This is already useful on Windows in order to remove tls.h, because
accesses to current_cpu are done from a different thread on that
platform. It will be used on POSIX platforms as soon TCG stops using
signals to interrupt the execution of translated code.
Backports commit 9373e63297c43752f9cf085feb7f5aed57d959f8 from qemu
Writing / reading to model specific registers should be as easy as
calling a function, it's a bit stupid to write shell code and run them
just to write/read to a MSR, and even worse, you need more than just a
shellcode to read...
So, add a special register ID called UC_X86_REG_MSR, which should be
passed to uc_reg_write()/uc_reg_read() as the register ID, and then a
data structure which is uc_x86_msr (12 bytes), as the value (always), where:
Byte Value Size
0 MSR ID 4
4 MSR val 8
* reg_read and reg_write now work with registers W0 through W30 in Aarch64 emulaton
* Added a regress test for the ARM64 reg_read and reg_write on 32-bit registers (W0-W30)
Added a new macro in uc_priv.h (WRITE_DWORD_TO_QWORD), in order to write to the lower 32 bits of a 64 bit value without overwriting the whole value when using reg_write
* Fixed WRITE_DWORD macro
reg_write would zero out the high order bits when writing to 32 bit registers
e.g. uc.reg_write(UC_X86_REG_EAX, 0) would also set register RAX to zero
Support for Cortex-M ARM CPU already exists in Qemu. This patch just
exposes a "cortex-m3" CPU.
"uc_open(UC_ARCH_ARM, UC_MODE_THUMB | UC_MODE_MCLASS, &uc);"
Instantiates a CPU with this feature on.
Signed-off-by: Lucian Cojocar <lucian@cojocar.com>
ARM and probably the rest of the arches have significant memory leaks as
they have no release interface.
Additionally, DrMemory does not have 64-bit support and thus I can't
test the 64-bit version under Windows. Under Linux valgrind supports
both 32-bit and 64-bit but there are different macros and code for Linux
and Windows.