Bochs/bochs/cpu/crregs.h
Stanislav Shwartsman b4df87c9b0 Added CVS id
2007-09-10 16:04:41 +00:00

112 lines
3.9 KiB
C
Executable File

/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// $Id: crregs.h,v 1.2 2007-09-10 16:04:41 sshwarts Exp $
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
// Copyright (C) 2007 MandrakeSoft S.A.
//
// MandrakeSoft S.A.
// 43, rue d'Aboukir
// 75002 Paris - France
// http://www.linux-mandrake.com/
// http://www.mandrakesoft.com/
//
// This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
// modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
// License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
// version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
//
// This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
// Lesser General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
// License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
// Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#ifndef BX_CRREGS
#define BX_CRREGS
struct bx_cr0_t {
Bit32u val32; // 32bit value of register
// Accessors for all cr0 bitfields.
#define IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(name,bitnum) \
BX_CPP_INLINE bx_bool get_##name () { \
return 1 & (val32 >> bitnum); \
} \
BX_CPP_INLINE void set_##name (Bit8u val) { \
val32 = (val32&~(1<<bitnum)) | (val ? (1<<bitnum) : 0); \
}
// CR0 notes:
// Each x86 level has its own quirks regarding how it handles
// reserved bits. I used DOS DEBUG.EXE in real mode on the
// following processors, tried to clear bits 1..30, then tried
// to set bits 1..30, to see how these bits are handled.
// I found the following:
//
// Processor try to clear bits 1..30 try to set bits 1..30
// 386 7FFFFFF0 7FFFFFFE
// 486DX2 00000010 6005003E
// Pentium 00000010 7FFFFFFE
// Pentium-II 00000010 6005003E
//
// My assumptions:
// All processors: bit 4 is hardwired to 1 (not true on all clones)
// 386: bits 5..30 of CR0 are also hardwired to 1
// Pentium: reserved bits retain value set using mov cr0, reg32
// 486DX2/Pentium-II: reserved bits are hardwired to 0
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PE, 0);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(MP, 1);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(EM, 2);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(TS, 3);
#if BX_CPU_LEVEL >= 4
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(ET, 4);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(NE, 5);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(AM, 18);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(WP, 16);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(CD, 29);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(NW, 30);
#endif
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PG, 31);
BX_CPP_INLINE Bit32u getRegister() { return val32; }
BX_CPP_INLINE void setRegister(Bit32u val) { val32 = val; }
};
#if BX_CPU_LEVEL >= 4
struct bx_cr4_t {
Bit32u val32; // 32bit value of register
#if BX_SUPPORT_VME
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(VME, 0);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PVI, 1);
#endif
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(TSD, 2);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(DE, 3);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PSE, 4);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PAE, 5);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(MCE, 6);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PGE, 7);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(PCE, 8);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(OSFXSR, 9);
IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS(OSXMMEXCPT, 10);
BX_CPP_INLINE Bit32u getRegister() { return val32; }
BX_CPP_INLINE void setRegister(Bit32u val) { val32 = val; }
};
#endif // #if BX_CPU_LEVEL >= 4
#if BX_SUPPORT_VME
#define CR4_VME_ENABLED (BX_CPU_THIS_PTR cr4.get_VME())
#else
#define CR4_VME_ENABLED (0)
#endif
#undef IMPLEMENT_CRREG_ACCESSORS
#endif