These functions either call abort() themselves, or call functions which
are already marked noreturn. Either way, they don't return, so mark them
as such so calling code can assume this. This fixes some uninitialized
warnings due to code paths that end in an abort function.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
The sim_load_file func creates a buffer with arbitrary data in it (reads
it via the bfd). It then passes it on to a sim_write_fn which expects a
unsigned char buffer. Since sim_load_file itself doesn't care about the
contents, tweak the type to avoid signed mismatch warnings from gcc:
common/sim-load.c: In function ‘sim_load_file’:
common/sim-load.c:143: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 3 of ‘do_write’ differ in signedness
common/sim-load.c:143: note: expected ‘const unsigned char *’ but argument is of type ‘char *’
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
We have malloc (uninitialized buffer), zalloc (zeroed buffer), and
nzalloc (zeroed array). But we don't have a way to allocate an
uninitialized array. Add a HW_NALLOC to fill this gap.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
The HW_NZALLOC macro has all caps args for some reason (unlike the other
alloc helpers), and ends up not using the "ME" argument since its copy
and paste source uses "me". Make all the args lowercase to match the
style of all the other args and make it use the correct "me".
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
There are options for listing the current device/hw tree and memory
regions, but no way to find out at run time all the current mappings.
So add a new --map-info option akin to the --memory-info option which
displays all the current mappings.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
When the sim is configured with profile support disabled, the build fails:
./../common/sim-profile.c: In function 'profile_option_handler':
./../common/sim-profile.c:337:6: warning: implicit declaration of function 'PROFILE_PC_FREQ'
./../common/sim-profile.c:337:6: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
./../common/sim-profile.c:351:6: warning: implicit declaration of function 'PROFILE_PC_NR_BUCKETS'
./../common/sim-profile.c:351:6: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
./../common/sim-profile.c:381:6: warning: implicit declaration of function 'PROFILE_PC_SHIFT'
./../common/sim-profile.c:381:6: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
./../common/sim-profile.c:405:8: warning: implicit declaration of function 'PROFILE_PC_START'
./../common/sim-profile.c:405:8: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
./../common/sim-profile.c:406:8: warning: implicit declaration of function 'PROFILE_PC_END'
./../common/sim-profile.c:406:8: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
./../common/sim-profile.c: In function 'profile_uninstall':
./../common/sim-profile.c:1299:7: warning: implicit declaration of function 'PROFILE_INSN_COUNT'
./../common/sim-profile.c:1299:37: warning: comparison between pointer and integer
./../common/sim-profile.c:1300:2: warning: passing argument 1 of 'zfree' makes pointer from integer without a cast
../common/sim-utils.h:30:6: note: expected 'void *' but argument is of type 'int'
make[2]: *** [sim-profile.o] Error 1
So add some stubs similar to how some of the other subsystems are
stubbed out so things build correctly.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
When building with device and hw support, the sim-core code generates a
lot of build time warnings such as:
./../common/sim-core.c: In function 'sim_core_map_attach':
./../common/sim-core.c:198:7: warning: passing argument 1 of 'device_error' from incompatible pointer type
../common/sim-core.h:347:6: note: expected 'struct device *' but argument is of type 'struct hw *'
./../common/sim-core.c:235:7: warning: passing argument 1 of 'device_error' from incompatible pointer type
../common/sim-core.h:347:6: note: expected 'struct device *' but argument is of type 'struct hw *'
In reality, these two structures get cast back and forth in the core
code already and so are "compatible". So tweak the three functions
that generate all of these warnings to include the casts automatically.
I know this isn't exactly clean, but the current device/hw ifdef
approach is full of landmines itself and I'm not entirely sure how
to unscrew it.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
Rather than having to bang out chunks of data one byte at a time over
the socket interface, add a write variant that accepts an arbitrarily
long buffer. This speeds things up considerably when we have many
chars to send out at once.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
* rx.h (RX_Operand_Type): Add TwoReg.
(RX_Opcode_ID): Remove ediv and ediv2.
[opcodes]
* rx-decode.opc (SRR): New.
(rx_decode_opcode): Use it for movbi and movbir. Decode NOP2 (mov
r0,r0) and NOP3 (max r0,r0) special cases.
* rx-decode.c: Regenerate.
[sim/rx]
* rx.c (decode_cache_base): New.
(id_names): Remove ediv and edivu.
(optype_names): Add TwoReg.
(maybe_get_mem_page): New.
(rx_get_byte): Call it.
(get_op): Add TwoReg support.
(put_op): Likewise.
(PD, PS, PS2, GD, GS, GS2, DSZ, SSZ, S2SZ, US1, US2, OM): "opcode"
is a pointer now.
(DO_RETURN): New. We use longjmp to return an exception result.
(decode_opcode): Make opcode a pointer to the decode cache. Save
decoded opcode information and re-use. Call DO_RETURN instead of
return throughout. Remove ediv and edivu.
* mem.c (ptdc): New. Adds decode cache.
(rx_mem_ptr): Support it.
(rx_mem_decode_cache): New.
* mem.h (enum mem_ptr_action): add MPA_DECODE_CACHE.
(rx_mem_decode_cache): Declare.
* gdb-if.c (sim_resume): Add decode_opcode's setjmp logic here...
* main.c (main): ...and here. Use a fast loop if neither trace
nor disassemble is given.
* cpu.h (RX_MAKE_STEPPED, RX_MAKE_HIT_BREAK, RX_MAKE_EXITED,
RX_MAKE_STOPPED, RX_EXITED, RX_STOPPED): Adjust so that 0 is not a
valid code for anything.
gdb/
* ser-tcp.c (net_open): Check error return from socket() call by its
equality to -1 not by it being negative.
(net_close): Likewise.
gdb/gdbserver/
* gdbreplay.c (remote_open): Check error return from socket() call by
its equality to -1 not by it being negative.
* remote-utils.c (remote_open): Likewise.
sim/arm/
* communicate.c (MYread_char): Check error return from accept() call
by its equality to -1 not by it being negative.
(MYread_charwait): Likewise.
* main.c (main): Likewise for both socket() and accept() calls.
sim/common/
* dv-sockser.c (dv_sockser_init): Check error return from socket()
call by its equality to -1 not by it being negative.
(connected_p): Likewise for accept() call.
sim/cris/
* dv-rv.c (hw_rv_init_socket): Check error return from socket() call
by its equality to -1 not by it being negative.
(hw_rv_write): Likewise.
(hw_rv_handle_incoming): Likewise.
(hw_rv_poll_once): Likewise.
* rvdummy.c (setupsocket): Likewise.
(main): Likewise for accept() call as returned from setupsocket().
sim/m32c/
* main.c (setup_tcp_console): Check error return from socket() call
by its equality to -1 not by it being negative.
* erc32.c (sis_memory_write): Change prototype to const unsigned char *.
* func.c (exec_cmd, event, advance_time, wait_for_irq): Use uint64
for counts.
* interf.c (run_sim): Change icount to uint64_t. Use strtol directly.
(sim_resume): Specify maximum run time as uint64.
* sis.c (run_sim): Change icount to uint64_t.
* sis.h: Define uint64 as uint64_t. Change various fields and
prototypes to uint64 to support longer simulations.
The testsuite subdir has a note about unifying the target->subdir logic,
so do just that. The end goal here is to have `make check` work out of
the box without having to delve into dejagnu internals.
The target-specific logic is split out of the top level configure.ac file
and into a dedicated configure.tgt similar to other subprojects (gdb and
ld and etc...) with the difference that this file has to be included at
the m4 level instead of the shell level. This is necessary only because
autoconf requires AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS be given a string literal and not a
variable value.
Then the toplevel and the testsuite configure files pull this in, the sim
subdir gets expanded into testsuite/site.exp, and the default sim run code
uses this info to set the sim path to the local compiled run file if it
hasn't already been specified.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
The current fpu code with externals enabled results in the warnings:
common/sim-fpu.c:2437: warning: missing initializer
common/sim-fpu.c:2437: warning: (near initialization for 'sim_fpu_zero.sign')
common/sim-fpu.c:2440: warning: missing initializer
common/sim-fpu.c:2440: warning: (near initialization for 'sim_fpu_qnan.sign')
So tweak the old style initializers to avoid these.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
The common/ code uses sim_cpu rather than SIM_CPU to avoid inter-header
dependency issues, so follow convention to fix building some targets.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>
The profile code already has options and handling for accepting a file to
write the profile output like the trace code, but it doesn't actually use
it. At the moment, it simply opens the file at the start and closes it at
the end. So add two new local functions the way the trace code is doing
it and have them figure out whether to write the output to stdout or the
specified file. Then convert all existing output in the profile code to
use these helpers.
Signed-off-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org>