linux/arch/um/kernel/skas/syscall.c
Jeff Dike 18badddaa8 uml: rename pt_regs general-purpose register file
Before the removal of tt mode, access to a register on the skas-mode side of a
pt_regs struct looked like pt_regs.regs.skas.regs.regs[FOO].  This was bad
enough, but it became pt_regs.regs.regs.regs[FOO] with the removal of the
union from the middle.  To get rid of the run of three "regs", the last field
is renamed to "gp".

Signed-off-by: Jeff Dike <jdike@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2007-10-16 09:43:06 -07:00

41 lines
1.0 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (C) 2002 - 2007 Jeff Dike (jdike@{addtoit,linux.intel}.com)
* Licensed under the GPL
*/
#include "linux/kernel.h"
#include "linux/ptrace.h"
#include "kern_util.h"
#include "sysdep/ptrace.h"
#include "sysdep/syscalls.h"
void handle_syscall(struct uml_pt_regs *r)
{
struct pt_regs *regs = container_of(r, struct pt_regs, regs);
long result;
int syscall;
syscall_trace(r, 0);
current->thread.nsyscalls++;
nsyscalls++;
/*
* This should go in the declaration of syscall, but when I do that,
* strace -f -c bash -c 'ls ; ls' breaks, sometimes not tracing
* children at all, sometimes hanging when bash doesn't see the first
* ls exit.
* The assembly looks functionally the same to me. This is
* gcc version 4.0.1 20050727 (Red Hat 4.0.1-5)
* in case it's a compiler bug.
*/
syscall = UPT_SYSCALL_NR(r);
if ((syscall >= NR_syscalls) || (syscall < 0))
result = -ENOSYS;
else result = EXECUTE_SYSCALL(syscall, regs);
REGS_SET_SYSCALL_RETURN(r->gp, result);
syscall_trace(r, 1);
}