbarch_debug) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: " "Previous architecture %s (%s) selected\n", host_address_to_string (new_gdbarch), new_gdbarch->bfd_arch_info->printable_name); /* Find the existing arch in the list. */ for (list = ®o->arches; (*list) != NULL && (*list)->gdbarch != new_gdbarch; list = &(*list)->next); /* It had better be in the list of architectures. */ gdb_assert ((*list) != NULL && (*list)->gdbarch == new_gdbarch); /* Unlink SELF. */ self = (*list); (*list) = self->next; /* Insert SELF at the front. */ self->next = rego->arches; rego->arches = self; /* Return it. */ return new_gdbarch; } /* It's a new architecture. */ if (gdbarch_debug) fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stdlog, "gdbarch_find_by_info: " "New architecture %s (%s) selected\n", host_address_to_string (new_gdbarch), new_gdbarch->bfd_arch_info->printable_name); /* Insert the new architecture into the front of the architecture list (keep the list sorted Most Recently Used). */ { struct gdbarch_list *self = XNEW (struct gdbarch_list); self->next = rego->arches; self->gdbarch = new_gdbarch; rego->arches = self; } /* Check that the newly installed architecture is valid. Plug in any post init values. */ new_gdbarch->dump_tdep = rego->dump_tdep; verify_gdbarch (new_gdbarch); new_gdbarch->initialized_p = 1; if (gdbarch_debug) gdbarch_dump (new_gdbarch, gdb_stdlog); return new_gdbarch; } /* Make the specified architecture current. */ void set_target_gdbarch (struct gdbarch *new_gdbarch) { gdb_assert (new_gdbarch != NULL); gdb_assert (new_gdbarch->initialized_p); current_inferior ()->gdbarch = new_gdbarch; gdb::observers::architecture_changed.notify (new_gdbarch); registers_changed (); } /* Return the current inferior's arch. */ struct gdbarch * target_gdbarch (void) { return current_inferior ()->gdbarch; } void _initialize_gdbarch (); void _initialize_gdbarch () { add_setshow_zuinteger_cmd ("arch", class_maintenance, &gdbarch_debug, _("\\ Set architecture debugging."), _("\\ Show architecture debugging."), _("\\ When non-zero, architecture debugging is enabled."), NULL, show_gdbarch_debug, &setdebuglist, &showdebuglist); } EOF # close things off exec 1>&2 ../move-if-change new-gdbarch.c gdbarch.c rm -f new-gdbarch.c