darling-gdb/gdb/i960-pinsn.c
Thomas Lord 199b2450f6 Change the stream argument to _filtered to GDB_FILE *.
Change all references to stdout/stderr to gdb_stdout/gdb_stderr.

Replace all calls to stdio output functions with calls to
corresponding _unfiltered functions (`fprintf_unfiltered')

Replaced calls to fopen for output to gdb_fopen.

Added sufficient goo to utils.c and defs.h to make the above work.

The net effect is that stdio output functions are only directly used
in utils.c.  Elsewhere, the _unfiltered and _filtered functions and
GDB_FILE type are used.

In the near future, GDB_FILE will stop being equivalant to FILE.

The semantics of some commands has changed in a very subtle way:
called in the right context, they may cause new occurences of
prompt_for_continue() behavior.  The testsuite doesn't notice anything
like this, though.

Please respect this change by not reintroducing stdio output
dependencies in the main body of gdb code.  All output from commands
should go to a GDB_FILE.

Target-specific code can still use stdio directly to communicate with
targets.
1993-11-01 22:25:23 +00:00

183 lines
4.5 KiB
C

/* i80960 instruction disassembler for GDB.
Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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. */
#include "defs.h"
#include "dis-asm.h"
/* Print the instruction at address MEMADDR in debugged memory,
on STREAM. Returns length of the instruction, in bytes. */
int
print_insn (memaddr, stream)
CORE_ADDR memaddr;
GDB_FILE *stream;
{
disassemble_info info;
GDB_INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO(info, stream);
return print_insn_i960 (memaddr, &info);
}
/****************************************/
/* MEM format */
/****************************************/
struct tabent {
char *name;
char numops;
};
static int /* returns instruction length: 4 or 8 */
mem( memaddr, word1, word2, noprint )
unsigned long memaddr;
unsigned long word1, word2;
int noprint; /* If TRUE, return instruction length, but
don't output any text. */
{
int i, j;
int len;
int mode;
int offset;
const char *reg1, *reg2, *reg3;
/* This lookup table is too sparse to make it worth typing in, but not
* so large as to make a sparse array necessary. We allocate the
* table at runtime, initialize all entries to empty, and copy the
* real ones in from an initialization table.
*
* NOTE: In this table, the meaning of 'numops' is:
* 1: single operand
* 2: 2 operands, load instruction
* -2: 2 operands, store instruction
*/
static struct tabent *mem_tab = NULL;
/* Opcodes of 0x8X, 9X, aX, bX, and cX must be in the table. */
#define MEM_MIN 0x80
#define MEM_MAX 0xcf
#define MEM_SIZ ((MEM_MAX-MEM_MIN+1) * sizeof(struct tabent))
static struct { int opcode; char *name; char numops; } mem_init[] = {
0x80, "ldob", 2,
0x82, "stob", -2,
0x84, "bx", 1,
0x85, "balx", 2,
0x86, "callx", 1,
0x88, "ldos", 2,
0x8a, "stos", -2,
0x8c, "lda", 2,
0x90, "ld", 2,
0x92, "st", -2,
0x98, "ldl", 2,
0x9a, "stl", -2,
0xa0, "ldt", 2,
0xa2, "stt", -2,
0xb0, "ldq", 2,
0xb2, "stq", -2,
0xc0, "ldib", 2,
0xc2, "stib", -2,
0xc8, "ldis", 2,
0xca, "stis", -2,
0, NULL, 0
};
if ( mem_tab == NULL ){
mem_tab = (struct tabent *) xmalloc( MEM_SIZ );
memset( mem_tab, '\0', MEM_SIZ );
for ( i = 0; mem_init[i].opcode != 0; i++ ){
j = mem_init[i].opcode - MEM_MIN;
mem_tab[j].name = mem_init[i].name;
mem_tab[j].numops = mem_init[i].numops;
}
}
i = ((word1 >> 24) & 0xff) - MEM_MIN;
mode = (word1 >> 10) & 0xf;
if ( (mem_tab[i].name != NULL) /* Valid instruction */
&& ((mode == 5) || (mode >=12)) ){ /* With 32-bit displacement */
len = 8;
} else {
len = 4;
}
if ( noprint ){
return len;
}
abort ();
}
/* Read the i960 instruction at 'memaddr' and return the address of
the next instruction after that, or 0 if 'memaddr' is not the
address of a valid instruction. The first word of the instruction
is stored at 'pword1', and the second word, if any, is stored at
'pword2'. */
CORE_ADDR
next_insn (memaddr, pword1, pword2)
unsigned long *pword1, *pword2;
CORE_ADDR memaddr;
{
int len;
char buf[8];
/* Read the two (potential) words of the instruction at once,
to eliminate the overhead of two calls to read_memory ().
FIXME: Loses if the first one is readable but the second is not
(e.g. last word of the segment). */
read_memory (memaddr, buf, 8);
*pword1 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, 4);
*pword2 = extract_unsigned_integer (buf + 4, 4);
/* Divide instruction set into classes based on high 4 bits of opcode*/
switch ((*pword1 >> 28) & 0xf)
{
case 0x0:
case 0x1: /* ctrl */
case 0x2:
case 0x3: /* cobr */
case 0x5:
case 0x6:
case 0x7: /* reg */
len = 4;
break;
case 0x8:
case 0x9:
case 0xa:
case 0xb:
case 0xc:
len = mem (memaddr, *pword1, *pword2, 1);
break;
default: /* invalid instruction */
len = 0;
break;
}
if (len)
return memaddr + len;
else
return 0;
}