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[RFC] Register sets
- From: Mark Kettenis <kettenis at chello dot nl>
- To: gdb at sources dot redhat dot com
- Date: Sun, 24 Aug 2003 00:49:57 +0200 (CEST)
- Subject: [RFC] Register sets
Folks (and especially Andrew),
A while back, Andrew submitted a patch that made it possible to read
Linux/i386 corefiles on Linux/x86-64. He tricked me into fixing the
"gcore" command for this case, which forced me to think a bit more
about how we can solve this cleanly. Here's what I think is the
solution.
Registers sets
--------------
In most hosted environments, the underlying OS devides the ISA's
registers in groups. Typically there is a set of general-purpose
(which usually includes all integer register)s and a set of
floating-point registers. That's one of the reasons why we have
reggroups in GDB.
Most OS'es define data structures for dealing with these groups of
registers:
* Modern BSD's have `struct reg' and `struct fpreg'.
* System V has `gregset_t' and `fpregset_t'. Solaris (as an
SVR4-derivative) has `prgregset_t' and `fpregset_t' and the
provision for an `xregset'.
* QNX has `procfs_greg', `procfs_fpreg' and `procfs_altreg'.
* Linux is a bit messy, but tries to mimic SVR4/Solaris.
These data structures are used in several interfaces:
* ptrace(2) (for systems that have PT_GETREGS/PTRACE_GETREGS and
friends, e.g. modern BSD's and most Linuxen).
* proc(4) filesystem (a.k.a. procfs on e.g. SVR4/Solaris and QNX).
* libthread_db(3)/proc_service(3) debugging interface (on Solaris and
Linux).
* core(5) memory dumps (on ELF systems, but also in some cases,
traditional a.out systems).
As a result, we use these data structures all over the place in GDB,
usually in ways that make it difficult to re-use code and/or
multi-arch things. I'd like to introduce a more unified approach to
handling these data structures, which I propose to call register sets,
or regsets for short. Basically a register set is just a block of
memory of a certain size. We may want to put these register sets (or
a single register from them) into GDB's register cache. We also need
to be able to grab these register sets (or a single register in them)
from the register cache.
It seems that we need a maximum of three of these sets. I propose to
name these register sets as follows:
* `gregset' for the general-purpose registers.
* `fpregset' for the floating-point registers.
* `xregset' for any "extra" registers.
For each register set we have to provide a function that takes apart
the register set and stores it in GDB's register cache, and a
functions that puts together a register set from GDB's register set.
For these functions I propose the functions:
void <prefix>_supply_<regset> (struct regcache *regcache,
const void *regs, int regnum);
for supplying register REGNUM from register set REGS into the cache
REGCACHE, and
void <prefix>_collect_<regset> (const struct regcache *regcache,
void *regs, int regnum)
for collecting register REGNUM from the cache REGCACHE into register
set REGS.
If REGNUM is -1, these function operate on all registers within the set.
For each architecture we will have a structure that contains all
information about the register sets:
struct regset_info
{
size_t sizeof_gregset;
void (*supply_gregset)(struct regcache *, const void *, int);
void (*collect_gregset)(const struct regcache *, void *, int);
size_t sizeof_fpregset;
void (*supply_fpregset)(struct regcache *, const void *, int);
void (*collect_fpregset)(const struct regcache *, void *, int);
size_t sizeof_xregset;
void (*supply_xregset)(const struct regcache *, void *, int);
void (*collect_xregset)(const struct regcache *, void *, int);
};
A pointer to this structure will be stored in the architecture vector,
such that we can use this from various places in GDB.
Thoughts?
Mark