Commit | Line | Data |
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871fbe6a | 1 | /* Target-dependent code for GNU/Linux i386. |
ca557f44 | 2 | |
4252dc94 MK |
3 | Copyright 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 |
4 | Free Software Foundation, Inc. | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
5 | |
6 | This file is part of GDB. | |
7 | ||
8 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
9 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
10 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or | |
11 | (at your option) any later version. | |
12 | ||
13 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
14 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
15 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
16 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
17 | ||
18 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
19 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | |
20 | Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, | |
21 | Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ | |
22 | ||
23 | #include "defs.h" | |
24 | #include "gdbcore.h" | |
25 | #include "frame.h" | |
26 | #include "value.h" | |
4e052eda | 27 | #include "regcache.h" |
6441c4a0 | 28 | #include "inferior.h" |
0670c0aa | 29 | #include "osabi.h" |
38c968cf | 30 | #include "reggroups.h" |
5cb2fe25 | 31 | #include "dwarf2-frame.h" |
0670c0aa | 32 | #include "gdb_string.h" |
4be87837 | 33 | |
8201327c MK |
34 | #include "i386-tdep.h" |
35 | #include "i386-linux-tdep.h" | |
0670c0aa | 36 | #include "glibc-tdep.h" |
871fbe6a | 37 | #include "solib-svr4.h" |
8201327c | 38 | |
6441c4a0 MK |
39 | /* Return the name of register REG. */ |
40 | ||
16775908 | 41 | static const char * |
6441c4a0 MK |
42 | i386_linux_register_name (int reg) |
43 | { | |
44 | /* Deal with the extra "orig_eax" pseudo register. */ | |
45 | if (reg == I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM) | |
46 | return "orig_eax"; | |
47 | ||
48 | return i386_register_name (reg); | |
49 | } | |
38c968cf AC |
50 | |
51 | /* Return non-zero, when the register is in the corresponding register | |
52 | group. Put the LINUX_ORIG_EAX register in the system group. */ | |
53 | static int | |
54 | i386_linux_register_reggroup_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int regnum, | |
55 | struct reggroup *group) | |
56 | { | |
57 | if (regnum == I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM) | |
58 | return (group == system_reggroup | |
59 | || group == save_reggroup | |
60 | || group == restore_reggroup); | |
61 | return i386_register_reggroup_p (gdbarch, regnum, group); | |
62 | } | |
63 | ||
e7ee86a9 JB |
64 | \f |
65 | /* Recognizing signal handler frames. */ | |
66 | ||
ca557f44 | 67 | /* GNU/Linux has two flavors of signals. Normal signal handlers, and |
e7ee86a9 JB |
68 | "realtime" (RT) signals. The RT signals can provide additional |
69 | information to the signal handler if the SA_SIGINFO flag is set | |
70 | when establishing a signal handler using `sigaction'. It is not | |
ca557f44 AC |
71 | unlikely that future versions of GNU/Linux will support SA_SIGINFO |
72 | for normal signals too. */ | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
73 | |
74 | /* When the i386 Linux kernel calls a signal handler and the | |
75 | SA_RESTORER flag isn't set, the return address points to a bit of | |
76 | code on the stack. This function returns whether the PC appears to | |
77 | be within this bit of code. | |
78 | ||
79 | The instruction sequence for normal signals is | |
80 | pop %eax | |
acd5c798 | 81 | mov $0x77, %eax |
e7ee86a9 JB |
82 | int $0x80 |
83 | or 0x58 0xb8 0x77 0x00 0x00 0x00 0xcd 0x80. | |
84 | ||
85 | Checking for the code sequence should be somewhat reliable, because | |
86 | the effect is to call the system call sigreturn. This is unlikely | |
911bc6ee | 87 | to occur anywhere other than in a signal trampoline. |
e7ee86a9 JB |
88 | |
89 | It kind of sucks that we have to read memory from the process in | |
90 | order to identify a signal trampoline, but there doesn't seem to be | |
911bc6ee MK |
91 | any other way. Therefore we only do the memory reads if no |
92 | function name could be identified, which should be the case since | |
93 | the code is on the stack. | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
94 | |
95 | Detection of signal trampolines for handlers that set the | |
96 | SA_RESTORER flag is in general not possible. Unfortunately this is | |
97 | what the GNU C Library has been doing for quite some time now. | |
98 | However, as of version 2.1.2, the GNU C Library uses signal | |
99 | trampolines (named __restore and __restore_rt) that are identical | |
100 | to the ones used by the kernel. Therefore, these trampolines are | |
101 | supported too. */ | |
102 | ||
acd5c798 MK |
103 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN0 0x58 /* pop %eax */ |
104 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET0 0 | |
105 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN1 0xb8 /* mov $NNNN, %eax */ | |
106 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1 1 | |
107 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN2 0xcd /* int */ | |
108 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET2 6 | |
e7ee86a9 | 109 | |
4252dc94 | 110 | static const gdb_byte linux_sigtramp_code[] = |
e7ee86a9 JB |
111 | { |
112 | LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN0, /* pop %eax */ | |
acd5c798 | 113 | LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN1, 0x77, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* mov $0x77, %eax */ |
e7ee86a9 JB |
114 | LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN2, 0x80 /* int $0x80 */ |
115 | }; | |
116 | ||
117 | #define LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN (sizeof linux_sigtramp_code) | |
118 | ||
8e6bed05 MK |
119 | /* If NEXT_FRAME unwinds into a sigtramp routine, return the address |
120 | of the start of the routine. Otherwise, return 0. */ | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
121 | |
122 | static CORE_ADDR | |
8e6bed05 | 123 | i386_linux_sigtramp_start (struct frame_info *next_frame) |
e7ee86a9 | 124 | { |
8e6bed05 | 125 | CORE_ADDR pc = frame_pc_unwind (next_frame); |
4252dc94 | 126 | gdb_byte buf[LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN]; |
e7ee86a9 JB |
127 | |
128 | /* We only recognize a signal trampoline if PC is at the start of | |
129 | one of the three instructions. We optimize for finding the PC at | |
130 | the start, as will be the case when the trampoline is not the | |
131 | first frame on the stack. We assume that in the case where the | |
132 | PC is not at the start of the instruction sequence, there will be | |
133 | a few trailing readable bytes on the stack. */ | |
134 | ||
8e6bed05 | 135 | if (!safe_frame_unwind_memory (next_frame, pc, buf, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN)) |
e7ee86a9 JB |
136 | return 0; |
137 | ||
138 | if (buf[0] != LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN0) | |
139 | { | |
140 | int adjust; | |
141 | ||
142 | switch (buf[0]) | |
143 | { | |
144 | case LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN1: | |
145 | adjust = LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1; | |
146 | break; | |
147 | case LINUX_SIGTRAMP_INSN2: | |
148 | adjust = LINUX_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET2; | |
149 | break; | |
150 | default: | |
151 | return 0; | |
152 | } | |
153 | ||
154 | pc -= adjust; | |
155 | ||
8e6bed05 | 156 | if (!safe_frame_unwind_memory (next_frame, pc, buf, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN)) |
e7ee86a9 JB |
157 | return 0; |
158 | } | |
159 | ||
160 | if (memcmp (buf, linux_sigtramp_code, LINUX_SIGTRAMP_LEN) != 0) | |
161 | return 0; | |
162 | ||
163 | return pc; | |
164 | } | |
165 | ||
166 | /* This function does the same for RT signals. Here the instruction | |
167 | sequence is | |
acd5c798 | 168 | mov $0xad, %eax |
e7ee86a9 JB |
169 | int $0x80 |
170 | or 0xb8 0xad 0x00 0x00 0x00 0xcd 0x80. | |
171 | ||
172 | The effect is to call the system call rt_sigreturn. */ | |
173 | ||
acd5c798 MK |
174 | #define LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN0 0xb8 /* mov $NNNN, %eax */ |
175 | #define LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET0 0 | |
176 | #define LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN1 0xcd /* int */ | |
177 | #define LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1 5 | |
e7ee86a9 | 178 | |
4252dc94 | 179 | static const gdb_byte linux_rt_sigtramp_code[] = |
e7ee86a9 | 180 | { |
acd5c798 | 181 | LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN0, 0xad, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, /* mov $0xad, %eax */ |
e7ee86a9 JB |
182 | LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN1, 0x80 /* int $0x80 */ |
183 | }; | |
184 | ||
185 | #define LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN (sizeof linux_rt_sigtramp_code) | |
186 | ||
8e6bed05 MK |
187 | /* If NEXT_FRAME unwinds into an RT sigtramp routine, return the |
188 | address of the start of the routine. Otherwise, return 0. */ | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
189 | |
190 | static CORE_ADDR | |
8e6bed05 | 191 | i386_linux_rt_sigtramp_start (struct frame_info *next_frame) |
e7ee86a9 | 192 | { |
8e6bed05 | 193 | CORE_ADDR pc = frame_pc_unwind (next_frame); |
4252dc94 | 194 | gdb_byte buf[LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN]; |
e7ee86a9 JB |
195 | |
196 | /* We only recognize a signal trampoline if PC is at the start of | |
197 | one of the two instructions. We optimize for finding the PC at | |
198 | the start, as will be the case when the trampoline is not the | |
199 | first frame on the stack. We assume that in the case where the | |
200 | PC is not at the start of the instruction sequence, there will be | |
201 | a few trailing readable bytes on the stack. */ | |
202 | ||
8e6bed05 | 203 | if (!safe_frame_unwind_memory (next_frame, pc, buf, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN)) |
e7ee86a9 JB |
204 | return 0; |
205 | ||
206 | if (buf[0] != LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN0) | |
207 | { | |
208 | if (buf[0] != LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_INSN1) | |
209 | return 0; | |
210 | ||
211 | pc -= LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_OFFSET1; | |
212 | ||
8e6bed05 MK |
213 | if (!safe_frame_unwind_memory (next_frame, pc, buf, |
214 | LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN)) | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
215 | return 0; |
216 | } | |
217 | ||
218 | if (memcmp (buf, linux_rt_sigtramp_code, LINUX_RT_SIGTRAMP_LEN) != 0) | |
219 | return 0; | |
220 | ||
221 | return pc; | |
222 | } | |
223 | ||
377d9ebd | 224 | /* Return whether the frame preceding NEXT_FRAME corresponds to a |
911bc6ee | 225 | GNU/Linux sigtramp routine. */ |
e7ee86a9 | 226 | |
8201327c | 227 | static int |
911bc6ee | 228 | i386_linux_sigtramp_p (struct frame_info *next_frame) |
e7ee86a9 | 229 | { |
911bc6ee MK |
230 | CORE_ADDR pc = frame_pc_unwind (next_frame); |
231 | char *name; | |
232 | ||
233 | find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, NULL, NULL); | |
234 | ||
ef17e74b DJ |
235 | /* If we have NAME, we can optimize the search. The trampolines are |
236 | named __restore and __restore_rt. However, they aren't dynamically | |
237 | exported from the shared C library, so the trampoline may appear to | |
238 | be part of the preceding function. This should always be sigaction, | |
239 | __sigaction, or __libc_sigaction (all aliases to the same function). */ | |
240 | if (name == NULL || strstr (name, "sigaction") != NULL) | |
8e6bed05 MK |
241 | return (i386_linux_sigtramp_start (next_frame) != 0 |
242 | || i386_linux_rt_sigtramp_start (next_frame) != 0); | |
ef17e74b DJ |
243 | |
244 | return (strcmp ("__restore", name) == 0 | |
245 | || strcmp ("__restore_rt", name) == 0); | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
246 | } |
247 | ||
12b8a2cb DJ |
248 | /* Return one if the unwound PC from NEXT_FRAME is in a signal trampoline |
249 | which may have DWARF-2 CFI. */ | |
250 | ||
251 | static int | |
252 | i386_linux_dwarf_signal_frame_p (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, | |
253 | struct frame_info *next_frame) | |
254 | { | |
255 | CORE_ADDR pc = frame_pc_unwind (next_frame); | |
256 | char *name; | |
257 | ||
258 | find_pc_partial_function (pc, &name, NULL, NULL); | |
259 | ||
260 | /* If a vsyscall DSO is in use, the signal trampolines may have these | |
261 | names. */ | |
262 | if (name && (strcmp (name, "__kernel_sigreturn") == 0 | |
263 | || strcmp (name, "__kernel_rt_sigreturn") == 0)) | |
264 | return 1; | |
265 | ||
266 | return 0; | |
267 | } | |
268 | ||
acd5c798 MK |
269 | /* Offset to struct sigcontext in ucontext, from <asm/ucontext.h>. */ |
270 | #define I386_LINUX_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT_OFFSET 20 | |
271 | ||
272 | /* Assuming NEXT_FRAME is a frame following a GNU/Linux sigtramp | |
273 | routine, return the address of the associated sigcontext structure. */ | |
e7ee86a9 | 274 | |
b7d15bf7 | 275 | static CORE_ADDR |
acd5c798 | 276 | i386_linux_sigcontext_addr (struct frame_info *next_frame) |
e7ee86a9 JB |
277 | { |
278 | CORE_ADDR pc; | |
acd5c798 | 279 | CORE_ADDR sp; |
4252dc94 | 280 | gdb_byte buf[4]; |
acd5c798 | 281 | |
c7f16359 | 282 | frame_unwind_register (next_frame, I386_ESP_REGNUM, buf); |
acd5c798 | 283 | sp = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4); |
e7ee86a9 | 284 | |
8e6bed05 | 285 | pc = i386_linux_sigtramp_start (next_frame); |
e7ee86a9 JB |
286 | if (pc) |
287 | { | |
acd5c798 MK |
288 | /* The sigcontext structure lives on the stack, right after |
289 | the signum argument. We determine the address of the | |
290 | sigcontext structure by looking at the frame's stack | |
291 | pointer. Keep in mind that the first instruction of the | |
292 | sigtramp code is "pop %eax". If the PC is after this | |
293 | instruction, adjust the returned value accordingly. */ | |
294 | if (pc == frame_pc_unwind (next_frame)) | |
e7ee86a9 JB |
295 | return sp + 4; |
296 | return sp; | |
297 | } | |
298 | ||
8e6bed05 | 299 | pc = i386_linux_rt_sigtramp_start (next_frame); |
e7ee86a9 JB |
300 | if (pc) |
301 | { | |
acd5c798 MK |
302 | CORE_ADDR ucontext_addr; |
303 | ||
304 | /* The sigcontext structure is part of the user context. A | |
305 | pointer to the user context is passed as the third argument | |
306 | to the signal handler. */ | |
307 | read_memory (sp + 8, buf, 4); | |
9fbfb822 | 308 | ucontext_addr = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4); |
acd5c798 | 309 | return ucontext_addr + I386_LINUX_UCONTEXT_SIGCONTEXT_OFFSET; |
e7ee86a9 JB |
310 | } |
311 | ||
8a3fe4f8 | 312 | error (_("Couldn't recognize signal trampoline.")); |
e7ee86a9 JB |
313 | return 0; |
314 | } | |
315 | ||
6441c4a0 MK |
316 | /* Set the program counter for process PTID to PC. */ |
317 | ||
8201327c | 318 | static void |
6441c4a0 MK |
319 | i386_linux_write_pc (CORE_ADDR pc, ptid_t ptid) |
320 | { | |
c7f16359 | 321 | write_register_pid (I386_EIP_REGNUM, pc, ptid); |
6441c4a0 MK |
322 | |
323 | /* We must be careful with modifying the program counter. If we | |
324 | just interrupted a system call, the kernel might try to restart | |
325 | it when we resume the inferior. On restarting the system call, | |
326 | the kernel will try backing up the program counter even though it | |
327 | no longer points at the system call. This typically results in a | |
328 | SIGSEGV or SIGILL. We can prevent this by writing `-1' in the | |
329 | "orig_eax" pseudo-register. | |
330 | ||
331 | Note that "orig_eax" is saved when setting up a dummy call frame. | |
332 | This means that it is properly restored when that frame is | |
333 | popped, and that the interrupted system call will be restarted | |
334 | when we resume the inferior on return from a function call from | |
335 | within GDB. In all other cases the system call will not be | |
336 | restarted. */ | |
337 | write_register_pid (I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM, -1, ptid); | |
338 | } | |
339 | \f | |
8201327c | 340 | |
e9f1aad5 MK |
341 | /* The register sets used in GNU/Linux ELF core-dumps are identical to |
342 | the register sets in `struct user' that are used for a.out | |
343 | core-dumps. These are also used by ptrace(2). The corresponding | |
344 | types are `elf_gregset_t' for the general-purpose registers (with | |
345 | `elf_greg_t' the type of a single GP register) and `elf_fpregset_t' | |
346 | for the floating-point registers. | |
347 | ||
348 | Those types used to be available under the names `gregset_t' and | |
349 | `fpregset_t' too, and GDB used those names in the past. But those | |
350 | names are now used for the register sets used in the `mcontext_t' | |
351 | type, which have a different size and layout. */ | |
352 | ||
353 | /* Mapping between the general-purpose registers in `struct user' | |
354 | format and GDB's register cache layout. */ | |
355 | ||
356 | /* From <sys/reg.h>. */ | |
357 | static int i386_linux_gregset_reg_offset[] = | |
358 | { | |
359 | 6 * 4, /* %eax */ | |
360 | 1 * 4, /* %ecx */ | |
361 | 2 * 4, /* %edx */ | |
362 | 0 * 4, /* %ebx */ | |
363 | 15 * 4, /* %esp */ | |
364 | 5 * 4, /* %ebp */ | |
365 | 3 * 4, /* %esi */ | |
366 | 4 * 4, /* %edi */ | |
367 | 12 * 4, /* %eip */ | |
368 | 14 * 4, /* %eflags */ | |
369 | 13 * 4, /* %cs */ | |
370 | 16 * 4, /* %ss */ | |
371 | 7 * 4, /* %ds */ | |
372 | 8 * 4, /* %es */ | |
373 | 9 * 4, /* %fs */ | |
374 | 10 * 4, /* %gs */ | |
375 | -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, | |
376 | -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, | |
377 | -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, -1, | |
378 | -1, | |
379 | 11 * 4 /* "orig_eax" */ | |
380 | }; | |
381 | ||
382 | /* Mapping between the general-purpose registers in `struct | |
383 | sigcontext' format and GDB's register cache layout. */ | |
384 | ||
a3386186 | 385 | /* From <asm/sigcontext.h>. */ |
bb489b3c | 386 | static int i386_linux_sc_reg_offset[] = |
a3386186 MK |
387 | { |
388 | 11 * 4, /* %eax */ | |
389 | 10 * 4, /* %ecx */ | |
390 | 9 * 4, /* %edx */ | |
391 | 8 * 4, /* %ebx */ | |
392 | 7 * 4, /* %esp */ | |
393 | 6 * 4, /* %ebp */ | |
394 | 5 * 4, /* %esi */ | |
395 | 4 * 4, /* %edi */ | |
396 | 14 * 4, /* %eip */ | |
397 | 16 * 4, /* %eflags */ | |
398 | 15 * 4, /* %cs */ | |
399 | 18 * 4, /* %ss */ | |
400 | 3 * 4, /* %ds */ | |
401 | 2 * 4, /* %es */ | |
402 | 1 * 4, /* %fs */ | |
403 | 0 * 4 /* %gs */ | |
404 | }; | |
405 | ||
8201327c MK |
406 | static void |
407 | i386_linux_init_abi (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch *gdbarch) | |
408 | { | |
409 | struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch); | |
410 | ||
411 | /* GNU/Linux uses ELF. */ | |
412 | i386_elf_init_abi (info, gdbarch); | |
413 | ||
8201327c MK |
414 | /* Since we have the extra "orig_eax" register on GNU/Linux, we have |
415 | to adjust a few things. */ | |
416 | ||
417 | set_gdbarch_write_pc (gdbarch, i386_linux_write_pc); | |
bb489b3c | 418 | set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, I386_LINUX_NUM_REGS); |
8201327c | 419 | set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, i386_linux_register_name); |
38c968cf | 420 | set_gdbarch_register_reggroup_p (gdbarch, i386_linux_register_reggroup_p); |
8201327c | 421 | |
e9f1aad5 MK |
422 | tdep->gregset_reg_offset = i386_linux_gregset_reg_offset; |
423 | tdep->gregset_num_regs = ARRAY_SIZE (i386_linux_gregset_reg_offset); | |
424 | tdep->sizeof_gregset = 17 * 4; | |
425 | ||
8201327c MK |
426 | tdep->jb_pc_offset = 20; /* From <bits/setjmp.h>. */ |
427 | ||
911bc6ee | 428 | tdep->sigtramp_p = i386_linux_sigtramp_p; |
b7d15bf7 | 429 | tdep->sigcontext_addr = i386_linux_sigcontext_addr; |
a3386186 | 430 | tdep->sc_reg_offset = i386_linux_sc_reg_offset; |
bb489b3c | 431 | tdep->sc_num_regs = ARRAY_SIZE (i386_linux_sc_reg_offset); |
8201327c | 432 | |
871fbe6a MK |
433 | /* GNU/Linux uses SVR4-style shared libraries. */ |
434 | set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets | |
435 | (gdbarch, svr4_ilp32_fetch_link_map_offsets); | |
436 | ||
437 | /* GNU/Linux uses the dynamic linker included in the GNU C Library. */ | |
bb41a796 | 438 | set_gdbarch_skip_solib_resolver (gdbarch, glibc_skip_solib_resolver); |
12b8a2cb DJ |
439 | |
440 | dwarf2_frame_set_signal_frame_p (gdbarch, i386_linux_dwarf_signal_frame_p); | |
b2756930 KB |
441 | |
442 | /* Enable TLS support. */ | |
443 | set_gdbarch_fetch_tls_load_module_address (gdbarch, | |
444 | svr4_fetch_objfile_link_map); | |
8201327c MK |
445 | } |
446 | ||
447 | /* Provide a prototype to silence -Wmissing-prototypes. */ | |
448 | extern void _initialize_i386_linux_tdep (void); | |
449 | ||
450 | void | |
451 | _initialize_i386_linux_tdep (void) | |
452 | { | |
05816f70 | 453 | gdbarch_register_osabi (bfd_arch_i386, 0, GDB_OSABI_LINUX, |
8201327c MK |
454 | i386_linux_init_abi); |
455 | } |