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Re: [RFC] Add support for Morpho ms1 processor
- From: Mark Kettenis <mark dot kettenis at xs4all dot nl>
- To: kevinb at redhat dot com
- Cc: gdb-patches at sources dot redhat dot com
- Date: Sat, 11 Jun 2005 01:12:50 +0200 (CEST)
- Subject: Re: [RFC] Add support for Morpho ms1 processor
- References: <20050603172038.449a41b9@ironwood.lan>
Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2005 17:20:38 -0700
From: Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
The patch below adds support for the Morpho Technologies ms1 processor
to GDB. This code was written by Michael Snyder. (Though I and
perhaps others have tweaked it here and there...)
It's not quite ready to commit; there are still some bits at the top
level, and in bfd/, opcodes/, and include/ that need to go in first.
Aldy Hernandez is submitting those portions.
However, it occurs to me that there may be a few things in this GDB
portion that ought to be adjusted before it goes in, so I'm posting it
now for comments.
So... comments?
There are a few coding-style violations, mostly regarding multi-line
comment style. There is some excessive spacing too; the GNU coding
standards seem to suggest using ^L to seperate larger chunks of code,
not multiple lines of whitespace. I also really would like to
encourage the usage of target-specific (ms1_) prefixes for function
and variable names. Especially naming an enum `gdb_regnum' seems like
a bad idea to me. What's the E_-prefix trying to convey? I seem to
remember a few other embedded processors using the same E_-prefix for
their register names. Internationalization of strings is missing too.
Can we somehow make sure this doesn't become yet another
commit-and-abondon target?
A few more comments down in the code.
+
+/* Function: register_name
+ Returns the name of the standard ms1 register N. */
Stating the function name in the comment here doesn't make sense. The
GNU coding standards certainly don't suggest it.
+static struct gdbarch *
+ms1_gdbarch_init (struct gdbarch_info info, struct gdbarch_list *arches)
+{
+ struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
+ static void ms1_frame_unwind_init (struct gdbarch *);
+
...
+ /* The MAC register for the MS1-16-003 is 8 bits larger
+ than it is for the other machine variants. */
+ switch (info.bfd_arch_info->mach) {
+ default:
+ case bfd_mach_ms1:
+ break;
This doesn't do anything...
+
+ set_gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, ms1_register_name);
+ set_gdbarch_num_regs (gdbarch, E_NUM_REGS);
+ set_gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (gdbarch, E_NUM_PSEUDO_REGS);
+ set_gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch, E_PC_REGNUM);
+ set_gdbarch_sp_regnum (gdbarch, E_SP_REGNUM);
+ set_gdbarch_pseudo_register_read (gdbarch, ms1_pseudo_register_read);
+ set_gdbarch_pseudo_register_write (gdbarch, ms1_pseudo_register_write);
+ set_gdbarch_skip_prologue (gdbarch, ms1_skip_prologue);
+ set_gdbarch_inner_than (gdbarch, core_addr_lessthan);
+ set_gdbarch_breakpoint_from_pc (gdbarch, ms1_breakpoint_from_pc);
+ set_gdbarch_decr_pc_after_break (gdbarch, 0);
+ set_gdbarch_frame_args_skip (gdbarch, 0);
+ set_gdbarch_print_insn (gdbarch, print_insn_ms1);
+ set_gdbarch_register_type (gdbarch, ms1_register_type);
+ set_gdbarch_register_reggroup_p (gdbarch, ms1_register_reggroup_p);
Don't try to line things up here; there should only be a single space.
+ * Target builtin data types.
+ */
+ set_gdbarch_short_bit (gdbarch, 2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_long_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_long_long_bit (gdbarch, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_float_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_double_bit (gdbarch, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_long_double_bit (gdbarch, 8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
+ set_gdbarch_ptr_bit (gdbarch, 4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT);
Personally I think this TARGET_CHAR_BIT is really silly, as if we're
going to support something other than 8. I really thing hardcoding
the numbers is much clearer. A `short' is 16 bits, not 2 times some
arbitrary constant.
+
+static void
+ms1_frame_unwind_init (struct gdbarch *gdbarch)
+{
+ /* This is the keystone. You add your "sniffer" to a
+ sniffer list, and now you're in the game. This registers
+ a) the sniffer, b) the 'prev_register', and c) the 'this_id'
+ methods.
+ */
That last */ defenitely shouldn't sit alone on a line.
Mark