reg.h revision 1.2 1 1.2 eeh /* $NetBSD: reg.h,v 1.2 1999/05/12 01:11:54 eeh Exp $ */
2 1.1 eeh
3 1.1 eeh /*
4 1.1 eeh * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
5 1.1 eeh * The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
6 1.1 eeh *
7 1.1 eeh * This software was developed by the Computer Systems Engineering group
8 1.1 eeh * at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory under DARPA contract BG 91-66 and
9 1.1 eeh * contributed to Berkeley.
10 1.1 eeh *
11 1.1 eeh * All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
12 1.1 eeh * must display the following acknowledgement:
13 1.1 eeh * This product includes software developed by the University of
14 1.1 eeh * California, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
15 1.1 eeh *
16 1.1 eeh * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
17 1.1 eeh * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
18 1.1 eeh * are met:
19 1.1 eeh * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
20 1.1 eeh * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
21 1.1 eeh * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
22 1.1 eeh * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
23 1.1 eeh * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
24 1.1 eeh * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software
25 1.1 eeh * must display the following acknowledgement:
26 1.1 eeh * This product includes software developed by the University of
27 1.1 eeh * California, Berkeley and its contributors.
28 1.1 eeh * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
29 1.1 eeh * may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
30 1.1 eeh * without specific prior written permission.
31 1.1 eeh *
32 1.1 eeh * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
33 1.1 eeh * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
34 1.1 eeh * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
35 1.1 eeh * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
36 1.1 eeh * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
37 1.1 eeh * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
38 1.1 eeh * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
39 1.1 eeh * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
40 1.1 eeh * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
41 1.1 eeh * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
42 1.1 eeh * SUCH DAMAGE.
43 1.1 eeh *
44 1.1 eeh * @(#)reg.h 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93
45 1.1 eeh */
46 1.1 eeh
47 1.1 eeh #ifndef _MACHINE_REG_H_
48 1.1 eeh #define _MACHINE_REG_H_
49 1.1 eeh
50 1.1 eeh /*
51 1.1 eeh * Registers passed to trap/syscall/etc.
52 1.1 eeh * This structure is known to occupy exactly 80 bytes (see locore.s).
53 1.1 eeh * Note, tf_global[0] is not actually written (since g0 is always 0).
54 1.1 eeh * (The slot tf_global[0] is used to send a copy of %wim to kernel gdb.
55 1.1 eeh * This is known as `cheating'.)
56 1.1 eeh */
57 1.1 eeh struct trapframe32 {
58 1.1 eeh int tf_psr; /* psr */
59 1.1 eeh int tf_pc; /* return pc */
60 1.1 eeh int tf_npc; /* return npc */
61 1.1 eeh int tf_y; /* %y register */
62 1.1 eeh int tf_global[8]; /* global registers in trap's caller */
63 1.1 eeh int tf_out[8]; /* output registers in trap's caller */
64 1.1 eeh };
65 1.1 eeh
66 1.1 eeh /*
67 1.1 eeh * The v9 trapframe is a bit more complex. Since we don't get a free
68 1.1 eeh * register window with each trap we need some way to keep track of
69 1.1 eeh * pending traps. We use tf_fault to save the faulting address for
70 1.1 eeh * memory faults and tf_kstack to thread trapframes on the kernel
71 1.1 eeh * stack(s). If tf_kstack == 0 then this is the lowest level trap;
72 1.1 eeh * we came from user mode.
73 1.1 eeh * (The slot tf_global[0] is used to store the %fp when this is used
74 1.1 eeh * as a clockframe. This is known as `cheating'.)
75 1.1 eeh */
76 1.1 eeh struct trapframe {
77 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_tstate; /* tstate register */
78 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_pc; /* return pc */
79 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_npc; /* return npc */
80 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_fault; /* faulting addr -- need somewhere to save it */
81 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_kstack; /* kernel stack of prev tf */
82 1.1 eeh int tf_y; /* %y register -- 32-bits */
83 1.1 eeh short tf_tt; /* What type of trap this was */
84 1.1 eeh char tf_pil; /* What IRQ we're handling */
85 1.1 eeh char tf_oldpil; /* What our old SPL was */
86 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_global[8]; /* global registers in trap's caller */
87 1.1 eeh /* n.b. tf_global[0] is used for fp when this is a clockframe */
88 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_out[8]; /* output registers in trap's caller */
89 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_local[8]; /* local registers in trap's caller */
90 1.1 eeh int64_t tf_in[8]; /* in registers in trap's caller (for debug) */
91 1.1 eeh };
92 1.1 eeh
93 1.1 eeh /*
94 1.1 eeh * Register windows. Each stack pointer (%o6 aka %sp) in each window
95 1.1 eeh * must ALWAYS point to some place at which it is safe to scribble on
96 1.1 eeh * 64 bytes. (If not, your process gets mangled.) Furthermore, each
97 1.1 eeh * stack pointer should be aligned on an 8-byte boundary for v8 stacks
98 1.1 eeh * or a 16-byte boundary (plus the BIAS) for v9 stacks (the kernel
99 1.1 eeh * as currently coded allows arbitrary alignment, but with a hefty
100 1.1 eeh * performance penalty).
101 1.1 eeh */
102 1.1 eeh struct rwindow32 {
103 1.1 eeh int rw_local[8]; /* %l0..%l7 */
104 1.1 eeh int rw_in[8]; /* %i0..%i7 */
105 1.1 eeh };
106 1.1 eeh
107 1.1 eeh /* Don't forget the BIAS!! */
108 1.1 eeh struct rwindow64 {
109 1.1 eeh int64_t rw_local[8]; /* %l0..%l7 */
110 1.1 eeh int64_t rw_in[8]; /* %i0..%i7 */
111 1.1 eeh };
112 1.1 eeh
113 1.1 eeh union rwindow {
114 1.1 eeh struct rwindow64 v9;
115 1.1 eeh struct rwindow32 v8;
116 1.1 eeh };
117 1.1 eeh
118 1.1 eeh /*
119 1.1 eeh * Clone trapframe for now; this seems to be the more useful
120 1.1 eeh * than the old struct reg above.
121 1.1 eeh */
122 1.1 eeh struct reg32 {
123 1.1 eeh int r_psr; /* psr */
124 1.1 eeh int r_pc; /* return pc */
125 1.1 eeh int r_npc; /* return npc */
126 1.1 eeh int r_y; /* %y register */
127 1.1 eeh int r_global[8]; /* global registers in trap's caller */
128 1.1 eeh int r_out[8]; /* output registers in trap's caller */
129 1.1 eeh };
130 1.1 eeh
131 1.1 eeh struct reg {
132 1.1 eeh int64_t r_tstate; /* tstate register */
133 1.1 eeh int64_t r_pc; /* return pc */
134 1.1 eeh int64_t r_npc; /* return npc */
135 1.1 eeh int r_y; /* %y register -- 32-bits */
136 1.1 eeh int64_t r_global[8]; /* global registers in trap's caller */
137 1.1 eeh int64_t r_out[8]; /* output registers in trap's caller */
138 1.1 eeh };
139 1.1 eeh
140 1.1 eeh #include <machine/fsr.h>
141 1.1 eeh
142 1.1 eeh /*
143 1.1 eeh * FP coprocessor registers.
144 1.1 eeh *
145 1.1 eeh * FP_QSIZE is the maximum coprocessor instruction queue depth
146 1.1 eeh * of any implementation on which the kernel will run. David Hough:
147 1.1 eeh * ``I'd suggest allowing 16 ... allowing an indeterminate variable
148 1.1 eeh * size would be even better''. Of course, we cannot do that; we
149 1.1 eeh * need to malloc these.
150 1.1 eeh */
151 1.1 eeh #define FP_QSIZE 16
152 1.1 eeh #define ALIGNFPSTATE(f) ((struct fpstate *)(((long)(f))&(~BLOCK_ALIGN)))
153 1.1 eeh
154 1.1 eeh struct fp_qentry {
155 1.1 eeh int *fq_addr; /* the instruction's address */
156 1.1 eeh int fq_instr; /* the instruction itself */
157 1.1 eeh };
158 1.1 eeh struct fpstate {
159 1.1 eeh u_int fs_regs[64]; /* our view is 64 32-bit registers */
160 1.1 eeh int64_t fs_fsr; /* %fsr */
161 1.1 eeh int fs_qsize; /* actual queue depth */
162 1.1 eeh struct fp_qentry fs_queue[FP_QSIZE]; /* queue contents */
163 1.1 eeh };
164 1.1 eeh
165 1.1 eeh /*
166 1.1 eeh * Clone fpstate into an fpreg structure to satisfy <kern/sys_process.c>
167 1.1 eeh */
168 1.1 eeh struct fpreg {
169 1.1 eeh u_int fr_regs[64]; /* our view is 64 32-bit registers */
170 1.1 eeh int64_t fr_fsr; /* %fsr */
171 1.2 eeh int fr_qsize; /* actual queue depth */
172 1.2 eeh struct fp_qentry fr_queue[FP_QSIZE]; /* queue contents */
173 1.2 eeh };
174 1.2 eeh
175 1.2 eeh /*
176 1.2 eeh * 32-bit fpreg used by 32-bit sparc CPUs
177 1.2 eeh */
178 1.2 eeh struct fpreg32 {
179 1.2 eeh u_int fr_regs[32]; /* our view is 32 32-bit registers */
180 1.2 eeh int fr_fsr; /* %fsr */
181 1.1 eeh int fr_qsize; /* actual queue depth */
182 1.1 eeh struct fp_qentry fr_queue[FP_QSIZE]; /* queue contents */
183 1.1 eeh };
184 1.1 eeh
185 1.1 eeh #endif /* _MACHINE_REG_H_ */
186