| /* | 
 |  * The ARM LDRD and Thumb LDRSB instructions use bit 20/11 (ARM/Thumb) | 
 |  * differently than every other instruction, so it is set to 0 (write) | 
 |  * even though the instructions are read instructions. This means that | 
 |  * during an abort the instructions will be treated as a write and the | 
 |  * handler will raise a signal from unwriteable locations if they | 
 |  * fault. We have to specifically check for these instructions | 
 |  * from the abort handlers to treat them properly. | 
 |  * | 
 |  */ | 
 |  | 
 | 	.macro	do_thumb_abort, fsr, pc, psr, tmp | 
 | 	tst	\psr, #PSR_T_BIT | 
 | 	beq	not_thumb | 
 | 	ldrh	\tmp, [\pc]			@ Read aborted Thumb instruction | 
 | 	and	\tmp, \tmp, # 0xfe00		@ Mask opcode field | 
 | 	cmp	\tmp, # 0x5600			@ Is it ldrsb? | 
 | 	orreq	\tmp, \tmp, #1 << 11		@ Set L-bit if yes | 
 | 	tst	\tmp, #1 << 11			@ L = 0 -> write | 
 | 	orreq	\fsr, \fsr, #1 << 11		@ yes. | 
 | 	b	do_DataAbort | 
 | not_thumb: | 
 | 	.endm | 
 |  | 
 | /* | 
 |  * We check for the following instruction encoding for LDRD. | 
 |  * | 
 |  * [27:25] == 000 | 
 |  *   [7:4] == 1101 | 
 |  *    [20] == 0 | 
 |  */ | 
 | 	.macro	do_ldrd_abort, tmp, insn | 
 | 	tst	\insn, #0x0e100000		@ [27:25,20] == 0 | 
 | 	bne	not_ldrd | 
 | 	and	\tmp, \insn, #0x000000f0	@ [7:4] == 1101 | 
 | 	cmp	\tmp, #0x000000d0 | 
 | 	beq	do_DataAbort | 
 | not_ldrd: | 
 | 	.endm | 
 |  |