| #include <linux/linkage.h> |
| #include <asm/assembler.h> |
| #include "abort-macro.S" |
| /* |
| * Function: v6_early_abort |
| * |
| * Params : r2 = address of aborted instruction |
| * : r3 = saved SPSR |
| * |
| * Returns : r0 = address of abort |
| * : r1 = FSR, bit 11 = write |
| * : r2-r8 = corrupted |
| * : r9 = preserved |
| * : sp = pointer to registers |
| * |
| * Purpose : obtain information about current aborted instruction. |
| * Note: we read user space. This means we might cause a data |
| * abort here if the I-TLB and D-TLB aren't seeing the same |
| * picture. Unfortunately, this does happen. We live with it. |
| */ |
| .align 5 |
| ENTRY(v6_early_abort) |
| #ifdef CONFIG_CPU_MPCORE |
| clrex |
| #else |
| strex r0, r1, [sp] @ Clear the exclusive monitor |
| #endif |
| mrc p15, 0, r1, c5, c0, 0 @ get FSR |
| mrc p15, 0, r0, c6, c0, 0 @ get FAR |
| /* |
| * Faulty SWP instruction on 1136 doesn't set bit 11 in DFSR. |
| * The test below covers all the write situations, including Java bytecodes |
| */ |
| bic r1, r1, #1 << 11 | 1 << 10 @ clear bits 11 and 10 of FSR |
| tst r3, #PSR_J_BIT @ Java? |
| movne pc, lr |
| do_thumb_abort |
| ldreq r3, [r2] @ read aborted ARM instruction |
| do_ldrd_abort |
| tst r3, #1 << 20 @ L = 0 -> write |
| orreq r1, r1, #1 << 11 @ yes. |
| mov pc, lr |
| |
| |