1/* Interface between the opcode library and its callers. 2 3 Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 4 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5 6 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) 9 any later version. 10 11 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 14 GNU General Public License for more details. 15 16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 17 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software 18 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, 19 Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. 20 21 Written by Cygnus Support, 1993. 22 23 The opcode library (libopcodes.a) provides instruction decoders for 24 a large variety of instruction sets, callable with an identical 25 interface, for making instruction-processing programs more independent 26 of the instruction set being processed. */ 27 28#ifndef DIS_ASM_H 29#define DIS_ASM_H 30 31#ifdef __cplusplus 32extern "C" { 33#endif 34 35#include <stdio.h> 36#include "bfd.h" 37 38 typedef int (*fprintf_ftype) (void *, const char*, ...) /*ATTRIBUTE_FPTR_PRINTF_2*/; 39 40enum dis_insn_type 41{ 42 dis_noninsn, /* Not a valid instruction */ 43 dis_nonbranch, /* Not a branch instruction */ 44 dis_branch, /* Unconditional branch */ 45 dis_condbranch, /* Conditional branch */ 46 dis_jsr, /* Jump to subroutine */ 47 dis_condjsr, /* Conditional jump to subroutine */ 48 dis_dref, /* Data reference instruction */ 49 dis_dref2 /* Two data references in instruction */ 50}; 51 52/* This struct is passed into the instruction decoding routine, 53 and is passed back out into each callback. The various fields are used 54 for conveying information from your main routine into your callbacks, 55 for passing information into the instruction decoders (such as the 56 addresses of the callback functions), or for passing information 57 back from the instruction decoders to their callers. 58 59 It must be initialized before it is first passed; this can be done 60 by hand, or using one of the initialization macros below. */ 61 62typedef struct disassemble_info 63{ 64 fprintf_ftype fprintf_func; 65 void *stream; 66 void *application_data; 67 68 /* Target description. We could replace this with a pointer to the bfd, 69 but that would require one. There currently isn't any such requirement 70 so to avoid introducing one we record these explicitly. */ 71 /* The bfd_flavour. This can be bfd_target_unknown_flavour. */ 72 enum bfd_flavour flavour; 73 /* The bfd_arch value. */ 74 enum bfd_architecture arch; 75 /* The bfd_mach value. */ 76 unsigned long mach; 77 /* Endianness (for bi-endian cpus). Mono-endian cpus can ignore this. */ 78 enum bfd_endian endian; 79 /* An arch/mach-specific bitmask of selected instruction subsets, mainly 80 for processors with run-time-switchable instruction sets. The default, 81 zero, means that there is no constraint. CGEN-based opcodes ports 82 may use ISA_foo masks. */ 83 void *insn_sets; 84 85 /* Some targets need information about the current section to accurately 86 display insns. If this is NULL, the target disassembler function 87 will have to make its best guess. */ 88 asection *section; 89 90 /* An array of pointers to symbols either at the location being disassembled 91 or at the start of the function being disassembled. The array is sorted 92 so that the first symbol is intended to be the one used. The others are 93 present for any misc. purposes. This is not set reliably, but if it is 94 not NULL, it is correct. */ 95 asymbol **symbols; 96 /* Number of symbols in array. */ 97 int num_symbols; 98 99 /* Symbol table provided for targets that want to look at it. This is 100 used on Arm to find mapping symbols and determine Arm/Thumb code. */ 101 asymbol **symtab; 102 int symtab_pos; 103 int symtab_size; 104 105 /* For use by the disassembler. 106 The top 16 bits are reserved for public use (and are documented here). 107 The bottom 16 bits are for the internal use of the disassembler. */ 108 unsigned long flags; 109#define INSN_HAS_RELOC 0x80000000 110 void *private_data; 111 112 /* Function used to get bytes to disassemble. MEMADDR is the 113 address of the stuff to be disassembled, MYADDR is the address to 114 put the bytes in, and LENGTH is the number of bytes to read. 115 INFO is a pointer to this struct. 116 Returns an errno value or 0 for success. */ 117 int (*read_memory_func) 118 (bfd_vma memaddr, bfd_byte *myaddr, unsigned int length, 119 struct disassemble_info *info); 120 121 /* Function which should be called if we get an error that we can't 122 recover from. STATUS is the errno value from read_memory_func and 123 MEMADDR is the address that we were trying to read. INFO is a 124 pointer to this struct. */ 125 void (*memory_error_func) 126 (int status, bfd_vma memaddr, struct disassemble_info *info); 127 128 /* Function called to print ADDR. */ 129 void (*print_address_func) 130 (bfd_vma addr, struct disassemble_info *info); 131 132 /* Function called to determine if there is a symbol at the given ADDR. 133 If there is, the function returns 1, otherwise it returns 0. 134 This is used by ports which support an overlay manager where 135 the overlay number is held in the top part of an address. In 136 some circumstances we want to include the overlay number in the 137 address, (normally because there is a symbol associated with 138 that address), but sometimes we want to mask out the overlay bits. */ 139 int (* symbol_at_address_func) 140 (bfd_vma addr, struct disassemble_info * info); 141 142 /* Function called to check if a SYMBOL is can be displayed to the user. 143 This is used by some ports that want to hide special symbols when 144 displaying debugging outout. */ 145 bfd_boolean (* symbol_is_valid) 146 (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info * info); 147 148 /* These are for buffer_read_memory. */ 149 bfd_byte *buffer; 150 bfd_vma buffer_vma; 151 unsigned int buffer_length; 152 153 /* This variable may be set by the instruction decoder. It suggests 154 the number of bytes objdump should display on a single line. If 155 the instruction decoder sets this, it should always set it to 156 the same value in order to get reasonable looking output. */ 157 int bytes_per_line; 158 159 /* The next two variables control the way objdump displays the raw data. */ 160 /* For example, if bytes_per_line is 8 and bytes_per_chunk is 4, the */ 161 /* output will look like this: 162 00: 00000000 00000000 163 with the chunks displayed according to "display_endian". */ 164 int bytes_per_chunk; 165 enum bfd_endian display_endian; 166 167 /* Number of octets per incremented target address 168 Normally one, but some DSPs have byte sizes of 16 or 32 bits. */ 169 unsigned int octets_per_byte; 170 171 /* The number of zeroes we want to see at the end of a section before we 172 start skipping them. */ 173 unsigned int skip_zeroes; 174 175 /* The number of zeroes to skip at the end of a section. If the number 176 of zeroes at the end is between SKIP_ZEROES_AT_END and SKIP_ZEROES, 177 they will be disassembled. If there are fewer than 178 SKIP_ZEROES_AT_END, they will be skipped. This is a heuristic 179 attempt to avoid disassembling zeroes inserted by section 180 alignment. */ 181 unsigned int skip_zeroes_at_end; 182 183 /* Whether the disassembler always needs the relocations. */ 184 bfd_boolean disassembler_needs_relocs; 185 186 /* Results from instruction decoders. Not all decoders yet support 187 this information. This info is set each time an instruction is 188 decoded, and is only valid for the last such instruction. 189 190 To determine whether this decoder supports this information, set 191 insn_info_valid to 0, decode an instruction, then check it. */ 192 193 char insn_info_valid; /* Branch info has been set. */ 194 char branch_delay_insns; /* How many sequential insn's will run before 195 a branch takes effect. (0 = normal) */ 196 char data_size; /* Size of data reference in insn, in bytes */ 197 enum dis_insn_type insn_type; /* Type of instruction */ 198 bfd_vma target; /* Target address of branch or dref, if known; 199 zero if unknown. */ 200 bfd_vma target2; /* Second target address for dref2 */ 201 202 /* Command line options specific to the target disassembler. */ 203 char * disassembler_options; 204 205} disassemble_info; 206 207 208/* Standard disassemblers. Disassemble one instruction at the given 209 target address. Return number of octets processed. */ 210typedef int (*disassembler_ftype) (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 211 212extern int print_insn_alpha (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 213extern int print_insn_avr (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 214extern int print_insn_bfin (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 215extern int print_insn_big_arm (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 216extern int print_insn_big_mips (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 217extern int print_insn_big_or32 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 218extern int print_insn_big_powerpc (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 219extern int print_insn_big_score (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 220extern int print_insn_cr16 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 221extern int print_insn_crx (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 222extern int print_insn_d10v (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 223extern int print_insn_d30v (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 224extern int print_insn_dlx (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 225extern int print_insn_fr30 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 226extern int print_insn_frv (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 227extern int print_insn_h8300 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 228extern int print_insn_h8300h (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 229extern int print_insn_h8300s (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 230extern int print_insn_h8500 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 231extern int print_insn_hppa (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 232extern int print_insn_i370 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 233extern int print_insn_i386 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 234extern int print_insn_i386_att (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 235extern int print_insn_i386_intel (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 236extern int print_insn_i860 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 237extern int print_insn_i960 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 238extern int print_insn_ia64 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 239extern int print_insn_ip2k (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 240extern int print_insn_iq2000 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 241extern int print_insn_little_arm (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 242extern int print_insn_little_mips (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 243extern int print_insn_little_or32 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 244extern int print_insn_little_powerpc (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 245extern int print_insn_little_score (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 246extern int print_insn_m32c (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 247extern int print_insn_m32r (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 248extern int print_insn_m68hc11 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 249extern int print_insn_m68hc12 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 250extern int print_insn_m68k (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 251extern int print_insn_m88k (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 252extern int print_insn_maxq_big (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 253extern int print_insn_maxq_little (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 254extern int print_insn_mcore (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 255extern int print_insn_mep (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 256extern int print_insn_mmix (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 257extern int print_insn_mn10200 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 258extern int print_insn_mn10300 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 259extern int print_insn_msp430 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 260extern int print_insn_mt (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 261extern int print_insn_ns32k (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 262extern int print_insn_openrisc (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 263extern int print_insn_pdp11 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 264extern int print_insn_pj (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 265extern int print_insn_rs6000 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 266extern int print_insn_s390 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 267extern int print_insn_sh (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 268extern int print_insn_sh64 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 269extern int print_insn_sh64x_media (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 270extern int print_insn_sparc (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 271extern int print_insn_spu (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 272extern int print_insn_tic30 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 273extern int print_insn_tic4x (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 274extern int print_insn_tic54x (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 275extern int print_insn_tic80 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 276extern int print_insn_v850 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 277extern int print_insn_vax (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 278extern int print_insn_w65 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 279extern int print_insn_xc16x (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 280extern int print_insn_xstormy16 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 281extern int print_insn_xtensa (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 282extern int print_insn_z80 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 283extern int print_insn_z8001 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 284extern int print_insn_z8002 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *); 285 286extern disassembler_ftype arc_get_disassembler (void *); 287extern disassembler_ftype cris_get_disassembler (bfd *); 288 289extern void print_i386_disassembler_options (FILE *); 290extern void print_mips_disassembler_options (FILE *); 291extern void print_ppc_disassembler_options (FILE *); 292extern void print_arm_disassembler_options (FILE *); 293extern void parse_arm_disassembler_option (char *); 294extern int get_arm_regname_num_options (void); 295extern int set_arm_regname_option (int); 296extern int get_arm_regnames (int, const char **, const char **, const char *const **); 297extern bfd_boolean arm_symbol_is_valid (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *); 298 299/* Fetch the disassembler for a given BFD, if that support is available. */ 300extern disassembler_ftype disassembler (bfd *); 301 302/* Amend the disassemble_info structure as necessary for the target architecture. 303 Should only be called after initialising the info->arch field. */ 304extern void disassemble_init_for_target (struct disassemble_info * info); 305 306/* Document any target specific options available from the disassembler. */ 307extern void disassembler_usage (FILE *); 308 309 310/* This block of definitions is for particular callers who read instructions 311 into a buffer before calling the instruction decoder. */ 312 313/* Here is a function which callers may wish to use for read_memory_func. 314 It gets bytes from a buffer. */ 315extern int buffer_read_memory 316 (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *, unsigned int, struct disassemble_info *); 317 318/* This function goes with buffer_read_memory. 319 It prints a message using info->fprintf_func and info->stream. */ 320extern void perror_memory (int, bfd_vma, struct disassemble_info *); 321 322 323/* Just print the address in hex. This is included for completeness even 324 though both GDB and objdump provide their own (to print symbolic 325 addresses). */ 326extern void generic_print_address 327 (bfd_vma, struct disassemble_info *); 328 329/* Always true. */ 330extern int generic_symbol_at_address 331 (bfd_vma, struct disassemble_info *); 332 333/* Also always true. */ 334extern bfd_boolean generic_symbol_is_valid 335 (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *); 336 337/* Method to initialize a disassemble_info struct. This should be 338 called by all applications creating such a struct. */ 339extern void init_disassemble_info (struct disassemble_info *info, void *stream, 340 fprintf_ftype fprintf_func); 341 342/* For compatibility with existing code. */ 343#define INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO(INFO, STREAM, FPRINTF_FUNC) \ 344 init_disassemble_info (&(INFO), (STREAM), (fprintf_ftype) (FPRINTF_FUNC)) 345#define INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO_NO_ARCH(INFO, STREAM, FPRINTF_FUNC) \ 346 init_disassemble_info (&(INFO), (STREAM), (fprintf_ftype) (FPRINTF_FUNC)) 347 348 349#ifdef __cplusplus 350} 351#endif 352 353#endif /* ! defined (DIS_ASM_H) */ 354