On 21.06.2013, at 20:10, Jan Kiszka wrote: > On 2013-06-18 17:34, Alexander Graf wrote: >> >> On 18.06.2013, at 16:53, Fabien Chouteau wrote: >> >>> On PPC 6xx, data and code have separated TLBs. Until now QEMU was only >>> looking at data TLBs, which is not good when GDB wants to read code. >>> >>> This patch adds a second call to get_physical_address() with an >>> ACCESS_CODE type of access when the first call with ACCESS_INT fails. >>> >>> Signed-off-by: Fabien Chouteau <chout...@adacore.com> >>> --- >>> target-ppc/mmu_helper.c | 10 +++++++++- >>> 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) >>> >>> diff --git a/target-ppc/mmu_helper.c b/target-ppc/mmu_helper.c >>> index 910e022..19f0b8c 100644 >>> --- a/target-ppc/mmu_helper.c >>> +++ b/target-ppc/mmu_helper.c >>> @@ -1378,7 +1378,15 @@ hwaddr cpu_get_phys_page_debug(CPUPPCState *env, >>> target_ulong addr) >>> } >>> >>> if (unlikely(get_physical_address(env, &ctx, addr, 0, ACCESS_INT) != 0)) >>> { >>> - return -1; >>> + >>> + /* Some MMUs have separate TLBs for code and data. If we only try >>> an >>> + * ACCESS_INT, we may not be able to read instructions mapped by >>> code >>> + * TLBs, so we also try a ACCESS_CODE. >> >> This is pretty ugly, but I don't see any other way to conveniently give gdb >> the information it needs. Let's ask Jan whether he has an idea. Maybe a >> monitor command to switch memory access modes? > > I suppose the gdb frontend is not willing to tell us what kind of memory > it accesses (code disassembling or data access etc.), right? So we can > only guess here, ie. try both. I don't see how a monitor-based side > channel could help. If we touched gdb, we could also touch the remote > protocol (for memory accesses).
Thanks, applied to ppc-next. Teaching gdb a new protocol is way out of scope for these rare cases :). Alex