/* Copyright (C) 1999, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of the GNU C Library. The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. The GNU C 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 Library General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with the GNU C Library; see the file COPYING.LIB. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ #include #include #define P(a, b) P2(a, b) #define P2(a, b) a##b .text /* The socket-oriented system calls are handled unusally in Linux. They are all gated through the single `socketcall' system call number. `socketcall' takes two arguments: the first is the subcode, specifying which socket function is being called; and the second is a pointer to the arguments to the specific function. The .S files for the other calls just #define socket and #include this. */ #ifndef __socket #define __socket P(__,socket) #endif #define PUSHARGS_1 mov.l r4,@-r15 #define PUSHARGS_2 mov.l r5,@-r15; PUSHARGS_1 #define PUSHARGS_3 mov.l r6,@-r15; PUSHARGS_2 #define PUSHARGS_4 mov.l r7,@-r15; PUSHARGS_3 #define PUSHARGS_5 PUSHARGS_4 /* Caller has already pushed arg 5 */ #define PUSHARGS_6 PUSHARGS_4 /* Caller has already pushed arg 5,6 */ #define POPARGS_1 add #4,r15 #define POPARGS_2 add #8,r15 #define POPARGS_3 add #12,r15 #define POPARGS_4 add #16,r15 #define POPARGS_5 add #16,r15 #define POPARGS_6 add #16,r15 #ifndef NARGS #define NARGS 3 /* If we were called with no wrapper, this is really socket() */ #endif .globl __socket ENTRY (__socket) /* This will not work in the case of a socket call being interrupted by a signal. If the signal handler uses any stack the arguments to socket will be trashed. The results of a restart of any socket call are then unpredictable. */ /* Push args onto the stack. */ P(PUSHARGS_,NARGS) /* Do the system call trap. */ mov #+P(SOCKOP_,socket), r4 mov r15, r5 mov.l .L1,r3 trapa #0x12 /* Pop args off the stack */ P(POPARGS_,NARGS) mov r0, r1 mov #-12, r2 shad r2, r1 not r1, r1 // r1=0 means r0 = -1 to -4095 tst r1, r1 // i.e. error in linux bf 1f mov.l .L2, r1 #ifdef SHARED mov r0, r2 mov.l r12, @-r15 sts.l pr, @-r15 mov.l 0f, r12 mova 0f, r0 add r0, r12 mova .L2, r0 add r0, r1 jsr @r1 mov r2, r0 lds.l @r15+, pr rts mov.l @r15+, r12 .align 2 0: .long _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ #else jmp @r1 nop #endif 1: /* Successful; return the syscall's value. */ rts nop .align 2 .L1: .long SYS_ify(socketcall) .L2: .long PLTJMP(C_SYMBOL_NAME(__syscall_error)) PSEUDO_END (__socket) weak_alias (__socket, socket)