root/arch/m68k/ifpsp060/fskeleton.S

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   1 |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
   2 |MOTOROLA MICROPROCESSOR & MEMORY TECHNOLOGY GROUP
   3 |M68000 Hi-Performance Microprocessor Division
   4 |M68060 Software Package
   5 |Production Release P1.00 -- October 10, 1994
   6 |
   7 |M68060 Software Package Copyright © 1993, 1994 Motorola Inc.  All rights reserved.
   8 |
   9 |THE SOFTWARE is provided on an "AS IS" basis and without warranty.
  10 |To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law,
  11 |MOTOROLA DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WHETHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
  12 |INCLUDING IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
  13 |and any warranty against infringement with regard to the SOFTWARE
  14 |(INCLUDING ANY MODIFIED VERSIONS THEREOF) and any accompanying written materials.
  15 |
  16 |To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law,
  17 |IN NO EVENT SHALL MOTOROLA BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER
  18 |(INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF BUSINESS PROFITS,
  19 |BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, LOSS OF BUSINESS INFORMATION, OR OTHER PECUNIARY LOSS)
  20 |ARISING OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE SOFTWARE.
  21 |Motorola assumes no responsibility for the maintenance and support of the SOFTWARE.
  22 |
  23 |You are hereby granted a copyright license to use, modify, and distribute the SOFTWARE
  24 |so long as this entire notice is retained without alteration in any modified and/or
  25 |redistributed versions, and that such modified versions are clearly identified as such.
  26 |No licenses are granted by implication, estoppel or otherwise under any patents
  27 |or trademarks of Motorola, Inc.
  28 |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  29 | fskeleton.s
  30 |
  31 | This file contains:
  32 |       (1) example "Call-out"s
  33 |       (2) example package entry code
  34 |       (3) example "Call-out" table
  35 |
  36 
  37 #include <linux/linkage.h>
  38 
  39 |################################
  40 | (1) EXAMPLE CALL-OUTS         #
  41 |                               #
  42 | _060_fpsp_done()              #
  43 | _060_real_ovfl()              #
  44 | _060_real_unfl()              #
  45 | _060_real_operr()             #
  46 | _060_real_snan()              #
  47 | _060_real_dz()                #
  48 | _060_real_inex()              #
  49 | _060_real_bsun()              #
  50 | _060_real_fline()             #
  51 | _060_real_fpu_disabled()      #
  52 | _060_real_trap()              #
  53 |################################
  54 
  55 |
  56 | _060_fpsp_done():
  57 |
  58 | This is the main exit point for the 68060 Floating-Point
  59 | Software Package. For a normal exit, all 060FPSP routines call this
  60 | routine. The operating system can do system dependent clean-up or
  61 | simply execute an "rte" as with the sample code below.
  62 |
  63         .global         _060_fpsp_done
  64 _060_fpsp_done:
  65         bral     _060_isp_done  | do the same as isp_done
  66 
  67 |
  68 | _060_real_ovfl():
  69 |
  70 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled overflow exception
  71 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
  72 | for enabled overflow conditions. The exception stack frame is an overflow
  73 | stack frame. The FP state frame holds the EXCEPTIONAL OPERAND.
  74 |
  75 | The sample routine below simply clears the exception status bit and
  76 | does an "rte".
  77 |
  78         .global         _060_real_ovfl
  79 _060_real_ovfl:
  80         fsave           -(%sp)
  81         move.w          #0x6000,0x2(%sp)
  82         frestore        (%sp)+
  83         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
  84 
  85 
  86 |
  87 | _060_real_unfl():
  88 |
  89 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled underflow exception
  90 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
  91 | for enabled underflow conditions. The exception stack frame is an underflow
  92 | stack frame. The FP state frame holds the EXCEPTIONAL OPERAND.
  93 |
  94 | The sample routine below simply clears the exception status bit and
  95 | does an "rte".
  96 |
  97         .global         _060_real_unfl
  98 _060_real_unfl:
  99         fsave           -(%sp)
 100         move.w          #0x6000,0x2(%sp)
 101         frestore        (%sp)+
 102         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 103 
 104 |
 105 | _060_real_operr():
 106 |
 107 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled operand error exception
 108 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
 109 | for enabled operand error exceptions. The exception stack frame is an operand error
 110 | stack frame. The FP state frame holds the source operand of the faulting
 111 | instruction.
 112 |
 113 | The sample routine below simply clears the exception status bit and
 114 | does an "rte".
 115 |
 116         .global         _060_real_operr
 117 _060_real_operr:
 118         fsave           -(%sp)
 119         move.w          #0x6000,0x2(%sp)
 120         frestore        (%sp)+
 121         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 122 
 123 |
 124 | _060_real_snan():
 125 |
 126 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled signalling NaN exception
 127 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
 128 | for enabled signalling NaN exceptions. The exception stack frame is a signalling NaN
 129 | stack frame. The FP state frame holds the source operand of the faulting
 130 | instruction.
 131 |
 132 | The sample routine below simply clears the exception status bit and
 133 | does an "rte".
 134 |
 135         .global         _060_real_snan
 136 _060_real_snan:
 137         fsave           -(%sp)
 138         move.w          #0x6000,0x2(%sp)
 139         frestore        (%sp)+
 140         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 141 
 142 |
 143 | _060_real_dz():
 144 |
 145 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled divide-by-zero exception
 146 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
 147 | for enabled divide-by-zero exceptions. The exception stack frame is a divide-by-zero
 148 | stack frame. The FP state frame holds the source operand of the faulting
 149 | instruction.
 150 |
 151 | The sample routine below simply clears the exception status bit and
 152 | does an "rte".
 153 |
 154         .global         _060_real_dz
 155 _060_real_dz:
 156         fsave           -(%sp)
 157         move.w          #0x6000,0x2(%sp)
 158         frestore        (%sp)+
 159         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 160 
 161 |
 162 | _060_real_inex():
 163 |
 164 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled inexact exception
 165 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
 166 | for enabled inexact exceptions. The exception stack frame is an inexact
 167 | stack frame. The FP state frame holds the source operand of the faulting
 168 | instruction.
 169 |
 170 | The sample routine below simply clears the exception status bit and
 171 | does an "rte".
 172 |
 173         .global         _060_real_inex
 174 _060_real_inex:
 175         fsave           -(%sp)
 176         move.w          #0x6000,0x2(%sp)
 177         frestore        (%sp)+
 178         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 179 
 180 |
 181 | _060_real_bsun():
 182 |
 183 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an enabled bsun exception
 184 | is present. The routine below should point to the operating system handler
 185 | for enabled bsun exceptions. The exception stack frame is a bsun
 186 | stack frame.
 187 |
 188 | The sample routine below clears the exception status bit, clears the NaN
 189 | bit in the FPSR, and does an "rte". The instruction that caused the
 190 | bsun will now be re-executed but with the NaN FPSR bit cleared.
 191 |
 192         .global         _060_real_bsun
 193 _060_real_bsun:
 194 |       fsave           -(%sp)
 195 
 196         fmove.l         %fpsr,-(%sp)
 197         andi.b          #0xfe,(%sp)
 198         fmove.l         (%sp)+,%fpsr
 199 
 200         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 201 
 202 |
 203 | _060_real_fline():
 204 |
 205 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an F-Line Illegal exception is
 206 | encountered. Three different types of exceptions can enter the F-Line exception
 207 | vector number 11: FP Unimplemented Instructions, FP implemented instructions when
 208 | the FPU is disabled, and F-Line Illegal instructions. The 060FPSP module
 209 | _fpsp_fline() distinguishes between the three and acts appropriately. F-Line
 210 | Illegals branch here.
 211 |
 212         .global         _060_real_fline
 213 _060_real_fline:
 214         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 215 
 216 |
 217 | _060_real_fpu_disabled():
 218 |
 219 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an FPU disabled exception is
 220 | encountered. Three different types of exceptions can enter the F-Line exception
 221 | vector number 11: FP Unimplemented Instructions, FP implemented instructions when
 222 | the FPU is disabled, and F-Line Illegal instructions. The 060FPSP module
 223 | _fpsp_fline() distinguishes between the three and acts appropriately. FPU disabled
 224 | exceptions branch here.
 225 |
 226 | The sample code below enables the FPU, sets the PC field in the exception stack
 227 | frame to the PC of the instruction causing the exception, and does an "rte".
 228 | The execution of the instruction then proceeds with an enabled floating-point
 229 | unit.
 230 |
 231         .global         _060_real_fpu_disabled
 232 _060_real_fpu_disabled:
 233         move.l          %d0,-(%sp)              | enabled the fpu
 234         .long   0x4E7A0808                      |movec          pcr,%d0
 235         bclr            #0x1,%d0
 236         .long   0x4E7B0808                      |movec          %d0,pcr
 237         move.l          (%sp)+,%d0
 238 
 239         move.l          0xc(%sp),0x2(%sp)       | set "Current PC"
 240         rte
 241 
 242 |
 243 | _060_real_trap():
 244 |
 245 | This is the exit point for the 060FPSP when an emulated "ftrapcc" instruction
 246 | discovers that the trap condition is true and it should branch to the operating
 247 | system handler for the trap exception vector number 7.
 248 |
 249 | The sample code below simply executes an "rte".
 250 |
 251         .global         _060_real_trap
 252 _060_real_trap:
 253         bral            trap    | jump to trap handler
 254 
 255 |############################################################################
 256 
 257 |#################################
 258 | (2) EXAMPLE PACKAGE ENTRY CODE #
 259 |#################################
 260 
 261         .global         _060_fpsp_snan
 262 _060_fpsp_snan:
 263         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x00
 264 
 265         .global         _060_fpsp_operr
 266 _060_fpsp_operr:
 267         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x08
 268 
 269         .global         _060_fpsp_ovfl
 270 _060_fpsp_ovfl:
 271         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x10
 272 
 273         .global         _060_fpsp_unfl
 274 _060_fpsp_unfl:
 275         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x18
 276 
 277         .global         _060_fpsp_dz
 278 _060_fpsp_dz:
 279         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x20
 280 
 281         .global         _060_fpsp_inex
 282 _060_fpsp_inex:
 283         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x28
 284 
 285         .global         _060_fpsp_fline
 286 _060_fpsp_fline:
 287         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x30
 288 
 289         .global         _060_fpsp_unsupp
 290 _060_fpsp_unsupp:
 291         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x38
 292 
 293         .global         _060_fpsp_effadd
 294 _060_fpsp_effadd:
 295         bra.l           _FP_CALL_TOP+0x80+0x40
 296 
 297 |############################################################################
 298 
 299 |###############################
 300 | (3) EXAMPLE CALL-OUT SECTION #
 301 |###############################
 302 
 303 | The size of this section MUST be 128 bytes!!!
 304 
 305 _FP_CALL_TOP:
 306         .long   _060_real_bsun          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 307         .long   _060_real_snan          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 308         .long   _060_real_operr         - _FP_CALL_TOP
 309         .long   _060_real_ovfl          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 310         .long   _060_real_unfl          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 311         .long   _060_real_dz            - _FP_CALL_TOP
 312         .long   _060_real_inex          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 313         .long   _060_real_fline         - _FP_CALL_TOP
 314         .long   _060_real_fpu_disabled  - _FP_CALL_TOP
 315         .long   _060_real_trap          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 316         .long   _060_real_trace         - _FP_CALL_TOP
 317         .long   _060_real_access        - _FP_CALL_TOP
 318         .long   _060_fpsp_done          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 319 
 320         .long   0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000
 321 
 322         .long   _060_imem_read          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 323         .long   _060_dmem_read          - _FP_CALL_TOP
 324         .long   _060_dmem_write         - _FP_CALL_TOP
 325         .long   _060_imem_read_word     - _FP_CALL_TOP
 326         .long   _060_imem_read_long     - _FP_CALL_TOP
 327         .long   _060_dmem_read_byte     - _FP_CALL_TOP
 328         .long   _060_dmem_read_word     - _FP_CALL_TOP
 329         .long   _060_dmem_read_long     - _FP_CALL_TOP
 330         .long   _060_dmem_write_byte    - _FP_CALL_TOP
 331         .long   _060_dmem_write_word    - _FP_CALL_TOP
 332         .long   _060_dmem_write_long    - _FP_CALL_TOP
 333 
 334         .long   0x00000000
 335 
 336         .long   0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000, 0x00000000
 337 
 338 |############################################################################
 339 
 340 | 060 FPSP KERNEL PACKAGE NEEDS TO GO HERE!!!
 341 
 342 #include "fpsp.sa"

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