From: Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>
To: Andrew Cagney <ac131313@cygnus.com>
Cc: Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>, gdb-patches@sources.redhat.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Fix sparc-*-linux register fetching/storing
Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2001 12:04:00 -0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20011126150435.A6212@nevyn.them.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3C02795A.9000104@cygnus.com>
On Mon, Nov 26, 2001 at 12:18:18PM -0500, Andrew Cagney wrote:
> >
> >Well, regcache_collect is the only approved interface to the contents
> >of registers[] for one thing. It would also prevent the need for the
> >cast (although you'd have to clear the upper half of the variable
> >first and make sure to stuff it into the low bytes since we're
> >big-endian. Ew.).
> >
> >Andrew? Do we need to have a regcache_collect_core_addr, to sign
> >extend and shift appropriately for each architecture?
>
> That sounds like overkill. If you need to be doing sign/zero extension
> stuff then I'd be looking at explicit calls to extract_signed_integer()
> and/or extract_unsigned_integer() in the nat code.
>
> A sequence like:
>
> void *buf = alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE);
> regcache_collect (my reg, buf);
> LONGEST val = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(my reg));
> store_unsigned_integer (dest, dest size, val);
>
> should insulate it from the current problems.
But won't we want this absolutely every time we extract a CORE_ADDR?
And for that matter, I'm talking about getting a target memory address
out of a register; is store_*signed_integer right for that? Is there
an extract_pointer or so?
--
Daniel Jacobowitz Carnegie Mellon University
MontaVista Software Debian GNU/Linux Developer
WARNING: multiple messages have this Message-ID
From: Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>
To: Andrew Cagney <ac131313@cygnus.com>
Cc: Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>, gdb-patches@sources.redhat.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Fix sparc-*-linux register fetching/storing
Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2001 18:40:00 -0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20011126150435.A6212@nevyn.them.org> (raw)
Message-ID: <20011112184000.kSlbKrTgOzUxK67PaNIIOhDbmlEXULDuRzCBBRpdDDU@z> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3C02795A.9000104@cygnus.com>
On Mon, Nov 26, 2001 at 12:18:18PM -0500, Andrew Cagney wrote:
> >
> >Well, regcache_collect is the only approved interface to the contents
> >of registers[] for one thing. It would also prevent the need for the
> >cast (although you'd have to clear the upper half of the variable
> >first and make sure to stuff it into the low bytes since we're
> >big-endian. Ew.).
> >
> >Andrew? Do we need to have a regcache_collect_core_addr, to sign
> >extend and shift appropriately for each architecture?
>
> That sounds like overkill. If you need to be doing sign/zero extension
> stuff then I'd be looking at explicit calls to extract_signed_integer()
> and/or extract_unsigned_integer() in the nat code.
>
> A sequence like:
>
> void *buf = alloca (MAX_REGISTER_RAW_SIZE);
> regcache_collect (my reg, buf);
> LONGEST val = extract_unsigned_integer (buf, REGISTER_RAW_SIZE(my reg));
> store_unsigned_integer (dest, dest size, val);
>
> should insulate it from the current problems.
But won't we want this absolutely every time we extract a CORE_ADDR?
And for that matter, I'm talking about getting a target memory address
out of a register; is store_*signed_integer right for that? Is there
an extract_pointer or so?
--
Daniel Jacobowitz Carnegie Mellon University
MontaVista Software Debian GNU/Linux Developer
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2001-11-26 12:04 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 18+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2001-11-10 9:20 Jakub Jelinek
2001-11-10 13:03 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2001-11-10 16:27 ` Jakub Jelinek
2001-11-10 16:35 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2001-11-10 16:41 ` Jakub Jelinek
2001-11-10 16:42 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2001-11-12 10:39 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-26 9:18 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-26 12:04 ` Daniel Jacobowitz [this message]
2001-11-12 18:40 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2001-11-26 12:34 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-12 19:11 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-13 8:19 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2001-11-26 12:43 ` Daniel Jacobowitz
2001-11-26 13:19 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-13 8:28 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-26 9:08 ` Andrew Cagney
2001-11-12 10:04 ` Andrew Cagney
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