Change len's type to ULONGEST: remote_write_bytes_aux
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / i386-nat.c
1 /* Native-dependent code for the i386.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2001-2014 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 3 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, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #include "defs.h"
21 #include "i386-nat.h"
22 #include "breakpoint.h"
23 #include "command.h"
24 #include "gdbcmd.h"
25 #include "target.h"
26 #include "gdb_assert.h"
27 #include "inferior.h"
28
29 /* Support for hardware watchpoints and breakpoints using the i386
30 debug registers.
31
32 This provides several functions for inserting and removing
33 hardware-assisted breakpoints and watchpoints, testing if one or
34 more of the watchpoints triggered and at what address, checking
35 whether a given region can be watched, etc.
36
37 The functions below implement debug registers sharing by reference
38 counts, and allow to watch regions up to 16 bytes long. */
39
40 struct i386_dr_low_type i386_dr_low;
41
42
43 /* Support for 8-byte wide hw watchpoints. */
44 #define TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 (i386_dr_low.debug_register_length == 8)
45
46 /* DR7 Debug Control register fields. */
47
48 /* How many bits to skip in DR7 to get to R/W and LEN fields. */
49 #define DR_CONTROL_SHIFT 16
50 /* How many bits in DR7 per R/W and LEN field for each watchpoint. */
51 #define DR_CONTROL_SIZE 4
52
53 /* Watchpoint/breakpoint read/write fields in DR7. */
54 #define DR_RW_EXECUTE (0x0) /* Break on instruction execution. */
55 #define DR_RW_WRITE (0x1) /* Break on data writes. */
56 #define DR_RW_READ (0x3) /* Break on data reads or writes. */
57
58 /* This is here for completeness. No platform supports this
59 functionality yet (as of March 2001). Note that the DE flag in the
60 CR4 register needs to be set to support this. */
61 #ifndef DR_RW_IORW
62 #define DR_RW_IORW (0x2) /* Break on I/O reads or writes. */
63 #endif
64
65 /* Watchpoint/breakpoint length fields in DR7. The 2-bit left shift
66 is so we could OR this with the read/write field defined above. */
67 #define DR_LEN_1 (0x0 << 2) /* 1-byte region watch or breakpoint. */
68 #define DR_LEN_2 (0x1 << 2) /* 2-byte region watch. */
69 #define DR_LEN_4 (0x3 << 2) /* 4-byte region watch. */
70 #define DR_LEN_8 (0x2 << 2) /* 8-byte region watch (AMD64). */
71
72 /* Local and Global Enable flags in DR7.
73
74 When the Local Enable flag is set, the breakpoint/watchpoint is
75 enabled only for the current task; the processor automatically
76 clears this flag on every task switch. When the Global Enable flag
77 is set, the breakpoint/watchpoint is enabled for all tasks; the
78 processor never clears this flag.
79
80 Currently, all watchpoint are locally enabled. If you need to
81 enable them globally, read the comment which pertains to this in
82 i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint below. */
83 #define DR_LOCAL_ENABLE_SHIFT 0 /* Extra shift to the local enable bit. */
84 #define DR_GLOBAL_ENABLE_SHIFT 1 /* Extra shift to the global enable bit. */
85 #define DR_ENABLE_SIZE 2 /* Two enable bits per debug register. */
86
87 /* Local and global exact breakpoint enable flags (a.k.a. slowdown
88 flags). These are only required on i386, to allow detection of the
89 exact instruction which caused a watchpoint to break; i486 and
90 later processors do that automatically. We set these flags for
91 backwards compatibility. */
92 #define DR_LOCAL_SLOWDOWN (0x100)
93 #define DR_GLOBAL_SLOWDOWN (0x200)
94
95 /* Fields reserved by Intel. This includes the GD (General Detect
96 Enable) flag, which causes a debug exception to be generated when a
97 MOV instruction accesses one of the debug registers.
98
99 FIXME: My Intel manual says we should use 0xF800, not 0xFC00. */
100 #define DR_CONTROL_RESERVED (0xFC00)
101
102 /* Auxiliary helper macros. */
103
104 /* A value that masks all fields in DR7 that are reserved by Intel. */
105 #define I386_DR_CONTROL_MASK (~DR_CONTROL_RESERVED)
106
107 /* The I'th debug register is vacant if its Local and Global Enable
108 bits are reset in the Debug Control register. */
109 #define I386_DR_VACANT(state, i) \
110 (((state)->dr_control_mirror & (3 << (DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i)))) == 0)
111
112 /* Locally enable the break/watchpoint in the I'th debug register. */
113 #define I386_DR_LOCAL_ENABLE(state, i) \
114 do { \
115 (state)->dr_control_mirror |= \
116 (1 << (DR_LOCAL_ENABLE_SHIFT + DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i))); \
117 } while (0)
118
119 /* Globally enable the break/watchpoint in the I'th debug register. */
120 #define I386_DR_GLOBAL_ENABLE(state, i) \
121 do { \
122 (state)->dr_control_mirror |= \
123 (1 << (DR_GLOBAL_ENABLE_SHIFT + DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i))); \
124 } while (0)
125
126 /* Disable the break/watchpoint in the I'th debug register. */
127 #define I386_DR_DISABLE(state, i) \
128 do { \
129 (state)->dr_control_mirror &= \
130 ~(3 << (DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i))); \
131 } while (0)
132
133 /* Set in DR7 the RW and LEN fields for the I'th debug register. */
134 #define I386_DR_SET_RW_LEN(state, i, rwlen) \
135 do { \
136 (state)->dr_control_mirror &= \
137 ~(0x0f << (DR_CONTROL_SHIFT + DR_CONTROL_SIZE * (i))); \
138 (state)->dr_control_mirror |= \
139 ((rwlen) << (DR_CONTROL_SHIFT + DR_CONTROL_SIZE * (i))); \
140 } while (0)
141
142 /* Get from DR7 the RW and LEN fields for the I'th debug register. */
143 #define I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN(dr7, i) \
144 (((dr7) \
145 >> (DR_CONTROL_SHIFT + DR_CONTROL_SIZE * (i))) & 0x0f)
146
147 /* Mask that this I'th watchpoint has triggered. */
148 #define I386_DR_WATCH_MASK(i) (1 << (i))
149
150 /* Did the watchpoint whose address is in the I'th register break? */
151 #define I386_DR_WATCH_HIT(dr6, i) ((dr6) & (1 << (i)))
152
153 /* A macro to loop over all debug registers. */
154 #define ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) for (i = 0; i < DR_NADDR; i++)
155
156 /* Per-process data. We don't bind this to a per-inferior registry
157 because of targets like x86 GNU/Linux that need to keep track of
158 processes that aren't bound to any inferior (e.g., fork children,
159 checkpoints). */
160
161 struct i386_process_info
162 {
163 /* Linked list. */
164 struct i386_process_info *next;
165
166 /* The process identifier. */
167 pid_t pid;
168
169 /* Copy of i386 hardware debug registers. */
170 struct i386_debug_reg_state state;
171 };
172
173 static struct i386_process_info *i386_process_list = NULL;
174
175 /* Find process data for process PID. */
176
177 static struct i386_process_info *
178 i386_find_process_pid (pid_t pid)
179 {
180 struct i386_process_info *proc;
181
182 for (proc = i386_process_list; proc; proc = proc->next)
183 if (proc->pid == pid)
184 return proc;
185
186 return NULL;
187 }
188
189 /* Add process data for process PID. Returns newly allocated info
190 object. */
191
192 static struct i386_process_info *
193 i386_add_process (pid_t pid)
194 {
195 struct i386_process_info *proc;
196
197 proc = xcalloc (1, sizeof (*proc));
198 proc->pid = pid;
199
200 proc->next = i386_process_list;
201 i386_process_list = proc;
202
203 return proc;
204 }
205
206 /* Get data specific info for process PID, creating it if necessary.
207 Never returns NULL. */
208
209 static struct i386_process_info *
210 i386_process_info_get (pid_t pid)
211 {
212 struct i386_process_info *proc;
213
214 proc = i386_find_process_pid (pid);
215 if (proc == NULL)
216 proc = i386_add_process (pid);
217
218 return proc;
219 }
220
221 /* Get debug registers state for process PID. */
222
223 struct i386_debug_reg_state *
224 i386_debug_reg_state (pid_t pid)
225 {
226 return &i386_process_info_get (pid)->state;
227 }
228
229 /* See declaration in i386-nat.h. */
230
231 void
232 i386_forget_process (pid_t pid)
233 {
234 struct i386_process_info *proc, **proc_link;
235
236 proc = i386_process_list;
237 proc_link = &i386_process_list;
238
239 while (proc != NULL)
240 {
241 if (proc->pid == pid)
242 {
243 *proc_link = proc->next;
244
245 xfree (proc);
246 return;
247 }
248
249 proc_link = &proc->next;
250 proc = *proc_link;
251 }
252 }
253
254 /* Whether or not to print the mirrored debug registers. */
255 static int maint_show_dr;
256
257 /* Types of operations supported by i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint. */
258 typedef enum { WP_INSERT, WP_REMOVE, WP_COUNT } i386_wp_op_t;
259
260 /* Internal functions. */
261
262 /* Return the value of a 4-bit field for DR7 suitable for watching a
263 region of LEN bytes for accesses of type TYPE. LEN is assumed to
264 have the value of 1, 2, or 4. */
265 static unsigned i386_length_and_rw_bits (int len, enum target_hw_bp_type type);
266
267 /* Insert a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned
268 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the
269 value of the bit-field from DR7 which describes the length and
270 access type of the region to be watched by this watchpoint. Return
271 0 on success, -1 on failure. */
272 static int i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
273 CORE_ADDR addr,
274 unsigned len_rw_bits);
275
276 /* Remove a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned
277 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the
278 value of the bits from DR7 which describes the length and access
279 type of the region watched by this watchpoint. Return 0 on
280 success, -1 on failure. */
281 static int i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
282 CORE_ADDR addr,
283 unsigned len_rw_bits);
284
285 /* Insert or remove a (possibly non-aligned) watchpoint, or count the
286 number of debug registers required to watch a region at address
287 ADDR whose length is LEN for accesses of type TYPE. Return 0 on
288 successful insertion or removal, a positive number when queried
289 about the number of registers, or -1 on failure. If WHAT is not a
290 valid value, bombs through internal_error. */
291 static int i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
292 i386_wp_op_t what,
293 CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
294 enum target_hw_bp_type type);
295
296 /* Implementation. */
297
298 /* Clear the reference counts and forget everything we knew about the
299 debug registers. */
300
301 void
302 i386_cleanup_dregs (void)
303 {
304 /* Starting from scratch has the same effect. */
305 i386_forget_process (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
306 }
307
308 /* Print the values of the mirrored debug registers. This is called
309 when maint_show_dr is non-zero. To set that up, type "maint
310 show-debug-regs" at GDB's prompt. */
311
312 static void
313 i386_show_dr (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
314 const char *func, CORE_ADDR addr,
315 int len, enum target_hw_bp_type type)
316 {
317 int addr_size = gdbarch_addr_bit (target_gdbarch ()) / 8;
318 int i;
319
320 puts_unfiltered (func);
321 if (addr || len)
322 printf_unfiltered (" (addr=%lx, len=%d, type=%s)",
323 /* This code is for ia32, so casting CORE_ADDR
324 to unsigned long should be okay. */
325 (unsigned long)addr, len,
326 type == hw_write ? "data-write"
327 : (type == hw_read ? "data-read"
328 : (type == hw_access ? "data-read/write"
329 : (type == hw_execute ? "instruction-execute"
330 /* FIXME: if/when I/O read/write
331 watchpoints are supported, add them
332 here. */
333 : "??unknown??"))));
334 puts_unfiltered (":\n");
335 printf_unfiltered ("\tCONTROL (DR7): %s STATUS (DR6): %s\n",
336 phex (state->dr_control_mirror, 8),
337 phex (state->dr_status_mirror, 8));
338 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i)
339 {
340 printf_unfiltered ("\
341 \tDR%d: addr=0x%s, ref.count=%d DR%d: addr=0x%s, ref.count=%d\n",
342 i, phex (state->dr_mirror[i], addr_size),
343 state->dr_ref_count[i],
344 i + 1, phex (state->dr_mirror[i + 1], addr_size),
345 state->dr_ref_count[i+1]);
346 i++;
347 }
348 }
349
350 /* Return the value of a 4-bit field for DR7 suitable for watching a
351 region of LEN bytes for accesses of type TYPE. LEN is assumed to
352 have the value of 1, 2, or 4. */
353
354 static unsigned
355 i386_length_and_rw_bits (int len, enum target_hw_bp_type type)
356 {
357 unsigned rw;
358
359 switch (type)
360 {
361 case hw_execute:
362 rw = DR_RW_EXECUTE;
363 break;
364 case hw_write:
365 rw = DR_RW_WRITE;
366 break;
367 case hw_read:
368 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
369 _("The i386 doesn't support "
370 "data-read watchpoints.\n"));
371 case hw_access:
372 rw = DR_RW_READ;
373 break;
374 #if 0
375 /* Not yet supported. */
376 case hw_io_access:
377 rw = DR_RW_IORW;
378 break;
379 #endif
380 default:
381 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("\
382 Invalid hardware breakpoint type %d in i386_length_and_rw_bits.\n"),
383 (int) type);
384 }
385
386 switch (len)
387 {
388 case 1:
389 return (DR_LEN_1 | rw);
390 case 2:
391 return (DR_LEN_2 | rw);
392 case 4:
393 return (DR_LEN_4 | rw);
394 case 8:
395 if (TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8)
396 return (DR_LEN_8 | rw);
397 /* ELSE FALL THROUGH */
398 default:
399 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("\
400 Invalid hardware breakpoint length %d in i386_length_and_rw_bits.\n"), len);
401 }
402 }
403
404 /* Insert a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned
405 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the
406 value of the bits from DR7 which describes the length and access
407 type of the region to be watched by this watchpoint. Return 0 on
408 success, -1 on failure. */
409
410 static int
411 i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
412 CORE_ADDR addr, unsigned len_rw_bits)
413 {
414 int i;
415
416 if (!i386_dr_low.set_addr || !i386_dr_low.set_control)
417 return -1;
418
419 /* First, look for an occupied debug register with the same address
420 and the same RW and LEN definitions. If we find one, we can
421 reuse it for this watchpoint as well (and save a register). */
422 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i)
423 {
424 if (!I386_DR_VACANT (state, i)
425 && state->dr_mirror[i] == addr
426 && I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN (state->dr_control_mirror, i) == len_rw_bits)
427 {
428 state->dr_ref_count[i]++;
429 return 0;
430 }
431 }
432
433 /* Next, look for a vacant debug register. */
434 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i)
435 {
436 if (I386_DR_VACANT (state, i))
437 break;
438 }
439
440 /* No more debug registers! */
441 if (i >= DR_NADDR)
442 return -1;
443
444 /* Now set up the register I to watch our region. */
445
446 /* Record the info in our local mirrored array. */
447 state->dr_mirror[i] = addr;
448 state->dr_ref_count[i] = 1;
449 I386_DR_SET_RW_LEN (state, i, len_rw_bits);
450 /* Note: we only enable the watchpoint locally, i.e. in the current
451 task. Currently, no i386 target allows or supports global
452 watchpoints; however, if any target would want that in the
453 future, GDB should probably provide a command to control whether
454 to enable watchpoints globally or locally, and the code below
455 should use global or local enable and slow-down flags as
456 appropriate. */
457 I386_DR_LOCAL_ENABLE (state, i);
458 state->dr_control_mirror |= DR_LOCAL_SLOWDOWN;
459 state->dr_control_mirror &= I386_DR_CONTROL_MASK;
460
461 return 0;
462 }
463
464 /* Remove a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned
465 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the
466 value of the bits from DR7 which describes the length and access
467 type of the region watched by this watchpoint. Return 0 on
468 success, -1 on failure. */
469
470 static int
471 i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
472 CORE_ADDR addr, unsigned len_rw_bits)
473 {
474 int i, retval = -1;
475
476 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i)
477 {
478 if (!I386_DR_VACANT (state, i)
479 && state->dr_mirror[i] == addr
480 && I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN (state->dr_control_mirror, i) == len_rw_bits)
481 {
482 if (--state->dr_ref_count[i] == 0) /* no longer in use? */
483 {
484 /* Reset our mirror. */
485 state->dr_mirror[i] = 0;
486 I386_DR_DISABLE (state, i);
487 }
488 retval = 0;
489 }
490 }
491
492 return retval;
493 }
494
495 /* Insert or remove a (possibly non-aligned) watchpoint, or count the
496 number of debug registers required to watch a region at address
497 ADDR whose length is LEN for accesses of type TYPE. Return 0 on
498 successful insertion or removal, a positive number when queried
499 about the number of registers, or -1 on failure. If WHAT is not a
500 valid value, bombs through internal_error. */
501
502 static int
503 i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (struct i386_debug_reg_state *state,
504 i386_wp_op_t what, CORE_ADDR addr, int len,
505 enum target_hw_bp_type type)
506 {
507 int retval = 0;
508 int max_wp_len = TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 ? 8 : 4;
509
510 static int size_try_array[8][8] =
511 {
512 {1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1}, /* Trying size one. */
513 {2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size two. */
514 {2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size three. */
515 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size four. */
516 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size five. */
517 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size six. */
518 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size seven. */
519 {8, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size eight. */
520 };
521
522 while (len > 0)
523 {
524 int align = addr % max_wp_len;
525 /* Four (eight on AMD64) is the maximum length a debug register
526 can watch. */
527 int try = (len > max_wp_len ? (max_wp_len - 1) : len - 1);
528 int size = size_try_array[try][align];
529
530 if (what == WP_COUNT)
531 {
532 /* size_try_array[] is defined such that each iteration
533 through the loop is guaranteed to produce an address and a
534 size that can be watched with a single debug register.
535 Thus, for counting the registers required to watch a
536 region, we simply need to increment the count on each
537 iteration. */
538 retval++;
539 }
540 else
541 {
542 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (size, type);
543
544 if (what == WP_INSERT)
545 retval = i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (state, addr, len_rw);
546 else if (what == WP_REMOVE)
547 retval = i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (state, addr, len_rw);
548 else
549 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("\
550 Invalid value %d of operation in i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint.\n"),
551 (int)what);
552 if (retval)
553 break;
554 }
555
556 addr += size;
557 len -= size;
558 }
559
560 return retval;
561 }
562
563 /* Update the inferior's debug registers with the new debug registers
564 state, in NEW_STATE, and then update our local mirror to match. */
565
566 static void
567 i386_update_inferior_debug_regs (struct i386_debug_reg_state *new_state)
568 {
569 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
570 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
571 int i;
572
573 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS (i)
574 {
575 if (I386_DR_VACANT (new_state, i) != I386_DR_VACANT (state, i))
576 i386_dr_low.set_addr (i, new_state->dr_mirror[i]);
577 else
578 gdb_assert (new_state->dr_mirror[i] == state->dr_mirror[i]);
579 }
580
581 if (new_state->dr_control_mirror != state->dr_control_mirror)
582 i386_dr_low.set_control (new_state->dr_control_mirror);
583
584 *state = *new_state;
585 }
586
587 /* Insert a watchpoint to watch a memory region which starts at
588 address ADDR and whose length is LEN bytes. Watch memory accesses
589 of the type TYPE. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */
590
591 static int
592 i386_insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type,
593 struct expression *cond)
594 {
595 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
596 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
597 int retval;
598 /* Work on a local copy of the debug registers, and on success,
599 commit the change back to the inferior. */
600 struct i386_debug_reg_state local_state = *state;
601
602 if (type == hw_read)
603 return 1; /* unsupported */
604
605 if (((len != 1 && len !=2 && len !=4) && !(TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 && len == 8))
606 || addr % len != 0)
607 retval = i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (&local_state,
608 WP_INSERT, addr, len, type);
609 else
610 {
611 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (len, type);
612
613 retval = i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (&local_state,
614 addr, len_rw);
615 }
616
617 if (retval == 0)
618 i386_update_inferior_debug_regs (&local_state);
619
620 if (maint_show_dr)
621 i386_show_dr (state, "insert_watchpoint", addr, len, type);
622
623 return retval;
624 }
625
626 /* Remove a watchpoint that watched the memory region which starts at
627 address ADDR, whose length is LEN bytes, and for accesses of the
628 type TYPE. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */
629 static int
630 i386_remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type,
631 struct expression *cond)
632 {
633 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
634 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
635 int retval;
636 /* Work on a local copy of the debug registers, and on success,
637 commit the change back to the inferior. */
638 struct i386_debug_reg_state local_state = *state;
639
640 if (((len != 1 && len !=2 && len !=4) && !(TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 && len == 8))
641 || addr % len != 0)
642 retval = i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (&local_state,
643 WP_REMOVE, addr, len, type);
644 else
645 {
646 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (len, type);
647
648 retval = i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (&local_state,
649 addr, len_rw);
650 }
651
652 if (retval == 0)
653 i386_update_inferior_debug_regs (&local_state);
654
655 if (maint_show_dr)
656 i386_show_dr (state, "remove_watchpoint", addr, len, type);
657
658 return retval;
659 }
660
661 /* Return non-zero if we can watch a memory region that starts at
662 address ADDR and whose length is LEN bytes. */
663
664 static int
665 i386_region_ok_for_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len)
666 {
667 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
668 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
669 int nregs;
670
671 /* Compute how many aligned watchpoints we would need to cover this
672 region. */
673 nregs = i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (state,
674 WP_COUNT, addr, len, hw_write);
675 return nregs <= DR_NADDR ? 1 : 0;
676 }
677
678 /* If the inferior has some watchpoint that triggered, set the
679 address associated with that watchpoint and return non-zero.
680 Otherwise, return zero. */
681
682 static int
683 i386_stopped_data_address (struct target_ops *ops, CORE_ADDR *addr_p)
684 {
685 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
686 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
687 CORE_ADDR addr = 0;
688 int i;
689 int rc = 0;
690 /* The current thread's DR_STATUS. We always need to read this to
691 check whether some watchpoint caused the trap. */
692 unsigned status;
693 /* We need DR_CONTROL as well, but only iff DR_STATUS indicates a
694 data breakpoint trap. Only fetch it when necessary, to avoid an
695 unnecessary extra syscall when no watchpoint triggered. */
696 int control_p = 0;
697 unsigned control = 0;
698
699 /* In non-stop/async, threads can be running while we change the
700 STATE (and friends). Say, we set a watchpoint, and let threads
701 resume. Now, say you delete the watchpoint, or add/remove
702 watchpoints such that STATE changes while threads are running.
703 On targets that support non-stop, inserting/deleting watchpoints
704 updates the STATE only. It does not update the real thread's
705 debug registers; that's only done prior to resume. Instead, if
706 threads are running when the mirror changes, a temporary and
707 transparent stop on all threads is forced so they can get their
708 copy of the debug registers updated on re-resume. Now, say,
709 a thread hit a watchpoint before having been updated with the new
710 STATE contents, and we haven't yet handled the corresponding
711 SIGTRAP. If we trusted STATE below, we'd mistake the real
712 trapped address (from the last time we had updated debug
713 registers in the thread) with whatever was currently in STATE.
714 So to fix this, STATE always represents intention, what we _want_
715 threads to have in debug registers. To get at the address and
716 cause of the trap, we need to read the state the thread still has
717 in its debug registers.
718
719 In sum, always get the current debug register values the current
720 thread has, instead of trusting the global mirror. If the thread
721 was running when we last changed watchpoints, the mirror no
722 longer represents what was set in this thread's debug
723 registers. */
724 status = i386_dr_low.get_status ();
725
726 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i)
727 {
728 if (!I386_DR_WATCH_HIT (status, i))
729 continue;
730
731 if (!control_p)
732 {
733 control = i386_dr_low.get_control ();
734 control_p = 1;
735 }
736
737 /* This second condition makes sure DRi is set up for a data
738 watchpoint, not a hardware breakpoint. The reason is that
739 GDB doesn't call the target_stopped_data_address method
740 except for data watchpoints. In other words, I'm being
741 paranoiac. */
742 if (I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN (control, i) != 0)
743 {
744 addr = i386_dr_low.get_addr (i);
745 rc = 1;
746 if (maint_show_dr)
747 i386_show_dr (state, "watchpoint_hit", addr, -1, hw_write);
748 }
749 }
750 if (maint_show_dr && addr == 0)
751 i386_show_dr (state, "stopped_data_addr", 0, 0, hw_write);
752
753 if (rc)
754 *addr_p = addr;
755 return rc;
756 }
757
758 static int
759 i386_stopped_by_watchpoint (void)
760 {
761 CORE_ADDR addr = 0;
762 return i386_stopped_data_address (&current_target, &addr);
763 }
764
765 /* Insert a hardware-assisted breakpoint at BP_TGT->placed_address.
766 Return 0 on success, EBUSY on failure. */
767 static int
768 i386_insert_hw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
769 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
770 {
771 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
772 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
773 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (1, hw_execute);
774 CORE_ADDR addr = bp_tgt->placed_address;
775 /* Work on a local copy of the debug registers, and on success,
776 commit the change back to the inferior. */
777 struct i386_debug_reg_state local_state = *state;
778 int retval = i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (&local_state,
779 addr, len_rw) ? EBUSY : 0;
780
781 if (retval == 0)
782 i386_update_inferior_debug_regs (&local_state);
783
784 if (maint_show_dr)
785 i386_show_dr (state, "insert_hwbp", addr, 1, hw_execute);
786
787 return retval;
788 }
789
790 /* Remove a hardware-assisted breakpoint at BP_TGT->placed_address.
791 Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */
792
793 static int
794 i386_remove_hw_breakpoint (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
795 struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
796 {
797 struct i386_debug_reg_state *state
798 = i386_debug_reg_state (ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid));
799 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (1, hw_execute);
800 CORE_ADDR addr = bp_tgt->placed_address;
801 /* Work on a local copy of the debug registers, and on success,
802 commit the change back to the inferior. */
803 struct i386_debug_reg_state local_state = *state;
804 int retval = i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (&local_state,
805 addr, len_rw);
806
807 if (retval == 0)
808 i386_update_inferior_debug_regs (&local_state);
809
810 if (maint_show_dr)
811 i386_show_dr (state, "remove_hwbp", addr, 1, hw_execute);
812
813 return retval;
814 }
815
816 /* Returns the number of hardware watchpoints of type TYPE that we can
817 set. Value is positive if we can set CNT watchpoints, zero if
818 setting watchpoints of type TYPE is not supported, and negative if
819 CNT is more than the maximum number of watchpoints of type TYPE
820 that we can support. TYPE is one of bp_hardware_watchpoint,
821 bp_read_watchpoint, bp_write_watchpoint, or bp_hardware_breakpoint.
822 CNT is the number of such watchpoints used so far (including this
823 one). OTHERTYPE is non-zero if other types of watchpoints are
824 currently enabled.
825
826 We always return 1 here because we don't have enough information
827 about possible overlap of addresses that they want to watch. As an
828 extreme example, consider the case where all the watchpoints watch
829 the same address and the same region length: then we can handle a
830 virtually unlimited number of watchpoints, due to debug register
831 sharing implemented via reference counts in i386-nat.c. */
832
833 static int
834 i386_can_use_hw_breakpoint (int type, int cnt, int othertype)
835 {
836 return 1;
837 }
838
839 static void
840 add_show_debug_regs_command (void)
841 {
842 /* A maintenance command to enable printing the internal DRi mirror
843 variables. */
844 add_setshow_boolean_cmd ("show-debug-regs", class_maintenance,
845 &maint_show_dr, _("\
846 Set whether to show variables that mirror the x86 debug registers."), _("\
847 Show whether to show variables that mirror the x86 debug registers."), _("\
848 Use \"on\" to enable, \"off\" to disable.\n\
849 If enabled, the debug registers values are shown when GDB inserts\n\
850 or removes a hardware breakpoint or watchpoint, and when the inferior\n\
851 triggers a breakpoint or watchpoint."),
852 NULL,
853 NULL,
854 &maintenance_set_cmdlist,
855 &maintenance_show_cmdlist);
856 }
857
858 /* There are only two global functions left. */
859
860 void
861 i386_use_watchpoints (struct target_ops *t)
862 {
863 /* After a watchpoint trap, the PC points to the instruction after the
864 one that caused the trap. Therefore we don't need to step over it.
865 But we do need to reset the status register to avoid another trap. */
866 t->to_have_continuable_watchpoint = 1;
867
868 t->to_can_use_hw_breakpoint = i386_can_use_hw_breakpoint;
869 t->to_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint = i386_region_ok_for_watchpoint;
870 t->to_stopped_by_watchpoint = i386_stopped_by_watchpoint;
871 t->to_stopped_data_address = i386_stopped_data_address;
872 t->to_insert_watchpoint = i386_insert_watchpoint;
873 t->to_remove_watchpoint = i386_remove_watchpoint;
874 t->to_insert_hw_breakpoint = i386_insert_hw_breakpoint;
875 t->to_remove_hw_breakpoint = i386_remove_hw_breakpoint;
876 }
877
878 void
879 i386_set_debug_register_length (int len)
880 {
881 /* This function should be called only once for each native target. */
882 gdb_assert (i386_dr_low.debug_register_length == 0);
883 gdb_assert (len == 4 || len == 8);
884 i386_dr_low.debug_register_length = len;
885 add_show_debug_regs_command ();
886 }
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