newlib/libgloss/sparc/erc32-stub.c
Joel Sherrill 99ad0c63ae 2002-04-17 Joel Sherrill <joel@OARcorp.com>
* sparc/cygmon-salib.c, sparc/erc32-stub.c: Don't use multi-line
	strings.
2002-04-17 17:29:02 +00:00

364 lines
8.4 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) 1996 Cygnus Support
*
* The authors hereby grant permission to use, copy, modify, distribute,
* and license this software and its documentation for any purpose, provided
* that existing copyright notices are retained in all copies and that this
* notice is included verbatim in any distributions. No written agreement,
* license, or royalty fee is required for any of the authorized uses.
* Modifications to this software may be copyrighted by their authors
* and need not follow the licensing terms described here, provided that
* the new terms are clearly indicated on the first page of each file where
* they apply.
*/
#include <string.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include "debug.h"
#include "asm.h"
#include "slite.h"
extern unsigned long rdtbr();
extern struct trap_entry fltr_proto;
extern void trap_low();
exception_t default_trap_hook = trap_low;
void target_reset();
void flush_i_cache();
char *target_read_registers(unsigned long *);
char *target_write_registers(unsigned long *);
char *target_dump_state(unsigned long *);
#define NUMREGS 72
/* Number of bytes of registers. */
#define NUMREGBYTES (NUMREGS * 4)
enum regnames {G0, G1, G2, G3, G4, G5, G6, G7,
O0, O1, O2, O3, O4, O5, SP, O7,
L0, L1, L2, L3, L4, L5, L6, L7,
I0, I1, I2, I3, I4, I5, FP, I7,
F0, F1, F2, F3, F4, F5, F6, F7,
F8, F9, F10, F11, F12, F13, F14, F15,
F16, F17, F18, F19, F20, F21, F22, F23,
F24, F25, F26, F27, F28, F29, F30, F31,
Y, PSR, WIM, TBR, PC, NPC, FPSR, CPSR };
/*
* Each entry in the trap vector occupies four words, typically a jump
* to the processing routine.
*/
struct trap_entry {
unsigned sethi_filler:10;
unsigned sethi_imm22:22;
unsigned jmpl_filler:19;
unsigned jmpl_simm13:13;
unsigned long filler[2];
};
/*
* This table contains the mapping between SPARC hardware trap types, and
* signals, which are primarily what GDB understands. It also indicates
* which hardware traps we need to commandeer when initializing the stub.
*/
struct trap_info hard_trap_info[] = {
{1, SIGSEGV}, /* instruction access error */
{2, SIGILL}, /* privileged instruction */
{3, SIGILL}, /* illegal instruction */
{4, SIGEMT}, /* fp disabled */
{36, SIGEMT}, /* cp disabled */
{7, SIGBUS}, /* mem address not aligned */
{9, SIGSEGV}, /* data access exception */
{10, SIGEMT}, /* tag overflow */
{128+1, SIGTRAP}, /* ta 1 - normal breakpoint instruction */
{0, 0} /* Must be last */
};
extern struct trap_entry fltr_proto;
void
exception_handler (int tt, unsigned long routine)
{
struct trap_entry *tb; /* Trap vector base address */
DEBUG (1, "Entering exception_handler()");
if (tt != 256) {
tb = (struct trap_entry *) (rdtbr() & ~0xfff);
} else {
tt = 255;
tb = (struct trap_entry *) 0;
}
tb[tt] = fltr_proto;
tb[tt].sethi_imm22 = routine >> 10;
tb[tt].jmpl_simm13 = routine & 0x3ff;
DEBUG (1, "Leaving exception_handler()");
}
/*
* This is so we can trap a memory fault when reading or writing
* directly to memory.
*/
void
set_mem_fault_trap(enable)
int enable;
{
extern void fltr_set_mem_err();
DEBUG (1, "Entering set_mem_fault_trap()");
mem_err = 0;
if (enable)
exception_handler(9, (unsigned long)fltr_set_mem_err);
else
exception_handler(9, (unsigned long)trap_low);
DEBUG (1, "Leaving set_mem_fault_trap()");
}
/*
* This function does all command procesing for interfacing to gdb. It
* returns 1 if you should skip the instruction at the trap address, 0
* otherwise.
*/
extern void breakinst();
void
handle_exception (registers)
unsigned long *registers;
{
int sigval;
/* First, we must force all of the windows to be spilled out */
DEBUG (1, "Entering handle_exception()");
/* asm("mov %g0, %wim ; nop; nop; nop"); */
asm(" save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
save %sp, -64, %sp \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
restore \n\
");
if (registers[PC] == (unsigned long)breakinst) {
registers[PC] = registers[NPC];
registers[NPC] += 4;
}
/* get the last know signal number from the trap register */
sigval = computeSignal((registers[TBR] >> 4) & 0xff);
/* call the main command processing loop for gdb */
gdb_event_loop (sigval, registers);
}
/*
* This function will generate a breakpoint exception. It is used at the
* beginning of a program to sync up with a debugger and can be used
* otherwise as a quick means to stop program execution and "break" into
* the debugger.
*/
void
breakpoint()
{
DEBUG (1, "Entering breakpoint()");
if (!initialized)
return;
asm(" .globl " STRINGSYM(breakinst) " \n\
" STRINGSYM(breakinst) ": ta 128+1 \n\
nop \n\
nop \n\
");
}
/*
* This is just a test vector for debugging excpetions.
*/
void
bad_trap(tt)
int tt;
{
print ("Got a bad trap #");
outbyte (tt);
outbyte ('\n');
asm("ta 0 \n\
nop \n\
nop \n\
");
}
/*
* This is just a test vector for debugging excpetions.
*/
void
soft_trap(tt)
int tt;
{
print ("Got a soft trap #");
outbyte (tt);
outbyte ('\n');
asm("ta 0 \n\
nop \n\
nop \n\
");
}
/*
* Flush the instruction cache. We need to do this for the debugger stub so
* that breakpoints, et. al. become visible to the instruction stream after
* storing them in memory.
*
* For the sparclite, we need to do something here, but for a standard
* sparc (which SIS simulates), we don't.
*/
void
flush_i_cache ()
{
}
/*
* This will reset the processor, so we never return from here.
*/
void
target_reset()
{
asm ("call 0 \n\
nop ");
}
/*
* g - read registers.
* no params.
* returns a vector of words, size is NUM_REGS.
*/
char *
target_read_registers(unsigned long *registers)
{
char *ptr;
unsigned long *sp;
DEBUG (1, "In target_read_registers()");
ptr = packet_out_buf;
ptr = mem2hex((char *)registers, ptr, 16 * 4, 0); /* G & O regs */
ptr = mem2hex((unsigned char *)(sp + 0), ptr, 16 * 4, 0); /* L & I regs */
memset(ptr, '0', 32 * 8); /* Floating point */
mem2hex((char *)&registers[Y],
ptr + 32 * 4 * 2,
8 * 4,
0); /* Y, PSR, WIM, TBR, PC, NPC, FPSR, CPSR */
return (ptr);
}
/*
* G - write registers.
* param is a vector of words, size is NUM_REGS.
* returns an OK or an error number.
*/
char *
target_write_registers(unsigned long *registers)
{
unsigned char *ptr;
unsigned long *sp;
unsigned long *newsp, psr;
DEBUG (1, "In target_write_registers()");
psr = registers[PSR];
ptr = &packet_in_buf[1];
hex2mem(ptr, (char *)registers, 16 * 4, 0); /* G & O regs */
hex2mem(ptr + 16 * 4 * 2, (unsigned char *)(sp + 0), 16 * 4, 0); /* L & I regs */
hex2mem(ptr + 64 * 4 * 2, (char *)&registers[Y],
8 * 4, 0); /* Y, PSR, WIM, TBR, PC, NPC, FPSR, CPSR */
/*
* see if the stack pointer has moved. If so, then copy the saved
* locals and ins to the new location. This keeps the window
* overflow and underflow routines happy.
*/
newsp = (unsigned long *)registers[SP];
if (sp != newsp)
sp = memcpy(newsp, sp, 16 * 4);
/* Don't allow CWP to be modified. */
if (psr != registers[PSR])
registers[PSR] = (psr & 0x1f) | (registers[PSR] & ~0x1f);
return (ptr);
}
char *
target_dump_state(unsigned long *registers)
{
int tt; /* Trap type */
int sigval;
char *ptr;
unsigned long *sp;
DEBUG (1, "In target_dump_state()");
sp = (unsigned long *)registers[SP];
tt = (registers[TBR] >> 4) & 0xff;
/* reply to host that an exception has occurred */
sigval = computeSignal(tt);
ptr = packet_out_buf;
*ptr++ = 'T';
*ptr++ = hexchars[sigval >> 4];
*ptr++ = hexchars[sigval & 0xf];
*ptr++ = hexchars[PC >> 4];
*ptr++ = hexchars[PC & 0xf];
*ptr++ = ':';
ptr = mem2hex((unsigned char *)&registers[PC], ptr, 4, 0);
*ptr++ = ';';
*ptr++ = hexchars[FP >> 4];
*ptr++ = hexchars[FP & 0xf];
*ptr++ = ':';
ptr = mem2hex((unsigned char *)(sp + 8 + 6), ptr, 4, 0); /* FP */
*ptr++ = ';';
*ptr++ = hexchars[SP >> 4];
*ptr++ = hexchars[SP & 0xf];
*ptr++ = ':';
ptr = mem2hex((unsigned char *)&sp, ptr, 4, 0);
*ptr++ = ';';
*ptr++ = hexchars[NPC >> 4];
return (packet_out_buf);
}
void
write_pc(unsigned long *registers, unsigned long addr)
{
DEBUG (1, "In write_pc");
registers[PC] = addr;
registers[NPC] = addr + 4;
}