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authorDan Albert <danalbert@google.com>2016-02-24 13:48:45 -0800
committerDan Albert <danalbert@google.com>2016-02-24 13:51:18 -0800
commitb9de1157289455b0ca26daff519d4a0ddcd1fa13 (patch)
tree4c56cc0a34b91f17033a40a455f26652304f7b8d /gcc-4.8.3/libjava/include/i386-signal.h
parent098157a754787181cfa10e71325832448ddcea98 (diff)
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Update 4.8.1 to 4.8.3.
My previous drop was the wrong version. The platform mingw is currently using 4.8.3, not 4.8.1 (not sure how I got that wrong). From ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gcc/gcc-4.8.3/gcc-4.8.3.tar.bz2. Bug: http://b/26523949 Change-Id: Id85f1bdcbbaf78c7d0b5a69e74c798a08f341c35
Diffstat (limited to 'gcc-4.8.3/libjava/include/i386-signal.h')
-rw-r--r--gcc-4.8.3/libjava/include/i386-signal.h178
1 files changed, 178 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/gcc-4.8.3/libjava/include/i386-signal.h b/gcc-4.8.3/libjava/include/i386-signal.h
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..c2409b0e3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/gcc-4.8.3/libjava/include/i386-signal.h
@@ -0,0 +1,178 @@
+// i386-signal.h - Catch runtime signals and turn them into exceptions
+// on an i386 based Linux system.
+
+/* Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2007, 2011
+ Free Software Foundation
+
+ This file is part of libgcj.
+
+This software is copyrighted work licensed under the terms of the
+Libgcj License. Please consult the file "LIBGCJ_LICENSE" for
+details. */
+
+
+#ifdef __i386__
+
+#ifndef JAVA_SIGNAL_H
+#define JAVA_SIGNAL_H 1
+
+#include <signal.h>
+#include <sys/syscall.h>
+
+#define HANDLE_SEGV 1
+#define HANDLE_FPE 1
+
+#define SIGNAL_HANDLER(_name) \
+static void _Jv_##_name (int, siginfo_t *, \
+ void *_p __attribute__ ((__unused__)))
+
+#define HANDLE_DIVIDE_OVERFLOW \
+do \
+{ \
+ struct ucontext *_uc = (struct ucontext *)_p; \
+ gregset_t &_gregs = _uc->uc_mcontext.gregs; \
+ unsigned char *_eip = (unsigned char *)_gregs[REG_EIP]; \
+ \
+ /* According to the JVM spec, "if the dividend is the negative \
+ * integer of largest possible magnitude for the type and the \
+ * divisor is -1, then overflow occurs and the result is equal to \
+ * the dividend. Despite the overflow, no exception occurs". \
+ \
+ * We handle this by inspecting the instruction which generated the \
+ * signal and advancing ip to point to the following instruction. \
+ * As the instructions are variable length it is necessary to do a \
+ * little calculation to figure out where the following instruction \
+ * actually is. \
+ \
+ */ \
+ \
+ /* Detect a signed division of Integer.MIN_VALUE. */ \
+ if (_eip[0] == 0xf7) \
+ { \
+ bool _min_value_dividend = false; \
+ unsigned char _modrm = _eip[1]; \
+ \
+ if (((_modrm >> 3) & 7) == 7) /* Signed divide */ \
+ { \
+ _min_value_dividend = \
+ _gregs[REG_EAX] == (greg_t)0x80000000UL; \
+ } \
+ \
+ if (_min_value_dividend) \
+ { \
+ unsigned char _rm = _modrm & 7; \
+ _gregs[REG_EDX] = 0; /* the remainder is zero */ \
+ switch (_modrm >> 6) \
+ { \
+ case 0: /* register indirect */ \
+ if (_rm == 5) /* 32-bit displacement */ \
+ _eip += 4; \
+ if (_rm == 4) /* A SIB byte follows the ModR/M byte */ \
+ _eip += 1; \
+ break; \
+ case 1: /* register indirect + 8-bit displacement */ \
+ _eip += 1; \
+ if (_rm == 4) /* A SIB byte follows the ModR/M byte */ \
+ _eip += 1; \
+ break; \
+ case 2: /* register indirect + 32-bit displacement */ \
+ _eip += 4; \
+ if (_rm == 4) /* A SIB byte follows the ModR/M byte */ \
+ _eip += 1; \
+ break; \
+ case 3: \
+ break; \
+ } \
+ _eip += 2; \
+ _gregs[REG_EIP] = (greg_t)_eip; \
+ return; \
+ } \
+ } \
+} \
+while (0)
+
+/* We use kernel_sigaction here because we're calling the kernel
+ directly rather than via glibc. The sigaction structure that the
+ syscall uses is a different shape from the one in userland and not
+ visible to us in a header file so we define it here. */
+
+extern "C"
+{
+ struct kernel_sigaction
+ {
+ void (*k_sa_sigaction)(int,siginfo_t *,void *);
+ unsigned long k_sa_flags;
+ void (*k_sa_restorer) (void);
+ sigset_t k_sa_mask;
+ };
+}
+
+#define MAKE_THROW_FRAME(_exception)
+
+#define RESTORE(name, syscall) RESTORE2 (name, syscall)
+#define RESTORE2(name, syscall) \
+asm \
+ ( \
+ ".text\n" \
+ ".byte 0 # Yes, this really is necessary\n" \
+ " .align 16\n" \
+ "__" #name ":\n" \
+ " movl $" #syscall ", %eax\n" \
+ " int $0x80" \
+ );
+
+/* The return code for realtime-signals. */
+RESTORE (restore_rt, __NR_rt_sigreturn)
+void restore_rt (void) asm ("__restore_rt")
+ __attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden")));
+
+#define INIT_SEGV \
+do \
+ { \
+ struct kernel_sigaction act; \
+ act.k_sa_sigaction = _Jv_catch_segv; \
+ sigemptyset (&act.k_sa_mask); \
+ act.k_sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO|0x4000000; \
+ act.k_sa_restorer = restore_rt; \
+ syscall (SYS_rt_sigaction, SIGSEGV, &act, NULL, _NSIG / 8); \
+ } \
+while (0)
+
+#define INIT_FPE \
+do \
+ { \
+ struct kernel_sigaction act; \
+ act.k_sa_sigaction = _Jv_catch_fpe; \
+ sigemptyset (&act.k_sa_mask); \
+ act.k_sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO|0x4000000; \
+ act.k_sa_restorer = restore_rt; \
+ syscall (SYS_rt_sigaction, SIGFPE, &act, NULL, _NSIG / 8); \
+ } \
+while (0)
+
+/* You might wonder why we use syscall(SYS_sigaction) in INIT_FPE
+ * instead of the standard sigaction(). This is necessary because of
+ * the shenanigans above where we increment the PC saved in the
+ * context and then return. This trick will only work when we are
+ * called _directly_ by the kernel, because linuxthreads wraps signal
+ * handlers and its wrappers do not copy the sigcontext struct back
+ * when returning from a signal handler. If we return from our divide
+ * handler to a linuxthreads wrapper, we will lose the PC adjustment
+ * we made and return to the faulting instruction again. Using
+ * syscall(SYS_sigaction) causes our handler to be called directly
+ * by the kernel, bypassing any wrappers.
+
+ * Also, there may not be any unwind info in the linuxthreads
+ * library's signal handlers and so we can't unwind through them
+ * anyway. */
+
+#endif /* JAVA_SIGNAL_H */
+
+#else /* __i386__ */
+
+/* This is for the 64-bit subsystem on i386. */
+
+#define sigcontext_struct sigcontext
+#include <java-signal-aux.h>
+
+#endif /* __i386__ */