Files
binutils-gdb/gdb/regformats/rs6000/powerpc-32l.dat
Andrew Burgess 06e9986d02 gdb/regformats: add osabi information to generated .dat files
Some gdbserver targets generate their target description based on the
gdb/regformats/*.dat files.  These .dat files are generated from a
matching xml file in gdb/features/.

Lets consider a concrete example:

Take gdb/features/or1k-linux.xml, this file is processed by
gdb/features/Makefile to create gdb/regformats/or1k-linux.dat.

When gdbserver is built for the or1k target the file
or1k-linux-generated.cc is generated using the
gdb/regformats/regdat.sh script.  This .cc file is then compiled and
linked into gdbserver.

The or1k-linux-generated.cc file contains the function
init_registers_or1k_linux which is called from within gdbserver, this
function creates a target_desc object and sets its xmltarget field to
a fixed string.  This fixed string is the xml filename that was
originally used to generate the xml file, in this case or1k-linux.xml.

Additionally, as part of the gdbserver build the file or1k-linux.xml
is converted to a string and placed in the file
xml-builtin-generated.cc which is then built into gdbserver.

Now when GDB asks gdbserver for the target description, gdbserver
returns the fixed xmltarget string, which is the name of an xml file.
GDB will then ask gdbserver for that file and gdbserver will return
the contents of that file thanks to the xml-builtin-generated.cc
file's contents.

This is all rather complicated, but it does work.  So what's the
problem that I'm fixing?

Well or1k-linux.xml does contain the osabi information, so this will
be returned from gdbserver to GDB.  That's good.

However, the target_desc object created in init_registers_or1k_linux
will not have its osabi set correctly.

Now this doesn't really matter too much except
init_registers_or1k_linux includes a call to init_target_desc.

In the next commit I want to extend init_target_desc to require an
osabi to be passed in.  The motivation for this will be explained in
the next commit, but if we accept for a moment that this is something
that should be done, then the question is what osabi should we use in
init_registers_or1k_linux?

Ideally we'd use the osabi which is set in or1k-linux.xml.  If we do
that then everything will remain consistent, which is a good thing.

And so, to get the osabi from or1k-linux.xml into
init_registers_or1k_linux, we first need to get the osabi information
into or1k-linux.dat file, and this is what this commit does.

I've added a new xsl script print-osabi.xsl and updated
gdb/features/Makefile to make use of this script.  Then I regenerated
all of the .dat files.  Now every .dat file contains either:

  osabi:GNU/Linux
  osabi:unknown

The first is for xml files containing <osabi>GNU/Linux</osabi> and the
second is for xml files that don't contain an osabi element.

This commit doesn't attempt to make use of the osabi information in
the .dat files, that will come in the next commit.  There should be no
user visible changes after this commit.

Approved-By: Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
2024-11-12 12:51:36 +00:00

80 lines
675 B
Plaintext

# THIS FILE IS GENERATED. -*- buffer-read-only: t -*- vi :set ro:
# Generated from: rs6000/powerpc-32l.xml
name:powerpc_32l
xmltarget:powerpc-32l.xml
expedite:r1,pc
osabi:unknown
32:r0
32:r1
32:r2
32:r3
32:r4
32:r5
32:r6
32:r7
32:r8
32:r9
32:r10
32:r11
32:r12
32:r13
32:r14
32:r15
32:r16
32:r17
32:r18
32:r19
32:r20
32:r21
32:r22
32:r23
32:r24
32:r25
32:r26
32:r27
32:r28
32:r29
32:r30
32:r31
64:f0
64:f1
64:f2
64:f3
64:f4
64:f5
64:f6
64:f7
64:f8
64:f9
64:f10
64:f11
64:f12
64:f13
64:f14
64:f15
64:f16
64:f17
64:f18
64:f19
64:f20
64:f21
64:f22
64:f23
64:f24
64:f25
64:f26
64:f27
64:f28
64:f29
64:f30
64:f31
32:pc
32:msr
32:cr
32:lr
32:ctr
32:xer
32:fpscr
32:orig_r3
32:trap