For the most part priviledged opcodes are ifdefed out of the user-only sparc translator, which will then incorrectly produce illegal opcode traps. But there are some code paths that properly raise TT_PRIV_INSN, so we must handle it.
Signed-off-by: Richard Henderson <richard.hender...@linaro.org> --- linux-user/sparc/cpu_loop.c | 3 +++ 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+) diff --git a/linux-user/sparc/cpu_loop.c b/linux-user/sparc/cpu_loop.c index a3edb353f6..61b6e81459 100644 --- a/linux-user/sparc/cpu_loop.c +++ b/linux-user/sparc/cpu_loop.c @@ -303,6 +303,9 @@ void cpu_loop (CPUSPARCState *env) case TT_ILL_INSN: force_sig_fault(TARGET_SIGILL, TARGET_ILL_ILLOPC, env->pc); break; + case TT_PRIV_INSN: + force_sig_fault(TARGET_SIGILL, TARGET_ILL_PRVOPC, env->pc); + break; case EXCP_ATOMIC: cpu_exec_step_atomic(cs); break; -- 2.34.1