From: Andrew Bennett <andrew.benn...@imgtec.com>

For the MIPS N64 ABI when QEMU reads the break/trap instruction so that
it can inspect the break/trap code it reads 8 rather than 4 bytes
which means it finds the code field from the instruction after the
break/trap instruction.  This then causes the break/trap handling
code to fail because it does not understand the code number.

The fix forces QEMU to always read 4 bytes of instruction data rather
than deciding how much to read based on the ABI.

Signed-off-by: Andrew Bennett <andrew.benn...@imgtec.com>
Reviewed-by: Leon Alrae <leon.al...@imgtec.com>
Signed-off-by: Leon Alrae <leon.al...@imgtec.com>
---
 linux-user/main.c | 4 ++--
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/linux-user/main.c b/linux-user/main.c
index 05914b1..fdee981 100644
--- a/linux-user/main.c
+++ b/linux-user/main.c
@@ -2577,7 +2577,7 @@ done_syscall:
                         code = (trap_instr >> 6) & 0x3f;
                     }
                 } else {
-                    ret = get_user_ual(trap_instr, env->active_tc.PC);
+                    ret = get_user_u32(trap_instr, env->active_tc.PC);
                     if (ret != 0) {
                         goto error;
                     }
@@ -2611,7 +2611,7 @@ done_syscall:
 
                     trap_instr = (instr[0] << 16) | instr[1];
                 } else {
-                    ret = get_user_ual(trap_instr, env->active_tc.PC);
+                    ret = get_user_u32(trap_instr, env->active_tc.PC);
                 }
 
                 if (ret != 0) {
-- 
2.1.0


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