1 /* Interface between the opcode library and its callers.
2 Written by Cygnus Support, 1993.
4 The opcode library (libopcodes.a) provides instruction decoders for
5 a large variety of instruction sets, callable with an identical
6 interface, for making instruction-processing programs more independent
7 of the instruction set being processed. */
12 #include "qemu-common.h"
15 typedef uint64_t bfd_vma
;
16 typedef int64_t bfd_signed_vma
;
17 typedef uint8_t bfd_byte
;
18 #define sprintf_vma(s,x) sprintf (s, "%0" PRIx64, x)
19 #define snprintf_vma(s,ss,x) snprintf (s, ss, "%0" PRIx64, x)
24 bfd_target_unknown_flavour
,
25 bfd_target_aout_flavour
,
26 bfd_target_coff_flavour
,
27 bfd_target_ecoff_flavour
,
28 bfd_target_elf_flavour
,
29 bfd_target_ieee_flavour
,
30 bfd_target_nlm_flavour
,
31 bfd_target_oasys_flavour
,
32 bfd_target_tekhex_flavour
,
33 bfd_target_srec_flavour
,
34 bfd_target_ihex_flavour
,
35 bfd_target_som_flavour
,
36 bfd_target_os9k_flavour
,
37 bfd_target_versados_flavour
,
38 bfd_target_msdos_flavour
,
39 bfd_target_evax_flavour
42 enum bfd_endian
{ BFD_ENDIAN_BIG
, BFD_ENDIAN_LITTLE
, BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN
};
46 bfd_arch_unknown
, /* File arch not known */
47 bfd_arch_obscure
, /* Arch known, not one of these */
48 bfd_arch_m68k
, /* Motorola 68xxx */
49 #define bfd_mach_m68000 1
50 #define bfd_mach_m68008 2
51 #define bfd_mach_m68010 3
52 #define bfd_mach_m68020 4
53 #define bfd_mach_m68030 5
54 #define bfd_mach_m68040 6
55 #define bfd_mach_m68060 7
56 #define bfd_mach_cpu32 8
57 #define bfd_mach_mcf5200 9
58 #define bfd_mach_mcf5206e 10
59 #define bfd_mach_mcf5307 11
60 #define bfd_mach_mcf5407 12
61 #define bfd_mach_mcf528x 13
62 #define bfd_mach_mcfv4e 14
63 #define bfd_mach_mcf521x 15
64 #define bfd_mach_mcf5249 16
65 #define bfd_mach_mcf547x 17
66 #define bfd_mach_mcf548x 18
67 bfd_arch_vax
, /* DEC Vax */
68 bfd_arch_i960
, /* Intel 960 */
69 /* The order of the following is important.
70 lower number indicates a machine type that
71 only accepts a subset of the instructions
72 available to machines with higher numbers.
73 The exception is the "ca", which is
74 incompatible with all other machines except
77 #define bfd_mach_i960_core 1
78 #define bfd_mach_i960_ka_sa 2
79 #define bfd_mach_i960_kb_sb 3
80 #define bfd_mach_i960_mc 4
81 #define bfd_mach_i960_xa 5
82 #define bfd_mach_i960_ca 6
83 #define bfd_mach_i960_jx 7
84 #define bfd_mach_i960_hx 8
86 bfd_arch_a29k
, /* AMD 29000 */
87 bfd_arch_sparc
, /* SPARC */
88 #define bfd_mach_sparc 1
89 /* The difference between v8plus and v9 is that v9 is a true 64 bit env. */
90 #define bfd_mach_sparc_sparclet 2
91 #define bfd_mach_sparc_sparclite 3
92 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v8plus 4
93 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v8plusa 5 /* with ultrasparc add'ns. */
94 #define bfd_mach_sparc_sparclite_le 6
95 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v9 7
96 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v9a 8 /* with ultrasparc add'ns. */
97 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v8plusb 9 /* with cheetah add'ns. */
98 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v9b 10 /* with cheetah add'ns. */
99 /* Nonzero if MACH has the v9 instruction set. */
100 #define bfd_mach_sparc_v9_p(mach) \
101 ((mach) >= bfd_mach_sparc_v8plus && (mach) <= bfd_mach_sparc_v9b \
102 && (mach) != bfd_mach_sparc_sparclite_le)
103 bfd_arch_mips
, /* MIPS Rxxxx */
104 #define bfd_mach_mips3000 3000
105 #define bfd_mach_mips3900 3900
106 #define bfd_mach_mips4000 4000
107 #define bfd_mach_mips4010 4010
108 #define bfd_mach_mips4100 4100
109 #define bfd_mach_mips4300 4300
110 #define bfd_mach_mips4400 4400
111 #define bfd_mach_mips4600 4600
112 #define bfd_mach_mips4650 4650
113 #define bfd_mach_mips5000 5000
114 #define bfd_mach_mips6000 6000
115 #define bfd_mach_mips8000 8000
116 #define bfd_mach_mips10000 10000
117 #define bfd_mach_mips16 16
118 bfd_arch_i386
, /* Intel 386 */
119 #define bfd_mach_i386_i386 0
120 #define bfd_mach_i386_i8086 1
121 #define bfd_mach_i386_i386_intel_syntax 2
122 #define bfd_mach_x86_64 3
123 #define bfd_mach_x86_64_intel_syntax 4
124 bfd_arch_we32k
, /* AT&T WE32xxx */
125 bfd_arch_tahoe
, /* CCI/Harris Tahoe */
126 bfd_arch_i860
, /* Intel 860 */
127 bfd_arch_romp
, /* IBM ROMP PC/RT */
128 bfd_arch_alliant
, /* Alliant */
129 bfd_arch_convex
, /* Convex */
130 bfd_arch_m88k
, /* Motorola 88xxx */
131 bfd_arch_pyramid
, /* Pyramid Technology */
132 bfd_arch_h8300
, /* Hitachi H8/300 */
133 #define bfd_mach_h8300 1
134 #define bfd_mach_h8300h 2
135 #define bfd_mach_h8300s 3
136 bfd_arch_powerpc
, /* PowerPC */
137 #define bfd_mach_ppc 0
138 #define bfd_mach_ppc64 1
139 #define bfd_mach_ppc_403 403
140 #define bfd_mach_ppc_403gc 4030
141 #define bfd_mach_ppc_e500 500
142 #define bfd_mach_ppc_505 505
143 #define bfd_mach_ppc_601 601
144 #define bfd_mach_ppc_602 602
145 #define bfd_mach_ppc_603 603
146 #define bfd_mach_ppc_ec603e 6031
147 #define bfd_mach_ppc_604 604
148 #define bfd_mach_ppc_620 620
149 #define bfd_mach_ppc_630 630
150 #define bfd_mach_ppc_750 750
151 #define bfd_mach_ppc_860 860
152 #define bfd_mach_ppc_a35 35
153 #define bfd_mach_ppc_rs64ii 642
154 #define bfd_mach_ppc_rs64iii 643
155 #define bfd_mach_ppc_7400 7400
156 bfd_arch_rs6000
, /* IBM RS/6000 */
157 bfd_arch_hppa
, /* HP PA RISC */
158 #define bfd_mach_hppa10 10
159 #define bfd_mach_hppa11 11
160 #define bfd_mach_hppa20 20
161 #define bfd_mach_hppa20w 25
162 bfd_arch_d10v
, /* Mitsubishi D10V */
163 bfd_arch_z8k
, /* Zilog Z8000 */
164 #define bfd_mach_z8001 1
165 #define bfd_mach_z8002 2
166 bfd_arch_h8500
, /* Hitachi H8/500 */
167 bfd_arch_sh
, /* Hitachi SH */
168 #define bfd_mach_sh 1
169 #define bfd_mach_sh2 0x20
170 #define bfd_mach_sh_dsp 0x2d
171 #define bfd_mach_sh2a 0x2a
172 #define bfd_mach_sh2a_nofpu 0x2b
173 #define bfd_mach_sh2e 0x2e
174 #define bfd_mach_sh3 0x30
175 #define bfd_mach_sh3_nommu 0x31
176 #define bfd_mach_sh3_dsp 0x3d
177 #define bfd_mach_sh3e 0x3e
178 #define bfd_mach_sh4 0x40
179 #define bfd_mach_sh4_nofpu 0x41
180 #define bfd_mach_sh4_nommu_nofpu 0x42
181 #define bfd_mach_sh4a 0x4a
182 #define bfd_mach_sh4a_nofpu 0x4b
183 #define bfd_mach_sh4al_dsp 0x4d
184 #define bfd_mach_sh5 0x50
185 bfd_arch_alpha
, /* Dec Alpha */
186 #define bfd_mach_alpha 1
187 #define bfd_mach_alpha_ev4 0x10
188 #define bfd_mach_alpha_ev5 0x20
189 #define bfd_mach_alpha_ev6 0x30
190 bfd_arch_arm
, /* Advanced Risc Machines ARM */
191 #define bfd_mach_arm_unknown 0
192 #define bfd_mach_arm_2 1
193 #define bfd_mach_arm_2a 2
194 #define bfd_mach_arm_3 3
195 #define bfd_mach_arm_3M 4
196 #define bfd_mach_arm_4 5
197 #define bfd_mach_arm_4T 6
198 #define bfd_mach_arm_5 7
199 #define bfd_mach_arm_5T 8
200 #define bfd_mach_arm_5TE 9
201 #define bfd_mach_arm_XScale 10
202 #define bfd_mach_arm_ep9312 11
203 #define bfd_mach_arm_iWMMXt 12
204 #define bfd_mach_arm_iWMMXt2 13
205 bfd_arch_ns32k
, /* National Semiconductors ns32000 */
206 bfd_arch_w65
, /* WDC 65816 */
207 bfd_arch_tic30
, /* Texas Instruments TMS320C30 */
208 bfd_arch_v850
, /* NEC V850 */
209 #define bfd_mach_v850 0
210 bfd_arch_arc
, /* Argonaut RISC Core */
211 #define bfd_mach_arc_base 0
212 bfd_arch_m32r
, /* Mitsubishi M32R/D */
213 #define bfd_mach_m32r 0 /* backwards compatibility */
214 bfd_arch_mn10200
, /* Matsushita MN10200 */
215 bfd_arch_mn10300
, /* Matsushita MN10300 */
216 bfd_arch_cris
, /* Axis CRIS */
217 #define bfd_mach_cris_v0_v10 255
218 #define bfd_mach_cris_v32 32
219 #define bfd_mach_cris_v10_v32 1032
220 bfd_arch_microblaze
, /* Xilinx MicroBlaze. */
221 bfd_arch_ia64
, /* HP/Intel ia64 */
222 #define bfd_mach_ia64_elf64 64
223 #define bfd_mach_ia64_elf32 32
224 bfd_arch_lm32
, /* Lattice Mico32 */
225 #define bfd_mach_lm32 1
228 #define bfd_mach_s390_31 31
229 #define bfd_mach_s390_64 64
231 typedef struct symbol_cache_entry
242 dis_noninsn
, /* Not a valid instruction */
243 dis_nonbranch
, /* Not a branch instruction */
244 dis_branch
, /* Unconditional branch */
245 dis_condbranch
, /* Conditional branch */
246 dis_jsr
, /* Jump to subroutine */
247 dis_condjsr
, /* Conditional jump to subroutine */
248 dis_dref
, /* Data reference instruction */
249 dis_dref2
/* Two data references in instruction */
252 /* This struct is passed into the instruction decoding routine,
253 and is passed back out into each callback. The various fields are used
254 for conveying information from your main routine into your callbacks,
255 for passing information into the instruction decoders (such as the
256 addresses of the callback functions), or for passing information
257 back from the instruction decoders to their callers.
259 It must be initialized before it is first passed; this can be done
260 by hand, or using one of the initialization macros below. */
262 typedef struct disassemble_info
{
263 fprintf_function fprintf_func
;
265 PTR application_data
;
267 /* Target description. We could replace this with a pointer to the bfd,
268 but that would require one. There currently isn't any such requirement
269 so to avoid introducing one we record these explicitly. */
270 /* The bfd_flavour. This can be bfd_target_unknown_flavour. */
271 enum bfd_flavour flavour
;
272 /* The bfd_arch value. */
273 enum bfd_architecture arch
;
274 /* The bfd_mach value. */
276 /* Endianness (for bi-endian cpus). Mono-endian cpus can ignore this. */
277 enum bfd_endian endian
;
279 /* An array of pointers to symbols either at the location being disassembled
280 or at the start of the function being disassembled. The array is sorted
281 so that the first symbol is intended to be the one used. The others are
282 present for any misc. purposes. This is not set reliably, but if it is
283 not NULL, it is correct. */
285 /* Number of symbols in array. */
288 /* For use by the disassembler.
289 The top 16 bits are reserved for public use (and are documented here).
290 The bottom 16 bits are for the internal use of the disassembler. */
292 #define INSN_HAS_RELOC 0x80000000
295 /* Function used to get bytes to disassemble. MEMADDR is the
296 address of the stuff to be disassembled, MYADDR is the address to
297 put the bytes in, and LENGTH is the number of bytes to read.
298 INFO is a pointer to this struct.
299 Returns an errno value or 0 for success. */
300 int (*read_memory_func
)
301 (bfd_vma memaddr
, bfd_byte
*myaddr
, int length
,
302 struct disassemble_info
*info
);
304 /* Function which should be called if we get an error that we can't
305 recover from. STATUS is the errno value from read_memory_func and
306 MEMADDR is the address that we were trying to read. INFO is a
307 pointer to this struct. */
308 void (*memory_error_func
)
309 (int status
, bfd_vma memaddr
, struct disassemble_info
*info
);
311 /* Function called to print ADDR. */
312 void (*print_address_func
)
313 (bfd_vma addr
, struct disassemble_info
*info
);
315 /* Function called to determine if there is a symbol at the given ADDR.
316 If there is, the function returns 1, otherwise it returns 0.
317 This is used by ports which support an overlay manager where
318 the overlay number is held in the top part of an address. In
319 some circumstances we want to include the overlay number in the
320 address, (normally because there is a symbol associated with
321 that address), but sometimes we want to mask out the overlay bits. */
322 int (* symbol_at_address_func
)
323 (bfd_vma addr
, struct disassemble_info
* info
);
325 /* These are for buffer_read_memory. */
330 /* This variable may be set by the instruction decoder. It suggests
331 the number of bytes objdump should display on a single line. If
332 the instruction decoder sets this, it should always set it to
333 the same value in order to get reasonable looking output. */
336 /* the next two variables control the way objdump displays the raw data */
337 /* For example, if bytes_per_line is 8 and bytes_per_chunk is 4, the */
338 /* output will look like this:
339 00: 00000000 00000000
340 with the chunks displayed according to "display_endian". */
342 enum bfd_endian display_endian
;
344 /* Results from instruction decoders. Not all decoders yet support
345 this information. This info is set each time an instruction is
346 decoded, and is only valid for the last such instruction.
348 To determine whether this decoder supports this information, set
349 insn_info_valid to 0, decode an instruction, then check it. */
351 char insn_info_valid
; /* Branch info has been set. */
352 char branch_delay_insns
; /* How many sequential insn's will run before
353 a branch takes effect. (0 = normal) */
354 char data_size
; /* Size of data reference in insn, in bytes */
355 enum dis_insn_type insn_type
; /* Type of instruction */
356 bfd_vma target
; /* Target address of branch or dref, if known;
358 bfd_vma target2
; /* Second target address for dref2 */
360 /* Command line options specific to the target disassembler. */
361 char * disassembler_options
;
366 /* Standard disassemblers. Disassemble one instruction at the given
367 target address. Return number of bytes processed. */
368 typedef int (*disassembler_ftype
) (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
370 int print_insn_tci(bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
371 int print_insn_big_mips (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
372 int print_insn_little_mips (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
373 int print_insn_i386 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
374 int print_insn_m68k (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
375 int print_insn_z8001 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
376 int print_insn_z8002 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
377 int print_insn_h8300 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
378 int print_insn_h8300h (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
379 int print_insn_h8300s (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
380 int print_insn_h8500 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
381 int print_insn_alpha (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
382 disassembler_ftype
arc_get_disassembler (int, int);
383 int print_insn_arm (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
384 int print_insn_sparc (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
385 int print_insn_big_a29k (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
386 int print_insn_little_a29k (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
387 int print_insn_i960 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
388 int print_insn_sh (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
389 int print_insn_shl (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
390 int print_insn_hppa (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
391 int print_insn_m32r (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
392 int print_insn_m88k (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
393 int print_insn_mn10200 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
394 int print_insn_mn10300 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
395 int print_insn_ns32k (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
396 int print_insn_big_powerpc (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
397 int print_insn_little_powerpc (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
398 int print_insn_rs6000 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
399 int print_insn_w65 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
400 int print_insn_d10v (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
401 int print_insn_v850 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
402 int print_insn_tic30 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
403 int print_insn_ppc (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
404 int print_insn_s390 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
405 int print_insn_crisv32 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
406 int print_insn_crisv10 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
407 int print_insn_microblaze (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
408 int print_insn_ia64 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
409 int print_insn_lm32 (bfd_vma
, disassemble_info
*);
412 /* Fetch the disassembler for a given BFD, if that support is available. */
413 disassembler_ftype
disassembler(bfd
*);
417 /* This block of definitions is for particular callers who read instructions
418 into a buffer before calling the instruction decoder. */
420 /* Here is a function which callers may wish to use for read_memory_func.
421 It gets bytes from a buffer. */
422 int buffer_read_memory(bfd_vma
, bfd_byte
*, int, struct disassemble_info
*);
424 /* This function goes with buffer_read_memory.
425 It prints a message using info->fprintf_func and info->stream. */
426 void perror_memory(int, bfd_vma
, struct disassemble_info
*);
429 /* Just print the address in hex. This is included for completeness even
430 though both GDB and objdump provide their own (to print symbolic
432 void generic_print_address(bfd_vma
, struct disassemble_info
*);
435 int generic_symbol_at_address(bfd_vma
, struct disassemble_info
*);
437 /* Macro to initialize a disassemble_info struct. This should be called
438 by all applications creating such a struct. */
439 #define INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO(INFO, STREAM, FPRINTF_FUNC) \
440 (INFO).flavour = bfd_target_unknown_flavour, \
441 (INFO).arch = bfd_arch_unknown, \
443 (INFO).endian = BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN, \
444 INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO_NO_ARCH(INFO, STREAM, FPRINTF_FUNC)
446 /* Call this macro to initialize only the internal variables for the
447 disassembler. Architecture dependent things such as byte order, or machine
448 variant are not touched by this macro. This makes things much easier for
449 GDB which must initialize these things separately. */
451 #define INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO_NO_ARCH(INFO, STREAM, FPRINTF_FUNC) \
452 (INFO).fprintf_func = (FPRINTF_FUNC), \
453 (INFO).stream = (STREAM), \
454 (INFO).symbols = NULL, \
455 (INFO).num_symbols = 0, \
456 (INFO).private_data = NULL, \
457 (INFO).buffer = NULL, \
458 (INFO).buffer_vma = 0, \
459 (INFO).buffer_length = 0, \
460 (INFO).read_memory_func = buffer_read_memory, \
461 (INFO).memory_error_func = perror_memory, \
462 (INFO).print_address_func = generic_print_address, \
463 (INFO).symbol_at_address_func = generic_symbol_at_address, \
465 (INFO).bytes_per_line = 0, \
466 (INFO).bytes_per_chunk = 0, \
467 (INFO).display_endian = BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN, \
468 (INFO).disassembler_options = NULL, \
469 (INFO).insn_info_valid = 0
472 #define ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED __attribute__((unused))
476 bfd_vma
bfd_getl64 (const bfd_byte
*addr
);
477 bfd_vma
bfd_getl32 (const bfd_byte
*addr
);
478 bfd_vma
bfd_getb32 (const bfd_byte
*addr
);
479 bfd_vma
bfd_getl16 (const bfd_byte
*addr
);
480 bfd_vma
bfd_getb16 (const bfd_byte
*addr
);
481 typedef bool bfd_boolean
;
483 #endif /* ! defined (DIS_ASM_H) */