linux/arch/sh/kernel/cpu/sh2a/opcode_helper.c

55 lines
1.5 KiB
C

/*
* arch/sh/kernel/cpu/sh2a/opcode_helper.c
*
* Helper for the SH-2A 32-bit opcodes.
*
* Copyright (C) 2007 Paul Mundt
*
* This file is subject to the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public
* License. See the file "COPYING" in the main directory of this archive
* for more details.
*/
#include <linux/kernel.h>
/*
* Instructions on SH are generally fixed at 16-bits, however, SH-2A
* introduces some 32-bit instructions. Since there are no real
* constraints on their use (and they can be mixed and matched), we need
* to check the instruction encoding to work out if it's a true 32-bit
* instruction or not.
*
* Presently, 32-bit opcodes have only slight variations in what the
* actual encoding looks like in the first-half of the instruction, which
* makes it fairly straightforward to differentiate from the 16-bit ones.
*
* First 16-bits of encoding Used by
*
* 0011nnnnmmmm0001 mov.b, mov.w, mov.l, fmov.d,
* fmov.s, movu.b, movu.w
*
* 0011nnnn0iii1001 bclr.b, bld.b, bset.b, bst.b, band.b,
* bandnot.b, bldnot.b, bor.b, bornot.b,
* bxor.b
*
* 0000nnnniiii0000 movi20
* 0000nnnniiii0001 movi20s
*/
unsigned int instruction_size(unsigned int insn)
{
/* Look for the common cases */
switch ((insn & 0xf00f)) {
case 0x0000: /* movi20 */
case 0x0001: /* movi20s */
case 0x3001: /* 32-bit mov/fmov/movu variants */
return 4;
}
/* And the special cases.. */
switch ((insn & 0xf08f)) {
case 0x3009: /* 32-bit b*.b bit operations */
return 4;
}
return 2;
}