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[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / remote-nindy.c
1 /* Memory-access and commands for remote NINDY process, for GDB.
2 Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Contributed by Intel Corporation. Modified from remote.c by Chris Benenati.
4
5 GDB is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
6 WARRANTY. No author or distributor accepts responsibility to anyone
7 for the consequences of using it or for whether it serves any
8 particular purpose or works at all, unless he says so in writing.
9 Refer to the GDB General Public License for full details.
10
11 Everyone is granted permission to copy, modify and redistribute GDB,
12 but only under the conditions described in the GDB General Public
13 License. A copy of this license is supposed to have been given to you
14 along with GDB so you can know your rights and responsibilities. It
15 should be in a file named COPYING. Among other things, the copyright
16 notice and this notice must be preserved on all copies.
17
18 In other words, go ahead and share GDB, but don't try to stop
19 anyone else from sharing it farther. Help stamp out software hoarding!
20 */
21
22 /*
23 Except for the data cache routines, this file bears little resemblence
24 to remote.c. A new (although similar) protocol has been specified, and
25 portions of the code are entirely dependent on having an i80960 with a
26 NINDY ROM monitor at the other end of the line.
27 */
28
29 /*****************************************************************************
30 *
31 * REMOTE COMMUNICATION PROTOCOL BETWEEN GDB960 AND THE NINDY ROM MONITOR.
32 *
33 *
34 * MODES OF OPERATION
35 * ----- -- ---------
36 *
37 * As far as NINDY is concerned, GDB is always in one of two modes: command
38 * mode or passthrough mode.
39 *
40 * In command mode (the default) pre-defined packets containing requests
41 * are sent by GDB to NINDY. NINDY never talks except in reponse to a request.
42 *
43 * Once the the user program is started, GDB enters passthrough mode, to give
44 * the user program access to the terminal. GDB remains in this mode until
45 * NINDY indicates that the program has stopped.
46 *
47 *
48 * PASSTHROUGH MODE
49 * ----------- ----
50 *
51 * GDB writes all input received from the keyboard directly to NINDY, and writes
52 * all characters received from NINDY directly to the monitor.
53 *
54 * Keyboard input is neither buffered nor echoed to the monitor.
55 *
56 * GDB remains in passthrough mode until NINDY sends a single ^P character,
57 * to indicate that the user process has stopped.
58 *
59 * Note:
60 * GDB assumes NINDY performs a 'flushreg' when the user program stops.
61 *
62 *
63 * COMMAND MODE
64 * ------- ----
65 *
66 * All info (except for message ack and nak) is transferred between gdb
67 * and the remote processor in messages of the following format:
68 *
69 * <info>#<checksum>
70 *
71 * where
72 * # is a literal character
73 *
74 * <info> ASCII information; all numeric information is in the
75 * form of hex digits ('0'-'9' and lowercase 'a'-'f').
76 *
77 * <checksum>
78 * is a pair of ASCII hex digits representing an 8-bit
79 * checksum formed by adding together each of the
80 * characters in <info>.
81 *
82 * The receiver of a message always sends a single character to the sender
83 * to indicate that the checksum was good ('+') or bad ('-'); the sender
84 * re-transmits the entire message over until a '+' is received.
85 *
86 * In response to a command NINDY always sends back either data or
87 * a result code of the form "Xnn", where "nn" are hex digits and "X00"
88 * means no errors. (Exceptions: the "s" and "c" commands don't respond.)
89 *
90 * SEE THE HEADER OF THE FILE "gdb.c" IN THE NINDY MONITOR SOURCE CODE FOR A
91 * FULL DESCRIPTION OF LEGAL COMMANDS.
92 *
93 * SEE THE FILE "stop.h" IN THE NINDY MONITOR SOURCE CODE FOR A LIST
94 * OF STOP CODES.
95 *
96 ******************************************************************************/
97
98 #include "defs.h"
99 #include <signal.h>
100 #include <sys/types.h>
101 #include <setjmp.h>
102
103 #include "frame.h"
104 #include "inferior.h"
105 #include "target.h"
106 #include "gdbcore.h"
107 #include "command.h"
108 #include "bfd.h"
109 #include "ieee-float.h"
110
111 #include "wait.h"
112 #include <sys/ioctl.h>
113 #include <sys/file.h>
114 #include <ctype.h>
115 #include "nindy-share/ttycntl.h"
116 #include "nindy-share/demux.h"
117 #include "nindy-share/env.h"
118 #include "nindy-share/stop.h"
119
120 extern int unlink();
121 extern char *getenv();
122 extern char *mktemp();
123
124 extern char *coffstrip();
125 extern void generic_mourn_inferior ();
126
127 extern struct target_ops nindy_ops;
128 extern jmp_buf to_top_level;
129 extern FILE *instream;
130 extern struct ext_format ext_format_i960; /* i960-tdep.c */
131
132 extern char ninStopWhy ();
133
134 int nindy_initial_brk; /* nonzero if want to send an initial BREAK to nindy */
135 int nindy_old_protocol; /* nonzero if want to use old protocol */
136 char *nindy_ttyname; /* name of tty to talk to nindy on, or null */
137
138 #define DLE '\020' /* Character NINDY sends to indicate user program has
139 * halted. */
140 #define TRUE 1
141 #define FALSE 0
142
143 int nindy_fd = 0; /* Descriptor for I/O to NINDY */
144 static int have_regs = 0; /* 1 iff regs read since i960 last halted */
145 static int regs_changed = 0; /* 1 iff regs were modified since last read */
146
147 extern char *exists();
148 static void dcache_flush (), dcache_poke (), dcache_init();
149 static int dcache_fetch ();
150 \f
151 /* FIXME, we can probably use the normal terminal_inferior stuff here.
152 We have to do terminal_inferior and then set up the passthrough
153 settings initially. Thereafter, terminal_ours and terminal_inferior
154 will automatically swap the settings around for us. */
155
156 /* Restore TTY to normal operation */
157
158 static TTY_STRUCT orig_tty; /* TTY attributes before entering passthrough */
159
160 static void
161 restore_tty()
162 {
163 ioctl( 0, TIOCSETN, &orig_tty );
164 }
165
166
167 /* Recover from ^Z or ^C while remote process is running */
168
169 static void (*old_ctrlc)(); /* Signal handlers before entering passthrough */
170
171 #ifdef SIGTSTP
172 static void (*old_ctrlz)();
173 #endif
174
175 static
176 #ifdef USG
177 void
178 #endif
179 cleanup()
180 {
181 restore_tty();
182 signal(SIGINT, old_ctrlc);
183 #ifdef SIGTSTP
184 signal(SIGTSTP, old_ctrlz);
185 #endif
186 error("\n\nYou may need to reset the 80960 and/or reload your program.\n");
187 }
188 \f
189 /* Clean up anything that needs cleaning when losing control. */
190
191 static char *savename;
192
193 static void
194 nindy_close (quitting)
195 int quitting;
196 {
197 if (nindy_fd)
198 close (nindy_fd);
199 nindy_fd = 0;
200
201 if (savename)
202 free (savename);
203 savename = 0;
204 }
205
206 /* Open a connection to a remote debugger.
207 FIXME, there should be a way to specify the various options that are
208 now specified with gdb command-line options. (baud_rate, old_protocol,
209 and initial_brk) */
210 void
211 nindy_open (name, from_tty)
212 char *name; /* "/dev/ttyXX", "ttyXX", or "XX": tty to be opened */
213 int from_tty;
214 {
215
216 if (!name)
217 error_no_arg ("serial port device name");
218
219 target_preopen (from_tty);
220
221 nindy_close (0);
222
223 have_regs = regs_changed = 0;
224 dcache_init();
225
226 /* Allow user to interrupt the following -- we could hang if
227 * there's no NINDY at the other end of the remote tty.
228 */
229 immediate_quit++;
230 nindy_fd = ninConnect( name, baud_rate? baud_rate: "9600",
231 nindy_initial_brk, !from_tty, nindy_old_protocol );
232 immediate_quit--;
233
234 if ( nindy_fd < 0 ){
235 nindy_fd = 0;
236 error( "Can't open tty '%s'", name );
237 }
238
239 savename = savestring (name, strlen (name));
240 push_target (&nindy_ops);
241 target_fetch_registers(-1);
242 }
243
244 /* User-initiated quit of nindy operations. */
245
246 static void
247 nindy_detach (name, from_tty)
248 char *name;
249 int from_tty;
250 {
251 if (name)
252 error ("Too many arguments");
253 pop_target ();
254 }
255
256 static void
257 nindy_files_info ()
258 {
259 printf("\tAttached to %s at %s bps%s%s.\n", savename,
260 baud_rate? baud_rate: "9600",
261 nindy_old_protocol? " in old protocol": "",
262 nindy_initial_brk? " with initial break": "");
263 }
264 \f
265 /******************************************************************************
266 * remote_load:
267 * Download an object file to the remote system by invoking the "comm960"
268 * utility. We look for "comm960" in $G960BIN, $G960BASE/bin, and
269 * DEFAULT_BASE/bin/HOST/bin where
270 * DEFAULT_BASE is defined in env.h, and
271 * HOST must be defined on the compiler invocation line.
272 ******************************************************************************/
273
274 static void
275 nindy_load( filename, from_tty )
276 char *filename;
277 int from_tty;
278 {
279 char *tmpfile;
280 struct cleanup *old_chain;
281 char *scratch_pathname;
282 int scratch_chan;
283
284 if (!filename)
285 filename = get_exec_file (1);
286
287 filename = tilde_expand (filename);
288 make_cleanup (free, filename);
289
290 scratch_chan = openp (getenv ("PATH"), 1, filename, O_RDONLY, 0,
291 &scratch_pathname);
292 if (scratch_chan < 0)
293 perror_with_name (filename);
294 close (scratch_chan); /* Slightly wasteful FIXME */
295
296 have_regs = regs_changed = 0;
297 mark_breakpoints_out();
298 inferior_pid = 0;
299 dcache_flush();
300
301 tmpfile = coffstrip(scratch_pathname);
302 if ( tmpfile ){
303 old_chain = make_cleanup (unlink,tmpfile);
304 immediate_quit++;
305 ninDownload( tmpfile, !from_tty );
306 /* FIXME, don't we want this merged in here? */
307 immediate_quit--;
308 do_cleanups (old_chain);
309 }
310 }
311
312
313
314 /* Return the number of characters in the buffer before the first DLE character.
315 */
316
317 static
318 int
319 non_dle( buf, n )
320 char *buf; /* Character buffer; NOT '\0'-terminated */
321 int n; /* Number of characters in buffer */
322 {
323 int i;
324
325 for ( i = 0; i < n; i++ ){
326 if ( buf[i] == DLE ){
327 break;
328 }
329 }
330 return i;
331 }
332 \f
333 /* Tell the remote machine to resume. */
334
335 void
336 nindy_resume (step, siggnal)
337 int step, siggnal;
338 {
339 if (siggnal != 0 && siggnal != stop_signal)
340 error ("Can't send signals to remote NINDY targets.");
341
342 dcache_flush();
343 if ( regs_changed ){
344 nindy_store_registers ();
345 regs_changed = 0;
346 }
347 have_regs = 0;
348 ninGo( step );
349 }
350
351 /* Wait until the remote machine stops. While waiting, operate in passthrough
352 * mode; i.e., pass everything NINDY sends to stdout, and everything from
353 * stdin to NINDY.
354 *
355 * Return to caller, storing status in 'status' just as `wait' would.
356 */
357
358 void
359 nindy_wait( status )
360 WAITTYPE *status;
361 {
362 DEMUX_DECL; /* OS-dependent data needed by DEMUX... macros */
363 char buf[500]; /* FIXME, what is "500" here? */
364 int i, n;
365 unsigned char stop_exit;
366 unsigned char stop_code;
367 TTY_STRUCT tty;
368 long ip_value, fp_value, sp_value; /* Reg values from stop */
369
370
371 WSETEXIT( (*status), 0 );
372
373 /* OPERATE IN PASSTHROUGH MODE UNTIL NINDY SENDS A DLE CHARACTER */
374
375 /* Save current tty attributes, set up signals to restore them.
376 */
377 ioctl( 0, TIOCGETP, &orig_tty );
378 old_ctrlc = signal( SIGINT, cleanup );
379 #ifdef SIGTSTP
380 old_ctrlz = signal( SIGTSTP, cleanup );
381 #endif
382
383 /* Pass input from keyboard to NINDY as it arrives.
384 * NINDY will interpret <CR> and perform echo.
385 */
386 tty = orig_tty;
387 TTY_NINDYTERM( tty );
388 ioctl( 0, TIOCSETN, &tty );
389
390 while ( 1 ){
391 /* Go to sleep until there's something for us on either
392 * the remote port or stdin.
393 */
394
395 DEMUX_WAIT( nindy_fd );
396
397 /* Pass input through to correct place */
398
399 n = DEMUX_READ( 0, buf, sizeof(buf) );
400 if ( n ){ /* Input on stdin */
401 write( nindy_fd, buf, n );
402 }
403
404 n = DEMUX_READ( nindy_fd, buf, sizeof(buf) );
405 if ( n ){ /* Input on remote */
406 /* Write out any characters in buffer preceding DLE */
407 i = non_dle( buf, n );
408 if ( i > 0 ){
409 write( 1, buf, i );
410 }
411
412 if ( i != n ){
413 /* There *was* a DLE in the buffer */
414 stop_exit = ninStopWhy( &stop_code,
415 &ip_value, &fp_value, &sp_value);
416 if ( !stop_exit && (stop_code==STOP_SRQ) ){
417 immediate_quit++;
418 ninSrq();
419 immediate_quit--;
420 } else {
421 /* Get out of loop */
422 supply_register (IP_REGNUM, &ip_value);
423 supply_register (FP_REGNUM, &fp_value);
424 supply_register (SP_REGNUM, &sp_value);
425 break;
426 }
427 }
428 }
429 }
430
431 signal( SIGINT, old_ctrlc );
432 #ifdef SIGTSTP
433 signal( SIGTSTP, old_ctrlz );
434 #endif
435 restore_tty();
436
437 if ( stop_exit ){ /* User program exited */
438 WSETEXIT( (*status), stop_code );
439 } else { /* Fault or trace */
440 switch (stop_code){
441 case STOP_GDB_BPT:
442 case TRACE_STEP:
443 /* Make it look like a VAX trace trap */
444 stop_code = SIGTRAP;
445 break;
446 default:
447 /* The target is not running Unix, and its
448 faults/traces do not map nicely into Unix signals.
449 Make sure they do not get confused with Unix signals
450 by numbering them with values higher than the highest
451 legal Unix signal. code in i960_print_fault(),
452 called via PRINT_RANDOM_SIGNAL, will interpret the
453 value. */
454 stop_code += NSIG;
455 break;
456 }
457 WSETSTOP( (*status), stop_code );
458 }
459 }
460
461 /* Read the remote registers into the block REGS. */
462
463 /* This is the block that ninRegsGet and ninRegsPut handles. */
464 struct nindy_regs {
465 char local_regs[16 * 4];
466 char global_regs[16 * 4];
467 char pcw_acw[2 * 4];
468 char ip[4];
469 char tcw[4];
470 char fp_as_double[4 * 8];
471 };
472
473 static int
474 nindy_fetch_registers(regno)
475 int regno;
476 {
477 struct nindy_regs nindy_regs;
478 int regnum, inv;
479 double dub;
480
481 immediate_quit++;
482 ninRegsGet( (char *) &nindy_regs );
483 immediate_quit--;
484
485 bcopy (nindy_regs.local_regs, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (R0_REGNUM)], 16*4);
486 bcopy (nindy_regs.global_regs, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (G0_REGNUM)], 16*4);
487 bcopy (nindy_regs.pcw_acw, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PCW_REGNUM)], 2*4);
488 bcopy (nindy_regs.ip, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (IP_REGNUM)], 1*4);
489 bcopy (nindy_regs.tcw, &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (TCW_REGNUM)], 1*4);
490 for (regnum = FP0_REGNUM; regnum < FP0_REGNUM + 4; regnum++) {
491 dub = unpack_double (builtin_type_double,
492 &nindy_regs.fp_as_double[8 * (regnum - FP0_REGNUM)],
493 &inv);
494 /* dub now in host byte order */
495 double_to_ieee_extended (&ext_format_i960, &dub,
496 &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (regnum)]);
497 }
498
499 registers_fetched ();
500 return 0;
501 }
502
503 static void
504 nindy_prepare_to_store()
505 {
506 nindy_fetch_registers(-1);
507 }
508
509 static int
510 nindy_store_registers(regno)
511 int regno;
512 {
513 struct nindy_regs nindy_regs;
514 int regnum, inv;
515 double dub;
516
517 bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (R0_REGNUM)], nindy_regs.local_regs, 16*4);
518 bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (G0_REGNUM)], nindy_regs.global_regs, 16*4);
519 bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (PCW_REGNUM)], nindy_regs.pcw_acw, 2*4);
520 bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (IP_REGNUM)], nindy_regs.ip, 1*4);
521 bcopy (&registers[REGISTER_BYTE (TCW_REGNUM)], nindy_regs.tcw, 1*4);
522 /* Float regs. Only works on IEEE_FLOAT hosts. */
523 for (regnum = FP0_REGNUM; regnum < FP0_REGNUM + 4; regnum++) {
524 ieee_extended_to_double (&ext_format_i960,
525 &registers[REGISTER_BYTE (regnum)], &dub);
526 /* dub now in host byte order */
527 /* FIXME-someday, the arguments to unpack_double are backward.
528 It expects a target double and returns a host; we pass the opposite.
529 This mostly works but not quite. */
530 dub = unpack_double (builtin_type_double, &dub, &inv);
531 /* dub now in target byte order */
532 bcopy ((char *)&dub, &nindy_regs.fp_as_double[8 * (regnum - FP0_REGNUM)],
533 8);
534 }
535
536 immediate_quit++;
537 ninRegsPut( (char *) &nindy_regs );
538 immediate_quit--;
539 return 0;
540 }
541
542 /* Read a word from remote address ADDR and return it.
543 * This goes through the data cache.
544 */
545 int
546 nindy_fetch_word (addr)
547 CORE_ADDR addr;
548 {
549 return dcache_fetch (addr);
550 }
551
552 /* Write a word WORD into remote address ADDR.
553 This goes through the data cache. */
554
555 void
556 nindy_store_word (addr, word)
557 CORE_ADDR addr;
558 int word;
559 {
560 dcache_poke (addr, word);
561 }
562
563 /* Copy LEN bytes to or from inferior's memory starting at MEMADDR
564 to debugger memory starting at MYADDR. Copy to inferior if
565 WRITE is nonzero. Returns the length copied.
566
567 This is stolen almost directly from infptrace.c's child_xfer_memory,
568 which also deals with a word-oriented memory interface. Sometime,
569 FIXME, rewrite this to not use the word-oriented routines. */
570
571 int
572 nindy_xfer_inferior_memory(memaddr, myaddr, len, write, target)
573 CORE_ADDR memaddr;
574 char *myaddr;
575 int len;
576 int write;
577 struct target_ops *target; /* ignored */
578 {
579 register int i;
580 /* Round starting address down to longword boundary. */
581 register CORE_ADDR addr = memaddr & - sizeof (int);
582 /* Round ending address up; get number of longwords that makes. */
583 register int count
584 = (((memaddr + len) - addr) + sizeof (int) - 1) / sizeof (int);
585 /* Allocate buffer of that many longwords. */
586 register int *buffer = (int *) alloca (count * sizeof (int));
587
588 if (write)
589 {
590 /* Fill start and end extra bytes of buffer with existing memory data. */
591
592 if (addr != memaddr || len < (int)sizeof (int)) {
593 /* Need part of initial word -- fetch it. */
594 buffer[0] = nindy_fetch_word (addr);
595 }
596
597 if (count > 1) /* FIXME, avoid if even boundary */
598 {
599 buffer[count - 1]
600 = nindy_fetch_word (addr + (count - 1) * sizeof (int));
601 }
602
603 /* Copy data to be written over corresponding part of buffer */
604
605 bcopy (myaddr, (char *) buffer + (memaddr & (sizeof (int) - 1)), len);
606
607 /* Write the entire buffer. */
608
609 for (i = 0; i < count; i++, addr += sizeof (int))
610 {
611 errno = 0;
612 nindy_store_word (addr, buffer[i]);
613 if (errno)
614 return 0;
615 }
616 }
617 else
618 {
619 /* Read all the longwords */
620 for (i = 0; i < count; i++, addr += sizeof (int))
621 {
622 errno = 0;
623 buffer[i] = nindy_fetch_word (addr);
624 if (errno)
625 return 0;
626 QUIT;
627 }
628
629 /* Copy appropriate bytes out of the buffer. */
630 bcopy ((char *) buffer + (memaddr & (sizeof (int) - 1)), myaddr, len);
631 }
632 return len;
633 }
634 \f
635 /* The data cache records all the data read from the remote machine
636 since the last time it stopped.
637
638 Each cache block holds 16 bytes of data
639 starting at a multiple-of-16 address. */
640
641 #define DCACHE_SIZE 64 /* Number of cache blocks */
642
643 struct dcache_block {
644 struct dcache_block *next, *last;
645 unsigned int addr; /* Address for which data is recorded. */
646 int data[4];
647 };
648
649 struct dcache_block dcache_free, dcache_valid;
650
651 /* Free all the data cache blocks, thus discarding all cached data. */
652 static
653 void
654 dcache_flush ()
655 {
656 register struct dcache_block *db;
657
658 while ((db = dcache_valid.next) != &dcache_valid)
659 {
660 remque (db);
661 insque (db, &dcache_free);
662 }
663 }
664
665 /*
666 * If addr is present in the dcache, return the address of the block
667 * containing it.
668 */
669 static
670 struct dcache_block *
671 dcache_hit (addr)
672 unsigned int addr;
673 {
674 register struct dcache_block *db;
675
676 if (addr & 3)
677 abort ();
678
679 /* Search all cache blocks for one that is at this address. */
680 db = dcache_valid.next;
681 while (db != &dcache_valid)
682 {
683 if ((addr & 0xfffffff0) == db->addr)
684 return db;
685 db = db->next;
686 }
687 return NULL;
688 }
689
690 /* Return the int data at address ADDR in dcache block DC. */
691 static
692 int
693 dcache_value (db, addr)
694 struct dcache_block *db;
695 unsigned int addr;
696 {
697 if (addr & 3)
698 abort ();
699 return (db->data[(addr>>2)&3]);
700 }
701
702 /* Get a free cache block, put or keep it on the valid list,
703 and return its address. The caller should store into the block
704 the address and data that it describes, then remque it from the
705 free list and insert it into the valid list. This procedure
706 prevents errors from creeping in if a ninMemGet is interrupted
707 (which used to put garbage blocks in the valid list...). */
708 static
709 struct dcache_block *
710 dcache_alloc ()
711 {
712 register struct dcache_block *db;
713
714 if ((db = dcache_free.next) == &dcache_free)
715 {
716 /* If we can't get one from the free list, take last valid and put
717 it on the free list. */
718 db = dcache_valid.last;
719 remque (db);
720 insque (db, &dcache_free);
721 }
722
723 remque (db);
724 insque (db, &dcache_valid);
725 return (db);
726 }
727
728 /* Return the contents of the word at address ADDR in the remote machine,
729 using the data cache. */
730 static
731 int
732 dcache_fetch (addr)
733 CORE_ADDR addr;
734 {
735 register struct dcache_block *db;
736
737 db = dcache_hit (addr);
738 if (db == 0)
739 {
740 db = dcache_alloc ();
741 immediate_quit++;
742 ninMemGet(addr & ~0xf, (unsigned char *)db->data, 16);
743 immediate_quit--;
744 db->addr = addr & ~0xf;
745 remque (db); /* Off the free list */
746 insque (db, &dcache_valid); /* On the valid list */
747 }
748 return (dcache_value (db, addr));
749 }
750
751 /* Write the word at ADDR both in the data cache and in the remote machine. */
752 static void
753 dcache_poke (addr, data)
754 CORE_ADDR addr;
755 int data;
756 {
757 register struct dcache_block *db;
758
759 /* First make sure the word is IN the cache. DB is its cache block. */
760 db = dcache_hit (addr);
761 if (db == 0)
762 {
763 db = dcache_alloc ();
764 immediate_quit++;
765 ninMemGet(addr & ~0xf, (unsigned char *)db->data, 16);
766 immediate_quit--;
767 db->addr = addr & ~0xf;
768 remque (db); /* Off the free list */
769 insque (db, &dcache_valid); /* On the valid list */
770 }
771
772 /* Modify the word in the cache. */
773 db->data[(addr>>2)&3] = data;
774
775 /* Send the changed word. */
776 immediate_quit++;
777 ninMemPut(addr, (unsigned char *)&data, 4);
778 immediate_quit--;
779 }
780
781 /* The cache itself. */
782 struct dcache_block the_cache[DCACHE_SIZE];
783
784 /* Initialize the data cache. */
785 static void
786 dcache_init ()
787 {
788 register i;
789 register struct dcache_block *db;
790
791 db = the_cache;
792 dcache_free.next = dcache_free.last = &dcache_free;
793 dcache_valid.next = dcache_valid.last = &dcache_valid;
794 for (i=0;i<DCACHE_SIZE;i++,db++)
795 insque (db, &dcache_free);
796 }
797
798
799 static void
800 nindy_create_inferior (execfile, args, env)
801 char *execfile;
802 char *args;
803 char **env;
804 {
805 int entry_pt;
806 int pid;
807
808 if (args && *args)
809 error ("Can't pass arguments to remote NINDY process");
810
811 if (execfile == 0 || exec_bfd == 0)
812 error ("No exec file specified");
813
814 entry_pt = (int) bfd_get_start_address (exec_bfd);
815
816 pid = 42;
817
818 #ifdef CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK
819 CREATE_INFERIOR_HOOK (pid);
820 #endif
821
822 /* The "process" (board) is already stopped awaiting our commands, and
823 the program is already downloaded. We just set its PC and go. */
824
825 inferior_pid = pid; /* Needed for wait_for_inferior below */
826
827 clear_proceed_status ();
828
829 /* Tell wait_for_inferior that we've started a new process. */
830 init_wait_for_inferior ();
831
832 /* Set up the "saved terminal modes" of the inferior
833 based on what modes we are starting it with. */
834 target_terminal_init ();
835
836 /* Install inferior's terminal modes. */
837 target_terminal_inferior ();
838
839 /* insert_step_breakpoint (); FIXME, do we need this? */
840 proceed ((CORE_ADDR)entry_pt, -1, 0); /* Let 'er rip... */
841 }
842
843 static void
844 reset_command(args, from_tty)
845 char *args;
846 int from_tty;
847 {
848 if ( !nindy_fd ){
849 error( "No target system to reset -- use 'target nindy' command.");
850 }
851 if ( query("Really reset the target system?",0,0) ){
852 send_break( nindy_fd );
853 tty_flush( nindy_fd );
854 }
855 }
856
857 void
858 nindy_kill (args, from_tty)
859 char *args;
860 int from_tty;
861 {
862 return; /* Ignore attempts to kill target system */
863 }
864
865 /* Clean up when a program exits.
866
867 The program actually lives on in the remote processor's RAM, and may be
868 run again without a download. Don't leave it full of breakpoint
869 instructions. */
870
871 void
872 nindy_mourn_inferior ()
873 {
874 remove_breakpoints ();
875 generic_mourn_inferior (); /* Do all the proper things now */
876 }
877 \f
878 /* This routine is run as a hook, just before the main command loop is
879 entered. If gdb is configured for the i960, but has not had its
880 nindy target specified yet, this will loop prompting the user to do so.
881
882 Unlike the loop provided by Intel, we actually let the user get out
883 of this with a RETURN. This is useful when e.g. simply examining
884 an i960 object file on the host system. */
885
886 nindy_before_main_loop ()
887 {
888 char ttyname[100];
889 char *p, *p2;
890
891 setjmp(to_top_level);
892 while (current_target != &nindy_ops) { /* remote tty not specified yet */
893 if ( instream == stdin ){
894 printf("\nAttach /dev/ttyNN -- specify NN, or \"quit\" to quit: ");
895 fflush( stdout );
896 }
897 fgets( ttyname, sizeof(ttyname)-1, stdin );
898
899 /* Strip leading and trailing whitespace */
900 for ( p = ttyname; isspace(*p); p++ ){
901 ;
902 }
903 if ( *p == '\0' ){
904 return; /* User just hit spaces or return, wants out */
905 }
906 for ( p2= p; !isspace(*p2) && (*p2 != '\0'); p2++ ){
907 ;
908 }
909 *p2= '\0';
910 if ( !strcmp("quit",p) ){
911 exit(1);
912 }
913
914 nindy_open( p, 1 );
915
916 /* Now that we have a tty open for talking to the remote machine,
917 download the executable file if one was specified. */
918 if ( !setjmp(to_top_level) && exec_bfd ) {
919 target_load (bfd_get_filename (exec_bfd), 1);
920 }
921 }
922 }
923 \f
924 /* Define the target subroutine names */
925
926 struct target_ops nindy_ops = {
927 "nindy", "Remote serial target in i960 NINDY-specific protocol",
928 "Use a remote i960 system running NINDY connected by a serial line.\n\
929 Specify the name of the device the serial line is connected to.\n\
930 The speed (baud rate), whether to use the old NINDY protocol,\n\
931 and whether to send a break on startup, are controlled by options\n\
932 specified when you started GDB.",
933 nindy_open, nindy_close,
934 0, nindy_detach, nindy_resume, nindy_wait,
935 nindy_fetch_registers, nindy_store_registers,
936 nindy_prepare_to_store, 0, 0, /* conv_from, conv_to */
937 nindy_xfer_inferior_memory, nindy_files_info,
938 0, 0, /* insert_breakpoint, remove_breakpoint, */
939 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, /* Terminal crud */
940 nindy_kill,
941 nindy_load,
942 0, /* lookup_symbol */
943 nindy_create_inferior,
944 nindy_mourn_inferior,
945 process_stratum, 0, /* next */
946 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, /* all mem, mem, stack, regs, exec */
947 0, 0, /* Section pointers */
948 OPS_MAGIC, /* Always the last thing */
949 };
950
951 void
952 _initialize_nindy ()
953 {
954 add_target (&nindy_ops);
955 add_com ("reset", class_obscure, reset_command,
956 "Send a 'break' to the remote target system.\n\
957 Only useful if the target has been equipped with a circuit\n\
958 to perform a hard reset when a break is detected.");
959 }
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