@@ -506,22 +506,20 @@ struct tb_tc {
};
struct TranslationBlock {
-#if !TARGET_TB_PCREL
/*
* Guest PC corresponding to this block. This must be the true
* virtual address. Therefore e.g. x86 stores EIP + CS_BASE, and
* targets like Arm, MIPS, HP-PA, which reuse low bits for ISA or
* privilege, must store those bits elsewhere.
*
- * If TARGET_TB_PCREL, the opcodes for the TranslationBlock are
- * written such that the TB is associated only with the physical
- * page and may be run in any virtual address context. In this case,
- * PC must always be taken from ENV in a target-specific manner.
+ * If CF_PCREL, the opcodes for the TranslationBlock are written
+ * such that the TB is associated only with the physical page and
+ * may be run in any virtual address context. In this case, PC
+ * must always be taken from ENV in a target-specific manner.
* Unwind information is taken as offsets from the page, to be
* deposited into the "current" PC.
*/
target_ulong pc;
-#endif
/*
* Target-specific data associated with the TranslationBlock, e.g.:
@@ -615,22 +613,19 @@ struct TranslationBlock {
uintptr_t jmp_dest[2];
};
-/* Hide the read to avoid ifdefs for TARGET_TB_PCREL. */
-static inline target_ulong tb_pc(const TranslationBlock *tb)
-{
-#if TARGET_TB_PCREL
- qemu_build_not_reached();
-#else
- return tb->pc;
-#endif
-}
-
/* Hide the qatomic_read to make code a little easier on the eyes */
static inline uint32_t tb_cflags(const TranslationBlock *tb)
{
return qatomic_read(&tb->cflags);
}
+/* Hide the read to avoid ifdefs for CF_PCREL. */
+static inline target_ulong tb_pc(const TranslationBlock *tb)
+{
+ assert(!(tb_cflags(tb) & CF_PCREL));
+ return tb->pc;
+}
+
static inline tb_page_addr_t tb_page_addr0(const TranslationBlock *tb)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_USER_ONLY