The way to obtain a kernel-mode stack pointer from a struct
pt_regs in 32-bit mode is "subtle": the stack doesn't actually
contain the stack pointer, but rather the location where it would
have been marks the actual previous stack frame. For clarity, use
kernel_stack_pointer() instead of coding this weirdness
explicitly.
Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Cc: Jason Wessel <jason.wessel@windriver.com>
gdb_regs[GDB_SS] = __KERNEL_DS;
gdb_regs[GDB_FS] = 0xFFFF;
gdb_regs[GDB_GS] = 0xFFFF;
- gdb_regs[GDB_SP] = (int)®s->sp;
#else
gdb_regs[GDB_R8] = regs->r8;
gdb_regs[GDB_R9] = regs->r9;
gdb_regs32[GDB_PS] = regs->flags;
gdb_regs32[GDB_CS] = regs->cs;
gdb_regs32[GDB_SS] = regs->ss;
- gdb_regs[GDB_SP] = regs->sp;
#endif
+ gdb_regs[GDB_SP] = kernel_stack_pointer(regs);
}
/**