Frederic Weisbecker wrote:
On Thu, Aug 20, 2009 at 01:42:31AM +0200, Frederic Weisbecker wrote:
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 04:34:13PM -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote:
Add x86 instruction decoder to arch-specific libraries. This decoder
can decode x86 instructions used in kernel into prefix, opcode, modrm,
sib, displacement and immediates. This can also show the length of
instructions.
This version introduces instruction attributes for decoding instructions.
The instruction attribute tables are generated from the opcode map file
(x86-opcode-map.txt) by the generator script(gen-insn-attr-x86.awk).
Currently, the opcode maps are based on opcode maps in Intel(R) 64 and
IA-32 Architectures Software Developers Manual Vol.2: Appendix.A,
and consist of below two types of opcode tables.
1-byte/2-bytes/3-bytes opcodes, which has 256 elements, are
written as below;
Table: table-name
Referrer: escaped-name
opcode: mnemonic|GrpXXX [operand1[,operand2...]] [(extra1)[,(extra2)...] [| 2nd-mnemonic ...]
(or)
opcode: escape # escaped-name
EndTable
Group opcodes, which has 8 elements, are written as below;
GrpTable: GrpXXX
reg: mnemonic [operand1[,operand2...]] [(extra1)[,(extra2)...] [| 2nd-mnemonic ...]
EndTable
These opcode maps include a few SSE and FP opcodes (for setup), because
those opcodes are used in the kernel.
I'm getting the following build error on an old K7 box:
arch/x86/lib/inat.c: In function ‘inat_get_opcode_attribute’:
arch/x86/lib/inat.c:29: erreur: ‘inat_primary_table’ undeclared (first use in this function)
arch/x86/lib/inat.c:29: erreur: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
arch/x86/lib/inat.c:29: erreur: for each function it appears in.)
I've attached my config. I haven't such problem on a dual x86-64 box.
Actually I have the same problem in x86-64
The content of my arch/x86/lib/inat-tables.c:
/* x86 opcode map generated from x86-opcode-map.txt */
/* Do not change this code. */
/* Table: one byte opcode */
/* Escape opcode map array */
const insn_attr_t const *inat_escape_tables[INAT_ESC_MAX + 1][INAT_LPREFIX_MAX + 1] = {
};
/* Group opcode map array */
const insn_attr_t const *inat_group_tables[INAT_GRP_MAX + 1][INAT_LPREFIX_MAX + 1] = {
};
I guess there is a problem with the generation of this file.
Aah, you may use mawk on Ubuntu 9.04, right?
If so, unfortunately, mawk is still under development.
http://invisible-island.net/mawk/CHANGES
20090727
add check/fix to prevent gsub from recurring to modify on a substring
of the current line when the regular expression is anchored to the
beginning of the line; fixes gawk's anchgsub testcase.
add check for implicit concatenation mistaken for exponent; fixes
gawk's hex testcase.
add character-classes to built-in regular expressions.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Look, this means we can't use char-class expressions like
[:lower:] until this version...
And I've found another bug in mawk-1.3.3-20090728(the latest one).
it almost works, but;
$ mawk 'BEGIN {printf("0x%x\n", 0)}'
0x1
$ gawk 'BEGIN {printf("0x%x\n", 0)}'
0x0
This bug skips an array element index 0x0 in inat-tables.c :(
So, I recommend you to install gawk instead mawk until that
supports all posix-awk features, since I don't think it is
good idea to avoid all those bugs which depends on
implementation (not specification).
Thank you,
--
Masami Hiramatsu
Software Engineer
Hitachi Computer Products (America), Inc.
Software Solutions Division
e-mail: mhiramat@xxxxxxxxxx
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html