/* Target-dependent code for GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright 2001, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Contributed by D.J. Barrow (djbarrow@de.ibm.com,barrow_dj@yahoo.com) for IBM Deutschland Entwicklung GmbH, IBM Corporation. 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 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, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #define S390_TDEP /* for special macros in tm-s390.h */ #include #include "arch-utils.h" #include "frame.h" #include "inferior.h" #include "symtab.h" #include "target.h" #include "gdbcore.h" #include "gdbcmd.h" #include "symfile.h" #include "objfiles.h" #include "tm.h" #include "../bfd/bfd.h" #include "floatformat.h" #include "regcache.h" #include "value.h" #include "gdb_assert.h" #include "dis-asm.h" /* Number of bytes of storage in the actual machine representation for register N. */ static int s390_register_raw_size (int reg_nr) { if (S390_FP0_REGNUM <= reg_nr && reg_nr < S390_FP0_REGNUM + S390_NUM_FPRS) return S390_FPR_SIZE; else return 4; } static int s390x_register_raw_size (int reg_nr) { return (reg_nr == S390_FPC_REGNUM) || (reg_nr >= S390_FIRST_ACR && reg_nr <= S390_LAST_ACR) ? 4 : 8; } static int s390_cannot_fetch_register (int regno) { return (regno >= S390_FIRST_CR && regno < (S390_FIRST_CR + 9)) || (regno >= (S390_FIRST_CR + 12) && regno <= S390_LAST_CR); } static int s390_register_byte (int reg_nr) { if (reg_nr <= S390_GP_LAST_REGNUM) return reg_nr * S390_GPR_SIZE; if (reg_nr <= S390_LAST_ACR) return S390_ACR0_OFFSET + (((reg_nr) - S390_FIRST_ACR) * S390_ACR_SIZE); if (reg_nr <= S390_LAST_CR) return S390_CR0_OFFSET + (((reg_nr) - S390_FIRST_CR) * S390_CR_SIZE); if (reg_nr == S390_FPC_REGNUM) return S390_FPC_OFFSET; else return S390_FP0_OFFSET + (((reg_nr) - S390_FP0_REGNUM) * S390_FPR_SIZE); } #define S390_MAX_INSTR_SIZE (6) #define S390_SYSCALL_OPCODE (0x0a) #define S390_SYSCALL_SIZE (2) #define S390_SIGCONTEXT_SREGS_OFFSET (8) #define S390X_SIGCONTEXT_SREGS_OFFSET (8) #define S390_SIGREGS_FP0_OFFSET (144) #define S390X_SIGREGS_FP0_OFFSET (216) #define S390_UC_MCONTEXT_OFFSET (256) #define S390X_UC_MCONTEXT_OFFSET (344) #define S390_STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD 16*DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE+32 #define S390_STACK_PARAMETER_ALIGNMENT DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE #define S390_NUM_FP_PARAMETER_REGISTERS (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? 4:2) #define S390_SIGNAL_FRAMESIZE (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? 160:96) #define s390_NR_sigreturn 119 #define s390_NR_rt_sigreturn 173 struct frame_extra_info { int initialised; int good_prologue; CORE_ADDR function_start; CORE_ADDR skip_prologue_function_start; CORE_ADDR saved_pc_valid; CORE_ADDR saved_pc; CORE_ADDR sig_fixed_saved_pc_valid; CORE_ADDR sig_fixed_saved_pc; CORE_ADDR frame_pointer_saved_pc; /* frame pointer needed for alloca */ CORE_ADDR stack_bought_valid; CORE_ADDR stack_bought; /* amount we decrement the stack pointer by */ CORE_ADDR sigcontext; }; static CORE_ADDR s390_frame_saved_pc_nofix (struct frame_info *fi); static int s390_readinstruction (bfd_byte instr[], CORE_ADDR at) { int instrlen; static int s390_instrlen[] = { 2, 4, 4, 6 }; if (target_read_memory (at, &instr[0], 2)) return -1; instrlen = s390_instrlen[instr[0] >> 6]; if (instrlen > 2) { if (target_read_memory (at + 2, &instr[2], instrlen - 2)) return -1; } return instrlen; } static void s390_memset_extra_info (struct frame_extra_info *fextra_info) { memset (fextra_info, 0, sizeof (struct frame_extra_info)); } static const char * s390_register_name (int reg_nr) { static char *register_names[] = { "pswm", "pswa", "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5", "r6", "r7", "r8", "r9", "r10", "r11", "r12", "r13", "r14", "r15", "acr0", "acr1", "acr2", "acr3", "acr4", "acr5", "acr6", "acr7", "acr8", "acr9", "acr10", "acr11", "acr12", "acr13", "acr14", "acr15", "cr0", "cr1", "cr2", "cr3", "cr4", "cr5", "cr6", "cr7", "cr8", "cr9", "cr10", "cr11", "cr12", "cr13", "cr14", "cr15", "fpc", "f0", "f1", "f2", "f3", "f4", "f5", "f6", "f7", "f8", "f9", "f10", "f11", "f12", "f13", "f14", "f15" }; if (reg_nr <= S390_LAST_REGNUM) return register_names[reg_nr]; else return NULL; } static int s390_stab_reg_to_regnum (int regno) { return regno >= 64 ? S390_PSWM_REGNUM - 64 : regno >= 48 ? S390_FIRST_ACR - 48 : regno >= 32 ? S390_FIRST_CR - 32 : regno <= 15 ? (regno + 2) : S390_FP0_REGNUM + ((regno - 16) & 8) + (((regno - 16) & 3) << 1) + (((regno - 16) & 4) >> 2); } /* Prologue analysis. */ /* When we analyze a prologue, we're really doing 'abstract interpretation' or 'pseudo-evaluation': running the function's code in simulation, but using conservative approximations of the values it would have when it actually runs. For example, if our function starts with the instruction: ahi r1, 42 # add halfword immediate 42 to r1 we don't know exactly what value will be in r1 after executing this instruction, but we do know it'll be 42 greater than its original value. If we then see an instruction like: ahi r1, 22 # add halfword immediate 22 to r1 we still don't know what r1's value is, but again, we can say it is now 64 greater than its original value. If the next instruction were: lr r2, r1 # set r2 to r1's value then we can say that r2's value is now the original value of r1 plus 64. And so on. Of course, this can only go so far before it gets unreasonable. If we wanted to be able to say anything about the value of r1 after the instruction: xr r1, r3 # exclusive-or r1 and r3, place result in r1 then things would get pretty complex. But remember, we're just doing a conservative approximation; if exclusive-or instructions aren't relevant to prologues, we can just say r1's value is now 'unknown'. We can ignore things that are too complex, if that loss of information is acceptable for our application. Once you've reached an instruction that you don't know how to simulate, you stop. Now you examine the state of the registers and stack slots you've kept track of. For example: - To see how large your stack frame is, just check the value of sp; if it's the original value of sp minus a constant, then that constant is the stack frame's size. If the sp's value has been marked as 'unknown', then that means the prologue has done something too complex for us to track, and we don't know the frame size. - To see whether we've saved the SP in the current frame's back chain slot, we just check whether the current value of the back chain stack slot is the original value of the sp. Sure, this takes some work. But prologue analyzers aren't quick-and-simple pattern patching to recognize a few fixed prologue forms any more; they're big, hairy functions. Along with inferior function calls, prologue analysis accounts for a substantial portion of the time needed to stabilize a GDB port. So I think it's worthwhile to look for an approach that will be easier to understand and maintain. In the approach used here: - It's easier to see that the analyzer is correct: you just see whether the analyzer properly (albiet conservatively) simulates the effect of each instruction. - It's easier to extend the analyzer: you can add support for new instructions, and know that you haven't broken anything that wasn't already broken before. - It's orthogonal: to gather new information, you don't need to complicate the code for each instruction. As long as your domain of conservative values is already detailed enough to tell you what you need, then all the existing instruction simulations are already gathering the right data for you. A 'struct prologue_value' is a conservative approximation of the real value the register or stack slot will have. */ struct prologue_value { /* What sort of value is this? This determines the interpretation of subsequent fields. */ enum { /* We don't know anything about the value. This is also used for values we could have kept track of, when doing so would have been too complex and we don't want to bother. The bottom of our lattice. */ pv_unknown, /* A known constant. K is its value. */ pv_constant, /* The value that register REG originally had *UPON ENTRY TO THE FUNCTION*, plus K. If K is zero, this means, obviously, just the value REG had upon entry to the function. REG is a GDB register number. Before we start interpreting, we initialize every register R to { pv_register, R, 0 }. */ pv_register, } kind; /* The meanings of the following fields depend on 'kind'; see the comments for the specific 'kind' values. */ int reg; CORE_ADDR k; }; /* Set V to be unknown. */ static void pv_set_to_unknown (struct prologue_value *v) { v->kind = pv_unknown; } /* Set V to the constant K. */ static void pv_set_to_constant (struct prologue_value *v, CORE_ADDR k) { v->kind = pv_constant; v->k = k; } /* Set V to the original value of register REG, plus K. */ static void pv_set_to_register (struct prologue_value *v, int reg, CORE_ADDR k) { v->kind = pv_register; v->reg = reg; v->k = k; } /* If one of *A and *B is a constant, and the other isn't, swap the pointers as necessary to ensure that *B points to the constant. This can reduce the number of cases we need to analyze in the functions below. */ static void pv_constant_last (struct prologue_value **a, struct prologue_value **b) { if ((*a)->kind == pv_constant && (*b)->kind != pv_constant) { struct prologue_value *temp = *a; *a = *b; *b = temp; } } /* Set SUM to the sum of A and B. SUM, A, and B may point to the same 'struct prologue_value' object. */ static void pv_add (struct prologue_value *sum, struct prologue_value *a, struct prologue_value *b) { pv_constant_last (&a, &b); /* We can handle adding constants to registers, and other constants. */ if (b->kind == pv_constant && (a->kind == pv_register || a->kind == pv_constant)) { sum->kind = a->kind; sum->reg = a->reg; /* not meaningful if a is pv_constant, but harmless */ sum->k = a->k + b->k; } /* Anything else we don't know how to add. We don't have a representation for, say, the sum of two registers, or a multiple of a register's value (adding a register to itself). */ else sum->kind = pv_unknown; } /* Add the constant K to V. */ static void pv_add_constant (struct prologue_value *v, CORE_ADDR k) { struct prologue_value pv_k; /* Rather than thinking of all the cases we can and can't handle, we'll just let pv_add take care of that for us. */ pv_set_to_constant (&pv_k, k); pv_add (v, v, &pv_k); } /* Subtract B from A, and put the result in DIFF. This isn't quite the same as negating B and adding it to A, since we don't have a representation for the negation of anything but a constant. For example, we can't negate { pv_register, R1, 10 }, but we do know that { pv_register, R1, 10 } minus { pv_register, R1, 5 } is { pv_constant, , 5 }. This means, for example, that we can subtract two stack addresses; they're both relative to the original SP. Since the frame pointer is set based on the SP, its value will be the original SP plus some constant (probably zero), so we can use its value just fine. */ static void pv_subtract (struct prologue_value *diff, struct prologue_value *a, struct prologue_value *b) { pv_constant_last (&a, &b); /* We can subtract a constant from another constant, or from a register. */ if (b->kind == pv_constant && (a->kind == pv_register || a->kind == pv_constant)) { diff->kind = a->kind; diff->reg = a->reg; /* not always meaningful, but harmless */ diff->k = a->k - b->k; } /* We can subtract a register from itself, yielding a constant. */ else if (a->kind == pv_register && b->kind == pv_register && a->reg == b->reg) { diff->kind = pv_constant; diff->k = a->k - b->k; } /* We don't know how to subtract anything else. */ else diff->kind = pv_unknown; } /* Set AND to the logical and of A and B. */ static void pv_logical_and (struct prologue_value *and, struct prologue_value *a, struct prologue_value *b) { pv_constant_last (&a, &b); /* We can 'and' two constants. */ if (a->kind == pv_constant && b->kind == pv_constant) { and->kind = pv_constant; and->k = a->k & b->k; } /* We can 'and' anything with the constant zero. */ else if (b->kind == pv_constant && b->k == 0) { and->kind = pv_constant; and->k = 0; } /* We can 'and' anything with ~0. */ else if (b->kind == pv_constant && b->k == ~ (CORE_ADDR) 0) *and = *a; /* We can 'and' a register with itself. */ else if (a->kind == pv_register && b->kind == pv_register && a->reg == b->reg && a->k == b->k) *and = *a; /* Otherwise, we don't know. */ else pv_set_to_unknown (and); } /* Return non-zero iff A and B are identical expressions. This is not the same as asking if the two values are equal; the result of such a comparison would have to be a pv_boolean, and asking whether two 'unknown' values were equal would give you pv_maybe. Same for comparing, say, { pv_register, R1, 0 } and { pv_register, R2, 0}. Instead, this is asking whether the two representations are the same. */ static int pv_is_identical (struct prologue_value *a, struct prologue_value *b) { if (a->kind != b->kind) return 0; switch (a->kind) { case pv_unknown: return 1; case pv_constant: return (a->k == b->k); case pv_register: return (a->reg == b->reg && a->k == b->k); default: gdb_assert (0); } } /* Return non-zero if A is the original value of register number R plus K, zero otherwise. */ static int pv_is_register (struct prologue_value *a, int r, CORE_ADDR k) { return (a->kind == pv_register && a->reg == r && a->k == k); } /* A prologue-value-esque boolean type, including "maybe", when we can't figure out whether something is true or not. */ enum pv_boolean { pv_maybe, pv_definite_yes, pv_definite_no, }; /* Decide whether a reference to SIZE bytes at ADDR refers exactly to an element of an array. The array starts at ARRAY_ADDR, and has ARRAY_LEN values of ELT_SIZE bytes each. If ADDR definitely does refer to an array element, set *I to the index of the referenced element in the array, and return pv_definite_yes. If it definitely doesn't, return pv_definite_no. If we can't tell, return pv_maybe. If the reference does touch the array, but doesn't fall exactly on an element boundary, or doesn't refer to the whole element, return pv_maybe. */ static enum pv_boolean pv_is_array_ref (struct prologue_value *addr, CORE_ADDR size, struct prologue_value *array_addr, CORE_ADDR array_len, CORE_ADDR elt_size, int *i) { struct prologue_value offset; /* Note that, since ->k is a CORE_ADDR, and CORE_ADDR is unsigned, if addr is *before* the start of the array, then this isn't going to be negative... */ pv_subtract (&offset, addr, array_addr); if (offset.kind == pv_constant) { /* This is a rather odd test. We want to know if the SIZE bytes at ADDR don't overlap the array at all, so you'd expect it to be an || expression: "if we're completely before || we're completely after". But with unsigned arithmetic, things are different: since it's a number circle, not a number line, the right values for offset.k are actually one contiguous range. */ if (offset.k <= -size && offset.k >= array_len * elt_size) return pv_definite_no; else if (offset.k % elt_size != 0 || size != elt_size) return pv_maybe; else { *i = offset.k / elt_size; return pv_definite_yes; } } else return pv_maybe; } /* Decoding S/390 instructions. */ /* Named opcode values for the S/390 instructions we recognize. Some instructions have their opcode split across two fields; those are the op1_* and op2_* enums. */ enum { op1_aghi = 0xa7, op2_aghi = 0xb, op1_ahi = 0xa7, op2_ahi = 0xa, op_ar = 0x1a, op_basr = 0x0d, op1_bras = 0xa7, op2_bras = 0x5, op_l = 0x58, op_la = 0x41, op1_larl = 0xc0, op2_larl = 0x0, op_lgr = 0xb904, op1_lghi = 0xa7, op2_lghi = 0x9, op1_lhi = 0xa7, op2_lhi = 0x8, op_lr = 0x18, op_nr = 0x14, op_ngr = 0xb980, op_s = 0x5b, op_st = 0x50, op_std = 0x60, op1_stg = 0xe3, op2_stg = 0x24, op_stm = 0x90, op1_stmg = 0xeb, op2_stmg = 0x24, op_svc = 0x0a, }; /* The functions below are for recognizing and decoding S/390 instructions of various formats. Each of them checks whether INSN is an instruction of the given format, with the specified opcodes. If it is, it sets the remaining arguments to the values of the instruction's fields, and returns a non-zero value; otherwise, it returns zero. These functions' arguments appear in the order they appear in the instruction, not in the machine-language form. So, opcodes always come first, even though they're sometimes scattered around the instructions. And displacements appear before base and extension registers, as they do in the assembly syntax, not at the end, as they do in the machine language. */ static int is_ri (bfd_byte *insn, int op1, int op2, unsigned int *r1, int *i2) { if (insn[0] == op1 && (insn[1] & 0xf) == op2) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; /* i2 is a 16-bit signed quantity. */ *i2 = (((insn[2] << 8) | insn[3]) ^ 0x8000) - 0x8000; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_ril (bfd_byte *insn, int op1, int op2, unsigned int *r1, int *i2) { if (insn[0] == op1 && (insn[1] & 0xf) == op2) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; /* i2 is a signed quantity. If the host 'int' is 32 bits long, no sign extension is necessary, but we don't want to assume that. */ *i2 = (((insn[2] << 24) | (insn[3] << 16) | (insn[4] << 8) | (insn[5])) ^ 0x80000000) - 0x80000000; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_rr (bfd_byte *insn, int op, unsigned int *r1, unsigned int *r2) { if (insn[0] == op) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; *r2 = insn[1] & 0xf; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_rre (bfd_byte *insn, int op, unsigned int *r1, unsigned int *r2) { if (((insn[0] << 8) | insn[1]) == op) { /* Yes, insn[3]. insn[2] is unused in RRE format. */ *r1 = (insn[3] >> 4) & 0xf; *r2 = insn[3] & 0xf; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_rs (bfd_byte *insn, int op, unsigned int *r1, unsigned int *r3, unsigned int *d2, unsigned int *b2) { if (insn[0] == op) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; *r3 = insn[1] & 0xf; *b2 = (insn[2] >> 4) & 0xf; *d2 = ((insn[2] & 0xf) << 8) | insn[3]; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_rse (bfd_byte *insn, int op1, int op2, unsigned int *r1, unsigned int *r3, unsigned int *d2, unsigned int *b2) { if (insn[0] == op1 /* Yes, insn[5]. insn[4] is unused. */ && insn[5] == op2) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; *r3 = insn[1] & 0xf; *b2 = (insn[2] >> 4) & 0xf; *d2 = ((insn[2] & 0xf) << 8) | insn[3]; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_rx (bfd_byte *insn, int op, unsigned int *r1, unsigned int *d2, unsigned int *x2, unsigned int *b2) { if (insn[0] == op) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; *x2 = insn[1] & 0xf; *b2 = (insn[2] >> 4) & 0xf; *d2 = ((insn[2] & 0xf) << 8) | insn[3]; return 1; } else return 0; } static int is_rxe (bfd_byte *insn, int op1, int op2, unsigned int *r1, unsigned int *d2, unsigned int *x2, unsigned int *b2) { if (insn[0] == op1 /* Yes, insn[5]. insn[4] is unused. */ && insn[5] == op2) { *r1 = (insn[1] >> 4) & 0xf; *x2 = insn[1] & 0xf; *b2 = (insn[2] >> 4) & 0xf; *d2 = ((insn[2] & 0xf) << 8) | insn[3]; return 1; } else return 0; } /* Set ADDR to the effective address for an X-style instruction, like: L R1, D2(X2, B2) Here, X2 and B2 are registers, and D2 is an unsigned 12-bit constant; the effective address is the sum of all three. If either X2 or B2 are zero, then it doesn't contribute to the sum --- this means that r0 can't be used as either X2 or B2. GPR is an array of general register values, indexed by GPR number, not GDB register number. */ static void compute_x_addr (struct prologue_value *addr, struct prologue_value *gpr, unsigned int d2, unsigned int x2, unsigned int b2) { /* We can't just add stuff directly in addr; it might alias some of the registers we need to read. */ struct prologue_value result; pv_set_to_constant (&result, d2); if (x2) pv_add (&result, &result, &gpr[x2]); if (b2) pv_add (&result, &result, &gpr[b2]); *addr = result; } /* The number of GPR and FPR spill slots in an S/390 stack frame. We track general-purpose registers r2 -- r15, and floating-point registers f0, f2, f4, and f6. */ #define S390_NUM_SPILL_SLOTS (14 + 4) /* If the SIZE bytes at ADDR are a stack slot we're actually tracking, return pv_definite_yes and set *STACK to point to the slot. If we're sure that they are not any of our stack slots, then return pv_definite_no. Otherwise, return pv_maybe. - GPR is an array indexed by GPR number giving the current values of the general-purpose registers. - SPILL is an array tracking the spill area of the caller's frame; SPILL[i] is the i'th spill slot. The spill slots are designated for r2 -- r15, and then f0, f2, f4, and f6. - BACK_CHAIN is the value of the back chain slot; it's only valid when the current frame actually has some space for a back chain slot --- that is, when the current value of the stack pointer (according to GPR) is at least S390_STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD bytes less than its original value. */ static enum pv_boolean s390_on_stack (struct prologue_value *addr, CORE_ADDR size, struct prologue_value *gpr, struct prologue_value *spill, struct prologue_value *back_chain, struct prologue_value **stack) { struct prologue_value gpr_spill_addr; struct prologue_value fpr_spill_addr; struct prologue_value back_chain_addr; int i; enum pv_boolean b; /* Construct the addresses of the spill arrays and the back chain. */ pv_set_to_register (&gpr_spill_addr, S390_SP_REGNUM, 2 * S390_GPR_SIZE); pv_set_to_register (&fpr_spill_addr, S390_SP_REGNUM, 16 * S390_GPR_SIZE); back_chain_addr = gpr[S390_SP_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; /* We have to check for GPR and FPR references using two separate calls to pv_is_array_ref, since the GPR and FPR spill slots are different sizes. (SPILL is an array, but the thing it tracks isn't really an array.) */ /* Was it a reference to the GPR spill array? */ b = pv_is_array_ref (addr, size, &gpr_spill_addr, 14, S390_GPR_SIZE, &i); if (b == pv_definite_yes) { *stack = &spill[i]; return pv_definite_yes; } if (b == pv_maybe) return pv_maybe; /* Was it a reference to the FPR spill array? */ b = pv_is_array_ref (addr, size, &fpr_spill_addr, 4, S390_FPR_SIZE, &i); if (b == pv_definite_yes) { *stack = &spill[14 + i]; return pv_definite_yes; } if (b == pv_maybe) return pv_maybe; /* Was it a reference to the back chain? This isn't quite right. We ought to check whether we have actually allocated any new frame at all. */ b = pv_is_array_ref (addr, size, &back_chain_addr, 1, S390_GPR_SIZE, &i); if (b == pv_definite_yes) { *stack = back_chain; return pv_definite_yes; } if (b == pv_maybe) return pv_maybe; /* All the above queries returned definite 'no's. */ return pv_definite_no; } /* Do a SIZE-byte store of VALUE to ADDR. GPR, SPILL, and BACK_CHAIN, and the return value are as described for s390_on_stack, above. Note that, when this returns pv_maybe, we have to assume that all of our memory now contains unknown values. */ static enum pv_boolean s390_store (struct prologue_value *addr, CORE_ADDR size, struct prologue_value *value, struct prologue_value *gpr, struct prologue_value *spill, struct prologue_value *back_chain) { struct prologue_value *stack; enum pv_boolean on_stack = s390_on_stack (addr, size, gpr, spill, back_chain, &stack); if (on_stack == pv_definite_yes) *stack = *value; return on_stack; } /* The current frame looks like a signal delivery frame: the first instruction is an 'svc' opcode. If the next frame is a signal handler's frame, set FI's saved register map to point into the signal context structure. */ static void s390_get_signal_frame_info (struct frame_info *fi) { struct frame_info *next_frame = get_next_frame (fi); if (next_frame && get_frame_extra_info (next_frame) && get_frame_extra_info (next_frame)->sigcontext) { /* We're definitely backtracing from a signal handler. */ CORE_ADDR *saved_regs = get_frame_saved_regs (fi); CORE_ADDR save_reg_addr = (get_frame_extra_info (next_frame)->sigcontext + REGISTER_BYTE (S390_GP0_REGNUM)); int reg; for (reg = 0; reg < S390_NUM_GPRS; reg++) { saved_regs[S390_GP0_REGNUM + reg] = save_reg_addr; save_reg_addr += S390_GPR_SIZE; } save_reg_addr = (get_frame_extra_info (next_frame)->sigcontext + (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? S390X_SIGREGS_FP0_OFFSET : S390_SIGREGS_FP0_OFFSET)); for (reg = 0; reg < S390_NUM_FPRS; reg++) { saved_regs[S390_FP0_REGNUM + reg] = save_reg_addr; save_reg_addr += S390_FPR_SIZE; } } } static int s390_get_frame_info (CORE_ADDR start_pc, struct frame_extra_info *fextra_info, struct frame_info *fi, int init_extra_info) { /* Our return value: zero if we were able to read all the instructions we wanted, or -1 if we got an error trying to read memory. */ int result = 0; /* The current PC for our abstract interpretation. */ CORE_ADDR pc; /* The address of the next instruction after that. */ CORE_ADDR next_pc; /* The general-purpose registers. */ struct prologue_value gpr[S390_NUM_GPRS]; /* The floating-point registers. */ struct prologue_value fpr[S390_NUM_FPRS]; /* The register spill stack slots in the caller's frame --- general-purpose registers r2 through r15, and floating-point registers. spill[i] is where gpr i+2 gets spilled; spill[(14, 15, 16, 17)] is where (f0, f2, f4, f6) get spilled. */ struct prologue_value spill[S390_NUM_SPILL_SLOTS]; /* The value of the back chain slot. This is only valid if the stack pointer is known to be less than its original value --- that is, if we have indeed allocated space on the stack. */ struct prologue_value back_chain; /* The address of the instruction after the last one that changed the SP, FP, or back chain. */ CORE_ADDR after_last_frame_setup_insn = start_pc; /* Set up everything's initial value. */ { int i; for (i = 0; i < S390_NUM_GPRS; i++) pv_set_to_register (&gpr[i], S390_GP0_REGNUM + i, 0); for (i = 0; i < S390_NUM_FPRS; i++) pv_set_to_register (&fpr[i], S390_FP0_REGNUM + i, 0); for (i = 0; i < S390_NUM_SPILL_SLOTS; i++) pv_set_to_unknown (&spill[i]); pv_set_to_unknown (&back_chain); } /* Start interpreting instructions, until we hit something we don't know how to interpret. (Ideally, we should stop at the frame's real current PC, but at the moment, our callers don't give us that info.) */ for (pc = start_pc; ; pc = next_pc) { bfd_byte insn[S390_MAX_INSTR_SIZE]; int insn_len = s390_readinstruction (insn, pc); /* Fields for various kinds of instructions. */ unsigned int b2, r1, r2, d2, x2, r3; int i2; /* The values of SP, FP, and back chain before this instruction, for detecting instructions that change them. */ struct prologue_value pre_insn_sp, pre_insn_fp, pre_insn_back_chain; /* If we got an error trying to read the instruction, report it. */ if (insn_len < 0) { result = -1; break; } next_pc = pc + insn_len; pre_insn_sp = gpr[S390_SP_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; pre_insn_fp = gpr[S390_FRAME_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; pre_insn_back_chain = back_chain; /* A special case, first --- only recognized as the very first instruction of the function, for signal delivery frames: SVC i --- system call */ if (pc == start_pc && is_rr (insn, op_svc, &r1, &r2)) { if (fi) s390_get_signal_frame_info (fi); break; } /* AHI r1, i2 --- add halfword immediate */ else if (is_ri (insn, op1_ahi, op2_ahi, &r1, &i2)) pv_add_constant (&gpr[r1], i2); /* AGHI r1, i2 --- add halfword immediate (64-bit version) */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_ri (insn, op1_aghi, op2_aghi, &r1, &i2)) pv_add_constant (&gpr[r1], i2); /* AR r1, r2 -- add register */ else if (is_rr (insn, op_ar, &r1, &r2)) pv_add (&gpr[r1], &gpr[r1], &gpr[r2]); /* BASR r1, 0 --- branch and save Since r2 is zero, this saves the PC in r1, but doesn't branch. */ else if (is_rr (insn, op_basr, &r1, &r2) && r2 == 0) pv_set_to_constant (&gpr[r1], next_pc); /* BRAS r1, i2 --- branch relative and save */ else if (is_ri (insn, op1_bras, op2_bras, &r1, &i2)) { pv_set_to_constant (&gpr[r1], next_pc); next_pc = pc + i2 * 2; /* We'd better not interpret any backward branches. We'll never terminate. */ if (next_pc <= pc) break; } /* L r1, d2(x2, b2) --- load */ else if (is_rx (insn, op_l, &r1, &d2, &x2, &b2)) { struct prologue_value addr; struct prologue_value *stack; compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2, x2, b2); /* If it's a load from an in-line constant pool, then we can simulate that, under the assumption that the code isn't going to change between the time the processor actually executed it creating the current frame, and the time when we're analyzing the code to unwind past that frame. */ if (addr.kind == pv_constant && start_pc <= addr.k && addr.k < next_pc) pv_set_to_constant (&gpr[r1], read_memory_integer (addr.k, 4)); /* If it's definitely a reference to something on the stack, we can do that. */ else if (s390_on_stack (&addr, 4, gpr, spill, &back_chain, &stack) == pv_definite_yes) gpr[r1] = *stack; /* Otherwise, we don't know the value. */ else pv_set_to_unknown (&gpr[r1]); } /* LA r1, d2(x2, b2) --- load address */ else if (is_rx (insn, op_la, &r1, &d2, &x2, &b2)) compute_x_addr (&gpr[r1], gpr, d2, x2, b2); /* LARL r1, i2 --- load address relative long */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_ril (insn, op1_larl, op2_larl, &r1, &i2)) pv_set_to_constant (&gpr[r1], pc + i2 * 2); /* LGR r1, r2 --- load from register */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_rre (insn, op_lgr, &r1, &r2)) gpr[r1] = gpr[r2]; /* LHI r1, i2 --- load halfword immediate */ else if (is_ri (insn, op1_lhi, op2_lhi, &r1, &i2)) pv_set_to_constant (&gpr[r1], i2); /* LGHI r1, i2 --- load halfword immediate --- 64-bit version */ else if (is_ri (insn, op1_lghi, op2_lghi, &r1, &i2)) pv_set_to_constant (&gpr[r1], i2); /* LR r1, r2 --- load from register */ else if (is_rr (insn, op_lr, &r1, &r2)) gpr[r1] = gpr[r2]; /* NGR r1, r2 --- logical and --- 64-bit version */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_rre (insn, op_ngr, &r1, &r2)) pv_logical_and (&gpr[r1], &gpr[r1], &gpr[r2]); /* NR r1, r2 --- logical and */ else if (is_rr (insn, op_nr, &r1, &r2)) pv_logical_and (&gpr[r1], &gpr[r1], &gpr[r2]); /* NGR r1, r2 --- logical and --- 64-bit version */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_rre (insn, op_ngr, &r1, &r2)) pv_logical_and (&gpr[r1], &gpr[r1], &gpr[r2]); /* NR r1, r2 --- logical and */ else if (is_rr (insn, op_nr, &r1, &r2)) pv_logical_and (&gpr[r1], &gpr[r1], &gpr[r2]); /* S r1, d2(x2, b2) --- subtract from memory */ else if (is_rx (insn, op_s, &r1, &d2, &x2, &b2)) { struct prologue_value addr; struct prologue_value value; struct prologue_value *stack; compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2, x2, b2); /* If it's a load from an in-line constant pool, then we can simulate that, under the assumption that the code isn't going to change between the time the processor actually executed it and the time when we're analyzing it. */ if (addr.kind == pv_constant && start_pc <= addr.k && addr.k < pc) pv_set_to_constant (&value, read_memory_integer (addr.k, 4)); /* If it's definitely a reference to something on the stack, we could do that. */ else if (s390_on_stack (&addr, 4, gpr, spill, &back_chain, &stack) == pv_definite_yes) value = *stack; /* Otherwise, we don't know the value. */ else pv_set_to_unknown (&value); pv_subtract (&gpr[r1], &gpr[r1], &value); } /* ST r1, d2(x2, b2) --- store */ else if (is_rx (insn, op_st, &r1, &d2, &x2, &b2)) { struct prologue_value addr; compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2, x2, b2); /* The below really should be '4', not 'S390_GPR_SIZE'; this instruction always stores 32 bits, regardless of the full size of the GPR. */ if (s390_store (&addr, 4, &gpr[r1], gpr, spill, &back_chain) == pv_maybe) /* If we can't be sure that it's *not* a store to something we're tracing, then we would have to mark all our memory as unknown --- after all, it *could* be a store to any of them --- so we might as well just stop interpreting. */ break; } /* STD r1, d2(x2,b2) --- store floating-point register */ else if (is_rx (insn, op_std, &r1, &d2, &x2, &b2)) { struct prologue_value addr; compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2, x2, b2); if (s390_store (&addr, 8, &fpr[r1], gpr, spill, &back_chain) == pv_maybe) /* If we can't be sure that it's *not* a store to something we're tracing, then we would have to mark all our memory as unknown --- after all, it *could* be a store to any of them --- so we might as well just stop interpreting. */ break; } /* STG r1, d2(x2, b2) --- 64-bit store */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_rxe (insn, op1_stg, op2_stg, &r1, &d2, &x2, &b2)) { struct prologue_value addr; compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2, x2, b2); /* The below really should be '8', not 'S390_GPR_SIZE'; this instruction always stores 64 bits, regardless of the full size of the GPR. */ if (s390_store (&addr, 8, &gpr[r1], gpr, spill, &back_chain) == pv_maybe) /* If we can't be sure that it's *not* a store to something we're tracing, then we would have to mark all our memory as unknown --- after all, it *could* be a store to any of them --- so we might as well just stop interpreting. */ break; } /* STM r1, r3, d2(b2) --- store multiple */ else if (is_rs (insn, op_stm, &r1, &r3, &d2, &b2)) { int regnum; int offset; struct prologue_value addr; for (regnum = r1, offset = 0; regnum <= r3; regnum++, offset += 4) { compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2 + offset, 0, b2); if (s390_store (&addr, 4, &gpr[regnum], gpr, spill, &back_chain) == pv_maybe) /* If we can't be sure that it's *not* a store to something we're tracing, then we would have to mark all our memory as unknown --- after all, it *could* be a store to any of them --- so we might as well just stop interpreting. */ break; } /* If we left the loop early, we should stop interpreting altogether. */ if (regnum <= r3) break; } /* STMG r1, r3, d2(b2) --- store multiple, 64-bit */ else if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME && is_rse (insn, op1_stmg, op2_stmg, &r1, &r3, &d2, &b2)) { int regnum; int offset; struct prologue_value addr; for (regnum = r1, offset = 0; regnum <= r3; regnum++, offset += 8) { compute_x_addr (&addr, gpr, d2 + offset, 0, b2); if (s390_store (&addr, 8, &gpr[regnum], gpr, spill, &back_chain) == pv_maybe) /* If we can't be sure that it's *not* a store to something we're tracing, then we would have to mark all our memory as unknown --- after all, it *could* be a store to any of them --- so we might as well just stop interpreting. */ break; } /* If we left the loop early, we should stop interpreting altogether. */ if (regnum <= r3) break; } else /* An instruction we don't know how to simulate. The only safe thing to do would be to set every value we're tracking to 'unknown'. Instead, we'll be optimistic: we just stop interpreting, and assume that the machine state we've got now is good enough for unwinding the stack. */ break; /* Record the address after the last instruction that changed the FP, SP, or backlink. Ignore instructions that changed them back to their original values --- those are probably restore instructions. (The back chain is never restored, just popped.) */ { struct prologue_value *sp = &gpr[S390_SP_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; struct prologue_value *fp = &gpr[S390_FRAME_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; if ((! pv_is_identical (&pre_insn_sp, sp) && ! pv_is_register (sp, S390_SP_REGNUM, 0)) || (! pv_is_identical (&pre_insn_fp, fp) && ! pv_is_register (fp, S390_FRAME_REGNUM, 0)) || ! pv_is_identical (&pre_insn_back_chain, &back_chain)) after_last_frame_setup_insn = next_pc; } } /* Okay, now gpr[], fpr[], spill[], and back_chain reflect the state of the machine as of the first instruction we couldn't interpret (hopefully the first non-prologue instruction). */ { /* The size of the frame, or (CORE_ADDR) -1 if we couldn't figure that out. */ CORE_ADDR frame_size = -1; /* The value the SP had upon entry to the function, or (CORE_ADDR) -1 if we can't figure that out. */ CORE_ADDR original_sp = -1; /* Are we using S390_FRAME_REGNUM as a frame pointer register? */ int using_frame_pointer = 0; /* If S390_FRAME_REGNUM is some constant offset from the SP, then that strongly suggests that we're going to use that as our frame pointer register, not the SP. */ { struct prologue_value *fp = &gpr[S390_FRAME_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; if (fp->kind == pv_register && fp->reg == S390_SP_REGNUM) using_frame_pointer = 1; } /* If we were given a frame_info structure, we may be able to use the frame's base address to figure out the actual value of the original SP. */ if (fi && get_frame_base (fi)) { int frame_base_regno; struct prologue_value *frame_base; /* The meaning of the frame base depends on whether the function uses a frame pointer register other than the SP or not (see s390_read_fp): - If the function does use a frame pointer register other than the SP, then the frame base is that register's value. - If the function doesn't use a frame pointer, then the frame base is the SP itself. We're duplicating some of the logic of s390_fp_regnum here, but we don't want to call that, because it would just do exactly the same analysis we've already done above. */ if (using_frame_pointer) frame_base_regno = S390_FRAME_REGNUM; else frame_base_regno = S390_SP_REGNUM; frame_base = &gpr[frame_base_regno - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; /* We know the frame base address; if the value of whatever register it came from is a constant offset from the original SP, then we can reconstruct the original SP just by subtracting off that constant. */ if (frame_base->kind == pv_register && frame_base->reg == S390_SP_REGNUM) original_sp = get_frame_base (fi) - frame_base->k; } /* If the analysis said that the current SP value is the original value less some constant, then that constant is the frame size. */ { struct prologue_value *sp = &gpr[S390_SP_REGNUM - S390_GP0_REGNUM]; if (sp->kind == pv_register && sp->reg == S390_SP_REGNUM) frame_size = -sp->k; } /* If we knew other registers' current values, we could check if the analysis said any of those were related to the original SP value, too. But for now, we'll just punt. */ /* If the caller passed in an 'extra info' structure, fill in the parts we can. */ if (fextra_info) { if (init_extra_info || ! fextra_info->initialised) { s390_memset_extra_info (fextra_info); fextra_info->function_start = start_pc; fextra_info->initialised = 1; } if (frame_size != -1) { fextra_info->stack_bought_valid = 1; fextra_info->stack_bought = frame_size; } /* Assume everything was okay, and indicate otherwise when we find something amiss. */ fextra_info->good_prologue = 1; if (using_frame_pointer) /* Actually, nobody cares about the exact PC, so any non-zero value will do here. */ fextra_info->frame_pointer_saved_pc = 1; /* If we weren't able to find the size of the frame, or find the original sp based on actual current register values, then we're not going to be able to unwind this frame. (If we're just doing prologue analysis to set a breakpoint, then frame_size might be known, but original_sp unknown; if we're analyzing a real frame which uses alloca, then original_sp might be known (from the frame pointer register), but the frame size might be unknown.) */ if (original_sp == -1 && frame_size == -1) fextra_info->good_prologue = 0; if (fextra_info->good_prologue) fextra_info->skip_prologue_function_start = after_last_frame_setup_insn; else /* If the prologue was too complex for us to make sense of, then perhaps it's better to just not skip anything at all. */ fextra_info->skip_prologue_function_start = start_pc; } /* Indicate where registers were saved on the stack, if: - the caller seems to want to know, - the caller provided an actual SP, and - the analysis gave us enough information to actually figure it out. */ if (fi && get_frame_saved_regs (fi) && original_sp != -1) { int slot_num; CORE_ADDR slot_addr; CORE_ADDR *saved_regs = get_frame_saved_regs (fi); /* Scan the spill array; if a spill slot says it holds the original value of some register, then record that slot's address as the place that register was saved. Just for kicks, note that, even if registers aren't saved in their officially-sanctioned slots, this will still work --- we know what really got put where. */ /* First, the slots for r2 -- r15. */ for (slot_num = 0, slot_addr = original_sp + 2 * S390_GPR_SIZE; slot_num < 14; slot_num++, slot_addr += S390_GPR_SIZE) { struct prologue_value *slot = &spill[slot_num]; if (slot->kind == pv_register && slot->k == 0) saved_regs[slot->reg] = slot_addr; } /* Then, the slots for f0, f2, f4, and f6. They're a different size. */ for (slot_num = 14, slot_addr = original_sp + 16 * S390_GPR_SIZE; slot_num < S390_NUM_SPILL_SLOTS; slot_num++, slot_addr += S390_FPR_SIZE) { struct prologue_value *slot = &spill[slot_num]; if (slot->kind == pv_register && slot->k == 0) saved_regs[slot->reg] = slot_addr; } /* The stack pointer's element of saved_regs[] is special. */ saved_regs[S390_SP_REGNUM] = original_sp; } } return result; } static int s390_check_function_end (CORE_ADDR pc) { bfd_byte instr[S390_MAX_INSTR_SIZE]; int regidx, instrlen; instrlen = s390_readinstruction (instr, pc); if (instrlen < 0) return -1; /* check for BR */ if (instrlen != 2 || instr[0] != 07 || (instr[1] >> 4) != 0xf) return 0; regidx = instr[1] & 0xf; /* Check for LMG or LG */ instrlen = s390_readinstruction (instr, pc - (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? 6 : 4)); if (instrlen < 0) return -1; if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME) { if (instrlen != 6 || instr[0] != 0xeb || instr[5] != 0x4) return 0; } else if (instrlen != 4 || instr[0] != 0x98) { return 0; } if ((instr[2] >> 4) != 0xf) return 0; if (regidx == 14) return 1; instrlen = s390_readinstruction (instr, pc - (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? 12 : 8)); if (instrlen < 0) return -1; if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME) { /* Check for LG */ if (instrlen != 6 || instr[0] != 0xe3 || instr[5] != 0x4) return 0; } else { /* Check for L */ if (instrlen != 4 || instr[0] != 0x58) return 0; } if (instr[2] >> 4 != 0xf) return 0; if (instr[1] >> 4 != regidx) return 0; return 1; } static CORE_ADDR s390_sniff_pc_function_start (CORE_ADDR pc, struct frame_info *fi) { CORE_ADDR function_start, test_function_start; int loop_cnt, err, function_end; struct frame_extra_info fextra_info; function_start = get_pc_function_start (pc); if (function_start == 0) { test_function_start = pc; if (test_function_start & 1) return 0; /* This has to be bogus */ loop_cnt = 0; do { err = s390_get_frame_info (test_function_start, &fextra_info, fi, 1); loop_cnt++; test_function_start -= 2; function_end = s390_check_function_end (test_function_start); } while (!(function_end == 1 || err || loop_cnt >= 4096 || (fextra_info.good_prologue))); if (fextra_info.good_prologue) function_start = fextra_info.function_start; else if (function_end == 1) function_start = test_function_start; } return function_start; } static CORE_ADDR s390_function_start (struct frame_info *fi) { CORE_ADDR function_start = 0; if (get_frame_extra_info (fi) && get_frame_extra_info (fi)->initialised) function_start = get_frame_extra_info (fi)->function_start; else if (get_frame_pc (fi)) function_start = get_frame_func (fi); return function_start; } static int s390_frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info *fi) { struct frame_extra_info fextra_info, *fextra_info_ptr; int frameless = 0; if (get_next_frame (fi) == NULL) /* no may be frameless */ { if (get_frame_extra_info (fi)) fextra_info_ptr = get_frame_extra_info (fi); else { fextra_info_ptr = &fextra_info; s390_get_frame_info (s390_sniff_pc_function_start (get_frame_pc (fi), fi), fextra_info_ptr, fi, 1); } frameless = (fextra_info_ptr->stack_bought_valid && fextra_info_ptr->stack_bought == 0); } return frameless; } static int s390_is_sigreturn (CORE_ADDR pc, struct frame_info *sighandler_fi, CORE_ADDR *sregs, CORE_ADDR *sigcaller_pc) { bfd_byte instr[S390_MAX_INSTR_SIZE]; int instrlen; CORE_ADDR scontext; int retval = 0; CORE_ADDR orig_sp; CORE_ADDR temp_sregs; scontext = temp_sregs = 0; instrlen = s390_readinstruction (instr, pc); if (sigcaller_pc) *sigcaller_pc = 0; if (((instrlen == S390_SYSCALL_SIZE) && (instr[0] == S390_SYSCALL_OPCODE)) && ((instr[1] == s390_NR_sigreturn) || (instr[1] == s390_NR_rt_sigreturn))) { if (sighandler_fi) { if (s390_frameless_function_invocation (sighandler_fi)) orig_sp = get_frame_base (sighandler_fi); else orig_sp = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE ((CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (get_frame_base (sighandler_fi), S390_GPR_SIZE)); if (orig_sp && sigcaller_pc) { scontext = orig_sp + S390_SIGNAL_FRAMESIZE; if (pc == scontext && instr[1] == s390_NR_rt_sigreturn) { /* We got a new style rt_signal */ /* get address of read ucontext->uc_mcontext */ temp_sregs = orig_sp + (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? S390X_UC_MCONTEXT_OFFSET : S390_UC_MCONTEXT_OFFSET); } else { /* read sigcontext->sregs */ temp_sregs = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE ((CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (scontext + (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME ? S390X_SIGCONTEXT_SREGS_OFFSET : S390_SIGCONTEXT_SREGS_OFFSET), S390_GPR_SIZE)); } /* read sigregs->psw.addr */ *sigcaller_pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE ((CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (temp_sregs + REGISTER_BYTE (S390_PC_REGNUM), S390_PSW_ADDR_SIZE)); } } retval = 1; } if (sregs) *sregs = temp_sregs; return retval; } /* We need to do something better here but this will keep us out of trouble for the moment. For some reason the blockframe.c calls us with fi->next->fromleaf so this seems of little use to us. */ static CORE_ADDR s390_init_frame_pc_first (int next_fromleaf, struct frame_info *fi) { CORE_ADDR sigcaller_pc; CORE_ADDR pc = 0; if (next_fromleaf) { pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_register (S390_RETADDR_REGNUM)); /* fix signal handlers */ } else if (get_next_frame (fi) && get_frame_pc (get_next_frame (fi))) pc = s390_frame_saved_pc_nofix (get_next_frame (fi)); if (pc && get_next_frame (fi) && get_frame_base (get_next_frame (fi)) && s390_is_sigreturn (pc, get_next_frame (fi), NULL, &sigcaller_pc)) { pc = sigcaller_pc; } return pc; } static void s390_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *fi) { frame_extra_info_zalloc (fi, sizeof (struct frame_extra_info)); if (get_frame_pc (fi)) s390_get_frame_info (s390_sniff_pc_function_start (get_frame_pc (fi), fi), get_frame_extra_info (fi), fi, 1); else s390_memset_extra_info (get_frame_extra_info (fi)); } /* If saved registers of frame FI are not known yet, read and cache them. &FEXTRA_INFOP contains struct frame_extra_info; TDATAP can be NULL, in which case the framedata are read. */ static void s390_frame_init_saved_regs (struct frame_info *fi) { int quick; if (get_frame_saved_regs (fi) == NULL) { /* zalloc memsets the saved regs */ frame_saved_regs_zalloc (fi); if (get_frame_pc (fi)) { quick = (get_frame_extra_info (fi) && get_frame_extra_info (fi)->initialised && get_frame_extra_info (fi)->good_prologue); s390_get_frame_info (quick ? get_frame_extra_info (fi)->function_start : s390_sniff_pc_function_start (get_frame_pc (fi), fi), get_frame_extra_info (fi), fi, !quick); } } } static CORE_ADDR s390_frame_saved_pc_nofix (struct frame_info *fi) { if (get_frame_extra_info (fi) && get_frame_extra_info (fi)->saved_pc_valid) return get_frame_extra_info (fi)->saved_pc; if (deprecated_generic_find_dummy_frame (get_frame_pc (fi), get_frame_base (fi))) return deprecated_read_register_dummy (get_frame_pc (fi), get_frame_base (fi), S390_PC_REGNUM); s390_frame_init_saved_regs (fi); if (get_frame_extra_info (fi)) { get_frame_extra_info (fi)->saved_pc_valid = 1; if (get_frame_extra_info (fi)->good_prologue && get_frame_saved_regs (fi)[S390_RETADDR_REGNUM]) get_frame_extra_info (fi)->saved_pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_memory_integer (get_frame_saved_regs (fi)[S390_RETADDR_REGNUM], S390_GPR_SIZE)); else get_frame_extra_info (fi)->saved_pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_register (S390_RETADDR_REGNUM)); return get_frame_extra_info (fi)->saved_pc; } return 0; } static CORE_ADDR s390_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *fi) { CORE_ADDR saved_pc = 0, sig_pc; if (get_frame_extra_info (fi) && get_frame_extra_info (fi)->sig_fixed_saved_pc_valid) return get_frame_extra_info (fi)->sig_fixed_saved_pc; saved_pc = s390_frame_saved_pc_nofix (fi); if (get_frame_extra_info (fi)) { get_frame_extra_info (fi)->sig_fixed_saved_pc_valid = 1; if (saved_pc) { if (s390_is_sigreturn (saved_pc, fi, NULL, &sig_pc)) saved_pc = sig_pc; } get_frame_extra_info (fi)->sig_fixed_saved_pc = saved_pc; } return saved_pc; } /* We want backtraces out of signal handlers so we don't set (get_frame_type (thisframe) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME) to 1 */ static CORE_ADDR s390_frame_chain (struct frame_info *thisframe) { CORE_ADDR prev_fp = 0; if (deprecated_generic_find_dummy_frame (get_frame_pc (thisframe), get_frame_base (thisframe))) return deprecated_read_register_dummy (get_frame_pc (thisframe), get_frame_base (thisframe), S390_SP_REGNUM); else { int sigreturn = 0; CORE_ADDR sregs = 0; struct frame_extra_info prev_fextra_info; memset (&prev_fextra_info, 0, sizeof (prev_fextra_info)); if (get_frame_pc (thisframe)) { CORE_ADDR saved_pc, sig_pc; saved_pc = s390_frame_saved_pc_nofix (thisframe); if (saved_pc) { if ((sigreturn = s390_is_sigreturn (saved_pc, thisframe, &sregs, &sig_pc))) saved_pc = sig_pc; s390_get_frame_info (s390_sniff_pc_function_start (saved_pc, NULL), &prev_fextra_info, NULL, 1); } } if (sigreturn) { /* read sigregs,regs.gprs[11 or 15] */ prev_fp = read_memory_integer (sregs + REGISTER_BYTE (S390_GP0_REGNUM + (prev_fextra_info. frame_pointer_saved_pc ? 11 : 15)), S390_GPR_SIZE); get_frame_extra_info (thisframe)->sigcontext = sregs; } else { if (get_frame_saved_regs (thisframe)) { int regno; if (prev_fextra_info.frame_pointer_saved_pc && get_frame_saved_regs (thisframe)[S390_FRAME_REGNUM]) regno = S390_FRAME_REGNUM; else regno = S390_SP_REGNUM; if (get_frame_saved_regs (thisframe)[regno]) { /* The SP's entry of `saved_regs' is special. */ if (regno == S390_SP_REGNUM) prev_fp = get_frame_saved_regs (thisframe)[regno]; else prev_fp = read_memory_integer (get_frame_saved_regs (thisframe)[regno], S390_GPR_SIZE); } } } } return ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (prev_fp); } /* Whether struct frame_extra_info is actually needed I'll have to figure out as our frames are similar to rs6000 there is a possibility i386 dosen't need it. */ /* a given return value in `regbuf' with a type `valtype', extract and copy its value into `valbuf' */ static void s390_extract_return_value (struct type *valtype, char *regbuf, char *valbuf) { /* floats and doubles are returned in fpr0. fpr's have a size of 8 bytes. We need to truncate the return value into float size (4 byte) if necessary. */ int len = TYPE_LENGTH (valtype); if (TYPE_CODE (valtype) == TYPE_CODE_FLT) memcpy (valbuf, ®buf[REGISTER_BYTE (S390_FP0_REGNUM)], len); else { int offset = 0; /* return value is copied starting from r2. */ if (TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) < S390_GPR_SIZE) offset = S390_GPR_SIZE - TYPE_LENGTH (valtype); memcpy (valbuf, regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (S390_GP0_REGNUM + 2) + offset, TYPE_LENGTH (valtype)); } } static char * s390_promote_integer_argument (struct type *valtype, char *valbuf, char *reg_buff, int *arglen) { char *value = valbuf; int len = TYPE_LENGTH (valtype); if (len < S390_GPR_SIZE) { /* We need to upgrade this value to a register to pass it correctly */ int idx, diff = S390_GPR_SIZE - len, negative = (!TYPE_UNSIGNED (valtype) && value[0] & 0x80); for (idx = 0; idx < S390_GPR_SIZE; idx++) { reg_buff[idx] = (idx < diff ? (negative ? 0xff : 0x0) : value[idx - diff]); } value = reg_buff; *arglen = S390_GPR_SIZE; } else { if (len & (S390_GPR_SIZE - 1)) { fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "s390_promote_integer_argument detected an argument not " "a multiple of S390_GPR_SIZE & greater than S390_GPR_SIZE " "we might not deal with this correctly.\n"); } *arglen = len; } return (value); } static void s390_store_return_value (struct type *valtype, char *valbuf) { int arglen; char *reg_buff = alloca (max (S390_FPR_SIZE, DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE)), *value; if (TYPE_CODE (valtype) == TYPE_CODE_FLT) { if (TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) == 4 || TYPE_LENGTH (valtype) == 8) deprecated_write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (S390_FP0_REGNUM), valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (valtype)); else error ("GDB is unable to return `long double' values " "on this architecture."); } else { value = s390_promote_integer_argument (valtype, valbuf, reg_buff, &arglen); /* Everything else is returned in GPR2 and up. */ deprecated_write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (S390_GP0_REGNUM + 2), value, arglen); } } /* Not the most efficent code in the world */ static int s390_fp_regnum (void) { int regno = S390_SP_REGNUM; struct frame_extra_info fextra_info; CORE_ADDR pc = ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_register (S390_PC_REGNUM)); s390_get_frame_info (s390_sniff_pc_function_start (pc, NULL), &fextra_info, NULL, 1); if (fextra_info.frame_pointer_saved_pc) regno = S390_FRAME_REGNUM; return regno; } static CORE_ADDR s390_read_fp (void) { return read_register (s390_fp_regnum ()); } static void s390_pop_frame_regular (struct frame_info *frame) { int regnum; write_register (S390_PC_REGNUM, DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame)); /* Restore any saved registers. */ if (get_frame_saved_regs (frame)) { for (regnum = 0; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++) if (get_frame_saved_regs (frame)[regnum] != 0) { ULONGEST value; value = read_memory_unsigned_integer (get_frame_saved_regs (frame)[regnum], REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regnum)); write_register (regnum, value); } /* Actually cut back the stack. Remember that the SP's element of saved_regs is the old SP itself, not the address at which it is saved. */ write_register (S390_SP_REGNUM, get_frame_saved_regs (frame)[S390_SP_REGNUM]); } /* Throw away any cached frame information. */ flush_cached_frames (); } /* Destroy the innermost (Top-Of-Stack) stack frame, restoring the machine state that was in effect before the frame was created. Used in the contexts of the "return" command, and of target function calls from the debugger. */ static void s390_pop_frame (void) { /* This function checks for and handles generic dummy frames, and calls back to our function for ordinary frames. */ generic_pop_current_frame (s390_pop_frame_regular); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is an integer-like type, zero otherwise. "Integer-like" types are those that should be passed the way integers are: integers, enums, ranges, characters, and booleans. */ static int is_integer_like (struct type *type) { enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (type); return (code == TYPE_CODE_INT || code == TYPE_CODE_ENUM || code == TYPE_CODE_RANGE || code == TYPE_CODE_CHAR || code == TYPE_CODE_BOOL); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is a pointer-like type, zero otherwise. "Pointer-like" types are those that should be passed the way pointers are: pointers and references. */ static int is_pointer_like (struct type *type) { enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (type); return (code == TYPE_CODE_PTR || code == TYPE_CODE_REF); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is a `float singleton' or `double singleton', zero otherwise. A `T singleton' is a struct type with one member, whose type is either T or a `T singleton'. So, the following are all float singletons: struct { float x }; struct { struct { float x; } x; }; struct { struct { struct { float x; } x; } x; }; ... and so on. WHY THE HECK DO WE CARE ABOUT THIS??? Well, it turns out that GCC passes all float singletons and double singletons as if they were simply floats or doubles. This is *not* what the ABI says it should do. */ static int is_float_singleton (struct type *type) { return (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT && TYPE_NFIELDS (type) == 1 && (TYPE_CODE (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, 0)) == TYPE_CODE_FLT || is_float_singleton (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, 0)))); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is a struct-like type, zero otherwise. "Struct-like" types are those that should be passed as structs are: structs and unions. As an odd quirk, not mentioned in the ABI, GCC passes float and double singletons as if they were a plain float, double, etc. (The corresponding union types are handled normally.) So we exclude those types here. *shrug* */ static int is_struct_like (struct type *type) { enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (type); return (code == TYPE_CODE_UNION || (code == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT && ! is_float_singleton (type))); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is a float-like type, zero otherwise. "Float-like" types are those that should be passed as floating-point values are. You'd think this would just be floats, doubles, long doubles, etc. But as an odd quirk, not mentioned in the ABI, GCC passes float and double singletons as if they were a plain float, double, etc. (The corresponding union types are handled normally.) So we include those types here. *shrug* */ static int is_float_like (struct type *type) { return (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_FLT || is_float_singleton (type)); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is considered a `DOUBLE_OR_FLOAT', as defined by the parameter passing conventions described in the "GNU/Linux for S/390 ELF Application Binary Interface Supplement". Otherwise, return zero. */ static int is_double_or_float (struct type *type) { return (is_float_like (type) && (TYPE_LENGTH (type) == 4 || TYPE_LENGTH (type) == 8)); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is a `DOUBLE_ARG', as defined by the parameter passing conventions described in the "GNU/Linux for S/390 ELF Application Binary Interface Supplement". Return zero otherwise. */ static int is_double_arg (struct type *type) { unsigned length = TYPE_LENGTH (type); /* The s390x ABI doesn't handle DOUBLE_ARGS specially. */ if (GDB_TARGET_IS_ESAME) return 0; return ((is_integer_like (type) || is_struct_like (type)) && length == 8); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE is considered a `SIMPLE_ARG', as defined by the parameter passing conventions described in the "GNU/Linux for S/390 ELF Application Binary Interface Supplement". Return zero otherwise. */ static int is_simple_arg (struct type *type) { unsigned length = TYPE_LENGTH (type); /* This is almost a direct translation of the ABI's language, except that we have to exclude 8-byte structs; those are DOUBLE_ARGs. */ return ((is_integer_like (type) && length <= DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE) || is_pointer_like (type) || (is_struct_like (type) && !is_double_arg (type))); } static int is_power_of_two (unsigned int n) { return ((n & (n - 1)) == 0); } /* Return non-zero if TYPE should be passed as a pointer to a copy, zero otherwise. TYPE must be a SIMPLE_ARG, as recognized by `is_simple_arg'. */ static int pass_by_copy_ref (struct type *type) { unsigned length = TYPE_LENGTH (type); return (is_struct_like (type) && !(is_power_of_two (length) && length <= DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE)); } /* Return ARG, a `SIMPLE_ARG', sign-extended or zero-extended to a full word as required for the ABI. */ static LONGEST extend_simple_arg (struct value *arg) { struct type *type = VALUE_TYPE (arg); /* Even structs get passed in the least significant bits of the register / memory word. It's not really right to extract them as an integer, but it does take care of the extension. */ if (TYPE_UNSIGNED (type)) return extract_unsigned_integer (VALUE_CONTENTS (arg), TYPE_LENGTH (type)); else return extract_signed_integer (VALUE_CONTENTS (arg), TYPE_LENGTH (type)); } /* Round ADDR up to the next N-byte boundary. N must be a power of two. */ static CORE_ADDR round_up (CORE_ADDR addr, int n) { /* Check that N is really a power of two. */ gdb_assert (n && (n & (n-1)) == 0); return ((addr + n - 1) & -n); } /* Round ADDR down to the next N-byte boundary. N must be a power of two. */ static CORE_ADDR round_down (CORE_ADDR addr, int n) { /* Check that N is really a power of two. */ gdb_assert (n && (n & (n-1)) == 0); return (addr & -n); } /* Return the alignment required by TYPE. */ static int alignment_of (struct type *type) { int alignment; if (is_integer_like (type) || is_pointer_like (type) || TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_FLT) alignment = TYPE_LENGTH (type); else if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT || TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_UNION) { int i; alignment = 1; for (i = 0; i < TYPE_NFIELDS (type); i++) { int field_alignment = alignment_of (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, i)); if (field_alignment > alignment) alignment = field_alignment; } } else alignment = 1; /* Check that everything we ever return is a power of two. Lots of code doesn't want to deal with aligning things to arbitrary boundaries. */ gdb_assert ((alignment & (alignment - 1)) == 0); return alignment; } /* Put the actual parameter values pointed to by ARGS[0..NARGS-1] in place to be passed to a function, as specified by the "GNU/Linux for S/390 ELF Application Binary Interface Supplement". SP is the current stack pointer. We must put arguments, links, padding, etc. whereever they belong, and return the new stack pointer value. If STRUCT_RETURN is non-zero, then the function we're calling is going to return a structure by value; STRUCT_ADDR is the address of a block we've allocated for it on the stack. Our caller has taken care of any type promotions needed to satisfy prototypes or the old K&R argument-passing rules. */ static CORE_ADDR s390_push_arguments (int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp, int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr) { int i; int pointer_size = (TARGET_PTR_BIT / TARGET_CHAR_BIT); /* The number of arguments passed by reference-to-copy. */ int num_copies; /* If the i'th argument is passed as a reference to a copy, then copy_addr[i] is the address of the copy we made. */ CORE_ADDR *copy_addr = alloca (nargs * sizeof (CORE_ADDR)); /* Build the reference-to-copy area. */ num_copies = 0; for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++) { struct value *arg = args[i]; struct type *type = VALUE_TYPE (arg); unsigned length = TYPE_LENGTH (type); if (is_simple_arg (type) && pass_by_copy_ref (type)) { sp -= length; sp = round_down (sp, alignment_of (type)); write_memory (sp, VALUE_CONTENTS (arg), length); copy_addr[i] = sp; num_copies++; } } /* Reserve space for the parameter area. As a conservative simplification, we assume that everything will be passed on the stack. */ { int i; for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++) { struct value *arg = args[i]; struct type *type = VALUE_TYPE (arg); int length = TYPE_LENGTH (type); sp = round_down (sp, alignment_of (type)); /* SIMPLE_ARG values get extended to DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE bytes. Assume every argument is. */ if (length < DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE) length = DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE; sp -= length; } } /* Include space for any reference-to-copy pointers. */ sp = round_down (sp, pointer_size); sp -= num_copies * pointer_size; /* After all that, make sure it's still aligned on an eight-byte boundary. */ sp = round_down (sp, 8); /* Finally, place the actual parameters, working from SP towards higher addresses. The code above is supposed to reserve enough space for this. */ { int fr = 0; int gr = 2; CORE_ADDR starg = sp; /* A struct is returned using general register 2 */ if (struct_return) gr++; for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++) { struct value *arg = args[i]; struct type *type = VALUE_TYPE (arg); if (is_double_or_float (type) && fr <= S390_NUM_FP_PARAMETER_REGISTERS * 2 - 2) { /* When we store a single-precision value in an FP register, it occupies the leftmost bits. */ deprecated_write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (S390_FP0_REGNUM + fr), VALUE_CONTENTS (arg), TYPE_LENGTH (type)); fr += 2; } else if (is_simple_arg (type) && gr <= 6) { /* Do we need to pass a pointer to our copy of this argument? */ if (pass_by_copy_ref (type)) write_register (S390_GP0_REGNUM + gr, copy_addr[i]); else write_register (S390_GP0_REGNUM + gr, extend_simple_arg (arg)); gr++; } else if (is_double_arg (type) && gr <= 5) { deprecated_write_register_gen (S390_GP0_REGNUM + gr, VALUE_CONTENTS (arg)); deprecated_write_register_gen (S390_GP0_REGNUM + gr + 1, VALUE_CONTENTS (arg) + DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE); gr += 2; } else { /* The `OTHER' case. */ enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (type); unsigned length = TYPE_LENGTH (type); /* If we skipped r6 because we couldn't fit a DOUBLE_ARG in it, then don't go back and use it again later. */ if (is_double_arg (type) && gr == 6) gr = 7; if (is_simple_arg (type)) { /* Simple args are always extended to DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE bytes. */ starg = round_up (starg, DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE); /* Do we need to pass a pointer to our copy of this argument? */ if (pass_by_copy_ref (type)) write_memory_signed_integer (starg, pointer_size, copy_addr[i]); else /* Simple args are always extended to DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE bytes. */ write_memory_signed_integer (starg, DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE, extend_simple_arg (arg)); starg += DEPRECATED_REGISTER_SIZE; } else { /* You'd think we should say: starg = round_up (starg, alignment_of (type)); Unfortunately, GCC seems to simply align the stack on a four/eight-byte boundary, even when passing doubles. */ starg = round_up (starg, S390_STACK_PARAMETER_ALIGNMENT); write_memory (starg, VALUE_CONTENTS (arg), length); starg += length; } } } } /* Allocate the standard frame areas: the register save area, the word reserved for the compiler (which seems kind of meaningless), and the back chain pointer. */ sp -= S390_STACK_FRAME_OVERHEAD; /* Write the back chain pointer into the first word of the stack frame. This will help us get backtraces from within functions called from GDB. */ write_memory_unsigned_integer (sp, (TARGET_PTR_BIT / TARGET_CHAR_BIT), deprecated_read_fp ()); return sp; } static CORE_ADDR s390_frame_align (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR addr) { /* Both the 32- and 64-bit ABI's say that the stack pointer should always be aligned on an eight-byte boundary. */ return (addr & -8); } static int s390_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *value_type) { enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE (value_type); return (code == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT || code == TYPE_CODE_UNION); } /* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type of data in register N. */ static struct type * s390_register_virtual_type (int regno) { if (S390_FP0_REGNUM <= regno && regno < S390_FP0_REGNUM + S390_NUM_FPRS) return builtin_type_double; else return builtin_type_int; } static struct type * s390x_register_virtual_type (int regno) { return (regno == S390_FPC_REGNUM) || (regno >= S390_FIRST_ACR && regno <= S390_LAST_ACR) ? builtin_type_int : (regno >= S390_FP0_REGNUM) ? builtin_type_double : builtin_type_long; } static void s390_store_struct_return (CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR sp) { write_register (S390_GP0_REGNUM + 2, addr); } static const unsigned char * s390_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR *pcptr, int *lenptr) { static unsigned char breakpoint[] = { 0x0, 0x1 }; *lenptr = sizeof (breakpoint); return breakpoint; } /* Advance PC across any function entry prologue instructions to reach some "real" code. */ static CORE_ADDR s390_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc) { struct frame_extra_info fextra_info; s390_get_frame_info (pc, &fextra_info, NULL, 1); return fextra_info.skip_prologue_function_start; } /* Immediately after a function call, return the saved pc. Can't go through the frames for this because on some machines the new frame is not set up until the new function executes some instructions. */ static CORE_ADDR s390_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *frame) { return ADDR_BITS_REMOVE (read_register (S390_RETADDR_REGNUM)); } static CORE_ADDR s390_addr_bits_remove (CORE_ADDR addr) { return (addr) & 0x7fffffff; } static CORE_ADDR s390_push_return_address (CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR sp) { write_register (S390_RETADDR_REGNUM, entry_point_address ()); return sp; } static int s390_address_class_type_flags (int byte_size, int dwarf2_addr_class) { if (byte_size == 4) return TYPE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1; else return 0; } static const char * s390_address_class_type_flags_to_name (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int type_flags) { if (type_flags & TYPE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1) return "mode32"; else return NULL; } static int s390_address_class_name_to_type_flags (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, const char *name, int *type_flags_ptr) { if (strcmp (name, "mode32") == 0) { *type_flags_ptr = TYPE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1; return 1; } else return 0; } static struct gdbarch * s390_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches) { static LONGEST s390_call_dummy_words[] = { 0 }; struct gdbarch *gdbarch; struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep; int elf_flags; /* First see if there is already a gdbarch that can satisfy the request. */ arches = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches, &info); if (arches != NULL) return arches->gdbarch; /* None found: is the request for a s390 architecture? */ if (info.bfd_arch_info->arch != bfd_arch_s390) return NULL; /* No; then it's not for us. */ /* Yes: create a new gdbarch for the specified machine type. */ gdbarch = gdbarch_alloc (&info, NULL); /* NOTE: cagney/2002-12-06: This can be deleted when this arch is ready to unwind the PC first (see frame.c:get_prev_frame()). */ set_gdbarch_deprecated_init_frame_pc (gdbarch, init_frame_pc_default); set_gdbarch_believe_pcc_promotion (gdbarch, 0); set_gdbarch_char_signed (gdbarch, 0); set_gdbarch_frame_args_skip (gdbarch, 0); set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_chain (gdbarch, s390_frame_chain); set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_init_saved_regs (gdbarch, s390_frame_init_saved_regs); set_gdbarch_deprecated_store_struct_return (gdbarch, s390_store_struct_return); set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_return_value (gdbarch, s390_extract_return_value); set_gdbarch_deprecated_store_return_value (gdbarch, s390_store_return_value); /* Amount PC must be decremented by after a breakpoint. This is often the number of bytes returned by BREAKPOINT_FROM_PC but not always. */ set_gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch, 2); set_gdbarch_deprecated_pop_frame (gdbarch, s390_pop_frame); /* Stack grows downward. */ set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, core_addr_lessthan); /* Offset from address of function to start of its code. Zero on most machines. */ set_gdbarch_function_start_offset (gdbarch, 0); set_gdbarch_deprecated_max_register_raw_size (gdbarch, 8); set_gdbarch_deprecated_max_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, 8); set_gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch, s390_breakpoint_from_pc); set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, s390_skip_prologue); set_gdbarch_deprecated_init_extra_frame_info (gdbarch, s390_init_extra_frame_info); set_gdbarch_deprecated_init_frame_pc_first (gdbarch, s390_init_frame_pc_first); set_gdbarch_deprecated_target_read_fp (gdbarch, s390_read_fp); /* This function that tells us whether the function invocation represented by FI does not have a frame on the stack associated with it. If it does not, FRAMELESS is set to 1, else 0. */ set_gdbarch_frameless_function_invocation (gdbarch, s390_frameless_function_invocation); /* Return saved PC from a frame */ set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_saved_pc (gdbarch, s390_frame_saved_pc); /* DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN takes a frame's nominal address and produces the frame's chain-pointer. */ set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_chain (gdbarch, s390_frame_chain); set_gdbarch_deprecated_saved_pc_after_call (gdbarch, s390_saved_pc_after_call); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_byte (gdbarch, s390_register_byte); set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch, S390_PC_REGNUM); set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch, S390_SP_REGNUM); set_gdbarch_deprecated_fp_regnum (gdbarch, S390_FP_REGNUM); set_gdbarch_fp0_regnum (gdbarch, S390_FP0_REGNUM); set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, S390_NUM_REGS); set_gdbarch_cannot_fetch_register (gdbarch, s390_cannot_fetch_register); set_gdbarch_cannot_store_register (gdbarch, s390_cannot_fetch_register); set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch, s390_use_struct_convention); set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, s390_register_name); set_gdbarch_stab_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch, s390_stab_reg_to_regnum); set_gdbarch_dwarf_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch, s390_stab_reg_to_regnum); set_gdbarch_dwarf2_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch, s390_stab_reg_to_regnum); set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_struct_value_address (gdbarch, generic_cannot_extract_struct_value_address); /* Parameters for inferior function calls. */ set_gdbarch_deprecated_pc_in_call_dummy (gdbarch, deprecated_pc_in_call_dummy_at_entry_point); set_gdbarch_frame_align (gdbarch, s390_frame_align); set_gdbarch_deprecated_push_arguments (gdbarch, s390_push_arguments); set_gdbarch_deprecated_save_dummy_frame_tos (gdbarch, generic_save_dummy_frame_tos); set_gdbarch_deprecated_push_return_address (gdbarch, s390_push_return_address); set_gdbarch_deprecated_sizeof_call_dummy_words (gdbarch, sizeof (s390_call_dummy_words)); set_gdbarch_deprecated_call_dummy_words (gdbarch, s390_call_dummy_words); switch (info.bfd_arch_info->mach) { case bfd_mach_s390_31: set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_size (gdbarch, 4); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_raw_size (gdbarch, s390_register_raw_size); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, s390_register_raw_size); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_virtual_type (gdbarch, s390_register_virtual_type); set_gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (gdbarch, s390_addr_bits_remove); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_bytes (gdbarch, S390_REGISTER_BYTES); break; case bfd_mach_s390_64: set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_size (gdbarch, 8); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_raw_size (gdbarch, s390x_register_raw_size); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, s390x_register_raw_size); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_virtual_type (gdbarch, s390x_register_virtual_type); set_gdbarch_long_bit (gdbarch, 64); set_gdbarch_long_long_bit (gdbarch, 64); set_gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch, 64); set_gdbarch_deprecated_register_bytes (gdbarch, S390X_REGISTER_BYTES); set_gdbarch_address_class_type_flags (gdbarch, s390_address_class_type_flags); set_gdbarch_address_class_type_flags_to_name (gdbarch, s390_address_class_type_flags_to_name); set_gdbarch_address_class_name_to_type_flags (gdbarch, s390_address_class_name_to_type_flags); break; } /* Should be using push_dummy_call. */ set_gdbarch_deprecated_dummy_write_sp (gdbarch, deprecated_write_sp); set_gdbarch_print_insn (gdbarch, print_insn_s390); return gdbarch; } extern initialize_file_ftype _initialize_s390_tdep; /* -Wmissing-prototypes */ void _initialize_s390_tdep (void) { /* Hook us into the gdbarch mechanism. */ register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_s390, s390_gdbarch_init); }