xref: /linux/arch/arm/mm/abort-ev6.S (revision 26584853a44c58f3d6ac7360d697a2ddcd1a3efa)
1#include <linux/linkage.h>
2#include <asm/assembler.h>
3#include "abort-macro.S"
4/*
5 * Function: v6_early_abort
6 *
7 * Params  : r2 = address of aborted instruction
8 *         : r3 = saved SPSR
9 *
10 * Returns : r0 = address of abort
11 *	   : r1 = FSR, bit 11 = write
12 *	   : r2-r8 = corrupted
13 *	   : r9 = preserved
14 *	   : sp = pointer to registers
15 *
16 * Purpose : obtain information about current aborted instruction.
17 * Note: we read user space.  This means we might cause a data
18 * abort here if the I-TLB and D-TLB aren't seeing the same
19 * picture.  Unfortunately, this does happen.  We live with it.
20 */
21	.align	5
22ENTRY(v6_early_abort)
23#ifdef CONFIG_CPU_32v6K
24	clrex
25#else
26	sub	r1, sp, #4			@ Get unused stack location
27	strex	r0, r1, [r1]			@ Clear the exclusive monitor
28#endif
29	mrc	p15, 0, r1, c5, c0, 0		@ get FSR
30	mrc	p15, 0, r0, c6, c0, 0		@ get FAR
31/*
32 * Faulty SWP instruction on 1136 doesn't set bit 11 in DFSR (erratum 326103).
33 * The test below covers all the write situations, including Java bytecodes
34 */
35	bic	r1, r1, #1 << 11		@ clear bit 11 of FSR
36	tst	r3, #PSR_J_BIT			@ Java?
37	movne	pc, lr
38	do_thumb_abort
39	ldreq	r3, [r2]			@ read aborted ARM instruction
40#ifdef CONFIG_CPU_ENDIAN_BE8
41	reveq	r3, r3
42#endif
43	do_ldrd_abort
44	tst	r3, #1 << 20			@ L = 0 -> write
45	orreq	r1, r1, #1 << 11		@ yes.
46	mov	pc, lr
47
48
49