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authorBen Dooks <ben-linux@fluff.org>2008-08-08 21:10:12 +0100
committerBen Dooks <ben-linux@fluff.org>2008-08-08 21:10:12 +0100
commitaf7a535688a758d15f06a98833e6a143b29af9de (patch)
treebac5ab210bbbbe276f0e44ed84194d7c8bb16aae /arch/arm/include/asm/user.h
parent0c17e4ceedd35c78b1c7413dbd16279a350be6bc (diff)
parentc41107c2d4fd31924533f4dbc4c3428acc2b5894 (diff)
Merge http://ftp.arm.linux.org.uk/pub/linux/arm/kernel/git-cur/linux-2.6-arm into for-rmk
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/arm/include/asm/user.h')
-rw-r--r--arch/arm/include/asm/user.h84
1 files changed, 84 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/arch/arm/include/asm/user.h b/arch/arm/include/asm/user.h
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..825c1e7c582
--- /dev/null
+++ b/arch/arm/include/asm/user.h
@@ -0,0 +1,84 @@
+#ifndef _ARM_USER_H
+#define _ARM_USER_H
+
+#include <asm/page.h>
+#include <asm/ptrace.h>
+/* Core file format: The core file is written in such a way that gdb
+ can understand it and provide useful information to the user (under
+ linux we use the 'trad-core' bfd). There are quite a number of
+ obstacles to being able to view the contents of the floating point
+ registers, and until these are solved you will not be able to view the
+ contents of them. Actually, you can read in the core file and look at
+ the contents of the user struct to find out what the floating point
+ registers contain.
+ The actual file contents are as follows:
+ UPAGE: 1 page consisting of a user struct that tells gdb what is present
+ in the file. Directly after this is a copy of the task_struct, which
+ is currently not used by gdb, but it may come in useful at some point.
+ All of the registers are stored as part of the upage. The upage should
+ always be only one page.
+ DATA: The data area is stored. We use current->end_text to
+ current->brk to pick up all of the user variables, plus any memory
+ that may have been malloced. No attempt is made to determine if a page
+ is demand-zero or if a page is totally unused, we just cover the entire
+ range. All of the addresses are rounded in such a way that an integral
+ number of pages is written.
+ STACK: We need the stack information in order to get a meaningful
+ backtrace. We need to write the data from (esp) to
+ current->start_stack, so we round each of these off in order to be able
+ to write an integer number of pages.
+ The minimum core file size is 3 pages, or 12288 bytes.
+*/
+
+struct user_fp {
+ struct fp_reg {
+ unsigned int sign1:1;
+ unsigned int unused:15;
+ unsigned int sign2:1;
+ unsigned int exponent:14;
+ unsigned int j:1;
+ unsigned int mantissa1:31;
+ unsigned int mantissa0:32;
+ } fpregs[8];
+ unsigned int fpsr:32;
+ unsigned int fpcr:32;
+ unsigned char ftype[8];
+ unsigned int init_flag;
+};
+
+/* When the kernel dumps core, it starts by dumping the user struct -
+ this will be used by gdb to figure out where the data and stack segments
+ are within the file, and what virtual addresses to use. */
+struct user{
+/* We start with the registers, to mimic the way that "memory" is returned
+ from the ptrace(3,...) function. */
+ struct pt_regs regs; /* Where the registers are actually stored */
+/* ptrace does not yet supply these. Someday.... */
+ int u_fpvalid; /* True if math co-processor being used. */
+ /* for this mess. Not yet used. */
+/* The rest of this junk is to help gdb figure out what goes where */
+ unsigned long int u_tsize; /* Text segment size (pages). */
+ unsigned long int u_dsize; /* Data segment size (pages). */
+ unsigned long int u_ssize; /* Stack segment size (pages). */
+ unsigned long start_code; /* Starting virtual address of text. */
+ unsigned long start_stack; /* Starting virtual address of stack area.
+ This is actually the bottom of the stack,
+ the top of the stack is always found in the
+ esp register. */
+ long int signal; /* Signal that caused the core dump. */
+ int reserved; /* No longer used */
+ unsigned long u_ar0; /* Used by gdb to help find the values for */
+ /* the registers. */
+ unsigned long magic; /* To uniquely identify a core file */
+ char u_comm[32]; /* User command that was responsible */
+ int u_debugreg[8];
+ struct user_fp u_fp; /* FP state */
+ struct user_fp_struct * u_fp0;/* Used by gdb to help find the values for */
+ /* the FP registers. */
+};
+#define NBPG PAGE_SIZE
+#define UPAGES 1
+#define HOST_TEXT_START_ADDR (u.start_code)
+#define HOST_STACK_END_ADDR (u.start_stack + u.u_ssize * NBPG)
+
+#endif /* _ARM_USER_H */