There's currently no way this path can occur and result in any
functioning executable. The recompiler backends are platform-specific.
If those platforms aren't available, then it's quite literally
impossible to use this library for anything meaningful. Instead of
defining a generic architecture and continuing on, notify the developer
that their platform is not currently supported.
Similar to the variant within the ARM-mode translator visitor. This will
be used in subsequent changes to implement the hint instructions
introduced in ARMv7.
Now that we fuzz against Unicorn, we aren't just restricted to VFPv2.
VFPv3 and VFPv4 facilities can now be implemented. This renames
constructs mentioning VFPv2 to just refer to VFP.
Implements the ARM-mode variants of the CRC32 instructions introduced
within ARMv8. This is also one of the instruction cases where there is
UNPREDICTABLE behavior that is constrained (we must do one of the
options indicated by the reference manual).
In both documented cases of constrained unpredictable behavior, we treat
the instructions as unpredictable in order to allow library users to
hook the unpredictable exception to provide the intended behavior they
desire.
We also make the arrays static here, as MSVC tends to load the whole
array every time the function is called, instead of storing the data
within rodata.
This also line breaks the elements a little earlier for readability.
With deduction guides, we can eliminate the need to explicitly size the
array. Also newlines the elements based off their relation, making it
slightly nicer to read.
Unicorn internally checks if the LSB is set in order to determine
whether or not it should assume thumb mode internally. Clearing this
ourselves will always result in the incorrect PSR between runs.
The SetRegister() IR function doesn't allow specifying the PC as a
register. This is a discrepancy that slipped through (my bad). Instead,
we can use BranchWritePC(), like how the other similar PC modifying
locations do it.
Replaces type aliases of raw integral types with the more type-safe Imm
template, like how the AArch64 frontend has been using it.
This makes the two frontends more consistent with one another.
Avoids potentially dumping boost, fmt, and xbyak targets into a
top-level namespace without any qualification, which can lead to build
errors in projects that already make use of them.
Introduces the same fuzzing mechanism used by the AArch64 code for
fuzzing instruction implementations, getting rid of the need to
manually specify the instruction generator sequences--replacing it with
an instruction blacklist instead.
Much of this change originates from a previous patch made by Mary. This
just makes it interact nicely with the alterations made to get Unicorn
to cooperate properly.