2003-03-30 Andrew Cagney <cagney@redhat.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / hppa-tdep.c
1 /* Target-dependent code for the HP PA architecture, for GDB.
2
3 Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
4 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 Contributed by the Center for Software Science at the
7 University of Utah (pa-gdb-bugs@cs.utah.edu).
8
9 This file is part of GDB.
10
11 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
14 (at your option) any later version.
15
16 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 GNU General Public License for more details.
20
21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
23 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
24 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
25
26 #include "defs.h"
27 #include "frame.h"
28 #include "bfd.h"
29 #include "inferior.h"
30 #include "value.h"
31 #include "regcache.h"
32 #include "completer.h"
33 #include "language.h"
34 #include "osabi.h"
35 #include "gdb_assert.h"
36 #include "infttrace.h"
37 /* For argument passing to the inferior */
38 #include "symtab.h"
39
40 #ifdef USG
41 #include <sys/types.h>
42 #endif
43
44 #include <dl.h>
45 #include <sys/param.h>
46 #include <signal.h>
47
48 #include <sys/ptrace.h>
49 #include <machine/save_state.h>
50
51 #ifdef COFF_ENCAPSULATE
52 #include "a.out.encap.h"
53 #else
54 #endif
55
56 /*#include <sys/user.h> After a.out.h */
57 #include <sys/file.h>
58 #include "gdb_stat.h"
59 #include "gdb_wait.h"
60
61 #include "gdbcore.h"
62 #include "gdbcmd.h"
63 #include "target.h"
64 #include "symfile.h"
65 #include "objfiles.h"
66
67 /* Some local constants. */
68 static const int hppa_num_regs = 128;
69
70 /* To support detection of the pseudo-initial frame
71 that threads have. */
72 #define THREAD_INITIAL_FRAME_SYMBOL "__pthread_exit"
73 #define THREAD_INITIAL_FRAME_SYM_LEN sizeof(THREAD_INITIAL_FRAME_SYMBOL)
74
75 static int extract_5_load (unsigned int);
76
77 static unsigned extract_5R_store (unsigned int);
78
79 static unsigned extract_5r_store (unsigned int);
80
81 static void find_dummy_frame_regs (struct frame_info *,
82 struct frame_saved_regs *);
83
84 static int find_proc_framesize (CORE_ADDR);
85
86 static int find_return_regnum (CORE_ADDR);
87
88 struct unwind_table_entry *find_unwind_entry (CORE_ADDR);
89
90 static int extract_17 (unsigned int);
91
92 static unsigned deposit_21 (unsigned int, unsigned int);
93
94 static int extract_21 (unsigned);
95
96 static unsigned deposit_14 (int, unsigned int);
97
98 static int extract_14 (unsigned);
99
100 static void unwind_command (char *, int);
101
102 static int low_sign_extend (unsigned int, unsigned int);
103
104 static int sign_extend (unsigned int, unsigned int);
105
106 static int restore_pc_queue (struct frame_saved_regs *);
107
108 static int hppa_alignof (struct type *);
109
110 /* To support multi-threading and stepping. */
111 int hppa_prepare_to_proceed ();
112
113 static int prologue_inst_adjust_sp (unsigned long);
114
115 static int is_branch (unsigned long);
116
117 static int inst_saves_gr (unsigned long);
118
119 static int inst_saves_fr (unsigned long);
120
121 static int pc_in_interrupt_handler (CORE_ADDR);
122
123 static int pc_in_linker_stub (CORE_ADDR);
124
125 static int compare_unwind_entries (const void *, const void *);
126
127 static void read_unwind_info (struct objfile *);
128
129 static void internalize_unwinds (struct objfile *,
130 struct unwind_table_entry *,
131 asection *, unsigned int,
132 unsigned int, CORE_ADDR);
133 static void pa_print_registers (char *, int, int);
134 static void pa_strcat_registers (char *, int, int, struct ui_file *);
135 static void pa_register_look_aside (char *, int, long *);
136 static void pa_print_fp_reg (int);
137 static void pa_strcat_fp_reg (int, struct ui_file *, enum precision_type);
138 static void record_text_segment_lowaddr (bfd *, asection *, void *);
139 /* FIXME: brobecker 2002-11-07: We will likely be able to make the
140 following functions static, once we hppa is partially multiarched. */
141 int hppa_reg_struct_has_addr (int gcc_p, struct type *type);
142 CORE_ADDR hppa_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc);
143 CORE_ADDR hppa_skip_trampoline_code (CORE_ADDR pc);
144 int hppa_in_solib_call_trampoline (CORE_ADDR pc, char *name);
145 int hppa_in_solib_return_trampoline (CORE_ADDR pc, char *name);
146 CORE_ADDR hppa_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *frame);
147 int hppa_inner_than (CORE_ADDR lhs, CORE_ADDR rhs);
148 CORE_ADDR hppa_stack_align (CORE_ADDR sp);
149 int hppa_pc_requires_run_before_use (CORE_ADDR pc);
150 int hppa_instruction_nullified (void);
151 int hppa_register_raw_size (int reg_nr);
152 int hppa_register_byte (int reg_nr);
153 struct type * hppa_register_virtual_type (int reg_nr);
154 void hppa_store_struct_return (CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR sp);
155 void hppa_extract_return_value (struct type *type, char *regbuf, char *valbuf);
156 int hppa_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *type);
157 void hppa_store_return_value (struct type *type, char *valbuf);
158 CORE_ADDR hppa_extract_struct_value_address (char *regbuf);
159 int hppa_cannot_store_register (int regnum);
160 void hppa_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *frame);
161 CORE_ADDR hppa_frame_chain (struct frame_info *frame);
162 int hppa_frame_chain_valid (CORE_ADDR chain, struct frame_info *thisframe);
163 int hppa_frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info *frame);
164 CORE_ADDR hppa_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *frame);
165 CORE_ADDR hppa_frame_args_address (struct frame_info *fi);
166 CORE_ADDR hppa_frame_locals_address (struct frame_info *fi);
167 int hppa_frame_num_args (struct frame_info *frame);
168 void hppa_push_dummy_frame (void);
169 void hppa_pop_frame (void);
170 CORE_ADDR hppa_fix_call_dummy (char *dummy, CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR fun,
171 int nargs, struct value **args,
172 struct type *type, int gcc_p);
173 CORE_ADDR hppa_push_arguments (int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp,
174 int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr);
175 CORE_ADDR hppa_smash_text_address (CORE_ADDR addr);
176 CORE_ADDR hppa_target_read_pc (ptid_t ptid);
177 void hppa_target_write_pc (CORE_ADDR v, ptid_t ptid);
178 CORE_ADDR hppa_target_read_fp (void);
179
180 typedef struct
181 {
182 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
183 CORE_ADDR solib_handle;
184 CORE_ADDR return_val;
185 }
186 args_for_find_stub;
187
188 static int cover_find_stub_with_shl_get (void *);
189
190 static int is_pa_2 = 0; /* False */
191
192 /* This is declared in symtab.c; set to 1 in hp-symtab-read.c */
193 extern int hp_som_som_object_present;
194
195 /* In breakpoint.c */
196 extern int exception_catchpoints_are_fragile;
197
198 /* Should call_function allocate stack space for a struct return? */
199
200 int
201 hppa_use_struct_convention (int gcc_p, struct type *type)
202 {
203 return (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 2 * REGISTER_SIZE);
204 }
205 \f
206
207 /* Routines to extract various sized constants out of hppa
208 instructions. */
209
210 /* This assumes that no garbage lies outside of the lower bits of
211 value. */
212
213 static int
214 sign_extend (unsigned val, unsigned bits)
215 {
216 return (int) (val >> (bits - 1) ? (-1 << bits) | val : val);
217 }
218
219 /* For many immediate values the sign bit is the low bit! */
220
221 static int
222 low_sign_extend (unsigned val, unsigned bits)
223 {
224 return (int) ((val & 0x1 ? (-1 << (bits - 1)) : 0) | val >> 1);
225 }
226
227 /* extract the immediate field from a ld{bhw}s instruction */
228
229 static int
230 extract_5_load (unsigned word)
231 {
232 return low_sign_extend (word >> 16 & MASK_5, 5);
233 }
234
235 /* extract the immediate field from a break instruction */
236
237 static unsigned
238 extract_5r_store (unsigned word)
239 {
240 return (word & MASK_5);
241 }
242
243 /* extract the immediate field from a {sr}sm instruction */
244
245 static unsigned
246 extract_5R_store (unsigned word)
247 {
248 return (word >> 16 & MASK_5);
249 }
250
251 /* extract a 14 bit immediate field */
252
253 static int
254 extract_14 (unsigned word)
255 {
256 return low_sign_extend (word & MASK_14, 14);
257 }
258
259 /* deposit a 14 bit constant in a word */
260
261 static unsigned
262 deposit_14 (int opnd, unsigned word)
263 {
264 unsigned sign = (opnd < 0 ? 1 : 0);
265
266 return word | ((unsigned) opnd << 1 & MASK_14) | sign;
267 }
268
269 /* extract a 21 bit constant */
270
271 static int
272 extract_21 (unsigned word)
273 {
274 int val;
275
276 word &= MASK_21;
277 word <<= 11;
278 val = GET_FIELD (word, 20, 20);
279 val <<= 11;
280 val |= GET_FIELD (word, 9, 19);
281 val <<= 2;
282 val |= GET_FIELD (word, 5, 6);
283 val <<= 5;
284 val |= GET_FIELD (word, 0, 4);
285 val <<= 2;
286 val |= GET_FIELD (word, 7, 8);
287 return sign_extend (val, 21) << 11;
288 }
289
290 /* deposit a 21 bit constant in a word. Although 21 bit constants are
291 usually the top 21 bits of a 32 bit constant, we assume that only
292 the low 21 bits of opnd are relevant */
293
294 static unsigned
295 deposit_21 (unsigned opnd, unsigned word)
296 {
297 unsigned val = 0;
298
299 val |= GET_FIELD (opnd, 11 + 14, 11 + 18);
300 val <<= 2;
301 val |= GET_FIELD (opnd, 11 + 12, 11 + 13);
302 val <<= 2;
303 val |= GET_FIELD (opnd, 11 + 19, 11 + 20);
304 val <<= 11;
305 val |= GET_FIELD (opnd, 11 + 1, 11 + 11);
306 val <<= 1;
307 val |= GET_FIELD (opnd, 11 + 0, 11 + 0);
308 return word | val;
309 }
310
311 /* extract a 17 bit constant from branch instructions, returning the
312 19 bit signed value. */
313
314 static int
315 extract_17 (unsigned word)
316 {
317 return sign_extend (GET_FIELD (word, 19, 28) |
318 GET_FIELD (word, 29, 29) << 10 |
319 GET_FIELD (word, 11, 15) << 11 |
320 (word & 0x1) << 16, 17) << 2;
321 }
322 \f
323
324 /* Compare the start address for two unwind entries returning 1 if
325 the first address is larger than the second, -1 if the second is
326 larger than the first, and zero if they are equal. */
327
328 static int
329 compare_unwind_entries (const void *arg1, const void *arg2)
330 {
331 const struct unwind_table_entry *a = arg1;
332 const struct unwind_table_entry *b = arg2;
333
334 if (a->region_start > b->region_start)
335 return 1;
336 else if (a->region_start < b->region_start)
337 return -1;
338 else
339 return 0;
340 }
341
342 static CORE_ADDR low_text_segment_address;
343
344 static void
345 record_text_segment_lowaddr (bfd *abfd, asection *section, void *ignored)
346 {
347 if (((section->flags & (SEC_ALLOC | SEC_LOAD | SEC_READONLY))
348 == (SEC_ALLOC | SEC_LOAD | SEC_READONLY))
349 && section->vma < low_text_segment_address)
350 low_text_segment_address = section->vma;
351 }
352
353 static void
354 internalize_unwinds (struct objfile *objfile, struct unwind_table_entry *table,
355 asection *section, unsigned int entries, unsigned int size,
356 CORE_ADDR text_offset)
357 {
358 /* We will read the unwind entries into temporary memory, then
359 fill in the actual unwind table. */
360 if (size > 0)
361 {
362 unsigned long tmp;
363 unsigned i;
364 char *buf = alloca (size);
365
366 low_text_segment_address = -1;
367
368 /* If addresses are 64 bits wide, then unwinds are supposed to
369 be segment relative offsets instead of absolute addresses.
370
371 Note that when loading a shared library (text_offset != 0) the
372 unwinds are already relative to the text_offset that will be
373 passed in. */
374 if (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 && text_offset == 0)
375 {
376 bfd_map_over_sections (objfile->obfd,
377 record_text_segment_lowaddr, NULL);
378
379 /* ?!? Mask off some low bits. Should this instead subtract
380 out the lowest section's filepos or something like that?
381 This looks very hokey to me. */
382 low_text_segment_address &= ~0xfff;
383 text_offset += low_text_segment_address;
384 }
385
386 bfd_get_section_contents (objfile->obfd, section, buf, 0, size);
387
388 /* Now internalize the information being careful to handle host/target
389 endian issues. */
390 for (i = 0; i < entries; i++)
391 {
392 table[i].region_start = bfd_get_32 (objfile->obfd,
393 (bfd_byte *) buf);
394 table[i].region_start += text_offset;
395 buf += 4;
396 table[i].region_end = bfd_get_32 (objfile->obfd, (bfd_byte *) buf);
397 table[i].region_end += text_offset;
398 buf += 4;
399 tmp = bfd_get_32 (objfile->obfd, (bfd_byte *) buf);
400 buf += 4;
401 table[i].Cannot_unwind = (tmp >> 31) & 0x1;
402 table[i].Millicode = (tmp >> 30) & 0x1;
403 table[i].Millicode_save_sr0 = (tmp >> 29) & 0x1;
404 table[i].Region_description = (tmp >> 27) & 0x3;
405 table[i].reserved1 = (tmp >> 26) & 0x1;
406 table[i].Entry_SR = (tmp >> 25) & 0x1;
407 table[i].Entry_FR = (tmp >> 21) & 0xf;
408 table[i].Entry_GR = (tmp >> 16) & 0x1f;
409 table[i].Args_stored = (tmp >> 15) & 0x1;
410 table[i].Variable_Frame = (tmp >> 14) & 0x1;
411 table[i].Separate_Package_Body = (tmp >> 13) & 0x1;
412 table[i].Frame_Extension_Millicode = (tmp >> 12) & 0x1;
413 table[i].Stack_Overflow_Check = (tmp >> 11) & 0x1;
414 table[i].Two_Instruction_SP_Increment = (tmp >> 10) & 0x1;
415 table[i].Ada_Region = (tmp >> 9) & 0x1;
416 table[i].cxx_info = (tmp >> 8) & 0x1;
417 table[i].cxx_try_catch = (tmp >> 7) & 0x1;
418 table[i].sched_entry_seq = (tmp >> 6) & 0x1;
419 table[i].reserved2 = (tmp >> 5) & 0x1;
420 table[i].Save_SP = (tmp >> 4) & 0x1;
421 table[i].Save_RP = (tmp >> 3) & 0x1;
422 table[i].Save_MRP_in_frame = (tmp >> 2) & 0x1;
423 table[i].extn_ptr_defined = (tmp >> 1) & 0x1;
424 table[i].Cleanup_defined = tmp & 0x1;
425 tmp = bfd_get_32 (objfile->obfd, (bfd_byte *) buf);
426 buf += 4;
427 table[i].MPE_XL_interrupt_marker = (tmp >> 31) & 0x1;
428 table[i].HP_UX_interrupt_marker = (tmp >> 30) & 0x1;
429 table[i].Large_frame = (tmp >> 29) & 0x1;
430 table[i].Pseudo_SP_Set = (tmp >> 28) & 0x1;
431 table[i].reserved4 = (tmp >> 27) & 0x1;
432 table[i].Total_frame_size = tmp & 0x7ffffff;
433
434 /* Stub unwinds are handled elsewhere. */
435 table[i].stub_unwind.stub_type = 0;
436 table[i].stub_unwind.padding = 0;
437 }
438 }
439 }
440
441 /* Read in the backtrace information stored in the `$UNWIND_START$' section of
442 the object file. This info is used mainly by find_unwind_entry() to find
443 out the stack frame size and frame pointer used by procedures. We put
444 everything on the psymbol obstack in the objfile so that it automatically
445 gets freed when the objfile is destroyed. */
446
447 static void
448 read_unwind_info (struct objfile *objfile)
449 {
450 asection *unwind_sec, *stub_unwind_sec;
451 unsigned unwind_size, stub_unwind_size, total_size;
452 unsigned index, unwind_entries;
453 unsigned stub_entries, total_entries;
454 CORE_ADDR text_offset;
455 struct obj_unwind_info *ui;
456 obj_private_data_t *obj_private;
457
458 text_offset = ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets, 0);
459 ui = (struct obj_unwind_info *) obstack_alloc (&objfile->psymbol_obstack,
460 sizeof (struct obj_unwind_info));
461
462 ui->table = NULL;
463 ui->cache = NULL;
464 ui->last = -1;
465
466 /* For reasons unknown the HP PA64 tools generate multiple unwinder
467 sections in a single executable. So we just iterate over every
468 section in the BFD looking for unwinder sections intead of trying
469 to do a lookup with bfd_get_section_by_name.
470
471 First determine the total size of the unwind tables so that we
472 can allocate memory in a nice big hunk. */
473 total_entries = 0;
474 for (unwind_sec = objfile->obfd->sections;
475 unwind_sec;
476 unwind_sec = unwind_sec->next)
477 {
478 if (strcmp (unwind_sec->name, "$UNWIND_START$") == 0
479 || strcmp (unwind_sec->name, ".PARISC.unwind") == 0)
480 {
481 unwind_size = bfd_section_size (objfile->obfd, unwind_sec);
482 unwind_entries = unwind_size / UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE;
483
484 total_entries += unwind_entries;
485 }
486 }
487
488 /* Now compute the size of the stub unwinds. Note the ELF tools do not
489 use stub unwinds at the curren time. */
490 stub_unwind_sec = bfd_get_section_by_name (objfile->obfd, "$UNWIND_END$");
491
492 if (stub_unwind_sec)
493 {
494 stub_unwind_size = bfd_section_size (objfile->obfd, stub_unwind_sec);
495 stub_entries = stub_unwind_size / STUB_UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE;
496 }
497 else
498 {
499 stub_unwind_size = 0;
500 stub_entries = 0;
501 }
502
503 /* Compute total number of unwind entries and their total size. */
504 total_entries += stub_entries;
505 total_size = total_entries * sizeof (struct unwind_table_entry);
506
507 /* Allocate memory for the unwind table. */
508 ui->table = (struct unwind_table_entry *)
509 obstack_alloc (&objfile->psymbol_obstack, total_size);
510 ui->last = total_entries - 1;
511
512 /* Now read in each unwind section and internalize the standard unwind
513 entries. */
514 index = 0;
515 for (unwind_sec = objfile->obfd->sections;
516 unwind_sec;
517 unwind_sec = unwind_sec->next)
518 {
519 if (strcmp (unwind_sec->name, "$UNWIND_START$") == 0
520 || strcmp (unwind_sec->name, ".PARISC.unwind") == 0)
521 {
522 unwind_size = bfd_section_size (objfile->obfd, unwind_sec);
523 unwind_entries = unwind_size / UNWIND_ENTRY_SIZE;
524
525 internalize_unwinds (objfile, &ui->table[index], unwind_sec,
526 unwind_entries, unwind_size, text_offset);
527 index += unwind_entries;
528 }
529 }
530
531 /* Now read in and internalize the stub unwind entries. */
532 if (stub_unwind_size > 0)
533 {
534 unsigned int i;
535 char *buf = alloca (stub_unwind_size);
536
537 /* Read in the stub unwind entries. */
538 bfd_get_section_contents (objfile->obfd, stub_unwind_sec, buf,
539 0, stub_unwind_size);
540
541 /* Now convert them into regular unwind entries. */
542 for (i = 0; i < stub_entries; i++, index++)
543 {
544 /* Clear out the next unwind entry. */
545 memset (&ui->table[index], 0, sizeof (struct unwind_table_entry));
546
547 /* Convert offset & size into region_start and region_end.
548 Stuff away the stub type into "reserved" fields. */
549 ui->table[index].region_start = bfd_get_32 (objfile->obfd,
550 (bfd_byte *) buf);
551 ui->table[index].region_start += text_offset;
552 buf += 4;
553 ui->table[index].stub_unwind.stub_type = bfd_get_8 (objfile->obfd,
554 (bfd_byte *) buf);
555 buf += 2;
556 ui->table[index].region_end
557 = ui->table[index].region_start + 4 *
558 (bfd_get_16 (objfile->obfd, (bfd_byte *) buf) - 1);
559 buf += 2;
560 }
561
562 }
563
564 /* Unwind table needs to be kept sorted. */
565 qsort (ui->table, total_entries, sizeof (struct unwind_table_entry),
566 compare_unwind_entries);
567
568 /* Keep a pointer to the unwind information. */
569 if (objfile->obj_private == NULL)
570 {
571 obj_private = (obj_private_data_t *)
572 obstack_alloc (&objfile->psymbol_obstack,
573 sizeof (obj_private_data_t));
574 obj_private->unwind_info = NULL;
575 obj_private->so_info = NULL;
576 obj_private->dp = 0;
577
578 objfile->obj_private = obj_private;
579 }
580 obj_private = (obj_private_data_t *) objfile->obj_private;
581 obj_private->unwind_info = ui;
582 }
583
584 /* Lookup the unwind (stack backtrace) info for the given PC. We search all
585 of the objfiles seeking the unwind table entry for this PC. Each objfile
586 contains a sorted list of struct unwind_table_entry. Since we do a binary
587 search of the unwind tables, we depend upon them to be sorted. */
588
589 struct unwind_table_entry *
590 find_unwind_entry (CORE_ADDR pc)
591 {
592 int first, middle, last;
593 struct objfile *objfile;
594
595 /* A function at address 0? Not in HP-UX! */
596 if (pc == (CORE_ADDR) 0)
597 return NULL;
598
599 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
600 {
601 struct obj_unwind_info *ui;
602 ui = NULL;
603 if (objfile->obj_private)
604 ui = ((obj_private_data_t *) (objfile->obj_private))->unwind_info;
605
606 if (!ui)
607 {
608 read_unwind_info (objfile);
609 if (objfile->obj_private == NULL)
610 error ("Internal error reading unwind information.");
611 ui = ((obj_private_data_t *) (objfile->obj_private))->unwind_info;
612 }
613
614 /* First, check the cache */
615
616 if (ui->cache
617 && pc >= ui->cache->region_start
618 && pc <= ui->cache->region_end)
619 return ui->cache;
620
621 /* Not in the cache, do a binary search */
622
623 first = 0;
624 last = ui->last;
625
626 while (first <= last)
627 {
628 middle = (first + last) / 2;
629 if (pc >= ui->table[middle].region_start
630 && pc <= ui->table[middle].region_end)
631 {
632 ui->cache = &ui->table[middle];
633 return &ui->table[middle];
634 }
635
636 if (pc < ui->table[middle].region_start)
637 last = middle - 1;
638 else
639 first = middle + 1;
640 }
641 } /* ALL_OBJFILES() */
642 return NULL;
643 }
644
645 /* Return the adjustment necessary to make for addresses on the stack
646 as presented by hpread.c.
647
648 This is necessary because of the stack direction on the PA and the
649 bizarre way in which someone (?) decided they wanted to handle
650 frame pointerless code in GDB. */
651 int
652 hpread_adjust_stack_address (CORE_ADDR func_addr)
653 {
654 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
655
656 u = find_unwind_entry (func_addr);
657 if (!u)
658 return 0;
659 else
660 return u->Total_frame_size << 3;
661 }
662
663 /* Called to determine if PC is in an interrupt handler of some
664 kind. */
665
666 static int
667 pc_in_interrupt_handler (CORE_ADDR pc)
668 {
669 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
670 struct minimal_symbol *msym_us;
671
672 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
673 if (!u)
674 return 0;
675
676 /* Oh joys. HPUX sets the interrupt bit for _sigreturn even though
677 its frame isn't a pure interrupt frame. Deal with this. */
678 msym_us = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc);
679
680 return (u->HP_UX_interrupt_marker
681 && !PC_IN_SIGTRAMP (pc, DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msym_us)));
682 }
683
684 /* Called when no unwind descriptor was found for PC. Returns 1 if it
685 appears that PC is in a linker stub.
686
687 ?!? Need to handle stubs which appear in PA64 code. */
688
689 static int
690 pc_in_linker_stub (CORE_ADDR pc)
691 {
692 int found_magic_instruction = 0;
693 int i;
694 char buf[4];
695
696 /* If unable to read memory, assume pc is not in a linker stub. */
697 if (target_read_memory (pc, buf, 4) != 0)
698 return 0;
699
700 /* We are looking for something like
701
702 ; $$dyncall jams RP into this special spot in the frame (RP')
703 ; before calling the "call stub"
704 ldw -18(sp),rp
705
706 ldsid (rp),r1 ; Get space associated with RP into r1
707 mtsp r1,sp ; Move it into space register 0
708 be,n 0(sr0),rp) ; back to your regularly scheduled program */
709
710 /* Maximum known linker stub size is 4 instructions. Search forward
711 from the given PC, then backward. */
712 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
713 {
714 /* If we hit something with an unwind, stop searching this direction. */
715
716 if (find_unwind_entry (pc + i * 4) != 0)
717 break;
718
719 /* Check for ldsid (rp),r1 which is the magic instruction for a
720 return from a cross-space function call. */
721 if (read_memory_integer (pc + i * 4, 4) == 0x004010a1)
722 {
723 found_magic_instruction = 1;
724 break;
725 }
726 /* Add code to handle long call/branch and argument relocation stubs
727 here. */
728 }
729
730 if (found_magic_instruction != 0)
731 return 1;
732
733 /* Now look backward. */
734 for (i = 0; i < 4; i++)
735 {
736 /* If we hit something with an unwind, stop searching this direction. */
737
738 if (find_unwind_entry (pc - i * 4) != 0)
739 break;
740
741 /* Check for ldsid (rp),r1 which is the magic instruction for a
742 return from a cross-space function call. */
743 if (read_memory_integer (pc - i * 4, 4) == 0x004010a1)
744 {
745 found_magic_instruction = 1;
746 break;
747 }
748 /* Add code to handle long call/branch and argument relocation stubs
749 here. */
750 }
751 return found_magic_instruction;
752 }
753
754 static int
755 find_return_regnum (CORE_ADDR pc)
756 {
757 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
758
759 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
760
761 if (!u)
762 return RP_REGNUM;
763
764 if (u->Millicode)
765 return 31;
766
767 return RP_REGNUM;
768 }
769
770 /* Return size of frame, or -1 if we should use a frame pointer. */
771 static int
772 find_proc_framesize (CORE_ADDR pc)
773 {
774 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
775 struct minimal_symbol *msym_us;
776
777 /* This may indicate a bug in our callers... */
778 if (pc == (CORE_ADDR) 0)
779 return -1;
780
781 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
782
783 if (!u)
784 {
785 if (pc_in_linker_stub (pc))
786 /* Linker stubs have a zero size frame. */
787 return 0;
788 else
789 return -1;
790 }
791
792 msym_us = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc);
793
794 /* If Save_SP is set, and we're not in an interrupt or signal caller,
795 then we have a frame pointer. Use it. */
796 if (u->Save_SP
797 && !pc_in_interrupt_handler (pc)
798 && msym_us
799 && !PC_IN_SIGTRAMP (pc, DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msym_us)))
800 return -1;
801
802 return u->Total_frame_size << 3;
803 }
804
805 /* Return offset from sp at which rp is saved, or 0 if not saved. */
806 static int rp_saved (CORE_ADDR);
807
808 static int
809 rp_saved (CORE_ADDR pc)
810 {
811 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
812
813 /* A function at, and thus a return PC from, address 0? Not in HP-UX! */
814 if (pc == (CORE_ADDR) 0)
815 return 0;
816
817 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
818
819 if (!u)
820 {
821 if (pc_in_linker_stub (pc))
822 /* This is the so-called RP'. */
823 return -24;
824 else
825 return 0;
826 }
827
828 if (u->Save_RP)
829 return (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? -16 : -20);
830 else if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type != 0)
831 {
832 switch (u->stub_unwind.stub_type)
833 {
834 case EXPORT:
835 case IMPORT:
836 return -24;
837 case PARAMETER_RELOCATION:
838 return -8;
839 default:
840 return 0;
841 }
842 }
843 else
844 return 0;
845 }
846 \f
847 int
848 hppa_frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info *frame)
849 {
850 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
851
852 u = find_unwind_entry (frame->pc);
853
854 if (u == 0)
855 return 0;
856
857 return (u->Total_frame_size == 0 && u->stub_unwind.stub_type == 0);
858 }
859
860 /* Immediately after a function call, return the saved pc.
861 Can't go through the frames for this because on some machines
862 the new frame is not set up until the new function executes
863 some instructions. */
864
865 CORE_ADDR
866 hppa_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info *frame)
867 {
868 int ret_regnum;
869 CORE_ADDR pc;
870 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
871
872 ret_regnum = find_return_regnum (get_frame_pc (frame));
873 pc = read_register (ret_regnum) & ~0x3;
874
875 /* If PC is in a linker stub, then we need to dig the address
876 the stub will return to out of the stack. */
877 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
878 if (u && u->stub_unwind.stub_type != 0)
879 return DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame);
880 else
881 return pc;
882 }
883 \f
884 CORE_ADDR
885 hppa_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info *frame)
886 {
887 CORE_ADDR pc = get_frame_pc (frame);
888 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
889 CORE_ADDR old_pc = 0;
890 int spun_around_loop = 0;
891 int rp_offset = 0;
892
893 /* BSD, HPUX & OSF1 all lay out the hardware state in the same manner
894 at the base of the frame in an interrupt handler. Registers within
895 are saved in the exact same order as GDB numbers registers. How
896 convienent. */
897 if (pc_in_interrupt_handler (pc))
898 return read_memory_integer (frame->frame + PC_REGNUM * 4,
899 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
900
901 if ((frame->pc >= frame->frame
902 && frame->pc <= (frame->frame
903 /* A call dummy is sized in words, but it is
904 actually a series of instructions. Account
905 for that scaling factor. */
906 + ((REGISTER_SIZE / INSTRUCTION_SIZE)
907 * CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH)
908 /* Similarly we have to account for 64bit
909 wide register saves. */
910 + (32 * REGISTER_SIZE)
911 /* We always consider FP regs 8 bytes long. */
912 + (NUM_REGS - FP0_REGNUM) * 8
913 /* Similarly we have to account for 64bit
914 wide register saves. */
915 + (6 * REGISTER_SIZE))))
916 {
917 return read_memory_integer ((frame->frame
918 + (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? -16 : -20)),
919 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
920 }
921
922 #ifdef FRAME_SAVED_PC_IN_SIGTRAMP
923 /* Deal with signal handler caller frames too. */
924 if ((get_frame_type (frame) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME))
925 {
926 CORE_ADDR rp;
927 FRAME_SAVED_PC_IN_SIGTRAMP (frame, &rp);
928 return rp & ~0x3;
929 }
930 #endif
931
932 if (hppa_frameless_function_invocation (frame))
933 {
934 int ret_regnum;
935
936 ret_regnum = find_return_regnum (pc);
937
938 /* If the next frame is an interrupt frame or a signal
939 handler caller, then we need to look in the saved
940 register area to get the return pointer (the values
941 in the registers may not correspond to anything useful). */
942 if (frame->next
943 && ((get_frame_type (frame->next) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME)
944 || pc_in_interrupt_handler (frame->next->pc)))
945 {
946 struct frame_saved_regs saved_regs;
947
948 deprecated_get_frame_saved_regs (frame->next, &saved_regs);
949 if (read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM],
950 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & 0x2)
951 {
952 pc = read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[31],
953 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
954
955 /* Syscalls are really two frames. The syscall stub itself
956 with a return pointer in %rp and the kernel call with
957 a return pointer in %r31. We return the %rp variant
958 if %r31 is the same as frame->pc. */
959 if (pc == frame->pc)
960 pc = read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[RP_REGNUM],
961 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
962 }
963 else
964 pc = read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[RP_REGNUM],
965 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
966 }
967 else
968 pc = read_register (ret_regnum) & ~0x3;
969 }
970 else
971 {
972 spun_around_loop = 0;
973 old_pc = pc;
974
975 restart:
976 rp_offset = rp_saved (pc);
977
978 /* Similar to code in frameless function case. If the next
979 frame is a signal or interrupt handler, then dig the right
980 information out of the saved register info. */
981 if (rp_offset == 0
982 && frame->next
983 && ((get_frame_type (frame->next) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME)
984 || pc_in_interrupt_handler (frame->next->pc)))
985 {
986 struct frame_saved_regs saved_regs;
987
988 deprecated_get_frame_saved_regs (frame->next, &saved_regs);
989 if (read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM],
990 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & 0x2)
991 {
992 pc = read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[31],
993 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
994
995 /* Syscalls are really two frames. The syscall stub itself
996 with a return pointer in %rp and the kernel call with
997 a return pointer in %r31. We return the %rp variant
998 if %r31 is the same as frame->pc. */
999 if (pc == frame->pc)
1000 pc = read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[RP_REGNUM],
1001 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
1002 }
1003 else
1004 pc = read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[RP_REGNUM],
1005 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
1006 }
1007 else if (rp_offset == 0)
1008 {
1009 old_pc = pc;
1010 pc = read_register (RP_REGNUM) & ~0x3;
1011 }
1012 else
1013 {
1014 old_pc = pc;
1015 pc = read_memory_integer (frame->frame + rp_offset,
1016 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8) & ~0x3;
1017 }
1018 }
1019
1020 /* If PC is inside a linker stub, then dig out the address the stub
1021 will return to.
1022
1023 Don't do this for long branch stubs. Why? For some unknown reason
1024 _start is marked as a long branch stub in hpux10. */
1025 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
1026 if (u && u->stub_unwind.stub_type != 0
1027 && u->stub_unwind.stub_type != LONG_BRANCH)
1028 {
1029 unsigned int insn;
1030
1031 /* If this is a dynamic executable, and we're in a signal handler,
1032 then the call chain will eventually point us into the stub for
1033 _sigreturn. Unlike most cases, we'll be pointed to the branch
1034 to the real sigreturn rather than the code after the real branch!.
1035
1036 Else, try to dig the address the stub will return to in the normal
1037 fashion. */
1038 insn = read_memory_integer (pc, 4);
1039 if ((insn & 0xfc00e000) == 0xe8000000)
1040 return (pc + extract_17 (insn) + 8) & ~0x3;
1041 else
1042 {
1043 if (old_pc == pc)
1044 spun_around_loop++;
1045
1046 if (spun_around_loop > 1)
1047 {
1048 /* We're just about to go around the loop again with
1049 no more hope of success. Die. */
1050 error ("Unable to find return pc for this frame");
1051 }
1052 else
1053 goto restart;
1054 }
1055 }
1056
1057 return pc;
1058 }
1059 \f
1060 /* We need to correct the PC and the FP for the outermost frame when we are
1061 in a system call. */
1062
1063 void
1064 hppa_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf, struct frame_info *frame)
1065 {
1066 int flags;
1067 int framesize;
1068
1069 if (frame->next && !fromleaf)
1070 return;
1071
1072 /* If the next frame represents a frameless function invocation then
1073 we have to do some adjustments that are normally done by
1074 DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN. (DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN is not called in
1075 this case.) */
1076 if (fromleaf)
1077 {
1078 /* Find the framesize of *this* frame without peeking at the PC
1079 in the current frame structure (it isn't set yet). */
1080 framesize = find_proc_framesize (DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (get_next_frame (frame)));
1081
1082 /* Now adjust our base frame accordingly. If we have a frame pointer
1083 use it, else subtract the size of this frame from the current
1084 frame. (we always want frame->frame to point at the lowest address
1085 in the frame). */
1086 if (framesize == -1)
1087 frame->frame = TARGET_READ_FP ();
1088 else
1089 frame->frame -= framesize;
1090 return;
1091 }
1092
1093 flags = read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM);
1094 if (flags & 2) /* In system call? */
1095 frame->pc = read_register (31) & ~0x3;
1096
1097 /* The outermost frame is always derived from PC-framesize
1098
1099 One might think frameless innermost frames should have
1100 a frame->frame that is the same as the parent's frame->frame.
1101 That is wrong; frame->frame in that case should be the *high*
1102 address of the parent's frame. It's complicated as hell to
1103 explain, but the parent *always* creates some stack space for
1104 the child. So the child actually does have a frame of some
1105 sorts, and its base is the high address in its parent's frame. */
1106 framesize = find_proc_framesize (frame->pc);
1107 if (framesize == -1)
1108 frame->frame = TARGET_READ_FP ();
1109 else
1110 frame->frame = read_register (SP_REGNUM) - framesize;
1111 }
1112 \f
1113 /* Given a GDB frame, determine the address of the calling function's
1114 frame. This will be used to create a new GDB frame struct, and
1115 then DEPRECATED_INIT_EXTRA_FRAME_INFO and DEPRECATED_INIT_FRAME_PC
1116 will be called for the new frame.
1117
1118 This may involve searching through prologues for several functions
1119 at boundaries where GCC calls HP C code, or where code which has
1120 a frame pointer calls code without a frame pointer. */
1121
1122 CORE_ADDR
1123 hppa_frame_chain (struct frame_info *frame)
1124 {
1125 int my_framesize, caller_framesize;
1126 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
1127 CORE_ADDR frame_base;
1128 struct frame_info *tmp_frame;
1129
1130 /* A frame in the current frame list, or zero. */
1131 struct frame_info *saved_regs_frame = 0;
1132 /* Where the registers were saved in saved_regs_frame.
1133 If saved_regs_frame is zero, this is garbage. */
1134 struct frame_saved_regs saved_regs;
1135
1136 CORE_ADDR caller_pc;
1137
1138 struct minimal_symbol *min_frame_symbol;
1139 struct symbol *frame_symbol;
1140 char *frame_symbol_name;
1141
1142 /* If this is a threaded application, and we see the
1143 routine "__pthread_exit", treat it as the stack root
1144 for this thread. */
1145 min_frame_symbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (frame->pc);
1146 frame_symbol = find_pc_function (frame->pc);
1147
1148 if ((min_frame_symbol != 0) /* && (frame_symbol == 0) */ )
1149 {
1150 /* The test above for "no user function name" would defend
1151 against the slim likelihood that a user might define a
1152 routine named "__pthread_exit" and then try to debug it.
1153
1154 If it weren't commented out, and you tried to debug the
1155 pthread library itself, you'd get errors.
1156
1157 So for today, we don't make that check. */
1158 frame_symbol_name = DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (min_frame_symbol);
1159 if (frame_symbol_name != 0)
1160 {
1161 if (0 == strncmp (frame_symbol_name,
1162 THREAD_INITIAL_FRAME_SYMBOL,
1163 THREAD_INITIAL_FRAME_SYM_LEN))
1164 {
1165 /* Pretend we've reached the bottom of the stack. */
1166 return (CORE_ADDR) 0;
1167 }
1168 }
1169 } /* End of hacky code for threads. */
1170
1171 /* Handle HPUX, BSD, and OSF1 style interrupt frames first. These
1172 are easy; at *sp we have a full save state strucutre which we can
1173 pull the old stack pointer from. Also see frame_saved_pc for
1174 code to dig a saved PC out of the save state structure. */
1175 if (pc_in_interrupt_handler (frame->pc))
1176 frame_base = read_memory_integer (frame->frame + SP_REGNUM * 4,
1177 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1178 #ifdef FRAME_BASE_BEFORE_SIGTRAMP
1179 else if ((get_frame_type (frame) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME))
1180 {
1181 FRAME_BASE_BEFORE_SIGTRAMP (frame, &frame_base);
1182 }
1183 #endif
1184 else
1185 frame_base = frame->frame;
1186
1187 /* Get frame sizes for the current frame and the frame of the
1188 caller. */
1189 my_framesize = find_proc_framesize (frame->pc);
1190 caller_pc = DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame);
1191
1192 /* If we can't determine the caller's PC, then it's not likely we can
1193 really determine anything meaningful about its frame. We'll consider
1194 this to be stack bottom. */
1195 if (caller_pc == (CORE_ADDR) 0)
1196 return (CORE_ADDR) 0;
1197
1198 caller_framesize = find_proc_framesize (DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
1199
1200 /* If caller does not have a frame pointer, then its frame
1201 can be found at current_frame - caller_framesize. */
1202 if (caller_framesize != -1)
1203 {
1204 return frame_base - caller_framesize;
1205 }
1206 /* Both caller and callee have frame pointers and are GCC compiled
1207 (SAVE_SP bit in unwind descriptor is on for both functions.
1208 The previous frame pointer is found at the top of the current frame. */
1209 if (caller_framesize == -1 && my_framesize == -1)
1210 {
1211 return read_memory_integer (frame_base, TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1212 }
1213 /* Caller has a frame pointer, but callee does not. This is a little
1214 more difficult as GCC and HP C lay out locals and callee register save
1215 areas very differently.
1216
1217 The previous frame pointer could be in a register, or in one of
1218 several areas on the stack.
1219
1220 Walk from the current frame to the innermost frame examining
1221 unwind descriptors to determine if %r3 ever gets saved into the
1222 stack. If so return whatever value got saved into the stack.
1223 If it was never saved in the stack, then the value in %r3 is still
1224 valid, so use it.
1225
1226 We use information from unwind descriptors to determine if %r3
1227 is saved into the stack (Entry_GR field has this information). */
1228
1229 for (tmp_frame = frame; tmp_frame; tmp_frame = tmp_frame->next)
1230 {
1231 u = find_unwind_entry (tmp_frame->pc);
1232
1233 if (!u)
1234 {
1235 /* We could find this information by examining prologues. I don't
1236 think anyone has actually written any tools (not even "strip")
1237 which leave them out of an executable, so maybe this is a moot
1238 point. */
1239 /* ??rehrauer: Actually, it's quite possible to stepi your way into
1240 code that doesn't have unwind entries. For example, stepping into
1241 the dynamic linker will give you a PC that has none. Thus, I've
1242 disabled this warning. */
1243 #if 0
1244 warning ("Unable to find unwind for PC 0x%x -- Help!", tmp_frame->pc);
1245 #endif
1246 return (CORE_ADDR) 0;
1247 }
1248
1249 if (u->Save_SP
1250 || (get_frame_type (tmp_frame) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME)
1251 || pc_in_interrupt_handler (tmp_frame->pc))
1252 break;
1253
1254 /* Entry_GR specifies the number of callee-saved general registers
1255 saved in the stack. It starts at %r3, so %r3 would be 1. */
1256 if (u->Entry_GR >= 1)
1257 {
1258 /* The unwind entry claims that r3 is saved here. However,
1259 in optimized code, GCC often doesn't actually save r3.
1260 We'll discover this if we look at the prologue. */
1261 deprecated_get_frame_saved_regs (tmp_frame, &saved_regs);
1262 saved_regs_frame = tmp_frame;
1263
1264 /* If we have an address for r3, that's good. */
1265 if (saved_regs.regs[FP_REGNUM])
1266 break;
1267 }
1268 }
1269
1270 if (tmp_frame)
1271 {
1272 /* We may have walked down the chain into a function with a frame
1273 pointer. */
1274 if (u->Save_SP
1275 && !(get_frame_type (tmp_frame) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME)
1276 && !pc_in_interrupt_handler (tmp_frame->pc))
1277 {
1278 return read_memory_integer (tmp_frame->frame, TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1279 }
1280 /* %r3 was saved somewhere in the stack. Dig it out. */
1281 else
1282 {
1283 /* Sick.
1284
1285 For optimization purposes many kernels don't have the
1286 callee saved registers into the save_state structure upon
1287 entry into the kernel for a syscall; the optimization
1288 is usually turned off if the process is being traced so
1289 that the debugger can get full register state for the
1290 process.
1291
1292 This scheme works well except for two cases:
1293
1294 * Attaching to a process when the process is in the
1295 kernel performing a system call (debugger can't get
1296 full register state for the inferior process since
1297 the process wasn't being traced when it entered the
1298 system call).
1299
1300 * Register state is not complete if the system call
1301 causes the process to core dump.
1302
1303
1304 The following heinous code is an attempt to deal with
1305 the lack of register state in a core dump. It will
1306 fail miserably if the function which performs the
1307 system call has a variable sized stack frame. */
1308
1309 if (tmp_frame != saved_regs_frame)
1310 deprecated_get_frame_saved_regs (tmp_frame, &saved_regs);
1311
1312 /* Abominable hack. */
1313 if (current_target.to_has_execution == 0
1314 && ((saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM]
1315 && (read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM],
1316 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8)
1317 & 0x2))
1318 || (saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM] == 0
1319 && read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM) & 0x2)))
1320 {
1321 u = find_unwind_entry (DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
1322 if (!u)
1323 {
1324 return read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FP_REGNUM],
1325 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1326 }
1327 else
1328 {
1329 return frame_base - (u->Total_frame_size << 3);
1330 }
1331 }
1332
1333 return read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FP_REGNUM],
1334 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1335 }
1336 }
1337 else
1338 {
1339 /* Get the innermost frame. */
1340 tmp_frame = frame;
1341 while (tmp_frame->next != NULL)
1342 tmp_frame = tmp_frame->next;
1343
1344 if (tmp_frame != saved_regs_frame)
1345 deprecated_get_frame_saved_regs (tmp_frame, &saved_regs);
1346
1347 /* Abominable hack. See above. */
1348 if (current_target.to_has_execution == 0
1349 && ((saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM]
1350 && (read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM],
1351 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8)
1352 & 0x2))
1353 || (saved_regs.regs[FLAGS_REGNUM] == 0
1354 && read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM) & 0x2)))
1355 {
1356 u = find_unwind_entry (DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (frame));
1357 if (!u)
1358 {
1359 return read_memory_integer (saved_regs.regs[FP_REGNUM],
1360 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1361 }
1362 else
1363 {
1364 return frame_base - (u->Total_frame_size << 3);
1365 }
1366 }
1367
1368 /* The value in %r3 was never saved into the stack (thus %r3 still
1369 holds the value of the previous frame pointer). */
1370 return TARGET_READ_FP ();
1371 }
1372 }
1373 \f
1374
1375 /* To see if a frame chain is valid, see if the caller looks like it
1376 was compiled with gcc. */
1377
1378 int
1379 hppa_frame_chain_valid (CORE_ADDR chain, struct frame_info *thisframe)
1380 {
1381 struct minimal_symbol *msym_us;
1382 struct minimal_symbol *msym_start;
1383 struct unwind_table_entry *u, *next_u = NULL;
1384 struct frame_info *next;
1385
1386 u = find_unwind_entry (thisframe->pc);
1387
1388 if (u == NULL)
1389 return 1;
1390
1391 /* We can't just check that the same of msym_us is "_start", because
1392 someone idiotically decided that they were going to make a Ltext_end
1393 symbol with the same address. This Ltext_end symbol is totally
1394 indistinguishable (as nearly as I can tell) from the symbol for a function
1395 which is (legitimately, since it is in the user's namespace)
1396 named Ltext_end, so we can't just ignore it. */
1397 msym_us = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (DEPRECATED_FRAME_SAVED_PC (thisframe));
1398 msym_start = lookup_minimal_symbol ("_start", NULL, NULL);
1399 if (msym_us
1400 && msym_start
1401 && SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym_us) == SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym_start))
1402 return 0;
1403
1404 /* Grrrr. Some new idiot decided that they don't want _start for the
1405 PRO configurations; $START$ calls main directly.... Deal with it. */
1406 msym_start = lookup_minimal_symbol ("$START$", NULL, NULL);
1407 if (msym_us
1408 && msym_start
1409 && SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym_us) == SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym_start))
1410 return 0;
1411
1412 next = get_next_frame (thisframe);
1413 if (next)
1414 next_u = find_unwind_entry (next->pc);
1415
1416 /* If this frame does not save SP, has no stack, isn't a stub,
1417 and doesn't "call" an interrupt routine or signal handler caller,
1418 then its not valid. */
1419 if (u->Save_SP || u->Total_frame_size || u->stub_unwind.stub_type != 0
1420 || (thisframe->next && (get_frame_type (thisframe->next) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME))
1421 || (next_u && next_u->HP_UX_interrupt_marker))
1422 return 1;
1423
1424 if (pc_in_linker_stub (thisframe->pc))
1425 return 1;
1426
1427 return 0;
1428 }
1429
1430 /* These functions deal with saving and restoring register state
1431 around a function call in the inferior. They keep the stack
1432 double-word aligned; eventually, on an hp700, the stack will have
1433 to be aligned to a 64-byte boundary. */
1434
1435 void
1436 hppa_push_dummy_frame (void)
1437 {
1438 CORE_ADDR sp, pc, pcspace;
1439 register int regnum;
1440 CORE_ADDR int_buffer;
1441 double freg_buffer;
1442
1443 pc = hppa_target_read_pc (inferior_ptid);
1444 int_buffer = read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM);
1445 if (int_buffer & 0x2)
1446 {
1447 const unsigned int sid = (pc >> 30) & 0x3;
1448 if (sid == 0)
1449 pcspace = read_register (SR4_REGNUM);
1450 else
1451 pcspace = read_register (SR4_REGNUM + 4 + sid);
1452 }
1453 else
1454 pcspace = read_register (PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM);
1455
1456 /* Space for "arguments"; the RP goes in here. */
1457 sp = read_register (SP_REGNUM) + 48;
1458 int_buffer = read_register (RP_REGNUM) | 0x3;
1459
1460 /* The 32bit and 64bit ABIs save the return pointer into different
1461 stack slots. */
1462 if (REGISTER_SIZE == 8)
1463 write_memory (sp - 16, (char *) &int_buffer, REGISTER_SIZE);
1464 else
1465 write_memory (sp - 20, (char *) &int_buffer, REGISTER_SIZE);
1466
1467 int_buffer = TARGET_READ_FP ();
1468 write_memory (sp, (char *) &int_buffer, REGISTER_SIZE);
1469
1470 write_register (FP_REGNUM, sp);
1471
1472 sp += 2 * REGISTER_SIZE;
1473
1474 for (regnum = 1; regnum < 32; regnum++)
1475 if (regnum != RP_REGNUM && regnum != FP_REGNUM)
1476 sp = push_word (sp, read_register (regnum));
1477
1478 /* This is not necessary for the 64bit ABI. In fact it is dangerous. */
1479 if (REGISTER_SIZE != 8)
1480 sp += 4;
1481
1482 for (regnum = FP0_REGNUM; regnum < NUM_REGS; regnum++)
1483 {
1484 deprecated_read_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (regnum),
1485 (char *) &freg_buffer, 8);
1486 sp = push_bytes (sp, (char *) &freg_buffer, 8);
1487 }
1488 sp = push_word (sp, read_register (IPSW_REGNUM));
1489 sp = push_word (sp, read_register (SAR_REGNUM));
1490 sp = push_word (sp, pc);
1491 sp = push_word (sp, pcspace);
1492 sp = push_word (sp, pc + 4);
1493 sp = push_word (sp, pcspace);
1494 write_register (SP_REGNUM, sp);
1495 }
1496
1497 static void
1498 find_dummy_frame_regs (struct frame_info *frame,
1499 struct frame_saved_regs *frame_saved_regs)
1500 {
1501 CORE_ADDR fp = frame->frame;
1502 int i;
1503
1504 /* The 32bit and 64bit ABIs save RP into different locations. */
1505 if (REGISTER_SIZE == 8)
1506 frame_saved_regs->regs[RP_REGNUM] = (fp - 16) & ~0x3;
1507 else
1508 frame_saved_regs->regs[RP_REGNUM] = (fp - 20) & ~0x3;
1509
1510 frame_saved_regs->regs[FP_REGNUM] = fp;
1511
1512 frame_saved_regs->regs[1] = fp + (2 * REGISTER_SIZE);
1513
1514 for (fp += 3 * REGISTER_SIZE, i = 3; i < 32; i++)
1515 {
1516 if (i != FP_REGNUM)
1517 {
1518 frame_saved_regs->regs[i] = fp;
1519 fp += REGISTER_SIZE;
1520 }
1521 }
1522
1523 /* This is not necessary or desirable for the 64bit ABI. */
1524 if (REGISTER_SIZE != 8)
1525 fp += 4;
1526
1527 for (i = FP0_REGNUM; i < NUM_REGS; i++, fp += 8)
1528 frame_saved_regs->regs[i] = fp;
1529
1530 frame_saved_regs->regs[IPSW_REGNUM] = fp;
1531 frame_saved_regs->regs[SAR_REGNUM] = fp + REGISTER_SIZE;
1532 frame_saved_regs->regs[PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM] = fp + 2 * REGISTER_SIZE;
1533 frame_saved_regs->regs[PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM] = fp + 3 * REGISTER_SIZE;
1534 frame_saved_regs->regs[PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM] = fp + 4 * REGISTER_SIZE;
1535 frame_saved_regs->regs[PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM] = fp + 5 * REGISTER_SIZE;
1536 }
1537
1538 void
1539 hppa_pop_frame (void)
1540 {
1541 register struct frame_info *frame = get_current_frame ();
1542 register CORE_ADDR fp, npc, target_pc;
1543 register int regnum;
1544 struct frame_saved_regs fsr;
1545 double freg_buffer;
1546
1547 fp = get_frame_base (frame);
1548 deprecated_get_frame_saved_regs (frame, &fsr);
1549
1550 #ifndef NO_PC_SPACE_QUEUE_RESTORE
1551 if (fsr.regs[IPSW_REGNUM]) /* Restoring a call dummy frame */
1552 restore_pc_queue (&fsr);
1553 #endif
1554
1555 for (regnum = 31; regnum > 0; regnum--)
1556 if (fsr.regs[regnum])
1557 write_register (regnum, read_memory_integer (fsr.regs[regnum],
1558 REGISTER_SIZE));
1559
1560 for (regnum = NUM_REGS - 1; regnum >= FP0_REGNUM; regnum--)
1561 if (fsr.regs[regnum])
1562 {
1563 read_memory (fsr.regs[regnum], (char *) &freg_buffer, 8);
1564 deprecated_write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (regnum),
1565 (char *) &freg_buffer, 8);
1566 }
1567
1568 if (fsr.regs[IPSW_REGNUM])
1569 write_register (IPSW_REGNUM,
1570 read_memory_integer (fsr.regs[IPSW_REGNUM],
1571 REGISTER_SIZE));
1572
1573 if (fsr.regs[SAR_REGNUM])
1574 write_register (SAR_REGNUM,
1575 read_memory_integer (fsr.regs[SAR_REGNUM],
1576 REGISTER_SIZE));
1577
1578 /* If the PC was explicitly saved, then just restore it. */
1579 if (fsr.regs[PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM])
1580 {
1581 npc = read_memory_integer (fsr.regs[PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM],
1582 REGISTER_SIZE);
1583 write_register (PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM, npc);
1584 }
1585 /* Else use the value in %rp to set the new PC. */
1586 else
1587 {
1588 npc = read_register (RP_REGNUM);
1589 write_pc (npc);
1590 }
1591
1592 write_register (FP_REGNUM, read_memory_integer (fp, REGISTER_SIZE));
1593
1594 if (fsr.regs[IPSW_REGNUM]) /* call dummy */
1595 write_register (SP_REGNUM, fp - 48);
1596 else
1597 write_register (SP_REGNUM, fp);
1598
1599 /* The PC we just restored may be inside a return trampoline. If so
1600 we want to restart the inferior and run it through the trampoline.
1601
1602 Do this by setting a momentary breakpoint at the location the
1603 trampoline returns to.
1604
1605 Don't skip through the trampoline if we're popping a dummy frame. */
1606 target_pc = SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE (npc & ~0x3) & ~0x3;
1607 if (target_pc && !fsr.regs[IPSW_REGNUM])
1608 {
1609 struct symtab_and_line sal;
1610 struct breakpoint *breakpoint;
1611 struct cleanup *old_chain;
1612
1613 /* Set up our breakpoint. Set it to be silent as the MI code
1614 for "return_command" will print the frame we returned to. */
1615 sal = find_pc_line (target_pc, 0);
1616 sal.pc = target_pc;
1617 breakpoint = set_momentary_breakpoint (sal, null_frame_id, bp_finish);
1618 breakpoint->silent = 1;
1619
1620 /* So we can clean things up. */
1621 old_chain = make_cleanup_delete_breakpoint (breakpoint);
1622
1623 /* Start up the inferior. */
1624 clear_proceed_status ();
1625 proceed_to_finish = 1;
1626 proceed ((CORE_ADDR) -1, TARGET_SIGNAL_DEFAULT, 0);
1627
1628 /* Perform our cleanups. */
1629 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1630 }
1631 flush_cached_frames ();
1632 }
1633
1634 /* After returning to a dummy on the stack, restore the instruction
1635 queue space registers. */
1636
1637 static int
1638 restore_pc_queue (struct frame_saved_regs *fsr)
1639 {
1640 CORE_ADDR pc = read_pc ();
1641 CORE_ADDR new_pc = read_memory_integer (fsr->regs[PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM],
1642 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
1643 struct target_waitstatus w;
1644 int insn_count;
1645
1646 /* Advance past break instruction in the call dummy. */
1647 write_register (PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM, pc + 4);
1648 write_register (PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM, pc + 8);
1649
1650 /* HPUX doesn't let us set the space registers or the space
1651 registers of the PC queue through ptrace. Boo, hiss.
1652 Conveniently, the call dummy has this sequence of instructions
1653 after the break:
1654 mtsp r21, sr0
1655 ble,n 0(sr0, r22)
1656
1657 So, load up the registers and single step until we are in the
1658 right place. */
1659
1660 write_register (21, read_memory_integer (fsr->regs[PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM],
1661 REGISTER_SIZE));
1662 write_register (22, new_pc);
1663
1664 for (insn_count = 0; insn_count < 3; insn_count++)
1665 {
1666 /* FIXME: What if the inferior gets a signal right now? Want to
1667 merge this into wait_for_inferior (as a special kind of
1668 watchpoint? By setting a breakpoint at the end? Is there
1669 any other choice? Is there *any* way to do this stuff with
1670 ptrace() or some equivalent?). */
1671 resume (1, 0);
1672 target_wait (inferior_ptid, &w);
1673
1674 if (w.kind == TARGET_WAITKIND_SIGNALLED)
1675 {
1676 stop_signal = w.value.sig;
1677 terminal_ours_for_output ();
1678 printf_unfiltered ("\nProgram terminated with signal %s, %s.\n",
1679 target_signal_to_name (stop_signal),
1680 target_signal_to_string (stop_signal));
1681 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
1682 return 0;
1683 }
1684 }
1685 target_terminal_ours ();
1686 target_fetch_registers (-1);
1687 return 1;
1688 }
1689
1690
1691 #ifdef PA20W_CALLING_CONVENTIONS
1692
1693 /* This function pushes a stack frame with arguments as part of the
1694 inferior function calling mechanism.
1695
1696 This is the version for the PA64, in which later arguments appear
1697 at higher addresses. (The stack always grows towards higher
1698 addresses.)
1699
1700 We simply allocate the appropriate amount of stack space and put
1701 arguments into their proper slots. The call dummy code will copy
1702 arguments into registers as needed by the ABI.
1703
1704 This ABI also requires that the caller provide an argument pointer
1705 to the callee, so we do that too. */
1706
1707 CORE_ADDR
1708 hppa_push_arguments (int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp,
1709 int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
1710 {
1711 /* array of arguments' offsets */
1712 int *offset = (int *) alloca (nargs * sizeof (int));
1713
1714 /* array of arguments' lengths: real lengths in bytes, not aligned to
1715 word size */
1716 int *lengths = (int *) alloca (nargs * sizeof (int));
1717
1718 /* The value of SP as it was passed into this function after
1719 aligning. */
1720 CORE_ADDR orig_sp = STACK_ALIGN (sp);
1721
1722 /* The number of stack bytes occupied by the current argument. */
1723 int bytes_reserved;
1724
1725 /* The total number of bytes reserved for the arguments. */
1726 int cum_bytes_reserved = 0;
1727
1728 /* Similarly, but aligned. */
1729 int cum_bytes_aligned = 0;
1730 int i;
1731
1732 /* Iterate over each argument provided by the user. */
1733 for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
1734 {
1735 struct type *arg_type = VALUE_TYPE (args[i]);
1736
1737 /* Integral scalar values smaller than a register are padded on
1738 the left. We do this by promoting them to full-width,
1739 although the ABI says to pad them with garbage. */
1740 if (is_integral_type (arg_type)
1741 && TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type) < REGISTER_SIZE)
1742 {
1743 args[i] = value_cast ((TYPE_UNSIGNED (arg_type)
1744 ? builtin_type_unsigned_long
1745 : builtin_type_long),
1746 args[i]);
1747 arg_type = VALUE_TYPE (args[i]);
1748 }
1749
1750 lengths[i] = TYPE_LENGTH (arg_type);
1751
1752 /* Align the size of the argument to the word size for this
1753 target. */
1754 bytes_reserved = (lengths[i] + REGISTER_SIZE - 1) & -REGISTER_SIZE;
1755
1756 offset[i] = cum_bytes_reserved;
1757
1758 /* Aggregates larger than eight bytes (the only types larger
1759 than eight bytes we have) are aligned on a 16-byte boundary,
1760 possibly padded on the right with garbage. This may leave an
1761 empty word on the stack, and thus an unused register, as per
1762 the ABI. */
1763 if (bytes_reserved > 8)
1764 {
1765 /* Round up the offset to a multiple of two slots. */
1766 int new_offset = ((offset[i] + 2*REGISTER_SIZE-1)
1767 & -(2*REGISTER_SIZE));
1768
1769 /* Note the space we've wasted, if any. */
1770 bytes_reserved += new_offset - offset[i];
1771 offset[i] = new_offset;
1772 }
1773
1774 cum_bytes_reserved += bytes_reserved;
1775 }
1776
1777 /* CUM_BYTES_RESERVED already accounts for all the arguments
1778 passed by the user. However, the ABIs mandate minimum stack space
1779 allocations for outgoing arguments.
1780
1781 The ABIs also mandate minimum stack alignments which we must
1782 preserve. */
1783 cum_bytes_aligned = STACK_ALIGN (cum_bytes_reserved);
1784 sp += max (cum_bytes_aligned, REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE);
1785
1786 /* Now write each of the args at the proper offset down the stack. */
1787 for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
1788 write_memory (orig_sp + offset[i], VALUE_CONTENTS (args[i]), lengths[i]);
1789
1790 /* If a structure has to be returned, set up register 28 to hold its
1791 address */
1792 if (struct_return)
1793 write_register (28, struct_addr);
1794
1795 /* For the PA64 we must pass a pointer to the outgoing argument list.
1796 The ABI mandates that the pointer should point to the first byte of
1797 storage beyond the register flushback area.
1798
1799 However, the call dummy expects the outgoing argument pointer to
1800 be passed in register %r4. */
1801 write_register (4, orig_sp + REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE);
1802
1803 /* ?!? This needs further work. We need to set up the global data
1804 pointer for this procedure. This assumes the same global pointer
1805 for every procedure. The call dummy expects the dp value to
1806 be passed in register %r6. */
1807 write_register (6, read_register (27));
1808
1809 /* The stack will have 64 bytes of additional space for a frame marker. */
1810 return sp + 64;
1811 }
1812
1813 #else
1814
1815 /* This function pushes a stack frame with arguments as part of the
1816 inferior function calling mechanism.
1817
1818 This is the version of the function for the 32-bit PA machines, in
1819 which later arguments appear at lower addresses. (The stack always
1820 grows towards higher addresses.)
1821
1822 We simply allocate the appropriate amount of stack space and put
1823 arguments into their proper slots. The call dummy code will copy
1824 arguments into registers as needed by the ABI. */
1825
1826 CORE_ADDR
1827 hppa_push_arguments (int nargs, struct value **args, CORE_ADDR sp,
1828 int struct_return, CORE_ADDR struct_addr)
1829 {
1830 /* array of arguments' offsets */
1831 int *offset = (int *) alloca (nargs * sizeof (int));
1832
1833 /* array of arguments' lengths: real lengths in bytes, not aligned to
1834 word size */
1835 int *lengths = (int *) alloca (nargs * sizeof (int));
1836
1837 /* The number of stack bytes occupied by the current argument. */
1838 int bytes_reserved;
1839
1840 /* The total number of bytes reserved for the arguments. */
1841 int cum_bytes_reserved = 0;
1842
1843 /* Similarly, but aligned. */
1844 int cum_bytes_aligned = 0;
1845 int i;
1846
1847 /* Iterate over each argument provided by the user. */
1848 for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
1849 {
1850 lengths[i] = TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (args[i]));
1851
1852 /* Align the size of the argument to the word size for this
1853 target. */
1854 bytes_reserved = (lengths[i] + REGISTER_SIZE - 1) & -REGISTER_SIZE;
1855
1856 offset[i] = (cum_bytes_reserved
1857 + (lengths[i] > 4 ? bytes_reserved : lengths[i]));
1858
1859 /* If the argument is a double word argument, then it needs to be
1860 double word aligned. */
1861 if ((bytes_reserved == 2 * REGISTER_SIZE)
1862 && (offset[i] % 2 * REGISTER_SIZE))
1863 {
1864 int new_offset = 0;
1865 /* BYTES_RESERVED is already aligned to the word, so we put
1866 the argument at one word more down the stack.
1867
1868 This will leave one empty word on the stack, and one unused
1869 register as mandated by the ABI. */
1870 new_offset = ((offset[i] + 2 * REGISTER_SIZE - 1)
1871 & -(2 * REGISTER_SIZE));
1872
1873 if ((new_offset - offset[i]) >= 2 * REGISTER_SIZE)
1874 {
1875 bytes_reserved += REGISTER_SIZE;
1876 offset[i] += REGISTER_SIZE;
1877 }
1878 }
1879
1880 cum_bytes_reserved += bytes_reserved;
1881
1882 }
1883
1884 /* CUM_BYTES_RESERVED already accounts for all the arguments passed
1885 by the user. However, the ABI mandates minimum stack space
1886 allocations for outgoing arguments.
1887
1888 The ABI also mandates minimum stack alignments which we must
1889 preserve. */
1890 cum_bytes_aligned = STACK_ALIGN (cum_bytes_reserved);
1891 sp += max (cum_bytes_aligned, REG_PARM_STACK_SPACE);
1892
1893 /* Now write each of the args at the proper offset down the stack.
1894 ?!? We need to promote values to a full register instead of skipping
1895 words in the stack. */
1896 for (i = 0; i < nargs; i++)
1897 write_memory (sp - offset[i], VALUE_CONTENTS (args[i]), lengths[i]);
1898
1899 /* If a structure has to be returned, set up register 28 to hold its
1900 address */
1901 if (struct_return)
1902 write_register (28, struct_addr);
1903
1904 /* The stack will have 32 bytes of additional space for a frame marker. */
1905 return sp + 32;
1906 }
1907
1908 #endif
1909
1910 /* elz: this function returns a value which is built looking at the given address.
1911 It is called from call_function_by_hand, in case we need to return a
1912 value which is larger than 64 bits, and it is stored in the stack rather than
1913 in the registers r28 and r29 or fr4.
1914 This function does the same stuff as value_being_returned in values.c, but
1915 gets the value from the stack rather than from the buffer where all the
1916 registers were saved when the function called completed. */
1917 struct value *
1918 hppa_value_returned_from_stack (register struct type *valtype, CORE_ADDR addr)
1919 {
1920 register struct value *val;
1921
1922 val = allocate_value (valtype);
1923 CHECK_TYPEDEF (valtype);
1924 target_read_memory (addr, VALUE_CONTENTS_RAW (val), TYPE_LENGTH (valtype));
1925
1926 return val;
1927 }
1928
1929
1930
1931 /* elz: Used to lookup a symbol in the shared libraries.
1932 This function calls shl_findsym, indirectly through a
1933 call to __d_shl_get. __d_shl_get is in end.c, which is always
1934 linked in by the hp compilers/linkers.
1935 The call to shl_findsym cannot be made directly because it needs
1936 to be active in target address space.
1937 inputs: - minimal symbol pointer for the function we want to look up
1938 - address in target space of the descriptor for the library
1939 where we want to look the symbol up.
1940 This address is retrieved using the
1941 som_solib_get_solib_by_pc function (somsolib.c).
1942 output: - real address in the library of the function.
1943 note: the handle can be null, in which case shl_findsym will look for
1944 the symbol in all the loaded shared libraries.
1945 files to look at if you need reference on this stuff:
1946 dld.c, dld_shl_findsym.c
1947 end.c
1948 man entry for shl_findsym */
1949
1950 CORE_ADDR
1951 find_stub_with_shl_get (struct minimal_symbol *function, CORE_ADDR handle)
1952 {
1953 struct symbol *get_sym, *symbol2;
1954 struct minimal_symbol *buff_minsym, *msymbol;
1955 struct type *ftype;
1956 struct value **args;
1957 struct value *funcval;
1958 struct value *val;
1959
1960 int x, namelen, err_value, tmp = -1;
1961 CORE_ADDR endo_buff_addr, value_return_addr, errno_return_addr;
1962 CORE_ADDR stub_addr;
1963
1964
1965 args = alloca (sizeof (struct value *) * 8); /* 6 for the arguments and one null one??? */
1966 funcval = find_function_in_inferior ("__d_shl_get");
1967 get_sym = lookup_symbol ("__d_shl_get", NULL, VAR_NAMESPACE, NULL, NULL);
1968 buff_minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__buffer", NULL, NULL);
1969 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__shldp", NULL, NULL);
1970 symbol2 = lookup_symbol ("__shldp", NULL, VAR_NAMESPACE, NULL, NULL);
1971 endo_buff_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (buff_minsym);
1972 namelen = strlen (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (function));
1973 value_return_addr = endo_buff_addr + namelen;
1974 ftype = check_typedef (SYMBOL_TYPE (get_sym));
1975
1976 /* do alignment */
1977 if ((x = value_return_addr % 64) != 0)
1978 value_return_addr = value_return_addr + 64 - x;
1979
1980 errno_return_addr = value_return_addr + 64;
1981
1982
1983 /* set up stuff needed by __d_shl_get in buffer in end.o */
1984
1985 target_write_memory (endo_buff_addr, DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (function), namelen);
1986
1987 target_write_memory (value_return_addr, (char *) &tmp, 4);
1988
1989 target_write_memory (errno_return_addr, (char *) &tmp, 4);
1990
1991 target_write_memory (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol),
1992 (char *) &handle, 4);
1993
1994 /* now prepare the arguments for the call */
1995
1996 args[0] = value_from_longest (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, 0), 12);
1997 args[1] = value_from_pointer (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, 1), SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol));
1998 args[2] = value_from_pointer (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, 2), endo_buff_addr);
1999 args[3] = value_from_longest (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, 3), TYPE_PROCEDURE);
2000 args[4] = value_from_pointer (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, 4), value_return_addr);
2001 args[5] = value_from_pointer (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, 5), errno_return_addr);
2002
2003 /* now call the function */
2004
2005 val = call_function_by_hand (funcval, 6, args);
2006
2007 /* now get the results */
2008
2009 target_read_memory (errno_return_addr, (char *) &err_value, sizeof (err_value));
2010
2011 target_read_memory (value_return_addr, (char *) &stub_addr, sizeof (stub_addr));
2012 if (stub_addr <= 0)
2013 error ("call to __d_shl_get failed, error code is %d", err_value);
2014
2015 return (stub_addr);
2016 }
2017
2018 /* Cover routine for find_stub_with_shl_get to pass to catch_errors */
2019 static int
2020 cover_find_stub_with_shl_get (void *args_untyped)
2021 {
2022 args_for_find_stub *args = args_untyped;
2023 args->return_val = find_stub_with_shl_get (args->msym, args->solib_handle);
2024 return 0;
2025 }
2026
2027 /* Insert the specified number of args and function address
2028 into a call sequence of the above form stored at DUMMYNAME.
2029
2030 On the hppa we need to call the stack dummy through $$dyncall.
2031 Therefore our version of FIX_CALL_DUMMY takes an extra argument,
2032 real_pc, which is the location where gdb should start up the
2033 inferior to do the function call.
2034
2035 This has to work across several versions of hpux, bsd, osf1. It has to
2036 work regardless of what compiler was used to build the inferior program.
2037 It should work regardless of whether or not end.o is available. It has
2038 to work even if gdb can not call into the dynamic loader in the inferior
2039 to query it for symbol names and addresses.
2040
2041 Yes, all those cases should work. Luckily code exists to handle most
2042 of them. The complexity is in selecting exactly what scheme should
2043 be used to perform the inferior call.
2044
2045 At the current time this routine is known not to handle cases where
2046 the program was linked with HP's compiler without including end.o.
2047
2048 Please contact Jeff Law (law@cygnus.com) before changing this code. */
2049
2050 CORE_ADDR
2051 hppa_fix_call_dummy (char *dummy, CORE_ADDR pc, CORE_ADDR fun, int nargs,
2052 struct value **args, struct type *type, int gcc_p)
2053 {
2054 CORE_ADDR dyncall_addr;
2055 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
2056 struct minimal_symbol *trampoline;
2057 int flags = read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM);
2058 struct unwind_table_entry *u = NULL;
2059 CORE_ADDR new_stub = 0;
2060 CORE_ADDR solib_handle = 0;
2061
2062 /* Nonzero if we will use GCC's PLT call routine. This routine must be
2063 passed an import stub, not a PLABEL. It is also necessary to set %r19
2064 (the PIC register) before performing the call.
2065
2066 If zero, then we are using __d_plt_call (HP's PLT call routine) or we
2067 are calling the target directly. When using __d_plt_call we want to
2068 use a PLABEL instead of an import stub. */
2069 int using_gcc_plt_call = 1;
2070
2071 #ifdef GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA_20W
2072 /* We currently use completely different code for the PA2.0W inferior
2073 function call sequences. This needs to be cleaned up. */
2074 {
2075 CORE_ADDR pcsqh, pcsqt, pcoqh, pcoqt, sr5;
2076 struct target_waitstatus w;
2077 int inst1, inst2;
2078 char buf[4];
2079 int status;
2080 struct objfile *objfile;
2081
2082 /* We can not modify the PC space queues directly, so we start
2083 up the inferior and execute a couple instructions to set the
2084 space queues so that they point to the call dummy in the stack. */
2085 pcsqh = read_register (PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM);
2086 sr5 = read_register (SR5_REGNUM);
2087 if (1)
2088 {
2089 pcoqh = read_register (PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM);
2090 pcoqt = read_register (PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM);
2091 if (target_read_memory (pcoqh, buf, 4) != 0)
2092 error ("Couldn't modify space queue\n");
2093 inst1 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
2094
2095 if (target_read_memory (pcoqt, buf, 4) != 0)
2096 error ("Couldn't modify space queue\n");
2097 inst2 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
2098
2099 /* BVE (r1) */
2100 *((int *) buf) = 0xe820d000;
2101 if (target_write_memory (pcoqh, buf, 4) != 0)
2102 error ("Couldn't modify space queue\n");
2103
2104 /* NOP */
2105 *((int *) buf) = 0x08000240;
2106 if (target_write_memory (pcoqt, buf, 4) != 0)
2107 {
2108 *((int *) buf) = inst1;
2109 target_write_memory (pcoqh, buf, 4);
2110 error ("Couldn't modify space queue\n");
2111 }
2112
2113 write_register (1, pc);
2114
2115 /* Single step twice, the BVE instruction will set the space queue
2116 such that it points to the PC value written immediately above
2117 (ie the call dummy). */
2118 resume (1, 0);
2119 target_wait (inferior_ptid, &w);
2120 resume (1, 0);
2121 target_wait (inferior_ptid, &w);
2122
2123 /* Restore the two instructions at the old PC locations. */
2124 *((int *) buf) = inst1;
2125 target_write_memory (pcoqh, buf, 4);
2126 *((int *) buf) = inst2;
2127 target_write_memory (pcoqt, buf, 4);
2128 }
2129
2130 /* The call dummy wants the ultimate destination address initially
2131 in register %r5. */
2132 write_register (5, fun);
2133
2134 /* We need to see if this objfile has a different DP value than our
2135 own (it could be a shared library for example). */
2136 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
2137 {
2138 struct obj_section *s;
2139 obj_private_data_t *obj_private;
2140
2141 /* See if FUN is in any section within this shared library. */
2142 for (s = objfile->sections; s < objfile->sections_end; s++)
2143 if (s->addr <= fun && fun < s->endaddr)
2144 break;
2145
2146 if (s >= objfile->sections_end)
2147 continue;
2148
2149 obj_private = (obj_private_data_t *) objfile->obj_private;
2150
2151 /* The DP value may be different for each objfile. But within an
2152 objfile each function uses the same dp value. Thus we do not need
2153 to grope around the opd section looking for dp values.
2154
2155 ?!? This is not strictly correct since we may be in a shared library
2156 and want to call back into the main program. To make that case
2157 work correctly we need to set obj_private->dp for the main program's
2158 objfile, then remove this conditional. */
2159 if (obj_private->dp)
2160 write_register (27, obj_private->dp);
2161 break;
2162 }
2163 return pc;
2164 }
2165 #endif
2166
2167 #ifndef GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA_20W
2168 /* Prefer __gcc_plt_call over the HP supplied routine because
2169 __gcc_plt_call works for any number of arguments. */
2170 trampoline = NULL;
2171 if (lookup_minimal_symbol ("__gcc_plt_call", NULL, NULL) == NULL)
2172 using_gcc_plt_call = 0;
2173
2174 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol ("$$dyncall", NULL, NULL);
2175 if (msymbol == NULL)
2176 error ("Can't find an address for $$dyncall trampoline");
2177
2178 dyncall_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol);
2179
2180 /* FUN could be a procedure label, in which case we have to get
2181 its real address and the value of its GOT/DP if we plan to
2182 call the routine via gcc_plt_call. */
2183 if ((fun & 0x2) && using_gcc_plt_call)
2184 {
2185 /* Get the GOT/DP value for the target function. It's
2186 at *(fun+4). Note the call dummy is *NOT* allowed to
2187 trash %r19 before calling the target function. */
2188 write_register (19, read_memory_integer ((fun & ~0x3) + 4,
2189 REGISTER_SIZE));
2190
2191 /* Now get the real address for the function we are calling, it's
2192 at *fun. */
2193 fun = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (fun & ~0x3,
2194 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
2195 }
2196 else
2197 {
2198
2199 #ifndef GDB_TARGET_IS_PA_ELF
2200 /* FUN could be an export stub, the real address of a function, or
2201 a PLABEL. When using gcc's PLT call routine we must call an import
2202 stub rather than the export stub or real function for lazy binding
2203 to work correctly
2204
2205 If we are using the gcc PLT call routine, then we need to
2206 get the import stub for the target function. */
2207 if (using_gcc_plt_call && som_solib_get_got_by_pc (fun))
2208 {
2209 struct objfile *objfile;
2210 struct minimal_symbol *funsymbol, *stub_symbol;
2211 CORE_ADDR newfun = 0;
2212
2213 funsymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (fun);
2214 if (!funsymbol)
2215 error ("Unable to find minimal symbol for target function.\n");
2216
2217 /* Search all the object files for an import symbol with the
2218 right name. */
2219 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile)
2220 {
2221 stub_symbol
2222 = lookup_minimal_symbol_solib_trampoline
2223 (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (funsymbol), NULL, objfile);
2224
2225 if (!stub_symbol)
2226 stub_symbol = lookup_minimal_symbol (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (funsymbol),
2227 NULL, objfile);
2228
2229 /* Found a symbol with the right name. */
2230 if (stub_symbol)
2231 {
2232 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
2233 /* It must be a shared library trampoline. */
2234 if (MSYMBOL_TYPE (stub_symbol) != mst_solib_trampoline)
2235 continue;
2236
2237 /* It must also be an import stub. */
2238 u = find_unwind_entry (SYMBOL_VALUE (stub_symbol));
2239 if (u == NULL
2240 || (u->stub_unwind.stub_type != IMPORT
2241 #ifdef GDB_NATIVE_HPUX_11
2242 /* Sigh. The hpux 10.20 dynamic linker will blow
2243 chunks if we perform a call to an unbound function
2244 via the IMPORT_SHLIB stub. The hpux 11.00 dynamic
2245 linker will blow chunks if we do not call the
2246 unbound function via the IMPORT_SHLIB stub.
2247
2248 We currently have no way to select bevahior on just
2249 the target. However, we only support HPUX/SOM in
2250 native mode. So we conditinalize on a native
2251 #ifdef. Ugly. Ugly. Ugly */
2252 && u->stub_unwind.stub_type != IMPORT_SHLIB
2253 #endif
2254 ))
2255 continue;
2256
2257 /* OK. Looks like the correct import stub. */
2258 newfun = SYMBOL_VALUE (stub_symbol);
2259 fun = newfun;
2260
2261 /* If we found an IMPORT stub, then we want to stop
2262 searching now. If we found an IMPORT_SHLIB, we want
2263 to continue the search in the hopes that we will find
2264 an IMPORT stub. */
2265 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == IMPORT)
2266 break;
2267 }
2268 }
2269
2270 /* Ouch. We did not find an import stub. Make an attempt to
2271 do the right thing instead of just croaking. Most of the
2272 time this will actually work. */
2273 if (newfun == 0)
2274 write_register (19, som_solib_get_got_by_pc (fun));
2275
2276 u = find_unwind_entry (fun);
2277 if (u
2278 && (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == IMPORT
2279 || u->stub_unwind.stub_type == IMPORT_SHLIB))
2280 trampoline = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__gcc_plt_call", NULL, NULL);
2281
2282 /* If we found the import stub in the shared library, then we have
2283 to set %r19 before we call the stub. */
2284 if (u && u->stub_unwind.stub_type == IMPORT_SHLIB)
2285 write_register (19, som_solib_get_got_by_pc (fun));
2286 }
2287 #endif
2288 }
2289
2290 /* If we are calling into another load module then have sr4export call the
2291 magic __d_plt_call routine which is linked in from end.o.
2292
2293 You can't use _sr4export to make the call as the value in sp-24 will get
2294 fried and you end up returning to the wrong location. You can't call the
2295 target as the code to bind the PLT entry to a function can't return to a
2296 stack address.
2297
2298 Also, query the dynamic linker in the inferior to provide a suitable
2299 PLABEL for the target function. */
2300 if (!using_gcc_plt_call)
2301 {
2302 CORE_ADDR new_fun;
2303
2304 /* Get a handle for the shared library containing FUN. Given the
2305 handle we can query the shared library for a PLABEL. */
2306 solib_handle = som_solib_get_solib_by_pc (fun);
2307
2308 if (solib_handle)
2309 {
2310 struct minimal_symbol *fmsymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (fun);
2311
2312 trampoline = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__d_plt_call", NULL, NULL);
2313
2314 if (trampoline == NULL)
2315 {
2316 error ("Can't find an address for __d_plt_call or __gcc_plt_call trampoline\nSuggest linking executable with -g or compiling with gcc.");
2317 }
2318
2319 /* This is where sr4export will jump to. */
2320 new_fun = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (trampoline);
2321
2322 /* If the function is in a shared library, then call __d_shl_get to
2323 get a PLABEL for the target function. */
2324 new_stub = find_stub_with_shl_get (fmsymbol, solib_handle);
2325
2326 if (new_stub == 0)
2327 error ("Can't find an import stub for %s", DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (fmsymbol));
2328
2329 /* We have to store the address of the stub in __shlib_funcptr. */
2330 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__shlib_funcptr", NULL,
2331 (struct objfile *) NULL);
2332
2333 if (msymbol == NULL)
2334 error ("Can't find an address for __shlib_funcptr");
2335 target_write_memory (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol),
2336 (char *) &new_stub, 4);
2337
2338 /* We want sr4export to call __d_plt_call, so we claim it is
2339 the final target. Clear trampoline. */
2340 fun = new_fun;
2341 trampoline = NULL;
2342 }
2343 }
2344
2345 /* Store upper 21 bits of function address into ldil. fun will either be
2346 the final target (most cases) or __d_plt_call when calling into a shared
2347 library and __gcc_plt_call is not available. */
2348 store_unsigned_integer
2349 (&dummy[FUNC_LDIL_OFFSET],
2350 INSTRUCTION_SIZE,
2351 deposit_21 (fun >> 11,
2352 extract_unsigned_integer (&dummy[FUNC_LDIL_OFFSET],
2353 INSTRUCTION_SIZE)));
2354
2355 /* Store lower 11 bits of function address into ldo */
2356 store_unsigned_integer
2357 (&dummy[FUNC_LDO_OFFSET],
2358 INSTRUCTION_SIZE,
2359 deposit_14 (fun & MASK_11,
2360 extract_unsigned_integer (&dummy[FUNC_LDO_OFFSET],
2361 INSTRUCTION_SIZE)));
2362 #ifdef SR4EXPORT_LDIL_OFFSET
2363
2364 {
2365 CORE_ADDR trampoline_addr;
2366
2367 /* We may still need sr4export's address too. */
2368
2369 if (trampoline == NULL)
2370 {
2371 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol ("_sr4export", NULL, NULL);
2372 if (msymbol == NULL)
2373 error ("Can't find an address for _sr4export trampoline");
2374
2375 trampoline_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol);
2376 }
2377 else
2378 trampoline_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (trampoline);
2379
2380
2381 /* Store upper 21 bits of trampoline's address into ldil */
2382 store_unsigned_integer
2383 (&dummy[SR4EXPORT_LDIL_OFFSET],
2384 INSTRUCTION_SIZE,
2385 deposit_21 (trampoline_addr >> 11,
2386 extract_unsigned_integer (&dummy[SR4EXPORT_LDIL_OFFSET],
2387 INSTRUCTION_SIZE)));
2388
2389 /* Store lower 11 bits of trampoline's address into ldo */
2390 store_unsigned_integer
2391 (&dummy[SR4EXPORT_LDO_OFFSET],
2392 INSTRUCTION_SIZE,
2393 deposit_14 (trampoline_addr & MASK_11,
2394 extract_unsigned_integer (&dummy[SR4EXPORT_LDO_OFFSET],
2395 INSTRUCTION_SIZE)));
2396 }
2397 #endif
2398
2399 write_register (22, pc);
2400
2401 /* If we are in a syscall, then we should call the stack dummy
2402 directly. $$dyncall is not needed as the kernel sets up the
2403 space id registers properly based on the value in %r31. In
2404 fact calling $$dyncall will not work because the value in %r22
2405 will be clobbered on the syscall exit path.
2406
2407 Similarly if the current PC is in a shared library. Note however,
2408 this scheme won't work if the shared library isn't mapped into
2409 the same space as the stack. */
2410 if (flags & 2)
2411 return pc;
2412 #ifndef GDB_TARGET_IS_PA_ELF
2413 else if (som_solib_get_got_by_pc (hppa_target_read_pc (inferior_ptid)))
2414 return pc;
2415 #endif
2416 else
2417 return dyncall_addr;
2418 #endif
2419 }
2420
2421 /* If the pid is in a syscall, then the FP register is not readable.
2422 We'll return zero in that case, rather than attempting to read it
2423 and cause a warning. */
2424
2425 CORE_ADDR
2426 hppa_read_fp (int pid)
2427 {
2428 int flags = read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM);
2429
2430 if (flags & 2)
2431 {
2432 return (CORE_ADDR) 0;
2433 }
2434
2435 /* This is the only site that may directly read_register () the FP
2436 register. All others must use TARGET_READ_FP (). */
2437 return read_register (FP_REGNUM);
2438 }
2439
2440 CORE_ADDR
2441 hppa_target_read_fp (void)
2442 {
2443 return hppa_read_fp (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
2444 }
2445
2446 /* Get the PC from %r31 if currently in a syscall. Also mask out privilege
2447 bits. */
2448
2449 CORE_ADDR
2450 hppa_target_read_pc (ptid_t ptid)
2451 {
2452 int flags = read_register_pid (FLAGS_REGNUM, ptid);
2453
2454 /* The following test does not belong here. It is OS-specific, and belongs
2455 in native code. */
2456 /* Test SS_INSYSCALL */
2457 if (flags & 2)
2458 return read_register_pid (31, ptid) & ~0x3;
2459
2460 return read_register_pid (PC_REGNUM, ptid) & ~0x3;
2461 }
2462
2463 /* Write out the PC. If currently in a syscall, then also write the new
2464 PC value into %r31. */
2465
2466 void
2467 hppa_target_write_pc (CORE_ADDR v, ptid_t ptid)
2468 {
2469 int flags = read_register_pid (FLAGS_REGNUM, ptid);
2470
2471 /* The following test does not belong here. It is OS-specific, and belongs
2472 in native code. */
2473 /* If in a syscall, then set %r31. Also make sure to get the
2474 privilege bits set correctly. */
2475 /* Test SS_INSYSCALL */
2476 if (flags & 2)
2477 write_register_pid (31, v | 0x3, ptid);
2478
2479 write_register_pid (PC_REGNUM, v, ptid);
2480 write_register_pid (NPC_REGNUM, v + 4, ptid);
2481 }
2482
2483 /* return the alignment of a type in bytes. Structures have the maximum
2484 alignment required by their fields. */
2485
2486 static int
2487 hppa_alignof (struct type *type)
2488 {
2489 int max_align, align, i;
2490 CHECK_TYPEDEF (type);
2491 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
2492 {
2493 case TYPE_CODE_PTR:
2494 case TYPE_CODE_INT:
2495 case TYPE_CODE_FLT:
2496 return TYPE_LENGTH (type);
2497 case TYPE_CODE_ARRAY:
2498 return hppa_alignof (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, 0));
2499 case TYPE_CODE_STRUCT:
2500 case TYPE_CODE_UNION:
2501 max_align = 1;
2502 for (i = 0; i < TYPE_NFIELDS (type); i++)
2503 {
2504 /* Bit fields have no real alignment. */
2505 /* if (!TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, i)) */
2506 if (!TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, i)) /* elz: this should be bitsize */
2507 {
2508 align = hppa_alignof (TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, i));
2509 max_align = max (max_align, align);
2510 }
2511 }
2512 return max_align;
2513 default:
2514 return 4;
2515 }
2516 }
2517
2518 /* Print the register regnum, or all registers if regnum is -1 */
2519
2520 void
2521 pa_do_registers_info (int regnum, int fpregs)
2522 {
2523 char raw_regs[REGISTER_BYTES];
2524 int i;
2525
2526 /* Make a copy of gdb's save area (may cause actual
2527 reads from the target). */
2528 for (i = 0; i < NUM_REGS; i++)
2529 frame_register_read (deprecated_selected_frame, i, raw_regs + REGISTER_BYTE (i));
2530
2531 if (regnum == -1)
2532 pa_print_registers (raw_regs, regnum, fpregs);
2533 else if (regnum < FP4_REGNUM)
2534 {
2535 long reg_val[2];
2536
2537 /* Why is the value not passed through "extract_signed_integer"
2538 as in "pa_print_registers" below? */
2539 pa_register_look_aside (raw_regs, regnum, &reg_val[0]);
2540
2541 if (!is_pa_2)
2542 {
2543 printf_unfiltered ("%s %lx\n", REGISTER_NAME (regnum), reg_val[1]);
2544 }
2545 else
2546 {
2547 /* Fancy % formats to prevent leading zeros. */
2548 if (reg_val[0] == 0)
2549 printf_unfiltered ("%s %lx\n", REGISTER_NAME (regnum), reg_val[1]);
2550 else
2551 printf_unfiltered ("%s %lx%8.8lx\n", REGISTER_NAME (regnum),
2552 reg_val[0], reg_val[1]);
2553 }
2554 }
2555 else
2556 /* Note that real floating point values only start at
2557 FP4_REGNUM. FP0 and up are just status and error
2558 registers, which have integral (bit) values. */
2559 pa_print_fp_reg (regnum);
2560 }
2561
2562 /********** new function ********************/
2563 void
2564 pa_do_strcat_registers_info (int regnum, int fpregs, struct ui_file *stream,
2565 enum precision_type precision)
2566 {
2567 char raw_regs[REGISTER_BYTES];
2568 int i;
2569
2570 /* Make a copy of gdb's save area (may cause actual
2571 reads from the target). */
2572 for (i = 0; i < NUM_REGS; i++)
2573 frame_register_read (deprecated_selected_frame, i, raw_regs + REGISTER_BYTE (i));
2574
2575 if (regnum == -1)
2576 pa_strcat_registers (raw_regs, regnum, fpregs, stream);
2577
2578 else if (regnum < FP4_REGNUM)
2579 {
2580 long reg_val[2];
2581
2582 /* Why is the value not passed through "extract_signed_integer"
2583 as in "pa_print_registers" below? */
2584 pa_register_look_aside (raw_regs, regnum, &reg_val[0]);
2585
2586 if (!is_pa_2)
2587 {
2588 fprintf_unfiltered (stream, "%s %lx", REGISTER_NAME (regnum), reg_val[1]);
2589 }
2590 else
2591 {
2592 /* Fancy % formats to prevent leading zeros. */
2593 if (reg_val[0] == 0)
2594 fprintf_unfiltered (stream, "%s %lx", REGISTER_NAME (regnum),
2595 reg_val[1]);
2596 else
2597 fprintf_unfiltered (stream, "%s %lx%8.8lx", REGISTER_NAME (regnum),
2598 reg_val[0], reg_val[1]);
2599 }
2600 }
2601 else
2602 /* Note that real floating point values only start at
2603 FP4_REGNUM. FP0 and up are just status and error
2604 registers, which have integral (bit) values. */
2605 pa_strcat_fp_reg (regnum, stream, precision);
2606 }
2607
2608 /* If this is a PA2.0 machine, fetch the real 64-bit register
2609 value. Otherwise use the info from gdb's saved register area.
2610
2611 Note that reg_val is really expected to be an array of longs,
2612 with two elements. */
2613 static void
2614 pa_register_look_aside (char *raw_regs, int regnum, long *raw_val)
2615 {
2616 static int know_which = 0; /* False */
2617
2618 int regaddr;
2619 unsigned int offset;
2620 register int i;
2621 int start;
2622
2623
2624 char *buf = alloca (max_register_size (current_gdbarch));
2625 long long reg_val;
2626
2627 if (!know_which)
2628 {
2629 if (CPU_PA_RISC2_0 == sysconf (_SC_CPU_VERSION))
2630 {
2631 is_pa_2 = (1 == 1);
2632 }
2633
2634 know_which = 1; /* True */
2635 }
2636
2637 raw_val[0] = 0;
2638 raw_val[1] = 0;
2639
2640 if (!is_pa_2)
2641 {
2642 raw_val[1] = *(long *) (raw_regs + REGISTER_BYTE (regnum));
2643 return;
2644 }
2645
2646 /* Code below copied from hppah-nat.c, with fixes for wide
2647 registers, using different area of save_state, etc. */
2648 if (regnum == FLAGS_REGNUM || regnum >= FP0_REGNUM ||
2649 !HAVE_STRUCT_SAVE_STATE_T || !HAVE_STRUCT_MEMBER_SS_WIDE)
2650 {
2651 /* Use narrow regs area of save_state and default macro. */
2652 offset = U_REGS_OFFSET;
2653 regaddr = register_addr (regnum, offset);
2654 start = 1;
2655 }
2656 else
2657 {
2658 /* Use wide regs area, and calculate registers as 8 bytes wide.
2659
2660 We'd like to do this, but current version of "C" doesn't
2661 permit "offsetof":
2662
2663 offset = offsetof(save_state_t, ss_wide);
2664
2665 Note that to avoid "C" doing typed pointer arithmetic, we
2666 have to cast away the type in our offset calculation:
2667 otherwise we get an offset of 1! */
2668
2669 /* NB: save_state_t is not available before HPUX 9.
2670 The ss_wide field is not available previous to HPUX 10.20,
2671 so to avoid compile-time warnings, we only compile this for
2672 PA 2.0 processors. This control path should only be followed
2673 if we're debugging a PA 2.0 processor, so this should not cause
2674 problems. */
2675
2676 /* #if the following code out so that this file can still be
2677 compiled on older HPUX boxes (< 10.20) which don't have
2678 this structure/structure member. */
2679 #if HAVE_STRUCT_SAVE_STATE_T == 1 && HAVE_STRUCT_MEMBER_SS_WIDE == 1
2680 save_state_t temp;
2681
2682 offset = ((int) &temp.ss_wide) - ((int) &temp);
2683 regaddr = offset + regnum * 8;
2684 start = 0;
2685 #endif
2686 }
2687
2688 for (i = start; i < 2; i++)
2689 {
2690 errno = 0;
2691 raw_val[i] = call_ptrace (PT_RUREGS, PIDGET (inferior_ptid),
2692 (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, 0);
2693 if (errno != 0)
2694 {
2695 /* Warning, not error, in case we are attached; sometimes the
2696 kernel doesn't let us at the registers. */
2697 char *err = safe_strerror (errno);
2698 char *msg = alloca (strlen (err) + 128);
2699 sprintf (msg, "reading register %s: %s", REGISTER_NAME (regnum), err);
2700 warning (msg);
2701 goto error_exit;
2702 }
2703
2704 regaddr += sizeof (long);
2705 }
2706
2707 if (regnum == PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM || regnum == PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM)
2708 raw_val[1] &= ~0x3; /* I think we're masking out space bits */
2709
2710 error_exit:
2711 ;
2712 }
2713
2714 /* "Info all-reg" command */
2715
2716 static void
2717 pa_print_registers (char *raw_regs, int regnum, int fpregs)
2718 {
2719 int i, j;
2720 /* Alas, we are compiled so that "long long" is 32 bits */
2721 long raw_val[2];
2722 long long_val;
2723 int rows = 48, columns = 2;
2724
2725 for (i = 0; i < rows; i++)
2726 {
2727 for (j = 0; j < columns; j++)
2728 {
2729 /* We display registers in column-major order. */
2730 int regnum = i + j * rows;
2731
2732 /* Q: Why is the value passed through "extract_signed_integer",
2733 while above, in "pa_do_registers_info" it isn't?
2734 A: ? */
2735 pa_register_look_aside (raw_regs, regnum, &raw_val[0]);
2736
2737 /* Even fancier % formats to prevent leading zeros
2738 and still maintain the output in columns. */
2739 if (!is_pa_2)
2740 {
2741 /* Being big-endian, on this machine the low bits
2742 (the ones we want to look at) are in the second longword. */
2743 long_val = extract_signed_integer (&raw_val[1], 4);
2744 printf_filtered ("%10.10s: %8lx ",
2745 REGISTER_NAME (regnum), long_val);
2746 }
2747 else
2748 {
2749 /* raw_val = extract_signed_integer(&raw_val, 8); */
2750 if (raw_val[0] == 0)
2751 printf_filtered ("%10.10s: %8lx ",
2752 REGISTER_NAME (regnum), raw_val[1]);
2753 else
2754 printf_filtered ("%10.10s: %8lx%8.8lx ",
2755 REGISTER_NAME (regnum),
2756 raw_val[0], raw_val[1]);
2757 }
2758 }
2759 printf_unfiltered ("\n");
2760 }
2761
2762 if (fpregs)
2763 for (i = FP4_REGNUM; i < NUM_REGS; i++) /* FP4_REGNUM == 72 */
2764 pa_print_fp_reg (i);
2765 }
2766
2767 /************* new function ******************/
2768 static void
2769 pa_strcat_registers (char *raw_regs, int regnum, int fpregs,
2770 struct ui_file *stream)
2771 {
2772 int i, j;
2773 long raw_val[2]; /* Alas, we are compiled so that "long long" is 32 bits */
2774 long long_val;
2775 enum precision_type precision;
2776
2777 precision = unspecified_precision;
2778
2779 for (i = 0; i < 18; i++)
2780 {
2781 for (j = 0; j < 4; j++)
2782 {
2783 /* Q: Why is the value passed through "extract_signed_integer",
2784 while above, in "pa_do_registers_info" it isn't?
2785 A: ? */
2786 pa_register_look_aside (raw_regs, i + (j * 18), &raw_val[0]);
2787
2788 /* Even fancier % formats to prevent leading zeros
2789 and still maintain the output in columns. */
2790 if (!is_pa_2)
2791 {
2792 /* Being big-endian, on this machine the low bits
2793 (the ones we want to look at) are in the second longword. */
2794 long_val = extract_signed_integer (&raw_val[1], 4);
2795 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%8.8s: %8lx ",
2796 REGISTER_NAME (i + (j * 18)), long_val);
2797 }
2798 else
2799 {
2800 /* raw_val = extract_signed_integer(&raw_val, 8); */
2801 if (raw_val[0] == 0)
2802 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%8.8s: %8lx ",
2803 REGISTER_NAME (i + (j * 18)), raw_val[1]);
2804 else
2805 fprintf_filtered (stream, "%8.8s: %8lx%8.8lx ",
2806 REGISTER_NAME (i + (j * 18)), raw_val[0],
2807 raw_val[1]);
2808 }
2809 }
2810 fprintf_unfiltered (stream, "\n");
2811 }
2812
2813 if (fpregs)
2814 for (i = FP4_REGNUM; i < NUM_REGS; i++) /* FP4_REGNUM == 72 */
2815 pa_strcat_fp_reg (i, stream, precision);
2816 }
2817
2818 static void
2819 pa_print_fp_reg (int i)
2820 {
2821 char *raw_buffer = alloca (max_register_size (current_gdbarch));
2822 char *virtual_buffer = alloca (max_register_size (current_gdbarch));
2823
2824 /* Get 32bits of data. */
2825 frame_register_read (deprecated_selected_frame, i, raw_buffer);
2826
2827 /* Put it in the buffer. No conversions are ever necessary. */
2828 memcpy (virtual_buffer, raw_buffer, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i));
2829
2830 fputs_filtered (REGISTER_NAME (i), gdb_stdout);
2831 print_spaces_filtered (8 - strlen (REGISTER_NAME (i)), gdb_stdout);
2832 fputs_filtered ("(single precision) ", gdb_stdout);
2833
2834 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i), virtual_buffer, 0, 0, gdb_stdout, 0,
2835 1, 0, Val_pretty_default);
2836 printf_filtered ("\n");
2837
2838 /* If "i" is even, then this register can also be a double-precision
2839 FP register. Dump it out as such. */
2840 if ((i % 2) == 0)
2841 {
2842 /* Get the data in raw format for the 2nd half. */
2843 frame_register_read (deprecated_selected_frame, i + 1, raw_buffer);
2844
2845 /* Copy it into the appropriate part of the virtual buffer. */
2846 memcpy (virtual_buffer + REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i), raw_buffer,
2847 REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i));
2848
2849 /* Dump it as a double. */
2850 fputs_filtered (REGISTER_NAME (i), gdb_stdout);
2851 print_spaces_filtered (8 - strlen (REGISTER_NAME (i)), gdb_stdout);
2852 fputs_filtered ("(double precision) ", gdb_stdout);
2853
2854 val_print (builtin_type_double, virtual_buffer, 0, 0, gdb_stdout, 0,
2855 1, 0, Val_pretty_default);
2856 printf_filtered ("\n");
2857 }
2858 }
2859
2860 /*************** new function ***********************/
2861 static void
2862 pa_strcat_fp_reg (int i, struct ui_file *stream, enum precision_type precision)
2863 {
2864 char *raw_buffer = alloca (max_register_size (current_gdbarch));
2865 char *virtual_buffer = alloca (max_register_size (current_gdbarch));
2866
2867 fputs_filtered (REGISTER_NAME (i), stream);
2868 print_spaces_filtered (8 - strlen (REGISTER_NAME (i)), stream);
2869
2870 /* Get 32bits of data. */
2871 frame_register_read (deprecated_selected_frame, i, raw_buffer);
2872
2873 /* Put it in the buffer. No conversions are ever necessary. */
2874 memcpy (virtual_buffer, raw_buffer, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i));
2875
2876 if (precision == double_precision && (i % 2) == 0)
2877 {
2878
2879 char *raw_buf = alloca (max_register_size (current_gdbarch));
2880
2881 /* Get the data in raw format for the 2nd half. */
2882 frame_register_read (deprecated_selected_frame, i + 1, raw_buf);
2883
2884 /* Copy it into the appropriate part of the virtual buffer. */
2885 memcpy (virtual_buffer + REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i), raw_buf, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i));
2886
2887 val_print (builtin_type_double, virtual_buffer, 0, 0, stream, 0,
2888 1, 0, Val_pretty_default);
2889
2890 }
2891 else
2892 {
2893 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i), virtual_buffer, 0, 0, stream, 0,
2894 1, 0, Val_pretty_default);
2895 }
2896
2897 }
2898
2899 /* Return one if PC is in the call path of a trampoline, else return zero.
2900
2901 Note we return one for *any* call trampoline (long-call, arg-reloc), not
2902 just shared library trampolines (import, export). */
2903
2904 int
2905 hppa_in_solib_call_trampoline (CORE_ADDR pc, char *name)
2906 {
2907 struct minimal_symbol *minsym;
2908 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
2909 static CORE_ADDR dyncall = 0;
2910 static CORE_ADDR sr4export = 0;
2911
2912 #ifdef GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA_20W
2913 /* PA64 has a completely different stub/trampoline scheme. Is it
2914 better? Maybe. It's certainly harder to determine with any
2915 certainty that we are in a stub because we can not refer to the
2916 unwinders to help.
2917
2918 The heuristic is simple. Try to lookup the current PC value in th
2919 minimal symbol table. If that fails, then assume we are not in a
2920 stub and return.
2921
2922 Then see if the PC value falls within the section bounds for the
2923 section containing the minimal symbol we found in the first
2924 step. If it does, then assume we are not in a stub and return.
2925
2926 Finally peek at the instructions to see if they look like a stub. */
2927 {
2928 struct minimal_symbol *minsym;
2929 asection *sec;
2930 CORE_ADDR addr;
2931 int insn, i;
2932
2933 minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc);
2934 if (! minsym)
2935 return 0;
2936
2937 sec = SYMBOL_BFD_SECTION (minsym);
2938
2939 if (sec->vma <= pc
2940 && sec->vma + sec->_cooked_size < pc)
2941 return 0;
2942
2943 /* We might be in a stub. Peek at the instructions. Stubs are 3
2944 instructions long. */
2945 insn = read_memory_integer (pc, 4);
2946
2947 /* Find out where we think we are within the stub. */
2948 if ((insn & 0xffffc00e) == 0x53610000)
2949 addr = pc;
2950 else if ((insn & 0xffffffff) == 0xe820d000)
2951 addr = pc - 4;
2952 else if ((insn & 0xffffc00e) == 0x537b0000)
2953 addr = pc - 8;
2954 else
2955 return 0;
2956
2957 /* Now verify each insn in the range looks like a stub instruction. */
2958 insn = read_memory_integer (addr, 4);
2959 if ((insn & 0xffffc00e) != 0x53610000)
2960 return 0;
2961
2962 /* Now verify each insn in the range looks like a stub instruction. */
2963 insn = read_memory_integer (addr + 4, 4);
2964 if ((insn & 0xffffffff) != 0xe820d000)
2965 return 0;
2966
2967 /* Now verify each insn in the range looks like a stub instruction. */
2968 insn = read_memory_integer (addr + 8, 4);
2969 if ((insn & 0xffffc00e) != 0x537b0000)
2970 return 0;
2971
2972 /* Looks like a stub. */
2973 return 1;
2974 }
2975 #endif
2976
2977 /* FIXME XXX - dyncall and sr4export must be initialized whenever we get a
2978 new exec file */
2979
2980 /* First see if PC is in one of the two C-library trampolines. */
2981 if (!dyncall)
2982 {
2983 minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol ("$$dyncall", NULL, NULL);
2984 if (minsym)
2985 dyncall = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (minsym);
2986 else
2987 dyncall = -1;
2988 }
2989
2990 if (!sr4export)
2991 {
2992 minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol ("_sr4export", NULL, NULL);
2993 if (minsym)
2994 sr4export = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (minsym);
2995 else
2996 sr4export = -1;
2997 }
2998
2999 if (pc == dyncall || pc == sr4export)
3000 return 1;
3001
3002 minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc);
3003 if (minsym && strcmp (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (minsym), ".stub") == 0)
3004 return 1;
3005
3006 /* Get the unwind descriptor corresponding to PC, return zero
3007 if no unwind was found. */
3008 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
3009 if (!u)
3010 return 0;
3011
3012 /* If this isn't a linker stub, then return now. */
3013 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == 0)
3014 return 0;
3015
3016 /* By definition a long-branch stub is a call stub. */
3017 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == LONG_BRANCH)
3018 return 1;
3019
3020 /* The call and return path execute the same instructions within
3021 an IMPORT stub! So an IMPORT stub is both a call and return
3022 trampoline. */
3023 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == IMPORT)
3024 return 1;
3025
3026 /* Parameter relocation stubs always have a call path and may have a
3027 return path. */
3028 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == PARAMETER_RELOCATION
3029 || u->stub_unwind.stub_type == EXPORT)
3030 {
3031 CORE_ADDR addr;
3032
3033 /* Search forward from the current PC until we hit a branch
3034 or the end of the stub. */
3035 for (addr = pc; addr <= u->region_end; addr += 4)
3036 {
3037 unsigned long insn;
3038
3039 insn = read_memory_integer (addr, 4);
3040
3041 /* Does it look like a bl? If so then it's the call path, if
3042 we find a bv or be first, then we're on the return path. */
3043 if ((insn & 0xfc00e000) == 0xe8000000)
3044 return 1;
3045 else if ((insn & 0xfc00e001) == 0xe800c000
3046 || (insn & 0xfc000000) == 0xe0000000)
3047 return 0;
3048 }
3049
3050 /* Should never happen. */
3051 warning ("Unable to find branch in parameter relocation stub.\n");
3052 return 0;
3053 }
3054
3055 /* Unknown stub type. For now, just return zero. */
3056 return 0;
3057 }
3058
3059 /* Return one if PC is in the return path of a trampoline, else return zero.
3060
3061 Note we return one for *any* call trampoline (long-call, arg-reloc), not
3062 just shared library trampolines (import, export). */
3063
3064 int
3065 hppa_in_solib_return_trampoline (CORE_ADDR pc, char *name)
3066 {
3067 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
3068
3069 /* Get the unwind descriptor corresponding to PC, return zero
3070 if no unwind was found. */
3071 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
3072 if (!u)
3073 return 0;
3074
3075 /* If this isn't a linker stub or it's just a long branch stub, then
3076 return zero. */
3077 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == 0 || u->stub_unwind.stub_type == LONG_BRANCH)
3078 return 0;
3079
3080 /* The call and return path execute the same instructions within
3081 an IMPORT stub! So an IMPORT stub is both a call and return
3082 trampoline. */
3083 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == IMPORT)
3084 return 1;
3085
3086 /* Parameter relocation stubs always have a call path and may have a
3087 return path. */
3088 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == PARAMETER_RELOCATION
3089 || u->stub_unwind.stub_type == EXPORT)
3090 {
3091 CORE_ADDR addr;
3092
3093 /* Search forward from the current PC until we hit a branch
3094 or the end of the stub. */
3095 for (addr = pc; addr <= u->region_end; addr += 4)
3096 {
3097 unsigned long insn;
3098
3099 insn = read_memory_integer (addr, 4);
3100
3101 /* Does it look like a bl? If so then it's the call path, if
3102 we find a bv or be first, then we're on the return path. */
3103 if ((insn & 0xfc00e000) == 0xe8000000)
3104 return 0;
3105 else if ((insn & 0xfc00e001) == 0xe800c000
3106 || (insn & 0xfc000000) == 0xe0000000)
3107 return 1;
3108 }
3109
3110 /* Should never happen. */
3111 warning ("Unable to find branch in parameter relocation stub.\n");
3112 return 0;
3113 }
3114
3115 /* Unknown stub type. For now, just return zero. */
3116 return 0;
3117
3118 }
3119
3120 /* Figure out if PC is in a trampoline, and if so find out where
3121 the trampoline will jump to. If not in a trampoline, return zero.
3122
3123 Simple code examination probably is not a good idea since the code
3124 sequences in trampolines can also appear in user code.
3125
3126 We use unwinds and information from the minimal symbol table to
3127 determine when we're in a trampoline. This won't work for ELF
3128 (yet) since it doesn't create stub unwind entries. Whether or
3129 not ELF will create stub unwinds or normal unwinds for linker
3130 stubs is still being debated.
3131
3132 This should handle simple calls through dyncall or sr4export,
3133 long calls, argument relocation stubs, and dyncall/sr4export
3134 calling an argument relocation stub. It even handles some stubs
3135 used in dynamic executables. */
3136
3137 CORE_ADDR
3138 hppa_skip_trampoline_code (CORE_ADDR pc)
3139 {
3140 long orig_pc = pc;
3141 long prev_inst, curr_inst, loc;
3142 static CORE_ADDR dyncall = 0;
3143 static CORE_ADDR dyncall_external = 0;
3144 static CORE_ADDR sr4export = 0;
3145 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
3146 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
3147
3148 /* FIXME XXX - dyncall and sr4export must be initialized whenever we get a
3149 new exec file */
3150
3151 if (!dyncall)
3152 {
3153 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol ("$$dyncall", NULL, NULL);
3154 if (msym)
3155 dyncall = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
3156 else
3157 dyncall = -1;
3158 }
3159
3160 if (!dyncall_external)
3161 {
3162 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol ("$$dyncall_external", NULL, NULL);
3163 if (msym)
3164 dyncall_external = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
3165 else
3166 dyncall_external = -1;
3167 }
3168
3169 if (!sr4export)
3170 {
3171 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol ("_sr4export", NULL, NULL);
3172 if (msym)
3173 sr4export = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
3174 else
3175 sr4export = -1;
3176 }
3177
3178 /* Addresses passed to dyncall may *NOT* be the actual address
3179 of the function. So we may have to do something special. */
3180 if (pc == dyncall)
3181 {
3182 pc = (CORE_ADDR) read_register (22);
3183
3184 /* If bit 30 (counting from the left) is on, then pc is the address of
3185 the PLT entry for this function, not the address of the function
3186 itself. Bit 31 has meaning too, but only for MPE. */
3187 if (pc & 0x2)
3188 pc = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (pc & ~0x3, TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
3189 }
3190 if (pc == dyncall_external)
3191 {
3192 pc = (CORE_ADDR) read_register (22);
3193 pc = (CORE_ADDR) read_memory_integer (pc & ~0x3, TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
3194 }
3195 else if (pc == sr4export)
3196 pc = (CORE_ADDR) (read_register (22));
3197
3198 /* Get the unwind descriptor corresponding to PC, return zero
3199 if no unwind was found. */
3200 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
3201 if (!u)
3202 return 0;
3203
3204 /* If this isn't a linker stub, then return now. */
3205 /* elz: attention here! (FIXME) because of a compiler/linker
3206 error, some stubs which should have a non zero stub_unwind.stub_type
3207 have unfortunately a value of zero. So this function would return here
3208 as if we were not in a trampoline. To fix this, we go look at the partial
3209 symbol information, which reports this guy as a stub.
3210 (FIXME): Unfortunately, we are not that lucky: it turns out that the
3211 partial symbol information is also wrong sometimes. This is because
3212 when it is entered (somread.c::som_symtab_read()) it can happen that
3213 if the type of the symbol (from the som) is Entry, and the symbol is
3214 in a shared library, then it can also be a trampoline. This would
3215 be OK, except that I believe the way they decide if we are ina shared library
3216 does not work. SOOOO..., even if we have a regular function w/o trampolines
3217 its minimal symbol can be assigned type mst_solib_trampoline.
3218 Also, if we find that the symbol is a real stub, then we fix the unwind
3219 descriptor, and define the stub type to be EXPORT.
3220 Hopefully this is correct most of the times. */
3221 if (u->stub_unwind.stub_type == 0)
3222 {
3223
3224 /* elz: NOTE (FIXME!) once the problem with the unwind information is fixed
3225 we can delete all the code which appears between the lines */
3226 /*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
3227 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc);
3228
3229 if (msym == NULL || MSYMBOL_TYPE (msym) != mst_solib_trampoline)
3230 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3231
3232 else if (msym != NULL && MSYMBOL_TYPE (msym) == mst_solib_trampoline)
3233 {
3234 struct objfile *objfile;
3235 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
3236 int function_found = 0;
3237
3238 /* go look if there is another minimal symbol with the same name as
3239 this one, but with type mst_text. This would happen if the msym
3240 is an actual trampoline, in which case there would be another
3241 symbol with the same name corresponding to the real function */
3242
3243 ALL_MSYMBOLS (objfile, msymbol)
3244 {
3245 if (MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) == mst_text
3246 && STREQ (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol), DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msym)))
3247 {
3248 function_found = 1;
3249 break;
3250 }
3251 }
3252
3253 if (function_found)
3254 /* the type of msym is correct (mst_solib_trampoline), but
3255 the unwind info is wrong, so set it to the correct value */
3256 u->stub_unwind.stub_type = EXPORT;
3257 else
3258 /* the stub type info in the unwind is correct (this is not a
3259 trampoline), but the msym type information is wrong, it
3260 should be mst_text. So we need to fix the msym, and also
3261 get out of this function */
3262 {
3263 MSYMBOL_TYPE (msym) = mst_text;
3264 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3265 }
3266 }
3267
3268 /*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*/
3269 }
3270
3271 /* It's a stub. Search for a branch and figure out where it goes.
3272 Note we have to handle multi insn branch sequences like ldil;ble.
3273 Most (all?) other branches can be determined by examining the contents
3274 of certain registers and the stack. */
3275
3276 loc = pc;
3277 curr_inst = 0;
3278 prev_inst = 0;
3279 while (1)
3280 {
3281 /* Make sure we haven't walked outside the range of this stub. */
3282 if (u != find_unwind_entry (loc))
3283 {
3284 warning ("Unable to find branch in linker stub");
3285 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3286 }
3287
3288 prev_inst = curr_inst;
3289 curr_inst = read_memory_integer (loc, 4);
3290
3291 /* Does it look like a branch external using %r1? Then it's the
3292 branch from the stub to the actual function. */
3293 if ((curr_inst & 0xffe0e000) == 0xe0202000)
3294 {
3295 /* Yup. See if the previous instruction loaded
3296 a value into %r1. If so compute and return the jump address. */
3297 if ((prev_inst & 0xffe00000) == 0x20200000)
3298 return (extract_21 (prev_inst) + extract_17 (curr_inst)) & ~0x3;
3299 else
3300 {
3301 warning ("Unable to find ldil X,%%r1 before ble Y(%%sr4,%%r1).");
3302 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3303 }
3304 }
3305
3306 /* Does it look like a be 0(sr0,%r21)? OR
3307 Does it look like a be, n 0(sr0,%r21)? OR
3308 Does it look like a bve (r21)? (this is on PA2.0)
3309 Does it look like a bve, n(r21)? (this is also on PA2.0)
3310 That's the branch from an
3311 import stub to an export stub.
3312
3313 It is impossible to determine the target of the branch via
3314 simple examination of instructions and/or data (consider
3315 that the address in the plabel may be the address of the
3316 bind-on-reference routine in the dynamic loader).
3317
3318 So we have try an alternative approach.
3319
3320 Get the name of the symbol at our current location; it should
3321 be a stub symbol with the same name as the symbol in the
3322 shared library.
3323
3324 Then lookup a minimal symbol with the same name; we should
3325 get the minimal symbol for the target routine in the shared
3326 library as those take precedence of import/export stubs. */
3327 if ((curr_inst == 0xe2a00000) ||
3328 (curr_inst == 0xe2a00002) ||
3329 (curr_inst == 0xeaa0d000) ||
3330 (curr_inst == 0xeaa0d002))
3331 {
3332 struct minimal_symbol *stubsym, *libsym;
3333
3334 stubsym = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (loc);
3335 if (stubsym == NULL)
3336 {
3337 warning ("Unable to find symbol for 0x%lx", loc);
3338 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3339 }
3340
3341 libsym = lookup_minimal_symbol (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (stubsym), NULL, NULL);
3342 if (libsym == NULL)
3343 {
3344 warning ("Unable to find library symbol for %s\n",
3345 DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (stubsym));
3346 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3347 }
3348
3349 return SYMBOL_VALUE (libsym);
3350 }
3351
3352 /* Does it look like bl X,%rp or bl X,%r0? Another way to do a
3353 branch from the stub to the actual function. */
3354 /*elz */
3355 else if ((curr_inst & 0xffe0e000) == 0xe8400000
3356 || (curr_inst & 0xffe0e000) == 0xe8000000
3357 || (curr_inst & 0xffe0e000) == 0xe800A000)
3358 return (loc + extract_17 (curr_inst) + 8) & ~0x3;
3359
3360 /* Does it look like bv (rp)? Note this depends on the
3361 current stack pointer being the same as the stack
3362 pointer in the stub itself! This is a branch on from the
3363 stub back to the original caller. */
3364 /*else if ((curr_inst & 0xffe0e000) == 0xe840c000) */
3365 else if ((curr_inst & 0xffe0f000) == 0xe840c000)
3366 {
3367 /* Yup. See if the previous instruction loaded
3368 rp from sp - 8. */
3369 if (prev_inst == 0x4bc23ff1)
3370 return (read_memory_integer
3371 (read_register (SP_REGNUM) - 8, 4)) & ~0x3;
3372 else
3373 {
3374 warning ("Unable to find restore of %%rp before bv (%%rp).");
3375 return orig_pc == pc ? 0 : pc & ~0x3;
3376 }
3377 }
3378
3379 /* elz: added this case to capture the new instruction
3380 at the end of the return part of an export stub used by
3381 the PA2.0: BVE, n (rp) */
3382 else if ((curr_inst & 0xffe0f000) == 0xe840d000)
3383 {
3384 return (read_memory_integer
3385 (read_register (SP_REGNUM) - 24, TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8)) & ~0x3;
3386 }
3387
3388 /* What about be,n 0(sr0,%rp)? It's just another way we return to
3389 the original caller from the stub. Used in dynamic executables. */
3390 else if (curr_inst == 0xe0400002)
3391 {
3392 /* The value we jump to is sitting in sp - 24. But that's
3393 loaded several instructions before the be instruction.
3394 I guess we could check for the previous instruction being
3395 mtsp %r1,%sr0 if we want to do sanity checking. */
3396 return (read_memory_integer
3397 (read_register (SP_REGNUM) - 24, TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8)) & ~0x3;
3398 }
3399
3400 /* Haven't found the branch yet, but we're still in the stub.
3401 Keep looking. */
3402 loc += 4;
3403 }
3404 }
3405
3406
3407 /* For the given instruction (INST), return any adjustment it makes
3408 to the stack pointer or zero for no adjustment.
3409
3410 This only handles instructions commonly found in prologues. */
3411
3412 static int
3413 prologue_inst_adjust_sp (unsigned long inst)
3414 {
3415 /* This must persist across calls. */
3416 static int save_high21;
3417
3418 /* The most common way to perform a stack adjustment ldo X(sp),sp */
3419 if ((inst & 0xffffc000) == 0x37de0000)
3420 return extract_14 (inst);
3421
3422 /* stwm X,D(sp) */
3423 if ((inst & 0xffe00000) == 0x6fc00000)
3424 return extract_14 (inst);
3425
3426 /* std,ma X,D(sp) */
3427 if ((inst & 0xffe00008) == 0x73c00008)
3428 return (inst & 0x1 ? -1 << 13 : 0) | (((inst >> 4) & 0x3ff) << 3);
3429
3430 /* addil high21,%r1; ldo low11,(%r1),%r30)
3431 save high bits in save_high21 for later use. */
3432 if ((inst & 0xffe00000) == 0x28200000)
3433 {
3434 save_high21 = extract_21 (inst);
3435 return 0;
3436 }
3437
3438 if ((inst & 0xffff0000) == 0x343e0000)
3439 return save_high21 + extract_14 (inst);
3440
3441 /* fstws as used by the HP compilers. */
3442 if ((inst & 0xffffffe0) == 0x2fd01220)
3443 return extract_5_load (inst);
3444
3445 /* No adjustment. */
3446 return 0;
3447 }
3448
3449 /* Return nonzero if INST is a branch of some kind, else return zero. */
3450
3451 static int
3452 is_branch (unsigned long inst)
3453 {
3454 switch (inst >> 26)
3455 {
3456 case 0x20:
3457 case 0x21:
3458 case 0x22:
3459 case 0x23:
3460 case 0x27:
3461 case 0x28:
3462 case 0x29:
3463 case 0x2a:
3464 case 0x2b:
3465 case 0x2f:
3466 case 0x30:
3467 case 0x31:
3468 case 0x32:
3469 case 0x33:
3470 case 0x38:
3471 case 0x39:
3472 case 0x3a:
3473 case 0x3b:
3474 return 1;
3475
3476 default:
3477 return 0;
3478 }
3479 }
3480
3481 /* Return the register number for a GR which is saved by INST or
3482 zero it INST does not save a GR. */
3483
3484 static int
3485 inst_saves_gr (unsigned long inst)
3486 {
3487 /* Does it look like a stw? */
3488 if ((inst >> 26) == 0x1a || (inst >> 26) == 0x1b
3489 || (inst >> 26) == 0x1f
3490 || ((inst >> 26) == 0x1f
3491 && ((inst >> 6) == 0xa)))
3492 return extract_5R_store (inst);
3493
3494 /* Does it look like a std? */
3495 if ((inst >> 26) == 0x1c
3496 || ((inst >> 26) == 0x03
3497 && ((inst >> 6) & 0xf) == 0xb))
3498 return extract_5R_store (inst);
3499
3500 /* Does it look like a stwm? GCC & HPC may use this in prologues. */
3501 if ((inst >> 26) == 0x1b)
3502 return extract_5R_store (inst);
3503
3504 /* Does it look like sth or stb? HPC versions 9.0 and later use these
3505 too. */
3506 if ((inst >> 26) == 0x19 || (inst >> 26) == 0x18
3507 || ((inst >> 26) == 0x3
3508 && (((inst >> 6) & 0xf) == 0x8
3509 || (inst >> 6) & 0xf) == 0x9))
3510 return extract_5R_store (inst);
3511
3512 return 0;
3513 }
3514
3515 /* Return the register number for a FR which is saved by INST or
3516 zero it INST does not save a FR.
3517
3518 Note we only care about full 64bit register stores (that's the only
3519 kind of stores the prologue will use).
3520
3521 FIXME: What about argument stores with the HP compiler in ANSI mode? */
3522
3523 static int
3524 inst_saves_fr (unsigned long inst)
3525 {
3526 /* is this an FSTD ? */
3527 if ((inst & 0xfc00dfc0) == 0x2c001200)
3528 return extract_5r_store (inst);
3529 if ((inst & 0xfc000002) == 0x70000002)
3530 return extract_5R_store (inst);
3531 /* is this an FSTW ? */
3532 if ((inst & 0xfc00df80) == 0x24001200)
3533 return extract_5r_store (inst);
3534 if ((inst & 0xfc000002) == 0x7c000000)
3535 return extract_5R_store (inst);
3536 return 0;
3537 }
3538
3539 /* Advance PC across any function entry prologue instructions
3540 to reach some "real" code.
3541
3542 Use information in the unwind table to determine what exactly should
3543 be in the prologue. */
3544
3545
3546 CORE_ADDR
3547 skip_prologue_hard_way (CORE_ADDR pc)
3548 {
3549 char buf[4];
3550 CORE_ADDR orig_pc = pc;
3551 unsigned long inst, stack_remaining, save_gr, save_fr, save_rp, save_sp;
3552 unsigned long args_stored, status, i, restart_gr, restart_fr;
3553 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
3554
3555 restart_gr = 0;
3556 restart_fr = 0;
3557
3558 restart:
3559 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
3560 if (!u)
3561 return pc;
3562
3563 /* If we are not at the beginning of a function, then return now. */
3564 if ((pc & ~0x3) != u->region_start)
3565 return pc;
3566
3567 /* This is how much of a frame adjustment we need to account for. */
3568 stack_remaining = u->Total_frame_size << 3;
3569
3570 /* Magic register saves we want to know about. */
3571 save_rp = u->Save_RP;
3572 save_sp = u->Save_SP;
3573
3574 /* An indication that args may be stored into the stack. Unfortunately
3575 the HPUX compilers tend to set this in cases where no args were
3576 stored too!. */
3577 args_stored = 1;
3578
3579 /* Turn the Entry_GR field into a bitmask. */
3580 save_gr = 0;
3581 for (i = 3; i < u->Entry_GR + 3; i++)
3582 {
3583 /* Frame pointer gets saved into a special location. */
3584 if (u->Save_SP && i == FP_REGNUM)
3585 continue;
3586
3587 save_gr |= (1 << i);
3588 }
3589 save_gr &= ~restart_gr;
3590
3591 /* Turn the Entry_FR field into a bitmask too. */
3592 save_fr = 0;
3593 for (i = 12; i < u->Entry_FR + 12; i++)
3594 save_fr |= (1 << i);
3595 save_fr &= ~restart_fr;
3596
3597 /* Loop until we find everything of interest or hit a branch.
3598
3599 For unoptimized GCC code and for any HP CC code this will never ever
3600 examine any user instructions.
3601
3602 For optimzied GCC code we're faced with problems. GCC will schedule
3603 its prologue and make prologue instructions available for delay slot
3604 filling. The end result is user code gets mixed in with the prologue
3605 and a prologue instruction may be in the delay slot of the first branch
3606 or call.
3607
3608 Some unexpected things are expected with debugging optimized code, so
3609 we allow this routine to walk past user instructions in optimized
3610 GCC code. */
3611 while (save_gr || save_fr || save_rp || save_sp || stack_remaining > 0
3612 || args_stored)
3613 {
3614 unsigned int reg_num;
3615 unsigned long old_stack_remaining, old_save_gr, old_save_fr;
3616 unsigned long old_save_rp, old_save_sp, next_inst;
3617
3618 /* Save copies of all the triggers so we can compare them later
3619 (only for HPC). */
3620 old_save_gr = save_gr;
3621 old_save_fr = save_fr;
3622 old_save_rp = save_rp;
3623 old_save_sp = save_sp;
3624 old_stack_remaining = stack_remaining;
3625
3626 status = target_read_memory (pc, buf, 4);
3627 inst = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
3628
3629 /* Yow! */
3630 if (status != 0)
3631 return pc;
3632
3633 /* Note the interesting effects of this instruction. */
3634 stack_remaining -= prologue_inst_adjust_sp (inst);
3635
3636 /* There are limited ways to store the return pointer into the
3637 stack. */
3638 if (inst == 0x6bc23fd9 || inst == 0x0fc212c1)
3639 save_rp = 0;
3640
3641 /* These are the only ways we save SP into the stack. At this time
3642 the HP compilers never bother to save SP into the stack. */
3643 if ((inst & 0xffffc000) == 0x6fc10000
3644 || (inst & 0xffffc00c) == 0x73c10008)
3645 save_sp = 0;
3646
3647 /* Are we loading some register with an offset from the argument
3648 pointer? */
3649 if ((inst & 0xffe00000) == 0x37a00000
3650 || (inst & 0xffffffe0) == 0x081d0240)
3651 {
3652 pc += 4;
3653 continue;
3654 }
3655
3656 /* Account for general and floating-point register saves. */
3657 reg_num = inst_saves_gr (inst);
3658 save_gr &= ~(1 << reg_num);
3659
3660 /* Ugh. Also account for argument stores into the stack.
3661 Unfortunately args_stored only tells us that some arguments
3662 where stored into the stack. Not how many or what kind!
3663
3664 This is a kludge as on the HP compiler sets this bit and it
3665 never does prologue scheduling. So once we see one, skip past
3666 all of them. We have similar code for the fp arg stores below.
3667
3668 FIXME. Can still die if we have a mix of GR and FR argument
3669 stores! */
3670 if (reg_num >= (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? 19 : 23) && reg_num <= 26)
3671 {
3672 while (reg_num >= (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? 19 : 23) && reg_num <= 26)
3673 {
3674 pc += 4;
3675 status = target_read_memory (pc, buf, 4);
3676 inst = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
3677 if (status != 0)
3678 return pc;
3679 reg_num = inst_saves_gr (inst);
3680 }
3681 args_stored = 0;
3682 continue;
3683 }
3684
3685 reg_num = inst_saves_fr (inst);
3686 save_fr &= ~(1 << reg_num);
3687
3688 status = target_read_memory (pc + 4, buf, 4);
3689 next_inst = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
3690
3691 /* Yow! */
3692 if (status != 0)
3693 return pc;
3694
3695 /* We've got to be read to handle the ldo before the fp register
3696 save. */
3697 if ((inst & 0xfc000000) == 0x34000000
3698 && inst_saves_fr (next_inst) >= 4
3699 && inst_saves_fr (next_inst) <= (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? 11 : 7))
3700 {
3701 /* So we drop into the code below in a reasonable state. */
3702 reg_num = inst_saves_fr (next_inst);
3703 pc -= 4;
3704 }
3705
3706 /* Ugh. Also account for argument stores into the stack.
3707 This is a kludge as on the HP compiler sets this bit and it
3708 never does prologue scheduling. So once we see one, skip past
3709 all of them. */
3710 if (reg_num >= 4 && reg_num <= (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? 11 : 7))
3711 {
3712 while (reg_num >= 4 && reg_num <= (TARGET_PTR_BIT == 64 ? 11 : 7))
3713 {
3714 pc += 8;
3715 status = target_read_memory (pc, buf, 4);
3716 inst = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
3717 if (status != 0)
3718 return pc;
3719 if ((inst & 0xfc000000) != 0x34000000)
3720 break;
3721 status = target_read_memory (pc + 4, buf, 4);
3722 next_inst = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
3723 if (status != 0)
3724 return pc;
3725 reg_num = inst_saves_fr (next_inst);
3726 }
3727 args_stored = 0;
3728 continue;
3729 }
3730
3731 /* Quit if we hit any kind of branch. This can happen if a prologue
3732 instruction is in the delay slot of the first call/branch. */
3733 if (is_branch (inst))
3734 break;
3735
3736 /* What a crock. The HP compilers set args_stored even if no
3737 arguments were stored into the stack (boo hiss). This could
3738 cause this code to then skip a bunch of user insns (up to the
3739 first branch).
3740
3741 To combat this we try to identify when args_stored was bogusly
3742 set and clear it. We only do this when args_stored is nonzero,
3743 all other resources are accounted for, and nothing changed on
3744 this pass. */
3745 if (args_stored
3746 && !(save_gr || save_fr || save_rp || save_sp || stack_remaining > 0)
3747 && old_save_gr == save_gr && old_save_fr == save_fr
3748 && old_save_rp == save_rp && old_save_sp == save_sp
3749 && old_stack_remaining == stack_remaining)
3750 break;
3751
3752 /* Bump the PC. */
3753 pc += 4;
3754 }
3755
3756 /* We've got a tenative location for the end of the prologue. However
3757 because of limitations in the unwind descriptor mechanism we may
3758 have went too far into user code looking for the save of a register
3759 that does not exist. So, if there registers we expected to be saved
3760 but never were, mask them out and restart.
3761
3762 This should only happen in optimized code, and should be very rare. */
3763 if (save_gr || (save_fr && !(restart_fr || restart_gr)))
3764 {
3765 pc = orig_pc;
3766 restart_gr = save_gr;
3767 restart_fr = save_fr;
3768 goto restart;
3769 }
3770
3771 return pc;
3772 }
3773
3774
3775 /* Return the address of the PC after the last prologue instruction if
3776 we can determine it from the debug symbols. Else return zero. */
3777
3778 static CORE_ADDR
3779 after_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc)
3780 {
3781 struct symtab_and_line sal;
3782 CORE_ADDR func_addr, func_end;
3783 struct symbol *f;
3784
3785 /* If we can not find the symbol in the partial symbol table, then
3786 there is no hope we can determine the function's start address
3787 with this code. */
3788 if (!find_pc_partial_function (pc, NULL, &func_addr, &func_end))
3789 return 0;
3790
3791 /* Get the line associated with FUNC_ADDR. */
3792 sal = find_pc_line (func_addr, 0);
3793
3794 /* There are only two cases to consider. First, the end of the source line
3795 is within the function bounds. In that case we return the end of the
3796 source line. Second is the end of the source line extends beyond the
3797 bounds of the current function. We need to use the slow code to
3798 examine instructions in that case.
3799
3800 Anything else is simply a bug elsewhere. Fixing it here is absolutely
3801 the wrong thing to do. In fact, it should be entirely possible for this
3802 function to always return zero since the slow instruction scanning code
3803 is supposed to *always* work. If it does not, then it is a bug. */
3804 if (sal.end < func_end)
3805 return sal.end;
3806 else
3807 return 0;
3808 }
3809
3810 /* To skip prologues, I use this predicate. Returns either PC itself
3811 if the code at PC does not look like a function prologue; otherwise
3812 returns an address that (if we're lucky) follows the prologue. If
3813 LENIENT, then we must skip everything which is involved in setting
3814 up the frame (it's OK to skip more, just so long as we don't skip
3815 anything which might clobber the registers which are being saved.
3816 Currently we must not skip more on the alpha, but we might the lenient
3817 stuff some day. */
3818
3819 CORE_ADDR
3820 hppa_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc)
3821 {
3822 unsigned long inst;
3823 int offset;
3824 CORE_ADDR post_prologue_pc;
3825 char buf[4];
3826
3827 /* See if we can determine the end of the prologue via the symbol table.
3828 If so, then return either PC, or the PC after the prologue, whichever
3829 is greater. */
3830
3831 post_prologue_pc = after_prologue (pc);
3832
3833 /* If after_prologue returned a useful address, then use it. Else
3834 fall back on the instruction skipping code.
3835
3836 Some folks have claimed this causes problems because the breakpoint
3837 may be the first instruction of the prologue. If that happens, then
3838 the instruction skipping code has a bug that needs to be fixed. */
3839 if (post_prologue_pc != 0)
3840 return max (pc, post_prologue_pc);
3841 else
3842 return (skip_prologue_hard_way (pc));
3843 }
3844
3845 /* Put here the code to store, into a struct frame_saved_regs,
3846 the addresses of the saved registers of frame described by FRAME_INFO.
3847 This includes special registers such as pc and fp saved in special
3848 ways in the stack frame. sp is even more special:
3849 the address we return for it IS the sp for the next frame. */
3850
3851 void
3852 hppa_frame_find_saved_regs (struct frame_info *frame_info,
3853 struct frame_saved_regs *frame_saved_regs)
3854 {
3855 CORE_ADDR pc;
3856 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
3857 unsigned long inst, stack_remaining, save_gr, save_fr, save_rp, save_sp;
3858 int status, i, reg;
3859 char buf[4];
3860 int fp_loc = -1;
3861 int final_iteration;
3862
3863 /* Zero out everything. */
3864 memset (frame_saved_regs, '\0', sizeof (struct frame_saved_regs));
3865
3866 /* Call dummy frames always look the same, so there's no need to
3867 examine the dummy code to determine locations of saved registers;
3868 instead, let find_dummy_frame_regs fill in the correct offsets
3869 for the saved registers. */
3870 if ((frame_info->pc >= frame_info->frame
3871 && frame_info->pc <= (frame_info->frame
3872 /* A call dummy is sized in words, but it is
3873 actually a series of instructions. Account
3874 for that scaling factor. */
3875 + ((REGISTER_SIZE / INSTRUCTION_SIZE)
3876 * CALL_DUMMY_LENGTH)
3877 /* Similarly we have to account for 64bit
3878 wide register saves. */
3879 + (32 * REGISTER_SIZE)
3880 /* We always consider FP regs 8 bytes long. */
3881 + (NUM_REGS - FP0_REGNUM) * 8
3882 /* Similarly we have to account for 64bit
3883 wide register saves. */
3884 + (6 * REGISTER_SIZE))))
3885 find_dummy_frame_regs (frame_info, frame_saved_regs);
3886
3887 /* Interrupt handlers are special too. They lay out the register
3888 state in the exact same order as the register numbers in GDB. */
3889 if (pc_in_interrupt_handler (frame_info->pc))
3890 {
3891 for (i = 0; i < NUM_REGS; i++)
3892 {
3893 /* SP is a little special. */
3894 if (i == SP_REGNUM)
3895 frame_saved_regs->regs[SP_REGNUM]
3896 = read_memory_integer (frame_info->frame + SP_REGNUM * 4,
3897 TARGET_PTR_BIT / 8);
3898 else
3899 frame_saved_regs->regs[i] = frame_info->frame + i * 4;
3900 }
3901 return;
3902 }
3903
3904 #ifdef FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS_IN_SIGTRAMP
3905 /* Handle signal handler callers. */
3906 if ((get_frame_type (frame_info) == SIGTRAMP_FRAME))
3907 {
3908 FRAME_FIND_SAVED_REGS_IN_SIGTRAMP (frame_info, frame_saved_regs);
3909 return;
3910 }
3911 #endif
3912
3913 /* Get the starting address of the function referred to by the PC
3914 saved in frame. */
3915 pc = get_pc_function_start (frame_info->pc);
3916
3917 /* Yow! */
3918 u = find_unwind_entry (pc);
3919 if (!u)
3920 return;
3921
3922 /* This is how much of a frame adjustment we need to account for. */
3923 stack_remaining = u->Total_frame_size << 3;
3924
3925 /* Magic register saves we want to know about. */
3926 save_rp = u->Save_RP;
3927 save_sp = u->Save_SP;
3928
3929 /* Turn the Entry_GR field into a bitmask. */
3930 save_gr = 0;
3931 for (i = 3; i < u->Entry_GR + 3; i++)
3932 {
3933 /* Frame pointer gets saved into a special location. */
3934 if (u->Save_SP && i == FP_REGNUM)
3935 continue;
3936
3937 save_gr |= (1 << i);
3938 }
3939
3940 /* Turn the Entry_FR field into a bitmask too. */
3941 save_fr = 0;
3942 for (i = 12; i < u->Entry_FR + 12; i++)
3943 save_fr |= (1 << i);
3944
3945 /* The frame always represents the value of %sp at entry to the
3946 current function (and is thus equivalent to the "saved" stack
3947 pointer. */
3948 frame_saved_regs->regs[SP_REGNUM] = frame_info->frame;
3949
3950 /* Loop until we find everything of interest or hit a branch.
3951
3952 For unoptimized GCC code and for any HP CC code this will never ever
3953 examine any user instructions.
3954
3955 For optimized GCC code we're faced with problems. GCC will schedule
3956 its prologue and make prologue instructions available for delay slot
3957 filling. The end result is user code gets mixed in with the prologue
3958 and a prologue instruction may be in the delay slot of the first branch
3959 or call.
3960
3961 Some unexpected things are expected with debugging optimized code, so
3962 we allow this routine to walk past user instructions in optimized
3963 GCC code. */
3964 final_iteration = 0;
3965 while ((save_gr || save_fr || save_rp || save_sp || stack_remaining > 0)
3966 && pc <= frame_info->pc)
3967 {
3968 status = target_read_memory (pc, buf, 4);
3969 inst = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
3970
3971 /* Yow! */
3972 if (status != 0)
3973 return;
3974
3975 /* Note the interesting effects of this instruction. */
3976 stack_remaining -= prologue_inst_adjust_sp (inst);
3977
3978 /* There are limited ways to store the return pointer into the
3979 stack. */
3980 if (inst == 0x6bc23fd9) /* stw rp,-0x14(sr0,sp) */
3981 {
3982 save_rp = 0;
3983 frame_saved_regs->regs[RP_REGNUM] = frame_info->frame - 20;
3984 }
3985 else if (inst == 0x0fc212c1) /* std rp,-0x10(sr0,sp) */
3986 {
3987 save_rp = 0;
3988 frame_saved_regs->regs[RP_REGNUM] = frame_info->frame - 16;
3989 }
3990
3991 /* Note if we saved SP into the stack. This also happens to indicate
3992 the location of the saved frame pointer. */
3993 if ( (inst & 0xffffc000) == 0x6fc10000 /* stw,ma r1,N(sr0,sp) */
3994 || (inst & 0xffffc00c) == 0x73c10008) /* std,ma r1,N(sr0,sp) */
3995 {
3996 frame_saved_regs->regs[FP_REGNUM] = frame_info->frame;
3997 save_sp = 0;
3998 }
3999
4000 /* Account for general and floating-point register saves. */
4001 reg = inst_saves_gr (inst);
4002 if (reg >= 3 && reg <= 18
4003 && (!u->Save_SP || reg != FP_REGNUM))
4004 {
4005 save_gr &= ~(1 << reg);
4006
4007 /* stwm with a positive displacement is a *post modify*. */
4008 if ((inst >> 26) == 0x1b
4009 && extract_14 (inst) >= 0)
4010 frame_saved_regs->regs[reg] = frame_info->frame;
4011 /* A std has explicit post_modify forms. */
4012 else if ((inst & 0xfc00000c0) == 0x70000008)
4013 frame_saved_regs->regs[reg] = frame_info->frame;
4014 else
4015 {
4016 CORE_ADDR offset;
4017
4018 if ((inst >> 26) == 0x1c)
4019 offset = (inst & 0x1 ? -1 << 13 : 0) | (((inst >> 4) & 0x3ff) << 3);
4020 else if ((inst >> 26) == 0x03)
4021 offset = low_sign_extend (inst & 0x1f, 5);
4022 else
4023 offset = extract_14 (inst);
4024
4025 /* Handle code with and without frame pointers. */
4026 if (u->Save_SP)
4027 frame_saved_regs->regs[reg]
4028 = frame_info->frame + offset;
4029 else
4030 frame_saved_regs->regs[reg]
4031 = (frame_info->frame + (u->Total_frame_size << 3)
4032 + offset);
4033 }
4034 }
4035
4036
4037 /* GCC handles callee saved FP regs a little differently.
4038
4039 It emits an instruction to put the value of the start of
4040 the FP store area into %r1. It then uses fstds,ma with
4041 a basereg of %r1 for the stores.
4042
4043 HP CC emits them at the current stack pointer modifying
4044 the stack pointer as it stores each register. */
4045
4046 /* ldo X(%r3),%r1 or ldo X(%r30),%r1. */
4047 if ((inst & 0xffffc000) == 0x34610000
4048 || (inst & 0xffffc000) == 0x37c10000)
4049 fp_loc = extract_14 (inst);
4050
4051 reg = inst_saves_fr (inst);
4052 if (reg >= 12 && reg <= 21)
4053 {
4054 /* Note +4 braindamage below is necessary because the FP status
4055 registers are internally 8 registers rather than the expected
4056 4 registers. */
4057 save_fr &= ~(1 << reg);
4058 if (fp_loc == -1)
4059 {
4060 /* 1st HP CC FP register store. After this instruction
4061 we've set enough state that the GCC and HPCC code are
4062 both handled in the same manner. */
4063 frame_saved_regs->regs[reg + FP4_REGNUM + 4] = frame_info->frame;
4064 fp_loc = 8;
4065 }
4066 else
4067 {
4068 frame_saved_regs->regs[reg + FP0_REGNUM + 4]
4069 = frame_info->frame + fp_loc;
4070 fp_loc += 8;
4071 }
4072 }
4073
4074 /* Quit if we hit any kind of branch the previous iteration. */
4075 if (final_iteration)
4076 break;
4077
4078 /* We want to look precisely one instruction beyond the branch
4079 if we have not found everything yet. */
4080 if (is_branch (inst))
4081 final_iteration = 1;
4082
4083 /* Bump the PC. */
4084 pc += 4;
4085 }
4086 }
4087
4088
4089 /* Exception handling support for the HP-UX ANSI C++ compiler.
4090 The compiler (aCC) provides a callback for exception events;
4091 GDB can set a breakpoint on this callback and find out what
4092 exception event has occurred. */
4093
4094 /* The name of the hook to be set to point to the callback function */
4095 static char HP_ACC_EH_notify_hook[] = "__eh_notify_hook";
4096 /* The name of the function to be used to set the hook value */
4097 static char HP_ACC_EH_set_hook_value[] = "__eh_set_hook_value";
4098 /* The name of the callback function in end.o */
4099 static char HP_ACC_EH_notify_callback[] = "__d_eh_notify_callback";
4100 /* Name of function in end.o on which a break is set (called by above) */
4101 static char HP_ACC_EH_break[] = "__d_eh_break";
4102 /* Name of flag (in end.o) that enables catching throws */
4103 static char HP_ACC_EH_catch_throw[] = "__d_eh_catch_throw";
4104 /* Name of flag (in end.o) that enables catching catching */
4105 static char HP_ACC_EH_catch_catch[] = "__d_eh_catch_catch";
4106 /* The enum used by aCC */
4107 typedef enum
4108 {
4109 __EH_NOTIFY_THROW,
4110 __EH_NOTIFY_CATCH
4111 }
4112 __eh_notification;
4113
4114 /* Is exception-handling support available with this executable? */
4115 static int hp_cxx_exception_support = 0;
4116 /* Has the initialize function been run? */
4117 int hp_cxx_exception_support_initialized = 0;
4118 /* Similar to above, but imported from breakpoint.c -- non-target-specific */
4119 extern int exception_support_initialized;
4120 /* Address of __eh_notify_hook */
4121 static CORE_ADDR eh_notify_hook_addr = 0;
4122 /* Address of __d_eh_notify_callback */
4123 static CORE_ADDR eh_notify_callback_addr = 0;
4124 /* Address of __d_eh_break */
4125 static CORE_ADDR eh_break_addr = 0;
4126 /* Address of __d_eh_catch_catch */
4127 static CORE_ADDR eh_catch_catch_addr = 0;
4128 /* Address of __d_eh_catch_throw */
4129 static CORE_ADDR eh_catch_throw_addr = 0;
4130 /* Sal for __d_eh_break */
4131 static struct symtab_and_line *break_callback_sal = 0;
4132
4133 /* Code in end.c expects __d_pid to be set in the inferior,
4134 otherwise __d_eh_notify_callback doesn't bother to call
4135 __d_eh_break! So we poke the pid into this symbol
4136 ourselves.
4137 0 => success
4138 1 => failure */
4139 int
4140 setup_d_pid_in_inferior (void)
4141 {
4142 CORE_ADDR anaddr;
4143 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
4144 char buf[4]; /* FIXME 32x64? */
4145
4146 /* Slam the pid of the process into __d_pid; failing is only a warning! */
4147 msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol ("__d_pid", NULL, symfile_objfile);
4148 if (msymbol == NULL)
4149 {
4150 warning ("Unable to find __d_pid symbol in object file.");
4151 warning ("Suggest linking executable with -g (links in /opt/langtools/lib/end.o).");
4152 return 1;
4153 }
4154
4155 anaddr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol);
4156 store_unsigned_integer (buf, 4, PIDGET (inferior_ptid)); /* FIXME 32x64? */
4157 if (target_write_memory (anaddr, buf, 4)) /* FIXME 32x64? */
4158 {
4159 warning ("Unable to write __d_pid");
4160 warning ("Suggest linking executable with -g (links in /opt/langtools/lib/end.o).");
4161 return 1;
4162 }
4163 return 0;
4164 }
4165
4166 /* Initialize exception catchpoint support by looking for the
4167 necessary hooks/callbacks in end.o, etc., and set the hook value to
4168 point to the required debug function
4169
4170 Return 0 => failure
4171 1 => success */
4172
4173 static int
4174 initialize_hp_cxx_exception_support (void)
4175 {
4176 struct symtabs_and_lines sals;
4177 struct cleanup *old_chain;
4178 struct cleanup *canonical_strings_chain = NULL;
4179 int i;
4180 char *addr_start;
4181 char *addr_end = NULL;
4182 char **canonical = (char **) NULL;
4183 int thread = -1;
4184 struct symbol *sym = NULL;
4185 struct minimal_symbol *msym = NULL;
4186 struct objfile *objfile;
4187 asection *shlib_info;
4188
4189 /* Detect and disallow recursion. On HP-UX with aCC, infinite
4190 recursion is a possibility because finding the hook for exception
4191 callbacks involves making a call in the inferior, which means
4192 re-inserting breakpoints which can re-invoke this code */
4193
4194 static int recurse = 0;
4195 if (recurse > 0)
4196 {
4197 hp_cxx_exception_support_initialized = 0;
4198 exception_support_initialized = 0;
4199 return 0;
4200 }
4201
4202 hp_cxx_exception_support = 0;
4203
4204 /* First check if we have seen any HP compiled objects; if not,
4205 it is very unlikely that HP's idiosyncratic callback mechanism
4206 for exception handling debug support will be available!
4207 This will percolate back up to breakpoint.c, where our callers
4208 will decide to try the g++ exception-handling support instead. */
4209 if (!hp_som_som_object_present)
4210 return 0;
4211
4212 /* We have a SOM executable with SOM debug info; find the hooks */
4213
4214 /* First look for the notify hook provided by aCC runtime libs */
4215 /* If we find this symbol, we conclude that the executable must
4216 have HP aCC exception support built in. If this symbol is not
4217 found, even though we're a HP SOM-SOM file, we may have been
4218 built with some other compiler (not aCC). This results percolates
4219 back up to our callers in breakpoint.c which can decide to
4220 try the g++ style of exception support instead.
4221 If this symbol is found but the other symbols we require are
4222 not found, there is something weird going on, and g++ support
4223 should *not* be tried as an alternative.
4224
4225 ASSUMPTION: Only HP aCC code will have __eh_notify_hook defined.
4226 ASSUMPTION: HP aCC and g++ modules cannot be linked together. */
4227
4228 /* libCsup has this hook; it'll usually be non-debuggable */
4229 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_notify_hook, NULL, NULL);
4230 if (msym)
4231 {
4232 eh_notify_hook_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
4233 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4234 }
4235 else
4236 {
4237 warning ("Unable to find exception callback hook (%s).", HP_ACC_EH_notify_hook);
4238 warning ("Executable may not have been compiled debuggable with HP aCC.");
4239 warning ("GDB will be unable to intercept exception events.");
4240 eh_notify_hook_addr = 0;
4241 hp_cxx_exception_support = 0;
4242 return 0;
4243 }
4244
4245 /* Next look for the notify callback routine in end.o */
4246 /* This is always available in the SOM symbol dictionary if end.o is linked in */
4247 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_notify_callback, NULL, NULL);
4248 if (msym)
4249 {
4250 eh_notify_callback_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
4251 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4252 }
4253 else
4254 {
4255 warning ("Unable to find exception callback routine (%s).", HP_ACC_EH_notify_callback);
4256 warning ("Suggest linking executable with -g (links in /opt/langtools/lib/end.o).");
4257 warning ("GDB will be unable to intercept exception events.");
4258 eh_notify_callback_addr = 0;
4259 return 0;
4260 }
4261
4262 #ifndef GDB_TARGET_IS_HPPA_20W
4263 /* Check whether the executable is dynamically linked or archive bound */
4264 /* With an archive-bound executable we can use the raw addresses we find
4265 for the callback function, etc. without modification. For an executable
4266 with shared libraries, we have to do more work to find the plabel, which
4267 can be the target of a call through $$dyncall from the aCC runtime support
4268 library (libCsup) which is linked shared by default by aCC. */
4269 /* This test below was copied from somsolib.c/somread.c. It may not be a very
4270 reliable one to test that an executable is linked shared. pai/1997-07-18 */
4271 shlib_info = bfd_get_section_by_name (symfile_objfile->obfd, "$SHLIB_INFO$");
4272 if (shlib_info && (bfd_section_size (symfile_objfile->obfd, shlib_info) != 0))
4273 {
4274 /* The minsym we have has the local code address, but that's not the
4275 plabel that can be used by an inter-load-module call. */
4276 /* Find solib handle for main image (which has end.o), and use that
4277 and the min sym as arguments to __d_shl_get() (which does the equivalent
4278 of shl_findsym()) to find the plabel. */
4279
4280 args_for_find_stub args;
4281 static char message[] = "Error while finding exception callback hook:\n";
4282
4283 args.solib_handle = som_solib_get_solib_by_pc (eh_notify_callback_addr);
4284 args.msym = msym;
4285 args.return_val = 0;
4286
4287 recurse++;
4288 catch_errors (cover_find_stub_with_shl_get, &args, message,
4289 RETURN_MASK_ALL);
4290 eh_notify_callback_addr = args.return_val;
4291 recurse--;
4292
4293 exception_catchpoints_are_fragile = 1;
4294
4295 if (!eh_notify_callback_addr)
4296 {
4297 /* We can get here either if there is no plabel in the export list
4298 for the main image, or if something strange happened (?) */
4299 warning ("Couldn't find a plabel (indirect function label) for the exception callback.");
4300 warning ("GDB will not be able to intercept exception events.");
4301 return 0;
4302 }
4303 }
4304 else
4305 exception_catchpoints_are_fragile = 0;
4306 #endif
4307
4308 /* Now, look for the breakpointable routine in end.o */
4309 /* This should also be available in the SOM symbol dict. if end.o linked in */
4310 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_break, NULL, NULL);
4311 if (msym)
4312 {
4313 eh_break_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
4314 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4315 }
4316 else
4317 {
4318 warning ("Unable to find exception callback routine to set breakpoint (%s).", HP_ACC_EH_break);
4319 warning ("Suggest linking executable with -g (link in /opt/langtools/lib/end.o).");
4320 warning ("GDB will be unable to intercept exception events.");
4321 eh_break_addr = 0;
4322 return 0;
4323 }
4324
4325 /* Next look for the catch enable flag provided in end.o */
4326 sym = lookup_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_catch_catch, (struct block *) NULL,
4327 VAR_NAMESPACE, 0, (struct symtab **) NULL);
4328 if (sym) /* sometimes present in debug info */
4329 {
4330 eh_catch_catch_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym);
4331 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4332 }
4333 else
4334 /* otherwise look in SOM symbol dict. */
4335 {
4336 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_catch_catch, NULL, NULL);
4337 if (msym)
4338 {
4339 eh_catch_catch_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
4340 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4341 }
4342 else
4343 {
4344 warning ("Unable to enable interception of exception catches.");
4345 warning ("Executable may not have been compiled debuggable with HP aCC.");
4346 warning ("Suggest linking executable with -g (link in /opt/langtools/lib/end.o).");
4347 return 0;
4348 }
4349 }
4350
4351 /* Next look for the catch enable flag provided end.o */
4352 sym = lookup_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_catch_catch, (struct block *) NULL,
4353 VAR_NAMESPACE, 0, (struct symtab **) NULL);
4354 if (sym) /* sometimes present in debug info */
4355 {
4356 eh_catch_throw_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym);
4357 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4358 }
4359 else
4360 /* otherwise look in SOM symbol dict. */
4361 {
4362 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (HP_ACC_EH_catch_throw, NULL, NULL);
4363 if (msym)
4364 {
4365 eh_catch_throw_addr = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
4366 hp_cxx_exception_support = 1;
4367 }
4368 else
4369 {
4370 warning ("Unable to enable interception of exception throws.");
4371 warning ("Executable may not have been compiled debuggable with HP aCC.");
4372 warning ("Suggest linking executable with -g (link in /opt/langtools/lib/end.o).");
4373 return 0;
4374 }
4375 }
4376
4377 /* Set the flags */
4378 hp_cxx_exception_support = 2; /* everything worked so far */
4379 hp_cxx_exception_support_initialized = 1;
4380 exception_support_initialized = 1;
4381
4382 return 1;
4383 }
4384
4385 /* Target operation for enabling or disabling interception of
4386 exception events.
4387 KIND is either EX_EVENT_THROW or EX_EVENT_CATCH
4388 ENABLE is either 0 (disable) or 1 (enable).
4389 Return value is NULL if no support found;
4390 -1 if something went wrong,
4391 or a pointer to a symtab/line struct if the breakpointable
4392 address was found. */
4393
4394 struct symtab_and_line *
4395 child_enable_exception_callback (enum exception_event_kind kind, int enable)
4396 {
4397 char buf[4];
4398
4399 if (!exception_support_initialized || !hp_cxx_exception_support_initialized)
4400 if (!initialize_hp_cxx_exception_support ())
4401 return NULL;
4402
4403 switch (hp_cxx_exception_support)
4404 {
4405 case 0:
4406 /* Assuming no HP support at all */
4407 return NULL;
4408 case 1:
4409 /* HP support should be present, but something went wrong */
4410 return (struct symtab_and_line *) -1; /* yuck! */
4411 /* there may be other cases in the future */
4412 }
4413
4414 /* Set the EH hook to point to the callback routine */
4415 store_unsigned_integer (buf, 4, enable ? eh_notify_callback_addr : 0); /* FIXME 32x64 problem */
4416 /* pai: (temp) FIXME should there be a pack operation first? */
4417 if (target_write_memory (eh_notify_hook_addr, buf, 4)) /* FIXME 32x64 problem */
4418 {
4419 warning ("Could not write to target memory for exception event callback.");
4420 warning ("Interception of exception events may not work.");
4421 return (struct symtab_and_line *) -1;
4422 }
4423 if (enable)
4424 {
4425 /* Ensure that __d_pid is set up correctly -- end.c code checks this. :-( */
4426 if (PIDGET (inferior_ptid) > 0)
4427 {
4428 if (setup_d_pid_in_inferior ())
4429 return (struct symtab_and_line *) -1;
4430 }
4431 else
4432 {
4433 warning ("Internal error: Invalid inferior pid? Cannot intercept exception events.");
4434 return (struct symtab_and_line *) -1;
4435 }
4436 }
4437
4438 switch (kind)
4439 {
4440 case EX_EVENT_THROW:
4441 store_unsigned_integer (buf, 4, enable ? 1 : 0);
4442 if (target_write_memory (eh_catch_throw_addr, buf, 4)) /* FIXME 32x64? */
4443 {
4444 warning ("Couldn't enable exception throw interception.");
4445 return (struct symtab_and_line *) -1;
4446 }
4447 break;
4448 case EX_EVENT_CATCH:
4449 store_unsigned_integer (buf, 4, enable ? 1 : 0);
4450 if (target_write_memory (eh_catch_catch_addr, buf, 4)) /* FIXME 32x64? */
4451 {
4452 warning ("Couldn't enable exception catch interception.");
4453 return (struct symtab_and_line *) -1;
4454 }
4455 break;
4456 default:
4457 error ("Request to enable unknown or unsupported exception event.");
4458 }
4459
4460 /* Copy break address into new sal struct, malloc'ing if needed. */
4461 if (!break_callback_sal)
4462 {
4463 break_callback_sal = (struct symtab_and_line *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct symtab_and_line));
4464 }
4465 init_sal (break_callback_sal);
4466 break_callback_sal->symtab = NULL;
4467 break_callback_sal->pc = eh_break_addr;
4468 break_callback_sal->line = 0;
4469 break_callback_sal->end = eh_break_addr;
4470
4471 return break_callback_sal;
4472 }
4473
4474 /* Record some information about the current exception event */
4475 static struct exception_event_record current_ex_event;
4476 /* Convenience struct */
4477 static struct symtab_and_line null_symtab_and_line =
4478 {NULL, 0, 0, 0};
4479
4480 /* Report current exception event. Returns a pointer to a record
4481 that describes the kind of the event, where it was thrown from,
4482 and where it will be caught. More information may be reported
4483 in the future */
4484 struct exception_event_record *
4485 child_get_current_exception_event (void)
4486 {
4487 CORE_ADDR event_kind;
4488 CORE_ADDR throw_addr;
4489 CORE_ADDR catch_addr;
4490 struct frame_info *fi, *curr_frame;
4491 int level = 1;
4492
4493 curr_frame = get_current_frame ();
4494 if (!curr_frame)
4495 return (struct exception_event_record *) NULL;
4496
4497 /* Go up one frame to __d_eh_notify_callback, because at the
4498 point when this code is executed, there's garbage in the
4499 arguments of __d_eh_break. */
4500 fi = find_relative_frame (curr_frame, &level);
4501 if (level != 0)
4502 return (struct exception_event_record *) NULL;
4503
4504 select_frame (fi);
4505
4506 /* Read in the arguments */
4507 /* __d_eh_notify_callback() is called with 3 arguments:
4508 1. event kind catch or throw
4509 2. the target address if known
4510 3. a flag -- not sure what this is. pai/1997-07-17 */
4511 event_kind = read_register (ARG0_REGNUM);
4512 catch_addr = read_register (ARG1_REGNUM);
4513
4514 /* Now go down to a user frame */
4515 /* For a throw, __d_eh_break is called by
4516 __d_eh_notify_callback which is called by
4517 __notify_throw which is called
4518 from user code.
4519 For a catch, __d_eh_break is called by
4520 __d_eh_notify_callback which is called by
4521 <stackwalking stuff> which is called by
4522 __throw__<stuff> or __rethrow_<stuff> which is called
4523 from user code. */
4524 /* FIXME: Don't use such magic numbers; search for the frames */
4525 level = (event_kind == EX_EVENT_THROW) ? 3 : 4;
4526 fi = find_relative_frame (curr_frame, &level);
4527 if (level != 0)
4528 return (struct exception_event_record *) NULL;
4529
4530 select_frame (fi);
4531 throw_addr = fi->pc;
4532
4533 /* Go back to original (top) frame */
4534 select_frame (curr_frame);
4535
4536 current_ex_event.kind = (enum exception_event_kind) event_kind;
4537 current_ex_event.throw_sal = find_pc_line (throw_addr, 1);
4538 current_ex_event.catch_sal = find_pc_line (catch_addr, 1);
4539
4540 return &current_ex_event;
4541 }
4542
4543 /* Instead of this nasty cast, add a method pvoid() that prints out a
4544 host VOID data type (remember %p isn't portable). */
4545
4546 static CORE_ADDR
4547 hppa_pointer_to_address_hack (void *ptr)
4548 {
4549 gdb_assert (sizeof (ptr) == TYPE_LENGTH (builtin_type_void_data_ptr));
4550 return POINTER_TO_ADDRESS (builtin_type_void_data_ptr, &ptr);
4551 }
4552
4553 static void
4554 unwind_command (char *exp, int from_tty)
4555 {
4556 CORE_ADDR address;
4557 struct unwind_table_entry *u;
4558
4559 /* If we have an expression, evaluate it and use it as the address. */
4560
4561 if (exp != 0 && *exp != 0)
4562 address = parse_and_eval_address (exp);
4563 else
4564 return;
4565
4566 u = find_unwind_entry (address);
4567
4568 if (!u)
4569 {
4570 printf_unfiltered ("Can't find unwind table entry for %s\n", exp);
4571 return;
4572 }
4573
4574 printf_unfiltered ("unwind_table_entry (0x%s):\n",
4575 paddr_nz (hppa_pointer_to_address_hack (u)));
4576
4577 printf_unfiltered ("\tregion_start = ");
4578 print_address (u->region_start, gdb_stdout);
4579
4580 printf_unfiltered ("\n\tregion_end = ");
4581 print_address (u->region_end, gdb_stdout);
4582
4583 #define pif(FLD) if (u->FLD) printf_unfiltered (" "#FLD);
4584
4585 printf_unfiltered ("\n\tflags =");
4586 pif (Cannot_unwind);
4587 pif (Millicode);
4588 pif (Millicode_save_sr0);
4589 pif (Entry_SR);
4590 pif (Args_stored);
4591 pif (Variable_Frame);
4592 pif (Separate_Package_Body);
4593 pif (Frame_Extension_Millicode);
4594 pif (Stack_Overflow_Check);
4595 pif (Two_Instruction_SP_Increment);
4596 pif (Ada_Region);
4597 pif (Save_SP);
4598 pif (Save_RP);
4599 pif (Save_MRP_in_frame);
4600 pif (extn_ptr_defined);
4601 pif (Cleanup_defined);
4602 pif (MPE_XL_interrupt_marker);
4603 pif (HP_UX_interrupt_marker);
4604 pif (Large_frame);
4605
4606 putchar_unfiltered ('\n');
4607
4608 #define pin(FLD) printf_unfiltered ("\t"#FLD" = 0x%x\n", u->FLD);
4609
4610 pin (Region_description);
4611 pin (Entry_FR);
4612 pin (Entry_GR);
4613 pin (Total_frame_size);
4614 }
4615
4616 #ifdef PREPARE_TO_PROCEED
4617
4618 /* If the user has switched threads, and there is a breakpoint
4619 at the old thread's pc location, then switch to that thread
4620 and return TRUE, else return FALSE and don't do a thread
4621 switch (or rather, don't seem to have done a thread switch).
4622
4623 Ptrace-based gdb will always return FALSE to the thread-switch
4624 query, and thus also to PREPARE_TO_PROCEED.
4625
4626 The important thing is whether there is a BPT instruction,
4627 not how many user breakpoints there are. So we have to worry
4628 about things like these:
4629
4630 o Non-bp stop -- NO
4631
4632 o User hits bp, no switch -- NO
4633
4634 o User hits bp, switches threads -- YES
4635
4636 o User hits bp, deletes bp, switches threads -- NO
4637
4638 o User hits bp, deletes one of two or more bps
4639 at that PC, user switches threads -- YES
4640
4641 o Plus, since we're buffering events, the user may have hit a
4642 breakpoint, deleted the breakpoint and then gotten another
4643 hit on that same breakpoint on another thread which
4644 actually hit before the delete. (FIXME in breakpoint.c
4645 so that "dead" breakpoints are ignored?) -- NO
4646
4647 For these reasons, we have to violate information hiding and
4648 call "breakpoint_here_p". If core gdb thinks there is a bpt
4649 here, that's what counts, as core gdb is the one which is
4650 putting the BPT instruction in and taking it out.
4651
4652 Note that this implementation is potentially redundant now that
4653 default_prepare_to_proceed() has been added.
4654
4655 FIXME This may not support switching threads after Ctrl-C
4656 correctly. The default implementation does support this. */
4657 int
4658 hppa_prepare_to_proceed (void)
4659 {
4660 pid_t old_thread;
4661 pid_t current_thread;
4662
4663 old_thread = hppa_switched_threads (PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
4664 if (old_thread != 0)
4665 {
4666 /* Switched over from "old_thread". Try to do
4667 as little work as possible, 'cause mostly
4668 we're going to switch back. */
4669 CORE_ADDR new_pc;
4670 CORE_ADDR old_pc = read_pc ();
4671
4672 /* Yuk, shouldn't use global to specify current
4673 thread. But that's how gdb does it. */
4674 current_thread = PIDGET (inferior_ptid);
4675 inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (old_thread);
4676
4677 new_pc = read_pc ();
4678 if (new_pc != old_pc /* If at same pc, no need */
4679 && breakpoint_here_p (new_pc))
4680 {
4681 /* User hasn't deleted the BP.
4682 Return TRUE, finishing switch to "old_thread". */
4683 flush_cached_frames ();
4684 registers_changed ();
4685 #if 0
4686 printf ("---> PREPARE_TO_PROCEED (was %d, now %d)!\n",
4687 current_thread, PIDGET (inferior_ptid));
4688 #endif
4689
4690 return 1;
4691 }
4692
4693 /* Otherwise switch back to the user-chosen thread. */
4694 inferior_ptid = pid_to_ptid (current_thread);
4695 new_pc = read_pc (); /* Re-prime register cache */
4696 }
4697
4698 return 0;
4699 }
4700 #endif /* PREPARE_TO_PROCEED */
4701
4702 void
4703 hppa_skip_permanent_breakpoint (void)
4704 {
4705 /* To step over a breakpoint instruction on the PA takes some
4706 fiddling with the instruction address queue.
4707
4708 When we stop at a breakpoint, the IA queue front (the instruction
4709 we're executing now) points at the breakpoint instruction, and
4710 the IA queue back (the next instruction to execute) points to
4711 whatever instruction we would execute after the breakpoint, if it
4712 were an ordinary instruction. This is the case even if the
4713 breakpoint is in the delay slot of a branch instruction.
4714
4715 Clearly, to step past the breakpoint, we need to set the queue
4716 front to the back. But what do we put in the back? What
4717 instruction comes after that one? Because of the branch delay
4718 slot, the next insn is always at the back + 4. */
4719 write_register (PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM, read_register (PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM));
4720 write_register (PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM, read_register (PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM));
4721
4722 write_register (PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM, read_register (PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM) + 4);
4723 /* We can leave the tail's space the same, since there's no jump. */
4724 }
4725
4726 /* Copy the function value from VALBUF into the proper location
4727 for a function return.
4728
4729 Called only in the context of the "return" command. */
4730
4731 void
4732 hppa_store_return_value (struct type *type, char *valbuf)
4733 {
4734 /* For software floating point, the return value goes into the
4735 integer registers. But we do not have any flag to key this on,
4736 so we always store the value into the integer registers.
4737
4738 If its a float value, then we also store it into the floating
4739 point registers. */
4740 deprecated_write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (28)
4741 + (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 4
4742 ? (8 - TYPE_LENGTH (type))
4743 : (4 - TYPE_LENGTH (type))),
4744 valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
4745 if (! SOFT_FLOAT && TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
4746 deprecated_write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (FP4_REGNUM),
4747 valbuf, TYPE_LENGTH (type));
4748 }
4749
4750 /* Copy the function's return value into VALBUF.
4751
4752 This function is called only in the context of "target function calls",
4753 ie. when the debugger forces a function to be called in the child, and
4754 when the debugger forces a fucntion to return prematurely via the
4755 "return" command. */
4756
4757 void
4758 hppa_extract_return_value (struct type *type, char *regbuf, char *valbuf)
4759 {
4760 if (! SOFT_FLOAT && TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_FLT)
4761 memcpy (valbuf,
4762 (char *)regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (FP4_REGNUM),
4763 TYPE_LENGTH (type));
4764 else
4765 memcpy (valbuf,
4766 ((char *)regbuf
4767 + REGISTER_BYTE (28)
4768 + (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 4
4769 ? (8 - TYPE_LENGTH (type))
4770 : (4 - TYPE_LENGTH (type)))),
4771 TYPE_LENGTH (type));
4772 }
4773
4774 int
4775 hppa_reg_struct_has_addr (int gcc_p, struct type *type)
4776 {
4777 /* On the PA, any pass-by-value structure > 8 bytes is actually passed
4778 via a pointer regardless of its type or the compiler used. */
4779 return (TYPE_LENGTH (type) > 8);
4780 }
4781
4782 int
4783 hppa_inner_than (CORE_ADDR lhs, CORE_ADDR rhs)
4784 {
4785 /* Stack grows upward */
4786 return (lhs > rhs);
4787 }
4788
4789 CORE_ADDR
4790 hppa_stack_align (CORE_ADDR sp)
4791 {
4792 /* elz: adjust the quantity to the next highest value which is
4793 64-bit aligned. This is used in valops.c, when the sp is adjusted.
4794 On hppa the sp must always be kept 64-bit aligned */
4795 return ((sp % 8) ? (sp + 7) & -8 : sp);
4796 }
4797
4798 int
4799 hppa_pc_requires_run_before_use (CORE_ADDR pc)
4800 {
4801 /* Sometimes we may pluck out a minimal symbol that has a negative address.
4802
4803 An example of this occurs when an a.out is linked against a foo.sl.
4804 The foo.sl defines a global bar(), and the a.out declares a signature
4805 for bar(). However, the a.out doesn't directly call bar(), but passes
4806 its address in another call.
4807
4808 If you have this scenario and attempt to "break bar" before running,
4809 gdb will find a minimal symbol for bar() in the a.out. But that
4810 symbol's address will be negative. What this appears to denote is
4811 an index backwards from the base of the procedure linkage table (PLT)
4812 into the data linkage table (DLT), the end of which is contiguous
4813 with the start of the PLT. This is clearly not a valid address for
4814 us to set a breakpoint on.
4815
4816 Note that one must be careful in how one checks for a negative address.
4817 0xc0000000 is a legitimate address of something in a shared text
4818 segment, for example. Since I don't know what the possible range
4819 is of these "really, truly negative" addresses that come from the
4820 minimal symbols, I'm resorting to the gross hack of checking the
4821 top byte of the address for all 1's. Sigh. */
4822
4823 return (!target_has_stack && (pc & 0xFF000000));
4824 }
4825
4826 int
4827 hppa_instruction_nullified (void)
4828 {
4829 /* brobecker 2002/11/07: Couldn't we use a ULONGEST here? It would
4830 avoid the type cast. I'm leaving it as is for now as I'm doing
4831 semi-mechanical multiarching-related changes. */
4832 const int ipsw = (int) read_register (IPSW_REGNUM);
4833 const int flags = (int) read_register (FLAGS_REGNUM);
4834
4835 return ((ipsw & 0x00200000) && !(flags & 0x2));
4836 }
4837
4838 int
4839 hppa_register_raw_size (int reg_nr)
4840 {
4841 /* All registers have the same size. */
4842 return REGISTER_SIZE;
4843 }
4844
4845 /* Index within the register vector of the first byte of the space i
4846 used for register REG_NR. */
4847
4848 int
4849 hppa_register_byte (int reg_nr)
4850 {
4851 return reg_nr * 4;
4852 }
4853
4854 /* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type of data
4855 in register N. */
4856
4857 struct type *
4858 hppa_register_virtual_type (int reg_nr)
4859 {
4860 if (reg_nr < FP4_REGNUM)
4861 return builtin_type_int;
4862 else
4863 return builtin_type_float;
4864 }
4865
4866 /* Store the address of the place in which to copy the structure the
4867 subroutine will return. This is called from call_function. */
4868
4869 void
4870 hppa_store_struct_return (CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR sp)
4871 {
4872 write_register (28, addr);
4873 }
4874
4875 CORE_ADDR
4876 hppa_extract_struct_value_address (char *regbuf)
4877 {
4878 /* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
4879 the address in which a function should return its structure value,
4880 as a CORE_ADDR (or an expression that can be used as one). */
4881 /* FIXME: brobecker 2002-12-26.
4882 The current implementation is historical, but we should eventually
4883 implement it in a more robust manner as it relies on the fact that
4884 the address size is equal to the size of an int* _on the host_...
4885 One possible implementation that crossed my mind is to use
4886 extract_address. */
4887 return (*(int *)(regbuf + REGISTER_BYTE (28)));
4888 }
4889
4890 /* Return True if REGNUM is not a register available to the user
4891 through ptrace(). */
4892
4893 int
4894 hppa_cannot_store_register (int regnum)
4895 {
4896 return (regnum == 0
4897 || regnum == PCSQ_HEAD_REGNUM
4898 || (regnum >= PCSQ_TAIL_REGNUM && regnum < IPSW_REGNUM)
4899 || (regnum > IPSW_REGNUM && regnum < FP4_REGNUM));
4900
4901 }
4902
4903 CORE_ADDR
4904 hppa_frame_args_address (struct frame_info *fi)
4905 {
4906 return fi->frame;
4907 }
4908
4909 CORE_ADDR
4910 hppa_frame_locals_address (struct frame_info *fi)
4911 {
4912 return fi->frame;
4913 }
4914
4915 int
4916 hppa_frame_num_args (struct frame_info *frame)
4917 {
4918 /* We can't tell how many args there are now that the C compiler delays
4919 popping them. */
4920 return -1;
4921 }
4922
4923 CORE_ADDR
4924 hppa_smash_text_address (CORE_ADDR addr)
4925 {
4926 /* The low two bits of the PC on the PA contain the privilege level.
4927 Some genius implementing a (non-GCC) compiler apparently decided
4928 this means that "addresses" in a text section therefore include a
4929 privilege level, and thus symbol tables should contain these bits.
4930 This seems like a bonehead thing to do--anyway, it seems to work
4931 for our purposes to just ignore those bits. */
4932
4933 return (addr &= ~0x3);
4934 }
4935
4936 static struct gdbarch *
4937 hppa_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches)
4938 {
4939 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
4940
4941 /* Try to determine the ABI of the object we are loading. */
4942 if (info.abfd != NULL && info.osabi == GDB_OSABI_UNKNOWN)
4943 {
4944 /* If it's a SOM file, assume it's HP/UX SOM. */
4945 if (bfd_get_flavour (info.abfd) == bfd_target_som_flavour)
4946 info.osabi = GDB_OSABI_HPUX_SOM;
4947 }
4948
4949 /* find a candidate among the list of pre-declared architectures. */
4950 arches = gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches, &info);
4951 if (arches != NULL)
4952 return (arches->gdbarch);
4953
4954 /* If none found, then allocate and initialize one. */
4955 gdbarch = gdbarch_alloc (&info, NULL);
4956
4957 /* Hook in ABI-specific overrides, if they have been registered. */
4958 gdbarch_init_osabi (info, gdbarch);
4959
4960 set_gdbarch_reg_struct_has_addr (gdbarch, hppa_reg_struct_has_addr);
4961 set_gdbarch_function_start_offset (gdbarch, 0);
4962 set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, hppa_skip_prologue);
4963 set_gdbarch_skip_trampoline_code (gdbarch, hppa_skip_trampoline_code);
4964 set_gdbarch_in_solib_call_trampoline (gdbarch, hppa_in_solib_call_trampoline);
4965 set_gdbarch_in_solib_return_trampoline (gdbarch,
4966 hppa_in_solib_return_trampoline);
4967 set_gdbarch_saved_pc_after_call (gdbarch, hppa_saved_pc_after_call);
4968 set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, hppa_inner_than);
4969 set_gdbarch_stack_align (gdbarch, hppa_stack_align);
4970 set_gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch, 0);
4971 set_gdbarch_register_size (gdbarch, 4);
4972 set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, hppa_num_regs);
4973 set_gdbarch_fp_regnum (gdbarch, 3);
4974 set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch, 30);
4975 set_gdbarch_fp0_regnum (gdbarch, 64);
4976 set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch, PCOQ_HEAD_REGNUM);
4977 set_gdbarch_npc_regnum (gdbarch, PCOQ_TAIL_REGNUM);
4978 set_gdbarch_register_raw_size (gdbarch, hppa_register_raw_size);
4979 set_gdbarch_register_bytes (gdbarch, hppa_num_regs * 4);
4980 set_gdbarch_register_byte (gdbarch, hppa_register_byte);
4981 set_gdbarch_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, hppa_register_raw_size);
4982 set_gdbarch_deprecated_max_register_raw_size (gdbarch, 4);
4983 set_gdbarch_deprecated_max_register_virtual_size (gdbarch, 8);
4984 set_gdbarch_register_virtual_type (gdbarch, hppa_register_virtual_type);
4985 set_gdbarch_deprecated_store_struct_return (gdbarch, hppa_store_struct_return);
4986 set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_return_value (gdbarch,
4987 hppa_extract_return_value);
4988 set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch, hppa_use_struct_convention);
4989 set_gdbarch_deprecated_store_return_value (gdbarch, hppa_store_return_value);
4990 set_gdbarch_deprecated_extract_struct_value_address
4991 (gdbarch, hppa_extract_struct_value_address);
4992 set_gdbarch_cannot_store_register (gdbarch, hppa_cannot_store_register);
4993 set_gdbarch_deprecated_init_extra_frame_info (gdbarch, hppa_init_extra_frame_info);
4994 set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_chain (gdbarch, hppa_frame_chain);
4995 set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_chain_valid (gdbarch, hppa_frame_chain_valid);
4996 set_gdbarch_frameless_function_invocation
4997 (gdbarch, hppa_frameless_function_invocation);
4998 set_gdbarch_deprecated_frame_saved_pc (gdbarch, hppa_frame_saved_pc);
4999 set_gdbarch_frame_args_address (gdbarch, hppa_frame_args_address);
5000 set_gdbarch_frame_locals_address (gdbarch, hppa_frame_locals_address);
5001 set_gdbarch_frame_num_args (gdbarch, hppa_frame_num_args);
5002 set_gdbarch_frame_args_skip (gdbarch, 0);
5003 set_gdbarch_deprecated_push_dummy_frame (gdbarch, hppa_push_dummy_frame);
5004 set_gdbarch_deprecated_pop_frame (gdbarch, hppa_pop_frame);
5005 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_length (gdbarch, INSTRUCTION_SIZE * 28);
5006 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_start_offset (gdbarch, 0);
5007 /* set_gdbarch_fix_call_dummy (gdbarch, hppa_fix_call_dummy); */
5008 set_gdbarch_deprecated_push_arguments (gdbarch, hppa_push_arguments);
5009 set_gdbarch_smash_text_address (gdbarch, hppa_smash_text_address);
5010 set_gdbarch_believe_pcc_promotion (gdbarch, 1);
5011 set_gdbarch_read_pc (gdbarch, hppa_target_read_pc);
5012 set_gdbarch_write_pc (gdbarch, hppa_target_write_pc);
5013 set_gdbarch_read_fp (gdbarch, hppa_target_read_fp);
5014
5015 return gdbarch;
5016 }
5017
5018 static void
5019 hppa_dump_tdep (struct gdbarch *current_gdbarch, struct ui_file *file)
5020 {
5021 /* Nothing to print for the moment. */
5022 }
5023
5024 void
5025 _initialize_hppa_tdep (void)
5026 {
5027 struct cmd_list_element *c;
5028 void break_at_finish_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
5029 void tbreak_at_finish_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
5030 void break_at_finish_at_depth_command (char *arg, int from_tty);
5031
5032 gdbarch_register (bfd_arch_hppa, hppa_gdbarch_init, hppa_dump_tdep);
5033 tm_print_insn = print_insn_hppa;
5034
5035 add_cmd ("unwind", class_maintenance, unwind_command,
5036 "Print unwind table entry at given address.",
5037 &maintenanceprintlist);
5038
5039 deprecate_cmd (add_com ("xbreak", class_breakpoint,
5040 break_at_finish_command,
5041 concat ("Set breakpoint at procedure exit. \n\
5042 Argument may be function name, or \"*\" and an address.\n\
5043 If function is specified, break at end of code for that function.\n\
5044 If an address is specified, break at the end of the function that contains \n\
5045 that exact address.\n",
5046 "With no arg, uses current execution address of selected stack frame.\n\
5047 This is useful for breaking on return to a stack frame.\n\
5048 \n\
5049 Multiple breakpoints at one place are permitted, and useful if conditional.\n\
5050 \n\
5051 Do \"help breakpoints\" for info on other commands dealing with breakpoints.", NULL)), NULL);
5052 deprecate_cmd (add_com_alias ("xb", "xbreak", class_breakpoint, 1), NULL);
5053 deprecate_cmd (add_com_alias ("xbr", "xbreak", class_breakpoint, 1), NULL);
5054 deprecate_cmd (add_com_alias ("xbre", "xbreak", class_breakpoint, 1), NULL);
5055 deprecate_cmd (add_com_alias ("xbrea", "xbreak", class_breakpoint, 1), NULL);
5056
5057 deprecate_cmd (c = add_com ("txbreak", class_breakpoint,
5058 tbreak_at_finish_command,
5059 "Set temporary breakpoint at procedure exit. Either there should\n\
5060 be no argument or the argument must be a depth.\n"), NULL);
5061 set_cmd_completer (c, location_completer);
5062
5063 if (xdb_commands)
5064 deprecate_cmd (add_com ("bx", class_breakpoint,
5065 break_at_finish_at_depth_command,
5066 "Set breakpoint at procedure exit. Either there should\n\
5067 be no argument or the argument must be a depth.\n"), NULL);
5068 }
5069
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