📄 ptrace.h
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#ifndef _CRIS_ARCH_PTRACE_H#define _CRIS_ARCH_PTRACE_H/* Frame types */#define CRIS_FRAME_NORMAL 0 /* normal frame without SBFS stacking */#define CRIS_FRAME_BUSFAULT 1 /* frame stacked using SBFS, need RBF return path *//* Register numbers in the ptrace system call interface */#define PT_FRAMETYPE 0#define PT_ORIG_R10 1#define PT_R13 2#define PT_R12 3#define PT_R11 4#define PT_R10 5#define PT_R9 6#define PT_R8 7#define PT_R7 8#define PT_R6 9#define PT_R5 10#define PT_R4 11#define PT_R3 12#define PT_R2 13#define PT_R1 14#define PT_R0 15#define PT_MOF 16#define PT_DCCR 17#define PT_SRP 18#define PT_IRP 19 /* This is actually the debugged process' PC */#define PT_CSRINSTR 20 /* CPU Status record remnants - valid if frametype == busfault */#define PT_CSRADDR 21#define PT_CSRDATA 22#define PT_USP 23 /* special case - USP is not in the pt_regs */#define PT_MAX 23/* Condition code bit numbers. The same numbers apply to CCR of course, but we use DCCR everywhere else, so let's try and be consistent. */#define C_DCCR_BITNR 0#define V_DCCR_BITNR 1#define Z_DCCR_BITNR 2#define N_DCCR_BITNR 3#define X_DCCR_BITNR 4#define I_DCCR_BITNR 5#define B_DCCR_BITNR 6#define M_DCCR_BITNR 7#define U_DCCR_BITNR 8#define P_DCCR_BITNR 9#define F_DCCR_BITNR 10/* pt_regs not only specifices the format in the user-struct during * ptrace but is also the frame format used in the kernel prologue/epilogues * themselves */struct pt_regs { unsigned long frametype; /* type of stackframe */ unsigned long orig_r10; /* pushed by movem r13, [sp] in SAVE_ALL, movem pushes backwards */ unsigned long r13; unsigned long r12; unsigned long r11; unsigned long r10; unsigned long r9; unsigned long r8; unsigned long r7; unsigned long r6; unsigned long r5; unsigned long r4; unsigned long r3; unsigned long r2; unsigned long r1; unsigned long r0; unsigned long mof; unsigned long dccr; unsigned long srp; unsigned long irp; /* This is actually the debugged process' PC */ unsigned long csrinstr; unsigned long csraddr; unsigned long csrdata;};/* switch_stack is the extra stuff pushed onto the stack in _resume (entry.S) * when doing a context-switch. it is used (apart from in resume) when a new * thread is made and we need to make _resume (which is starting it for the * first time) realise what is going on. * * Actually, the use is very close to the thread struct (TSS) in that both the * switch_stack and the TSS are used to keep thread stuff when switching in * _resume. */struct switch_stack { unsigned long r9; unsigned long r8; unsigned long r7; unsigned long r6; unsigned long r5; unsigned long r4; unsigned long r3; unsigned long r2; unsigned long r1; unsigned long r0; unsigned long return_ip; /* ip that _resume will return to */};/* bit 8 is user-mode flag */#define user_mode(regs) (((regs)->dccr & 0x100) != 0)#define instruction_pointer(regs) ((regs)->irp)#define profile_pc(regs) instruction_pointer(regs)extern void show_regs(struct pt_regs *);#endif
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