ARM/THUMB instructions that change execution path?

Has anybody come across a list of ARM & THUMB instructions that cause deviation from the linear instruction stream?

I've been trying to figure out gdb-stub single stepping using software interrupts, and in single stepping you need to find

the next instruction(s) where the next breakpoint instruction needs to be set.

There are three cases:

1) current instruction doesn't change the execution path. Next instruction is the next word.

2) current instruction is a jump. The operand defines the next instruction address

3) current instruction is conditional branch. One possible next instruction is the next word, the other possible

instruction address is defined by the operand. (That includes conditional add with PC as the target, and the like).

To implement single stepping, I need to tell those cases apart and figure out how to find out the possible branching address.

I could go through manuals of numerous processors instruction by instruction and maybe I'd be done within the next couple of years,

or I could find a list of instructions to check, or a paper that explains how to "decode" the instructions in a useful way.

Also, there doesn't seem to be lots of sources of ARM gdb servers or stubs around that use software breakpoints.

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  • Doing that on Cortex-M is not easy, because constants are chopped into small bits and pieces, plus they're moved around.

    I can understand. I couldn't avoid seeing the Thumb encodings while going through ARM encodings in the ARMv7-A/R ARM.

    I'm sweating blood for just thinking about going through the Thumb instructions.

    (There are still a lot of ARM instructions to do.)

    BTW: if you want to format your edits, you can click the "Use advanced editor" in the top right-hand corner. Then switch to the HTML editor and change the font to ...

    Monaco, Courier, mono-space; after that, click "Use advanced editor" again, now the editor should allow you to make some fixed-font formatting.

    Thanks for the hint.

    (BTW, nice tutorial)

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  • Doing that on Cortex-M is not easy, because constants are chopped into small bits and pieces, plus they're moved around.

    I can understand. I couldn't avoid seeing the Thumb encodings while going through ARM encodings in the ARMv7-A/R ARM.

    I'm sweating blood for just thinking about going through the Thumb instructions.

    (There are still a lot of ARM instructions to do.)

    BTW: if you want to format your edits, you can click the "Use advanced editor" in the top right-hand corner. Then switch to the HTML editor and change the font to ...

    Monaco, Courier, mono-space; after that, click "Use advanced editor" again, now the editor should allow you to make some fixed-font formatting.

    Thanks for the hint.

    (BTW, nice tutorial)

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