David Howells | 5457982 | 2012-10-09 09:47:43 +0100 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | /* |
| 2 | * traps.h: Format of entries for the Sparc trap table. |
| 3 | * |
| 4 | * Copyright (C) 1995 David S. Miller (davem@caip.rutgers.edu) |
| 5 | */ |
| 6 | |
| 7 | #ifndef _UAPI_SPARC_TRAPS_H |
| 8 | #define _UAPI_SPARC_TRAPS_H |
| 9 | |
| 10 | #define NUM_SPARC_TRAPS 255 |
| 11 | |
| 12 | #ifndef __ASSEMBLY__ |
| 13 | #endif /* !(__ASSEMBLY__) */ |
| 14 | |
| 15 | /* For patching the trap table at boot time, we need to know how to |
| 16 | * form various common Sparc instructions. Thus these macros... |
| 17 | */ |
| 18 | |
| 19 | #define SPARC_MOV_CONST_L3(const) (0xa6102000 | (const&0xfff)) |
| 20 | |
| 21 | /* The following assumes that the branch lies before the place we |
| 22 | * are branching to. This is the case for a trap vector... |
| 23 | * You have been warned. |
| 24 | */ |
| 25 | #define SPARC_BRANCH(dest_addr, inst_addr) \ |
| 26 | (0x10800000 | (((dest_addr-inst_addr)>>2)&0x3fffff)) |
| 27 | |
| 28 | #define SPARC_RD_PSR_L0 (0xa1480000) |
| 29 | #define SPARC_RD_WIM_L3 (0xa7500000) |
| 30 | #define SPARC_NOP (0x01000000) |
| 31 | |
| 32 | /* Various interesting trap levels. */ |
| 33 | /* First, hardware traps. */ |
| 34 | #define SP_TRAP_TFLT 0x1 /* Text fault */ |
| 35 | #define SP_TRAP_II 0x2 /* Illegal Instruction */ |
| 36 | #define SP_TRAP_PI 0x3 /* Privileged Instruction */ |
| 37 | #define SP_TRAP_FPD 0x4 /* Floating Point Disabled */ |
| 38 | #define SP_TRAP_WOVF 0x5 /* Window Overflow */ |
| 39 | #define SP_TRAP_WUNF 0x6 /* Window Underflow */ |
| 40 | #define SP_TRAP_MNA 0x7 /* Memory Address Unaligned */ |
| 41 | #define SP_TRAP_FPE 0x8 /* Floating Point Exception */ |
| 42 | #define SP_TRAP_DFLT 0x9 /* Data Fault */ |
| 43 | #define SP_TRAP_TOF 0xa /* Tag Overflow */ |
| 44 | #define SP_TRAP_WDOG 0xb /* Watchpoint Detected */ |
| 45 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ1 0x11 /* IRQ level 1 */ |
| 46 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ2 0x12 /* IRQ level 2 */ |
| 47 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ3 0x13 /* IRQ level 3 */ |
| 48 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ4 0x14 /* IRQ level 4 */ |
| 49 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ5 0x15 /* IRQ level 5 */ |
| 50 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ6 0x16 /* IRQ level 6 */ |
| 51 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ7 0x17 /* IRQ level 7 */ |
| 52 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ8 0x18 /* IRQ level 8 */ |
| 53 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ9 0x19 /* IRQ level 9 */ |
| 54 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ10 0x1a /* IRQ level 10 */ |
| 55 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ11 0x1b /* IRQ level 11 */ |
| 56 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ12 0x1c /* IRQ level 12 */ |
| 57 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ13 0x1d /* IRQ level 13 */ |
| 58 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ14 0x1e /* IRQ level 14 */ |
| 59 | #define SP_TRAP_IRQ15 0x1f /* IRQ level 15 Non-maskable */ |
| 60 | #define SP_TRAP_RACC 0x20 /* Register Access Error ??? */ |
| 61 | #define SP_TRAP_IACC 0x21 /* Instruction Access Error */ |
| 62 | #define SP_TRAP_CPDIS 0x24 /* Co-Processor Disabled */ |
| 63 | #define SP_TRAP_BADFL 0x25 /* Unimplemented Flush Instruction */ |
| 64 | #define SP_TRAP_CPEXP 0x28 /* Co-Processor Exception */ |
| 65 | #define SP_TRAP_DACC 0x29 /* Data Access Error */ |
| 66 | #define SP_TRAP_DIVZ 0x2a /* Divide By Zero */ |
| 67 | #define SP_TRAP_DSTORE 0x2b /* Data Store Error ??? */ |
| 68 | #define SP_TRAP_DMM 0x2c /* Data Access MMU Miss ??? */ |
| 69 | #define SP_TRAP_IMM 0x3c /* Instruction Access MMU Miss ??? */ |
| 70 | |
| 71 | /* Now the Software Traps... */ |
| 72 | #define SP_TRAP_SUNOS 0x80 /* SunOS System Call */ |
| 73 | #define SP_TRAP_SBPT 0x81 /* Software Breakpoint */ |
| 74 | #define SP_TRAP_SDIVZ 0x82 /* Software Divide-by-Zero trap */ |
| 75 | #define SP_TRAP_FWIN 0x83 /* Flush Windows */ |
| 76 | #define SP_TRAP_CWIN 0x84 /* Clean Windows */ |
| 77 | #define SP_TRAP_RCHK 0x85 /* Range Check */ |
| 78 | #define SP_TRAP_FUNA 0x86 /* Fix Unaligned Access */ |
| 79 | #define SP_TRAP_IOWFL 0x87 /* Integer Overflow */ |
| 80 | #define SP_TRAP_SOLARIS 0x88 /* Solaris System Call */ |
| 81 | #define SP_TRAP_NETBSD 0x89 /* NetBSD System Call */ |
| 82 | #define SP_TRAP_LINUX 0x90 /* Linux System Call */ |
| 83 | |
| 84 | /* Names used for compatibility with SunOS */ |
| 85 | #define ST_SYSCALL 0x00 |
| 86 | #define ST_BREAKPOINT 0x01 |
| 87 | #define ST_DIV0 0x02 |
| 88 | #define ST_FLUSH_WINDOWS 0x03 |
| 89 | #define ST_CLEAN_WINDOWS 0x04 |
| 90 | #define ST_RANGE_CHECK 0x05 |
| 91 | #define ST_FIX_ALIGN 0x06 |
| 92 | #define ST_INT_OVERFLOW 0x07 |
| 93 | |
| 94 | /* Special traps... */ |
| 95 | #define SP_TRAP_KBPT1 0xfe /* KADB/PROM Breakpoint one */ |
| 96 | #define SP_TRAP_KBPT2 0xff /* KADB/PROM Breakpoint two */ |
| 97 | |
| 98 | /* Handy Macros */ |
| 99 | /* Is this a trap we never expect to get? */ |
| 100 | #define BAD_TRAP_P(level) \ |
| 101 | ((level > SP_TRAP_WDOG && level < SP_TRAP_IRQ1) || \ |
| 102 | (level > SP_TRAP_IACC && level < SP_TRAP_CPDIS) || \ |
| 103 | (level > SP_TRAP_BADFL && level < SP_TRAP_CPEXP) || \ |
| 104 | (level > SP_TRAP_DMM && level < SP_TRAP_IMM) || \ |
| 105 | (level > SP_TRAP_IMM && level < SP_TRAP_SUNOS) || \ |
| 106 | (level > SP_TRAP_LINUX && level < SP_TRAP_KBPT1)) |
| 107 | |
| 108 | /* Is this a Hardware trap? */ |
| 109 | #define HW_TRAP_P(level) ((level > 0) && (level < SP_TRAP_SUNOS)) |
| 110 | |
| 111 | /* Is this a Software trap? */ |
| 112 | #define SW_TRAP_P(level) ((level >= SP_TRAP_SUNOS) && (level <= SP_TRAP_KBPT2)) |
| 113 | |
| 114 | /* Is this a system call for some OS we know about? */ |
| 115 | #define SCALL_TRAP_P(level) ((level == SP_TRAP_SUNOS) || \ |
| 116 | (level == SP_TRAP_SOLARIS) || \ |
| 117 | (level == SP_TRAP_NETBSD) || \ |
| 118 | (level == SP_TRAP_LINUX)) |
| 119 | |
| 120 | #endif /* _UAPI_SPARC_TRAPS_H */ |