looking at wiki definition...
Seems your terminology might be a little off, as I have completely lost in what are you doing.
ignore the + sign in every net... its to differentiate with -ve tracking regulator (not shown) which has - sign, but they are both symetrical...
Vpd = Vpi / 5;
Vrd = Vro / 5;
Vro = post (linear) regulator output;
Vpi = pre (switching) regulator output = post (linear) regulator input;
if (Vpd - Vrd) > 4V (Vpm) then turn ON Q28 NMOSFET to drain Vpi ; // LM317 protection (not shown) ie if Vpi - Vro > 20V
if Q28 is turned ON, ensure Q26 is turned OFF by using Q4 to avoid driver short
Vpc = Vpa + Vrd;
Vpa = 1 (default) pretrack volt offset so that Vpi = Vro + 5V;
if Vpd < Vpc then turn ON Q26 PMOSFET
that may sound funny, but this is what happened when a mechanical + software inclined guy try to build an analog hardware circuit in one single headskull...

The schematic also needs cleaning and polishing.
thank you for the advice...
For example the diodes over the mosfets has what purpose?
if Vpi goes above V60+ by external force, D13 will conduct. if it goes -ve by external force, then D14 will conduct. both to protect the mosfet driver...
And why only "PChannel"?
i have NMOSFET as drain there... Q28
Learn how to make a discrete bootsrapped driver instead, it is easy and much more elegant!
oh that! i like the simplicity of high side PMOSFET without a bootstrap, + i need to save board space as much as i can, i have tight enclosure, a slight decision change on a tiny function will result in few cm^2 board expansion requirement resulting in the board will not fitting in the enclosure, i already have 4 boards crammed together inside the enclosure, i originally hoped only 1 board for the project but this is the best i can get to, + i have symetrical -ve rail remember? so i'm not sure if there is a symetrical -ve rail NMOSFET bootstrapper chip, or discrete example in the net. discrete? it will double the above mentioned trouble (board expansion problem), so i dont give much thought on that idea... comments appreciated, fwiw...
