#include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "ieee754.h" #include "dsemul.h" /* Strap kernel emulator for full MIPS IV emulation */ #ifdef __mips #undef __mips #endif #define __mips 4 /* * Emulate the arbritrary instruction ir at xcp->cp0_epc. Required when * we have to emulate the instruction in a COP1 branch delay slot. Do * not change cp0_epc due to the instruction * * According to the spec: * 1) it shouldnt be a branch :-) * 2) it can be a COP instruction :-( * 3) if we are tring to run a protected memory space we must take * special care on memory access instructions :-( */ /* * "Trampoline" return routine to catch exception following * execution of delay-slot instruction execution. */ struct emuframe { mips_instruction emul; mips_instruction badinst; mips_instruction cookie; gpreg_t epc; }; int mips_dsemul(struct pt_regs *regs, mips_instruction ir, gpreg_t cpc) { extern asmlinkage void handle_dsemulret(void); mips_instruction *dsemul_insns; struct emuframe *fr; int err; if (ir == 0) { /* a nop is easy */ regs->cp0_epc = cpc; regs->cp0_cause &= ~CAUSEF_BD; return 0; } #ifdef DSEMUL_TRACE printk("dsemul %lx %lx\n", regs->cp0_epc, cpc); #endif /* * The strategy is to push the instruction onto the user stack * and put a trap after it which we can catch and jump to * the required address any alternative apart from full * instruction emulation!!. * * Algorithmics used a system call instruction, and * borrowed that vector. MIPS/Linux version is a bit * more heavyweight in the interests of portability and * multiprocessor support. For Linux we generate a * an unaligned access and force an address error exception. * * For embedded systems (stand-alone) we prefer to use a * non-existing CP1 instruction. This prevents us from emulating * branches, but gives us a cleaner interface to the exception * handler (single entry point). */ /* Ensure that the two instructions are in the same cache line */ dsemul_insns = (mips_instruction *) REG_TO_VA ((regs->regs[29] - sizeof(struct emuframe)) & ~0x7); fr = (struct emuframe *) dsemul_insns; /* Verify that the stack pointer is not competely insane */ if (unlikely(!access_ok(VERIFY_WRITE, fr, sizeof(struct emuframe)))) return SIGBUS; err = __put_user(ir, &fr->emul); err |= __put_user((mips_instruction)BADINST, &fr->badinst); err |= __put_user((mips_instruction)BD_COOKIE, &fr->cookie); err |= __put_user(cpc, &fr->epc); if (unlikely(err)) { fpuemuprivate.stats.errors++; return SIGBUS; } regs->cp0_epc = VA_TO_REG & fr->emul; flush_cache_sigtramp((unsigned long)&fr->badinst); return SIGILL; /* force out of emulation loop */ } int do_dsemulret(struct pt_regs *xcp) { struct emuframe *fr; gpreg_t epc; u32 insn, cookie; int err = 0; fr = (struct emuframe *) (xcp->cp0_epc - sizeof(mips_instruction)); /* * If we can't even access the area, something is very wrong, but we'll * leave that to the default handling */ if (!access_ok(VERIFY_READ, fr, sizeof(struct emuframe))) return 0; /* * Do some sanity checking on the stackframe: * * - Is the instruction pointed to by the EPC an BADINST? * - Is the following memory word the BD_COOKIE? */ err = __get_user(insn, &fr->badinst); err |= __get_user(cookie, &fr->cookie); if (unlikely(err || (insn != BADINST) || (cookie != BD_COOKIE))) { fpuemuprivate.stats.errors++; return 0; } /* * At this point, we are satisfied that it's a BD emulation trap. Yes, * a user might have deliberately put two malformed and useless * instructions in a row in his program, in which case he's in for a * nasty surprise - the next instruction will be treated as a * continuation address! Alas, this seems to be the only way that we * can handle signals, recursion, and longjmps() in the context of * emulating the branch delay instruction. */ #ifdef DSEMUL_TRACE printk("dsemulret\n"); #endif if (__get_user(epc, &fr->epc)) { /* Saved EPC */ /* This is not a good situation to be in */ force_sig(SIGBUS, current); return 0; } /* Set EPC to return to post-branch instruction */ xcp->cp0_epc = epc; return 1; }