/* * arm thread support * * Copyright (c) 2013 Stacey D. Son * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program; if not, see . */ #ifndef TARGET_ARCH_THREAD_H #define TARGET_ARCH_THREAD_H /* Compare to arm/arm/vm_machdep.c cpu_set_upcall_kse() */ static inline void target_thread_set_upcall(CPUARMState *env, abi_ulong entry, abi_ulong arg, abi_ulong stack_base, abi_ulong stack_size) { abi_ulong sp; /* * Make sure the stack is properly aligned. * arm/include/param.h (STACKLIGN() macro) */ sp = (u_int)(stack_base + stack_size) & ~0x7; /* sp = stack base */ env->regs[13] = sp; /* pc = start function entry */ env->regs[15] = entry & 0xfffffffe; /* r0 = arg */ env->regs[0] = arg; env->spsr = ARM_CPU_MODE_USR; /* * Thumb mode is encoded by the low bit in the entry point (since ARM can't * execute at odd addresses). When it's set, set the Thumb bit (T) in the * CPSR. */ cpsr_write(env, (entry & 1) * CPSR_T, CPSR_T, CPSRWriteByInstr); } static inline void target_thread_init(struct target_pt_regs *regs, struct image_info *infop) { abi_long stack = infop->start_stack; memset(regs, 0, sizeof(*regs)); regs->ARM_cpsr = ARM_CPU_MODE_USR; /* * Thumb mode is encoded by the low bit in the entry point (since ARM can't * execute at odd addresses). When it's set, set the Thumb bit (T) in the * CPSR. */ if (infop->entry & 1) { regs->ARM_cpsr |= CPSR_T; } regs->ARM_pc = infop->entry & 0xfffffffe; regs->ARM_sp = stack; regs->ARM_lr = infop->entry & 0xfffffffe; /* * FreeBSD kernel passes the ps_strings pointer in r0. This is used by some * programs to set status messages that we see in ps. bsd-user doesn't * support that functionality, so it's ignored. When set to 0, FreeBSD's csu * code ignores it. For the static case, r1 and r2 are effectively ignored * by the csu __startup() routine. For the dynamic case, rtld saves r0 but * generates r1 and r2 and passes them into the csu _startup. * * r0 ps_strings 0 passed since ps arg setting not supported * r1 obj_main ignored by _start(), so 0 passed * r2 cleanup generated by rtld or ignored by _start(), so 0 passed */ } #endif /* TARGET_ARCH_THREAD_H */