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.file "zsvjmp.s"
/ ZSVJMP, ZDOJMP -- Set up a jump (non-local goto) by saving the processor
/ registers in the buffer jmpbuf. A subsequent call to ZDOJMP restores
/ the registers, effecting a call in the context of the procedure which
/ originally called ZSVJMP, but with the new status code. These are Fortran
/ callable procedures.
/
/ zsvjmp (jmp_buf, status) (returns status)
/ zdojmp (jmp_buf, status) (passes status to zsvjmp)
/
/ These routines are directly comparable to the UNIX setjmp/longjmp, except
/ that they are Fortran callable kernel routines, i.e., trailing underscore,
/ call by reference, and no function returns. ZSVJMP requires an assembler
/ jacket routine to avoid modifying the call stack, but relies upon setjmp
/ to do the real work. ZDOJMP is implemented as a portable C routine in OS,
/ calling longjmp to do the restore. In these routines, JMP_BUF consists
/ of one longword containing the address of the STATUS variable, followed
/ by the "jmp_buf" used by setjmp/longjmp.
/
/ This file contains the Solaris x86 version of ZSVJMP.
.globl zsvjmp_
.globl mem_
.type mem_, @object
.size mem_, 0x8
mem_ = 0
/ The following has nothing to do with ZSVJMP, and is included here
/ only because this assembler module is loaded with every process.
/ This code sets the value of the symbol MEM (the VOS or Fortran Mem
/ common) to zero, setting the origin for IRAF pointers to zero rather
/ than some arbitrary value, and ensuring that the MEM common is
/ aligned for all datatypes as well as page aligned. A further
/ advantage is that references to NULL pointers are likely to cause a
/ memory violation.
/ .data
/ .globl mem_
/ mem_ = 0
.text
zsvjmp_:
movl 4(%esp), %ecx / &jmpbuf to ECX
movl 8(%esp), %eax / &status to EAX
movl %eax, (%ecx) / store &status in jmpbuf[0]
movl $0, (%eax) / zero the value of status
addl $4, %ecx / change stack to point to &jmpbuf[1]
movl %ecx, 4(%esp) / ...
jmp setjmp / let setjmp do the rest
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