[444] | 1 | /* ppc.h -- Header file for PowerPC opcode table |
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| 2 | Copyright 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, |
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| 3 | 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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| 4 | Written by Ian Lance Taylor, Cygnus Support |
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| 5 | |
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| 6 | This file is part of GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils. |
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| 7 | |
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| 8 | GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils are free software; you can redistribute |
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| 9 | them and/or modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public |
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| 10 | License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, |
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| 11 | or (at your option) any later version. |
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| 12 | |
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| 13 | GDB, GAS, and the GNU binutils are distributed in the hope that they |
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| 14 | will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied |
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| 15 | warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See |
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| 16 | the GNU General Public License for more details. |
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| 17 | |
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| 18 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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| 19 | along with this file; see the file COPYING3. If not, write to the Free |
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| 20 | Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, |
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| 21 | MA 02110-1301, USA. */ |
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| 22 | |
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| 23 | #ifndef PPC_H |
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| 24 | #define PPC_H |
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| 25 | |
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| 26 | #include "bfd_stdint.h" |
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| 27 | |
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| 28 | typedef uint64_t ppc_cpu_t; |
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| 29 | |
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| 30 | /* The opcode table is an array of struct powerpc_opcode. */ |
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| 31 | |
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| 32 | struct powerpc_opcode |
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| 33 | { |
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| 34 | /* The opcode name. */ |
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| 35 | const char *name; |
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| 36 | |
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| 37 | /* The opcode itself. Those bits which will be filled in with |
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| 38 | operands are zeroes. */ |
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| 39 | unsigned long opcode; |
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| 40 | |
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| 41 | /* The opcode mask. This is used by the disassembler. This is a |
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| 42 | mask containing ones indicating those bits which must match the |
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| 43 | opcode field, and zeroes indicating those bits which need not |
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| 44 | match (and are presumably filled in by operands). */ |
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| 45 | unsigned long mask; |
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| 46 | |
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| 47 | /* One bit flags for the opcode. These are used to indicate which |
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| 48 | specific processors support the instructions. The defined values |
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| 49 | are listed below. */ |
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| 50 | ppc_cpu_t flags; |
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| 51 | |
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| 52 | /* One bit flags for the opcode. These are used to indicate which |
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| 53 | specific processors no longer support the instructions. The defined |
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| 54 | values are listed below. */ |
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| 55 | ppc_cpu_t deprecated; |
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| 56 | |
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| 57 | /* An array of operand codes. Each code is an index into the |
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| 58 | operand table. They appear in the order which the operands must |
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| 59 | appear in assembly code, and are terminated by a zero. */ |
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| 60 | unsigned char operands[8]; |
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| 61 | }; |
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| 62 | |
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| 63 | /* The table itself is sorted by major opcode number, and is otherwise |
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| 64 | in the order in which the disassembler should consider |
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| 65 | instructions. */ |
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| 66 | extern const struct powerpc_opcode powerpc_opcodes[]; |
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| 67 | extern const int powerpc_num_opcodes; |
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| 68 | extern const struct powerpc_opcode vle_opcodes[]; |
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| 69 | extern const int vle_num_opcodes; |
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| 70 | |
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| 71 | /* Values defined for the flags field of a struct powerpc_opcode. */ |
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| 72 | |
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| 73 | /* Opcode is defined for the PowerPC architecture. */ |
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| 74 | #define PPC_OPCODE_PPC 1 |
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| 75 | |
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| 76 | /* Opcode is defined for the POWER (RS/6000) architecture. */ |
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| 77 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER 2 |
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| 78 | |
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| 79 | /* Opcode is defined for the POWER2 (Rios 2) architecture. */ |
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| 80 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER2 4 |
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| 81 | |
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| 82 | /* Opcode is supported by the Motorola PowerPC 601 processor. The 601 |
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| 83 | is assumed to support all PowerPC (PPC_OPCODE_PPC) instructions, |
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| 84 | but it also supports many additional POWER instructions. */ |
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| 85 | #define PPC_OPCODE_601 8 |
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| 86 | |
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| 87 | /* Opcode is supported in both the Power and PowerPC architectures |
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| 88 | (ie, compiler's -mcpu=common or assembler's -mcom). More than just |
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| 89 | the intersection of PPC_OPCODE_PPC with the union of PPC_OPCODE_POWER |
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| 90 | and PPC_OPCODE_POWER2 because many instructions changed mnemonics |
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| 91 | between POWER and POWERPC. */ |
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| 92 | #define PPC_OPCODE_COMMON 0x10 |
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| 93 | |
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| 94 | /* Opcode is supported for any Power or PowerPC platform (this is |
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| 95 | for the assembler's -many option, and it eliminates duplicates). */ |
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| 96 | #define PPC_OPCODE_ANY 0x20 |
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| 97 | |
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| 98 | /* Opcode is only defined on 64 bit architectures. */ |
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| 99 | #define PPC_OPCODE_64 0x40 |
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| 100 | |
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| 101 | /* Opcode is supported as part of the 64-bit bridge. */ |
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| 102 | #define PPC_OPCODE_64_BRIDGE 0x80 |
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| 103 | |
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| 104 | /* Opcode is supported by Altivec Vector Unit */ |
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| 105 | #define PPC_OPCODE_ALTIVEC 0x100 |
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| 106 | |
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| 107 | /* Opcode is supported by PowerPC 403 processor. */ |
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| 108 | #define PPC_OPCODE_403 0x200 |
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| 109 | |
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| 110 | /* Opcode is supported by PowerPC BookE processor. */ |
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| 111 | #define PPC_OPCODE_BOOKE 0x400 |
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| 112 | |
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| 113 | /* Opcode is supported by PowerPC 440 processor. */ |
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| 114 | #define PPC_OPCODE_440 0x800 |
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| 115 | |
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| 116 | /* Opcode is only supported by Power4 architecture. */ |
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| 117 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER4 0x1000 |
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| 118 | |
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| 119 | /* Opcode is only supported by Power7 architecture. */ |
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| 120 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER7 0x2000 |
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| 121 | |
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| 122 | /* Opcode is only supported by e500x2 Core. */ |
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| 123 | #define PPC_OPCODE_SPE 0x4000 |
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| 124 | |
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| 125 | /* Opcode is supported by e500x2 Integer select APU. */ |
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| 126 | #define PPC_OPCODE_ISEL 0x8000 |
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| 127 | |
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| 128 | /* Opcode is an e500 SPE floating point instruction. */ |
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| 129 | #define PPC_OPCODE_EFS 0x10000 |
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| 130 | |
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| 131 | /* Opcode is supported by branch locking APU. */ |
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| 132 | #define PPC_OPCODE_BRLOCK 0x20000 |
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| 133 | |
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| 134 | /* Opcode is supported by performance monitor APU. */ |
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| 135 | #define PPC_OPCODE_PMR 0x40000 |
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| 136 | |
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| 137 | /* Opcode is supported by cache locking APU. */ |
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| 138 | #define PPC_OPCODE_CACHELCK 0x80000 |
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| 139 | |
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| 140 | /* Opcode is supported by machine check APU. */ |
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| 141 | #define PPC_OPCODE_RFMCI 0x100000 |
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| 142 | |
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| 143 | /* Opcode is only supported by Power5 architecture. */ |
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| 144 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER5 0x200000 |
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| 145 | |
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| 146 | /* Opcode is supported by PowerPC e300 family. */ |
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| 147 | #define PPC_OPCODE_E300 0x400000 |
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| 148 | |
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| 149 | /* Opcode is only supported by Power6 architecture. */ |
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| 150 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER6 0x800000 |
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| 151 | |
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| 152 | /* Opcode is only supported by PowerPC Cell family. */ |
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| 153 | #define PPC_OPCODE_CELL 0x1000000 |
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| 154 | |
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| 155 | /* Opcode is supported by CPUs with paired singles support. */ |
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| 156 | #define PPC_OPCODE_PPCPS 0x2000000 |
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| 157 | |
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| 158 | /* Opcode is supported by Power E500MC */ |
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| 159 | #define PPC_OPCODE_E500MC 0x4000000 |
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| 160 | |
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| 161 | /* Opcode is supported by PowerPC 405 processor. */ |
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| 162 | #define PPC_OPCODE_405 0x8000000 |
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| 163 | |
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| 164 | /* Opcode is supported by Vector-Scalar (VSX) Unit */ |
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| 165 | #define PPC_OPCODE_VSX 0x10000000 |
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| 166 | |
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| 167 | /* Opcode is supported by A2. */ |
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| 168 | #define PPC_OPCODE_A2 0x20000000 |
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| 169 | |
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| 170 | /* Opcode is supported by PowerPC 476 processor. */ |
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| 171 | #define PPC_OPCODE_476 0x40000000 |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | /* Opcode is supported by AppliedMicro Titan core */ |
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| 174 | #define PPC_OPCODE_TITAN 0x80000000 |
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| 175 | |
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| 176 | /* Opcode which is supported by the e500 family */ |
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| 177 | #define PPC_OPCODE_E500 0x100000000ull |
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| 178 | |
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| 179 | /* Opcode is supported by Extended Altivec Vector Unit */ |
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| 180 | #define PPC_OPCODE_ALTIVEC2 0x200000000ull |
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| 181 | |
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| 182 | /* Opcode is supported by Power E6500 */ |
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| 183 | #define PPC_OPCODE_E6500 0x400000000ull |
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| 184 | |
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| 185 | /* Opcode is supported by Thread management APU */ |
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| 186 | #define PPC_OPCODE_TMR 0x800000000ull |
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| 187 | |
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| 188 | /* Opcode which is supported by the VLE extension. */ |
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| 189 | #define PPC_OPCODE_VLE 0x1000000000ull |
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| 190 | |
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| 191 | /* Opcode is only supported by Power8 architecture. */ |
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| 192 | #define PPC_OPCODE_POWER8 0x2000000000ull |
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| 193 | |
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| 194 | /* Opcode which is supported by the Hardware Transactional Memory extension. */ |
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| 195 | /* Currently, this is the same as the POWER8 mask. If another cpu comes out |
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| 196 | that isn't a superset of POWER8, we can define this to its own mask. */ |
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| 197 | #define PPC_OPCODE_HTM PPC_OPCODE_POWER8 |
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| 198 | |
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| 199 | /* A macro to extract the major opcode from an instruction. */ |
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| 200 | #define PPC_OP(i) (((i) >> 26) & 0x3f) |
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| 201 | |
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| 202 | /* A macro to determine if the instruction is a 2-byte VLE insn. */ |
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| 203 | #define PPC_OP_SE_VLE(m) ((m) <= 0xffff) |
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| 204 | |
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| 205 | /* A macro to extract the major opcode from a VLE instruction. */ |
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| 206 | #define VLE_OP(i,m) (((i) >> ((m) <= 0xffff ? 10 : 26)) & 0x3f) |
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| 207 | |
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| 208 | /* A macro to convert a VLE opcode to a VLE opcode segment. */ |
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| 209 | #define VLE_OP_TO_SEG(i) ((i) >> 1) |
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| 210 | |
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| 211 | /* The operands table is an array of struct powerpc_operand. */ |
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| 212 | |
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| 213 | struct powerpc_operand |
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| 214 | { |
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| 215 | /* A bitmask of bits in the operand. */ |
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| 216 | unsigned int bitm; |
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| 217 | |
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| 218 | /* The shift operation to be applied to the operand. No shift |
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| 219 | is made if this is zero. For positive values, the operand |
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| 220 | is shifted left by SHIFT. For negative values, the operand |
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| 221 | is shifted right by -SHIFT. Use PPC_OPSHIFT_INV to indicate |
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| 222 | that BITM and SHIFT cannot be used to determine where the |
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| 223 | operand goes in the insn. */ |
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| 224 | int shift; |
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| 225 | |
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| 226 | /* Insertion function. This is used by the assembler. To insert an |
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| 227 | operand value into an instruction, check this field. |
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| 228 | |
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| 229 | If it is NULL, execute |
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| 230 | if (o->shift >= 0) |
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| 231 | i |= (op & o->bitm) << o->shift; |
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| 232 | else |
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| 233 | i |= (op & o->bitm) >> -o->shift; |
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| 234 | (i is the instruction which we are filling in, o is a pointer to |
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| 235 | this structure, and op is the operand value). |
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| 236 | |
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| 237 | If this field is not NULL, then simply call it with the |
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| 238 | instruction and the operand value. It will return the new value |
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| 239 | of the instruction. If the ERRMSG argument is not NULL, then if |
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| 240 | the operand value is illegal, *ERRMSG will be set to a warning |
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| 241 | string (the operand will be inserted in any case). If the |
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| 242 | operand value is legal, *ERRMSG will be unchanged (most operands |
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| 243 | can accept any value). */ |
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| 244 | unsigned long (*insert) |
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| 245 | (unsigned long instruction, long op, ppc_cpu_t dialect, const char **errmsg); |
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| 246 | |
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| 247 | /* Extraction function. This is used by the disassembler. To |
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| 248 | extract this operand type from an instruction, check this field. |
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| 249 | |
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| 250 | If it is NULL, compute |
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| 251 | if (o->shift >= 0) |
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| 252 | op = (i >> o->shift) & o->bitm; |
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| 253 | else |
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| 254 | op = (i << -o->shift) & o->bitm; |
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| 255 | if ((o->flags & PPC_OPERAND_SIGNED) != 0) |
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| 256 | sign_extend (op); |
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| 257 | (i is the instruction, o is a pointer to this structure, and op |
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| 258 | is the result). |
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| 259 | |
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| 260 | If this field is not NULL, then simply call it with the |
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| 261 | instruction value. It will return the value of the operand. If |
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| 262 | the INVALID argument is not NULL, *INVALID will be set to |
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| 263 | non-zero if this operand type can not actually be extracted from |
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| 264 | this operand (i.e., the instruction does not match). If the |
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| 265 | operand is valid, *INVALID will not be changed. */ |
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| 266 | long (*extract) (unsigned long instruction, ppc_cpu_t dialect, int *invalid); |
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| 267 | |
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| 268 | /* One bit syntax flags. */ |
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| 269 | unsigned long flags; |
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| 270 | }; |
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| 271 | |
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| 272 | /* Elements in the table are retrieved by indexing with values from |
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| 273 | the operands field of the powerpc_opcodes table. */ |
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| 274 | |
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| 275 | extern const struct powerpc_operand powerpc_operands[]; |
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| 276 | extern const unsigned int num_powerpc_operands; |
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| 277 | |
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| 278 | /* Use with the shift field of a struct powerpc_operand to indicate |
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| 279 | that BITM and SHIFT cannot be used to determine where the operand |
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| 280 | goes in the insn. */ |
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| 281 | #define PPC_OPSHIFT_INV (-1 << 31) |
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| 282 | |
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| 283 | /* Values defined for the flags field of a struct powerpc_operand. */ |
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| 284 | |
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| 285 | /* This operand takes signed values. */ |
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| 286 | #define PPC_OPERAND_SIGNED (0x1) |
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| 287 | |
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| 288 | /* This operand takes signed values, but also accepts a full positive |
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| 289 | range of values when running in 32 bit mode. That is, if bits is |
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| 290 | 16, it takes any value from -0x8000 to 0xffff. In 64 bit mode, |
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| 291 | this flag is ignored. */ |
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| 292 | #define PPC_OPERAND_SIGNOPT (0x2) |
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| 293 | |
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| 294 | /* This operand does not actually exist in the assembler input. This |
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| 295 | is used to support extended mnemonics such as mr, for which two |
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| 296 | operands fields are identical. The assembler should call the |
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| 297 | insert function with any op value. The disassembler should call |
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| 298 | the extract function, ignore the return value, and check the value |
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| 299 | placed in the valid argument. */ |
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| 300 | #define PPC_OPERAND_FAKE (0x4) |
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| 301 | |
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| 302 | /* The next operand should be wrapped in parentheses rather than |
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| 303 | separated from this one by a comma. This is used for the load and |
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| 304 | store instructions which want their operands to look like |
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| 305 | reg,displacement(reg) |
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| 306 | */ |
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| 307 | #define PPC_OPERAND_PARENS (0x8) |
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| 308 | |
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| 309 | /* This operand may use the symbolic names for the CR fields, which |
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| 310 | are |
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| 311 | lt 0 gt 1 eq 2 so 3 un 3 |
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| 312 | cr0 0 cr1 1 cr2 2 cr3 3 |
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| 313 | cr4 4 cr5 5 cr6 6 cr7 7 |
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| 314 | These may be combined arithmetically, as in cr2*4+gt. These are |
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| 315 | only supported on the PowerPC, not the POWER. */ |
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| 316 | #define PPC_OPERAND_CR_BIT (0x10) |
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| 317 | |
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| 318 | /* This operand names a register. The disassembler uses this to print |
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| 319 | register names with a leading 'r'. */ |
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| 320 | #define PPC_OPERAND_GPR (0x20) |
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| 321 | |
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| 322 | /* Like PPC_OPERAND_GPR, but don't print a leading 'r' for r0. */ |
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| 323 | #define PPC_OPERAND_GPR_0 (0x40) |
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| 324 | |
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| 325 | /* This operand names a floating point register. The disassembler |
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| 326 | prints these with a leading 'f'. */ |
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| 327 | #define PPC_OPERAND_FPR (0x80) |
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| 328 | |
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| 329 | /* This operand is a relative branch displacement. The disassembler |
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| 330 | prints these symbolically if possible. */ |
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| 331 | #define PPC_OPERAND_RELATIVE (0x100) |
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| 332 | |
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| 333 | /* This operand is an absolute branch address. The disassembler |
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| 334 | prints these symbolically if possible. */ |
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| 335 | #define PPC_OPERAND_ABSOLUTE (0x200) |
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| 336 | |
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| 337 | /* This operand is optional, and is zero if omitted. This is used for |
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| 338 | example, in the optional BF field in the comparison instructions. The |
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| 339 | assembler must count the number of operands remaining on the line, |
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| 340 | and the number of operands remaining for the opcode, and decide |
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| 341 | whether this operand is present or not. The disassembler should |
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| 342 | print this operand out only if it is not zero. */ |
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| 343 | #define PPC_OPERAND_OPTIONAL (0x400) |
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| 344 | |
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| 345 | /* This flag is only used with PPC_OPERAND_OPTIONAL. If this operand |
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| 346 | is omitted, then for the next operand use this operand value plus |
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| 347 | 1, ignoring the next operand field for the opcode. This wretched |
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| 348 | hack is needed because the Power rotate instructions can take |
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| 349 | either 4 or 5 operands. The disassembler should print this operand |
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| 350 | out regardless of the PPC_OPERAND_OPTIONAL field. */ |
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| 351 | #define PPC_OPERAND_NEXT (0x800) |
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| 352 | |
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| 353 | /* This operand should be regarded as a negative number for the |
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| 354 | purposes of overflow checking (i.e., the normal most negative |
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| 355 | number is disallowed and one more than the normal most positive |
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| 356 | number is allowed). This flag will only be set for a signed |
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| 357 | operand. */ |
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| 358 | #define PPC_OPERAND_NEGATIVE (0x1000) |
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| 359 | |
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| 360 | /* This operand names a vector unit register. The disassembler |
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| 361 | prints these with a leading 'v'. */ |
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| 362 | #define PPC_OPERAND_VR (0x2000) |
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| 363 | |
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| 364 | /* This operand is for the DS field in a DS form instruction. */ |
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| 365 | #define PPC_OPERAND_DS (0x4000) |
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| 366 | |
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| 367 | /* This operand is for the DQ field in a DQ form instruction. */ |
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| 368 | #define PPC_OPERAND_DQ (0x8000) |
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| 369 | |
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| 370 | /* Valid range of operand is 0..n rather than 0..n-1. */ |
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| 371 | #define PPC_OPERAND_PLUS1 (0x10000) |
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| 372 | |
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| 373 | /* Xilinx APU and FSL related operands */ |
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| 374 | #define PPC_OPERAND_FSL (0x20000) |
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| 375 | #define PPC_OPERAND_FCR (0x40000) |
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| 376 | #define PPC_OPERAND_UDI (0x80000) |
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| 377 | |
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| 378 | /* This operand names a vector-scalar unit register. The disassembler |
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| 379 | prints these with a leading 'vs'. */ |
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| 380 | #define PPC_OPERAND_VSR (0x100000) |
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| 381 | |
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| 382 | /* This is a CR FIELD that does not use symbolic names. */ |
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| 383 | #define PPC_OPERAND_CR_REG (0x200000) |
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| 384 | |
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| 385 | /* The POWER and PowerPC assemblers use a few macros. We keep them |
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| 386 | with the operands table for simplicity. The macro table is an |
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| 387 | array of struct powerpc_macro. */ |
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| 388 | |
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| 389 | struct powerpc_macro |
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| 390 | { |
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| 391 | /* The macro name. */ |
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| 392 | const char *name; |
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| 393 | |
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| 394 | /* The number of operands the macro takes. */ |
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| 395 | unsigned int operands; |
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| 396 | |
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| 397 | /* One bit flags for the opcode. These are used to indicate which |
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| 398 | specific processors support the instructions. The values are the |
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| 399 | same as those for the struct powerpc_opcode flags field. */ |
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| 400 | ppc_cpu_t flags; |
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| 401 | |
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| 402 | /* A format string to turn the macro into a normal instruction. |
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| 403 | Each %N in the string is replaced with operand number N (zero |
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| 404 | based). */ |
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| 405 | const char *format; |
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| 406 | }; |
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| 407 | |
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| 408 | extern const struct powerpc_macro powerpc_macros[]; |
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| 409 | extern const int powerpc_num_macros; |
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| 410 | |
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| 411 | extern ppc_cpu_t ppc_parse_cpu (ppc_cpu_t, ppc_cpu_t *, const char *); |
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| 412 | |
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| 413 | #endif /* PPC_H */ |
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