1 /* Target-dependent code for GDB, the GNU debugger.
2 Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
3 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002
4 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 This file is part of GDB.
8 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
11 (at your option) any later version.
13 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
20 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
21 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
32 #include "arch-utils.h"
36 #include "parser-defs.h"
38 #include "libbfd.h" /* for bfd_default_set_arch_mach */
39 #include "coff/internal.h" /* for libcoff.h */
40 #include "libcoff.h" /* for xcoff_data */
44 #include "solib-svr4.h"
47 /* If the kernel has to deliver a signal, it pushes a sigcontext
48 structure on the stack and then calls the signal handler, passing
49 the address of the sigcontext in an argument register. Usually
50 the signal handler doesn't save this register, so we have to
51 access the sigcontext structure via an offset from the signal handler
53 The following constants were determined by experimentation on AIX 3.2. */
54 #define SIG_FRAME_PC_OFFSET 96
55 #define SIG_FRAME_LR_OFFSET 108
56 #define SIG_FRAME_FP_OFFSET 284
58 /* To be used by skip_prologue. */
60 struct rs6000_framedata
62 int offset
; /* total size of frame --- the distance
63 by which we decrement sp to allocate
65 int saved_gpr
; /* smallest # of saved gpr */
66 int saved_fpr
; /* smallest # of saved fpr */
67 int saved_vr
; /* smallest # of saved vr */
68 int alloca_reg
; /* alloca register number (frame ptr) */
69 char frameless
; /* true if frameless functions. */
70 char nosavedpc
; /* true if pc not saved. */
71 int gpr_offset
; /* offset of saved gprs from prev sp */
72 int fpr_offset
; /* offset of saved fprs from prev sp */
73 int vr_offset
; /* offset of saved vrs from prev sp */
74 int lr_offset
; /* offset of saved lr */
75 int cr_offset
; /* offset of saved cr */
76 int vrsave_offset
; /* offset of saved vrsave register */
79 /* Description of a single register. */
83 char *name
; /* name of register */
84 unsigned char sz32
; /* size on 32-bit arch, 0 if nonextant */
85 unsigned char sz64
; /* size on 64-bit arch, 0 if nonextant */
86 unsigned char fpr
; /* whether register is floating-point */
89 /* Return the current architecture's gdbarch_tdep structure. */
91 #define TDEP gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch)
93 /* Breakpoint shadows for the single step instructions will be kept here. */
95 static struct sstep_breaks
97 /* Address, or 0 if this is not in use. */
99 /* Shadow contents. */
104 /* Hook for determining the TOC address when calling functions in the
105 inferior under AIX. The initialization code in rs6000-nat.c sets
106 this hook to point to find_toc_address. */
108 CORE_ADDR (*rs6000_find_toc_address_hook
) (CORE_ADDR
) = NULL
;
110 /* Hook to set the current architecture when starting a child process.
111 rs6000-nat.c sets this. */
113 void (*rs6000_set_host_arch_hook
) (int) = NULL
;
115 /* Static function prototypes */
117 static CORE_ADDR
branch_dest (int opcode
, int instr
, CORE_ADDR pc
,
119 static CORE_ADDR
skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR
, CORE_ADDR
,
120 struct rs6000_framedata
*);
121 static void frame_get_saved_regs (struct frame_info
* fi
,
122 struct rs6000_framedata
* fdatap
);
123 static CORE_ADDR
frame_initial_stack_address (struct frame_info
*);
125 /* Read a LEN-byte address from debugged memory address MEMADDR. */
128 read_memory_addr (CORE_ADDR memaddr
, int len
)
130 return read_memory_unsigned_integer (memaddr
, len
);
134 rs6000_skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc
)
136 struct rs6000_framedata frame
;
137 pc
= skip_prologue (pc
, 0, &frame
);
142 /* Fill in fi->saved_regs */
144 struct frame_extra_info
146 /* Functions calling alloca() change the value of the stack
147 pointer. We need to use initial stack pointer (which is saved in
148 r31 by gcc) in such cases. If a compiler emits traceback table,
149 then we should use the alloca register specified in traceback
151 CORE_ADDR initial_sp
; /* initial stack pointer. */
155 rs6000_init_extra_frame_info (int fromleaf
, struct frame_info
*fi
)
157 fi
->extra_info
= (struct frame_extra_info
*)
158 frame_obstack_alloc (sizeof (struct frame_extra_info
));
159 fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
= 0;
160 if (fi
->next
!= (CORE_ADDR
) 0
161 && fi
->pc
< TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE
)
162 /* We're in get_prev_frame */
163 /* and this is a special signal frame. */
164 /* (fi->pc will be some low address in the kernel, */
165 /* to which the signal handler returns). */
166 fi
->signal_handler_caller
= 1;
169 /* Put here the code to store, into a struct frame_saved_regs,
170 the addresses of the saved registers of frame described by FRAME_INFO.
171 This includes special registers such as pc and fp saved in special
172 ways in the stack frame. sp is even more special:
173 the address we return for it IS the sp for the next frame. */
175 /* In this implementation for RS/6000, we do *not* save sp. I am
176 not sure if it will be needed. The following function takes care of gpr's
180 rs6000_frame_init_saved_regs (struct frame_info
*fi
)
182 frame_get_saved_regs (fi
, NULL
);
186 rs6000_frame_args_address (struct frame_info
*fi
)
188 if (fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
!= 0)
189 return fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
;
191 return frame_initial_stack_address (fi
);
194 /* Immediately after a function call, return the saved pc.
195 Can't go through the frames for this because on some machines
196 the new frame is not set up until the new function executes
197 some instructions. */
200 rs6000_saved_pc_after_call (struct frame_info
*fi
)
202 return read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
);
205 /* Calculate the destination of a branch/jump. Return -1 if not a branch. */
208 branch_dest (int opcode
, int instr
, CORE_ADDR pc
, CORE_ADDR safety
)
215 absolute
= (int) ((instr
>> 1) & 1);
220 immediate
= ((instr
& ~3) << 6) >> 6; /* br unconditional */
224 dest
= pc
+ immediate
;
228 immediate
= ((instr
& ~3) << 16) >> 16; /* br conditional */
232 dest
= pc
+ immediate
;
236 ext_op
= (instr
>> 1) & 0x3ff;
238 if (ext_op
== 16) /* br conditional register */
240 dest
= read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
) & ~3;
242 /* If we are about to return from a signal handler, dest is
243 something like 0x3c90. The current frame is a signal handler
244 caller frame, upon completion of the sigreturn system call
245 execution will return to the saved PC in the frame. */
246 if (dest
< TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE
)
248 struct frame_info
*fi
;
250 fi
= get_current_frame ();
252 dest
= read_memory_addr (fi
->frame
+ SIG_FRAME_PC_OFFSET
,
257 else if (ext_op
== 528) /* br cond to count reg */
259 dest
= read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_ctr_regnum
) & ~3;
261 /* If we are about to execute a system call, dest is something
262 like 0x22fc or 0x3b00. Upon completion the system call
263 will return to the address in the link register. */
264 if (dest
< TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE
)
265 dest
= read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
) & ~3;
274 return (dest
< TEXT_SEGMENT_BASE
) ? safety
: dest
;
278 /* Sequence of bytes for breakpoint instruction. */
280 #define BIG_BREAKPOINT { 0x7d, 0x82, 0x10, 0x08 }
281 #define LITTLE_BREAKPOINT { 0x08, 0x10, 0x82, 0x7d }
283 const static unsigned char *
284 rs6000_breakpoint_from_pc (CORE_ADDR
*bp_addr
, int *bp_size
)
286 static unsigned char big_breakpoint
[] = BIG_BREAKPOINT
;
287 static unsigned char little_breakpoint
[] = LITTLE_BREAKPOINT
;
289 if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER
== BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
)
290 return big_breakpoint
;
292 return little_breakpoint
;
296 /* AIX does not support PT_STEP. Simulate it. */
299 rs6000_software_single_step (enum target_signal signal
,
300 int insert_breakpoints_p
)
304 const char *breakp
= rs6000_breakpoint_from_pc (&dummy
, &breakp_sz
);
310 if (insert_breakpoints_p
)
315 insn
= read_memory_integer (loc
, 4);
317 breaks
[0] = loc
+ breakp_sz
;
319 breaks
[1] = branch_dest (opcode
, insn
, loc
, breaks
[0]);
321 /* Don't put two breakpoints on the same address. */
322 if (breaks
[1] == breaks
[0])
325 stepBreaks
[1].address
= 0;
327 for (ii
= 0; ii
< 2; ++ii
)
330 /* ignore invalid breakpoint. */
331 if (breaks
[ii
] == -1)
333 target_insert_breakpoint (breaks
[ii
], stepBreaks
[ii
].data
);
334 stepBreaks
[ii
].address
= breaks
[ii
];
341 /* remove step breakpoints. */
342 for (ii
= 0; ii
< 2; ++ii
)
343 if (stepBreaks
[ii
].address
!= 0)
344 target_remove_breakpoint (stepBreaks
[ii
].address
,
345 stepBreaks
[ii
].data
);
347 errno
= 0; /* FIXME, don't ignore errors! */
348 /* What errors? {read,write}_memory call error(). */
352 /* return pc value after skipping a function prologue and also return
353 information about a function frame.
355 in struct rs6000_framedata fdata:
356 - frameless is TRUE, if function does not have a frame.
357 - nosavedpc is TRUE, if function does not save %pc value in its frame.
358 - offset is the initial size of this stack frame --- the amount by
359 which we decrement the sp to allocate the frame.
360 - saved_gpr is the number of the first saved gpr.
361 - saved_fpr is the number of the first saved fpr.
362 - saved_vr is the number of the first saved vr.
363 - alloca_reg is the number of the register used for alloca() handling.
365 - gpr_offset is the offset of the first saved gpr from the previous frame.
366 - fpr_offset is the offset of the first saved fpr from the previous frame.
367 - vr_offset is the offset of the first saved vr from the previous frame.
368 - lr_offset is the offset of the saved lr
369 - cr_offset is the offset of the saved cr
370 - vrsave_offset is the offset of the saved vrsave register
373 #define SIGNED_SHORT(x) \
374 ((sizeof (short) == 2) \
375 ? ((int)(short)(x)) \
376 : ((int)((((x) & 0xffff) ^ 0x8000) - 0x8000)))
378 #define GET_SRC_REG(x) (((x) >> 21) & 0x1f)
380 /* Limit the number of skipped non-prologue instructions, as the examining
381 of the prologue is expensive. */
382 static int max_skip_non_prologue_insns
= 10;
384 /* Given PC representing the starting address of a function, and
385 LIM_PC which is the (sloppy) limit to which to scan when looking
386 for a prologue, attempt to further refine this limit by using
387 the line data in the symbol table. If successful, a better guess
388 on where the prologue ends is returned, otherwise the previous
389 value of lim_pc is returned. */
391 refine_prologue_limit (CORE_ADDR pc
, CORE_ADDR lim_pc
)
393 struct symtab_and_line prologue_sal
;
395 prologue_sal
= find_pc_line (pc
, 0);
396 if (prologue_sal
.line
!= 0)
399 CORE_ADDR addr
= prologue_sal
.end
;
401 /* Handle the case in which compiler's optimizer/scheduler
402 has moved instructions into the prologue. We scan ahead
403 in the function looking for address ranges whose corresponding
404 line number is less than or equal to the first one that we
405 found for the function. (It can be less than when the
406 scheduler puts a body instruction before the first prologue
408 for (i
= 2 * max_skip_non_prologue_insns
;
409 i
> 0 && (lim_pc
== 0 || addr
< lim_pc
);
412 struct symtab_and_line sal
;
414 sal
= find_pc_line (addr
, 0);
417 if (sal
.line
<= prologue_sal
.line
418 && sal
.symtab
== prologue_sal
.symtab
)
425 if (lim_pc
== 0 || prologue_sal
.end
< lim_pc
)
426 lim_pc
= prologue_sal
.end
;
433 skip_prologue (CORE_ADDR pc
, CORE_ADDR lim_pc
, struct rs6000_framedata
*fdata
)
435 CORE_ADDR orig_pc
= pc
;
436 CORE_ADDR last_prologue_pc
= pc
;
437 CORE_ADDR li_found_pc
= 0;
441 long vr_saved_offset
= 0;
448 int minimal_toc_loaded
= 0;
449 int prev_insn_was_prologue_insn
= 1;
450 int num_skip_non_prologue_insns
= 0;
452 /* Attempt to find the end of the prologue when no limit is specified.
453 Note that refine_prologue_limit() has been written so that it may
454 be used to "refine" the limits of non-zero PC values too, but this
455 is only safe if we 1) trust the line information provided by the
456 compiler and 2) iterate enough to actually find the end of the
459 It may become a good idea at some point (for both performance and
460 accuracy) to unconditionally call refine_prologue_limit(). But,
461 until we can make a clear determination that this is beneficial,
462 we'll play it safe and only use it to obtain a limit when none
463 has been specified. */
465 lim_pc
= refine_prologue_limit (pc
, lim_pc
);
467 memset (fdata
, 0, sizeof (struct rs6000_framedata
));
468 fdata
->saved_gpr
= -1;
469 fdata
->saved_fpr
= -1;
470 fdata
->saved_vr
= -1;
471 fdata
->alloca_reg
= -1;
472 fdata
->frameless
= 1;
473 fdata
->nosavedpc
= 1;
477 /* Sometimes it isn't clear if an instruction is a prologue
478 instruction or not. When we encounter one of these ambiguous
479 cases, we'll set prev_insn_was_prologue_insn to 0 (false).
480 Otherwise, we'll assume that it really is a prologue instruction. */
481 if (prev_insn_was_prologue_insn
)
482 last_prologue_pc
= pc
;
484 /* Stop scanning if we've hit the limit. */
485 if (lim_pc
!= 0 && pc
>= lim_pc
)
488 prev_insn_was_prologue_insn
= 1;
490 /* Fetch the instruction and convert it to an integer. */
491 if (target_read_memory (pc
, buf
, 4))
493 op
= extract_signed_integer (buf
, 4);
495 if ((op
& 0xfc1fffff) == 0x7c0802a6)
497 lr_reg
= (op
& 0x03e00000) | 0x90010000;
501 else if ((op
& 0xfc1fffff) == 0x7c000026)
503 cr_reg
= (op
& 0x03e00000) | 0x90010000;
507 else if ((op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0xd8010000)
508 { /* stfd Rx,NUM(r1) */
509 reg
= GET_SRC_REG (op
);
510 if (fdata
->saved_fpr
== -1 || fdata
->saved_fpr
> reg
)
512 fdata
->saved_fpr
= reg
;
513 fdata
->fpr_offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
) + offset
;
518 else if (((op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0xbc010000) || /* stm Rx, NUM(r1) */
519 (((op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0x90010000 || /* st rx,NUM(r1) */
520 (op
& 0xfc1f0003) == 0xf8010000) && /* std rx,NUM(r1) */
521 (op
& 0x03e00000) >= 0x01a00000)) /* rx >= r13 */
524 reg
= GET_SRC_REG (op
);
525 if (fdata
->saved_gpr
== -1 || fdata
->saved_gpr
> reg
)
527 fdata
->saved_gpr
= reg
;
528 if ((op
& 0xfc1f0003) == 0xf8010000)
530 fdata
->gpr_offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
) + offset
;
535 else if ((op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x60000000)
538 /* Allow nops in the prologue, but do not consider them to
539 be part of the prologue unless followed by other prologue
541 prev_insn_was_prologue_insn
= 0;
545 else if ((op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x3c000000)
546 { /* addis 0,0,NUM, used
548 fdata
->offset
= (op
& 0x0000ffff) << 16;
549 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
553 else if ((op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x60000000)
554 { /* ori 0,0,NUM, 2nd ha
555 lf of >= 32k frames */
556 fdata
->offset
|= (op
& 0x0000ffff);
557 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
561 else if (lr_reg
!= -1 && (op
& 0xffff0000) == lr_reg
)
564 fdata
->lr_offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
) + offset
;
565 fdata
->nosavedpc
= 0;
570 else if (cr_reg
!= -1 && (op
& 0xffff0000) == cr_reg
)
573 fdata
->cr_offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
) + offset
;
578 else if (op
== 0x48000005)
584 else if (op
== 0x48000004)
589 else if ((op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x3fc00000 || /* addis 30,0,foo@ha, used
590 in V.4 -mminimal-toc */
591 (op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x3bde0000)
592 { /* addi 30,30,foo@l */
596 else if ((op
& 0xfc000001) == 0x48000001)
600 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
601 /* Don't skip over the subroutine call if it is not within
602 the first three instructions of the prologue. */
603 if ((pc
- orig_pc
) > 8)
606 op
= read_memory_integer (pc
+ 4, 4);
608 /* At this point, make sure this is not a trampoline
609 function (a function that simply calls another functions,
610 and nothing else). If the next is not a nop, this branch
611 was part of the function prologue. */
613 if (op
== 0x4def7b82 || op
== 0) /* crorc 15, 15, 15 */
614 break; /* don't skip over
618 /* update stack pointer */
620 else if ((op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x94210000 || /* stu r1,NUM(r1) */
621 (op
& 0xffff0003) == 0xf8210001) /* stdu r1,NUM(r1) */
623 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
624 if ((op
& 0xffff0003) == 0xf8210001)
626 fdata
->offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
);
627 offset
= fdata
->offset
;
631 else if (op
== 0x7c21016e)
633 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
634 offset
= fdata
->offset
;
637 /* Load up minimal toc pointer */
639 else if ((op
>> 22) == 0x20f
640 && !minimal_toc_loaded
)
641 { /* l r31,... or l r30,... */
642 minimal_toc_loaded
= 1;
645 /* move parameters from argument registers to local variable
648 else if ((op
& 0xfc0007fe) == 0x7c000378 && /* mr(.) Rx,Ry */
649 (((op
>> 21) & 31) >= 3) && /* R3 >= Ry >= R10 */
650 (((op
>> 21) & 31) <= 10) &&
651 (((op
>> 16) & 31) >= fdata
->saved_gpr
)) /* Rx: local var reg */
655 /* store parameters in stack */
657 else if ((op
& 0xfc1f0003) == 0xf8010000 || /* std rx,NUM(r1) */
658 (op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0xd8010000 || /* stfd Rx,NUM(r1) */
659 (op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0xfc010000) /* frsp, fp?,NUM(r1) */
663 /* store parameters in stack via frame pointer */
666 ((op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0x901f0000 || /* st rx,NUM(r1) */
667 (op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0xd81f0000 || /* stfd Rx,NUM(r1) */
668 (op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0xfc1f0000))
669 { /* frsp, fp?,NUM(r1) */
672 /* Set up frame pointer */
674 else if (op
== 0x603f0000 /* oril r31, r1, 0x0 */
677 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
679 fdata
->alloca_reg
= 31;
682 /* Another way to set up the frame pointer. */
684 else if ((op
& 0xfc1fffff) == 0x38010000)
685 { /* addi rX, r1, 0x0 */
686 fdata
->frameless
= 0;
688 fdata
->alloca_reg
= (op
& ~0x38010000) >> 21;
691 /* AltiVec related instructions. */
692 /* Store the vrsave register (spr 256) in another register for
693 later manipulation, or load a register into the vrsave
694 register. 2 instructions are used: mfvrsave and
695 mtvrsave. They are shorthand notation for mfspr Rn, SPR256
696 and mtspr SPR256, Rn. */
697 /* mfspr Rn SPR256 == 011111 nnnnn 0000001000 01010100110
698 mtspr SPR256 Rn == 011111 nnnnn 0000001000 01110100110 */
699 else if ((op
& 0xfc1fffff) == 0x7c0042a6) /* mfvrsave Rn */
701 vrsave_reg
= GET_SRC_REG (op
);
704 else if ((op
& 0xfc1fffff) == 0x7c0043a6) /* mtvrsave Rn */
708 /* Store the register where vrsave was saved to onto the stack:
709 rS is the register where vrsave was stored in a previous
711 /* 100100 sssss 00001 dddddddd dddddddd */
712 else if ((op
& 0xfc1f0000) == 0x90010000) /* stw rS, d(r1) */
714 if (vrsave_reg
== GET_SRC_REG (op
))
716 fdata
->vrsave_offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
) + offset
;
721 /* Compute the new value of vrsave, by modifying the register
722 where vrsave was saved to. */
723 else if (((op
& 0xfc000000) == 0x64000000) /* oris Ra, Rs, UIMM */
724 || ((op
& 0xfc000000) == 0x60000000))/* ori Ra, Rs, UIMM */
728 /* li r0, SIMM (short for addi r0, 0, SIMM). This is the first
729 in a pair of insns to save the vector registers on the
731 /* 001110 00000 00000 iiii iiii iiii iiii */
732 else if ((op
& 0xffff0000) == 0x38000000) /* li r0, SIMM */
735 vr_saved_offset
= SIGNED_SHORT (op
);
737 /* Store vector register S at (r31+r0) aligned to 16 bytes. */
738 /* 011111 sssss 11111 00000 00111001110 */
739 else if ((op
& 0xfc1fffff) == 0x7c1f01ce) /* stvx Vs, R31, R0 */
741 if (pc
== (li_found_pc
+ 4))
743 vr_reg
= GET_SRC_REG (op
);
744 /* If this is the first vector reg to be saved, or if
745 it has a lower number than others previously seen,
746 reupdate the frame info. */
747 if (fdata
->saved_vr
== -1 || fdata
->saved_vr
> vr_reg
)
749 fdata
->saved_vr
= vr_reg
;
750 fdata
->vr_offset
= vr_saved_offset
+ offset
;
752 vr_saved_offset
= -1;
757 /* End AltiVec related instructions. */
760 /* Not a recognized prologue instruction.
761 Handle optimizer code motions into the prologue by continuing
762 the search if we have no valid frame yet or if the return
763 address is not yet saved in the frame. */
764 if (fdata
->frameless
== 0
765 && (lr_reg
== -1 || fdata
->nosavedpc
== 0))
768 if (op
== 0x4e800020 /* blr */
769 || op
== 0x4e800420) /* bctr */
770 /* Do not scan past epilogue in frameless functions or
773 if ((op
& 0xf4000000) == 0x40000000) /* bxx */
774 /* Never skip branches. */
777 if (num_skip_non_prologue_insns
++ > max_skip_non_prologue_insns
)
778 /* Do not scan too many insns, scanning insns is expensive with
782 /* Continue scanning. */
783 prev_insn_was_prologue_insn
= 0;
789 /* I have problems with skipping over __main() that I need to address
790 * sometime. Previously, I used to use misc_function_vector which
791 * didn't work as well as I wanted to be. -MGO */
793 /* If the first thing after skipping a prolog is a branch to a function,
794 this might be a call to an initializer in main(), introduced by gcc2.
795 We'd like to skip over it as well. Fortunately, xlc does some extra
796 work before calling a function right after a prologue, thus we can
797 single out such gcc2 behaviour. */
800 if ((op
& 0xfc000001) == 0x48000001)
801 { /* bl foo, an initializer function? */
802 op
= read_memory_integer (pc
+ 4, 4);
804 if (op
== 0x4def7b82)
805 { /* cror 0xf, 0xf, 0xf (nop) */
807 /* check and see if we are in main. If so, skip over this initializer
810 tmp
= find_pc_misc_function (pc
);
811 if (tmp
>= 0 && STREQ (misc_function_vector
[tmp
].name
, main_name ()))
817 fdata
->offset
= -fdata
->offset
;
818 return last_prologue_pc
;
822 /*************************************************************************
823 Support for creating pushing a dummy frame into the stack, and popping
825 *************************************************************************/
828 /* Pop the innermost frame, go back to the caller. */
831 rs6000_pop_frame (void)
833 CORE_ADDR pc
, lr
, sp
, prev_sp
, addr
; /* %pc, %lr, %sp */
834 struct rs6000_framedata fdata
;
835 struct frame_info
*frame
= get_current_frame ();
839 sp
= FRAME_FP (frame
);
841 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (frame
->pc
, frame
->frame
, frame
->frame
))
843 generic_pop_dummy_frame ();
844 flush_cached_frames ();
848 /* Make sure that all registers are valid. */
849 read_register_bytes (0, NULL
, REGISTER_BYTES
);
851 /* figure out previous %pc value. If the function is frameless, it is
852 still in the link register, otherwise walk the frames and retrieve the
853 saved %pc value in the previous frame. */
855 addr
= get_pc_function_start (frame
->pc
);
856 (void) skip_prologue (addr
, frame
->pc
, &fdata
);
858 wordsize
= TDEP
->wordsize
;
862 prev_sp
= read_memory_addr (sp
, wordsize
);
863 if (fdata
.lr_offset
== 0)
864 lr
= read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
);
866 lr
= read_memory_addr (prev_sp
+ fdata
.lr_offset
, wordsize
);
868 /* reset %pc value. */
869 write_register (PC_REGNUM
, lr
);
871 /* reset register values if any was saved earlier. */
873 if (fdata
.saved_gpr
!= -1)
875 addr
= prev_sp
+ fdata
.gpr_offset
;
876 for (ii
= fdata
.saved_gpr
; ii
<= 31; ++ii
)
878 read_memory (addr
, ®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (ii
)], wordsize
);
883 if (fdata
.saved_fpr
!= -1)
885 addr
= prev_sp
+ fdata
.fpr_offset
;
886 for (ii
= fdata
.saved_fpr
; ii
<= 31; ++ii
)
888 read_memory (addr
, ®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (ii
+ FP0_REGNUM
)], 8);
893 write_register (SP_REGNUM
, prev_sp
);
894 target_store_registers (-1);
895 flush_cached_frames ();
898 /* Fixup the call sequence of a dummy function, with the real function
899 address. Its arguments will be passed by gdb. */
902 rs6000_fix_call_dummy (char *dummyname
, CORE_ADDR pc
, CORE_ADDR fun
,
903 int nargs
, struct value
**args
, struct type
*type
,
907 CORE_ADDR target_addr
;
909 if (rs6000_find_toc_address_hook
!= NULL
)
911 CORE_ADDR tocvalue
= (*rs6000_find_toc_address_hook
) (fun
);
912 write_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_toc_regnum
,
917 /* Pass the arguments in either registers, or in the stack. In RS/6000,
918 the first eight words of the argument list (that might be less than
919 eight parameters if some parameters occupy more than one word) are
920 passed in r3..r10 registers. float and double parameters are
921 passed in fpr's, in addition to that. Rest of the parameters if any
922 are passed in user stack. There might be cases in which half of the
923 parameter is copied into registers, the other half is pushed into
926 Stack must be aligned on 64-bit boundaries when synthesizing
929 If the function is returning a structure, then the return address is passed
930 in r3, then the first 7 words of the parameters can be passed in registers,
934 rs6000_push_arguments (int nargs
, struct value
**args
, CORE_ADDR sp
,
935 int struct_return
, CORE_ADDR struct_addr
)
939 int argno
; /* current argument number */
940 int argbytes
; /* current argument byte */
942 int f_argno
= 0; /* current floating point argno */
943 int wordsize
= TDEP
->wordsize
;
945 struct value
*arg
= 0;
950 /* The first eight words of ther arguments are passed in registers. Copy
953 If the function is returning a `struct', then the first word (which
954 will be passed in r3) is used for struct return address. In that
955 case we should advance one word and start from r4 register to copy
958 ii
= struct_return
? 1 : 0;
961 effectively indirect call... gcc does...
963 return_val example( float, int);
966 float in fp0, int in r3
967 offset of stack on overflow 8/16
968 for varargs, must go by type.
970 float in r3&r4, int in r5
971 offset of stack on overflow different
973 return in r3 or f0. If no float, must study how gcc emulates floats;
974 pay attention to arg promotion.
975 User may have to cast\args to handle promotion correctly
976 since gdb won't know if prototype supplied or not.
979 for (argno
= 0, argbytes
= 0; argno
< nargs
&& ii
< 8; ++ii
)
981 int reg_size
= REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (ii
+ 3);
984 type
= check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (arg
));
985 len
= TYPE_LENGTH (type
);
987 if (TYPE_CODE (type
) == TYPE_CODE_FLT
)
990 /* floating point arguments are passed in fpr's, as well as gpr's.
991 There are 13 fpr's reserved for passing parameters. At this point
992 there is no way we would run out of them. */
996 "Fatal Error: a floating point parameter #%d with a size > 8 is found!\n", argno
);
998 memcpy (®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM
+ 1 + f_argno
)],
999 VALUE_CONTENTS (arg
),
1007 /* Argument takes more than one register. */
1008 while (argbytes
< len
)
1010 memset (®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (ii
+ 3)], 0, reg_size
);
1011 memcpy (®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (ii
+ 3)],
1012 ((char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (arg
)) + argbytes
,
1013 (len
- argbytes
) > reg_size
1014 ? reg_size
: len
- argbytes
);
1015 ++ii
, argbytes
+= reg_size
;
1018 goto ran_out_of_registers_for_arguments
;
1024 { /* Argument can fit in one register. No problem. */
1025 int adj
= TARGET_BYTE_ORDER
== BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
? reg_size
- len
: 0;
1026 memset (®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (ii
+ 3)], 0, reg_size
);
1027 memcpy ((char *)®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (ii
+ 3)] + adj
,
1028 VALUE_CONTENTS (arg
), len
);
1033 ran_out_of_registers_for_arguments
:
1035 saved_sp
= read_sp ();
1037 /* location for 8 parameters are always reserved. */
1040 /* another six words for back chain, TOC register, link register, etc. */
1043 /* stack pointer must be quadword aligned */
1046 /* if there are more arguments, allocate space for them in
1047 the stack, then push them starting from the ninth one. */
1049 if ((argno
< nargs
) || argbytes
)
1055 space
+= ((len
- argbytes
+ 3) & -4);
1061 for (; jj
< nargs
; ++jj
)
1063 struct value
*val
= args
[jj
];
1064 space
+= ((TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (val
))) + 3) & -4;
1067 /* add location required for the rest of the parameters */
1068 space
= (space
+ 15) & -16;
1071 /* This is another instance we need to be concerned about securing our
1072 stack space. If we write anything underneath %sp (r1), we might conflict
1073 with the kernel who thinks he is free to use this area. So, update %sp
1074 first before doing anything else. */
1076 write_register (SP_REGNUM
, sp
);
1078 /* if the last argument copied into the registers didn't fit there
1079 completely, push the rest of it into stack. */
1083 write_memory (sp
+ 24 + (ii
* 4),
1084 ((char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (arg
)) + argbytes
,
1087 ii
+= ((len
- argbytes
+ 3) & -4) / 4;
1090 /* push the rest of the arguments into stack. */
1091 for (; argno
< nargs
; ++argno
)
1095 type
= check_typedef (VALUE_TYPE (arg
));
1096 len
= TYPE_LENGTH (type
);
1099 /* float types should be passed in fpr's, as well as in the stack. */
1100 if (TYPE_CODE (type
) == TYPE_CODE_FLT
&& f_argno
< 13)
1105 "Fatal Error: a floating point parameter #%d with a size > 8 is found!\n", argno
);
1107 memcpy (®isters
[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM
+ 1 + f_argno
)],
1108 VALUE_CONTENTS (arg
),
1113 write_memory (sp
+ 24 + (ii
* 4), (char *) VALUE_CONTENTS (arg
), len
);
1114 ii
+= ((len
+ 3) & -4) / 4;
1118 /* Secure stack areas first, before doing anything else. */
1119 write_register (SP_REGNUM
, sp
);
1121 /* set back chain properly */
1122 store_address (tmp_buffer
, 4, saved_sp
);
1123 write_memory (sp
, tmp_buffer
, 4);
1125 target_store_registers (-1);
1129 /* Function: ppc_push_return_address (pc, sp)
1130 Set up the return address for the inferior function call. */
1133 ppc_push_return_address (CORE_ADDR pc
, CORE_ADDR sp
)
1135 write_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
,
1136 CALL_DUMMY_ADDRESS ());
1140 /* Extract a function return value of type TYPE from raw register array
1141 REGBUF, and copy that return value into VALBUF in virtual format. */
1144 rs6000_extract_return_value (struct type
*valtype
, char *regbuf
, char *valbuf
)
1148 if (TYPE_CODE (valtype
) == TYPE_CODE_FLT
)
1153 /* floats and doubles are returned in fpr1. fpr's have a size of 8 bytes.
1154 We need to truncate the return value into float size (4 byte) if
1157 if (TYPE_LENGTH (valtype
) > 4) /* this is a double */
1159 ®buf
[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM
+ 1)],
1160 TYPE_LENGTH (valtype
));
1163 memcpy (&dd
, ®buf
[REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM
+ 1)], 8);
1165 memcpy (valbuf
, &ff
, sizeof (float));
1170 /* return value is copied starting from r3. */
1171 if (TARGET_BYTE_ORDER
== BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
1172 && TYPE_LENGTH (valtype
) < REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (3))
1173 offset
= REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (3) - TYPE_LENGTH (valtype
);
1176 regbuf
+ REGISTER_BYTE (3) + offset
,
1177 TYPE_LENGTH (valtype
));
1181 /* Keep structure return address in this variable.
1182 FIXME: This is a horrid kludge which should not be allowed to continue
1183 living. This only allows a single nested call to a structure-returning
1184 function. Come on, guys! -- gnu@cygnus.com, Aug 92 */
1186 static CORE_ADDR rs6000_struct_return_address
;
1188 /* Return whether handle_inferior_event() should proceed through code
1189 starting at PC in function NAME when stepping.
1191 The AIX -bbigtoc linker option generates functions @FIX0, @FIX1, etc. to
1192 handle memory references that are too distant to fit in instructions
1193 generated by the compiler. For example, if 'foo' in the following
1198 is greater than 32767, the linker might replace the lwz with a branch to
1199 somewhere in @FIX1 that does the load in 2 instructions and then branches
1200 back to where execution should continue.
1202 GDB should silently step over @FIX code, just like AIX dbx does.
1203 Unfortunately, the linker uses the "b" instruction for the branches,
1204 meaning that the link register doesn't get set. Therefore, GDB's usual
1205 step_over_function() mechanism won't work.
1207 Instead, use the IN_SOLIB_RETURN_TRAMPOLINE and SKIP_TRAMPOLINE_CODE hooks
1208 in handle_inferior_event() to skip past @FIX code. */
1211 rs6000_in_solib_return_trampoline (CORE_ADDR pc
, char *name
)
1213 return name
&& !strncmp (name
, "@FIX", 4);
1216 /* Skip code that the user doesn't want to see when stepping:
1218 1. Indirect function calls use a piece of trampoline code to do context
1219 switching, i.e. to set the new TOC table. Skip such code if we are on
1220 its first instruction (as when we have single-stepped to here).
1222 2. Skip shared library trampoline code (which is different from
1223 indirect function call trampolines).
1225 3. Skip bigtoc fixup code.
1227 Result is desired PC to step until, or NULL if we are not in
1228 code that should be skipped. */
1231 rs6000_skip_trampoline_code (CORE_ADDR pc
)
1233 register unsigned int ii
, op
;
1235 CORE_ADDR solib_target_pc
;
1236 struct minimal_symbol
*msymbol
;
1238 static unsigned trampoline_code
[] =
1240 0x800b0000, /* l r0,0x0(r11) */
1241 0x90410014, /* st r2,0x14(r1) */
1242 0x7c0903a6, /* mtctr r0 */
1243 0x804b0004, /* l r2,0x4(r11) */
1244 0x816b0008, /* l r11,0x8(r11) */
1245 0x4e800420, /* bctr */
1246 0x4e800020, /* br */
1250 /* Check for bigtoc fixup code. */
1251 msymbol
= lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc
);
1252 if (msymbol
&& rs6000_in_solib_return_trampoline (pc
, SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol
)))
1254 /* Double-check that the third instruction from PC is relative "b". */
1255 op
= read_memory_integer (pc
+ 8, 4);
1256 if ((op
& 0xfc000003) == 0x48000000)
1258 /* Extract bits 6-29 as a signed 24-bit relative word address and
1259 add it to the containing PC. */
1260 rel
= ((int)(op
<< 6) >> 6);
1261 return pc
+ 8 + rel
;
1265 /* If pc is in a shared library trampoline, return its target. */
1266 solib_target_pc
= find_solib_trampoline_target (pc
);
1267 if (solib_target_pc
)
1268 return solib_target_pc
;
1270 for (ii
= 0; trampoline_code
[ii
]; ++ii
)
1272 op
= read_memory_integer (pc
+ (ii
* 4), 4);
1273 if (op
!= trampoline_code
[ii
])
1276 ii
= read_register (11); /* r11 holds destination addr */
1277 pc
= read_memory_addr (ii
, TDEP
->wordsize
); /* (r11) value */
1281 /* Determines whether the function FI has a frame on the stack or not. */
1284 rs6000_frameless_function_invocation (struct frame_info
*fi
)
1286 CORE_ADDR func_start
;
1287 struct rs6000_framedata fdata
;
1289 /* Don't even think about framelessness except on the innermost frame
1290 or if the function was interrupted by a signal. */
1291 if (fi
->next
!= NULL
&& !fi
->next
->signal_handler_caller
)
1294 func_start
= get_pc_function_start (fi
->pc
);
1296 /* If we failed to find the start of the function, it is a mistake
1297 to inspect the instructions. */
1301 /* A frame with a zero PC is usually created by dereferencing a NULL
1302 function pointer, normally causing an immediate core dump of the
1303 inferior. Mark function as frameless, as the inferior has no chance
1304 of setting up a stack frame. */
1311 (void) skip_prologue (func_start
, fi
->pc
, &fdata
);
1312 return fdata
.frameless
;
1315 /* Return the PC saved in a frame */
1318 rs6000_frame_saved_pc (struct frame_info
*fi
)
1320 CORE_ADDR func_start
;
1321 struct rs6000_framedata fdata
;
1322 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
= TDEP
;
1323 int wordsize
= tdep
->wordsize
;
1325 if (fi
->signal_handler_caller
)
1326 return read_memory_addr (fi
->frame
+ SIG_FRAME_PC_OFFSET
, wordsize
);
1328 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (fi
->pc
, fi
->frame
, fi
->frame
))
1329 return generic_read_register_dummy (fi
->pc
, fi
->frame
, PC_REGNUM
);
1331 func_start
= get_pc_function_start (fi
->pc
);
1333 /* If we failed to find the start of the function, it is a mistake
1334 to inspect the instructions. */
1338 (void) skip_prologue (func_start
, fi
->pc
, &fdata
);
1340 if (fdata
.lr_offset
== 0 && fi
->next
!= NULL
)
1342 if (fi
->next
->signal_handler_caller
)
1343 return read_memory_addr (fi
->next
->frame
+ SIG_FRAME_LR_OFFSET
,
1346 return read_memory_addr (FRAME_CHAIN (fi
) + tdep
->lr_frame_offset
,
1350 if (fdata
.lr_offset
== 0)
1351 return read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
);
1353 return read_memory_addr (FRAME_CHAIN (fi
) + fdata
.lr_offset
, wordsize
);
1356 /* If saved registers of frame FI are not known yet, read and cache them.
1357 &FDATAP contains rs6000_framedata; TDATAP can be NULL,
1358 in which case the framedata are read. */
1361 frame_get_saved_regs (struct frame_info
*fi
, struct rs6000_framedata
*fdatap
)
1363 CORE_ADDR frame_addr
;
1364 struct rs6000_framedata work_fdata
;
1365 struct gdbarch_tdep
* tdep
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
);
1366 int wordsize
= tdep
->wordsize
;
1373 fdatap
= &work_fdata
;
1374 (void) skip_prologue (get_pc_function_start (fi
->pc
), fi
->pc
, fdatap
);
1377 frame_saved_regs_zalloc (fi
);
1379 /* If there were any saved registers, figure out parent's stack
1381 /* The following is true only if the frame doesn't have a call to
1384 if (fdatap
->saved_fpr
== 0
1385 && fdatap
->saved_gpr
== 0
1386 && fdatap
->saved_vr
== 0
1387 && fdatap
->lr_offset
== 0
1388 && fdatap
->cr_offset
== 0
1389 && fdatap
->vr_offset
== 0)
1392 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-04-14: The ->frame points to the inner-most
1393 address of the current frame. Things might be easier if the
1394 ->frame pointed to the outer-most address of the frame. In the
1395 mean time, the address of the prev frame is used as the base
1396 address of this frame. */
1397 frame_addr
= FRAME_CHAIN (fi
);
1399 /* if != -1, fdatap->saved_fpr is the smallest number of saved_fpr.
1400 All fpr's from saved_fpr to fp31 are saved. */
1402 if (fdatap
->saved_fpr
>= 0)
1405 CORE_ADDR fpr_addr
= frame_addr
+ fdatap
->fpr_offset
;
1406 for (i
= fdatap
->saved_fpr
; i
< 32; i
++)
1408 fi
->saved_regs
[FP0_REGNUM
+ i
] = fpr_addr
;
1413 /* if != -1, fdatap->saved_gpr is the smallest number of saved_gpr.
1414 All gpr's from saved_gpr to gpr31 are saved. */
1416 if (fdatap
->saved_gpr
>= 0)
1419 CORE_ADDR gpr_addr
= frame_addr
+ fdatap
->gpr_offset
;
1420 for (i
= fdatap
->saved_gpr
; i
< 32; i
++)
1422 fi
->saved_regs
[i
] = gpr_addr
;
1423 gpr_addr
+= wordsize
;
1427 /* if != -1, fdatap->saved_vr is the smallest number of saved_vr.
1428 All vr's from saved_vr to vr31 are saved. */
1429 if (tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
!= -1 && tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
!= -1)
1431 if (fdatap
->saved_vr
>= 0)
1434 CORE_ADDR vr_addr
= frame_addr
+ fdatap
->vr_offset
;
1435 for (i
= fdatap
->saved_vr
; i
< 32; i
++)
1437 fi
->saved_regs
[tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
+ i
] = vr_addr
;
1438 vr_addr
+= REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
);
1443 /* If != 0, fdatap->cr_offset is the offset from the frame that holds
1445 if (fdatap
->cr_offset
!= 0)
1446 fi
->saved_regs
[tdep
->ppc_cr_regnum
] = frame_addr
+ fdatap
->cr_offset
;
1448 /* If != 0, fdatap->lr_offset is the offset from the frame that holds
1450 if (fdatap
->lr_offset
!= 0)
1451 fi
->saved_regs
[tdep
->ppc_lr_regnum
] = frame_addr
+ fdatap
->lr_offset
;
1453 /* If != 0, fdatap->vrsave_offset is the offset from the frame that holds
1455 if (fdatap
->vrsave_offset
!= 0)
1456 fi
->saved_regs
[tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
] = frame_addr
+ fdatap
->vrsave_offset
;
1459 /* Return the address of a frame. This is the inital %sp value when the frame
1460 was first allocated. For functions calling alloca(), it might be saved in
1461 an alloca register. */
1464 frame_initial_stack_address (struct frame_info
*fi
)
1467 struct rs6000_framedata fdata
;
1468 struct frame_info
*callee_fi
;
1470 /* if the initial stack pointer (frame address) of this frame is known,
1473 if (fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
)
1474 return fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
;
1476 /* find out if this function is using an alloca register.. */
1478 (void) skip_prologue (get_pc_function_start (fi
->pc
), fi
->pc
, &fdata
);
1480 /* if saved registers of this frame are not known yet, read and cache them. */
1482 if (!fi
->saved_regs
)
1483 frame_get_saved_regs (fi
, &fdata
);
1485 /* If no alloca register used, then fi->frame is the value of the %sp for
1486 this frame, and it is good enough. */
1488 if (fdata
.alloca_reg
< 0)
1490 fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
= fi
->frame
;
1491 return fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
;
1494 /* There is an alloca register, use its value, in the current frame,
1495 as the initial stack pointer. */
1497 char *tmpbuf
= alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE
);
1498 if (frame_register_read (fi
, fdata
.alloca_reg
, tmpbuf
))
1500 fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
1501 = extract_unsigned_integer (tmpbuf
,
1502 REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (fdata
.alloca_reg
));
1505 /* NOTE: cagney/2002-04-17: At present the only time
1506 frame_register_read will fail is when the register isn't
1507 available. If that does happen, use the frame. */
1508 fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
= fi
->frame
;
1510 return fi
->extra_info
->initial_sp
;
1513 /* Describe the pointer in each stack frame to the previous stack frame
1516 /* FRAME_CHAIN takes a frame's nominal address
1517 and produces the frame's chain-pointer. */
1519 /* In the case of the RS/6000, the frame's nominal address
1520 is the address of a 4-byte word containing the calling frame's address. */
1523 rs6000_frame_chain (struct frame_info
*thisframe
)
1525 CORE_ADDR fp
, fpp
, lr
;
1526 int wordsize
= TDEP
->wordsize
;
1528 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (thisframe
->pc
, thisframe
->frame
, thisframe
->frame
))
1529 return thisframe
->frame
; /* dummy frame same as caller's frame */
1531 if (inside_entry_file (thisframe
->pc
) ||
1532 thisframe
->pc
== entry_point_address ())
1535 if (thisframe
->signal_handler_caller
)
1536 fp
= read_memory_addr (thisframe
->frame
+ SIG_FRAME_FP_OFFSET
,
1538 else if (thisframe
->next
!= NULL
1539 && thisframe
->next
->signal_handler_caller
1540 && FRAMELESS_FUNCTION_INVOCATION (thisframe
))
1541 /* A frameless function interrupted by a signal did not change the
1543 fp
= FRAME_FP (thisframe
);
1545 fp
= read_memory_addr ((thisframe
)->frame
, wordsize
);
1547 lr
= read_register (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
);
1548 if (lr
== entry_point_address ())
1549 if (fp
!= 0 && (fpp
= read_memory_addr (fp
, wordsize
)) != 0)
1550 if (PC_IN_CALL_DUMMY (lr
, fpp
, fpp
))
1556 /* Return the size of register REG when words are WORDSIZE bytes long. If REG
1557 isn't available with that word size, return 0. */
1560 regsize (const struct reg
*reg
, int wordsize
)
1562 return wordsize
== 8 ? reg
->sz64
: reg
->sz32
;
1565 /* Return the name of register number N, or null if no such register exists
1566 in the current architecture. */
1569 rs6000_register_name (int n
)
1571 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
= TDEP
;
1572 const struct reg
*reg
= tdep
->regs
+ n
;
1574 if (!regsize (reg
, tdep
->wordsize
))
1579 /* Index within `registers' of the first byte of the space for
1583 rs6000_register_byte (int n
)
1585 return TDEP
->regoff
[n
];
1588 /* Return the number of bytes of storage in the actual machine representation
1589 for register N if that register is available, else return 0. */
1592 rs6000_register_raw_size (int n
)
1594 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
= TDEP
;
1595 const struct reg
*reg
= tdep
->regs
+ n
;
1596 return regsize (reg
, tdep
->wordsize
);
1599 /* Return the GDB type object for the "standard" data type
1600 of data in register N. */
1602 static struct type
*
1603 rs6000_register_virtual_type (int n
)
1605 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
= TDEP
;
1606 const struct reg
*reg
= tdep
->regs
+ n
;
1609 return builtin_type_double
;
1612 int size
= regsize (reg
, tdep
->wordsize
);
1616 return builtin_type_int64
;
1619 return builtin_type_vec128
;
1622 return builtin_type_int32
;
1628 /* For the PowerPC, it appears that the debug info marks float parameters as
1629 floats regardless of whether the function is prototyped, but the actual
1630 values are always passed in as doubles. Tell gdb to always assume that
1631 floats are passed as doubles and then converted in the callee. */
1634 rs6000_coerce_float_to_double (struct type
*formal
, struct type
*actual
)
1639 /* Return whether register N requires conversion when moving from raw format
1642 The register format for RS/6000 floating point registers is always
1643 double, we need a conversion if the memory format is float. */
1646 rs6000_register_convertible (int n
)
1648 const struct reg
*reg
= TDEP
->regs
+ n
;
1652 /* Convert data from raw format for register N in buffer FROM
1653 to virtual format with type TYPE in buffer TO. */
1656 rs6000_register_convert_to_virtual (int n
, struct type
*type
,
1657 char *from
, char *to
)
1659 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type
) != REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (n
))
1661 double val
= extract_floating (from
, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (n
));
1662 store_floating (to
, TYPE_LENGTH (type
), val
);
1665 memcpy (to
, from
, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (n
));
1668 /* Convert data from virtual format with type TYPE in buffer FROM
1669 to raw format for register N in buffer TO. */
1672 rs6000_register_convert_to_raw (struct type
*type
, int n
,
1673 char *from
, char *to
)
1675 if (TYPE_LENGTH (type
) != REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (n
))
1677 double val
= extract_floating (from
, TYPE_LENGTH (type
));
1678 store_floating (to
, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (n
), val
);
1681 memcpy (to
, from
, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (n
));
1685 altivec_register_p (int regno
)
1687 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
);
1688 if (tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
< 0 || tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
< 0)
1691 return (regno
>= tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
&& regno
<= tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
);
1695 rs6000_do_altivec_registers (int regnum
)
1698 char *raw_buffer
= (char*) alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE
);
1699 char *virtual_buffer
= (char*) alloca (MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE
);
1700 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
);
1702 for (i
= tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
; i
<= tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
; i
++)
1704 /* If we want just one reg, check that this is the one we want. */
1705 if (regnum
!= -1 && i
!= regnum
)
1708 /* If the register name is empty, it is undefined for this
1709 processor, so don't display anything. */
1710 if (REGISTER_NAME (i
) == NULL
|| *(REGISTER_NAME (i
)) == '\0')
1713 fputs_filtered (REGISTER_NAME (i
), gdb_stdout
);
1714 print_spaces_filtered (15 - strlen (REGISTER_NAME (i
)), gdb_stdout
);
1716 /* Get the data in raw format. */
1717 if (!frame_register_read (selected_frame
, i
, raw_buffer
))
1719 printf_filtered ("*value not available*\n");
1723 /* Convert raw data to virtual format if necessary. */
1724 if (REGISTER_CONVERTIBLE (i
))
1725 REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL (i
, REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
),
1726 raw_buffer
, virtual_buffer
);
1728 memcpy (virtual_buffer
, raw_buffer
, REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (i
));
1730 /* Print as integer in hex only. */
1731 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
), virtual_buffer
, 0, 0,
1732 gdb_stdout
, 'x', 1, 0, Val_pretty_default
);
1733 printf_filtered ("\n");
1738 rs6000_altivec_registers_info (char *addr_exp
, int from_tty
)
1740 int regnum
, numregs
;
1743 if (!target_has_registers
)
1744 error ("The program has no registers now.");
1745 if (selected_frame
== NULL
)
1746 error ("No selected frame.");
1750 rs6000_do_altivec_registers (-1);
1754 numregs
= NUM_REGS
+ NUM_PSEUDO_REGS
;
1757 if (addr_exp
[0] == '$')
1760 while (*end
!= '\0' && *end
!= ' ' && *end
!= '\t')
1763 regnum
= target_map_name_to_register (addr_exp
, end
- addr_exp
);
1767 if (*addr_exp
>= '0' && *addr_exp
<= '9')
1768 regnum
= atoi (addr_exp
); /* Take a number */
1769 if (regnum
>= numregs
) /* Bad name, or bad number */
1770 error ("%.*s: invalid register", end
- addr_exp
, addr_exp
);
1773 rs6000_do_altivec_registers (regnum
);
1776 while (*addr_exp
== ' ' || *addr_exp
== '\t')
1779 while (*addr_exp
!= '\0');
1783 rs6000_do_registers_info (int regnum
, int fpregs
)
1786 int numregs
= NUM_REGS
+ NUM_PSEUDO_REGS
;
1787 char *raw_buffer
= (char*) alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE
);
1788 char *virtual_buffer
= (char*) alloca (MAX_REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE
);
1790 for (i
= 0; i
< numregs
; i
++)
1792 /* Decide between printing all regs, nonfloat regs, or specific reg. */
1795 if ((TYPE_CODE (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
)) == TYPE_CODE_FLT
&& !fpregs
)
1796 || (altivec_register_p (i
) && !fpregs
))
1805 /* If the register name is empty, it is undefined for this
1806 processor, so don't display anything. */
1807 if (REGISTER_NAME (i
) == NULL
|| *(REGISTER_NAME (i
)) == '\0')
1810 fputs_filtered (REGISTER_NAME (i
), gdb_stdout
);
1811 print_spaces_filtered (15 - strlen (REGISTER_NAME (i
)), gdb_stdout
);
1813 /* Get the data in raw format. */
1814 if (!frame_register_read (selected_frame
, i
, raw_buffer
))
1816 printf_filtered ("*value not available*\n");
1820 /* Convert raw data to virtual format if necessary. */
1821 if (REGISTER_CONVERTIBLE (i
))
1822 REGISTER_CONVERT_TO_VIRTUAL (i
, REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
),
1823 raw_buffer
, virtual_buffer
);
1825 memcpy (virtual_buffer
, raw_buffer
, REGISTER_VIRTUAL_SIZE (i
));
1827 /* If virtual format is floating, print it that way, and in raw hex. */
1828 if (TYPE_CODE (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
)) == TYPE_CODE_FLT
)
1832 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
), virtual_buffer
, 0, 0,
1833 gdb_stdout
, 0, 1, 0, Val_pretty_default
);
1835 printf_filtered ("\t(raw 0x");
1836 for (j
= 0; j
< REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i
); j
++)
1838 register int idx
= TARGET_BYTE_ORDER
== BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
? j
1839 : REGISTER_RAW_SIZE (i
) - 1 - j
;
1840 printf_filtered ("%02x", (unsigned char) raw_buffer
[idx
]);
1842 printf_filtered (")");
1846 /* Print as integer in hex and in decimal. */
1847 if (!altivec_register_p (i
))
1849 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
), virtual_buffer
, 0, 0,
1850 gdb_stdout
, 'x', 1, 0, Val_pretty_default
);
1851 printf_filtered ("\t");
1852 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
), virtual_buffer
, 0, 0,
1853 gdb_stdout
, 0, 1, 0, Val_pretty_default
);
1856 /* Print as integer in hex only. */
1857 val_print (REGISTER_VIRTUAL_TYPE (i
), virtual_buffer
, 0, 0,
1858 gdb_stdout
, 'x', 1, 0, Val_pretty_default
);
1860 printf_filtered ("\n");
1864 /* Convert a dbx stab register number (from `r' declaration) to a gdb
1867 rs6000_stab_reg_to_regnum (int num
)
1873 regnum
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_mq_regnum
;
1876 regnum
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_lr_regnum
;
1879 regnum
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_ctr_regnum
;
1882 regnum
= gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_xer_regnum
;
1891 /* Store the address of the place in which to copy the structure the
1892 subroutine will return. This is called from call_function.
1894 In RS/6000, struct return addresses are passed as an extra parameter in r3.
1895 In function return, callee is not responsible of returning this address
1896 back. Since gdb needs to find it, we will store in a designated variable
1897 `rs6000_struct_return_address'. */
1900 rs6000_store_struct_return (CORE_ADDR addr
, CORE_ADDR sp
)
1902 write_register (3, addr
);
1903 rs6000_struct_return_address
= addr
;
1906 /* Write into appropriate registers a function return value
1907 of type TYPE, given in virtual format. */
1910 rs6000_store_return_value (struct type
*type
, char *valbuf
)
1912 if (TYPE_CODE (type
) == TYPE_CODE_FLT
)
1914 /* Floating point values are returned starting from FPR1 and up.
1915 Say a double_double_double type could be returned in
1916 FPR1/FPR2/FPR3 triple. */
1918 write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (FP0_REGNUM
+ 1), valbuf
,
1919 TYPE_LENGTH (type
));
1921 /* Everything else is returned in GPR3 and up. */
1922 write_register_bytes (REGISTER_BYTE (gdbarch_tdep (current_gdbarch
)->ppc_gp0_regnum
+ 3),
1923 valbuf
, TYPE_LENGTH (type
));
1926 /* Extract from an array REGBUF containing the (raw) register state
1927 the address in which a function should return its structure value,
1928 as a CORE_ADDR (or an expression that can be used as one). */
1931 rs6000_extract_struct_value_address (char *regbuf
)
1933 return rs6000_struct_return_address
;
1936 /* Return whether PC is in a dummy function call.
1938 FIXME: This just checks for the end of the stack, which is broken
1939 for things like stepping through gcc nested function stubs. */
1942 rs6000_pc_in_call_dummy (CORE_ADDR pc
, CORE_ADDR sp
, CORE_ADDR fp
)
1944 return sp
< pc
&& pc
< fp
;
1947 /* Hook called when a new child process is started. */
1950 rs6000_create_inferior (int pid
)
1952 if (rs6000_set_host_arch_hook
)
1953 rs6000_set_host_arch_hook (pid
);
1956 /* Support for CONVERT_FROM_FUNC_PTR_ADDR(ADDR).
1958 Usually a function pointer's representation is simply the address
1959 of the function. On the RS/6000 however, a function pointer is
1960 represented by a pointer to a TOC entry. This TOC entry contains
1961 three words, the first word is the address of the function, the
1962 second word is the TOC pointer (r2), and the third word is the
1963 static chain value. Throughout GDB it is currently assumed that a
1964 function pointer contains the address of the function, which is not
1965 easy to fix. In addition, the conversion of a function address to
1966 a function pointer would require allocation of a TOC entry in the
1967 inferior's memory space, with all its drawbacks. To be able to
1968 call C++ virtual methods in the inferior (which are called via
1969 function pointers), find_function_addr uses this function to get the
1970 function address from a function pointer. */
1972 /* Return real function address if ADDR (a function pointer) is in the data
1973 space and is therefore a special function pointer. */
1976 rs6000_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (CORE_ADDR addr
)
1978 struct obj_section
*s
;
1980 s
= find_pc_section (addr
);
1981 if (s
&& s
->the_bfd_section
->flags
& SEC_CODE
)
1984 /* ADDR is in the data space, so it's a special function pointer. */
1985 return read_memory_addr (addr
, TDEP
->wordsize
);
1989 /* Handling the various POWER/PowerPC variants. */
1992 /* The arrays here called registers_MUMBLE hold information about available
1995 For each family of PPC variants, I've tried to isolate out the
1996 common registers and put them up front, so that as long as you get
1997 the general family right, GDB will correctly identify the registers
1998 common to that family. The common register sets are:
2000 For the 60x family: hid0 hid1 iabr dabr pir
2002 For the 505 and 860 family: eie eid nri
2004 For the 403 and 403GC: icdbdr esr dear evpr cdbcr tsr tcr pit tbhi
2005 tblo srr2 srr3 dbsr dbcr iac1 iac2 dac1 dac2 dccr iccr pbl1
2008 Most of these register groups aren't anything formal. I arrived at
2009 them by looking at the registers that occurred in more than one
2012 /* Convenience macros for populating register arrays. */
2014 /* Within another macro, convert S to a string. */
2018 /* Return a struct reg defining register NAME that's 32 bits on 32-bit systems
2019 and 64 bits on 64-bit systems. */
2020 #define R(name) { STR(name), 4, 8, 0 }
2022 /* Return a struct reg defining register NAME that's 32 bits on all
2024 #define R4(name) { STR(name), 4, 4, 0 }
2026 /* Return a struct reg defining register NAME that's 64 bits on all
2028 #define R8(name) { STR(name), 8, 8, 0 }
2030 /* Return a struct reg defining register NAME that's 128 bits on all
2032 #define R16(name) { STR(name), 16, 16, 0 }
2034 /* Return a struct reg defining floating-point register NAME. */
2035 #define F(name) { STR(name), 8, 8, 1 }
2037 /* Return a struct reg defining register NAME that's 32 bits on 32-bit
2038 systems and that doesn't exist on 64-bit systems. */
2039 #define R32(name) { STR(name), 4, 0, 0 }
2041 /* Return a struct reg defining register NAME that's 64 bits on 64-bit
2042 systems and that doesn't exist on 32-bit systems. */
2043 #define R64(name) { STR(name), 0, 8, 0 }
2045 /* Return a struct reg placeholder for a register that doesn't exist. */
2046 #define R0 { 0, 0, 0, 0 }
2048 /* UISA registers common across all architectures, including POWER. */
2050 #define COMMON_UISA_REGS \
2051 /* 0 */ R(r0), R(r1), R(r2), R(r3), R(r4), R(r5), R(r6), R(r7), \
2052 /* 8 */ R(r8), R(r9), R(r10),R(r11),R(r12),R(r13),R(r14),R(r15), \
2053 /* 16 */ R(r16),R(r17),R(r18),R(r19),R(r20),R(r21),R(r22),R(r23), \
2054 /* 24 */ R(r24),R(r25),R(r26),R(r27),R(r28),R(r29),R(r30),R(r31), \
2055 /* 32 */ F(f0), F(f1), F(f2), F(f3), F(f4), F(f5), F(f6), F(f7), \
2056 /* 40 */ F(f8), F(f9), F(f10),F(f11),F(f12),F(f13),F(f14),F(f15), \
2057 /* 48 */ F(f16),F(f17),F(f18),F(f19),F(f20),F(f21),F(f22),F(f23), \
2058 /* 56 */ F(f24),F(f25),F(f26),F(f27),F(f28),F(f29),F(f30),F(f31), \
2059 /* 64 */ R(pc), R(ps)
2061 #define COMMON_UISA_NOFP_REGS \
2062 /* 0 */ R(r0), R(r1), R(r2), R(r3), R(r4), R(r5), R(r6), R(r7), \
2063 /* 8 */ R(r8), R(r9), R(r10),R(r11),R(r12),R(r13),R(r14),R(r15), \
2064 /* 16 */ R(r16),R(r17),R(r18),R(r19),R(r20),R(r21),R(r22),R(r23), \
2065 /* 24 */ R(r24),R(r25),R(r26),R(r27),R(r28),R(r29),R(r30),R(r31), \
2066 /* 32 */ R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, \
2067 /* 40 */ R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, \
2068 /* 48 */ R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, \
2069 /* 56 */ R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, R0, \
2070 /* 64 */ R(pc), R(ps)
2072 /* UISA-level SPRs for PowerPC. */
2073 #define PPC_UISA_SPRS \
2074 /* 66 */ R4(cr), R(lr), R(ctr), R4(xer), R4(fpscr)
2076 /* Segment registers, for PowerPC. */
2077 #define PPC_SEGMENT_REGS \
2078 /* 71 */ R32(sr0), R32(sr1), R32(sr2), R32(sr3), \
2079 /* 75 */ R32(sr4), R32(sr5), R32(sr6), R32(sr7), \
2080 /* 79 */ R32(sr8), R32(sr9), R32(sr10), R32(sr11), \
2081 /* 83 */ R32(sr12), R32(sr13), R32(sr14), R32(sr15)
2083 /* OEA SPRs for PowerPC. */
2084 #define PPC_OEA_SPRS \
2086 /* 88 */ R(ibat0u), R(ibat0l), R(ibat1u), R(ibat1l), \
2087 /* 92 */ R(ibat2u), R(ibat2l), R(ibat3u), R(ibat3l), \
2088 /* 96 */ R(dbat0u), R(dbat0l), R(dbat1u), R(dbat1l), \
2089 /* 100 */ R(dbat2u), R(dbat2l), R(dbat3u), R(dbat3l), \
2090 /* 104 */ R(sdr1), R64(asr), R(dar), R4(dsisr), \
2091 /* 108 */ R(sprg0), R(sprg1), R(sprg2), R(sprg3), \
2092 /* 112 */ R(srr0), R(srr1), R(tbl), R(tbu), \
2093 /* 116 */ R4(dec), R(dabr), R4(ear)
2095 /* AltiVec registers */
2096 #define PPC_ALTIVEC_REGS \
2097 /*119*/R16(vr0), R16(vr1), R16(vr2), R16(vr3), R16(vr4), R16(vr5), R16(vr6), R16(vr7), \
2098 /*127*/R16(vr8), R16(vr9), R16(vr10),R16(vr11),R16(vr12),R16(vr13),R16(vr14),R16(vr15), \
2099 /*135*/R16(vr16),R16(vr17),R16(vr18),R16(vr19),R16(vr20),R16(vr21),R16(vr22),R16(vr23), \
2100 /*143*/R16(vr24),R16(vr25),R16(vr26),R16(vr27),R16(vr28),R16(vr29),R16(vr30),R16(vr31), \
2101 /*151*/R4(vscr), R4(vrsave)
2103 /* IBM POWER (pre-PowerPC) architecture, user-level view. We only cover
2104 user-level SPR's. */
2105 static const struct reg registers_power
[] =
2108 /* 66 */ R4(cnd
), R(lr
), R(cnt
), R4(xer
), R4(mq
),
2112 /* PowerPC UISA - a PPC processor as viewed by user-level code. A UISA-only
2113 view of the PowerPC. */
2114 static const struct reg registers_powerpc
[] =
2121 /* PowerPC UISA - a PPC processor as viewed by user-level
2122 code, but without floating point registers. */
2123 static const struct reg registers_powerpc_nofp
[] =
2125 COMMON_UISA_NOFP_REGS
,
2129 /* IBM PowerPC 403. */
2130 static const struct reg registers_403
[] =
2136 /* 119 */ R(icdbdr
), R(esr
), R(dear
), R(evpr
),
2137 /* 123 */ R(cdbcr
), R(tsr
), R(tcr
), R(pit
),
2138 /* 127 */ R(tbhi
), R(tblo
), R(srr2
), R(srr3
),
2139 /* 131 */ R(dbsr
), R(dbcr
), R(iac1
), R(iac2
),
2140 /* 135 */ R(dac1
), R(dac2
), R(dccr
), R(iccr
),
2141 /* 139 */ R(pbl1
), R(pbu1
), R(pbl2
), R(pbu2
)
2144 /* IBM PowerPC 403GC. */
2145 static const struct reg registers_403GC
[] =
2151 /* 119 */ R(icdbdr
), R(esr
), R(dear
), R(evpr
),
2152 /* 123 */ R(cdbcr
), R(tsr
), R(tcr
), R(pit
),
2153 /* 127 */ R(tbhi
), R(tblo
), R(srr2
), R(srr3
),
2154 /* 131 */ R(dbsr
), R(dbcr
), R(iac1
), R(iac2
),
2155 /* 135 */ R(dac1
), R(dac2
), R(dccr
), R(iccr
),
2156 /* 139 */ R(pbl1
), R(pbu1
), R(pbl2
), R(pbu2
),
2157 /* 143 */ R(zpr
), R(pid
), R(sgr
), R(dcwr
),
2158 /* 147 */ R(tbhu
), R(tblu
)
2161 /* Motorola PowerPC 505. */
2162 static const struct reg registers_505
[] =
2168 /* 119 */ R(eie
), R(eid
), R(nri
)
2171 /* Motorola PowerPC 860 or 850. */
2172 static const struct reg registers_860
[] =
2178 /* 119 */ R(eie
), R(eid
), R(nri
), R(cmpa
),
2179 /* 123 */ R(cmpb
), R(cmpc
), R(cmpd
), R(icr
),
2180 /* 127 */ R(der
), R(counta
), R(countb
), R(cmpe
),
2181 /* 131 */ R(cmpf
), R(cmpg
), R(cmph
), R(lctrl1
),
2182 /* 135 */ R(lctrl2
), R(ictrl
), R(bar
), R(ic_cst
),
2183 /* 139 */ R(ic_adr
), R(ic_dat
), R(dc_cst
), R(dc_adr
),
2184 /* 143 */ R(dc_dat
), R(dpdr
), R(dpir
), R(immr
),
2185 /* 147 */ R(mi_ctr
), R(mi_ap
), R(mi_epn
), R(mi_twc
),
2186 /* 151 */ R(mi_rpn
), R(md_ctr
), R(m_casid
), R(md_ap
),
2187 /* 155 */ R(md_epn
), R(md_twb
), R(md_twc
), R(md_rpn
),
2188 /* 159 */ R(m_tw
), R(mi_dbcam
), R(mi_dbram0
), R(mi_dbram1
),
2189 /* 163 */ R(md_dbcam
), R(md_dbram0
), R(md_dbram1
)
2192 /* Motorola PowerPC 601. Note that the 601 has different register numbers
2193 for reading and writing RTCU and RTCL. However, how one reads and writes a
2194 register is the stub's problem. */
2195 static const struct reg registers_601
[] =
2201 /* 119 */ R(hid0
), R(hid1
), R(iabr
), R(dabr
),
2202 /* 123 */ R(pir
), R(mq
), R(rtcu
), R(rtcl
)
2205 /* Motorola PowerPC 602. */
2206 static const struct reg registers_602
[] =
2212 /* 119 */ R(hid0
), R(hid1
), R(iabr
), R0
,
2213 /* 123 */ R0
, R(tcr
), R(ibr
), R(esassr
),
2214 /* 127 */ R(sebr
), R(ser
), R(sp
), R(lt
)
2217 /* Motorola/IBM PowerPC 603 or 603e. */
2218 static const struct reg registers_603
[] =
2224 /* 119 */ R(hid0
), R(hid1
), R(iabr
), R0
,
2225 /* 123 */ R0
, R(dmiss
), R(dcmp
), R(hash1
),
2226 /* 127 */ R(hash2
), R(imiss
), R(icmp
), R(rpa
)
2229 /* Motorola PowerPC 604 or 604e. */
2230 static const struct reg registers_604
[] =
2236 /* 119 */ R(hid0
), R(hid1
), R(iabr
), R(dabr
),
2237 /* 123 */ R(pir
), R(mmcr0
), R(pmc1
), R(pmc2
),
2238 /* 127 */ R(sia
), R(sda
)
2241 /* Motorola/IBM PowerPC 750 or 740. */
2242 static const struct reg registers_750
[] =
2248 /* 119 */ R(hid0
), R(hid1
), R(iabr
), R(dabr
),
2249 /* 123 */ R0
, R(ummcr0
), R(upmc1
), R(upmc2
),
2250 /* 127 */ R(usia
), R(ummcr1
), R(upmc3
), R(upmc4
),
2251 /* 131 */ R(mmcr0
), R(pmc1
), R(pmc2
), R(sia
),
2252 /* 135 */ R(mmcr1
), R(pmc3
), R(pmc4
), R(l2cr
),
2253 /* 139 */ R(ictc
), R(thrm1
), R(thrm2
), R(thrm3
)
2257 /* Motorola PowerPC 7400. */
2258 static const struct reg registers_7400
[] =
2260 /* gpr0-gpr31, fpr0-fpr31 */
2262 /* ctr, xre, lr, cr */
2267 /* vr0-vr31, vrsave, vscr */
2269 /* FIXME? Add more registers? */
2272 /* Information about a particular processor variant. */
2276 /* Name of this variant. */
2279 /* English description of the variant. */
2282 /* bfd_arch_info.arch corresponding to variant. */
2283 enum bfd_architecture arch
;
2285 /* bfd_arch_info.mach corresponding to variant. */
2288 /* Table of register names; registers[R] is the name of the register
2291 const struct reg
*regs
;
2294 #define num_registers(list) (sizeof (list) / sizeof((list)[0]))
2297 /* Information in this table comes from the following web sites:
2298 IBM: http://www.chips.ibm.com:80/products/embedded/
2299 Motorola: http://www.mot.com/SPS/PowerPC/
2301 I'm sure I've got some of the variant descriptions not quite right.
2302 Please report any inaccuracies you find to GDB's maintainer.
2304 If you add entries to this table, please be sure to allow the new
2305 value as an argument to the --with-cpu flag, in configure.in. */
2307 static const struct variant variants
[] =
2309 {"powerpc", "PowerPC user-level", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2310 bfd_mach_ppc
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2311 {"power", "POWER user-level", bfd_arch_rs6000
,
2312 bfd_mach_rs6k
, num_registers (registers_power
), registers_power
},
2313 {"403", "IBM PowerPC 403", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2314 bfd_mach_ppc_403
, num_registers (registers_403
), registers_403
},
2315 {"601", "Motorola PowerPC 601", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2316 bfd_mach_ppc_601
, num_registers (registers_601
), registers_601
},
2317 {"602", "Motorola PowerPC 602", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2318 bfd_mach_ppc_602
, num_registers (registers_602
), registers_602
},
2319 {"603", "Motorola/IBM PowerPC 603 or 603e", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2320 bfd_mach_ppc_603
, num_registers (registers_603
), registers_603
},
2321 {"604", "Motorola PowerPC 604 or 604e", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2322 604, num_registers (registers_604
), registers_604
},
2323 {"403GC", "IBM PowerPC 403GC", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2324 bfd_mach_ppc_403gc
, num_registers (registers_403GC
), registers_403GC
},
2325 {"505", "Motorola PowerPC 505", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2326 bfd_mach_ppc_505
, num_registers (registers_505
), registers_505
},
2327 {"860", "Motorola PowerPC 860 or 850", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2328 bfd_mach_ppc_860
, num_registers (registers_860
), registers_860
},
2329 {"750", "Motorola/IBM PowerPC 750 or 740", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2330 bfd_mach_ppc_750
, num_registers (registers_750
), registers_750
},
2331 {"7400", "Motorola/IBM PowerPC 7400 (G4)", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2332 bfd_mach_ppc_7400
, num_registers (registers_7400
), registers_7400
},
2335 {"powerpc64", "PowerPC 64-bit user-level", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2336 bfd_mach_ppc64
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2337 {"620", "Motorola PowerPC 620", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2338 bfd_mach_ppc_620
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2339 {"630", "Motorola PowerPC 630", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2340 bfd_mach_ppc_630
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2341 {"a35", "PowerPC A35", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2342 bfd_mach_ppc_a35
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2343 {"rs64ii", "PowerPC rs64ii", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2344 bfd_mach_ppc_rs64ii
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2345 {"rs64iii", "PowerPC rs64iii", bfd_arch_powerpc
,
2346 bfd_mach_ppc_rs64iii
, num_registers (registers_powerpc
), registers_powerpc
},
2348 /* FIXME: I haven't checked the register sets of the following. */
2349 {"rs1", "IBM POWER RS1", bfd_arch_rs6000
,
2350 bfd_mach_rs6k_rs1
, num_registers (registers_power
), registers_power
},
2351 {"rsc", "IBM POWER RSC", bfd_arch_rs6000
,
2352 bfd_mach_rs6k_rsc
, num_registers (registers_power
), registers_power
},
2353 {"rs2", "IBM POWER RS2", bfd_arch_rs6000
,
2354 bfd_mach_rs6k_rs2
, num_registers (registers_power
), registers_power
},
2359 #undef num_registers
2361 /* Return the variant corresponding to architecture ARCH and machine number
2362 MACH. If no such variant exists, return null. */
2364 static const struct variant
*
2365 find_variant_by_arch (enum bfd_architecture arch
, unsigned long mach
)
2367 const struct variant
*v
;
2369 for (v
= variants
; v
->name
; v
++)
2370 if (arch
== v
->arch
&& mach
== v
->mach
)
2380 process_note_abi_tag_sections (bfd
*abfd
, asection
*sect
, void *obj
)
2382 int *os_ident_ptr
= obj
;
2384 unsigned int sectsize
;
2386 name
= bfd_get_section_name (abfd
, sect
);
2387 sectsize
= bfd_section_size (abfd
, sect
);
2388 if (strcmp (name
, ".note.ABI-tag") == 0 && sectsize
> 0)
2390 unsigned int name_length
, data_length
, note_type
;
2391 char *note
= alloca (sectsize
);
2393 bfd_get_section_contents (abfd
, sect
, note
,
2394 (file_ptr
) 0, (bfd_size_type
) sectsize
);
2396 name_length
= bfd_h_get_32 (abfd
, note
);
2397 data_length
= bfd_h_get_32 (abfd
, note
+ 4);
2398 note_type
= bfd_h_get_32 (abfd
, note
+ 8);
2400 if (name_length
== 4 && data_length
== 16 && note_type
== 1
2401 && strcmp (note
+ 12, "GNU") == 0)
2403 int os_number
= bfd_h_get_32 (abfd
, note
+ 16);
2405 /* The case numbers are from abi-tags in glibc */
2409 *os_ident_ptr
= ELFOSABI_LINUX
;
2412 *os_ident_ptr
= ELFOSABI_HURD
;
2415 *os_ident_ptr
= ELFOSABI_SOLARIS
;
2418 internal_error (__FILE__
, __LINE__
,
2419 "process_note_abi_sections: unknown OS number %d",
2427 /* Return one of the ELFOSABI_ constants for BFDs representing ELF
2428 executables. If it's not an ELF executable or if the OS/ABI couldn't
2429 be determined, simply return -1. */
2432 get_elfosabi (bfd
*abfd
)
2436 if (abfd
!= NULL
&& bfd_get_flavour (abfd
) == bfd_target_elf_flavour
)
2438 elfosabi
= elf_elfheader (abfd
)->e_ident
[EI_OSABI
];
2440 /* When elfosabi is 0 (ELFOSABI_NONE), this is supposed to indicate
2441 that we're on a SYSV system. However, GNU/Linux uses a note section
2442 to record OS/ABI info, but leaves e_ident[EI_OSABI] zero. So we
2443 have to check the note sections too. */
2446 bfd_map_over_sections (abfd
,
2447 process_note_abi_tag_sections
,
2457 /* Initialize the current architecture based on INFO. If possible, re-use an
2458 architecture from ARCHES, which is a list of architectures already created
2459 during this debugging session.
2461 Called e.g. at program startup, when reading a core file, and when reading
2464 static struct gdbarch
*
2465 rs6000_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info
, struct gdbarch_list
*arches
)
2467 struct gdbarch
*gdbarch
;
2468 struct gdbarch_tdep
*tdep
;
2469 int wordsize
, from_xcoff_exec
, from_elf_exec
, power
, i
, off
;
2471 const struct variant
*v
;
2472 enum bfd_architecture arch
;
2475 int osabi
, sysv_abi
;
2476 gdbarch_print_insn_ftype
*print_insn
;
2478 from_xcoff_exec
= info
.abfd
&& info
.abfd
->format
== bfd_object
&&
2479 bfd_get_flavour (info
.abfd
) == bfd_target_xcoff_flavour
;
2481 from_elf_exec
= info
.abfd
&& info
.abfd
->format
== bfd_object
&&
2482 bfd_get_flavour (info
.abfd
) == bfd_target_elf_flavour
;
2484 sysv_abi
= info
.abfd
&& bfd_get_flavour (info
.abfd
) == bfd_target_elf_flavour
;
2486 osabi
= get_elfosabi (info
.abfd
);
2488 /* Check word size. If INFO is from a binary file, infer it from
2489 that, else choose a likely default. */
2490 if (from_xcoff_exec
)
2492 if (xcoff_data (info
.abfd
)->xcoff64
)
2497 else if (from_elf_exec
)
2499 if (elf_elfheader (info
.abfd
)->e_ident
[EI_CLASS
] == ELFCLASS64
)
2506 if (info
.bfd_arch_info
!= NULL
&& info
.bfd_arch_info
->bits_per_word
!= 0)
2507 wordsize
= info
.bfd_arch_info
->bits_per_word
/
2508 info
.bfd_arch_info
->bits_per_byte
;
2513 /* Find a candidate among extant architectures. */
2514 for (arches
= gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches
, &info
);
2516 arches
= gdbarch_list_lookup_by_info (arches
->next
, &info
))
2518 /* Word size in the various PowerPC bfd_arch_info structs isn't
2519 meaningful, because 64-bit CPUs can run in 32-bit mode. So, perform
2520 separate word size check. */
2521 tdep
= gdbarch_tdep (arches
->gdbarch
);
2522 if (tdep
&& tdep
->wordsize
== wordsize
&& tdep
->osabi
== osabi
)
2523 return arches
->gdbarch
;
2526 /* None found, create a new architecture from INFO, whose bfd_arch_info
2527 validity depends on the source:
2528 - executable useless
2529 - rs6000_host_arch() good
2531 - "set arch" trust blindly
2532 - GDB startup useless but harmless */
2534 if (!from_xcoff_exec
)
2536 arch
= info
.bfd_arch_info
->arch
;
2537 mach
= info
.bfd_arch_info
->mach
;
2541 arch
= bfd_arch_powerpc
;
2543 bfd_default_set_arch_mach (&abfd
, arch
, mach
);
2544 info
.bfd_arch_info
= bfd_get_arch_info (&abfd
);
2546 tdep
= xmalloc (sizeof (struct gdbarch_tdep
));
2547 tdep
->wordsize
= wordsize
;
2548 tdep
->osabi
= osabi
;
2549 gdbarch
= gdbarch_alloc (&info
, tdep
);
2550 power
= arch
== bfd_arch_rs6000
;
2552 /* Choose variant. */
2553 v
= find_variant_by_arch (arch
, mach
);
2557 tdep
->regs
= v
->regs
;
2559 tdep
->ppc_gp0_regnum
= 0;
2560 tdep
->ppc_gplast_regnum
= 31;
2561 tdep
->ppc_toc_regnum
= 2;
2562 tdep
->ppc_ps_regnum
= 65;
2563 tdep
->ppc_cr_regnum
= 66;
2564 tdep
->ppc_lr_regnum
= 67;
2565 tdep
->ppc_ctr_regnum
= 68;
2566 tdep
->ppc_xer_regnum
= 69;
2567 if (v
->mach
== bfd_mach_ppc_601
)
2568 tdep
->ppc_mq_regnum
= 124;
2570 tdep
->ppc_mq_regnum
= 70;
2572 tdep
->ppc_mq_regnum
= -1;
2573 tdep
->ppc_fpscr_regnum
= power
? 71 : 70;
2575 if (v
->arch
== bfd_arch_powerpc
)
2579 tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
= 71;
2580 tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
= 104;
2582 case bfd_mach_ppc_7400
:
2583 tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
= 119;
2584 tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
= 153;
2587 tdep
->ppc_vr0_regnum
= -1;
2588 tdep
->ppc_vrsave_regnum
= -1;
2592 /* Set lr_frame_offset. */
2594 tdep
->lr_frame_offset
= 16;
2596 tdep
->lr_frame_offset
= 4;
2598 tdep
->lr_frame_offset
= 8;
2600 /* Calculate byte offsets in raw register array. */
2601 tdep
->regoff
= xmalloc (v
->nregs
* sizeof (int));
2602 for (i
= off
= 0; i
< v
->nregs
; i
++)
2604 tdep
->regoff
[i
] = off
;
2605 off
+= regsize (v
->regs
+ i
, wordsize
);
2608 /* Select instruction printer. */
2610 print_insn
= print_insn_rs6000
;
2611 else if (info
.byte_order
== BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
)
2612 print_insn
= print_insn_big_powerpc
;
2614 print_insn
= print_insn_little_powerpc
;
2615 set_gdbarch_print_insn (gdbarch
, print_insn
);
2617 set_gdbarch_read_pc (gdbarch
, generic_target_read_pc
);
2618 set_gdbarch_write_pc (gdbarch
, generic_target_write_pc
);
2619 set_gdbarch_read_fp (gdbarch
, generic_target_read_fp
);
2620 set_gdbarch_read_sp (gdbarch
, generic_target_read_sp
);
2621 set_gdbarch_write_sp (gdbarch
, generic_target_write_sp
);
2623 set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch
, v
->nregs
);
2624 set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch
, 1);
2625 set_gdbarch_fp_regnum (gdbarch
, 1);
2626 set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch
, 64);
2627 set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_name
);
2628 set_gdbarch_register_size (gdbarch
, wordsize
);
2629 set_gdbarch_register_bytes (gdbarch
, off
);
2630 set_gdbarch_register_byte (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_byte
);
2631 set_gdbarch_register_raw_size (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_raw_size
);
2632 set_gdbarch_max_register_raw_size (gdbarch
, 16);
2633 set_gdbarch_register_virtual_size (gdbarch
, generic_register_virtual_size
);
2634 set_gdbarch_max_register_virtual_size (gdbarch
, 16);
2635 set_gdbarch_register_virtual_type (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_virtual_type
);
2636 set_gdbarch_do_registers_info (gdbarch
, rs6000_do_registers_info
);
2638 set_gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch
, wordsize
* TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2639 set_gdbarch_short_bit (gdbarch
, 2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2640 set_gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch
, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2641 set_gdbarch_long_bit (gdbarch
, wordsize
* TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2642 set_gdbarch_long_long_bit (gdbarch
, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2643 set_gdbarch_float_bit (gdbarch
, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2644 set_gdbarch_double_bit (gdbarch
, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2645 set_gdbarch_long_double_bit (gdbarch
, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT
);
2646 set_gdbarch_char_signed (gdbarch
, 0);
2648 set_gdbarch_use_generic_dummy_frames (gdbarch
, 1);
2649 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_length (gdbarch
, 0);
2650 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_location (gdbarch
, AT_ENTRY_POINT
);
2651 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_address (gdbarch
, entry_point_address
);
2652 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset_p (gdbarch
, 1);
2653 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_breakpoint_offset (gdbarch
, 0);
2654 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_start_offset (gdbarch
, 0);
2655 set_gdbarch_pc_in_call_dummy (gdbarch
, generic_pc_in_call_dummy
);
2656 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_p (gdbarch
, 1);
2657 set_gdbarch_call_dummy_stack_adjust_p (gdbarch
, 0);
2658 set_gdbarch_get_saved_register (gdbarch
, generic_get_saved_register
);
2659 set_gdbarch_fix_call_dummy (gdbarch
, rs6000_fix_call_dummy
);
2660 set_gdbarch_push_dummy_frame (gdbarch
, generic_push_dummy_frame
);
2661 set_gdbarch_save_dummy_frame_tos (gdbarch
, generic_save_dummy_frame_tos
);
2662 set_gdbarch_push_return_address (gdbarch
, ppc_push_return_address
);
2663 set_gdbarch_believe_pcc_promotion (gdbarch
, 1);
2664 set_gdbarch_coerce_float_to_double (gdbarch
, rs6000_coerce_float_to_double
);
2666 set_gdbarch_register_convertible (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_convertible
);
2667 set_gdbarch_register_convert_to_virtual (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_convert_to_virtual
);
2668 set_gdbarch_register_convert_to_raw (gdbarch
, rs6000_register_convert_to_raw
);
2669 set_gdbarch_stab_reg_to_regnum (gdbarch
, rs6000_stab_reg_to_regnum
);
2671 set_gdbarch_extract_return_value (gdbarch
, rs6000_extract_return_value
);
2673 /* Note: kevinb/2002-04-12: I'm not convinced that rs6000_push_arguments()
2674 is correct for the SysV ABI when the wordsize is 8, but I'm also
2675 fairly certain that ppc_sysv_abi_push_arguments() will give even
2676 worse results since it only works for 32-bit code. So, for the moment,
2677 we're better off calling rs6000_push_arguments() since it works for
2678 64-bit code. At some point in the future, this matter needs to be
2680 if (sysv_abi
&& wordsize
== 4)
2681 set_gdbarch_push_arguments (gdbarch
, ppc_sysv_abi_push_arguments
);
2683 set_gdbarch_push_arguments (gdbarch
, rs6000_push_arguments
);
2685 set_gdbarch_store_struct_return (gdbarch
, rs6000_store_struct_return
);
2686 set_gdbarch_store_return_value (gdbarch
, rs6000_store_return_value
);
2687 set_gdbarch_extract_struct_value_address (gdbarch
, rs6000_extract_struct_value_address
);
2688 set_gdbarch_pop_frame (gdbarch
, rs6000_pop_frame
);
2690 set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch
, rs6000_skip_prologue
);
2691 set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch
, core_addr_lessthan
);
2692 set_gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch
, 0);
2693 set_gdbarch_function_start_offset (gdbarch
, 0);
2694 set_gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch
, rs6000_breakpoint_from_pc
);
2696 /* Not sure on this. FIXMEmgo */
2697 set_gdbarch_frame_args_skip (gdbarch
, 8);
2699 /* Until November 2001, gcc was not complying to the SYSV ABI for
2700 returning structures less than or equal to 8 bytes in size. It was
2701 returning everything in memory. When this was corrected, it wasn't
2702 fixed for native platforms. */
2705 if (osabi
== ELFOSABI_LINUX
2706 || osabi
== ELFOSABI_NETBSD
2707 || osabi
== ELFOSABI_FREEBSD
)
2708 set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch
,
2709 generic_use_struct_convention
);
2711 set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch
,
2712 ppc_sysv_abi_use_struct_convention
);
2716 set_gdbarch_use_struct_convention (gdbarch
,
2717 generic_use_struct_convention
);
2720 set_gdbarch_frame_chain_valid (gdbarch
, file_frame_chain_valid
);
2721 /* Note: kevinb/2002-04-12: See note above regarding *_push_arguments().
2722 The same remarks hold for the methods below. */
2723 if (osabi
== ELFOSABI_LINUX
&& wordsize
== 4)
2725 set_gdbarch_frameless_function_invocation (gdbarch
,
2726 ppc_linux_frameless_function_invocation
);
2727 set_gdbarch_frame_chain (gdbarch
, ppc_linux_frame_chain
);
2728 set_gdbarch_frame_saved_pc (gdbarch
, ppc_linux_frame_saved_pc
);
2730 set_gdbarch_frame_init_saved_regs (gdbarch
,
2731 ppc_linux_frame_init_saved_regs
);
2732 set_gdbarch_init_extra_frame_info (gdbarch
,
2733 ppc_linux_init_extra_frame_info
);
2735 set_gdbarch_memory_remove_breakpoint (gdbarch
,
2736 ppc_linux_memory_remove_breakpoint
);
2737 set_solib_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets
2738 (gdbarch
, ppc_linux_svr4_fetch_link_map_offsets
);
2742 set_gdbarch_frameless_function_invocation (gdbarch
,
2743 rs6000_frameless_function_invocation
);
2744 set_gdbarch_frame_chain (gdbarch
, rs6000_frame_chain
);
2745 set_gdbarch_frame_saved_pc (gdbarch
, rs6000_frame_saved_pc
);
2747 set_gdbarch_frame_init_saved_regs (gdbarch
, rs6000_frame_init_saved_regs
);
2748 set_gdbarch_init_extra_frame_info (gdbarch
, rs6000_init_extra_frame_info
);
2750 /* Handle RS/6000 function pointers. */
2751 set_gdbarch_convert_from_func_ptr_addr (gdbarch
,
2752 rs6000_convert_from_func_ptr_addr
);
2754 set_gdbarch_frame_args_address (gdbarch
, rs6000_frame_args_address
);
2755 set_gdbarch_frame_locals_address (gdbarch
, rs6000_frame_args_address
);
2756 set_gdbarch_saved_pc_after_call (gdbarch
, rs6000_saved_pc_after_call
);
2758 /* We can't tell how many args there are
2759 now that the C compiler delays popping them. */
2760 set_gdbarch_frame_num_args (gdbarch
, frame_num_args_unknown
);
2765 static struct cmd_list_element
*info_powerpc_cmdlist
= NULL
;
2768 rs6000_info_powerpc_command (char *args
, int from_tty
)
2770 help_list (info_powerpc_cmdlist
, "info powerpc ", class_info
, gdb_stdout
);
2773 /* Initialization code. */
2776 _initialize_rs6000_tdep (void)
2778 register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_rs6000
, rs6000_gdbarch_init
);
2779 register_gdbarch_init (bfd_arch_powerpc
, rs6000_gdbarch_init
);
2781 /* Add root prefix command for "info powerpc" commands */
2782 add_prefix_cmd ("powerpc", class_info
, rs6000_info_powerpc_command
,
2783 "Various POWERPC info specific commands.",
2784 &info_powerpc_cmdlist
, "info powerpc ", 0, &infolist
);
2786 add_cmd ("altivec", class_info
, rs6000_altivec_registers_info
,
2787 "Display the contents of the AltiVec registers.",
2788 &info_powerpc_cmdlist
);