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"