1 /* Native-dependent code for the i386. 2 3 Copyright 2001, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 4 5 This file is part of GDB. 6 7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 10 (at your option) any later version. 11 12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 15 GNU General Public License for more details. 16 17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 18 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 19 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, 20 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ 21 22 #include "defs.h" 23 #include "breakpoint.h" 24 #include "command.h" 25 #include "gdbcmd.h" 26 27 /* Support for hardware watchpoints and breakpoints using the i386 28 debug registers. 29 30 This provides several functions for inserting and removing 31 hardware-assisted breakpoints and watchpoints, testing if one or 32 more of the watchpoints triggered and at what address, checking 33 whether a given region can be watched, etc. 34 35 A target which wants to use these functions should define several 36 macros, such as `target_insert_watchpoint' and 37 `target_stopped_data_address', listed in target.h, to call the 38 appropriate functions below. It should also define 39 I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS in its tm.h file. 40 41 In addition, each target should provide several low-level macros 42 that will be called to insert watchpoints and hardware breakpoints 43 into the inferior, remove them, and check their status. These 44 macros are: 45 46 I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL -- set the debug control (DR7) 47 register to a given value 48 49 I386_DR_LOW_SET_ADDR -- put an address into one debug 50 register 51 52 I386_DR_LOW_RESET_ADDR -- reset the address stored in 53 one debug register 54 55 I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS -- return the value of the debug 56 status (DR6) register. 57 58 The functions below implement debug registers sharing by reference 59 counts, and allow to watch regions up to 16 bytes long. */ 60 61 #ifdef I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS 62 63 /* Support for 8-byte wide hw watchpoints. */ 64 #ifndef TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 65 #define TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 0 66 #endif 67 68 /* Debug registers' indices. */ 69 #define DR_NADDR 4 /* The number of debug address registers. */ 70 #define DR_STATUS 6 /* Index of debug status register (DR6). */ 71 #define DR_CONTROL 7 /* Index of debug control register (DR7). */ 72 73 /* DR7 Debug Control register fields. */ 74 75 /* How many bits to skip in DR7 to get to R/W and LEN fields. */ 76 #define DR_CONTROL_SHIFT 16 77 /* How many bits in DR7 per R/W and LEN field for each watchpoint. */ 78 #define DR_CONTROL_SIZE 4 79 80 /* Watchpoint/breakpoint read/write fields in DR7. */ 81 #define DR_RW_EXECUTE (0x0) /* Break on instruction execution. */ 82 #define DR_RW_WRITE (0x1) /* Break on data writes. */ 83 #define DR_RW_READ (0x3) /* Break on data reads or writes. */ 84 85 /* This is here for completeness. No platform supports this 86 functionality yet (as of March 2001). Note that the DE flag in the 87 CR4 register needs to be set to support this. */ 88 #ifndef DR_RW_IORW 89 #define DR_RW_IORW (0x2) /* Break on I/O reads or writes. */ 90 #endif 91 92 /* Watchpoint/breakpoint length fields in DR7. The 2-bit left shift 93 is so we could OR this with the read/write field defined above. */ 94 #define DR_LEN_1 (0x0 << 2) /* 1-byte region watch or breakpoint. */ 95 #define DR_LEN_2 (0x1 << 2) /* 2-byte region watch. */ 96 #define DR_LEN_4 (0x3 << 2) /* 4-byte region watch. */ 97 #define DR_LEN_8 (0x2 << 2) /* 8-byte region watch (AMD64). */ 98 99 /* Local and Global Enable flags in DR7. 100 101 When the Local Enable flag is set, the breakpoint/watchpoint is 102 enabled only for the current task; the processor automatically 103 clears this flag on every task switch. When the Global Enable flag 104 is set, the breakpoint/watchpoint is enabled for all tasks; the 105 processor never clears this flag. 106 107 Currently, all watchpoint are locally enabled. If you need to 108 enable them globally, read the comment which pertains to this in 109 i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint below. */ 110 #define DR_LOCAL_ENABLE_SHIFT 0 /* Extra shift to the local enable bit. */ 111 #define DR_GLOBAL_ENABLE_SHIFT 1 /* Extra shift to the global enable bit. */ 112 #define DR_ENABLE_SIZE 2 /* Two enable bits per debug register. */ 113 114 /* Local and global exact breakpoint enable flags (a.k.a. slowdown 115 flags). These are only required on i386, to allow detection of the 116 exact instruction which caused a watchpoint to break; i486 and 117 later processors do that automatically. We set these flags for 118 backwards compatibility. */ 119 #define DR_LOCAL_SLOWDOWN (0x100) 120 #define DR_GLOBAL_SLOWDOWN (0x200) 121 122 /* Fields reserved by Intel. This includes the GD (General Detect 123 Enable) flag, which causes a debug exception to be generated when a 124 MOV instruction accesses one of the debug registers. 125 126 FIXME: My Intel manual says we should use 0xF800, not 0xFC00. */ 127 #define DR_CONTROL_RESERVED (0xFC00) 128 129 /* Auxiliary helper macros. */ 130 131 /* A value that masks all fields in DR7 that are reserved by Intel. */ 132 #define I386_DR_CONTROL_MASK (~DR_CONTROL_RESERVED) 133 134 /* The I'th debug register is vacant if its Local and Global Enable 135 bits are reset in the Debug Control register. */ 136 #define I386_DR_VACANT(i) \ 137 ((dr_control_mirror & (3 << (DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i)))) == 0) 138 139 /* Locally enable the break/watchpoint in the I'th debug register. */ 140 #define I386_DR_LOCAL_ENABLE(i) \ 141 dr_control_mirror |= (1 << (DR_LOCAL_ENABLE_SHIFT + DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i))) 142 143 /* Globally enable the break/watchpoint in the I'th debug register. */ 144 #define I386_DR_GLOBAL_ENABLE(i) \ 145 dr_control_mirror |= (1 << (DR_GLOBAL_ENABLE_SHIFT + DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i))) 146 147 /* Disable the break/watchpoint in the I'th debug register. */ 148 #define I386_DR_DISABLE(i) \ 149 dr_control_mirror &= ~(3 << (DR_ENABLE_SIZE * (i))) 150 151 /* Set in DR7 the RW and LEN fields for the I'th debug register. */ 152 #define I386_DR_SET_RW_LEN(i,rwlen) \ 153 do { \ 154 dr_control_mirror &= ~(0x0f << (DR_CONTROL_SHIFT+DR_CONTROL_SIZE*(i))); \ 155 dr_control_mirror |= ((rwlen) << (DR_CONTROL_SHIFT+DR_CONTROL_SIZE*(i))); \ 156 } while (0) 157 158 /* Get from DR7 the RW and LEN fields for the I'th debug register. */ 159 #define I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN(i) \ 160 ((dr_control_mirror >> (DR_CONTROL_SHIFT + DR_CONTROL_SIZE * (i))) & 0x0f) 161 162 /* Did the watchpoint whose address is in the I'th register break? */ 163 #define I386_DR_WATCH_HIT(i) (dr_status_mirror & (1 << (i))) 164 165 /* A macro to loop over all debug registers. */ 166 #define ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) for (i = 0; i < DR_NADDR; i++) 167 168 /* Mirror the inferior's DRi registers. We keep the status and 169 control registers separated because they don't hold addresses. */ 170 static CORE_ADDR dr_mirror[DR_NADDR]; 171 static unsigned dr_status_mirror, dr_control_mirror; 172 173 /* Reference counts for each debug register. */ 174 static int dr_ref_count[DR_NADDR]; 175 176 /* Whether or not to print the mirrored debug registers. */ 177 static int maint_show_dr; 178 179 /* Types of operations supported by i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint. */ 180 typedef enum { WP_INSERT, WP_REMOVE, WP_COUNT } i386_wp_op_t; 181 182 /* Internal functions. */ 183 184 /* Return the value of a 4-bit field for DR7 suitable for watching a 185 region of LEN bytes for accesses of type TYPE. LEN is assumed to 186 have the value of 1, 2, or 4. */ 187 static unsigned i386_length_and_rw_bits (int len, enum target_hw_bp_type type); 188 189 /* Insert a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned 190 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the 191 value of the bit-field from DR7 which describes the length and 192 access type of the region to be watched by this watchpoint. Return 193 0 on success, -1 on failure. */ 194 static int i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, 195 unsigned len_rw_bits); 196 197 /* Remove a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned 198 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the 199 value of the bits from DR7 which describes the length and access 200 type of the region watched by this watchpoint. Return 0 on 201 success, -1 on failure. */ 202 static int i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, 203 unsigned len_rw_bits); 204 205 /* Insert or remove a (possibly non-aligned) watchpoint, or count the 206 number of debug registers required to watch a region at address 207 ADDR whose length is LEN for accesses of type TYPE. Return 0 on 208 successful insertion or removal, a positive number when queried 209 about the number of registers, or -1 on failure. If WHAT is not a 210 valid value, bombs through internal_error. */ 211 static int i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (i386_wp_op_t what, 212 CORE_ADDR addr, int len, 213 enum target_hw_bp_type type); 214 215 /* Implementation. */ 216 217 /* Clear the reference counts and forget everything we knew about the 218 debug registers. */ 219 220 void 221 i386_cleanup_dregs (void) 222 { 223 int i; 224 225 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 226 { 227 dr_mirror[i] = 0; 228 dr_ref_count[i] = 0; 229 } 230 dr_control_mirror = 0; 231 dr_status_mirror = 0; 232 } 233 234 #ifndef LINUX_CHILD_POST_STARTUP_INFERIOR 235 236 /* Reset all debug registers at each new startup to avoid missing 237 watchpoints after restart. */ 238 239 void 240 child_post_startup_inferior (ptid_t ptid) 241 { 242 i386_cleanup_dregs (); 243 } 244 245 #endif /* LINUX_CHILD_POST_STARTUP_INFERIOR */ 246 247 /* Print the values of the mirrored debug registers. This is called 248 when maint_show_dr is non-zero. To set that up, type "maint 249 show-debug-regs" at GDB's prompt. */ 250 251 static void 252 i386_show_dr (const char *func, CORE_ADDR addr, 253 int len, enum target_hw_bp_type type) 254 { 255 int i; 256 257 puts_unfiltered (func); 258 if (addr || len) 259 printf_unfiltered (" (addr=%lx, len=%d, type=%s)", 260 /* This code is for ia32, so casting CORE_ADDR 261 to unsigned long should be okay. */ 262 (unsigned long)addr, len, 263 type == hw_write ? "data-write" 264 : (type == hw_read ? "data-read" 265 : (type == hw_access ? "data-read/write" 266 : (type == hw_execute ? "instruction-execute" 267 /* FIXME: if/when I/O read/write 268 watchpoints are supported, add them 269 here. */ 270 : "??unknown??")))); 271 puts_unfiltered (":\n"); 272 printf_unfiltered ("\tCONTROL (DR7): %08x STATUS (DR6): %08x\n", 273 dr_control_mirror, dr_status_mirror); 274 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 275 { 276 printf_unfiltered ("\ 277 \tDR%d: addr=0x%s, ref.count=%d DR%d: addr=0x%s, ref.count=%d\n", 278 i, paddr(dr_mirror[i]), dr_ref_count[i], 279 i+1, paddr(dr_mirror[i+1]), dr_ref_count[i+1]); 280 i++; 281 } 282 } 283 284 /* Return the value of a 4-bit field for DR7 suitable for watching a 285 region of LEN bytes for accesses of type TYPE. LEN is assumed to 286 have the value of 1, 2, or 4. */ 287 288 static unsigned 289 i386_length_and_rw_bits (int len, enum target_hw_bp_type type) 290 { 291 unsigned rw; 292 293 switch (type) 294 { 295 case hw_execute: 296 rw = DR_RW_EXECUTE; 297 break; 298 case hw_write: 299 rw = DR_RW_WRITE; 300 break; 301 case hw_read: 302 /* The i386 doesn't support data-read watchpoints. */ 303 case hw_access: 304 rw = DR_RW_READ; 305 break; 306 #if 0 307 /* Not yet supported. */ 308 case hw_io_access: 309 rw = DR_RW_IORW; 310 break; 311 #endif 312 default: 313 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "\ 314 Invalid hardware breakpoint type %d in i386_length_and_rw_bits.\n", 315 (int) type); 316 } 317 318 switch (len) 319 { 320 case 1: 321 return (DR_LEN_1 | rw); 322 case 2: 323 return (DR_LEN_2 | rw); 324 case 4: 325 return (DR_LEN_4 | rw); 326 case 8: 327 if (TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8) 328 return (DR_LEN_8 | rw); 329 default: 330 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "\ 331 Invalid hardware breakpoint length %d in i386_length_and_rw_bits.\n", len); 332 } 333 } 334 335 /* Insert a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned 336 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the 337 value of the bits from DR7 which describes the length and access 338 type of the region to be watched by this watchpoint. Return 0 on 339 success, -1 on failure. */ 340 341 static int 342 i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, unsigned len_rw_bits) 343 { 344 int i; 345 346 /* First, look for an occupied debug register with the same address 347 and the same RW and LEN definitions. If we find one, we can 348 reuse it for this watchpoint as well (and save a register). */ 349 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 350 { 351 if (!I386_DR_VACANT (i) 352 && dr_mirror[i] == addr 353 && I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN (i) == len_rw_bits) 354 { 355 dr_ref_count[i]++; 356 return 0; 357 } 358 } 359 360 /* Next, look for a vacant debug register. */ 361 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 362 { 363 if (I386_DR_VACANT (i)) 364 break; 365 } 366 367 /* No more debug registers! */ 368 if (i >= DR_NADDR) 369 return -1; 370 371 /* Now set up the register I to watch our region. */ 372 373 /* Record the info in our local mirrored array. */ 374 dr_mirror[i] = addr; 375 dr_ref_count[i] = 1; 376 I386_DR_SET_RW_LEN (i, len_rw_bits); 377 /* Note: we only enable the watchpoint locally, i.e. in the current 378 task. Currently, no i386 target allows or supports global 379 watchpoints; however, if any target would want that in the 380 future, GDB should probably provide a command to control whether 381 to enable watchpoints globally or locally, and the code below 382 should use global or local enable and slow-down flags as 383 appropriate. */ 384 I386_DR_LOCAL_ENABLE (i); 385 dr_control_mirror |= DR_LOCAL_SLOWDOWN; 386 dr_control_mirror &= I386_DR_CONTROL_MASK; 387 388 /* Finally, actually pass the info to the inferior. */ 389 I386_DR_LOW_SET_ADDR (i, addr); 390 I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL (dr_control_mirror); 391 392 return 0; 393 } 394 395 /* Remove a watchpoint at address ADDR, which is assumed to be aligned 396 according to the length of the region to watch. LEN_RW_BITS is the 397 value of the bits from DR7 which describes the length and access 398 type of the region watched by this watchpoint. Return 0 on 399 success, -1 on failure. */ 400 401 static int 402 i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, unsigned len_rw_bits) 403 { 404 int i, retval = -1; 405 406 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 407 { 408 if (!I386_DR_VACANT (i) 409 && dr_mirror[i] == addr 410 && I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN (i) == len_rw_bits) 411 { 412 if (--dr_ref_count[i] == 0) /* no longer in use? */ 413 { 414 /* Reset our mirror. */ 415 dr_mirror[i] = 0; 416 I386_DR_DISABLE (i); 417 /* Reset it in the inferior. */ 418 I386_DR_LOW_SET_CONTROL (dr_control_mirror); 419 I386_DR_LOW_RESET_ADDR (i); 420 } 421 retval = 0; 422 } 423 } 424 425 return retval; 426 } 427 428 /* Insert or remove a (possibly non-aligned) watchpoint, or count the 429 number of debug registers required to watch a region at address 430 ADDR whose length is LEN for accesses of type TYPE. Return 0 on 431 successful insertion or removal, a positive number when queried 432 about the number of registers, or -1 on failure. If WHAT is not a 433 valid value, bombs through internal_error. */ 434 435 static int 436 i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (i386_wp_op_t what, CORE_ADDR addr, int len, 437 enum target_hw_bp_type type) 438 { 439 int retval = 0, status = 0; 440 int max_wp_len = TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 ? 8 : 4; 441 442 static int size_try_array[8][8] = 443 { 444 {1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1}, /* Trying size one. */ 445 {2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size two. */ 446 {2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size three. */ 447 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size four. */ 448 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size five. */ 449 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size six. */ 450 {4, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size seven. */ 451 {8, 1, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1}, /* Trying size eight. */ 452 }; 453 454 while (len > 0) 455 { 456 int align = addr % max_wp_len; 457 /* Four (eight on AMD64) is the maximum length a debug register 458 can watch. */ 459 int try = (len > max_wp_len ? (max_wp_len - 1) : len - 1); 460 int size = size_try_array[try][align]; 461 462 if (what == WP_COUNT) 463 { 464 /* size_try_array[] is defined such that each iteration 465 through the loop is guaranteed to produce an address and a 466 size that can be watched with a single debug register. 467 Thus, for counting the registers required to watch a 468 region, we simply need to increment the count on each 469 iteration. */ 470 retval++; 471 } 472 else 473 { 474 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (size, type); 475 476 if (what == WP_INSERT) 477 status = i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (addr, len_rw); 478 else if (what == WP_REMOVE) 479 status = i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (addr, len_rw); 480 else 481 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, "\ 482 Invalid value %d of operation in i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint.\n", 483 (int)what); 484 /* We keep the loop going even after a failure, because some 485 of the other aligned watchpoints might still succeed 486 (e.g. if they watch addresses that are already watched, 487 in which case we just increment the reference counts of 488 occupied debug registers). If we break out of the loop 489 too early, we could cause those addresses watched by 490 other watchpoints to be disabled when breakpoint.c reacts 491 to our failure to insert this watchpoint and tries to 492 remove it. */ 493 if (status) 494 retval = status; 495 } 496 497 addr += size; 498 len -= size; 499 } 500 501 return retval; 502 } 503 504 /* Insert a watchpoint to watch a memory region which starts at 505 address ADDR and whose length is LEN bytes. Watch memory accesses 506 of the type TYPE. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */ 507 508 int 509 i386_insert_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type) 510 { 511 int retval; 512 513 if (((len != 1 && len !=2 && len !=4) && !(TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 && len == 8)) 514 || addr % len != 0) 515 retval = i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (WP_INSERT, addr, len, type); 516 else 517 { 518 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (len, type); 519 520 retval = i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (addr, len_rw); 521 } 522 523 if (maint_show_dr) 524 i386_show_dr ("insert_watchpoint", addr, len, type); 525 526 return retval; 527 } 528 529 /* Remove a watchpoint that watched the memory region which starts at 530 address ADDR, whose length is LEN bytes, and for accesses of the 531 type TYPE. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */ 532 int 533 i386_remove_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, int type) 534 { 535 int retval; 536 537 if (((len != 1 && len !=2 && len !=4) && !(TARGET_HAS_DR_LEN_8 && len == 8)) 538 || addr % len != 0) 539 retval = i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (WP_REMOVE, addr, len, type); 540 else 541 { 542 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (len, type); 543 544 retval = i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (addr, len_rw); 545 } 546 547 if (maint_show_dr) 548 i386_show_dr ("remove_watchpoint", addr, len, type); 549 550 return retval; 551 } 552 553 /* Return non-zero if we can watch a memory region that starts at 554 address ADDR and whose length is LEN bytes. */ 555 556 int 557 i386_region_ok_for_watchpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, int len) 558 { 559 int nregs; 560 561 /* Compute how many aligned watchpoints we would need to cover this 562 region. */ 563 nregs = i386_handle_nonaligned_watchpoint (WP_COUNT, addr, len, hw_write); 564 return nregs <= DR_NADDR ? 1 : 0; 565 } 566 567 /* If the inferior has some watchpoint that triggered, set the 568 address associated with that watchpoint and return non-zero. 569 Otherwise, return zero. */ 570 571 int 572 i386_stopped_data_address (CORE_ADDR *addr_p) 573 { 574 CORE_ADDR addr = 0; 575 int i; 576 int rc = 0; 577 578 dr_status_mirror = I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS (); 579 580 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 581 { 582 if (I386_DR_WATCH_HIT (i) 583 /* This second condition makes sure DRi is set up for a data 584 watchpoint, not a hardware breakpoint. The reason is 585 that GDB doesn't call the target_stopped_data_address 586 method except for data watchpoints. In other words, I'm 587 being paranoiac. */ 588 && I386_DR_GET_RW_LEN (i) != 0) 589 { 590 addr = dr_mirror[i]; 591 rc = 1; 592 if (maint_show_dr) 593 i386_show_dr ("watchpoint_hit", addr, -1, hw_write); 594 } 595 } 596 if (maint_show_dr && addr == 0) 597 i386_show_dr ("stopped_data_addr", 0, 0, hw_write); 598 599 if (rc) 600 *addr_p = addr; 601 return rc; 602 } 603 604 int 605 i386_stopped_by_watchpoint (void) 606 { 607 CORE_ADDR addr = 0; 608 return i386_stopped_data_address (&addr); 609 } 610 611 /* Return non-zero if the inferior has some break/watchpoint that 612 triggered. */ 613 614 int 615 i386_stopped_by_hwbp (void) 616 { 617 int i; 618 619 dr_status_mirror = I386_DR_LOW_GET_STATUS (); 620 if (maint_show_dr) 621 i386_show_dr ("stopped_by_hwbp", 0, 0, hw_execute); 622 623 ALL_DEBUG_REGISTERS(i) 624 { 625 if (I386_DR_WATCH_HIT (i)) 626 return 1; 627 } 628 629 return 0; 630 } 631 632 /* Insert a hardware-assisted breakpoint at address ADDR. SHADOW is 633 unused. Return 0 on success, EBUSY on failure. */ 634 int 635 i386_insert_hw_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, void *shadow) 636 { 637 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (1, hw_execute); 638 int retval = i386_insert_aligned_watchpoint (addr, len_rw) ? EBUSY : 0; 639 640 if (maint_show_dr) 641 i386_show_dr ("insert_hwbp", addr, 1, hw_execute); 642 643 return retval; 644 } 645 646 /* Remove a hardware-assisted breakpoint at address ADDR. SHADOW is 647 unused. Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */ 648 649 int 650 i386_remove_hw_breakpoint (CORE_ADDR addr, void *shadow) 651 { 652 unsigned len_rw = i386_length_and_rw_bits (1, hw_execute); 653 int retval = i386_remove_aligned_watchpoint (addr, len_rw); 654 655 if (maint_show_dr) 656 i386_show_dr ("remove_hwbp", addr, 1, hw_execute); 657 658 return retval; 659 } 660 661 #endif /* I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS */ 662 663 664 /* Provide a prototype to silence -Wmissing-prototypes. */ 665 void _initialize_i386_nat (void); 666 667 void 668 _initialize_i386_nat (void) 669 { 670 #ifdef I386_USE_GENERIC_WATCHPOINTS 671 /* A maintenance command to enable printing the internal DRi mirror 672 variables. */ 673 add_set_cmd ("show-debug-regs", class_maintenance, 674 var_boolean, (char *) &maint_show_dr, 675 "\ 676 Set whether to show variables that mirror the x86 debug registers.\n\ 677 Use \"on\" to enable, \"off\" to disable.\n\ 678 If enabled, the debug registers values are shown when GDB inserts\n\ 679 or removes a hardware breakpoint or watchpoint, and when the inferior\n\ 680 triggers a breakpoint or watchpoint.", &maintenancelist); 681 #endif 682 } 683