* osabi.c (gdb_osabi_name): Add entry for GDB_OSABI_INTERIX.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / i386-linux-nat.c
1 /* Native-dependent code for GNU/Linux x86.
2
3 Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
19 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
20 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
21
22 #include "defs.h"
23 #include "inferior.h"
24 #include "gdbcore.h"
25 #include "regcache.h"
26
27 #include "gdb_assert.h"
28 #include "gdb_string.h"
29 #include <sys/ptrace.h>
30 #include <sys/user.h>
31 #include <sys/procfs.h>
32
33 #ifdef HAVE_SYS_REG_H
34 #include <sys/reg.h>
35 #endif
36
37 #ifdef HAVE_SYS_DEBUGREG_H
38 #include <sys/debugreg.h>
39 #endif
40
41 #ifndef DR_FIRSTADDR
42 #define DR_FIRSTADDR 0
43 #endif
44
45 #ifndef DR_LASTADDR
46 #define DR_LASTADDR 3
47 #endif
48
49 #ifndef DR_STATUS
50 #define DR_STATUS 6
51 #endif
52
53 #ifndef DR_CONTROL
54 #define DR_CONTROL 7
55 #endif
56
57 /* Prototypes for supply_gregset etc. */
58 #include "gregset.h"
59
60 /* Prototypes for i387_supply_fsave etc. */
61 #include "i387-tdep.h"
62
63 /* Defines for XMM0_REGNUM etc. */
64 #include "i386-tdep.h"
65
66 /* Defines I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM. */
67 #include "i386-linux-tdep.h"
68
69 /* Prototypes for local functions. */
70 static void dummy_sse_values (void);
71
72 \f
73
74 /* The register sets used in GNU/Linux ELF core-dumps are identical to
75 the register sets in `struct user' that is used for a.out
76 core-dumps, and is also used by `ptrace'. The corresponding types
77 are `elf_gregset_t' for the general-purpose registers (with
78 `elf_greg_t' the type of a single GP register) and `elf_fpregset_t'
79 for the floating-point registers.
80
81 Those types used to be available under the names `gregset_t' and
82 `fpregset_t' too, and this file used those names in the past. But
83 those names are now used for the register sets used in the
84 `mcontext_t' type, and have a different size and layout. */
85
86 /* Mapping between the general-purpose registers in `struct user'
87 format and GDB's register array layout. */
88 static int regmap[] =
89 {
90 EAX, ECX, EDX, EBX,
91 UESP, EBP, ESI, EDI,
92 EIP, EFL, CS, SS,
93 DS, ES, FS, GS
94 };
95
96 /* Which ptrace request retrieves which registers?
97 These apply to the corresponding SET requests as well. */
98 #define GETREGS_SUPPLIES(regno) \
99 ((0 <= (regno) && (regno) <= 15) || (regno) == I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM)
100 #define GETFPREGS_SUPPLIES(regno) \
101 (FP0_REGNUM <= (regno) && (regno) <= LAST_FPU_CTRL_REGNUM)
102 #define GETFPXREGS_SUPPLIES(regno) \
103 (FP0_REGNUM <= (regno) && (regno) <= MXCSR_REGNUM)
104
105 /* Does the current host support the GETREGS request? */
106 int have_ptrace_getregs =
107 #ifdef HAVE_PTRACE_GETREGS
108 1
109 #else
110 0
111 #endif
112 ;
113
114 /* Does the current host support the GETFPXREGS request? The header
115 file may or may not define it, and even if it is defined, the
116 kernel will return EIO if it's running on a pre-SSE processor.
117
118 My instinct is to attach this to some architecture- or
119 target-specific data structure, but really, a particular GDB
120 process can only run on top of one kernel at a time. So it's okay
121 for this to be a simple variable. */
122 int have_ptrace_getfpxregs =
123 #ifdef HAVE_PTRACE_GETFPXREGS
124 1
125 #else
126 0
127 #endif
128 ;
129 \f
130
131 /* Support for the user struct. */
132
133 /* Return the address of register REGNUM. BLOCKEND is the value of
134 u.u_ar0, which should point to the registers. */
135
136 CORE_ADDR
137 register_u_addr (CORE_ADDR blockend, int regnum)
138 {
139 return (blockend + 4 * regmap[regnum]);
140 }
141
142 /* Return the size of the user struct. */
143
144 int
145 kernel_u_size (void)
146 {
147 return (sizeof (struct user));
148 }
149 \f
150
151 /* Fetching registers directly from the U area, one at a time. */
152
153 /* FIXME: kettenis/2000-03-05: This duplicates code from `inptrace.c'.
154 The problem is that we define FETCH_INFERIOR_REGISTERS since we
155 want to use our own versions of {fetch,store}_inferior_registers
156 that use the GETREGS request. This means that the code in
157 `infptrace.c' is #ifdef'd out. But we need to fall back on that
158 code when GDB is running on top of a kernel that doesn't support
159 the GETREGS request. I want to avoid changing `infptrace.c' right
160 now. */
161
162 #ifndef PT_READ_U
163 #define PT_READ_U PTRACE_PEEKUSR
164 #endif
165 #ifndef PT_WRITE_U
166 #define PT_WRITE_U PTRACE_POKEUSR
167 #endif
168
169 /* Default the type of the ptrace transfer to int. */
170 #ifndef PTRACE_XFER_TYPE
171 #define PTRACE_XFER_TYPE int
172 #endif
173
174 /* Registers we shouldn't try to fetch. */
175 #define OLD_CANNOT_FETCH_REGISTER(regno) ((regno) >= I386_NUM_GREGS)
176
177 /* Fetch one register. */
178
179 static void
180 fetch_register (int regno)
181 {
182 /* This isn't really an address. But ptrace thinks of it as one. */
183 CORE_ADDR regaddr;
184 char mess[128]; /* For messages */
185 register int i;
186 unsigned int offset; /* Offset of registers within the u area. */
187 char buf[MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE];
188 int tid;
189
190 if (OLD_CANNOT_FETCH_REGISTER (regno))
191 {
192 memset (buf, '\0', REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno)); /* Supply zeroes */
193 supply_register (regno, buf);
194 return;
195 }
196
197 /* Overload thread id onto process id */
198 if ((tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid)) == 0)
199 tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); /* no thread id, just use process id */
200
201 offset = U_REGS_OFFSET;
202
203 regaddr = register_addr (regno, offset);
204 for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i += sizeof (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE))
205 {
206 errno = 0;
207 *(PTRACE_XFER_TYPE *) & buf[i] = ptrace (PT_READ_U, tid,
208 (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr, 0);
209 regaddr += sizeof (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE);
210 if (errno != 0)
211 {
212 sprintf (mess, "reading register %s (#%d)",
213 REGISTER_NAME (regno), regno);
214 perror_with_name (mess);
215 }
216 }
217 supply_register (regno, buf);
218 }
219
220 /* Fetch register values from the inferior.
221 If REGNO is negative, do this for all registers.
222 Otherwise, REGNO specifies which register (so we can save time). */
223
224 void
225 old_fetch_inferior_registers (int regno)
226 {
227 if (regno >= 0)
228 {
229 fetch_register (regno);
230 }
231 else
232 {
233 for (regno = 0; regno < NUM_REGS; regno++)
234 {
235 fetch_register (regno);
236 }
237 }
238 }
239
240 /* Registers we shouldn't try to store. */
241 #define OLD_CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER(regno) ((regno) >= I386_NUM_GREGS)
242
243 /* Store one register. */
244
245 static void
246 store_register (int regno)
247 {
248 /* This isn't really an address. But ptrace thinks of it as one. */
249 CORE_ADDR regaddr;
250 char mess[128]; /* For messages */
251 register int i;
252 unsigned int offset; /* Offset of registers within the u area. */
253 int tid;
254
255 if (OLD_CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER (regno))
256 {
257 return;
258 }
259
260 /* Overload thread id onto process id */
261 if ((tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid)) == 0)
262 tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); /* no thread id, just use process id */
263
264 offset = U_REGS_OFFSET;
265
266 regaddr = register_addr (regno, offset);
267 for (i = 0; i < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (regno); i += sizeof (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE))
268 {
269 errno = 0;
270 ptrace (PT_WRITE_U, tid, (PTRACE_ARG3_TYPE) regaddr,
271 *(PTRACE_XFER_TYPE *) & registers[REGISTER_BYTE (regno) + i]);
272 regaddr += sizeof (PTRACE_XFER_TYPE);
273 if (errno != 0)
274 {
275 sprintf (mess, "writing register %s (#%d)",
276 REGISTER_NAME (regno), regno);
277 perror_with_name (mess);
278 }
279 }
280 }
281
282 /* Store our register values back into the inferior.
283 If REGNO is negative, do this for all registers.
284 Otherwise, REGNO specifies which register (so we can save time). */
285
286 void
287 old_store_inferior_registers (int regno)
288 {
289 if (regno >= 0)
290 {
291 store_register (regno);
292 }
293 else
294 {
295 for (regno = 0; regno < NUM_REGS; regno++)
296 {
297 store_register (regno);
298 }
299 }
300 }
301 \f
302
303 /* Transfering the general-purpose registers between GDB, inferiors
304 and core files. */
305
306 /* Fill GDB's register array with the general-purpose register values
307 in *GREGSETP. */
308
309 void
310 supply_gregset (elf_gregset_t *gregsetp)
311 {
312 elf_greg_t *regp = (elf_greg_t *) gregsetp;
313 int i;
314
315 for (i = 0; i < I386_NUM_GREGS; i++)
316 supply_register (i, (char *) (regp + regmap[i]));
317
318 if (I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM < NUM_REGS)
319 supply_register (I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM, (char *) (regp + ORIG_EAX));
320 }
321
322 /* Fill register REGNO (if it is a general-purpose register) in
323 *GREGSETPS with the value in GDB's register array. If REGNO is -1,
324 do this for all registers. */
325
326 void
327 fill_gregset (elf_gregset_t *gregsetp, int regno)
328 {
329 elf_greg_t *regp = (elf_greg_t *) gregsetp;
330 int i;
331
332 for (i = 0; i < I386_NUM_GREGS; i++)
333 if (regno == -1 || regno == i)
334 regcache_collect (i, regp + regmap[i]);
335
336 if ((regno == -1 || regno == I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM)
337 && I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM < NUM_REGS)
338 regcache_collect (I386_LINUX_ORIG_EAX_REGNUM, regp + ORIG_EAX);
339 }
340
341 #ifdef HAVE_PTRACE_GETREGS
342
343 /* Fetch all general-purpose registers from process/thread TID and
344 store their values in GDB's register array. */
345
346 static void
347 fetch_regs (int tid)
348 {
349 elf_gregset_t regs;
350
351 if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, tid, 0, (int) &regs) < 0)
352 {
353 if (errno == EIO)
354 {
355 /* The kernel we're running on doesn't support the GETREGS
356 request. Reset `have_ptrace_getregs'. */
357 have_ptrace_getregs = 0;
358 return;
359 }
360
361 perror_with_name ("Couldn't get registers");
362 }
363
364 supply_gregset (&regs);
365 }
366
367 /* Store all valid general-purpose registers in GDB's register array
368 into the process/thread specified by TID. */
369
370 static void
371 store_regs (int tid, int regno)
372 {
373 elf_gregset_t regs;
374
375 if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, tid, 0, (int) &regs) < 0)
376 perror_with_name ("Couldn't get registers");
377
378 fill_gregset (&regs, regno);
379
380 if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETREGS, tid, 0, (int) &regs) < 0)
381 perror_with_name ("Couldn't write registers");
382 }
383
384 #else
385
386 static void fetch_regs (int tid) {}
387 static void store_regs (int tid, int regno) {}
388
389 #endif
390 \f
391
392 /* Transfering floating-point registers between GDB, inferiors and cores. */
393
394 /* Fill GDB's register array with the floating-point register values in
395 *FPREGSETP. */
396
397 void
398 supply_fpregset (elf_fpregset_t *fpregsetp)
399 {
400 i387_supply_fsave ((char *) fpregsetp);
401 dummy_sse_values ();
402 }
403
404 /* Fill register REGNO (if it is a floating-point register) in
405 *FPREGSETP with the value in GDB's register array. If REGNO is -1,
406 do this for all registers. */
407
408 void
409 fill_fpregset (elf_fpregset_t *fpregsetp, int regno)
410 {
411 i387_fill_fsave ((char *) fpregsetp, regno);
412 }
413
414 #ifdef HAVE_PTRACE_GETREGS
415
416 /* Fetch all floating-point registers from process/thread TID and store
417 thier values in GDB's register array. */
418
419 static void
420 fetch_fpregs (int tid)
421 {
422 elf_fpregset_t fpregs;
423
424 if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, tid, 0, (int) &fpregs) < 0)
425 perror_with_name ("Couldn't get floating point status");
426
427 supply_fpregset (&fpregs);
428 }
429
430 /* Store all valid floating-point registers in GDB's register array
431 into the process/thread specified by TID. */
432
433 static void
434 store_fpregs (int tid, int regno)
435 {
436 elf_fpregset_t fpregs;
437
438 if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, tid, 0, (int) &fpregs) < 0)
439 perror_with_name ("Couldn't get floating point status");
440
441 fill_fpregset (&fpregs, regno);
442
443 if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETFPREGS, tid, 0, (int) &fpregs) < 0)
444 perror_with_name ("Couldn't write floating point status");
445 }
446
447 #else
448
449 static void fetch_fpregs (int tid) {}
450 static void store_fpregs (int tid, int regno) {}
451
452 #endif
453 \f
454
455 /* Transfering floating-point and SSE registers to and from GDB. */
456
457 #ifdef HAVE_PTRACE_GETFPXREGS
458
459 /* Fill GDB's register array with the floating-point and SSE register
460 values in *FPXREGSETP. */
461
462 void
463 supply_fpxregset (elf_fpxregset_t *fpxregsetp)
464 {
465 i387_supply_fxsave ((char *) fpxregsetp);
466 }
467
468 /* Fill register REGNO (if it is a floating-point or SSE register) in
469 *FPXREGSETP with the value in GDB's register array. If REGNO is
470 -1, do this for all registers. */
471
472 void
473 fill_fpxregset (elf_fpxregset_t *fpxregsetp, int regno)
474 {
475 i387_fill_fxsave ((char *) fpxregsetp, regno);
476 }
477
478 /* Fetch all registers covered by the PTRACE_GETFPXREGS request from
479 process/thread TID and store their values in GDB's register array.
480 Return non-zero if successful, zero otherwise. */
481
482 static int
483 fetch_fpxregs (int tid)
484 {
485 elf_fpxregset_t fpxregs;
486
487 if (! have_ptrace_getfpxregs)
488 return 0;
489
490 if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPXREGS, tid, 0, (int) &fpxregs) < 0)
491 {
492 if (errno == EIO)
493 {
494 have_ptrace_getfpxregs = 0;
495 return 0;
496 }
497
498 perror_with_name ("Couldn't read floating-point and SSE registers");
499 }
500
501 supply_fpxregset (&fpxregs);
502 return 1;
503 }
504
505 /* Store all valid registers in GDB's register array covered by the
506 PTRACE_SETFPXREGS request into the process/thread specified by TID.
507 Return non-zero if successful, zero otherwise. */
508
509 static int
510 store_fpxregs (int tid, int regno)
511 {
512 elf_fpxregset_t fpxregs;
513
514 if (! have_ptrace_getfpxregs)
515 return 0;
516
517 if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPXREGS, tid, 0, &fpxregs) == -1)
518 {
519 if (errno == EIO)
520 {
521 have_ptrace_getfpxregs = 0;
522 return 0;
523 }
524
525 perror_with_name ("Couldn't read floating-point and SSE registers");
526 }
527
528 fill_fpxregset (&fpxregs, regno);
529
530 if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETFPXREGS, tid, 0, &fpxregs) == -1)
531 perror_with_name ("Couldn't write floating-point and SSE registers");
532
533 return 1;
534 }
535
536 /* Fill the XMM registers in the register array with dummy values. For
537 cases where we don't have access to the XMM registers. I think
538 this is cleaner than printing a warning. For a cleaner solution,
539 we should gdbarchify the i386 family. */
540
541 static void
542 dummy_sse_values (void)
543 {
544 struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch);
545 /* C doesn't have a syntax for NaN's, so write it out as an array of
546 longs. */
547 static long dummy[4] = { 0xffffffff, 0xffffffff, 0xffffffff, 0xffffffff };
548 static long mxcsr = 0x1f80;
549 int reg;
550
551 for (reg = 0; reg < tdep->num_xmm_regs; reg++)
552 supply_register (XMM0_REGNUM + reg, (char *) dummy);
553 if (tdep->num_xmm_regs > 0)
554 supply_register (MXCSR_REGNUM, (char *) &mxcsr);
555 }
556
557 #else
558
559 static int fetch_fpxregs (int tid) { return 0; }
560 static int store_fpxregs (int tid, int regno) { return 0; }
561 static void dummy_sse_values (void) {}
562
563 #endif /* HAVE_PTRACE_GETFPXREGS */
564 \f
565
566 /* Transferring arbitrary registers between GDB and inferior. */
567
568 /* Check if register REGNO in the child process is accessible.
569 If we are accessing registers directly via the U area, only the
570 general-purpose registers are available.
571 All registers should be accessible if we have GETREGS support. */
572
573 int
574 cannot_fetch_register (int regno)
575 {
576 if (! have_ptrace_getregs)
577 return OLD_CANNOT_FETCH_REGISTER (regno);
578 return 0;
579 }
580 int
581 cannot_store_register (int regno)
582 {
583 if (! have_ptrace_getregs)
584 return OLD_CANNOT_STORE_REGISTER (regno);
585 return 0;
586 }
587
588 /* Fetch register REGNO from the child process. If REGNO is -1, do
589 this for all registers (including the floating point and SSE
590 registers). */
591
592 void
593 fetch_inferior_registers (int regno)
594 {
595 int tid;
596
597 /* Use the old method of peeking around in `struct user' if the
598 GETREGS request isn't available. */
599 if (! have_ptrace_getregs)
600 {
601 old_fetch_inferior_registers (regno);
602 return;
603 }
604
605 /* GNU/Linux LWP ID's are process ID's. */
606 if ((tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid)) == 0)
607 tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); /* Not a threaded program. */
608
609 /* Use the PTRACE_GETFPXREGS request whenever possible, since it
610 transfers more registers in one system call, and we'll cache the
611 results. But remember that fetch_fpxregs can fail, and return
612 zero. */
613 if (regno == -1)
614 {
615 fetch_regs (tid);
616
617 /* The call above might reset `have_ptrace_getregs'. */
618 if (! have_ptrace_getregs)
619 {
620 old_fetch_inferior_registers (-1);
621 return;
622 }
623
624 if (fetch_fpxregs (tid))
625 return;
626 fetch_fpregs (tid);
627 return;
628 }
629
630 if (GETREGS_SUPPLIES (regno))
631 {
632 fetch_regs (tid);
633 return;
634 }
635
636 if (GETFPXREGS_SUPPLIES (regno))
637 {
638 if (fetch_fpxregs (tid))
639 return;
640
641 /* Either our processor or our kernel doesn't support the SSE
642 registers, so read the FP registers in the traditional way,
643 and fill the SSE registers with dummy values. It would be
644 more graceful to handle differences in the register set using
645 gdbarch. Until then, this will at least make things work
646 plausibly. */
647 fetch_fpregs (tid);
648 return;
649 }
650
651 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
652 "Got request for bad register number %d.", regno);
653 }
654
655 /* Store register REGNO back into the child process. If REGNO is -1,
656 do this for all registers (including the floating point and SSE
657 registers). */
658 void
659 store_inferior_registers (int regno)
660 {
661 int tid;
662
663 /* Use the old method of poking around in `struct user' if the
664 SETREGS request isn't available. */
665 if (! have_ptrace_getregs)
666 {
667 old_store_inferior_registers (regno);
668 return;
669 }
670
671 /* GNU/Linux LWP ID's are process ID's. */
672 if ((tid = TIDGET (inferior_ptid)) == 0)
673 tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid); /* Not a threaded program. */
674
675 /* Use the PTRACE_SETFPXREGS requests whenever possible, since it
676 transfers more registers in one system call. But remember that
677 store_fpxregs can fail, and return zero. */
678 if (regno == -1)
679 {
680 store_regs (tid, regno);
681 if (store_fpxregs (tid, regno))
682 return;
683 store_fpregs (tid, regno);
684 return;
685 }
686
687 if (GETREGS_SUPPLIES (regno))
688 {
689 store_regs (tid, regno);
690 return;
691 }
692
693 if (GETFPXREGS_SUPPLIES (regno))
694 {
695 if (store_fpxregs (tid, regno))
696 return;
697
698 /* Either our processor or our kernel doesn't support the SSE
699 registers, so just write the FP registers in the traditional
700 way. */
701 store_fpregs (tid, regno);
702 return;
703 }
704
705 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
706 "Got request to store bad register number %d.", regno);
707 }
708 \f
709
710 static unsigned long
711 i386_linux_dr_get (int regnum)
712 {
713 int tid;
714 unsigned long value;
715
716 /* FIXME: kettenis/2001-01-29: It's not clear what we should do with
717 multi-threaded processes here. For now, pretend there is just
718 one thread. */
719 tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid);
720
721 /* FIXME: kettenis/2001-03-27: Calling perror_with_name if the
722 ptrace call fails breaks debugging remote targets. The correct
723 way to fix this is to add the hardware breakpoint and watchpoint
724 stuff to the target vectore. For now, just return zero if the
725 ptrace call fails. */
726 errno = 0;
727 value = ptrace (PT_READ_U, tid,
728 offsetof (struct user, u_debugreg[regnum]), 0);
729 if (errno != 0)
730 #if 0
731 perror_with_name ("Couldn't read debug register");
732 #else
733 return 0;
734 #endif
735
736 return value;
737 }
738
739 static void
740 i386_linux_dr_set (int regnum, unsigned long value)
741 {
742 int tid;
743
744 /* FIXME: kettenis/2001-01-29: It's not clear what we should do with
745 multi-threaded processes here. For now, pretend there is just
746 one thread. */
747 tid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid);
748
749 errno = 0;
750 ptrace (PT_WRITE_U, tid,
751 offsetof (struct user, u_debugreg[regnum]), value);
752 if (errno != 0)
753 perror_with_name ("Couldn't write debug register");
754 }
755
756 void
757 i386_linux_dr_set_control (unsigned long control)
758 {
759 i386_linux_dr_set (DR_CONTROL, control);
760 }
761
762 void
763 i386_linux_dr_set_addr (int regnum, CORE_ADDR addr)
764 {
765 gdb_assert (regnum >= 0 && regnum <= DR_LASTADDR - DR_FIRSTADDR);
766
767 i386_linux_dr_set (DR_FIRSTADDR + regnum, addr);
768 }
769
770 void
771 i386_linux_dr_reset_addr (int regnum)
772 {
773 gdb_assert (regnum >= 0 && regnum <= DR_LASTADDR - DR_FIRSTADDR);
774
775 i386_linux_dr_set (DR_FIRSTADDR + regnum, 0L);
776 }
777
778 unsigned long
779 i386_linux_dr_get_status (void)
780 {
781 return i386_linux_dr_get (DR_STATUS);
782 }
783 \f
784
785 /* Interpreting register set info found in core files. */
786
787 /* Provide registers to GDB from a core file.
788
789 (We can't use the generic version of this function in
790 core-regset.c, because GNU/Linux has *three* different kinds of
791 register set notes. core-regset.c would have to call
792 supply_fpxregset, which most platforms don't have.)
793
794 CORE_REG_SECT points to an array of bytes, which are the contents
795 of a `note' from a core file which BFD thinks might contain
796 register contents. CORE_REG_SIZE is its size.
797
798 WHICH says which register set corelow suspects this is:
799 0 --- the general-purpose register set, in elf_gregset_t format
800 2 --- the floating-point register set, in elf_fpregset_t format
801 3 --- the extended floating-point register set, in elf_fpxregset_t format
802
803 REG_ADDR isn't used on GNU/Linux. */
804
805 static void
806 fetch_core_registers (char *core_reg_sect, unsigned core_reg_size,
807 int which, CORE_ADDR reg_addr)
808 {
809 elf_gregset_t gregset;
810 elf_fpregset_t fpregset;
811
812 switch (which)
813 {
814 case 0:
815 if (core_reg_size != sizeof (gregset))
816 warning ("Wrong size gregset in core file.");
817 else
818 {
819 memcpy (&gregset, core_reg_sect, sizeof (gregset));
820 supply_gregset (&gregset);
821 }
822 break;
823
824 case 2:
825 if (core_reg_size != sizeof (fpregset))
826 warning ("Wrong size fpregset in core file.");
827 else
828 {
829 memcpy (&fpregset, core_reg_sect, sizeof (fpregset));
830 supply_fpregset (&fpregset);
831 }
832 break;
833
834 #ifdef HAVE_PTRACE_GETFPXREGS
835 {
836 elf_fpxregset_t fpxregset;
837
838 case 3:
839 if (core_reg_size != sizeof (fpxregset))
840 warning ("Wrong size fpxregset in core file.");
841 else
842 {
843 memcpy (&fpxregset, core_reg_sect, sizeof (fpxregset));
844 supply_fpxregset (&fpxregset);
845 }
846 break;
847 }
848 #endif
849
850 default:
851 /* We've covered all the kinds of registers we know about here,
852 so this must be something we wouldn't know what to do with
853 anyway. Just ignore it. */
854 break;
855 }
856 }
857 \f
858
859 /* The instruction for a GNU/Linux system call is:
860 int $0x80
861 or 0xcd 0x80. */
862
863 static const unsigned char linux_syscall[] = { 0xcd, 0x80 };
864
865 #define LINUX_SYSCALL_LEN (sizeof linux_syscall)
866
867 /* The system call number is stored in the %eax register. */
868 #define LINUX_SYSCALL_REGNUM 0 /* %eax */
869
870 /* We are specifically interested in the sigreturn and rt_sigreturn
871 system calls. */
872
873 #ifndef SYS_sigreturn
874 #define SYS_sigreturn 0x77
875 #endif
876 #ifndef SYS_rt_sigreturn
877 #define SYS_rt_sigreturn 0xad
878 #endif
879
880 /* Offset to saved processor flags, from <asm/sigcontext.h>. */
881 #define LINUX_SIGCONTEXT_EFLAGS_OFFSET (64)
882
883 /* Resume execution of the inferior process.
884 If STEP is nonzero, single-step it.
885 If SIGNAL is nonzero, give it that signal. */
886
887 void
888 child_resume (ptid_t ptid, int step, enum target_signal signal)
889 {
890 int pid = PIDGET (ptid);
891
892 int request = PTRACE_CONT;
893
894 if (pid == -1)
895 /* Resume all threads. */
896 /* I think this only gets used in the non-threaded case, where "resume
897 all threads" and "resume inferior_ptid" are the same. */
898 pid = PIDGET (inferior_ptid);
899
900 if (step)
901 {
902 CORE_ADDR pc = read_pc_pid (pid_to_ptid (pid));
903 unsigned char buf[LINUX_SYSCALL_LEN];
904
905 request = PTRACE_SINGLESTEP;
906
907 /* Returning from a signal trampoline is done by calling a
908 special system call (sigreturn or rt_sigreturn, see
909 i386-linux-tdep.c for more information). This system call
910 restores the registers that were saved when the signal was
911 raised, including %eflags. That means that single-stepping
912 won't work. Instead, we'll have to modify the signal context
913 that's about to be restored, and set the trace flag there. */
914
915 /* First check if PC is at a system call. */
916 if (read_memory_nobpt (pc, (char *) buf, LINUX_SYSCALL_LEN) == 0
917 && memcmp (buf, linux_syscall, LINUX_SYSCALL_LEN) == 0)
918 {
919 int syscall = read_register_pid (LINUX_SYSCALL_REGNUM,
920 pid_to_ptid (pid));
921
922 /* Then check the system call number. */
923 if (syscall == SYS_sigreturn || syscall == SYS_rt_sigreturn)
924 {
925 CORE_ADDR sp = read_register (SP_REGNUM);
926 CORE_ADDR addr = sp;
927 unsigned long int eflags;
928
929 if (syscall == SYS_rt_sigreturn)
930 addr = read_memory_integer (sp + 8, 4) + 20;
931
932 /* Set the trace flag in the context that's about to be
933 restored. */
934 addr += LINUX_SIGCONTEXT_EFLAGS_OFFSET;
935 read_memory (addr, (char *) &eflags, 4);
936 eflags |= 0x0100;
937 write_memory (addr, (char *) &eflags, 4);
938 }
939 }
940 }
941
942 if (ptrace (request, pid, 0, target_signal_to_host (signal)) == -1)
943 perror_with_name ("ptrace");
944 }
945 \f
946
947 /* Register that we are able to handle GNU/Linux ELF core file
948 formats. */
949
950 static struct core_fns linux_elf_core_fns =
951 {
952 bfd_target_elf_flavour, /* core_flavour */
953 default_check_format, /* check_format */
954 default_core_sniffer, /* core_sniffer */
955 fetch_core_registers, /* core_read_registers */
956 NULL /* next */
957 };
958
959 void
960 _initialize_i386_linux_nat (void)
961 {
962 add_core_fns (&linux_elf_core_fns);
963 }
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