qemu-e2k/include/exec/gdbstub.h
Richard Henderson 64c8c6a992 gdbstub: Adjust gdb_syscall_complete_cb declaration
Change 'ret' to uint64_t.  This resolves a FIXME in the
m68k and nios2 semihosting that we've lost data.
Change 'err' to int.  There is nothing target-specific
about the width of the errno value.

Reviewed-by: Luc Michel <lmichel@kalray.eu>
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.henderson@linaro.org>
2022-06-28 04:35:52 +05:30

253 lines
7.7 KiB
C

#ifndef GDBSTUB_H
#define GDBSTUB_H
#define DEFAULT_GDBSTUB_PORT "1234"
/* GDB breakpoint/watchpoint types */
#define GDB_BREAKPOINT_SW 0
#define GDB_BREAKPOINT_HW 1
#define GDB_WATCHPOINT_WRITE 2
#define GDB_WATCHPOINT_READ 3
#define GDB_WATCHPOINT_ACCESS 4
/* For gdb file i/o remote protocol open flags. */
#define GDB_O_RDONLY 0
#define GDB_O_WRONLY 1
#define GDB_O_RDWR 2
#define GDB_O_APPEND 8
#define GDB_O_CREAT 0x200
#define GDB_O_TRUNC 0x400
#define GDB_O_EXCL 0x800
/* For gdb file i/o remote protocol errno values */
#define GDB_EPERM 1
#define GDB_ENOENT 2
#define GDB_EINTR 4
#define GDB_EBADF 9
#define GDB_EACCES 13
#define GDB_EFAULT 14
#define GDB_EBUSY 16
#define GDB_EEXIST 17
#define GDB_ENODEV 19
#define GDB_ENOTDIR 20
#define GDB_EISDIR 21
#define GDB_EINVAL 22
#define GDB_ENFILE 23
#define GDB_EMFILE 24
#define GDB_EFBIG 27
#define GDB_ENOSPC 28
#define GDB_ESPIPE 29
#define GDB_EROFS 30
#define GDB_ENAMETOOLONG 91
#define GDB_EUNKNOWN 9999
/* For gdb file i/o remote protocol lseek whence. */
#define GDB_SEEK_SET 0
#define GDB_SEEK_CUR 1
#define GDB_SEEK_END 2
/* For gdb file i/o stat/fstat. */
typedef uint32_t gdb_mode_t;
typedef uint32_t gdb_time_t;
struct gdb_stat {
uint32_t gdb_st_dev; /* device */
uint32_t gdb_st_ino; /* inode */
gdb_mode_t gdb_st_mode; /* protection */
uint32_t gdb_st_nlink; /* number of hard links */
uint32_t gdb_st_uid; /* user ID of owner */
uint32_t gdb_st_gid; /* group ID of owner */
uint32_t gdb_st_rdev; /* device type (if inode device) */
uint64_t gdb_st_size; /* total size, in bytes */
uint64_t gdb_st_blksize; /* blocksize for filesystem I/O */
uint64_t gdb_st_blocks; /* number of blocks allocated */
gdb_time_t gdb_st_atime; /* time of last access */
gdb_time_t gdb_st_mtime; /* time of last modification */
gdb_time_t gdb_st_ctime; /* time of last change */
} QEMU_PACKED;
struct gdb_timeval {
gdb_time_t tv_sec; /* second */
uint64_t tv_usec; /* microsecond */
} QEMU_PACKED;
#ifdef NEED_CPU_H
#include "cpu.h"
typedef void (*gdb_syscall_complete_cb)(CPUState *cpu, uint64_t ret, int err);
/**
* gdb_do_syscall:
* @cb: function to call when the system call has completed
* @fmt: gdb syscall format string
* ...: list of arguments to interpolate into @fmt
*
* Send a GDB syscall request. This function will return immediately;
* the callback function will be called later when the remote system
* call has completed.
*
* @fmt should be in the 'call-id,parameter,parameter...' format documented
* for the F request packet in the GDB remote protocol. A limited set of
* printf-style format specifiers is supported:
* %x - target_ulong argument printed in hex
* %lx - 64-bit argument printed in hex
* %s - string pointer (target_ulong) and length (int) pair
*/
void gdb_do_syscall(gdb_syscall_complete_cb cb, const char *fmt, ...);
/**
* gdb_do_syscallv:
* @cb: function to call when the system call has completed
* @fmt: gdb syscall format string
* @va: arguments to interpolate into @fmt
*
* As gdb_do_syscall, but taking a va_list rather than a variable
* argument list.
*/
void gdb_do_syscallv(gdb_syscall_complete_cb cb, const char *fmt, va_list va);
int use_gdb_syscalls(void);
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY
/**
* gdb_handlesig: yield control to gdb
* @cpu: CPU
* @sig: if non-zero, the signal number which caused us to stop
*
* This function yields control to gdb, when a user-mode-only target
* needs to stop execution. If @sig is non-zero, then we will send a
* stop packet to tell gdb that we have stopped because of this signal.
*
* This function will block (handling protocol requests from gdb)
* until gdb tells us to continue target execution. When it does
* return, the return value is a signal to deliver to the target,
* or 0 if no signal should be delivered, ie the signal that caused
* us to stop should be ignored.
*/
int gdb_handlesig(CPUState *, int);
void gdb_signalled(CPUArchState *, int);
void gdbserver_fork(CPUState *);
#endif
/* Get or set a register. Returns the size of the register. */
typedef int (*gdb_get_reg_cb)(CPUArchState *env, GByteArray *buf, int reg);
typedef int (*gdb_set_reg_cb)(CPUArchState *env, uint8_t *buf, int reg);
void gdb_register_coprocessor(CPUState *cpu,
gdb_get_reg_cb get_reg, gdb_set_reg_cb set_reg,
int num_regs, const char *xml, int g_pos);
/*
* The GDB remote protocol transfers values in target byte order. As
* the gdbstub may be batching up several register values we always
* append to the array.
*/
static inline int gdb_get_reg8(GByteArray *buf, uint8_t val)
{
g_byte_array_append(buf, &val, 1);
return 1;
}
static inline int gdb_get_reg16(GByteArray *buf, uint16_t val)
{
uint16_t to_word = tswap16(val);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_word, 2);
return 2;
}
static inline int gdb_get_reg32(GByteArray *buf, uint32_t val)
{
uint32_t to_long = tswap32(val);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_long, 4);
return 4;
}
static inline int gdb_get_reg64(GByteArray *buf, uint64_t val)
{
uint64_t to_quad = tswap64(val);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_quad, 8);
return 8;
}
static inline int gdb_get_reg128(GByteArray *buf, uint64_t val_hi,
uint64_t val_lo)
{
uint64_t to_quad;
#if TARGET_BIG_ENDIAN
to_quad = tswap64(val_hi);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_quad, 8);
to_quad = tswap64(val_lo);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_quad, 8);
#else
to_quad = tswap64(val_lo);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_quad, 8);
to_quad = tswap64(val_hi);
g_byte_array_append(buf, (uint8_t *) &to_quad, 8);
#endif
return 16;
}
static inline int gdb_get_zeroes(GByteArray *array, size_t len)
{
guint oldlen = array->len;
g_byte_array_set_size(array, oldlen + len);
memset(array->data + oldlen, 0, len);
return len;
}
/**
* gdb_get_reg_ptr: get pointer to start of last element
* @len: length of element
*
* This is a helper function to extract the pointer to the last
* element for additional processing. Some front-ends do additional
* dynamic swapping of the elements based on CPU state.
*/
static inline uint8_t * gdb_get_reg_ptr(GByteArray *buf, int len)
{
return buf->data + buf->len - len;
}
#if TARGET_LONG_BITS == 64
#define gdb_get_regl(buf, val) gdb_get_reg64(buf, val)
#define ldtul_p(addr) ldq_p(addr)
#else
#define gdb_get_regl(buf, val) gdb_get_reg32(buf, val)
#define ldtul_p(addr) ldl_p(addr)
#endif
#endif /* NEED_CPU_H */
/**
* gdbserver_start: start the gdb server
* @port_or_device: connection spec for gdb
*
* For CONFIG_USER this is either a tcp port or a path to a fifo. For
* system emulation you can use a full chardev spec for your gdbserver
* port.
*/
int gdbserver_start(const char *port_or_device);
/**
* gdb_exit: exit gdb session, reporting inferior status
* @code: exit code reported
*
* This closes the session and sends a final packet to GDB reporting
* the exit status of the program. It also cleans up any connections
* detritus before returning.
*/
void gdb_exit(int code);
void gdb_set_stop_cpu(CPUState *cpu);
/**
* gdb_has_xml:
* This is an ugly hack to cope with both new and old gdb.
* If gdb sends qXfer:features:read then assume we're talking to a newish
* gdb that understands target descriptions.
*/
extern bool gdb_has_xml;
/* in gdbstub-xml.c, generated by scripts/feature_to_c.sh */
extern const char *const xml_builtin[][2];
#endif