Have arm_set_cpsr() handle the two core state flags, updating
the CPU state. This eliminates code in various debug_entry()
paths, and marginally improves handling of the J bit.
Catch and comment a few holes in the handling of the J bit on
ARM926ejs cores ... it's unlikely our users will care about
Jazelle mode, but we can at least warn of Impending Doom. If
anyone does use it, these breadcrumbs may help them to find
the right path through the code.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Define arm_reg_current() ... returning handle to a given register,
and encapsulating the current mode's register shadowing. It's got
one current use, for reporting the current register set to GDB.
This will let later patches clean up much ARMV4_5_CORE_REG_MODE()
nastiness, saving a bit of code.
Define and use arm_set_cpsr() ... initially it updates the cached
CPSR and sets up state used by arm_reg_current(), plus any SPSR
handle. (Later: can also set up for T and J bits.)
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Stash a pointer to the CPSR in the "struct arm", to help get rid
of the (common) references to its index in the register cache.
This removes almost all references to CPSR offsets outside of the
toplevel ARM code ... except a pair related to the current ARM11
"simulator" logic (which should be removable soonish).
This is a net minor code shrink of a few hundred bytes of object
code, and also makes the code more readable.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Minor cleanup of ARM11 register handling: remove disabled
register hooks. This should all be handled by shared code,
and this stuff is just clutter.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Add this to ease debugging why the standard scripts aren't
found on the default script search path in some build/install
enviroments. Especially on Windows it's not straight forward
where openocd actually looks for the scripts.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Fritiofson <andreas.fritiofson@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Implementations need to access the register struct they modify;
make it easier and less error-prone to identify the instance.
(This removes over 10% of the ARMV4_5_CORE_REG_MODE nastiness...)
Plus some minor fixes noted when making these updates: ARM7/ARM9
accessor methods should be static; don't leave CPSR wrongly marked
"dirty"; note significant XScale omissions in register handling;
and have armv4_5_build_reg_cache() record its result.
Rename "struct armv4_5_core_reg" as "struct arm_reg"; it's used
for more than those older architecture generations.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Remove two commands that were documented as "debug commands"
and where "you probably don't want to use this". We never
intended to support them, and at least one problem report
boiled down to using this when it shouldn't have been used.
Update the docs on the existing register commands to talk a
bit more about register access and cache behavior. (Those
debug commands existed largely to *bypass* the cache.) And
fix some minor doc goofs that snuck in with recent changes,
renaming "armv4_5" as "arm" and "arm9tdmi" as "arm9".
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Rewrite means for scripts to register help text for commands. These
cause the new commands to be stored in the command heirarchy, with
built-in commands; however, they will never be invoked there because
they do not receive a command handler. The same trick is used for
the Jim commands.
Remove the old helpers that were used to register commands.
For the startup.tcl code to use built-in commands, the context must be
associated with the interpreter temporarily. This will be required to
add help text.
Rewrites 'help' command in C, using new 'cmd_help' for display. Adds the
built-in 'help' COMMAND_HANDLER to provide better output than the
TCL-based script command (e.g. heirarchical listing of commands).
The help string is stored in the command structure, though it conitnues
to be pushed into the Jim environment. The current idiomatic usage
suggests the addition of a usage field as well, to provide two levels
of detail for users to consume (i.e. terse usage list, or verbose help).
Creates a helper function, cmd_help, which displays the help string
for a single command. Presently, it is called from the loop in help.
The routine has been extended to allow indentation of command groups,
so an improved help command can improve the display of information.
Refactors the command registration to use helpers to simplify the code.
The unregistration routines were made more flexible by allowing them
to operate on a single command, such that one can remove all of a
commands children in one step (perhaps before adding back a 'config'
subcommand that allows getting the others back). Eliminates a bit
of duplicated code and adds full API documentation for these routines.
The previous version never wrote dirty registers
for non-current CPU modes ... fix that.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
We *should* be able to read and write registers in any core mode,
instead of being stuck with whatever mode the core was when we
entered debug state. This patch makes them work.
Note that the current restore_context() only handles the current
mode; writing to other-mode registers is a NOP without a followup
patch fixing that. Also, that SPSR access needed some bugfixes;
it was confused with CPSR.
Secure monitor mode also seems dubious; there's probably more to
be done before that's sufficiently understood by the debugger.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Create a generic register_cache_invalidate(), and use it to
replace three all-but-identical core-specific routines:
- armv4_5_invalidate_core_regs()
- armv7m_invalidate_core_regs
- mips32_invalidate_core_regs() too.
Make cache->num_regs be unsigned, avoiding various errors.
Net code shrink and simplification.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Move bulk of for-loop to a new static command helper function.
Adds handle_nand_list_drivers command handler, registered as
'nand drivers'.
Improves command help text and error reporting.
Move variables to point of first use, reducing their scope.
Add driver_name temporary to help arguments be changed later.
Eliminates the useless 'found' variable, changing the code to terminate
the loop immediate and return its success.
After adding support for referencing banks by name, renames
the COMMAND_HELPERs appropriately:
flash_command_get_bank_by_num -> flash_command_get_bank
nand_command_get_device_by_num -> flash_command_get_device
Add get_flash_bank_by_name (and get_nand_device_by_name) helpers
to retrieves struct flash_bank * (struct nand_device *) given a
driver name and an (optional) driver-specific bank index.
These are used to extend flash_command_get_bank_by_num (and
nand_command_get_device_by_num) to allow all flash (nand) commands to
reference defined banks by name, not just by number.
To avoid some code duplication, add the flash/common.[ch] files to hold
functionality common to both types driver. The first two methods are
helpers for the above routines to find a bank specified by a "name" or
"name.index" string. get_flash_name_index() finds the '.index' portion,
while flash_driver_name_matches() performs the string portion matching.
Just pre-allocate memory for the cached register value.
Shrinks heap overhead; increases locality-of-reference.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Combine register names with other per-register data into a
single template structure. This saves space, and makes it
easier to change how registers get handled (by shrinking
the number of places that care about cache indices).
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
The examine() method has some conceptual breakage. Cope
with it by manually splitting out the run-once parts from
the after-each-reset parts ... this gets rid of memory
leaks and speeds up resets after the first one.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
We don't want an ARMv7-specific core state enumeration just to
add ThumbEE state. Update the generic stuff to handle that,
and replace the V7-specific bits with it.
For Cortex-A8: on debug entry, check both the T and J bits
instead of just the T bit. When the J bit is set, set the
right state and warn appropriately.
(And while we're at it, move the generic arm struct to the front
of the v7a structure, for somewhat better code generation.)
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
The only way ARMv7-A modes differ from ARMv4/ARMv5 flavors
is that v7-A is allowed to include "Secure monitor" support.
That's now handled by our standard top-level ARM code ... so
phase out the stuff that's specific to ARMv7-A.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
Removing the fast command eliminates the fast_and_dangerous global,
which was used only by arm7_9_common as an initializer. The command
is not called in the tree; instead, more explicit commands are used.
The jim_global_long function was not used anywhere in the tree.
Adds the foo/bar commands to provide more working examples of command
argument parsing, including the new handle_command_parse_bool helper.
Updates hello command help text to provide useful information.
This patch changes the behavior of all boolean parsing callers to
accept any one of "true/enable/on/yes/1" or "false/disable/off/no/0".
Since one particular pair will be most appropriate in any given
situation, the specific macros should continue to be used in
order to display the most informative error messages possible.
Rewrite arm11_handle_bool to provide a generic on/off command helper.
Refactors COMMAND_PARSE_BOOL to use new command_parse_bool helper,
which gets reused by the new command_parse_bool_any helper.
This later helper is called by the new command helper function to
accepts any on/off, enable/disable, true/false, yes/no, or 0/1 parameter.
Updates all command parsing of simple "enable" and "disable" arguments.
A few case in the tree use a tri-state or extended arguments, which
cannot use this simple macro.
Simlifies the xscale icache/dcache command handler logic.
Adds several macros similar to COMMAND_PARSE_NUMBER, but for parsing
boolean command arguments. Two flavors are provided to provide
drop-in compatibility with existing code, allow for the elimination
of a lot of code bloat while improving the error checking and reporting.
COMMAND_PARSE_ON_OFF parses "on"/"off" command parameters.
COMMAND_PARSE_ENABLE parses "enable"/"disable" command parameters.
Both print the error and return an error out of the calling function.
Change the layout to show the "Secure Monitor" registers too,
when they're present.
Instead of lining registers for each of six (or seven) modes up
in adjacent vertical columns, display each mode's registers (or
shadows) in a single block, avoiding duplicate value displays.
This also lets us shrink the line length to fits in standard 80
character lines ... six or seven 18-character columns can't fit.
Relabel "r13" as "sp", so it's more meaningful.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
When we read the CPSR on debug entry, update the CPSR cache in all
cases, not just when the current processor state is User or System.
Plus minor cleanup of how the (too-many) other registers' cache
entries get updated.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>
If the core doesn't provide an optimized version of this
method, provide one without core-specific optimizations.
Use this to make Cortex-A8 support the "arm reg" command.
Related: make the two register access methods properly static,
have the "set" log a "not halted" error too, and make sure
that the "valid" flag is set on successful reads.
Signed-off-by: David Brownell <dbrownell@users.sourceforge.net>