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-rw-r--r--gdb/mem-break.c47
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 45 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/mem-break.c b/gdb/mem-break.c
index 9cf638e4c62..96750c8b8f6 100644
--- a/gdb/mem-break.c
+++ b/gdb/mem-break.c
@@ -24,7 +24,8 @@
#include "defs.h"
-/* This file is only useful if BREAKPOINT is set. If not, we punt. */
+/* This file is only useful if BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC is set. If not, we
+ punt. */
#include "symtab.h"
#include "breakpoint.h"
@@ -32,50 +33,6 @@
#include "target.h"
-/* Use the program counter to determine the contents and size
- of a breakpoint instruction. If no target-dependent macro
- BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC has been defined to implement this function,
- assume that the breakpoint doesn't depend on the PC, and
- use the values of the BIG_BREAKPOINT and LITTLE_BREAKPOINT macros.
- Return a pointer to a string of bytes that encode a breakpoint
- instruction, stores the length of the string to *lenptr,
- and optionally adjust the pc to point to the correct memory location
- for inserting the breakpoint. */
-
-const unsigned char *
-memory_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR *pcptr, int *lenptr)
-{
- /* {BIG_,LITTLE_}BREAKPOINT is the sequence of bytes we insert for a
- breakpoint. On some machines, breakpoints are handled by the
- target environment and we don't have to worry about them here. */
-#ifdef BIG_BREAKPOINT
- if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
- {
- static unsigned char big_break_insn[] = BIG_BREAKPOINT;
- *lenptr = sizeof (big_break_insn);
- return big_break_insn;
- }
-#endif
-#ifdef LITTLE_BREAKPOINT
- if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER != BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
- {
- static unsigned char little_break_insn[] = LITTLE_BREAKPOINT;
- *lenptr = sizeof (little_break_insn);
- return little_break_insn;
- }
-#endif
-#ifdef BREAKPOINT
- {
- static unsigned char break_insn[] = BREAKPOINT;
- *lenptr = sizeof (break_insn);
- return break_insn;
- }
-#endif
- *lenptr = 0;
- return NULL;
-}
-
-
/* Insert a breakpoint on targets that don't have any better breakpoint
support. We read the contents of the target location and stash it,
then overwrite it with a breakpoint instruction. ADDR is the target