darling-gdb/gdb/monitor.h

144 lines
6.3 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/* Remote debugging interface ROM monitors.
* Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
* Contributed by Cygnus Support. Written by Rob Savoye for Cygnus.
*
* Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
* Contributed by Cygnus Support. Written by Rob Savoye for Cygnus.
*
* This file is part of GDB.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
struct rom_cmd_data {
char *cmd; /* command to send */
char *delim; /* the delimiter */
char *result; /* the result */
};
/* This structure describes the strings necessary to give small command
sequences to the monitor, and parse the response.
CMD is the actual command typed at the monitor. Usually this has embedded
sequences ala printf, which are substituted with the arguments appropriate
to that type of command. Ie: to examine a register, we substitute the
register name for the first arg. To modify memory, we substitute the memory
location and the new contents for the first and second args, etc...
RESP_DELIM used to home in on the response string, and is used to
disambiguate the answer within the pile of text returned by the monitor.
This should be a unique string that immediately precedes the answer. Ie: if
your monitor prints out `PC: 00000001= ' in response to asking for the PC,
you should use `: ' as the RESP_DELIM. RESP_DELIM may be NULL if the res-
ponse is going to be ignored, or has no particular leading text.
TERM is the string that the monitor outputs to indicate that it is idle, and
waiting for input. This is usually a prompt of some sort. In the previous
example, it would be `= '. It is important that TERM really means that the
monitor is idle, otherwise GDB may try to type at it when it isn't ready for
input. This is a problem because many monitors cannot deal with type-ahead.
TERM may be NULL if the normal prompt is output.
TERM_CMD is used to quit out of the subcommand mode and get back to the main
prompt. TERM_CMD may be NULL if it isn't necessary. It will also be
ignored if TERM is NULL.
*/
struct cmd_resp {
char *cmd; /* Command to send */
char *resp_delim; /* String just prior to the desired value */
char *term; /* Terminating string to search for */
char *term_cmd; /* String to get out of sub-mode (if necessary) */
};
struct monitor_ops {
int type; /* 1 is ascii, 0 is GDB remote protocol */
char *init; /* initialize to the monitor */
char *execute; /* execute or usually GO command */
char *resume; /* continue command */
char *step; /* single step */
char *set_break; /* set a breakpoint */
char *clr_break; /* clear a breakpoint */
int clr_type; /* number or address for clearing */
struct cmd_resp setmem; /* set memory to a value */
struct cmd_resp getmem; /* display memory */
struct cmd_resp setreg; /* set a register */
struct cmd_resp getreg; /* get a register */
/* Some commands can dump a bunch of registers
at once. This comes as a set of REG=VAL
pairs. This should be called for each pair
of registers that we can parse to supply
GDB with the value of a register. */
char *register_pattern; /* Pattern that picks out register from reg dump */
void (*supply_register) PARAMS ((char *name, int namelen, char *val, int vallen));
char *load; /* load command */
char *prompt; /* monitor command prompt */
char *cmd_delim; /* end-of-command delimitor */
char *cmd_end; /* optional command terminator */
struct target_ops *target; /* target operations */
char **loadtypes; /* the load types that are supported */
char **loadprotos; /* the load protocols that are supported */
char *baudrates; /* supported baud rates */
int stopbits; /* number of stop bits */
char **regnames; /* array of register names in ascii */
};
extern struct monitor_ops *current_monitor;
#define PROTO_TYPE (current_monitor->type)
#define LOADTYPES (current_monitor->loadtypes)
#define LOADPROTOS (current_monitor->loadprotos)
#define INIT_CMD (current_monitor->init)
#define GO_CMD (current_monitor->execute)
#define CONT_CMD (current_monitor->resume)
#define STEP_CMD (current_monitor->step)
#define SET_BREAK_CMD (current_monitor->set_break)
#define CLR_BREAK_CMD (current_monitor->clr_break)
#define CLR_BREAK_ADDR (current_monitor->clr_type)
#define SET_MEM (current_monitor->setmem)
#define GET_MEM (current_monitor->getmem)
#define LOAD_CMD (current_monitor->load)
#define GET_REG (current_monitor->regget)
#define SET_REG (current_monitor->regset)
#define CMD_END (current_monitor->cmd_end)
#define CMD_DELIM (current_monitor->cmd_delim)
#define PROMPT (current_monitor->prompt)
#define TARGET_OPS (current_monitor->target)
#define TARGET_NAME (current_monitor->target->to_shortname)
#define BAUDRATES (current_monitor->baudrates)
#define STOPBITS (current_monitor->stopbits)
#define REGNAMES(x) (current_monitor->regnames[x])
#define ROMCMD(x) (x.cmd)
#define ROMDELIM(x) (x.delim)
#define ROMRES(x) (x.result)
#define push_monitor(x) current_monitor = x;
#define SREC_SIZE 160
#define GDBPROTO ((current_monitor->type) ? 0: 1)
/*
* FIXME: These are to temporarily maintain compatability with the
* old monitor structure till remote-mon.c is fixed to work
* like the *-rom.c files.
*/
#define MEM_PROMPT (current_monitor->loadtypes)
#define MEM_SET_CMD (current_monitor->setmem)
#define MEM_DIS_CMD (current_monitor->getmem)
#define REG_DELIM (current_monitor->regset.delim)
extern void monitor_open PARAMS ((char *args, struct monitor_ops *ops, int from_tty));
extern char *monitor_supply_register PARAMS ((int regno, char *valstr));