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author | Mike Dunn <mikedunn@newsguy.com> | 2010-09-19 14:48:51 -0700 |
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committer | Øyvind Harboe <oyvind.harboe@zylin.com> | 2010-09-20 09:21:12 +0200 |
commit | ebfb2f4f3715f264ae4474c1b2e78812d1625cdc (patch) | |
tree | 8b0039ebc6504c0d6d44a7d805bddeaa33846b8f /src/server | |
parent | 7e888741d13e66b6b343b8f0839621107c5a2962 (diff) | |
download | openocd_libswd-ebfb2f4f3715f264ae4474c1b2e78812d1625cdc.tar.gz openocd_libswd-ebfb2f4f3715f264ae4474c1b2e78812d1625cdc.tar.bz2 openocd_libswd-ebfb2f4f3715f264ae4474c1b2e78812d1625cdc.tar.xz openocd_libswd-ebfb2f4f3715f264ae4474c1b2e78812d1625cdc.zip |
xscale: check that wp length does not exceed address
Hi everyone,
A while back I sent in a patch that adds support for watchpoint lengths greater
than four on xscale. It's been working well, until the other day, when it
caused an unexpected debug exception. Looking into this I realized there is a
case where it breaks: when the length arg is greater than the base address.
This is a consequence of the way the hardware works. Don't see a work-around,
so I added code to xscale_add_watchpoint() to check for and disallow this
combination.
Some more detail... xscale watchpoint hardware does not support a length
directly. Instead, a mask value can be specified (not to be confused with the
optional mask arg to the wp command, which xscale does not support). Any bits
set in the mask are ignored when the watchpoint hardware compares the access
address to the watchpoint address. So as long as the length is a power of two,
setting the mask to length-1 effectively specifies the length. Or so I thought,
until I realized that if the length exceeds the base address, *all* bits of the
base address are ignored by the comaparator, and the watchpoint range
effectively becomes 0 .. length.
Questions, comments, criticisms gratefully received.
Thanks,
Mike
Signed-off-by: Mike Dunn <mikedunn@newsguy.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/server')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions