Home | History | Annotate | Line # | Download | only in gdb
ppc-linux-nat.c revision 1.1.1.2
      1 /* PPC GNU/Linux native support.
      2 
      3    Copyright (C) 1988-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
      4 
      5    This file is part of GDB.
      6 
      7    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
      8    it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
      9    the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
     10    (at your option) any later version.
     11 
     12    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
     13    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
     14    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
     15    GNU General Public License for more details.
     16 
     17    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
     18    along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.  */
     19 
     20 #include "defs.h"
     21 #include "observer.h"
     22 #include "frame.h"
     23 #include "inferior.h"
     24 #include "gdbthread.h"
     25 #include "gdbcore.h"
     26 #include "regcache.h"
     27 #include "target.h"
     28 #include "linux-nat.h"
     29 
     30 #include <stdint.h>
     31 #include <sys/types.h>
     32 #include <signal.h>
     33 #include <sys/user.h>
     34 #include <sys/ioctl.h>
     35 #include "gdb_wait.h"
     36 #include <fcntl.h>
     37 #include <sys/procfs.h>
     38 #include <sys/ptrace.h>
     39 
     40 /* Prototypes for supply_gregset etc.  */
     41 #include "gregset.h"
     42 #include "ppc-tdep.h"
     43 #include "ppc-linux-tdep.h"
     44 
     45 /* Required when using the AUXV.  */
     46 #include "elf/common.h"
     47 #include "auxv.h"
     48 
     49 /* This sometimes isn't defined.  */
     50 #ifndef PT_ORIG_R3
     51 #define PT_ORIG_R3 34
     52 #endif
     53 #ifndef PT_TRAP
     54 #define PT_TRAP 40
     55 #endif
     56 
     57 /* The PPC_FEATURE_* defines should be provided by <asm/cputable.h>.
     58    If they aren't, we can provide them ourselves (their values are fixed
     59    because they are part of the kernel ABI).  They are used in the AT_HWCAP
     60    entry of the AUXV.  */
     61 #ifndef PPC_FEATURE_CELL
     62 #define PPC_FEATURE_CELL 0x00010000
     63 #endif
     64 #ifndef PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE
     65 #define PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE 0x00008000
     66 #endif
     67 #ifndef PPC_FEATURE_HAS_DFP
     68 #define PPC_FEATURE_HAS_DFP	0x00000400  /* Decimal Floating Point.  */
     69 #endif
     70 
     71 /* Glibc's headers don't define PTRACE_GETVRREGS so we cannot use a
     72    configure time check.  Some older glibc's (for instance 2.2.1)
     73    don't have a specific powerpc version of ptrace.h, and fall back on
     74    a generic one.  In such cases, sys/ptrace.h defines
     75    PTRACE_GETFPXREGS and PTRACE_SETFPXREGS to the same numbers that
     76    ppc kernel's asm/ptrace.h defines PTRACE_GETVRREGS and
     77    PTRACE_SETVRREGS to be.  This also makes a configury check pretty
     78    much useless.  */
     79 
     80 /* These definitions should really come from the glibc header files,
     81    but Glibc doesn't know about the vrregs yet.  */
     82 #ifndef PTRACE_GETVRREGS
     83 #define PTRACE_GETVRREGS 18
     84 #define PTRACE_SETVRREGS 19
     85 #endif
     86 
     87 /* PTRACE requests for POWER7 VSX registers.  */
     88 #ifndef PTRACE_GETVSXREGS
     89 #define PTRACE_GETVSXREGS 27
     90 #define PTRACE_SETVSXREGS 28
     91 #endif
     92 
     93 /* Similarly for the ptrace requests for getting / setting the SPE
     94    registers (ev0 -- ev31, acc, and spefscr).  See the description of
     95    gdb_evrregset_t for details.  */
     96 #ifndef PTRACE_GETEVRREGS
     97 #define PTRACE_GETEVRREGS 20
     98 #define PTRACE_SETEVRREGS 21
     99 #endif
    100 
    101 /* Similarly for the hardware watchpoint support.  These requests are used
    102    when the PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface is not available.  */
    103 #ifndef PTRACE_GET_DEBUGREG
    104 #define PTRACE_GET_DEBUGREG    25
    105 #endif
    106 #ifndef PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG
    107 #define PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG    26
    108 #endif
    109 #ifndef PTRACE_GETSIGINFO
    110 #define PTRACE_GETSIGINFO    0x4202
    111 #endif
    112 
    113 /* These requests are used when the PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface is
    114    available.  It exposes the debug facilities of PowerPC processors, as well
    115    as additional features of BookE processors, such as ranged breakpoints and
    116    watchpoints and hardware-accelerated condition evaluation.  */
    117 #ifndef PPC_PTRACE_GETHWDBGINFO
    118 
    119 /* Not having PPC_PTRACE_GETHWDBGINFO defined means that the PowerPC HWDEBUG
    120    ptrace interface is not present in ptrace.h, so we'll have to pretty much
    121    include it all here so that the code at least compiles on older systems.  */
    122 #define PPC_PTRACE_GETHWDBGINFO 0x89
    123 #define PPC_PTRACE_SETHWDEBUG   0x88
    124 #define PPC_PTRACE_DELHWDEBUG   0x87
    125 
    126 struct ppc_debug_info
    127 {
    128         uint32_t version;               /* Only version 1 exists to date.  */
    129         uint32_t num_instruction_bps;
    130         uint32_t num_data_bps;
    131         uint32_t num_condition_regs;
    132         uint32_t data_bp_alignment;
    133         uint32_t sizeof_condition;      /* size of the DVC register.  */
    134         uint64_t features;
    135 };
    136 
    137 /* Features will have bits indicating whether there is support for:  */
    138 #define PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_INSN_BP_RANGE         0x1
    139 #define PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_INSN_BP_MASK          0x2
    140 #define PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_RANGE         0x4
    141 #define PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_MASK          0x8
    142 
    143 struct ppc_hw_breakpoint
    144 {
    145         uint32_t version;               /* currently, version must be 1 */
    146         uint32_t trigger_type;          /* only some combinations allowed */
    147         uint32_t addr_mode;             /* address match mode */
    148         uint32_t condition_mode;        /* break/watchpoint condition flags */
    149         uint64_t addr;                  /* break/watchpoint address */
    150         uint64_t addr2;                 /* range end or mask */
    151         uint64_t condition_value;       /* contents of the DVC register */
    152 };
    153 
    154 /* Trigger type.  */
    155 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_EXECUTE  0x1
    156 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_READ     0x2
    157 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_WRITE    0x4
    158 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_RW       0x6
    159 
    160 /* Address mode.  */
    161 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_EXACT               0x0
    162 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_RANGE_INCLUSIVE     0x1
    163 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_RANGE_EXCLUSIVE     0x2
    164 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_MASK                0x3
    165 
    166 /* Condition mode.  */
    167 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE   0x0
    168 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_AND    0x1
    169 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_EXACT  0x1
    170 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_OR     0x2
    171 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_AND_OR 0x3
    172 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_BE_ALL 0x00ff0000
    173 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_BE_SHIFT       16
    174 #define PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_BE(n)  \
    175         (1<<((n)+PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_BE_SHIFT))
    176 #endif /* PPC_PTRACE_GETHWDBGINFO */
    177 
    178 /* Feature defined on Linux kernel v3.9: DAWR interface, that enables wider
    179    watchpoint (up to 512 bytes).  */
    180 #ifndef PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_DAWR
    181 #define PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_DAWR	0x10
    182 #endif /* PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_DAWR */
    183 
    184 /* Similarly for the general-purpose (gp0 -- gp31)
    185    and floating-point registers (fp0 -- fp31).  */
    186 #ifndef PTRACE_GETREGS
    187 #define PTRACE_GETREGS 12
    188 #endif
    189 #ifndef PTRACE_SETREGS
    190 #define PTRACE_SETREGS 13
    191 #endif
    192 #ifndef PTRACE_GETFPREGS
    193 #define PTRACE_GETFPREGS 14
    194 #endif
    195 #ifndef PTRACE_SETFPREGS
    196 #define PTRACE_SETFPREGS 15
    197 #endif
    198 
    199 /* This oddity is because the Linux kernel defines elf_vrregset_t as
    200    an array of 33 16 bytes long elements.  I.e. it leaves out vrsave.
    201    However the PTRACE_GETVRREGS and PTRACE_SETVRREGS requests return
    202    the vrsave as an extra 4 bytes at the end.  I opted for creating a
    203    flat array of chars, so that it is easier to manipulate for gdb.
    204 
    205    There are 32 vector registers 16 bytes longs, plus a VSCR register
    206    which is only 4 bytes long, but is fetched as a 16 bytes
    207    quantity.  Up to here we have the elf_vrregset_t structure.
    208    Appended to this there is space for the VRSAVE register: 4 bytes.
    209    Even though this vrsave register is not included in the regset
    210    typedef, it is handled by the ptrace requests.
    211 
    212    Note that GNU/Linux doesn't support little endian PPC hardware,
    213    therefore the offset at which the real value of the VSCR register
    214    is located will be always 12 bytes.
    215 
    216    The layout is like this (where x is the actual value of the vscr reg): */
    217 
    218 /* *INDENT-OFF* */
    219 /*
    220    |.|.|.|.|.....|.|.|.|.||.|.|.|x||.|
    221    <------->     <-------><-------><->
    222      VR0           VR31     VSCR    VRSAVE
    223 */
    224 /* *INDENT-ON* */
    225 
    226 #define SIZEOF_VRREGS 33*16+4
    227 
    228 typedef char gdb_vrregset_t[SIZEOF_VRREGS];
    229 
    230 /* This is the layout of the POWER7 VSX registers and the way they overlap
    231    with the existing FPR and VMX registers.
    232 
    233                     VSR doubleword 0               VSR doubleword 1
    234            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    235    VSR[0]  |             FPR[0]            |                              |
    236            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    237    VSR[1]  |             FPR[1]            |                              |
    238            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    239            |              ...              |                              |
    240            |              ...              |                              |
    241            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    242    VSR[30] |             FPR[30]           |                              |
    243            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    244    VSR[31] |             FPR[31]           |                              |
    245            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    246    VSR[32] |                             VR[0]                            |
    247            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    248    VSR[33] |                             VR[1]                            |
    249            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    250            |                              ...                             |
    251            |                              ...                             |
    252            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    253    VSR[62] |                             VR[30]                           |
    254            ----------------------------------------------------------------
    255    VSR[63] |                             VR[31]                           |
    256           ----------------------------------------------------------------
    257 
    258    VSX has 64 128bit registers.  The first 32 registers overlap with
    259    the FP registers (doubleword 0) and hence extend them with additional
    260    64 bits (doubleword 1).  The other 32 regs overlap with the VMX
    261    registers.  */
    262 #define SIZEOF_VSXREGS 32*8
    263 
    264 typedef char gdb_vsxregset_t[SIZEOF_VSXREGS];
    265 
    266 /* On PPC processors that support the Signal Processing Extension
    267    (SPE) APU, the general-purpose registers are 64 bits long.
    268    However, the ordinary Linux kernel PTRACE_PEEKUSER / PTRACE_POKEUSER
    269    ptrace calls only access the lower half of each register, to allow
    270    them to behave the same way they do on non-SPE systems.  There's a
    271    separate pair of calls, PTRACE_GETEVRREGS / PTRACE_SETEVRREGS, that
    272    read and write the top halves of all the general-purpose registers
    273    at once, along with some SPE-specific registers.
    274 
    275    GDB itself continues to claim the general-purpose registers are 32
    276    bits long.  It has unnamed raw registers that hold the upper halves
    277    of the gprs, and the full 64-bit SIMD views of the registers,
    278    'ev0' -- 'ev31', are pseudo-registers that splice the top and
    279    bottom halves together.
    280 
    281    This is the structure filled in by PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and written to
    282    the inferior's registers by PTRACE_SETEVRREGS.  */
    283 struct gdb_evrregset_t
    284 {
    285   unsigned long evr[32];
    286   unsigned long long acc;
    287   unsigned long spefscr;
    288 };
    289 
    290 /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETVSXREGS and
    291    PTRACE_SETVSXREGS requests, for reading and writing the VSX
    292    POWER7 registers 0 through 31.  Zero if we've tried one of them and
    293    gotten an error.  Note that VSX registers 32 through 63 overlap
    294    with VR registers 0 through 31.  */
    295 int have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs = 1;
    296 
    297 /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETVRREGS and
    298    PTRACE_SETVRREGS requests, for reading and writing the Altivec
    299    registers.  Zero if we've tried one of them and gotten an
    300    error.  */
    301 int have_ptrace_getvrregs = 1;
    302 
    303 /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and
    304    PTRACE_SETEVRREGS requests, for reading and writing the SPE
    305    registers.  Zero if we've tried one of them and gotten an
    306    error.  */
    307 int have_ptrace_getsetevrregs = 1;
    308 
    309 /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETREGS and
    310    PTRACE_SETREGS requests, for reading and writing the
    311    general-purpose registers.  Zero if we've tried one of
    312    them and gotten an error.  */
    313 int have_ptrace_getsetregs = 1;
    314 
    315 /* Non-zero if our kernel may support the PTRACE_GETFPREGS and
    316    PTRACE_SETFPREGS requests, for reading and writing the
    317    floating-pointers registers.  Zero if we've tried one of
    318    them and gotten an error.  */
    319 int have_ptrace_getsetfpregs = 1;
    320 
    321 /* *INDENT-OFF* */
    322 /* registers layout, as presented by the ptrace interface:
    323 PT_R0, PT_R1, PT_R2, PT_R3, PT_R4, PT_R5, PT_R6, PT_R7,
    324 PT_R8, PT_R9, PT_R10, PT_R11, PT_R12, PT_R13, PT_R14, PT_R15,
    325 PT_R16, PT_R17, PT_R18, PT_R19, PT_R20, PT_R21, PT_R22, PT_R23,
    326 PT_R24, PT_R25, PT_R26, PT_R27, PT_R28, PT_R29, PT_R30, PT_R31,
    327 PT_FPR0, PT_FPR0 + 2, PT_FPR0 + 4, PT_FPR0 + 6,
    328 PT_FPR0 + 8, PT_FPR0 + 10, PT_FPR0 + 12, PT_FPR0 + 14,
    329 PT_FPR0 + 16, PT_FPR0 + 18, PT_FPR0 + 20, PT_FPR0 + 22,
    330 PT_FPR0 + 24, PT_FPR0 + 26, PT_FPR0 + 28, PT_FPR0 + 30,
    331 PT_FPR0 + 32, PT_FPR0 + 34, PT_FPR0 + 36, PT_FPR0 + 38,
    332 PT_FPR0 + 40, PT_FPR0 + 42, PT_FPR0 + 44, PT_FPR0 + 46,
    333 PT_FPR0 + 48, PT_FPR0 + 50, PT_FPR0 + 52, PT_FPR0 + 54,
    334 PT_FPR0 + 56, PT_FPR0 + 58, PT_FPR0 + 60, PT_FPR0 + 62,
    335 PT_NIP, PT_MSR, PT_CCR, PT_LNK, PT_CTR, PT_XER, PT_MQ */
    336 /* *INDENT_ON * */
    337 
    338 static int
    339 ppc_register_u_addr (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, int regno)
    340 {
    341   int u_addr = -1;
    342   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    343   /* NOTE: cagney/2003-11-25: This is the word size used by the ptrace
    344      interface, and not the wordsize of the program's ABI.  */
    345   int wordsize = sizeof (long);
    346 
    347   /* General purpose registers occupy 1 slot each in the buffer.  */
    348   if (regno >= tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum
    349       && regno < tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + ppc_num_gprs)
    350     u_addr = ((regno - tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + PT_R0) * wordsize);
    351 
    352   /* Floating point regs: eight bytes each in both 32- and 64-bit
    353      ptrace interfaces.  Thus, two slots each in 32-bit interface, one
    354      slot each in 64-bit interface.  */
    355   if (tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum >= 0
    356       && regno >= tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum
    357       && regno < tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum + ppc_num_fprs)
    358     u_addr = (PT_FPR0 * wordsize) + ((regno - tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum) * 8);
    359 
    360   /* UISA special purpose registers: 1 slot each.  */
    361   if (regno == gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch))
    362     u_addr = PT_NIP * wordsize;
    363   if (regno == tdep->ppc_lr_regnum)
    364     u_addr = PT_LNK * wordsize;
    365   if (regno == tdep->ppc_cr_regnum)
    366     u_addr = PT_CCR * wordsize;
    367   if (regno == tdep->ppc_xer_regnum)
    368     u_addr = PT_XER * wordsize;
    369   if (regno == tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum)
    370     u_addr = PT_CTR * wordsize;
    371 #ifdef PT_MQ
    372   if (regno == tdep->ppc_mq_regnum)
    373     u_addr = PT_MQ * wordsize;
    374 #endif
    375   if (regno == tdep->ppc_ps_regnum)
    376     u_addr = PT_MSR * wordsize;
    377   if (regno == PPC_ORIG_R3_REGNUM)
    378     u_addr = PT_ORIG_R3 * wordsize;
    379   if (regno == PPC_TRAP_REGNUM)
    380     u_addr = PT_TRAP * wordsize;
    381   if (tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum >= 0
    382       && regno == tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum)
    383     {
    384       /* NOTE: cagney/2005-02-08: On some 64-bit GNU/Linux systems the
    385 	 kernel headers incorrectly contained the 32-bit definition of
    386 	 PT_FPSCR.  For the 32-bit definition, floating-point
    387 	 registers occupy two 32-bit "slots", and the FPSCR lives in
    388 	 the second half of such a slot-pair (hence +1).  For 64-bit,
    389 	 the FPSCR instead occupies the full 64-bit 2-word-slot and
    390 	 hence no adjustment is necessary.  Hack around this.  */
    391       if (wordsize == 8 && PT_FPSCR == (48 + 32 + 1))
    392 	u_addr = (48 + 32) * wordsize;
    393       /* If the FPSCR is 64-bit wide, we need to fetch the whole 64-bit
    394 	 slot and not just its second word.  The PT_FPSCR supplied when
    395 	 GDB is compiled as a 32-bit app doesn't reflect this.  */
    396       else if (wordsize == 4 && register_size (gdbarch, regno) == 8
    397 	       && PT_FPSCR == (48 + 2*32 + 1))
    398 	u_addr = (48 + 2*32) * wordsize;
    399       else
    400 	u_addr = PT_FPSCR * wordsize;
    401     }
    402   return u_addr;
    403 }
    404 
    405 /* The Linux kernel ptrace interface for POWER7 VSX registers uses the
    406    registers set mechanism, as opposed to the interface for all the
    407    other registers, that stores/fetches each register individually.  */
    408 static void
    409 fetch_vsx_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    410 {
    411   int ret;
    412   gdb_vsxregset_t regs;
    413   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    414   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    415   int vsxregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum);
    416 
    417   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    418   if (ret < 0)
    419     {
    420       if (errno == EIO)
    421 	{
    422 	  have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs = 0;
    423 	  return;
    424 	}
    425       perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch VSX register"));
    426     }
    427 
    428   regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno,
    429 		       regs + (regno - tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum)
    430 		       * vsxregsize);
    431 }
    432 
    433 /* The Linux kernel ptrace interface for AltiVec registers uses the
    434    registers set mechanism, as opposed to the interface for all the
    435    other registers, that stores/fetches each register individually.  */
    436 static void
    437 fetch_altivec_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    438 {
    439   int ret;
    440   int offset = 0;
    441   gdb_vrregset_t regs;
    442   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    443   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    444   int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum);
    445 
    446   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    447   if (ret < 0)
    448     {
    449       if (errno == EIO)
    450         {
    451           have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0;
    452           return;
    453         }
    454       perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec register"));
    455     }
    456 
    457   /* VSCR is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity, but it is really 4 bytes
    458      long on the hardware.  We deal only with the lower 4 bytes of the
    459      vector.  VRSAVE is at the end of the array in a 4 bytes slot, so
    460      there is no need to define an offset for it.  */
    461   if (regno == (tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - 1))
    462     offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum);
    463 
    464   regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno,
    465 		       regs + (regno
    466 			       - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum) * vrregsize + offset);
    467 }
    468 
    469 /* Fetch the top 32 bits of TID's general-purpose registers and the
    470    SPE-specific registers, and place the results in EVRREGSET.  If we
    471    don't support PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, then just fill EVRREGSET with
    472    zeros.
    473 
    474    All the logic to deal with whether or not the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and
    475    PTRACE_SETEVRREGS requests are supported is isolated here, and in
    476    set_spe_registers.  */
    477 static void
    478 get_spe_registers (int tid, struct gdb_evrregset_t *evrregset)
    479 {
    480   if (have_ptrace_getsetevrregs)
    481     {
    482       if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, tid, 0, evrregset) >= 0)
    483         return;
    484       else
    485         {
    486           /* EIO means that the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS request isn't supported;
    487              we just return zeros.  */
    488           if (errno == EIO)
    489             have_ptrace_getsetevrregs = 0;
    490           else
    491             /* Anything else needs to be reported.  */
    492             perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch SPE registers"));
    493         }
    494     }
    495 
    496   memset (evrregset, 0, sizeof (*evrregset));
    497 }
    498 
    499 /* Supply values from TID for SPE-specific raw registers: the upper
    500    halves of the GPRs, the accumulator, and the spefscr.  REGNO must
    501    be the number of an upper half register, acc, spefscr, or -1 to
    502    supply the values of all registers.  */
    503 static void
    504 fetch_spe_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    505 {
    506   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    507   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    508   struct gdb_evrregset_t evrregs;
    509 
    510   gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.evr[0])
    511               == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum));
    512   gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.acc)
    513               == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum));
    514   gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.spefscr)
    515               == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum));
    516 
    517   get_spe_registers (tid, &evrregs);
    518 
    519   if (regno == -1)
    520     {
    521       int i;
    522 
    523       for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++)
    524         regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + i,
    525                              &evrregs.evr[i]);
    526     }
    527   else if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum <= regno
    528            && regno < tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + ppc_num_gprs)
    529     regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno,
    530                          &evrregs.evr[regno - tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum]);
    531 
    532   if (regno == -1
    533       || regno == tdep->ppc_acc_regnum)
    534     regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum, &evrregs.acc);
    535 
    536   if (regno == -1
    537       || regno == tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum)
    538     regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum,
    539                          &evrregs.spefscr);
    540 }
    541 
    542 static void
    543 fetch_register (struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    544 {
    545   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    546   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    547   /* This isn't really an address.  But ptrace thinks of it as one.  */
    548   CORE_ADDR regaddr = ppc_register_u_addr (gdbarch, regno);
    549   int bytes_transferred;
    550   unsigned int offset;         /* Offset of registers within the u area.  */
    551   gdb_byte buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
    552 
    553   if (altivec_register_p (gdbarch, regno))
    554     {
    555       /* If this is the first time through, or if it is not the first
    556          time through, and we have comfirmed that there is kernel
    557          support for such a ptrace request, then go and fetch the
    558          register.  */
    559       if (have_ptrace_getvrregs)
    560        {
    561          fetch_altivec_register (regcache, tid, regno);
    562          return;
    563        }
    564      /* If we have discovered that there is no ptrace support for
    565         AltiVec registers, fall through and return zeroes, because
    566         regaddr will be -1 in this case.  */
    567     }
    568   if (vsx_register_p (gdbarch, regno))
    569     {
    570       if (have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs)
    571 	{
    572 	  fetch_vsx_register (regcache, tid, regno);
    573 	  return;
    574 	}
    575     }
    576   else if (spe_register_p (gdbarch, regno))
    577     {
    578       fetch_spe_register (regcache, tid, regno);
    579       return;
    580     }
    581 
    582   if (regaddr == -1)
    583     {
    584       memset (buf, '\0', register_size (gdbarch, regno));   /* Supply zeroes */
    585       regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf);
    586       return;
    587     }
    588 
    589   /* Read the raw register using sizeof(long) sized chunks.  On a
    590      32-bit platform, 64-bit floating-point registers will require two
    591      transfers.  */
    592   for (bytes_transferred = 0;
    593        bytes_transferred < register_size (gdbarch, regno);
    594        bytes_transferred += sizeof (long))
    595     {
    596       long l;
    597 
    598       errno = 0;
    599       l = ptrace (PTRACE_PEEKUSER, tid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) regaddr, 0);
    600       regaddr += sizeof (long);
    601       if (errno != 0)
    602 	{
    603           char message[128];
    604 	  xsnprintf (message, sizeof (message), "reading register %s (#%d)",
    605 		     gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, regno), regno);
    606 	  perror_with_name (message);
    607 	}
    608       memcpy (&buf[bytes_transferred], &l, sizeof (l));
    609     }
    610 
    611   /* Now supply the register.  Keep in mind that the regcache's idea
    612      of the register's size may not be a multiple of sizeof
    613      (long).  */
    614   if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE)
    615     {
    616       /* Little-endian values are always found at the left end of the
    617          bytes transferred.  */
    618       regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf);
    619     }
    620   else if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
    621     {
    622       /* Big-endian values are found at the right end of the bytes
    623          transferred.  */
    624       size_t padding = (bytes_transferred - register_size (gdbarch, regno));
    625       regcache_raw_supply (regcache, regno, buf + padding);
    626     }
    627   else
    628     internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
    629                     _("fetch_register: unexpected byte order: %d"),
    630                     gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch));
    631 }
    632 
    633 static void
    634 supply_vsxregset (struct regcache *regcache, gdb_vsxregset_t *vsxregsetp)
    635 {
    636   int i;
    637   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    638   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    639   int vsxregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum);
    640 
    641   for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_vshrs; i++)
    642     {
    643 	regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum + i,
    644 			     *vsxregsetp + i * vsxregsize);
    645     }
    646 }
    647 
    648 static void
    649 supply_vrregset (struct regcache *regcache, gdb_vrregset_t *vrregsetp)
    650 {
    651   int i;
    652   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    653   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    654   int num_of_vrregs = tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + 1;
    655   int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum);
    656   int offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum);
    657 
    658   for (i = 0; i < num_of_vrregs; i++)
    659     {
    660       /* The last 2 registers of this set are only 32 bit long, not
    661          128.  However an offset is necessary only for VSCR because it
    662          occupies a whole vector, while VRSAVE occupies a full 4 bytes
    663          slot.  */
    664       if (i == (num_of_vrregs - 2))
    665         regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i,
    666 			     *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize + offset);
    667       else
    668         regcache_raw_supply (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i,
    669 			     *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize);
    670     }
    671 }
    672 
    673 static void
    674 fetch_vsx_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    675 {
    676   int ret;
    677   gdb_vsxregset_t regs;
    678 
    679   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    680   if (ret < 0)
    681     {
    682       if (errno == EIO)
    683 	{
    684 	  have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs = 0;
    685 	  return;
    686 	}
    687       perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch VSX registers"));
    688     }
    689   supply_vsxregset (regcache, &regs);
    690 }
    691 
    692 static void
    693 fetch_altivec_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    694 {
    695   int ret;
    696   gdb_vrregset_t regs;
    697 
    698   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    699   if (ret < 0)
    700     {
    701       if (errno == EIO)
    702 	{
    703           have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0;
    704 	  return;
    705 	}
    706       perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec registers"));
    707     }
    708   supply_vrregset (regcache, &regs);
    709 }
    710 
    711 /* This function actually issues the request to ptrace, telling
    712    it to get all general-purpose registers and put them into the
    713    specified regset.
    714 
    715    If the ptrace request does not exist, this function returns 0
    716    and properly sets the have_ptrace_* flag.  If the request fails,
    717    this function calls perror_with_name.  Otherwise, if the request
    718    succeeds, then the regcache gets filled and 1 is returned.  */
    719 static int
    720 fetch_all_gp_regs (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    721 {
    722   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    723   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    724   gdb_gregset_t gregset;
    725 
    726   if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, tid, 0, (void *) &gregset) < 0)
    727     {
    728       if (errno == EIO)
    729         {
    730           have_ptrace_getsetregs = 0;
    731           return 0;
    732         }
    733       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get general-purpose registers."));
    734     }
    735 
    736   supply_gregset (regcache, (const gdb_gregset_t *) &gregset);
    737 
    738   return 1;
    739 }
    740 
    741 /* This is a wrapper for the fetch_all_gp_regs function.  It is
    742    responsible for verifying if this target has the ptrace request
    743    that can be used to fetch all general-purpose registers at one
    744    shot.  If it doesn't, then we should fetch them using the
    745    old-fashioned way, which is to iterate over the registers and
    746    request them one by one.  */
    747 static void
    748 fetch_gp_regs (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    749 {
    750   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    751   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    752   int i;
    753 
    754   if (have_ptrace_getsetregs)
    755     if (fetch_all_gp_regs (regcache, tid))
    756       return;
    757 
    758   /* If we've hit this point, it doesn't really matter which
    759      architecture we are using.  We just need to read the
    760      registers in the "old-fashioned way".  */
    761   for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++)
    762     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + i);
    763 }
    764 
    765 /* This function actually issues the request to ptrace, telling
    766    it to get all floating-point registers and put them into the
    767    specified regset.
    768 
    769    If the ptrace request does not exist, this function returns 0
    770    and properly sets the have_ptrace_* flag.  If the request fails,
    771    this function calls perror_with_name.  Otherwise, if the request
    772    succeeds, then the regcache gets filled and 1 is returned.  */
    773 static int
    774 fetch_all_fp_regs (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    775 {
    776   gdb_fpregset_t fpregs;
    777 
    778   if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, tid, 0, (void *) &fpregs) < 0)
    779     {
    780       if (errno == EIO)
    781         {
    782           have_ptrace_getsetfpregs = 0;
    783           return 0;
    784         }
    785       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get floating-point registers."));
    786     }
    787 
    788   supply_fpregset (regcache, (const gdb_fpregset_t *) &fpregs);
    789 
    790   return 1;
    791 }
    792 
    793 /* This is a wrapper for the fetch_all_fp_regs function.  It is
    794    responsible for verifying if this target has the ptrace request
    795    that can be used to fetch all floating-point registers at one
    796    shot.  If it doesn't, then we should fetch them using the
    797    old-fashioned way, which is to iterate over the registers and
    798    request them one by one.  */
    799 static void
    800 fetch_fp_regs (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    801 {
    802   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    803   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    804   int i;
    805 
    806   if (have_ptrace_getsetfpregs)
    807     if (fetch_all_fp_regs (regcache, tid))
    808       return;
    809 
    810   /* If we've hit this point, it doesn't really matter which
    811      architecture we are using.  We just need to read the
    812      registers in the "old-fashioned way".  */
    813   for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_fprs; i++)
    814     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum + i);
    815 }
    816 
    817 static void
    818 fetch_ppc_registers (struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
    819 {
    820   int i;
    821   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    822   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    823 
    824   fetch_gp_regs (regcache, tid);
    825   if (tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum >= 0)
    826     fetch_fp_regs (regcache, tid);
    827   fetch_register (regcache, tid, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch));
    828   if (tdep->ppc_ps_regnum != -1)
    829     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ps_regnum);
    830   if (tdep->ppc_cr_regnum != -1)
    831     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_cr_regnum);
    832   if (tdep->ppc_lr_regnum != -1)
    833     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_lr_regnum);
    834   if (tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum != -1)
    835     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum);
    836   if (tdep->ppc_xer_regnum != -1)
    837     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_xer_regnum);
    838   if (tdep->ppc_mq_regnum != -1)
    839     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_mq_regnum);
    840   if (ppc_linux_trap_reg_p (gdbarch))
    841     {
    842       fetch_register (regcache, tid, PPC_ORIG_R3_REGNUM);
    843       fetch_register (regcache, tid, PPC_TRAP_REGNUM);
    844     }
    845   if (tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum != -1)
    846     fetch_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum);
    847   if (have_ptrace_getvrregs)
    848     if (tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum != -1 && tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum != -1)
    849       fetch_altivec_registers (regcache, tid);
    850   if (have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs)
    851     if (tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum != -1)
    852       fetch_vsx_registers (regcache, tid);
    853   if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum >= 0)
    854     fetch_spe_register (regcache, tid, -1);
    855 }
    856 
    857 /* Fetch registers from the child process.  Fetch all registers if
    858    regno == -1, otherwise fetch all general registers or all floating
    859    point registers depending upon the value of regno.  */
    860 static void
    861 ppc_linux_fetch_inferior_registers (struct target_ops *ops,
    862 				    struct regcache *regcache, int regno)
    863 {
    864   /* Overload thread id onto process id.  */
    865   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
    866 
    867   /* No thread id, just use process id.  */
    868   if (tid == 0)
    869     tid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
    870 
    871   if (regno == -1)
    872     fetch_ppc_registers (regcache, tid);
    873   else
    874     fetch_register (regcache, tid, regno);
    875 }
    876 
    877 /* Store one VSX register.  */
    878 static void
    879 store_vsx_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    880 {
    881   int ret;
    882   gdb_vsxregset_t regs;
    883   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    884   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    885   int vsxregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum);
    886 
    887   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    888   if (ret < 0)
    889     {
    890       if (errno == EIO)
    891 	{
    892 	  have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs = 0;
    893 	  return;
    894 	}
    895       perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch VSX register"));
    896     }
    897 
    898   regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, regs +
    899 			(regno - tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum) * vsxregsize);
    900 
    901   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    902   if (ret < 0)
    903     perror_with_name (_("Unable to store VSX register"));
    904 }
    905 
    906 /* Store one register.  */
    907 static void
    908 store_altivec_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    909 {
    910   int ret;
    911   int offset = 0;
    912   gdb_vrregset_t regs;
    913   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    914   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    915   int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum);
    916 
    917   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    918   if (ret < 0)
    919     {
    920       if (errno == EIO)
    921         {
    922           have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0;
    923           return;
    924         }
    925       perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec register"));
    926     }
    927 
    928   /* VSCR is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity, but it is really 4 bytes
    929      long on the hardware.  */
    930   if (regno == (tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - 1))
    931     offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum);
    932 
    933   regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno,
    934 			regs + (regno
    935 				- tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum) * vrregsize + offset);
    936 
    937   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_SETVRREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
    938   if (ret < 0)
    939     perror_with_name (_("Unable to store AltiVec register"));
    940 }
    941 
    942 /* Assuming TID referrs to an SPE process, set the top halves of TID's
    943    general-purpose registers and its SPE-specific registers to the
    944    values in EVRREGSET.  If we don't support PTRACE_SETEVRREGS, do
    945    nothing.
    946 
    947    All the logic to deal with whether or not the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS and
    948    PTRACE_SETEVRREGS requests are supported is isolated here, and in
    949    get_spe_registers.  */
    950 static void
    951 set_spe_registers (int tid, struct gdb_evrregset_t *evrregset)
    952 {
    953   if (have_ptrace_getsetevrregs)
    954     {
    955       if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETEVRREGS, tid, 0, evrregset) >= 0)
    956         return;
    957       else
    958         {
    959           /* EIO means that the PTRACE_SETEVRREGS request isn't
    960              supported; we fail silently, and don't try the call
    961              again.  */
    962           if (errno == EIO)
    963             have_ptrace_getsetevrregs = 0;
    964           else
    965             /* Anything else needs to be reported.  */
    966             perror_with_name (_("Unable to set SPE registers"));
    967         }
    968     }
    969 }
    970 
    971 /* Write GDB's value for the SPE-specific raw register REGNO to TID.
    972    If REGNO is -1, write the values of all the SPE-specific
    973    registers.  */
    974 static void
    975 store_spe_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
    976 {
    977   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
    978   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
    979   struct gdb_evrregset_t evrregs;
    980 
    981   gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.evr[0])
    982               == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum));
    983   gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.acc)
    984               == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_acc_regnum));
    985   gdb_assert (sizeof (evrregs.spefscr)
    986               == register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum));
    987 
    988   if (regno == -1)
    989     /* Since we're going to write out every register, the code below
    990        should store to every field of evrregs; if that doesn't happen,
    991        make it obvious by initializing it with suspicious values.  */
    992     memset (&evrregs, 42, sizeof (evrregs));
    993   else
    994     /* We can only read and write the entire EVR register set at a
    995        time, so to write just a single register, we do a
    996        read-modify-write maneuver.  */
    997     get_spe_registers (tid, &evrregs);
    998 
    999   if (regno == -1)
   1000     {
   1001       int i;
   1002 
   1003       for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++)
   1004         regcache_raw_collect (regcache,
   1005                               tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + i,
   1006                               &evrregs.evr[i]);
   1007     }
   1008   else if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum <= regno
   1009            && regno < tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum + ppc_num_gprs)
   1010     regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno,
   1011                           &evrregs.evr[regno - tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum]);
   1012 
   1013   if (regno == -1
   1014       || regno == tdep->ppc_acc_regnum)
   1015     regcache_raw_collect (regcache,
   1016                           tdep->ppc_acc_regnum,
   1017                           &evrregs.acc);
   1018 
   1019   if (regno == -1
   1020       || regno == tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum)
   1021     regcache_raw_collect (regcache,
   1022                           tdep->ppc_spefscr_regnum,
   1023                           &evrregs.spefscr);
   1024 
   1025   /* Write back the modified register set.  */
   1026   set_spe_registers (tid, &evrregs);
   1027 }
   1028 
   1029 static void
   1030 store_register (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
   1031 {
   1032   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1033   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1034   /* This isn't really an address.  But ptrace thinks of it as one.  */
   1035   CORE_ADDR regaddr = ppc_register_u_addr (gdbarch, regno);
   1036   int i;
   1037   size_t bytes_to_transfer;
   1038   gdb_byte buf[MAX_REGISTER_SIZE];
   1039 
   1040   if (altivec_register_p (gdbarch, regno))
   1041     {
   1042       store_altivec_register (regcache, tid, regno);
   1043       return;
   1044     }
   1045   if (vsx_register_p (gdbarch, regno))
   1046     {
   1047       store_vsx_register (regcache, tid, regno);
   1048       return;
   1049     }
   1050   else if (spe_register_p (gdbarch, regno))
   1051     {
   1052       store_spe_register (regcache, tid, regno);
   1053       return;
   1054     }
   1055 
   1056   if (regaddr == -1)
   1057     return;
   1058 
   1059   /* First collect the register.  Keep in mind that the regcache's
   1060      idea of the register's size may not be a multiple of sizeof
   1061      (long).  */
   1062   memset (buf, 0, sizeof buf);
   1063   bytes_to_transfer = align_up (register_size (gdbarch, regno), sizeof (long));
   1064   if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE)
   1065     {
   1066       /* Little-endian values always sit at the left end of the buffer.  */
   1067       regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, buf);
   1068     }
   1069   else if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) == BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
   1070     {
   1071       /* Big-endian values sit at the right end of the buffer.  */
   1072       size_t padding = (bytes_to_transfer - register_size (gdbarch, regno));
   1073       regcache_raw_collect (regcache, regno, buf + padding);
   1074     }
   1075 
   1076   for (i = 0; i < bytes_to_transfer; i += sizeof (long))
   1077     {
   1078       long l;
   1079 
   1080       memcpy (&l, &buf[i], sizeof (l));
   1081       errno = 0;
   1082       ptrace (PTRACE_POKEUSER, tid, (PTRACE_TYPE_ARG3) regaddr, l);
   1083       regaddr += sizeof (long);
   1084 
   1085       if (errno == EIO
   1086           && (regno == tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum
   1087 	      || regno == PPC_ORIG_R3_REGNUM
   1088 	      || regno == PPC_TRAP_REGNUM))
   1089 	{
   1090 	  /* Some older kernel versions don't allow fpscr, orig_r3
   1091 	     or trap to be written.  */
   1092 	  continue;
   1093 	}
   1094 
   1095       if (errno != 0)
   1096 	{
   1097           char message[128];
   1098 	  xsnprintf (message, sizeof (message), "writing register %s (#%d)",
   1099 		     gdbarch_register_name (gdbarch, regno), regno);
   1100 	  perror_with_name (message);
   1101 	}
   1102     }
   1103 }
   1104 
   1105 static void
   1106 fill_vsxregset (const struct regcache *regcache, gdb_vsxregset_t *vsxregsetp)
   1107 {
   1108   int i;
   1109   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1110   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1111   int vsxregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum);
   1112 
   1113   for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_vshrs; i++)
   1114     regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum + i,
   1115 			  *vsxregsetp + i * vsxregsize);
   1116 }
   1117 
   1118 static void
   1119 fill_vrregset (const struct regcache *regcache, gdb_vrregset_t *vrregsetp)
   1120 {
   1121   int i;
   1122   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1123   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1124   int num_of_vrregs = tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum - tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + 1;
   1125   int vrregsize = register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum);
   1126   int offset = vrregsize - register_size (gdbarch, tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum);
   1127 
   1128   for (i = 0; i < num_of_vrregs; i++)
   1129     {
   1130       /* The last 2 registers of this set are only 32 bit long, not
   1131          128, but only VSCR is fetched as a 16 bytes quantity.  */
   1132       if (i == (num_of_vrregs - 2))
   1133         regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i,
   1134 			      *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize + offset);
   1135       else
   1136         regcache_raw_collect (regcache, tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum + i,
   1137 			      *vrregsetp + i * vrregsize);
   1138     }
   1139 }
   1140 
   1141 static void
   1142 store_vsx_registers (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
   1143 {
   1144   int ret;
   1145   gdb_vsxregset_t regs;
   1146 
   1147   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
   1148   if (ret < 0)
   1149     {
   1150       if (errno == EIO)
   1151 	{
   1152 	  have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs = 0;
   1153 	  return;
   1154 	}
   1155       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get VSX registers"));
   1156     }
   1157 
   1158   fill_vsxregset (regcache, &regs);
   1159 
   1160   if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &regs) < 0)
   1161     perror_with_name (_("Couldn't write VSX registers"));
   1162 }
   1163 
   1164 static void
   1165 store_altivec_registers (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
   1166 {
   1167   int ret;
   1168   gdb_vrregset_t regs;
   1169 
   1170   ret = ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, &regs);
   1171   if (ret < 0)
   1172     {
   1173       if (errno == EIO)
   1174         {
   1175           have_ptrace_getvrregs = 0;
   1176           return;
   1177         }
   1178       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get AltiVec registers"));
   1179     }
   1180 
   1181   fill_vrregset (regcache, &regs);
   1182 
   1183   if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETVRREGS, tid, 0, &regs) < 0)
   1184     perror_with_name (_("Couldn't write AltiVec registers"));
   1185 }
   1186 
   1187 /* This function actually issues the request to ptrace, telling
   1188    it to store all general-purpose registers present in the specified
   1189    regset.
   1190 
   1191    If the ptrace request does not exist, this function returns 0
   1192    and properly sets the have_ptrace_* flag.  If the request fails,
   1193    this function calls perror_with_name.  Otherwise, if the request
   1194    succeeds, then the regcache is stored and 1 is returned.  */
   1195 static int
   1196 store_all_gp_regs (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
   1197 {
   1198   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1199   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1200   gdb_gregset_t gregset;
   1201 
   1202   if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETREGS, tid, 0, (void *) &gregset) < 0)
   1203     {
   1204       if (errno == EIO)
   1205         {
   1206           have_ptrace_getsetregs = 0;
   1207           return 0;
   1208         }
   1209       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get general-purpose registers."));
   1210     }
   1211 
   1212   fill_gregset (regcache, &gregset, regno);
   1213 
   1214   if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETREGS, tid, 0, (void *) &gregset) < 0)
   1215     {
   1216       if (errno == EIO)
   1217         {
   1218           have_ptrace_getsetregs = 0;
   1219           return 0;
   1220         }
   1221       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't set general-purpose registers."));
   1222     }
   1223 
   1224   return 1;
   1225 }
   1226 
   1227 /* This is a wrapper for the store_all_gp_regs function.  It is
   1228    responsible for verifying if this target has the ptrace request
   1229    that can be used to store all general-purpose registers at one
   1230    shot.  If it doesn't, then we should store them using the
   1231    old-fashioned way, which is to iterate over the registers and
   1232    store them one by one.  */
   1233 static void
   1234 store_gp_regs (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
   1235 {
   1236   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1237   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1238   int i;
   1239 
   1240   if (have_ptrace_getsetregs)
   1241     if (store_all_gp_regs (regcache, tid, regno))
   1242       return;
   1243 
   1244   /* If we hit this point, it doesn't really matter which
   1245      architecture we are using.  We just need to store the
   1246      registers in the "old-fashioned way".  */
   1247   for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_gprs; i++)
   1248     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_gp0_regnum + i);
   1249 }
   1250 
   1251 /* This function actually issues the request to ptrace, telling
   1252    it to store all floating-point registers present in the specified
   1253    regset.
   1254 
   1255    If the ptrace request does not exist, this function returns 0
   1256    and properly sets the have_ptrace_* flag.  If the request fails,
   1257    this function calls perror_with_name.  Otherwise, if the request
   1258    succeeds, then the regcache is stored and 1 is returned.  */
   1259 static int
   1260 store_all_fp_regs (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
   1261 {
   1262   gdb_fpregset_t fpregs;
   1263 
   1264   if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETFPREGS, tid, 0, (void *) &fpregs) < 0)
   1265     {
   1266       if (errno == EIO)
   1267         {
   1268           have_ptrace_getsetfpregs = 0;
   1269           return 0;
   1270         }
   1271       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't get floating-point registers."));
   1272     }
   1273 
   1274   fill_fpregset (regcache, &fpregs, regno);
   1275 
   1276   if (ptrace (PTRACE_SETFPREGS, tid, 0, (void *) &fpregs) < 0)
   1277     {
   1278       if (errno == EIO)
   1279         {
   1280           have_ptrace_getsetfpregs = 0;
   1281           return 0;
   1282         }
   1283       perror_with_name (_("Couldn't set floating-point registers."));
   1284     }
   1285 
   1286   return 1;
   1287 }
   1288 
   1289 /* This is a wrapper for the store_all_fp_regs function.  It is
   1290    responsible for verifying if this target has the ptrace request
   1291    that can be used to store all floating-point registers at one
   1292    shot.  If it doesn't, then we should store them using the
   1293    old-fashioned way, which is to iterate over the registers and
   1294    store them one by one.  */
   1295 static void
   1296 store_fp_regs (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid, int regno)
   1297 {
   1298   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1299   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1300   int i;
   1301 
   1302   if (have_ptrace_getsetfpregs)
   1303     if (store_all_fp_regs (regcache, tid, regno))
   1304       return;
   1305 
   1306   /* If we hit this point, it doesn't really matter which
   1307      architecture we are using.  We just need to store the
   1308      registers in the "old-fashioned way".  */
   1309   for (i = 0; i < ppc_num_fprs; i++)
   1310     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum + i);
   1311 }
   1312 
   1313 static void
   1314 store_ppc_registers (const struct regcache *regcache, int tid)
   1315 {
   1316   int i;
   1317   struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_regcache_arch (regcache);
   1318   struct gdbarch_tdep *tdep = gdbarch_tdep (gdbarch);
   1319 
   1320   store_gp_regs (regcache, tid, -1);
   1321   if (tdep->ppc_fp0_regnum >= 0)
   1322     store_fp_regs (regcache, tid, -1);
   1323   store_register (regcache, tid, gdbarch_pc_regnum (gdbarch));
   1324   if (tdep->ppc_ps_regnum != -1)
   1325     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ps_regnum);
   1326   if (tdep->ppc_cr_regnum != -1)
   1327     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_cr_regnum);
   1328   if (tdep->ppc_lr_regnum != -1)
   1329     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_lr_regnum);
   1330   if (tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum != -1)
   1331     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_ctr_regnum);
   1332   if (tdep->ppc_xer_regnum != -1)
   1333     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_xer_regnum);
   1334   if (tdep->ppc_mq_regnum != -1)
   1335     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_mq_regnum);
   1336   if (tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum != -1)
   1337     store_register (regcache, tid, tdep->ppc_fpscr_regnum);
   1338   if (ppc_linux_trap_reg_p (gdbarch))
   1339     {
   1340       store_register (regcache, tid, PPC_ORIG_R3_REGNUM);
   1341       store_register (regcache, tid, PPC_TRAP_REGNUM);
   1342     }
   1343   if (have_ptrace_getvrregs)
   1344     if (tdep->ppc_vr0_regnum != -1 && tdep->ppc_vrsave_regnum != -1)
   1345       store_altivec_registers (regcache, tid);
   1346   if (have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs)
   1347     if (tdep->ppc_vsr0_upper_regnum != -1)
   1348       store_vsx_registers (regcache, tid);
   1349   if (tdep->ppc_ev0_upper_regnum >= 0)
   1350     store_spe_register (regcache, tid, -1);
   1351 }
   1352 
   1353 /* Fetch the AT_HWCAP entry from the aux vector.  */
   1354 static unsigned long
   1355 ppc_linux_get_hwcap (void)
   1356 {
   1357   CORE_ADDR field;
   1358 
   1359   if (target_auxv_search (&current_target, AT_HWCAP, &field))
   1360     return (unsigned long) field;
   1361 
   1362   return 0;
   1363 }
   1364 
   1365 /* The cached DABR value, to install in new threads.
   1366    This variable is used when the PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace
   1367    interface is not available.  */
   1368 static long saved_dabr_value;
   1369 
   1370 /* Global structure that will store information about the available
   1371    features provided by the PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface.  */
   1372 static struct ppc_debug_info hwdebug_info;
   1373 
   1374 /* Global variable that holds the maximum number of slots that the
   1375    kernel will use.  This is only used when PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface
   1376    is available.  */
   1377 static size_t max_slots_number = 0;
   1378 
   1379 struct hw_break_tuple
   1380 {
   1381   long slot;
   1382   struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *hw_break;
   1383 };
   1384 
   1385 /* This is an internal VEC created to store information about *points inserted
   1386    for each thread.  This is used when PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface is
   1387    available.  */
   1388 typedef struct thread_points
   1389   {
   1390     /* The TID to which this *point relates.  */
   1391     int tid;
   1392     /* Information about the *point, such as its address, type, etc.
   1393 
   1394        Each element inside this vector corresponds to a hardware
   1395        breakpoint or watchpoint in the thread represented by TID.  The maximum
   1396        size of these vector is MAX_SLOTS_NUMBER.  If the hw_break element of
   1397        the tuple is NULL, then the position in the vector is free.  */
   1398     struct hw_break_tuple *hw_breaks;
   1399   } *thread_points_p;
   1400 DEF_VEC_P (thread_points_p);
   1401 
   1402 VEC(thread_points_p) *ppc_threads = NULL;
   1403 
   1404 /* The version of the PowerPC HWDEBUG kernel interface that we will use, if
   1405    available.  */
   1406 #define PPC_DEBUG_CURRENT_VERSION 1
   1407 
   1408 /* Returns non-zero if we support the PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface.  */
   1409 static int
   1410 have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface (void)
   1411 {
   1412   static int have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface = -1;
   1413 
   1414   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface == -1)
   1415     {
   1416       int tid;
   1417 
   1418       tid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
   1419       if (tid == 0)
   1420 	tid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
   1421 
   1422       /* Check for kernel support for PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface.  */
   1423       if (ptrace (PPC_PTRACE_GETHWDBGINFO, tid, 0, &hwdebug_info) >= 0)
   1424 	{
   1425 	  /* Check whether PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface is functional and
   1426 	     provides any supported feature.  */
   1427 	  if (hwdebug_info.features != 0)
   1428 	    {
   1429 	      have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface = 1;
   1430 	      max_slots_number = hwdebug_info.num_instruction_bps
   1431 	        + hwdebug_info.num_data_bps
   1432 	        + hwdebug_info.num_condition_regs;
   1433 	      return have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface;
   1434 	    }
   1435 	}
   1436       /* Old school interface and no PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace support.  */
   1437       have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface = 0;
   1438       memset (&hwdebug_info, 0, sizeof (struct ppc_debug_info));
   1439     }
   1440 
   1441   return have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface;
   1442 }
   1443 
   1444 static int
   1445 ppc_linux_can_use_hw_breakpoint (struct target_ops *self,
   1446 				 int type, int cnt, int ot)
   1447 {
   1448   int total_hw_wp, total_hw_bp;
   1449 
   1450   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   1451     {
   1452       /* When PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface is available, the number of
   1453 	 available hardware watchpoints and breakpoints is stored at the
   1454 	 hwdebug_info struct.  */
   1455       total_hw_bp = hwdebug_info.num_instruction_bps;
   1456       total_hw_wp = hwdebug_info.num_data_bps;
   1457     }
   1458   else
   1459     {
   1460       /* When we do not have PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface, we should
   1461 	 consider having 1 hardware watchpoint and no hardware breakpoints.  */
   1462       total_hw_bp = 0;
   1463       total_hw_wp = 1;
   1464     }
   1465 
   1466   if (type == bp_hardware_watchpoint || type == bp_read_watchpoint
   1467       || type == bp_access_watchpoint || type == bp_watchpoint)
   1468     {
   1469       if (cnt + ot > total_hw_wp)
   1470 	return -1;
   1471     }
   1472   else if (type == bp_hardware_breakpoint)
   1473     {
   1474       if (total_hw_bp == 0)
   1475 	{
   1476 	  /* No hardware breakpoint support. */
   1477 	  return 0;
   1478 	}
   1479       if (cnt > total_hw_bp)
   1480 	return -1;
   1481     }
   1482 
   1483   if (!have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   1484     {
   1485       int tid;
   1486       ptid_t ptid = inferior_ptid;
   1487 
   1488       /* We need to know whether ptrace supports PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG
   1489 	 and whether the target has DABR.  If either answer is no, the
   1490 	 ptrace call will return -1.  Fail in that case.  */
   1491       tid = ptid_get_lwp (ptid);
   1492       if (tid == 0)
   1493 	tid = ptid_get_pid (ptid);
   1494 
   1495       if (ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, tid, 0, 0) == -1)
   1496 	return 0;
   1497     }
   1498 
   1499   return 1;
   1500 }
   1501 
   1502 static int
   1503 ppc_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint (struct target_ops *self,
   1504 				       CORE_ADDR addr, int len)
   1505 {
   1506   /* Handle sub-8-byte quantities.  */
   1507   if (len <= 0)
   1508     return 0;
   1509 
   1510   /* The PowerPC HWDEBUG ptrace interface tells if there are alignment
   1511      restrictions for watchpoints in the processors.  In that case, we use that
   1512      information to determine the hardcoded watchable region for
   1513      watchpoints.  */
   1514   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   1515     {
   1516       int region_size;
   1517       /* Embedded DAC-based processors, like the PowerPC 440 have ranged
   1518 	 watchpoints and can watch any access within an arbitrary memory
   1519 	 region. This is useful to watch arrays and structs, for instance.  It
   1520          takes two hardware watchpoints though.  */
   1521       if (len > 1
   1522 	  && hwdebug_info.features & PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_RANGE
   1523 	  && ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE)
   1524 	return 2;
   1525       /* Check if the processor provides DAWR interface.  */
   1526       if (hwdebug_info.features & PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_DAWR)
   1527 	/* DAWR interface allows to watch up to 512 byte wide ranges which
   1528 	   can't cross a 512 byte boundary.  */
   1529 	region_size = 512;
   1530       else
   1531 	region_size = hwdebug_info.data_bp_alignment;
   1532       /* Server processors provide one hardware watchpoint and addr+len should
   1533          fall in the watchable region provided by the ptrace interface.  */
   1534       if (region_size
   1535 	  && (addr + len > (addr & ~(region_size - 1)) + region_size))
   1536 	return 0;
   1537     }
   1538   /* addr+len must fall in the 8 byte watchable region for DABR-based
   1539      processors (i.e., server processors).  Without the new PowerPC HWDEBUG
   1540      ptrace interface, DAC-based processors (i.e., embedded processors) will
   1541      use addresses aligned to 4-bytes due to the way the read/write flags are
   1542      passed in the old ptrace interface.  */
   1543   else if (((ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE)
   1544 	   && (addr + len) > (addr & ~3) + 4)
   1545 	   || (addr + len) > (addr & ~7) + 8)
   1546     return 0;
   1547 
   1548   return 1;
   1549 }
   1550 
   1551 /* This function compares two ppc_hw_breakpoint structs field-by-field.  */
   1552 static int
   1553 hwdebug_point_cmp (struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *a, struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *b)
   1554 {
   1555   return (a->trigger_type == b->trigger_type
   1556 	  && a->addr_mode == b->addr_mode
   1557 	  && a->condition_mode == b->condition_mode
   1558 	  && a->addr == b->addr
   1559 	  && a->addr2 == b->addr2
   1560 	  && a->condition_value == b->condition_value);
   1561 }
   1562 
   1563 /* This function can be used to retrieve a thread_points by the TID of the
   1564    related process/thread.  If nothing has been found, and ALLOC_NEW is 0,
   1565    it returns NULL.  If ALLOC_NEW is non-zero, a new thread_points for the
   1566    provided TID will be created and returned.  */
   1567 static struct thread_points *
   1568 hwdebug_find_thread_points_by_tid (int tid, int alloc_new)
   1569 {
   1570   int i;
   1571   struct thread_points *t;
   1572 
   1573   for (i = 0; VEC_iterate (thread_points_p, ppc_threads, i, t); i++)
   1574     if (t->tid == tid)
   1575       return t;
   1576 
   1577   t = NULL;
   1578 
   1579   /* Do we need to allocate a new point_item
   1580      if the wanted one does not exist?  */
   1581   if (alloc_new)
   1582     {
   1583       t = xmalloc (sizeof (struct thread_points));
   1584       t->hw_breaks
   1585 	= xzalloc (max_slots_number * sizeof (struct hw_break_tuple));
   1586       t->tid = tid;
   1587       VEC_safe_push (thread_points_p, ppc_threads, t);
   1588     }
   1589 
   1590   return t;
   1591 }
   1592 
   1593 /* This function is a generic wrapper that is responsible for inserting a
   1594    *point (i.e., calling `ptrace' in order to issue the request to the
   1595    kernel) and registering it internally in GDB.  */
   1596 static void
   1597 hwdebug_insert_point (struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *b, int tid)
   1598 {
   1599   int i;
   1600   long slot;
   1601   struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *p = xmalloc (sizeof (struct ppc_hw_breakpoint));
   1602   struct hw_break_tuple *hw_breaks;
   1603   struct cleanup *c = make_cleanup (xfree, p);
   1604   struct thread_points *t;
   1605   struct hw_break_tuple *tuple;
   1606 
   1607   memcpy (p, b, sizeof (struct ppc_hw_breakpoint));
   1608 
   1609   errno = 0;
   1610   slot = ptrace (PPC_PTRACE_SETHWDEBUG, tid, 0, p);
   1611   if (slot < 0)
   1612     perror_with_name (_("Unexpected error setting breakpoint or watchpoint"));
   1613 
   1614   /* Everything went fine, so we have to register this *point.  */
   1615   t = hwdebug_find_thread_points_by_tid (tid, 1);
   1616   gdb_assert (t != NULL);
   1617   hw_breaks = t->hw_breaks;
   1618 
   1619   /* Find a free element in the hw_breaks vector.  */
   1620   for (i = 0; i < max_slots_number; i++)
   1621     if (hw_breaks[i].hw_break == NULL)
   1622       {
   1623 	hw_breaks[i].slot = slot;
   1624 	hw_breaks[i].hw_break = p;
   1625 	break;
   1626       }
   1627 
   1628   gdb_assert (i != max_slots_number);
   1629 
   1630   discard_cleanups (c);
   1631 }
   1632 
   1633 /* This function is a generic wrapper that is responsible for removing a
   1634    *point (i.e., calling `ptrace' in order to issue the request to the
   1635    kernel), and unregistering it internally at GDB.  */
   1636 static void
   1637 hwdebug_remove_point (struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *b, int tid)
   1638 {
   1639   int i;
   1640   struct hw_break_tuple *hw_breaks;
   1641   struct thread_points *t;
   1642 
   1643   t = hwdebug_find_thread_points_by_tid (tid, 0);
   1644   gdb_assert (t != NULL);
   1645   hw_breaks = t->hw_breaks;
   1646 
   1647   for (i = 0; i < max_slots_number; i++)
   1648     if (hw_breaks[i].hw_break && hwdebug_point_cmp (hw_breaks[i].hw_break, b))
   1649       break;
   1650 
   1651   gdb_assert (i != max_slots_number);
   1652 
   1653   /* We have to ignore ENOENT errors because the kernel implements hardware
   1654      breakpoints/watchpoints as "one-shot", that is, they are automatically
   1655      deleted when hit.  */
   1656   errno = 0;
   1657   if (ptrace (PPC_PTRACE_DELHWDEBUG, tid, 0, hw_breaks[i].slot) < 0)
   1658     if (errno != ENOENT)
   1659       perror_with_name (_("Unexpected error deleting "
   1660 			  "breakpoint or watchpoint"));
   1661 
   1662   xfree (hw_breaks[i].hw_break);
   1663   hw_breaks[i].hw_break = NULL;
   1664 }
   1665 
   1666 /* Return the number of registers needed for a ranged breakpoint.  */
   1667 
   1668 static int
   1669 ppc_linux_ranged_break_num_registers (struct target_ops *target)
   1670 {
   1671   return ((have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ()
   1672 	   && hwdebug_info.features & PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_INSN_BP_RANGE)?
   1673 	  2 : -1);
   1674 }
   1675 
   1676 /* Insert the hardware breakpoint described by BP_TGT.  Returns 0 for
   1677    success, 1 if hardware breakpoints are not supported or -1 for failure.  */
   1678 
   1679 static int
   1680 ppc_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint (struct target_ops *self,
   1681 				struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
   1682 				  struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
   1683 {
   1684   struct lwp_info *lp;
   1685   struct ppc_hw_breakpoint p;
   1686 
   1687   if (!have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   1688     return -1;
   1689 
   1690   p.version = PPC_DEBUG_CURRENT_VERSION;
   1691   p.trigger_type = PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_EXECUTE;
   1692   p.condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE;
   1693   p.addr = (uint64_t) (bp_tgt->placed_address = bp_tgt->reqstd_address);
   1694   p.condition_value = 0;
   1695 
   1696   if (bp_tgt->length)
   1697     {
   1698       p.addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_RANGE_INCLUSIVE;
   1699 
   1700       /* The breakpoint will trigger if the address of the instruction is
   1701 	 within the defined range, as follows: p.addr <= address < p.addr2.  */
   1702       p.addr2 = (uint64_t) bp_tgt->placed_address + bp_tgt->length;
   1703     }
   1704   else
   1705     {
   1706       p.addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_EXACT;
   1707       p.addr2 = 0;
   1708     }
   1709 
   1710   ALL_LWPS (lp)
   1711     hwdebug_insert_point (&p, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
   1712 
   1713   return 0;
   1714 }
   1715 
   1716 static int
   1717 ppc_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint (struct target_ops *self,
   1718 				struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
   1719 				  struct bp_target_info *bp_tgt)
   1720 {
   1721   struct lwp_info *lp;
   1722   struct ppc_hw_breakpoint p;
   1723 
   1724   if (!have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   1725     return -1;
   1726 
   1727   p.version = PPC_DEBUG_CURRENT_VERSION;
   1728   p.trigger_type = PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_EXECUTE;
   1729   p.condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE;
   1730   p.addr = (uint64_t) bp_tgt->placed_address;
   1731   p.condition_value = 0;
   1732 
   1733   if (bp_tgt->length)
   1734     {
   1735       p.addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_RANGE_INCLUSIVE;
   1736 
   1737       /* The breakpoint will trigger if the address of the instruction is within
   1738 	 the defined range, as follows: p.addr <= address < p.addr2.  */
   1739       p.addr2 = (uint64_t) bp_tgt->placed_address + bp_tgt->length;
   1740     }
   1741   else
   1742     {
   1743       p.addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_EXACT;
   1744       p.addr2 = 0;
   1745     }
   1746 
   1747   ALL_LWPS (lp)
   1748     hwdebug_remove_point (&p, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
   1749 
   1750   return 0;
   1751 }
   1752 
   1753 static int
   1754 get_trigger_type (int rw)
   1755 {
   1756   int t;
   1757 
   1758   if (rw == hw_read)
   1759     t = PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_READ;
   1760   else if (rw == hw_write)
   1761     t = PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_WRITE;
   1762   else
   1763     t = PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_READ | PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_WRITE;
   1764 
   1765   return t;
   1766 }
   1767 
   1768 /* Insert a new masked watchpoint at ADDR using the mask MASK.
   1769    RW may be hw_read for a read watchpoint, hw_write for a write watchpoint
   1770    or hw_access for an access watchpoint.  Returns 0 on success and throws
   1771    an error on failure.  */
   1772 
   1773 static int
   1774 ppc_linux_insert_mask_watchpoint (struct target_ops *ops, CORE_ADDR addr,
   1775 				  CORE_ADDR mask, int rw)
   1776 {
   1777   struct lwp_info *lp;
   1778   struct ppc_hw_breakpoint p;
   1779 
   1780   gdb_assert (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ());
   1781 
   1782   p.version = PPC_DEBUG_CURRENT_VERSION;
   1783   p.trigger_type = get_trigger_type (rw);
   1784   p.addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_MASK;
   1785   p.condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE;
   1786   p.addr = addr;
   1787   p.addr2 = mask;
   1788   p.condition_value = 0;
   1789 
   1790   ALL_LWPS (lp)
   1791     hwdebug_insert_point (&p, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
   1792 
   1793   return 0;
   1794 }
   1795 
   1796 /* Remove a masked watchpoint at ADDR with the mask MASK.
   1797    RW may be hw_read for a read watchpoint, hw_write for a write watchpoint
   1798    or hw_access for an access watchpoint.  Returns 0 on success and throws
   1799    an error on failure.  */
   1800 
   1801 static int
   1802 ppc_linux_remove_mask_watchpoint (struct target_ops *ops, CORE_ADDR addr,
   1803 				  CORE_ADDR mask, int rw)
   1804 {
   1805   struct lwp_info *lp;
   1806   struct ppc_hw_breakpoint p;
   1807 
   1808   gdb_assert (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ());
   1809 
   1810   p.version = PPC_DEBUG_CURRENT_VERSION;
   1811   p.trigger_type = get_trigger_type (rw);
   1812   p.addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_MASK;
   1813   p.condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE;
   1814   p.addr = addr;
   1815   p.addr2 = mask;
   1816   p.condition_value = 0;
   1817 
   1818   ALL_LWPS (lp)
   1819     hwdebug_remove_point (&p, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
   1820 
   1821   return 0;
   1822 }
   1823 
   1824 /* Check whether we have at least one free DVC register.  */
   1825 static int
   1826 can_use_watchpoint_cond_accel (void)
   1827 {
   1828   struct thread_points *p;
   1829   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
   1830   int cnt = hwdebug_info.num_condition_regs, i;
   1831   CORE_ADDR tmp_value;
   1832 
   1833   if (!have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface () || cnt == 0)
   1834     return 0;
   1835 
   1836   p = hwdebug_find_thread_points_by_tid (tid, 0);
   1837 
   1838   if (p)
   1839     {
   1840       for (i = 0; i < max_slots_number; i++)
   1841 	if (p->hw_breaks[i].hw_break != NULL
   1842 	    && (p->hw_breaks[i].hw_break->condition_mode
   1843 		!= PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE))
   1844 	  cnt--;
   1845 
   1846       /* There are no available slots now.  */
   1847       if (cnt <= 0)
   1848 	return 0;
   1849     }
   1850 
   1851   return 1;
   1852 }
   1853 
   1854 /* Calculate the enable bits and the contents of the Data Value Compare
   1855    debug register present in BookE processors.
   1856 
   1857    ADDR is the address to be watched, LEN is the length of watched data
   1858    and DATA_VALUE is the value which will trigger the watchpoint.
   1859    On exit, CONDITION_MODE will hold the enable bits for the DVC, and
   1860    CONDITION_VALUE will hold the value which should be put in the
   1861    DVC register.  */
   1862 static void
   1863 calculate_dvc (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, CORE_ADDR data_value,
   1864 	       uint32_t *condition_mode, uint64_t *condition_value)
   1865 {
   1866   int i, num_byte_enable, align_offset, num_bytes_off_dvc,
   1867       rightmost_enabled_byte;
   1868   CORE_ADDR addr_end_data, addr_end_dvc;
   1869 
   1870   /* The DVC register compares bytes within fixed-length windows which
   1871      are word-aligned, with length equal to that of the DVC register.
   1872      We need to calculate where our watch region is relative to that
   1873      window and enable comparison of the bytes which fall within it.  */
   1874 
   1875   align_offset = addr % hwdebug_info.sizeof_condition;
   1876   addr_end_data = addr + len;
   1877   addr_end_dvc = (addr - align_offset
   1878 		  + hwdebug_info.sizeof_condition);
   1879   num_bytes_off_dvc = (addr_end_data > addr_end_dvc)?
   1880 			 addr_end_data - addr_end_dvc : 0;
   1881   num_byte_enable = len - num_bytes_off_dvc;
   1882   /* Here, bytes are numbered from right to left.  */
   1883   rightmost_enabled_byte = (addr_end_data < addr_end_dvc)?
   1884 			      addr_end_dvc - addr_end_data : 0;
   1885 
   1886   *condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_AND;
   1887   for (i = 0; i < num_byte_enable; i++)
   1888     *condition_mode
   1889       |= PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_BE (i + rightmost_enabled_byte);
   1890 
   1891   /* Now we need to match the position within the DVC of the comparison
   1892      value with where the watch region is relative to the window
   1893      (i.e., the ALIGN_OFFSET).  */
   1894 
   1895   *condition_value = ((uint64_t) data_value >> num_bytes_off_dvc * 8
   1896 		      << rightmost_enabled_byte * 8);
   1897 }
   1898 
   1899 /* Return the number of memory locations that need to be accessed to
   1900    evaluate the expression which generated the given value chain.
   1901    Returns -1 if there's any register access involved, or if there are
   1902    other kinds of values which are not acceptable in a condition
   1903    expression (e.g., lval_computed or lval_internalvar).  */
   1904 static int
   1905 num_memory_accesses (struct value *v)
   1906 {
   1907   int found_memory_cnt = 0;
   1908   struct value *head = v;
   1909 
   1910   /* The idea here is that evaluating an expression generates a series
   1911      of values, one holding the value of every subexpression.  (The
   1912      expression a*b+c has five subexpressions: a, b, a*b, c, and
   1913      a*b+c.)  GDB's values hold almost enough information to establish
   1914      the criteria given above --- they identify memory lvalues,
   1915      register lvalues, computed values, etcetera.  So we can evaluate
   1916      the expression, and then scan the chain of values that leaves
   1917      behind to determine the memory locations involved in the evaluation
   1918      of an expression.
   1919 
   1920      However, I don't think that the values returned by inferior
   1921      function calls are special in any way.  So this function may not
   1922      notice that an expression contains an inferior function call.
   1923      FIXME.  */
   1924 
   1925   for (; v; v = value_next (v))
   1926     {
   1927       /* Constants and values from the history are fine.  */
   1928       if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == not_lval || deprecated_value_modifiable (v) == 0)
   1929 	continue;
   1930       else if (VALUE_LVAL (v) == lval_memory)
   1931 	{
   1932 	  /* A lazy memory lvalue is one that GDB never needed to fetch;
   1933 	     we either just used its address (e.g., `a' in `a.b') or
   1934 	     we never needed it at all (e.g., `a' in `a,b').  */
   1935 	  if (!value_lazy (v))
   1936 	    found_memory_cnt++;
   1937 	}
   1938       /* Other kinds of values are not fine.  */
   1939       else
   1940 	return -1;
   1941     }
   1942 
   1943   return found_memory_cnt;
   1944 }
   1945 
   1946 /* Verifies whether the expression COND can be implemented using the
   1947    DVC (Data Value Compare) register in BookE processors.  The expression
   1948    must test the watch value for equality with a constant expression.
   1949    If the function returns 1, DATA_VALUE will contain the constant against
   1950    which the watch value should be compared and LEN will contain the size
   1951    of the constant.  */
   1952 static int
   1953 check_condition (CORE_ADDR watch_addr, struct expression *cond,
   1954 		 CORE_ADDR *data_value, int *len)
   1955 {
   1956   int pc = 1, num_accesses_left, num_accesses_right;
   1957   struct value *left_val, *right_val, *left_chain, *right_chain;
   1958 
   1959   if (cond->elts[0].opcode != BINOP_EQUAL)
   1960     return 0;
   1961 
   1962   fetch_subexp_value (cond, &pc, &left_val, NULL, &left_chain, 0);
   1963   num_accesses_left = num_memory_accesses (left_chain);
   1964 
   1965   if (left_val == NULL || num_accesses_left < 0)
   1966     {
   1967       free_value_chain (left_chain);
   1968 
   1969       return 0;
   1970     }
   1971 
   1972   fetch_subexp_value (cond, &pc, &right_val, NULL, &right_chain, 0);
   1973   num_accesses_right = num_memory_accesses (right_chain);
   1974 
   1975   if (right_val == NULL || num_accesses_right < 0)
   1976     {
   1977       free_value_chain (left_chain);
   1978       free_value_chain (right_chain);
   1979 
   1980       return 0;
   1981     }
   1982 
   1983   if (num_accesses_left == 1 && num_accesses_right == 0
   1984       && VALUE_LVAL (left_val) == lval_memory
   1985       && value_address (left_val) == watch_addr)
   1986     {
   1987       *data_value = value_as_long (right_val);
   1988 
   1989       /* DATA_VALUE is the constant in RIGHT_VAL, but actually has
   1990 	 the same type as the memory region referenced by LEFT_VAL.  */
   1991       *len = TYPE_LENGTH (check_typedef (value_type (left_val)));
   1992     }
   1993   else if (num_accesses_left == 0 && num_accesses_right == 1
   1994 	   && VALUE_LVAL (right_val) == lval_memory
   1995 	   && value_address (right_val) == watch_addr)
   1996     {
   1997       *data_value = value_as_long (left_val);
   1998 
   1999       /* DATA_VALUE is the constant in LEFT_VAL, but actually has
   2000 	 the same type as the memory region referenced by RIGHT_VAL.  */
   2001       *len = TYPE_LENGTH (check_typedef (value_type (right_val)));
   2002     }
   2003   else
   2004     {
   2005       free_value_chain (left_chain);
   2006       free_value_chain (right_chain);
   2007 
   2008       return 0;
   2009     }
   2010 
   2011   free_value_chain (left_chain);
   2012   free_value_chain (right_chain);
   2013 
   2014   return 1;
   2015 }
   2016 
   2017 /* Return non-zero if the target is capable of using hardware to evaluate
   2018    the condition expression, thus only triggering the watchpoint when it is
   2019    true.  */
   2020 static int
   2021 ppc_linux_can_accel_watchpoint_condition (struct target_ops *self,
   2022 					  CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int rw,
   2023 					  struct expression *cond)
   2024 {
   2025   CORE_ADDR data_value;
   2026 
   2027   return (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ()
   2028 	  && hwdebug_info.num_condition_regs > 0
   2029 	  && check_condition (addr, cond, &data_value, &len));
   2030 }
   2031 
   2032 /* Set up P with the parameters necessary to request a watchpoint covering
   2033    LEN bytes starting at ADDR and if possible with condition expression COND
   2034    evaluated by hardware.  INSERT tells if we are creating a request for
   2035    inserting or removing the watchpoint.  */
   2036 
   2037 static void
   2038 create_watchpoint_request (struct ppc_hw_breakpoint *p, CORE_ADDR addr,
   2039 			   int len, int rw, struct expression *cond,
   2040 			   int insert)
   2041 {
   2042   if (len == 1
   2043       || !(hwdebug_info.features & PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_RANGE))
   2044     {
   2045       int use_condition;
   2046       CORE_ADDR data_value;
   2047 
   2048       use_condition = (insert? can_use_watchpoint_cond_accel ()
   2049 			: hwdebug_info.num_condition_regs > 0);
   2050       if (cond && use_condition && check_condition (addr, cond,
   2051 						    &data_value, &len))
   2052 	calculate_dvc (addr, len, data_value, &p->condition_mode,
   2053 		       &p->condition_value);
   2054       else
   2055 	{
   2056 	  p->condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE;
   2057 	  p->condition_value = 0;
   2058 	}
   2059 
   2060       p->addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_EXACT;
   2061       p->addr2 = 0;
   2062     }
   2063   else
   2064     {
   2065       p->addr_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_MODE_RANGE_INCLUSIVE;
   2066       p->condition_mode = PPC_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION_NONE;
   2067       p->condition_value = 0;
   2068 
   2069       /* The watchpoint will trigger if the address of the memory access is
   2070 	 within the defined range, as follows: p->addr <= address < p->addr2.
   2071 
   2072 	 Note that the above sentence just documents how ptrace interprets
   2073 	 its arguments; the watchpoint is set to watch the range defined by
   2074 	 the user _inclusively_, as specified by the user interface.  */
   2075       p->addr2 = (uint64_t) addr + len;
   2076     }
   2077 
   2078   p->version = PPC_DEBUG_CURRENT_VERSION;
   2079   p->trigger_type = get_trigger_type (rw);
   2080   p->addr = (uint64_t) addr;
   2081 }
   2082 
   2083 static int
   2084 ppc_linux_insert_watchpoint (struct target_ops *self,
   2085 			     CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int rw,
   2086 			     struct expression *cond)
   2087 {
   2088   struct lwp_info *lp;
   2089   int ret = -1;
   2090 
   2091   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   2092     {
   2093       struct ppc_hw_breakpoint p;
   2094 
   2095       create_watchpoint_request (&p, addr, len, rw, cond, 1);
   2096 
   2097       ALL_LWPS (lp)
   2098 	hwdebug_insert_point (&p, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
   2099 
   2100       ret = 0;
   2101     }
   2102   else
   2103     {
   2104       long dabr_value;
   2105       long read_mode, write_mode;
   2106 
   2107       if (ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE)
   2108 	{
   2109 	  /* PowerPC 440 requires only the read/write flags to be passed
   2110 	     to the kernel.  */
   2111 	  read_mode = 1;
   2112 	  write_mode = 2;
   2113 	}
   2114       else
   2115 	{
   2116 	  /* PowerPC 970 and other DABR-based processors are required to pass
   2117 	     the Breakpoint Translation bit together with the flags.  */
   2118 	  read_mode = 5;
   2119 	  write_mode = 6;
   2120 	}
   2121 
   2122       dabr_value = addr & ~(read_mode | write_mode);
   2123       switch (rw)
   2124 	{
   2125 	  case hw_read:
   2126 	    /* Set read and translate bits.  */
   2127 	    dabr_value |= read_mode;
   2128 	    break;
   2129 	  case hw_write:
   2130 	    /* Set write and translate bits.  */
   2131 	    dabr_value |= write_mode;
   2132 	    break;
   2133 	  case hw_access:
   2134 	    /* Set read, write and translate bits.  */
   2135 	    dabr_value |= read_mode | write_mode;
   2136 	    break;
   2137 	}
   2138 
   2139       saved_dabr_value = dabr_value;
   2140 
   2141       ALL_LWPS (lp)
   2142 	if (ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), 0,
   2143 		    saved_dabr_value) < 0)
   2144 	  return -1;
   2145 
   2146       ret = 0;
   2147     }
   2148 
   2149   return ret;
   2150 }
   2151 
   2152 static int
   2153 ppc_linux_remove_watchpoint (struct target_ops *self,
   2154 			     CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int rw,
   2155 			     struct expression *cond)
   2156 {
   2157   struct lwp_info *lp;
   2158   int ret = -1;
   2159 
   2160   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   2161     {
   2162       struct ppc_hw_breakpoint p;
   2163 
   2164       create_watchpoint_request (&p, addr, len, rw, cond, 0);
   2165 
   2166       ALL_LWPS (lp)
   2167 	hwdebug_remove_point (&p, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid));
   2168 
   2169       ret = 0;
   2170     }
   2171   else
   2172     {
   2173       saved_dabr_value = 0;
   2174       ALL_LWPS (lp)
   2175 	if (ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid), 0,
   2176 		    saved_dabr_value) < 0)
   2177 	  return -1;
   2178 
   2179       ret = 0;
   2180     }
   2181 
   2182   return ret;
   2183 }
   2184 
   2185 static void
   2186 ppc_linux_new_thread (struct lwp_info *lp)
   2187 {
   2188   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (lp->ptid);
   2189 
   2190   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   2191     {
   2192       int i;
   2193       struct thread_points *p;
   2194       struct hw_break_tuple *hw_breaks;
   2195 
   2196       if (VEC_empty (thread_points_p, ppc_threads))
   2197 	return;
   2198 
   2199       /* Get a list of breakpoints from any thread.  */
   2200       p = VEC_last (thread_points_p, ppc_threads);
   2201       hw_breaks = p->hw_breaks;
   2202 
   2203       /* Copy that thread's breakpoints and watchpoints to the new thread.  */
   2204       for (i = 0; i < max_slots_number; i++)
   2205 	if (hw_breaks[i].hw_break)
   2206 	  {
   2207 	    /* Older kernels did not make new threads inherit their parent
   2208 	       thread's debug state, so we always clear the slot and replicate
   2209 	       the debug state ourselves, ensuring compatibility with all
   2210 	       kernels.  */
   2211 
   2212 	    /* The ppc debug resource accounting is done through "slots".
   2213 	       Ask the kernel the deallocate this specific *point's slot.  */
   2214 	    ptrace (PPC_PTRACE_DELHWDEBUG, tid, 0, hw_breaks[i].slot);
   2215 
   2216 	    hwdebug_insert_point (hw_breaks[i].hw_break, tid);
   2217 	  }
   2218     }
   2219   else
   2220     ptrace (PTRACE_SET_DEBUGREG, tid, 0, saved_dabr_value);
   2221 }
   2222 
   2223 static void
   2224 ppc_linux_thread_exit (struct thread_info *tp, int silent)
   2225 {
   2226   int i;
   2227   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (tp->ptid);
   2228   struct hw_break_tuple *hw_breaks;
   2229   struct thread_points *t = NULL, *p;
   2230 
   2231   if (!have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   2232     return;
   2233 
   2234   for (i = 0; VEC_iterate (thread_points_p, ppc_threads, i, p); i++)
   2235     if (p->tid == tid)
   2236       {
   2237 	t = p;
   2238 	break;
   2239       }
   2240 
   2241   if (t == NULL)
   2242     return;
   2243 
   2244   VEC_unordered_remove (thread_points_p, ppc_threads, i);
   2245 
   2246   hw_breaks = t->hw_breaks;
   2247 
   2248   for (i = 0; i < max_slots_number; i++)
   2249     if (hw_breaks[i].hw_break)
   2250       xfree (hw_breaks[i].hw_break);
   2251 
   2252   xfree (t->hw_breaks);
   2253   xfree (t);
   2254 }
   2255 
   2256 static int
   2257 ppc_linux_stopped_data_address (struct target_ops *target, CORE_ADDR *addr_p)
   2258 {
   2259   siginfo_t siginfo;
   2260 
   2261   if (!linux_nat_get_siginfo (inferior_ptid, &siginfo))
   2262     return 0;
   2263 
   2264   if (siginfo.si_signo != SIGTRAP
   2265       || (siginfo.si_code & 0xffff) != 0x0004 /* TRAP_HWBKPT */)
   2266     return 0;
   2267 
   2268   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ())
   2269     {
   2270       int i;
   2271       struct thread_points *t;
   2272       struct hw_break_tuple *hw_breaks;
   2273       /* The index (or slot) of the *point is passed in the si_errno field.  */
   2274       int slot = siginfo.si_errno;
   2275 
   2276       t = hwdebug_find_thread_points_by_tid (ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid), 0);
   2277 
   2278       /* Find out if this *point is a hardware breakpoint.
   2279 	 If so, we should return 0.  */
   2280       if (t)
   2281 	{
   2282 	  hw_breaks = t->hw_breaks;
   2283 	  for (i = 0; i < max_slots_number; i++)
   2284 	   if (hw_breaks[i].hw_break && hw_breaks[i].slot == slot
   2285 	       && hw_breaks[i].hw_break->trigger_type
   2286 		    == PPC_BREAKPOINT_TRIGGER_EXECUTE)
   2287 	     return 0;
   2288 	}
   2289     }
   2290 
   2291   *addr_p = (CORE_ADDR) (uintptr_t) siginfo.si_addr;
   2292   return 1;
   2293 }
   2294 
   2295 static int
   2296 ppc_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint (struct target_ops *ops)
   2297 {
   2298   CORE_ADDR addr;
   2299   return ppc_linux_stopped_data_address (ops, &addr);
   2300 }
   2301 
   2302 static int
   2303 ppc_linux_watchpoint_addr_within_range (struct target_ops *target,
   2304 					CORE_ADDR addr,
   2305 					CORE_ADDR start, int length)
   2306 {
   2307   int mask;
   2308 
   2309   if (have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ()
   2310       && ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE)
   2311     return start <= addr && start + length >= addr;
   2312   else if (ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_BOOKE)
   2313     mask = 3;
   2314   else
   2315     mask = 7;
   2316 
   2317   addr &= ~mask;
   2318 
   2319   /* Check whether [start, start+length-1] intersects [addr, addr+mask].  */
   2320   return start <= addr + mask && start + length - 1 >= addr;
   2321 }
   2322 
   2323 /* Return the number of registers needed for a masked hardware watchpoint.  */
   2324 
   2325 static int
   2326 ppc_linux_masked_watch_num_registers (struct target_ops *target,
   2327 				      CORE_ADDR addr, CORE_ADDR mask)
   2328 {
   2329   if (!have_ptrace_hwdebug_interface ()
   2330 	   || (hwdebug_info.features & PPC_DEBUG_FEATURE_DATA_BP_MASK) == 0)
   2331     return -1;
   2332   else if ((mask & 0xC0000000) != 0xC0000000)
   2333     {
   2334       warning (_("The given mask covers kernel address space "
   2335 		 "and cannot be used.\n"));
   2336 
   2337       return -2;
   2338     }
   2339   else
   2340     return 2;
   2341 }
   2342 
   2343 static void
   2344 ppc_linux_store_inferior_registers (struct target_ops *ops,
   2345 				    struct regcache *regcache, int regno)
   2346 {
   2347   /* Overload thread id onto process id.  */
   2348   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
   2349 
   2350   /* No thread id, just use process id.  */
   2351   if (tid == 0)
   2352     tid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
   2353 
   2354   if (regno >= 0)
   2355     store_register (regcache, tid, regno);
   2356   else
   2357     store_ppc_registers (regcache, tid);
   2358 }
   2359 
   2360 /* Functions for transferring registers between a gregset_t or fpregset_t
   2361    (see sys/ucontext.h) and gdb's regcache.  The word size is that used
   2362    by the ptrace interface, not the current program's ABI.  Eg. if a
   2363    powerpc64-linux gdb is being used to debug a powerpc32-linux app, we
   2364    read or write 64-bit gregsets.  This is to suit the host libthread_db.  */
   2365 
   2366 void
   2367 supply_gregset (struct regcache *regcache, const gdb_gregset_t *gregsetp)
   2368 {
   2369   const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_gregset (sizeof (long));
   2370 
   2371   ppc_supply_gregset (regset, regcache, -1, gregsetp, sizeof (*gregsetp));
   2372 }
   2373 
   2374 void
   2375 fill_gregset (const struct regcache *regcache,
   2376 	      gdb_gregset_t *gregsetp, int regno)
   2377 {
   2378   const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_gregset (sizeof (long));
   2379 
   2380   if (regno == -1)
   2381     memset (gregsetp, 0, sizeof (*gregsetp));
   2382   ppc_collect_gregset (regset, regcache, regno, gregsetp, sizeof (*gregsetp));
   2383 }
   2384 
   2385 void
   2386 supply_fpregset (struct regcache *regcache, const gdb_fpregset_t * fpregsetp)
   2387 {
   2388   const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_fpregset ();
   2389 
   2390   ppc_supply_fpregset (regset, regcache, -1,
   2391 		       fpregsetp, sizeof (*fpregsetp));
   2392 }
   2393 
   2394 void
   2395 fill_fpregset (const struct regcache *regcache,
   2396 	       gdb_fpregset_t *fpregsetp, int regno)
   2397 {
   2398   const struct regset *regset = ppc_linux_fpregset ();
   2399 
   2400   ppc_collect_fpregset (regset, regcache, regno,
   2401 			fpregsetp, sizeof (*fpregsetp));
   2402 }
   2403 
   2404 static int
   2405 ppc_linux_target_wordsize (void)
   2406 {
   2407   int wordsize = 4;
   2408 
   2409   /* Check for 64-bit inferior process.  This is the case when the host is
   2410      64-bit, and in addition the top bit of the MSR register is set.  */
   2411 #ifdef __powerpc64__
   2412   long msr;
   2413 
   2414   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
   2415   if (tid == 0)
   2416     tid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
   2417 
   2418   errno = 0;
   2419   msr = (long) ptrace (PTRACE_PEEKUSER, tid, PT_MSR * 8, 0);
   2420   if (errno == 0 && msr < 0)
   2421     wordsize = 8;
   2422 #endif
   2423 
   2424   return wordsize;
   2425 }
   2426 
   2427 static int
   2428 ppc_linux_auxv_parse (struct target_ops *ops, gdb_byte **readptr,
   2429                       gdb_byte *endptr, CORE_ADDR *typep, CORE_ADDR *valp)
   2430 {
   2431   int sizeof_auxv_field = ppc_linux_target_wordsize ();
   2432   enum bfd_endian byte_order = gdbarch_byte_order (target_gdbarch ());
   2433   gdb_byte *ptr = *readptr;
   2434 
   2435   if (endptr == ptr)
   2436     return 0;
   2437 
   2438   if (endptr - ptr < sizeof_auxv_field * 2)
   2439     return -1;
   2440 
   2441   *typep = extract_unsigned_integer (ptr, sizeof_auxv_field, byte_order);
   2442   ptr += sizeof_auxv_field;
   2443   *valp = extract_unsigned_integer (ptr, sizeof_auxv_field, byte_order);
   2444   ptr += sizeof_auxv_field;
   2445 
   2446   *readptr = ptr;
   2447   return 1;
   2448 }
   2449 
   2450 static const struct target_desc *
   2451 ppc_linux_read_description (struct target_ops *ops)
   2452 {
   2453   int altivec = 0;
   2454   int vsx = 0;
   2455   int isa205 = 0;
   2456   int cell = 0;
   2457 
   2458   int tid = ptid_get_lwp (inferior_ptid);
   2459   if (tid == 0)
   2460     tid = ptid_get_pid (inferior_ptid);
   2461 
   2462   if (have_ptrace_getsetevrregs)
   2463     {
   2464       struct gdb_evrregset_t evrregset;
   2465 
   2466       if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETEVRREGS, tid, 0, &evrregset) >= 0)
   2467         return tdesc_powerpc_e500l;
   2468 
   2469       /* EIO means that the PTRACE_GETEVRREGS request isn't supported.
   2470 	 Anything else needs to be reported.  */
   2471       else if (errno != EIO)
   2472 	perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch SPE registers"));
   2473     }
   2474 
   2475   if (have_ptrace_getsetvsxregs)
   2476     {
   2477       gdb_vsxregset_t vsxregset;
   2478 
   2479       if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETVSXREGS, tid, 0, &vsxregset) >= 0)
   2480 	vsx = 1;
   2481 
   2482       /* EIO means that the PTRACE_GETVSXREGS request isn't supported.
   2483 	 Anything else needs to be reported.  */
   2484       else if (errno != EIO)
   2485 	perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch VSX registers"));
   2486     }
   2487 
   2488   if (have_ptrace_getvrregs)
   2489     {
   2490       gdb_vrregset_t vrregset;
   2491 
   2492       if (ptrace (PTRACE_GETVRREGS, tid, 0, &vrregset) >= 0)
   2493         altivec = 1;
   2494 
   2495       /* EIO means that the PTRACE_GETVRREGS request isn't supported.
   2496 	 Anything else needs to be reported.  */
   2497       else if (errno != EIO)
   2498 	perror_with_name (_("Unable to fetch AltiVec registers"));
   2499     }
   2500 
   2501   /* Power ISA 2.05 (implemented by Power 6 and newer processors) increases
   2502      the FPSCR from 32 bits to 64 bits.  Even though Power 7 supports this
   2503      ISA version, it doesn't have PPC_FEATURE_ARCH_2_05 set, only
   2504      PPC_FEATURE_ARCH_2_06.  Since for now the only bits used in the higher
   2505      half of the register are for Decimal Floating Point, we check if that
   2506      feature is available to decide the size of the FPSCR.  */
   2507   if (ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_HAS_DFP)
   2508     isa205 = 1;
   2509 
   2510   if (ppc_linux_get_hwcap () & PPC_FEATURE_CELL)
   2511     cell = 1;
   2512 
   2513   if (ppc_linux_target_wordsize () == 8)
   2514     {
   2515       if (cell)
   2516 	return tdesc_powerpc_cell64l;
   2517       else if (vsx)
   2518 	return isa205? tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx64l : tdesc_powerpc_vsx64l;
   2519       else if (altivec)
   2520 	return isa205
   2521 	  ? tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec64l : tdesc_powerpc_altivec64l;
   2522 
   2523       return isa205? tdesc_powerpc_isa205_64l : tdesc_powerpc_64l;
   2524     }
   2525 
   2526   if (cell)
   2527     return tdesc_powerpc_cell32l;
   2528   else if (vsx)
   2529     return isa205? tdesc_powerpc_isa205_vsx32l : tdesc_powerpc_vsx32l;
   2530   else if (altivec)
   2531     return isa205? tdesc_powerpc_isa205_altivec32l : tdesc_powerpc_altivec32l;
   2532 
   2533   return isa205? tdesc_powerpc_isa205_32l : tdesc_powerpc_32l;
   2534 }
   2535 
   2536 void _initialize_ppc_linux_nat (void);
   2537 
   2538 void
   2539 _initialize_ppc_linux_nat (void)
   2540 {
   2541   struct target_ops *t;
   2542 
   2543   /* Fill in the generic GNU/Linux methods.  */
   2544   t = linux_target ();
   2545 
   2546   /* Add our register access methods.  */
   2547   t->to_fetch_registers = ppc_linux_fetch_inferior_registers;
   2548   t->to_store_registers = ppc_linux_store_inferior_registers;
   2549 
   2550   /* Add our breakpoint/watchpoint methods.  */
   2551   t->to_can_use_hw_breakpoint = ppc_linux_can_use_hw_breakpoint;
   2552   t->to_insert_hw_breakpoint = ppc_linux_insert_hw_breakpoint;
   2553   t->to_remove_hw_breakpoint = ppc_linux_remove_hw_breakpoint;
   2554   t->to_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint = ppc_linux_region_ok_for_hw_watchpoint;
   2555   t->to_insert_watchpoint = ppc_linux_insert_watchpoint;
   2556   t->to_remove_watchpoint = ppc_linux_remove_watchpoint;
   2557   t->to_insert_mask_watchpoint = ppc_linux_insert_mask_watchpoint;
   2558   t->to_remove_mask_watchpoint = ppc_linux_remove_mask_watchpoint;
   2559   t->to_stopped_by_watchpoint = ppc_linux_stopped_by_watchpoint;
   2560   t->to_stopped_data_address = ppc_linux_stopped_data_address;
   2561   t->to_watchpoint_addr_within_range = ppc_linux_watchpoint_addr_within_range;
   2562   t->to_can_accel_watchpoint_condition
   2563     = ppc_linux_can_accel_watchpoint_condition;
   2564   t->to_masked_watch_num_registers = ppc_linux_masked_watch_num_registers;
   2565   t->to_ranged_break_num_registers = ppc_linux_ranged_break_num_registers;
   2566 
   2567   t->to_read_description = ppc_linux_read_description;
   2568   t->to_auxv_parse = ppc_linux_auxv_parse;
   2569 
   2570   observer_attach_thread_exit (ppc_linux_thread_exit);
   2571 
   2572   /* Register the target.  */
   2573   linux_nat_add_target (t);
   2574   linux_nat_set_new_thread (t, ppc_linux_new_thread);
   2575 }
   2576