In the cris disassembler we were using 'unsigned long' to calculate addresses which are supposed to be 32 bits. This meant that we might accidentally sign extend or calculate a value that was outside the 32 bit range of the guest CPU. Use 'uint32_t' instead so we give the right answers on 64-bit hosts.
(Spotted by Coverity, CID 1005402, 1005403.) Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.mayd...@linaro.org> --- disas/cris.c | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/disas/cris.c b/disas/cris.c index 8a1daf9..30217f1 100644 --- a/disas/cris.c +++ b/disas/cris.c @@ -2009,7 +2009,7 @@ print_with_operands (const struct cris_opcode *opcodep, case 'n': { /* Like N but pc-relative to the start of the insn. */ - unsigned long number + uint32_t number = (buffer[2] + buffer[3] * 256 + buffer[4] * 65536 + buffer[5] * 0x1000000 + addr); @@ -2201,7 +2201,7 @@ print_with_operands (const struct cris_opcode *opcodep, { /* It's [pc+]. This cannot possibly be anything but an address. */ - unsigned long number + uint32_t number = prefix_buffer[2] + prefix_buffer[3] * 256 + prefix_buffer[4] * 65536 + prefix_buffer[5] * 0x1000000; -- 2.7.4