remote.c: don't install a deprecated_xfer_memory hook.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / binutils / doc / binutils.texi
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1\input texinfo @c -*- Texinfo -*-
2@setfilename binutils.info
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3@settitle @sc{gnu} Binary Utilities
4@finalout
5@synindex ky cp
8c2bc687 6
dff70155 7@c man begin INCLUDE
c428fa83 8@include bfdver.texi
dff70155 9@c man end
252b5132 10
0e9517a9 11@copying
0285c67d 12@c man begin COPYRIGHT
a043396b 13Copyright @copyright{} 1991-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
252b5132 14
0285c67d 15Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
793c5807 16under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
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17or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
18with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no
19Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the
947ed062 20section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
252b5132 21
0285c67d 22@c man end
0e9517a9 23@end copying
252b5132 24
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25@dircategory Software development
26@direntry
27* Binutils: (binutils). The GNU binary utilities.
28@end direntry
29
30@dircategory Individual utilities
31@direntry
32* addr2line: (binutils)addr2line. Convert addresses to file and line.
33* ar: (binutils)ar. Create, modify, and extract from archives.
34* c++filt: (binutils)c++filt. Filter to demangle encoded C++ symbols.
35* cxxfilt: (binutils)c++filt. MS-DOS name for c++filt.
36* dlltool: (binutils)dlltool. Create files needed to build and use DLLs.
37* nlmconv: (binutils)nlmconv. Converts object code into an NLM.
38* nm: (binutils)nm. List symbols from object files.
39* objcopy: (binutils)objcopy. Copy and translate object files.
40* objdump: (binutils)objdump. Display information from object files.
41* ranlib: (binutils)ranlib. Generate index to archive contents.
42* readelf: (binutils)readelf. Display the contents of ELF format files.
43* size: (binutils)size. List section sizes and total size.
44* strings: (binutils)strings. List printable strings from files.
45* strip: (binutils)strip. Discard symbols.
30fd33bb 46* elfedit: (binutils)elfedit. Update the ELF header of ELF files.
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47* windmc: (binutils)windmc. Generator for Windows message resources.
48* windres: (binutils)windres. Manipulate Windows resources.
49@end direntry
50
252b5132 51@titlepage
252b5132 52@title The @sc{gnu} Binary Utilities
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53@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE
54@subtitle @value{VERSION_PACKAGE}
55@end ifset
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56@subtitle Version @value{VERSION}
57@sp 1
36607f99 58@subtitle @value{UPDATED}
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59@author Roland H. Pesch
60@author Jeffrey M. Osier
61@author Cygnus Support
62@page
63
64@tex
65{\parskip=0pt \hfill Cygnus Support\par \hfill
e016ec1f 66Texinfo \texinfoversion\par }
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67@end tex
68
69@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
e016ec1f 70@insertcopying
252b5132 71@end titlepage
4ecceb71 72@contents
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73
74@node Top
75@top Introduction
76
77@cindex version
947ed062 78This brief manual contains documentation for the @sc{gnu} binary
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79utilities
80@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE
81@value{VERSION_PACKAGE}
82@end ifset
83version @value{VERSION}:
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84
85@iftex
86@table @code
87@item ar
88Create, modify, and extract from archives
89
90@item nm
91List symbols from object files
92
93@item objcopy
94Copy and translate object files
95
96@item objdump
97Display information from object files
98
99@item ranlib
100Generate index to archive contents
101
102@item readelf
103Display the contents of ELF format files.
104
105@item size
106List file section sizes and total size
107
108@item strings
109List printable strings from files
110
111@item strip
112Discard symbols
113
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114@item elfedit
115Update the ELF header of ELF files.
116
252b5132 117@item c++filt
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118Demangle encoded C++ symbols (on MS-DOS, this program is named
119@code{cxxfilt})
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120
121@item addr2line
122Convert addresses into file names and line numbers
123
124@item nlmconv
125Convert object code into a Netware Loadable Module
126
127@item windres
128Manipulate Windows resources
129
692ed3e7 130@item windmc
a8685210 131Generator for Windows message resources
692ed3e7 132
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133@item dlltool
134Create the files needed to build and use Dynamic Link Libraries
135@end table
136@end iftex
137
cf055d54 138This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU Free
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139Documentation License version 1.3. A copy of the license is included
140in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
cf055d54 141
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142@menu
143* ar:: Create, modify, and extract from archives
144* nm:: List symbols from object files
145* objcopy:: Copy and translate object files
146* objdump:: Display information from object files
147* ranlib:: Generate index to archive contents
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148* size:: List section sizes and total size
149* strings:: List printable strings from files
150* strip:: Discard symbols
151* c++filt:: Filter to demangle encoded C++ symbols
9d51cc66 152* cxxfilt: c++filt. MS-DOS name for c++filt
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153* addr2line:: Convert addresses to file and line
154* nlmconv:: Converts object code into an NLM
692ed3e7 155* windmc:: Generator for Windows message resources
7ca01ed9 156* windres:: Manipulate Windows resources
252b5132 157* dlltool:: Create files needed to build and use DLLs
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158* readelf:: Display the contents of ELF format files
159* elfedit:: Update the ELF header of ELF files
07012eee 160* Common Options:: Command-line options for all utilities
fff279a7 161* Selecting the Target System:: How these utilities determine the target
252b5132 162* Reporting Bugs:: Reporting Bugs
cf055d54 163* GNU Free Documentation License:: GNU Free Documentation License
fa0d8a3e 164* Binutils Index:: Binutils Index
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165@end menu
166
167@node ar
168@chapter ar
169
170@kindex ar
171@cindex archives
172@cindex collections of files
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173
174@c man title ar create, modify, and extract from archives
175
252b5132 176@smallexample
b3364cb9 177ar [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [-]@var{p}[@var{mod} [@var{relpos}] [@var{count}]] [@option{--target} @var{bfdname}] @var{archive} [@var{member}@dots{}]
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178ar -M [ <mri-script ]
179@end smallexample
180
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181@c man begin DESCRIPTION ar
182
c7c55b78 183The @sc{gnu} @command{ar} program creates, modifies, and extracts from
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184archives. An @dfn{archive} is a single file holding a collection of
185other files in a structure that makes it possible to retrieve
186the original individual files (called @dfn{members} of the archive).
187
188The original files' contents, mode (permissions), timestamp, owner, and
189group are preserved in the archive, and can be restored on
c1c0eb9e 190extraction.
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191
192@cindex name length
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193@sc{gnu} @command{ar} can maintain archives whose members have names of any
194length; however, depending on how @command{ar} is configured on your
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195system, a limit on member-name length may be imposed for compatibility
196with archive formats maintained with other tools. If it exists, the
197limit is often 15 characters (typical of formats related to a.out) or 16
198characters (typical of formats related to coff).
199
200@cindex libraries
c7c55b78 201@command{ar} is considered a binary utility because archives of this sort
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202are most often used as @dfn{libraries} holding commonly needed
203subroutines.
204
205@cindex symbol index
c7c55b78 206@command{ar} creates an index to the symbols defined in relocatable
252b5132 207object modules in the archive when you specify the modifier @samp{s}.
c7c55b78 208Once created, this index is updated in the archive whenever @command{ar}
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209makes a change to its contents (save for the @samp{q} update operation).
210An archive with such an index speeds up linking to the library, and
211allows routines in the library to call each other without regard to
212their placement in the archive.
213
214You may use @samp{nm -s} or @samp{nm --print-armap} to list this index
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215table. If an archive lacks the table, another form of @command{ar} called
216@command{ranlib} can be used to add just the table.
252b5132 217
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218@cindex thin archives
219@sc{gnu} @command{ar} can optionally create a @emph{thin} archive,
220which contains a symbol index and references to the original copies
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221of the member files of the archive. This is useful for building
222libraries for use within a local build tree, where the relocatable
223objects are expected to remain available, and copying the contents of
224each object would only waste time and space.
225
226An archive can either be @emph{thin} or it can be normal. It cannot
227be both at the same time. Once an archive is created its format
228cannot be changed without first deleting it and then creating a new
229archive in its place.
230
231Thin archives are also @emph{flattened}, so that adding one thin
232archive to another thin archive does not nest it, as would happen with
233a normal archive. Instead the elements of the first archive are added
234individually to the second archive.
235
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236The paths to the elements of the archive are stored relative to the
237archive itself.
238
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239@cindex compatibility, @command{ar}
240@cindex @command{ar} compatibility
241@sc{gnu} @command{ar} is designed to be compatible with two different
252b5132 242facilities. You can control its activity using command-line options,
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243like the different varieties of @command{ar} on Unix systems; or, if you
244specify the single command-line option @option{-M}, you can control it
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245with a script supplied via standard input, like the MRI ``librarian''
246program.
247
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248@c man end
249
252b5132 250@menu
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251* ar cmdline:: Controlling @command{ar} on the command line
252* ar scripts:: Controlling @command{ar} with a script
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253@end menu
254
255@page
256@node ar cmdline
947ed062 257@section Controlling @command{ar} on the Command Line
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258
259@smallexample
0285c67d 260@c man begin SYNOPSIS ar
8adf5d70 261ar [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [@option{-X32_64}] [@option{-}]@var{p}[@var{mod} [@var{relpos}] [@var{count}]] [@option{--target} @var{bfdname}] @var{archive} [@var{member}@dots{}]
0285c67d 262@c man end
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263@end smallexample
264
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265@cindex Unix compatibility, @command{ar}
266When you use @command{ar} in the Unix style, @command{ar} insists on at least two
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267arguments to execute: one keyletter specifying the @emph{operation}
268(optionally accompanied by other keyletters specifying
269@emph{modifiers}), and the archive name to act on.
270
271Most operations can also accept further @var{member} arguments,
272specifying particular files to operate on.
273
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274@c man begin OPTIONS ar
275
c7c55b78 276@sc{gnu} @command{ar} allows you to mix the operation code @var{p} and modifier
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277flags @var{mod} in any order, within the first command-line argument.
278
279If you wish, you may begin the first command-line argument with a
280dash.
281
282@cindex operations on archive
283The @var{p} keyletter specifies what operation to execute; it may be
284any of the following, but you must specify only one of them:
285
c7c55b78 286@table @samp
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287@item d
288@cindex deleting from archive
289@emph{Delete} modules from the archive. Specify the names of modules to
290be deleted as @var{member}@dots{}; the archive is untouched if you
291specify no files to delete.
292
c7c55b78 293If you specify the @samp{v} modifier, @command{ar} lists each module
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294as it is deleted.
295
296@item m
297@cindex moving in archive
298Use this operation to @emph{move} members in an archive.
299
300The ordering of members in an archive can make a difference in how
301programs are linked using the library, if a symbol is defined in more
c1c0eb9e 302than one member.
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303
304If no modifiers are used with @code{m}, any members you name in the
305@var{member} arguments are moved to the @emph{end} of the archive;
306you can use the @samp{a}, @samp{b}, or @samp{i} modifiers to move them to a
307specified place instead.
308
309@item p
310@cindex printing from archive
311@emph{Print} the specified members of the archive, to the standard
312output file. If the @samp{v} modifier is specified, show the member
313name before copying its contents to standard output.
314
315If you specify no @var{member} arguments, all the files in the archive are
316printed.
317
318@item q
319@cindex quick append to archive
320@emph{Quick append}; Historically, add the files @var{member}@dots{} to the end of
321@var{archive}, without checking for replacement.
322
323The modifiers @samp{a}, @samp{b}, and @samp{i} do @emph{not} affect this
324operation; new members are always placed at the end of the archive.
325
c7c55b78 326The modifier @samp{v} makes @command{ar} list each file as it is appended.
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327
328Since the point of this operation is speed, the archive's symbol table
329index is not updated, even if it already existed; you can use @samp{ar s} or
c7c55b78 330@command{ranlib} explicitly to update the symbol table index.
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331
332However, too many different systems assume quick append rebuilds the
947ed062 333index, so @sc{gnu} @command{ar} implements @samp{q} as a synonym for @samp{r}.
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334
335@item r
336@cindex replacement in archive
337Insert the files @var{member}@dots{} into @var{archive} (with
338@emph{replacement}). This operation differs from @samp{q} in that any
339previously existing members are deleted if their names match those being
340added.
341
c7c55b78 342If one of the files named in @var{member}@dots{} does not exist, @command{ar}
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343displays an error message, and leaves undisturbed any existing members
344of the archive matching that name.
345
346By default, new members are added at the end of the file; but you may
347use one of the modifiers @samp{a}, @samp{b}, or @samp{i} to request
348placement relative to some existing member.
349
350The modifier @samp{v} used with this operation elicits a line of
351output for each file inserted, along with one of the letters @samp{a} or
352@samp{r} to indicate whether the file was appended (no old member
353deleted) or replaced.
354
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355@item s
356@cindex ranlib
357Add an index to the archive, or update it if it already exists. Note
358this command is an exception to the rule that there can only be one
359command letter, as it is possible to use it as either a command or a
360modifier. In either case it does the same thing.
361
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362@item t
363@cindex contents of archive
364Display a @emph{table} listing the contents of @var{archive}, or those
365of the files listed in @var{member}@dots{} that are present in the
366archive. Normally only the member name is shown; if you also want to
367see the modes (permissions), timestamp, owner, group, and size, you can
368request that by also specifying the @samp{v} modifier.
369
370If you do not specify a @var{member}, all files in the archive
371are listed.
372
373@cindex repeated names in archive
374@cindex name duplication in archive
375If there is more than one file with the same name (say, @samp{fie}) in
376an archive (say @samp{b.a}), @samp{ar t b.a fie} lists only the
377first instance; to see them all, you must ask for a complete
378listing---in our example, @samp{ar t b.a}.
379@c WRS only; per Gumby, this is implementation-dependent, and in a more
380@c recent case in fact works the other way.
381
382@item x
383@cindex extract from archive
384@emph{Extract} members (named @var{member}) from the archive. You can
385use the @samp{v} modifier with this operation, to request that
c7c55b78 386@command{ar} list each name as it extracts it.
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387
388If you do not specify a @var{member}, all files in the archive
389are extracted.
390
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391Files cannot be extracted from a thin archive.
392
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393@item --help
394Displays the list of command line options supported by @command{ar}
395and then exits.
396
397@item --version
398Displays the version information of @command{ar} and then exits.
399
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400@end table
401
402A number of modifiers (@var{mod}) may immediately follow the @var{p}
403keyletter, to specify variations on an operation's behavior:
404
c7c55b78 405@table @samp
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406@item a
407@cindex relative placement in archive
408Add new files @emph{after} an existing member of the
409archive. If you use the modifier @samp{a}, the name of an existing archive
410member must be present as the @var{relpos} argument, before the
411@var{archive} specification.
412
413@item b
414Add new files @emph{before} an existing member of the
415archive. If you use the modifier @samp{b}, the name of an existing archive
416member must be present as the @var{relpos} argument, before the
417@var{archive} specification. (same as @samp{i}).
418
419@item c
420@cindex creating archives
421@emph{Create} the archive. The specified @var{archive} is always
422created if it did not exist, when you request an update. But a warning is
423issued unless you specify in advance that you expect to create it, by
424using this modifier.
425
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426@item D
427@cindex deterministic archives
9cb80f72 428@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
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429Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. When adding files and the archive
430index use zero for UIDs, GIDs, timestamps, and use consistent file modes
431for all files. When this option is used, if @command{ar} is used with
432identical options and identical input files, multiple runs will create
433identical output files regardless of the input files' owners, groups,
434file modes, or modification times.
435
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436If @file{binutils} was configured with
437@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by default.
438It can be disabled with the @samp{U} modifier, below.
439
252b5132 440@item f
c7c55b78 441Truncate names in the archive. @sc{gnu} @command{ar} will normally permit file
252b5132 442names of any length. This will cause it to create archives which are
c7c55b78 443not compatible with the native @command{ar} program on some systems. If
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444this is a concern, the @samp{f} modifier may be used to truncate file
445names when putting them in the archive.
446
447@item i
448Insert new files @emph{before} an existing member of the
449archive. If you use the modifier @samp{i}, the name of an existing archive
450member must be present as the @var{relpos} argument, before the
451@var{archive} specification. (same as @samp{b}).
452
453@item l
454This modifier is accepted but not used.
455@c whaffor ar l modifier??? presumably compat; with
c1c0eb9e 456@c what???---doc@@cygnus.com, 25jan91
252b5132 457
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458@item N
459Uses the @var{count} parameter. This is used if there are multiple
460entries in the archive with the same name. Extract or delete instance
461@var{count} of the given name from the archive.
462
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463@item o
464@cindex dates in archive
465Preserve the @emph{original} dates of members when extracting them. If
466you do not specify this modifier, files extracted from the archive
467are stamped with the time of extraction.
468
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469@item P
470Use the full path name when matching names in the archive. @sc{gnu}
c7c55b78 471@command{ar} can not create an archive with a full path name (such archives
3de39064 472are not POSIX complaint), but other archive creators can. This option
c7c55b78 473will cause @sc{gnu} @command{ar} to match file names using a complete path
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474name, which can be convenient when extracting a single file from an
475archive created by another tool.
476
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477@item s
478@cindex writing archive index
479Write an object-file index into the archive, or update an existing one,
480even if no other change is made to the archive. You may use this modifier
481flag either with any operation, or alone. Running @samp{ar s} on an
482archive is equivalent to running @samp{ranlib} on it.
483
484@item S
485@cindex not writing archive index
486Do not generate an archive symbol table. This can speed up building a
487large library in several steps. The resulting archive can not be used
488with the linker. In order to build a symbol table, you must omit the
489@samp{S} modifier on the last execution of @samp{ar}, or you must run
490@samp{ranlib} on the archive.
491
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492@item T
493@cindex creating thin archive
494Make the specified @var{archive} a @emph{thin} archive. If it already
495exists and is a regular archive, the existing members must be present
496in the same directory as @var{archive}.
497
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498@item u
499@cindex updating an archive
500Normally, @samp{ar r}@dots{} inserts all files
501listed into the archive. If you would like to insert @emph{only} those
502of the files you list that are newer than existing members of the same
503names, use this modifier. The @samp{u} modifier is allowed only for the
504operation @samp{r} (replace). In particular, the combination @samp{qu} is
505not allowed, since checking the timestamps would lose any speed
506advantage from the operation @samp{q}.
507
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508@item U
509@cindex deterministic archives
510@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
511Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the inverse
512of the @samp{D} modifier, above: added files and the archive index will
513get their actual UID, GID, timestamp, and file mode values.
514
515This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with
516@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}.
517
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518@item v
519This modifier requests the @emph{verbose} version of an operation. Many
520operations display additional information, such as filenames processed,
521when the modifier @samp{v} is appended.
522
523@item V
c7c55b78 524This modifier shows the version number of @command{ar}.
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525@end table
526
c7c55b78 527@command{ar} ignores an initial option spelt @samp{-X32_64}, for
6e800839 528compatibility with AIX. The behaviour produced by this option is the
947ed062 529default for @sc{gnu} @command{ar}. @command{ar} does not support any of the other
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530@samp{-X} options; in particular, it does not support @option{-X32}
531which is the default for AIX @command{ar}.
6e800839 532
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533The optional command line switch @option{--plugin} @var{name} causes
534@command{ar} to load the plugin called @var{name} which adds support
535for more file formats. This option is only available if the toolchain
536has been built with plugin support enabled.
537
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538The optional command line switch @option{--target} @var{bfdname}
539specifies that the archive members are in an object code format
540different from your system's default format. See
541@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
542
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543@c man end
544
545@ignore
546@c man begin SEEALSO ar
547nm(1), ranlib(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
548@c man end
549@end ignore
550
252b5132 551@node ar scripts
947ed062 552@section Controlling @command{ar} with a Script
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553
554@smallexample
555ar -M [ <@var{script} ]
556@end smallexample
557
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558@cindex MRI compatibility, @command{ar}
559@cindex scripts, @command{ar}
560If you use the single command-line option @samp{-M} with @command{ar}, you
252b5132 561can control its operation with a rudimentary command language. This
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562form of @command{ar} operates interactively if standard input is coming
563directly from a terminal. During interactive use, @command{ar} prompts for
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564input (the prompt is @samp{AR >}), and continues executing even after
565errors. If you redirect standard input to a script file, no prompts are
c7c55b78 566issued, and @command{ar} abandons execution (with a nonzero exit code)
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567on any error.
568
c7c55b78 569The @command{ar} command language is @emph{not} designed to be equivalent
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570to the command-line options; in fact, it provides somewhat less control
571over archives. The only purpose of the command language is to ease the
c7c55b78 572transition to @sc{gnu} @command{ar} for developers who already have scripts
252b5132
RH
573written for the MRI ``librarian'' program.
574
c7c55b78 575The syntax for the @command{ar} command language is straightforward:
252b5132
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576@itemize @bullet
577@item
578commands are recognized in upper or lower case; for example, @code{LIST}
579is the same as @code{list}. In the following descriptions, commands are
580shown in upper case for clarity.
581
582@item
583a single command may appear on each line; it is the first word on the
584line.
585
586@item
587empty lines are allowed, and have no effect.
588
589@item
590comments are allowed; text after either of the characters @samp{*}
591or @samp{;} is ignored.
592
593@item
c7c55b78 594Whenever you use a list of names as part of the argument to an @command{ar}
252b5132
RH
595command, you can separate the individual names with either commas or
596blanks. Commas are shown in the explanations below, for clarity.
597
598@item
599@samp{+} is used as a line continuation character; if @samp{+} appears
600at the end of a line, the text on the following line is considered part
601of the current command.
602@end itemize
603
c7c55b78
NC
604Here are the commands you can use in @command{ar} scripts, or when using
605@command{ar} interactively. Three of them have special significance:
252b5132
RH
606
607@code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE} specify a @dfn{current archive}, which is
608a temporary file required for most of the other commands.
609
610@code{SAVE} commits the changes so far specified by the script. Prior
611to @code{SAVE}, commands affect only the temporary copy of the current
612archive.
613
614@table @code
c1c0eb9e 615@item ADDLIB @var{archive}
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RH
616@itemx ADDLIB @var{archive} (@var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module})
617Add all the contents of @var{archive} (or, if specified, each named
618@var{module} from @var{archive}) to the current archive.
619
620Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
621
622@item ADDMOD @var{member}, @var{member}, @dots{} @var{member}
623@c FIXME! w/Replacement?? If so, like "ar r @var{archive} @var{names}"
624@c else like "ar q..."
625Add each named @var{member} as a module in the current archive.
626
627Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
628
629@item CLEAR
630Discard the contents of the current archive, canceling the effect of
631any operations since the last @code{SAVE}. May be executed (with no
632effect) even if no current archive is specified.
633
634@item CREATE @var{archive}
635Creates an archive, and makes it the current archive (required for many
636other commands). The new archive is created with a temporary name; it
637is not actually saved as @var{archive} until you use @code{SAVE}.
638You can overwrite existing archives; similarly, the contents of any
639existing file named @var{archive} will not be destroyed until @code{SAVE}.
640
641@item DELETE @var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}
642Delete each listed @var{module} from the current archive; equivalent to
643@samp{ar -d @var{archive} @var{module} @dots{} @var{module}}.
644
645Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
646
647@item DIRECTORY @var{archive} (@var{module}, @dots{} @var{module})
648@itemx DIRECTORY @var{archive} (@var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}) @var{outputfile}
649List each named @var{module} present in @var{archive}. The separate
650command @code{VERBOSE} specifies the form of the output: when verbose
651output is off, output is like that of @samp{ar -t @var{archive}
652@var{module}@dots{}}. When verbose output is on, the listing is like
653@samp{ar -tv @var{archive} @var{module}@dots{}}.
654
655Output normally goes to the standard output stream; however, if you
c7c55b78 656specify @var{outputfile} as a final argument, @command{ar} directs the
252b5132
RH
657output to that file.
658
659@item END
c7c55b78 660Exit from @command{ar}, with a @code{0} exit code to indicate successful
252b5132
RH
661completion. This command does not save the output file; if you have
662changed the current archive since the last @code{SAVE} command, those
663changes are lost.
664
665@item EXTRACT @var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}
666Extract each named @var{module} from the current archive, writing them
667into the current directory as separate files. Equivalent to @samp{ar -x
668@var{archive} @var{module}@dots{}}.
669
670Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
671
672@ignore
673@c FIXME Tokens but no commands???
674@item FULLDIR
675
676@item HELP
677@end ignore
678
679@item LIST
680Display full contents of the current archive, in ``verbose'' style
681regardless of the state of @code{VERBOSE}. The effect is like @samp{ar
c7c55b78 682tv @var{archive}}. (This single command is a @sc{gnu} @command{ar}
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RH
683enhancement, rather than present for MRI compatibility.)
684
685Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
686
687@item OPEN @var{archive}
688Opens an existing archive for use as the current archive (required for
689many other commands). Any changes as the result of subsequent commands
690will not actually affect @var{archive} until you next use @code{SAVE}.
691
692@item REPLACE @var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}
693In the current archive, replace each existing @var{module} (named in
694the @code{REPLACE} arguments) from files in the current working directory.
695To execute this command without errors, both the file, and the module in
c1c0eb9e 696the current archive, must exist.
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RH
697
698Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
699
700@item VERBOSE
701Toggle an internal flag governing the output from @code{DIRECTORY}.
702When the flag is on, @code{DIRECTORY} output matches output from
703@samp{ar -tv }@dots{}.
704
705@item SAVE
706Commit your changes to the current archive, and actually save it as a
707file with the name specified in the last @code{CREATE} or @code{OPEN}
c1c0eb9e 708command.
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RH
709
710Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}.
711
712@end table
713
714@iftex
715@node ld
716@chapter ld
717@cindex linker
718@kindex ld
c7c55b78 719The @sc{gnu} linker @command{ld} is now described in a separate manual.
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720@xref{Top,, Overview,, Using LD: the @sc{gnu} linker}.
721@end iftex
722
723@node nm
724@chapter nm
725@cindex symbols
726@kindex nm
727
0285c67d
NC
728@c man title nm list symbols from object files
729
252b5132 730@smallexample
0285c67d 731@c man begin SYNOPSIS nm
fa8f3997
NC
732nm [@option{-A}|@option{-o}|@option{--print-file-name}] [@option{-a}|@option{--debug-syms}]
733 [@option{-B}|@option{--format=bsd}] [@option{-C}|@option{--demangle}[=@var{style}]]
734 [@option{-D}|@option{--dynamic}] [@option{-f}@var{format}|@option{--format=}@var{format}]
735 [@option{-g}|@option{--extern-only}] [@option{-h}|@option{--help}]
736 [@option{-l}|@option{--line-numbers}] [@option{-n}|@option{-v}|@option{--numeric-sort}]
737 [@option{-P}|@option{--portability}] [@option{-p}|@option{--no-sort}]
738 [@option{-r}|@option{--reverse-sort}] [@option{-S}|@option{--print-size}]
739 [@option{-s}|@option{--print-armap}] [@option{-t} @var{radix}|@option{--radix=}@var{radix}]
740 [@option{-u}|@option{--undefined-only}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
741 [@option{-X 32_64}] [@option{--defined-only}] [@option{--no-demangle}]
742 [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [@option{--size-sort}] [@option{--special-syms}]
743 [@option{--synthetic}] [@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}]
744 [@var{objfile}@dots{}]
0285c67d 745@c man end
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RH
746@end smallexample
747
0285c67d 748@c man begin DESCRIPTION nm
c7c55b78
NC
749@sc{gnu} @command{nm} lists the symbols from object files @var{objfile}@dots{}.
750If no object files are listed as arguments, @command{nm} assumes the file
252b5132
RH
751@file{a.out}.
752
c7c55b78 753For each symbol, @command{nm} shows:
252b5132
RH
754
755@itemize @bullet
756@item
757The symbol value, in the radix selected by options (see below), or
758hexadecimal by default.
759
760@item
761The symbol type. At least the following types are used; others are, as
762well, depending on the object file format. If lowercase, the symbol is
0ba0c2b3
NC
763usually local; if uppercase, the symbol is global (external). There
764are however a few lowercase symbols that are shown for special global
765symbols (@code{u}, @code{v} and @code{w}).
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RH
766
767@c Some more detail on exactly what these symbol types are used for
768@c would be nice.
769@table @code
770@item A
771The symbol's value is absolute, and will not be changed by further
772linking.
773
774@item B
a1039809 775@itemx b
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RH
776The symbol is in the uninitialized data section (known as BSS).
777
778@item C
779The symbol is common. Common symbols are uninitialized data. When
780linking, multiple common symbols may appear with the same name. If the
781symbol is defined anywhere, the common symbols are treated as undefined
0285c67d
NC
782references.
783@ifclear man
784For more details on common symbols, see the discussion of
252b5132 785--warn-common in @ref{Options,,Linker options,ld.info,The GNU linker}.
0879a67a 786@end ifclear
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RH
787
788@item D
a1039809 789@itemx d
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RH
790The symbol is in the initialized data section.
791
792@item G
a1039809 793@itemx g
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RH
794The symbol is in an initialized data section for small objects. Some
795object file formats permit more efficient access to small data objects,
796such as a global int variable as opposed to a large global array.
797
a1039809 798@item i
3e7a7d11
NC
799For PE format files this indicates that the symbol is in a section
800specific to the implementation of DLLs. For ELF format files this
801indicates that the symbol is an indirect function. This is a GNU
802extension to the standard set of ELF symbol types. It indicates a
803symbol which if referenced by a relocation does not evaluate to its
804address, but instead must be invoked at runtime. The runtime
805execution will then return the value to be used in the relocation.
a1039809 806
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RH
807@item N
808The symbol is a debugging symbol.
809
a1039809
NC
810@item p
811The symbols is in a stack unwind section.
812
252b5132 813@item R
a1039809 814@itemx r
252b5132
RH
815The symbol is in a read only data section.
816
817@item S
a1039809 818@itemx s
252b5132
RH
819The symbol is in an uninitialized data section for small objects.
820
821@item T
a1039809 822@itemx t
252b5132
RH
823The symbol is in the text (code) section.
824
825@item U
826The symbol is undefined.
827
3e7a7d11
NC
828@item u
829The symbol is a unique global symbol. This is a GNU extension to the
830standard set of ELF symbol bindings. For such a symbol the dynamic linker
831will make sure that in the entire process there is just one symbol with
832this name and type in use.
833
fad6fcbb 834@item V
a1039809 835@itemx v
fad6fcbb
NC
836The symbol is a weak object. When a weak defined symbol is linked with
837a normal defined symbol, the normal defined symbol is used with no error.
838When a weak undefined symbol is linked and the symbol is not defined,
a1039809
NC
839the value of the weak symbol becomes zero with no error. On some
840systems, uppercase indicates that a default value has been specified.
fad6fcbb 841
252b5132 842@item W
a1039809 843@itemx w
fad6fcbb
NC
844The symbol is a weak symbol that has not been specifically tagged as a
845weak object symbol. When a weak defined symbol is linked with a normal
846defined symbol, the normal defined symbol is used with no error.
847When a weak undefined symbol is linked and the symbol is not defined,
c87db184 848the value of the symbol is determined in a system-specific manner without
c1c0eb9e 849error. On some systems, uppercase indicates that a default value has been
977cdf5a
NC
850specified.
851
252b5132
RH
852@item -
853The symbol is a stabs symbol in an a.out object file. In this case, the
854next values printed are the stabs other field, the stabs desc field, and
c7c55b78 855the stab type. Stabs symbols are used to hold debugging information.
252b5132
RH
856
857@item ?
858The symbol type is unknown, or object file format specific.
859@end table
860
861@item
862The symbol name.
863@end itemize
864
0285c67d
NC
865@c man end
866
867@c man begin OPTIONS nm
252b5132
RH
868The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are
869equivalent.
870
c7c55b78 871@table @env
252b5132
RH
872@item -A
873@itemx -o
c1c0eb9e 874@itemx --print-file-name
252b5132
RH
875@cindex input file name
876@cindex file name
877@cindex source file name
f20a759a 878Precede each symbol by the name of the input file (or archive member)
252b5132
RH
879in which it was found, rather than identifying the input file once only,
880before all of its symbols.
881
882@item -a
c1c0eb9e 883@itemx --debug-syms
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RH
884@cindex debugging symbols
885Display all symbols, even debugger-only symbols; normally these are not
886listed.
887
888@item -B
c7c55b78
NC
889@cindex @command{nm} format
890@cindex @command{nm} compatibility
891The same as @option{--format=bsd} (for compatibility with the MIPS @command{nm}).
252b5132
RH
892
893@item -C
28c309a2 894@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}]
252b5132
RH
895@cindex demangling in nm
896Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names.
897Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this
28c309a2 898makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different
c1c0eb9e
RM
899mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to
900choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. @xref{c++filt},
28c309a2 901for more information on demangling.
252b5132
RH
902
903@item --no-demangle
904Do not demangle low-level symbol names. This is the default.
905
906@item -D
907@itemx --dynamic
908@cindex dynamic symbols
909Display the dynamic symbols rather than the normal symbols. This is
910only meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared
911libraries.
912
913@item -f @var{format}
914@itemx --format=@var{format}
c7c55b78
NC
915@cindex @command{nm} format
916@cindex @command{nm} compatibility
252b5132
RH
917Use the output format @var{format}, which can be @code{bsd},
918@code{sysv}, or @code{posix}. The default is @code{bsd}.
919Only the first character of @var{format} is significant; it can be
920either upper or lower case.
921
922@item -g
c1c0eb9e 923@itemx --extern-only
252b5132
RH
924@cindex external symbols
925Display only external symbols.
926
fa8f3997
NC
927@item -h
928@itemx --help
929Show a summary of the options to @command{nm} and exit.
ce3c775b 930
252b5132
RH
931@item -l
932@itemx --line-numbers
933@cindex symbol line numbers
934For each symbol, use debugging information to try to find a filename and
935line number. For a defined symbol, look for the line number of the
936address of the symbol. For an undefined symbol, look for the line
937number of a relocation entry which refers to the symbol. If line number
938information can be found, print it after the other symbol information.
939
940@item -n
941@itemx -v
c1c0eb9e 942@itemx --numeric-sort
252b5132 943Sort symbols numerically by their addresses, rather than alphabetically
c1c0eb9e 944by their names.
252b5132
RH
945
946@item -p
c1c0eb9e 947@itemx --no-sort
252b5132
RH
948@cindex sorting symbols
949Do not bother to sort the symbols in any order; print them in the order
950encountered.
951
952@item -P
953@itemx --portability
954Use the POSIX.2 standard output format instead of the default format.
955Equivalent to @samp{-f posix}.
956
fa8f3997
NC
957@item -r
958@itemx --reverse-sort
959Reverse the order of the sort (whether numeric or alphabetic); let the
960last come first.
961
72797995
L
962@item -S
963@itemx --print-size
1533edfb
AM
964Print both value and size of defined symbols for the @code{bsd} output style.
965This option has no effect for object formats that do not record symbol
966sizes, unless @samp{--size-sort} is also used in which case a
967calculated size is displayed.
72797995 968
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RH
969@item -s
970@itemx --print-armap
971@cindex symbol index, listing
972When listing symbols from archive members, include the index: a mapping
c7c55b78 973(stored in the archive by @command{ar} or @command{ranlib}) of which modules
252b5132
RH
974contain definitions for which names.
975
fa8f3997
NC
976@item -t @var{radix}
977@itemx --radix=@var{radix}
978Use @var{radix} as the radix for printing the symbol values. It must be
979@samp{d} for decimal, @samp{o} for octal, or @samp{x} for hexadecimal.
980
981@item -u
982@itemx --undefined-only
983@cindex external symbols
984@cindex undefined symbols
985Display only undefined symbols (those external to each object file).
986
987@item -V
988@itemx --version
989Show the version number of @command{nm} and exit.
990
991@item -X
992This option is ignored for compatibility with the AIX version of
993@command{nm}. It takes one parameter which must be the string
994@option{32_64}. The default mode of AIX @command{nm} corresponds
995to @option{-X 32}, which is not supported by @sc{gnu} @command{nm}.
996
997@item --defined-only
998@cindex external symbols
999@cindex undefined symbols
1000Display only defined symbols for each object file.
1001
1002@item --plugin @var{name}
1003@cindex load plugin
1004Load the plugin called @var{name} to add support for extra target
1005types. This option is only available if the toolchain has been built
1006with plugin support enabled.
252b5132
RH
1007
1008@item --size-sort
1009Sort symbols by size. The size is computed as the difference between
1010the value of the symbol and the value of the symbol with the next higher
c1c0eb9e
RM
1011value. If the @code{bsd} output format is used the size of the symbol
1012is printed, rather than the value, and @samp{-S} must be used in order
76ed1927 1013both size and value to be printed.
252b5132 1014
3c9458e9
NC
1015@item --special-syms
1016Display symbols which have a target-specific special meaning. These
1017symbols are usually used by the target for some special processing and
1018are not normally helpful when included included in the normal symbol
1019lists. For example for ARM targets this option would skip the mapping
b45619c0 1020symbols used to mark transitions between ARM code, THUMB code and
3c9458e9
NC
1021data.
1022
fa8f3997
NC
1023@item --synthetic
1024Include synthetic symbols in the output. These are special symbols
1025created by the linker for various purposes. They are not shown by
1026default since they are not part of the binary's original source code.
252b5132
RH
1027
1028@item --target=@var{bfdname}
1029@cindex object code format
1030Specify an object code format other than your system's default format.
1031@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
1032
252b5132
RH
1033@end table
1034
0285c67d
NC
1035@c man end
1036
1037@ignore
1038@c man begin SEEALSO nm
1039ar(1), objdump(1), ranlib(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
1040@c man end
1041@end ignore
1042
252b5132
RH
1043@node objcopy
1044@chapter objcopy
1045
0285c67d
NC
1046@c man title objcopy copy and translate object files
1047
252b5132 1048@smallexample
0285c67d 1049@c man begin SYNOPSIS objcopy
c7c55b78
NC
1050objcopy [@option{-F} @var{bfdname}|@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}]
1051 [@option{-I} @var{bfdname}|@option{--input-target=}@var{bfdname}]
1052 [@option{-O} @var{bfdname}|@option{--output-target=}@var{bfdname}]
1053 [@option{-B} @var{bfdarch}|@option{--binary-architecture=}@var{bfdarch}]
2593f09a
NC
1054 [@option{-S}|@option{--strip-all}]
1055 [@option{-g}|@option{--strip-debug}]
c7c55b78
NC
1056 [@option{-K} @var{symbolname}|@option{--keep-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
1057 [@option{-N} @var{symbolname}|@option{--strip-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
bcf32829 1058 [@option{--strip-unneeded-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
c7c55b78 1059 [@option{-G} @var{symbolname}|@option{--keep-global-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
d58c2e3a 1060 [@option{--localize-hidden}]
c7c55b78 1061 [@option{-L} @var{symbolname}|@option{--localize-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
7b4a0685 1062 [@option{--globalize-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
c7c55b78 1063 [@option{-W} @var{symbolname}|@option{--weaken-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
5fe11841 1064 [@option{-w}|@option{--wildcard}]
2593f09a
NC
1065 [@option{-x}|@option{--discard-all}]
1066 [@option{-X}|@option{--discard-locals}]
c7c55b78 1067 [@option{-b} @var{byte}|@option{--byte=}@var{byte}]
b7dd81f7
NC
1068 [@option{-i} [@var{breadth}]|@option{--interleave}[=@var{breadth}]]
1069 [@option{--interleave-width=}@var{width}]
2e62b721
NC
1070 [@option{-j} @var{sectionpattern}|@option{--only-section=}@var{sectionpattern}]
1071 [@option{-R} @var{sectionpattern}|@option{--remove-section=}@var{sectionpattern}]
c7c55b78 1072 [@option{-p}|@option{--preserve-dates}]
2e30cb57 1073 [@option{-D}|@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}]
955d0b3b 1074 [@option{-U}|@option{--disable-deterministic-archives}]
c7c55b78 1075 [@option{--debugging}]
2593f09a
NC
1076 [@option{--gap-fill=}@var{val}]
1077 [@option{--pad-to=}@var{address}]
1078 [@option{--set-start=}@var{val}]
1079 [@option{--adjust-start=}@var{incr}]
c7c55b78 1080 [@option{--change-addresses=}@var{incr}]
2e62b721
NC
1081 [@option{--change-section-address} @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}]
1082 [@option{--change-section-lma} @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}]
1083 [@option{--change-section-vma} @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}]
c7c55b78 1084 [@option{--change-warnings}] [@option{--no-change-warnings}]
2e62b721 1085 [@option{--set-section-flags} @var{sectionpattern}=@var{flags}]
c7c55b78
NC
1086 [@option{--add-section} @var{sectionname}=@var{filename}]
1087 [@option{--rename-section} @var{oldname}=@var{newname}[,@var{flags}]]
0408dee6 1088 [@option{--long-section-names} @{enable,disable,keep@}]
2593f09a 1089 [@option{--change-leading-char}] [@option{--remove-leading-char}]
9e48b4c6 1090 [@option{--reverse-bytes=}@var{num}]
2593f09a
NC
1091 [@option{--srec-len=}@var{ival}] [@option{--srec-forceS3}]
1092 [@option{--redefine-sym} @var{old}=@var{new}]
1093 [@option{--redefine-syms=}@var{filename}]
c7c55b78
NC
1094 [@option{--weaken}]
1095 [@option{--keep-symbols=}@var{filename}]
1096 [@option{--strip-symbols=}@var{filename}]
bcf32829 1097 [@option{--strip-unneeded-symbols=}@var{filename}]
c7c55b78
NC
1098 [@option{--keep-global-symbols=}@var{filename}]
1099 [@option{--localize-symbols=}@var{filename}]
7b4a0685 1100 [@option{--globalize-symbols=}@var{filename}]
c7c55b78 1101 [@option{--weaken-symbols=}@var{filename}]
c51238bc
DA
1102 [@option{--alt-machine-code=}@var{index}]
1103 [@option{--prefix-symbols=}@var{string}]
1104 [@option{--prefix-sections=}@var{string}]
1105 [@option{--prefix-alloc-sections=}@var{string}]
ed1653a7 1106 [@option{--add-gnu-debuglink=}@var{path-to-file}]
1637cd90 1107 [@option{--keep-file-symbols}]
ed1653a7 1108 [@option{--only-keep-debug}]
96109726
CC
1109 [@option{--strip-dwo}]
1110 [@option{--extract-dwo}]
d3e52d40 1111 [@option{--extract-symbol}]
4087920c
MR
1112 [@option{--writable-text}]
1113 [@option{--readonly-text}]
1114 [@option{--pure}]
1115 [@option{--impure}]
92dd4511
L
1116 [@option{--file-alignment=}@var{num}]
1117 [@option{--heap=}@var{size}]
1118 [@option{--image-base=}@var{address}]
1119 [@option{--section-alignment=}@var{num}]
1120 [@option{--stack=}@var{size}]
1121 [@option{--subsystem=}@var{which}:@var{major}.@var{minor}]
4a114e3e
L
1122 [@option{--compress-debug-sections}]
1123 [@option{--decompress-debug-sections}]
fd2f0033
TT
1124 [@option{--dwarf-depth=@var{n}}]
1125 [@option{--dwarf-start=@var{n}}]
c7c55b78 1126 [@option{-v}|@option{--verbose}]
c1c0eb9e 1127 [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
7c29036b 1128 [@option{--help}] [@option{--info}]
252b5132 1129 @var{infile} [@var{outfile}]
0285c67d 1130@c man end
252b5132
RH
1131@end smallexample
1132
0285c67d 1133@c man begin DESCRIPTION objcopy
c7c55b78
NC
1134The @sc{gnu} @command{objcopy} utility copies the contents of an object
1135file to another. @command{objcopy} uses the @sc{gnu} @sc{bfd} Library to
252b5132
RH
1136read and write the object files. It can write the destination object
1137file in a format different from that of the source object file. The
c7c55b78
NC
1138exact behavior of @command{objcopy} is controlled by command-line options.
1139Note that @command{objcopy} should be able to copy a fully linked file
ccd13d18
L
1140between any two formats. However, copying a relocatable object file
1141between any two formats may not work as expected.
252b5132 1142
c7c55b78
NC
1143@command{objcopy} creates temporary files to do its translations and
1144deletes them afterward. @command{objcopy} uses @sc{bfd} to do all its
252b5132
RH
1145translation work; it has access to all the formats described in @sc{bfd}
1146and thus is able to recognize most formats without being told
1147explicitly. @xref{BFD,,BFD,ld.info,Using LD}.
1148
c7c55b78 1149@command{objcopy} can be used to generate S-records by using an output
252b5132
RH
1150target of @samp{srec} (e.g., use @samp{-O srec}).
1151
c7c55b78
NC
1152@command{objcopy} can be used to generate a raw binary file by using an
1153output target of @samp{binary} (e.g., use @option{-O binary}). When
1154@command{objcopy} generates a raw binary file, it will essentially produce
252b5132
RH
1155a memory dump of the contents of the input object file. All symbols and
1156relocation information will be discarded. The memory dump will start at
1157the load address of the lowest section copied into the output file.
1158
1159When generating an S-record or a raw binary file, it may be helpful to
c7c55b78
NC
1160use @option{-S} to remove sections containing debugging information. In
1161some cases @option{-R} will be useful to remove sections which contain
f20a759a 1162information that is not needed by the binary file.
252b5132 1163
947ed062
NC
1164Note---@command{objcopy} is not able to change the endianness of its input
1165files. If the input format has an endianness (some formats do not),
c7c55b78 1166@command{objcopy} can only copy the inputs into file formats that have the
947ed062 1167same endianness or which have no endianness (e.g., @samp{srec}).
9e48b4c6 1168(However, see the @option{--reverse-bytes} option.)
18356cf2 1169
0285c67d
NC
1170@c man end
1171
1172@c man begin OPTIONS objcopy
1173
c7c55b78 1174@table @env
252b5132
RH
1175@item @var{infile}
1176@itemx @var{outfile}
f20a759a 1177The input and output files, respectively.
c7c55b78 1178If you do not specify @var{outfile}, @command{objcopy} creates a
252b5132
RH
1179temporary file and destructively renames the result with
1180the name of @var{infile}.
1181
c7c55b78 1182@item -I @var{bfdname}
252b5132
RH
1183@itemx --input-target=@var{bfdname}
1184Consider the source file's object format to be @var{bfdname}, rather than
1185attempting to deduce it. @xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
1186
1187@item -O @var{bfdname}
1188@itemx --output-target=@var{bfdname}
1189Write the output file using the object format @var{bfdname}.
1190@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
1191
1192@item -F @var{bfdname}
1193@itemx --target=@var{bfdname}
1194Use @var{bfdname} as the object format for both the input and the output
1195file; i.e., simply transfer data from source to destination with no
1196translation. @xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
1197
43a0748c
NC
1198@item -B @var{bfdarch}
1199@itemx --binary-architecture=@var{bfdarch}
8b31b6c4
NC
1200Useful when transforming a architecture-less input file into an object file.
1201In this case the output architecture can be set to @var{bfdarch}. This
1202option will be ignored if the input file has a known @var{bfdarch}. You
43a0748c
NC
1203can access this binary data inside a program by referencing the special
1204symbols that are created by the conversion process. These symbols are
1205called _binary_@var{objfile}_start, _binary_@var{objfile}_end and
1206_binary_@var{objfile}_size. e.g. you can transform a picture file into
c1c0eb9e 1207an object file and then access it in your code using these symbols.
43a0748c 1208
2e62b721
NC
1209@item -j @var{sectionpattern}
1210@itemx --only-section=@var{sectionpattern}
1211Copy only the indicated sections from the input file to the output file.
f91ea849 1212This option may be given more than once. Note that using this option
2e62b721
NC
1213inappropriately may make the output file unusable. Wildcard
1214characters are accepted in @var{sectionpattern}.
f91ea849 1215
2e62b721
NC
1216@item -R @var{sectionpattern}
1217@itemx --remove-section=@var{sectionpattern}
1218Remove any section matching @var{sectionpattern} from the output file.
1219This option may be given more than once. Note that using this option
1220inappropriately may make the output file unusable. Wildcard
1221characters are accepted in @var{sectionpattern}. Using both the
1222@option{-j} and @option{-R} options together results in undefined
1223behaviour.
252b5132
RH
1224
1225@item -S
1226@itemx --strip-all
1227Do not copy relocation and symbol information from the source file.
1228
1229@item -g
1230@itemx --strip-debug
2593f09a 1231Do not copy debugging symbols or sections from the source file.
252b5132
RH
1232
1233@item --strip-unneeded
1234Strip all symbols that are not needed for relocation processing.
1235
1236@item -K @var{symbolname}
1237@itemx --keep-symbol=@var{symbolname}
e7f918ad
NC
1238When stripping symbols, keep symbol @var{symbolname} even if it would
1239normally be stripped. This option may be given more than once.
252b5132
RH
1240
1241@item -N @var{symbolname}
1242@itemx --strip-symbol=@var{symbolname}
1243Do not copy symbol @var{symbolname} from the source file. This option
1244may be given more than once.
1245
bcf32829
JB
1246@item --strip-unneeded-symbol=@var{symbolname}
1247Do not copy symbol @var{symbolname} from the source file unless it is needed
1248by a relocation. This option may be given more than once.
1249
16b2b71c
NC
1250@item -G @var{symbolname}
1251@itemx --keep-global-symbol=@var{symbolname}
1252Keep only symbol @var{symbolname} global. Make all other symbols local
1253to the file, so that they are not visible externally. This option may
1254be given more than once.
1255
d58c2e3a
RS
1256@item --localize-hidden
1257In an ELF object, mark all symbols that have hidden or internal visibility
1258as local. This option applies on top of symbol-specific localization options
1259such as @option{-L}.
1260
252b5132
RH
1261@item -L @var{symbolname}
1262@itemx --localize-symbol=@var{symbolname}
1263Make symbol @var{symbolname} local to the file, so that it is not
1264visible externally. This option may be given more than once.
1265
1266@item -W @var{symbolname}
1267@itemx --weaken-symbol=@var{symbolname}
1268Make symbol @var{symbolname} weak. This option may be given more than once.
1269
7b4a0685
NC
1270@item --globalize-symbol=@var{symbolname}
1271Give symbol @var{symbolname} global scoping so that it is visible
1272outside of the file in which it is defined. This option may be given
1273more than once.
1274
5fe11841
NC
1275@item -w
1276@itemx --wildcard
1277Permit regular expressions in @var{symbolname}s used in other command
1278line options. The question mark (?), asterisk (*), backslash (\) and
1279square brackets ([]) operators can be used anywhere in the symbol
1280name. If the first character of the symbol name is the exclamation
1281point (!) then the sense of the switch is reversed for that symbol.
1282For example:
1283
1284@smallexample
1285 -w -W !foo -W fo*
1286@end smallexample
1287
1288would cause objcopy to weaken all symbols that start with ``fo''
1289except for the symbol ``foo''.
1290
252b5132
RH
1291@item -x
1292@itemx --discard-all
1293Do not copy non-global symbols from the source file.
1294@c FIXME any reason to prefer "non-global" to "local" here?
1295
1296@item -X
1297@itemx --discard-locals
1298Do not copy compiler-generated local symbols.
1299(These usually start with @samp{L} or @samp{.}.)
1300
1301@item -b @var{byte}
1302@itemx --byte=@var{byte}
b7dd81f7
NC
1303If interleaving has been enabled via the @option{--interleave} option
1304then start the range of bytes to keep at the @var{byte}th byte.
1305@var{byte} can be in the range from 0 to @var{breadth}-1, where
1306@var{breadth} is the value given by the @option{--interleave} option.
1307
1308@item -i [@var{breadth}]
1309@itemx --interleave[=@var{breadth}]
1310Only copy a range out of every @var{breadth} bytes. (Header data is
1311not affected). Select which byte in the range begins the copy with
1312the @option{--byte} option. Select the width of the range with the
1313@option{--interleave-width} option.
1314
1315This option is useful for creating files to program @sc{rom}. It is
1316typically used with an @code{srec} output target. Note that
1317@command{objcopy} will complain if you do not specify the
1318@option{--byte} option as well.
1319
1320The default interleave breadth is 4, so with @option{--byte} set to 0,
1321@command{objcopy} would copy the first byte out of every four bytes
1322from the input to the output.
1323
1324@item --interleave-width=@var{width}
1325When used with the @option{--interleave} option, copy @var{width}
1326bytes at a time. The start of the range of bytes to be copied is set
1327by the @option{--byte} option, and the extent of the range is set with
1328the @option{--interleave} option.
1329
1330The default value for this option is 1. The value of @var{width} plus
1331the @var{byte} value set by the @option{--byte} option must not exceed
1332the interleave breadth set by the @option{--interleave} option.
1333
1334This option can be used to create images for two 16-bit flashes interleaved
1335in a 32-bit bus by passing @option{-b 0 -i 4 --interleave-width=2}
1336and @option{-b 2 -i 4 --interleave-width=2} to two @command{objcopy}
1337commands. If the input was '12345678' then the outputs would be
1338'1256' and '3478' respectively.
252b5132
RH
1339
1340@item -p
1341@itemx --preserve-dates
1342Set the access and modification dates of the output file to be the same
1343as those of the input file.
1344
2e30cb57
CC
1345@item -D
1346@itemx --enable-deterministic-archives
955d0b3b
RM
1347@cindex deterministic archives
1348@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
2e30cb57
CC
1349Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. When copying archive members
1350and writing the archive index, use zero for UIDs, GIDs, timestamps,
1351and use consistent file modes for all files.
1352
955d0b3b
RM
1353If @file{binutils} was configured with
1354@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by default.
1355It can be disabled with the @samp{-U} option, below.
1356
1357@item -U
1358@itemx --disable-deterministic-archives
1359@cindex deterministic archives
1360@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
1361Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the
1362inverse of the @option{-D} option, above: when copying archive members
1363and writing the archive index, use their actual UID, GID, timestamp,
1364and file mode values.
1365
1366This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with
1367@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}.
1368
252b5132
RH
1369@item --debugging
1370Convert debugging information, if possible. This is not the default
1371because only certain debugging formats are supported, and the
1372conversion process can be time consuming.
1373
1374@item --gap-fill @var{val}
1375Fill gaps between sections with @var{val}. This operation applies to
1376the @emph{load address} (LMA) of the sections. It is done by increasing
1377the size of the section with the lower address, and filling in the extra
1378space created with @var{val}.
1379
1380@item --pad-to @var{address}
1381Pad the output file up to the load address @var{address}. This is
1382done by increasing the size of the last section. The extra space is
c7c55b78 1383filled in with the value specified by @option{--gap-fill} (default zero).
252b5132
RH
1384
1385@item --set-start @var{val}
f20a759a 1386Set the start address of the new file to @var{val}. Not all object file
252b5132
RH
1387formats support setting the start address.
1388
1389@item --change-start @var{incr}
1390@itemx --adjust-start @var{incr}
1391@cindex changing start address
1392Change the start address by adding @var{incr}. Not all object file
1393formats support setting the start address.
1394
1395@item --change-addresses @var{incr}
1396@itemx --adjust-vma @var{incr}
1397@cindex changing object addresses
1398Change the VMA and LMA addresses of all sections, as well as the start
1399address, by adding @var{incr}. Some object file formats do not permit
1400section addresses to be changed arbitrarily. Note that this does not
1401relocate the sections; if the program expects sections to be loaded at a
1402certain address, and this option is used to change the sections such
c1c0eb9e 1403that they are loaded at a different address, the program may fail.
252b5132 1404
2e62b721
NC
1405@item --change-section-address @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}
1406@itemx --adjust-section-vma @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}
252b5132 1407@cindex changing section address
2e62b721
NC
1408Set or change both the VMA address and the LMA address of any section
1409matching @var{sectionpattern}. If @samp{=} is used, the section
1410address is set to @var{val}. Otherwise, @var{val} is added to or
1411subtracted from the section address. See the comments under
1412@option{--change-addresses}, above. If @var{sectionpattern} does not
1413match any sections in the input file, a warning will be issued, unless
1414@option{--no-change-warnings} is used.
252b5132 1415
2e62b721 1416@item --change-section-lma @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}
252b5132 1417@cindex changing section LMA
2e62b721
NC
1418Set or change the LMA address of any sections matching
1419@var{sectionpattern}. The LMA address is the address where the
1420section will be loaded into memory at program load time. Normally
1421this is the same as the VMA address, which is the address of the
1422section at program run time, but on some systems, especially those
1423where a program is held in ROM, the two can be different. If @samp{=}
1424is used, the section address is set to @var{val}. Otherwise,
1425@var{val} is added to or subtracted from the section address. See the
1426comments under @option{--change-addresses}, above. If
1427@var{sectionpattern} does not match any sections in the input file, a
1428warning will be issued, unless @option{--no-change-warnings} is used.
1429
1430@item --change-section-vma @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}
1431@cindex changing section VMA
1432Set or change the VMA address of any section matching
1433@var{sectionpattern}. The VMA address is the address where the
1434section will be located once the program has started executing.
1435Normally this is the same as the LMA address, which is the address
1436where the section will be loaded into memory, but on some systems,
252b5132
RH
1437especially those where a program is held in ROM, the two can be
1438different. If @samp{=} is used, the section address is set to
1439@var{val}. Otherwise, @var{val} is added to or subtracted from the
c7c55b78 1440section address. See the comments under @option{--change-addresses},
2e62b721
NC
1441above. If @var{sectionpattern} does not match any sections in the
1442input file, a warning will be issued, unless
c1c0eb9e 1443@option{--no-change-warnings} is used.
252b5132
RH
1444
1445@item --change-warnings
1446@itemx --adjust-warnings
c7c55b78 1447If @option{--change-section-address} or @option{--change-section-lma} or
2e62b721
NC
1448@option{--change-section-vma} is used, and the section pattern does not
1449match any sections, issue a warning. This is the default.
252b5132
RH
1450
1451@item --no-change-warnings
1452@itemx --no-adjust-warnings
c7c55b78
NC
1453Do not issue a warning if @option{--change-section-address} or
1454@option{--adjust-section-lma} or @option{--adjust-section-vma} is used, even
2e62b721
NC
1455if the section pattern does not match any sections.
1456
1457@item --set-section-flags @var{sectionpattern}=@var{flags}
1458Set the flags for any sections matching @var{sectionpattern}. The
1459@var{flags} argument is a comma separated string of flag names. The
1460recognized names are @samp{alloc}, @samp{contents}, @samp{load},
1461@samp{noload}, @samp{readonly}, @samp{code}, @samp{data}, @samp{rom},
1462@samp{share}, and @samp{debug}. You can set the @samp{contents} flag
1463for a section which does not have contents, but it is not meaningful
1464to clear the @samp{contents} flag of a section which does have
1465contents--just remove the section instead. Not all flags are
1466meaningful for all object file formats.
252b5132
RH
1467
1468@item --add-section @var{sectionname}=@var{filename}
1469Add a new section named @var{sectionname} while copying the file. The
1470contents of the new section are taken from the file @var{filename}. The
1471size of the section will be the size of the file. This option only
1472works on file formats which can support sections with arbitrary names.
1473
594ef5db
NC
1474@item --rename-section @var{oldname}=@var{newname}[,@var{flags}]
1475Rename a section from @var{oldname} to @var{newname}, optionally
1476changing the section's flags to @var{flags} in the process. This has
1477the advantage over usng a linker script to perform the rename in that
1478the output stays as an object file and does not become a linked
1479executable.
1480
1481This option is particularly helpful when the input format is binary,
1482since this will always create a section called .data. If for example,
1483you wanted instead to create a section called .rodata containing binary
1484data you could use the following command line to achieve it:
1485
1486@smallexample
1487 objcopy -I binary -O <output_format> -B <architecture> \
1488 --rename-section .data=.rodata,alloc,load,readonly,data,contents \
1489 <input_binary_file> <output_object_file>
1490@end smallexample
1491
0408dee6
DK
1492@item --long-section-names @{enable,disable,keep@}
1493Controls the handling of long section names when processing @code{COFF}
1494and @code{PE-COFF} object formats. The default behaviour, @samp{keep},
1495is to preserve long section names if any are present in the input file.
1496The @samp{enable} and @samp{disable} options forcibly enable or disable
1497the use of long section names in the output object; when @samp{disable}
1498is in effect, any long section names in the input object will be truncated.
1499The @samp{enable} option will only emit long section names if any are
1500present in the inputs; this is mostly the same as @samp{keep}, but it
b3364cb9 1501is left undefined whether the @samp{enable} option might force the
0408dee6
DK
1502creation of an empty string table in the output file.
1503
252b5132
RH
1504@item --change-leading-char
1505Some object file formats use special characters at the start of
1506symbols. The most common such character is underscore, which compilers
c7c55b78 1507often add before every symbol. This option tells @command{objcopy} to
252b5132
RH
1508change the leading character of every symbol when it converts between
1509object file formats. If the object file formats use the same leading
1510character, this option has no effect. Otherwise, it will add a
1511character, or remove a character, or change a character, as
1512appropriate.
1513
1514@item --remove-leading-char
1515If the first character of a global symbol is a special symbol leading
1516character used by the object file format, remove the character. The
1517most common symbol leading character is underscore. This option will
1518remove a leading underscore from all global symbols. This can be useful
1519if you want to link together objects of different file formats with
1520different conventions for symbol names. This is different from
c7c55b78 1521@option{--change-leading-char} because it always changes the symbol name
252b5132
RH
1522when appropriate, regardless of the object file format of the output
1523file.
1524
9e48b4c6
NC
1525@item --reverse-bytes=@var{num}
1526Reverse the bytes in a section with output contents. A section length must
1527be evenly divisible by the value given in order for the swap to be able to
1528take place. Reversing takes place before the interleaving is performed.
1529
1530This option is used typically in generating ROM images for problematic
1531target systems. For example, on some target boards, the 32-bit words
1532fetched from 8-bit ROMs are re-assembled in little-endian byte order
1533regardless of the CPU byte order. Depending on the programming model, the
1534endianness of the ROM may need to be modified.
1535
1536Consider a simple file with a section containing the following eight
1537bytes: @code{12345678}.
1538
1539Using @samp{--reverse-bytes=2} for the above example, the bytes in the
1540output file would be ordered @code{21436587}.
1541
1542Using @samp{--reverse-bytes=4} for the above example, the bytes in the
1543output file would be ordered @code{43218765}.
1544
1545By using @samp{--reverse-bytes=2} for the above example, followed by
1546@samp{--reverse-bytes=4} on the output file, the bytes in the second
1547output file would be ordered @code{34127856}.
1548
420496c1
NC
1549@item --srec-len=@var{ival}
1550Meaningful only for srec output. Set the maximum length of the Srecords
1551being produced to @var{ival}. This length covers both address, data and
1552crc fields.
1553
1554@item --srec-forceS3
c1c0eb9e 1555Meaningful only for srec output. Avoid generation of S1/S2 records,
420496c1
NC
1556creating S3-only record format.
1557
57938635
AM
1558@item --redefine-sym @var{old}=@var{new}
1559Change the name of a symbol @var{old}, to @var{new}. This can be useful
1560when one is trying link two things together for which you have no
1561source, and there are name collisions.
1562
92991082
JT
1563@item --redefine-syms=@var{filename}
1564Apply @option{--redefine-sym} to each symbol pair "@var{old} @var{new}"
1565listed in the file @var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file,
1566with one symbol pair per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash
1567character. This option may be given more than once.
1568
252b5132
RH
1569@item --weaken
1570Change all global symbols in the file to be weak. This can be useful
1571when building an object which will be linked against other objects using
c7c55b78 1572the @option{-R} option to the linker. This option is only effective when
252b5132
RH
1573using an object file format which supports weak symbols.
1574
16b2b71c 1575@item --keep-symbols=@var{filename}
c7c55b78 1576Apply @option{--keep-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file
16b2b71c
NC
1577@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol
1578name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character.
1579This option may be given more than once.
1580
1581@item --strip-symbols=@var{filename}
c7c55b78 1582Apply @option{--strip-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file
16b2b71c
NC
1583@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol
1584name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character.
1585This option may be given more than once.
1586
bcf32829
JB
1587@item --strip-unneeded-symbols=@var{filename}
1588Apply @option{--strip-unneeded-symbol} option to each symbol listed in
1589the file @var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one
1590symbol name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash
1591character. This option may be given more than once.
1592
16b2b71c 1593@item --keep-global-symbols=@var{filename}
c7c55b78 1594Apply @option{--keep-global-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the
16b2b71c
NC
1595file @var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one
1596symbol name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash
1597character. This option may be given more than once.
1598
1599@item --localize-symbols=@var{filename}
c7c55b78 1600Apply @option{--localize-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file
16b2b71c
NC
1601@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol
1602name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character.
1603This option may be given more than once.
1604
7b4a0685
NC
1605@item --globalize-symbols=@var{filename}
1606Apply @option{--globalize-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file
1607@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol
1608name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character.
1609This option may be given more than once.
1610
16b2b71c 1611@item --weaken-symbols=@var{filename}
c7c55b78 1612Apply @option{--weaken-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file
16b2b71c
NC
1613@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol
1614name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character.
1615This option may be given more than once.
1616
1ae8b3d2
AO
1617@item --alt-machine-code=@var{index}
1618If the output architecture has alternate machine codes, use the
1619@var{index}th code instead of the default one. This is useful in case
c1c0eb9e 1620a machine is assigned an official code and the tool-chain adopts the
1ae8b3d2 1621new code, but other applications still depend on the original code
f9d4ad2a
NC
1622being used. For ELF based architectures if the @var{index}
1623alternative does not exist then the value is treated as an absolute
1624number to be stored in the e_machine field of the ELF header.
1ae8b3d2 1625
4087920c
MR
1626@item --writable-text
1627Mark the output text as writable. This option isn't meaningful for all
1628object file formats.
1629
1630@item --readonly-text
1631Make the output text write protected. This option isn't meaningful for all
1632object file formats.
1633
1634@item --pure
1635Mark the output file as demand paged. This option isn't meaningful for all
1636object file formats.
1637
1638@item --impure
1639Mark the output file as impure. This option isn't meaningful for all
1640object file formats.
1641
d7fb0dd2
NC
1642@item --prefix-symbols=@var{string}
1643Prefix all symbols in the output file with @var{string}.
1644
1645@item --prefix-sections=@var{string}
1646Prefix all section names in the output file with @var{string}.
1647
1648@item --prefix-alloc-sections=@var{string}
1649Prefix all the names of all allocated sections in the output file with
1650@var{string}.
1651
ed1653a7
NC
1652@item --add-gnu-debuglink=@var{path-to-file}
1653Creates a .gnu_debuglink section which contains a reference to @var{path-to-file}
1654and adds it to the output file.
1655
1637cd90
JB
1656@item --keep-file-symbols
1657When stripping a file, perhaps with @option{--strip-debug} or
1658@option{--strip-unneeded}, retain any symbols specifying source file names,
1659which would otherwise get stripped.
1660
ed1653a7 1661@item --only-keep-debug
36d3b955
MR
1662Strip a file, removing contents of any sections that would not be
1663stripped by @option{--strip-debug} and leaving the debugging sections
c1c0eb9e 1664intact. In ELF files, this preserves all note sections in the output.
ed1653a7
NC
1665
1666The intention is that this option will be used in conjunction with
1667@option{--add-gnu-debuglink} to create a two part executable. One a
1668stripped binary which will occupy less space in RAM and in a
1669distribution and the second a debugging information file which is only
1670needed if debugging abilities are required. The suggested procedure
1671to create these files is as follows:
1672
b96fec5e
DK
1673@enumerate
1674@item Link the executable as normal. Assuming that is is called
1675@code{foo} then...
1676@item Run @code{objcopy --only-keep-debug foo foo.dbg} to
1677create a file containing the debugging info.
1678@item Run @code{objcopy --strip-debug foo} to create a
1679stripped executable.
1680@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.dbg foo}
1681to add a link to the debugging info into the stripped executable.
1682@end enumerate
1683
1684Note---the choice of @code{.dbg} as an extension for the debug info
1685file is arbitrary. Also the @code{--only-keep-debug} step is
1686optional. You could instead do this:
1687
1688@enumerate
1689@item Link the executable as normal.
1690@item Copy @code{foo} to @code{foo.full}
1691@item Run @code{objcopy --strip-debug foo}
1692@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.full foo}
1693@end enumerate
1694
1695i.e., the file pointed to by the @option{--add-gnu-debuglink} can be the
1696full executable. It does not have to be a file created by the
1697@option{--only-keep-debug} switch.
1698
1699Note---this switch is only intended for use on fully linked files. It
1700does not make sense to use it on object files where the debugging
1701information may be incomplete. Besides the gnu_debuglink feature
1702currently only supports the presence of one filename containing
1703debugging information, not multiple filenames on a one-per-object-file
1704basis.
1705
96109726
CC
1706@item --strip-dwo
1707Remove the contents of all DWARF .dwo sections, leaving the
1708remaining debugging sections and all symbols intact.
1709This option is intended for use by the compiler as part of
1710the @option{-gsplit-dwarf} option, which splits debug information
1711between the .o file and a separate .dwo file. The compiler
1712generates all debug information in the same file, then uses
1713the @option{--extract-dwo} option to copy the .dwo sections to
1714the .dwo file, then the @option{--strip-dwo} option to remove
1715those sections from the original .o file.
1716
1717@item --extract-dwo
1718Extract the contents of all DWARF .dwo sections. See the
1719@option{--strip-dwo} option for more information.
1720
92dd4511
L
1721@item --file-alignment @var{num}
1722Specify the file alignment. Sections in the file will always begin at
1723file offsets which are multiples of this number. This defaults to
1724512.
1725[This option is specific to PE targets.]
1726
1727@item --heap @var{reserve}
1728@itemx --heap @var{reserve},@var{commit}
1729Specify the number of bytes of memory to reserve (and optionally commit)
1730to be used as heap for this program.
1731[This option is specific to PE targets.]
1732
1733@item --image-base @var{value}
1734Use @var{value} as the base address of your program or dll. This is
1735the lowest memory location that will be used when your program or dll
1736is loaded. To reduce the need to relocate and improve performance of
1737your dlls, each should have a unique base address and not overlap any
1738other dlls. The default is 0x400000 for executables, and 0x10000000
1739for dlls.
1740[This option is specific to PE targets.]
1741
1742@item --section-alignment @var{num}
1743Sets the section alignment. Sections in memory will always begin at
1744addresses which are a multiple of this number. Defaults to 0x1000.
1745[This option is specific to PE targets.]
1746
1747@item --stack @var{reserve}
1748@itemx --stack @var{reserve},@var{commit}
1749Specify the number of bytes of memory to reserve (and optionally commit)
1750to be used as stack for this program.
1751[This option is specific to PE targets.]
1752
1753@item --subsystem @var{which}
1754@itemx --subsystem @var{which}:@var{major}
1755@itemx --subsystem @var{which}:@var{major}.@var{minor}
1756Specifies the subsystem under which your program will execute. The
1757legal values for @var{which} are @code{native}, @code{windows},
1758@code{console}, @code{posix}, @code{efi-app}, @code{efi-bsd},
d9118602 1759@code{efi-rtd}, @code{sal-rtd}, and @code{xbox}. You may optionally set
92dd4511
L
1760the subsystem version also. Numeric values are also accepted for
1761@var{which}.
1762[This option is specific to PE targets.]
1763
d3e52d40
RS
1764@item --extract-symbol
1765Keep the file's section flags and symbols but remove all section data.
1766Specifically, the option:
1767
1768@itemize
d3e52d40
RS
1769@item removes the contents of all sections;
1770@item sets the size of every section to zero; and
1771@item sets the file's start address to zero.
1772@end itemize
c1c0eb9e 1773
d3e52d40
RS
1774This option is used to build a @file{.sym} file for a VxWorks kernel.
1775It can also be a useful way of reducing the size of a @option{--just-symbols}
1776linker input file.
1777
4a114e3e
L
1778@item --compress-debug-sections
1779Compress DWARF debug sections using zlib.
1780
1781@item --decompress-debug-sections
1782Decompress DWARF debug sections using zlib.
1783
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RH
1784@item -V
1785@itemx --version
c7c55b78 1786Show the version number of @command{objcopy}.
252b5132
RH
1787
1788@item -v
1789@itemx --verbose
1790Verbose output: list all object files modified. In the case of
1791archives, @samp{objcopy -V} lists all members of the archive.
1792
1793@item --help
c7c55b78 1794Show a summary of the options to @command{objcopy}.
7c29036b
NC
1795
1796@item --info
1797Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available.
252b5132
RH
1798@end table
1799
0285c67d
NC
1800@c man end
1801
1802@ignore
1803@c man begin SEEALSO objcopy
1804ld(1), objdump(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
1805@c man end
1806@end ignore
1807
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RH
1808@node objdump
1809@chapter objdump
1810
1811@cindex object file information
1812@kindex objdump
1813
0285c67d
NC
1814@c man title objdump display information from object files.
1815
252b5132 1816@smallexample
0285c67d 1817@c man begin SYNOPSIS objdump
c7c55b78
NC
1818objdump [@option{-a}|@option{--archive-headers}]
1819 [@option{-b} @var{bfdname}|@option{--target=@var{bfdname}}]
1820 [@option{-C}|@option{--demangle}[=@var{style}] ]
1821 [@option{-d}|@option{--disassemble}]
1822 [@option{-D}|@option{--disassemble-all}]
1823 [@option{-z}|@option{--disassemble-zeroes}]
1824 [@option{-EB}|@option{-EL}|@option{--endian=}@{big | little @}]
1825 [@option{-f}|@option{--file-headers}]
98ec6e72 1826 [@option{-F}|@option{--file-offsets}]
c7c55b78
NC
1827 [@option{--file-start-context}]
1828 [@option{-g}|@option{--debugging}]
51cdc6e0 1829 [@option{-e}|@option{--debugging-tags}]
c7c55b78
NC
1830 [@option{-h}|@option{--section-headers}|@option{--headers}]
1831 [@option{-i}|@option{--info}]
1832 [@option{-j} @var{section}|@option{--section=}@var{section}]
1833 [@option{-l}|@option{--line-numbers}]
1834 [@option{-S}|@option{--source}]
1835 [@option{-m} @var{machine}|@option{--architecture=}@var{machine}]
1836 [@option{-M} @var{options}|@option{--disassembler-options=}@var{options}]
1837 [@option{-p}|@option{--private-headers}]
6abcee90 1838 [@option{-P} @var{options}|@option{--private=}@var{options}]
c7c55b78
NC
1839 [@option{-r}|@option{--reloc}]
1840 [@option{-R}|@option{--dynamic-reloc}]
1841 [@option{-s}|@option{--full-contents}]
f9f0e732 1842 [@option{-W[lLiaprmfFsoRt]}|
5bbdf3d5 1843 @option{--dwarf}[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index]]
c7c55b78
NC
1844 [@option{-G}|@option{--stabs}]
1845 [@option{-t}|@option{--syms}]
1846 [@option{-T}|@option{--dynamic-syms}]
1847 [@option{-x}|@option{--all-headers}]
1848 [@option{-w}|@option{--wide}]
1849 [@option{--start-address=}@var{address}]
1850 [@option{--stop-address=}@var{address}]
1851 [@option{--prefix-addresses}]
1852 [@option{--[no-]show-raw-insn}]
1853 [@option{--adjust-vma=}@var{offset}]
3c9458e9 1854 [@option{--special-syms}]
0dafdf3f
L
1855 [@option{--prefix=}@var{prefix}]
1856 [@option{--prefix-strip=}@var{level}]
3dcb3fcb 1857 [@option{--insn-width=}@var{width}]
c7c55b78
NC
1858 [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
1859 [@option{-H}|@option{--help}]
252b5132 1860 @var{objfile}@dots{}
0285c67d 1861@c man end
252b5132
RH
1862@end smallexample
1863
0285c67d
NC
1864@c man begin DESCRIPTION objdump
1865
c7c55b78 1866@command{objdump} displays information about one or more object files.
252b5132
RH
1867The options control what particular information to display. This
1868information is mostly useful to programmers who are working on the
1869compilation tools, as opposed to programmers who just want their
1870program to compile and work.
1871
1872@var{objfile}@dots{} are the object files to be examined. When you
c7c55b78 1873specify archives, @command{objdump} shows information on each of the member
252b5132
RH
1874object files.
1875
0285c67d
NC
1876@c man end
1877
1878@c man begin OPTIONS objdump
1879
252b5132 1880The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are
1dada9c5 1881equivalent. At least one option from the list
6abcee90 1882@option{-a,-d,-D,-e,-f,-g,-G,-h,-H,-p,-P,-r,-R,-s,-S,-t,-T,-V,-x} must be given.
252b5132 1883
c7c55b78 1884@table @env
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1885@item -a
1886@itemx --archive-header
1887@cindex archive headers
1888If any of the @var{objfile} files are archives, display the archive
1889header information (in a format similar to @samp{ls -l}). Besides the
1890information you could list with @samp{ar tv}, @samp{objdump -a} shows
1891the object file format of each archive member.
1892
1893@item --adjust-vma=@var{offset}
1894@cindex section addresses in objdump
1895@cindex VMA in objdump
1896When dumping information, first add @var{offset} to all the section
1897addresses. This is useful if the section addresses do not correspond to
1898the symbol table, which can happen when putting sections at particular
1899addresses when using a format which can not represent section addresses,
1900such as a.out.
1901
1902@item -b @var{bfdname}
1903@itemx --target=@var{bfdname}
1904@cindex object code format
1905Specify that the object-code format for the object files is
1906@var{bfdname}. This option may not be necessary; @var{objdump} can
1907automatically recognize many formats.
1908
1909For example,
1910@example
1911objdump -b oasys -m vax -h fu.o
1912@end example
1913@noindent
c7c55b78
NC
1914displays summary information from the section headers (@option{-h}) of
1915@file{fu.o}, which is explicitly identified (@option{-m}) as a VAX object
252b5132 1916file in the format produced by Oasys compilers. You can list the
c7c55b78 1917formats available with the @option{-i} option.
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RH
1918@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
1919
1920@item -C
28c309a2 1921@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}]
252b5132
RH
1922@cindex demangling in objdump
1923Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names.
1924Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this
28c309a2 1925makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different
c1c0eb9e
RM
1926mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to
1927choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. @xref{c++filt},
28c309a2 1928for more information on demangling.
252b5132 1929
947ed062
NC
1930@item -g
1931@itemx --debugging
b922d590
NC
1932Display debugging information. This attempts to parse STABS and IEEE
1933debugging format information stored in the file and print it out using
1934a C like syntax. If neither of these formats are found this option
1935falls back on the @option{-W} option to print any DWARF information in
1936the file.
252b5132 1937
51cdc6e0
NC
1938@item -e
1939@itemx --debugging-tags
1940Like @option{-g}, but the information is generated in a format compatible
1941with ctags tool.
1942
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RH
1943@item -d
1944@itemx --disassemble
1945@cindex disassembling object code
1946@cindex machine instructions
1947Display the assembler mnemonics for the machine instructions from
1948@var{objfile}. This option only disassembles those sections which are
1949expected to contain instructions.
1950
1951@item -D
1952@itemx --disassemble-all
c7c55b78 1953Like @option{-d}, but disassemble the contents of all sections, not just
252b5132
RH
1954those expected to contain instructions.
1955
0313a2b8
NC
1956If the target is an ARM architecture this switch also has the effect
1957of forcing the disassembler to decode pieces of data found in code
1958sections as if they were instructions.
1959
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RH
1960@item --prefix-addresses
1961When disassembling, print the complete address on each line. This is
1962the older disassembly format.
1963
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RH
1964@item -EB
1965@itemx -EL
1966@itemx --endian=@{big|little@}
1967@cindex endianness
1968@cindex disassembly endianness
1969Specify the endianness of the object files. This only affects
1970disassembly. This can be useful when disassembling a file format which
1971does not describe endianness information, such as S-records.
1972
1973@item -f
947ed062 1974@itemx --file-headers
252b5132
RH
1975@cindex object file header
1976Display summary information from the overall header of
1977each of the @var{objfile} files.
1978
98ec6e72
NC
1979@item -F
1980@itemx --file-offsets
1981@cindex object file offsets
1982When disassembling sections, whenever a symbol is displayed, also
1983display the file offset of the region of data that is about to be
1984dumped. If zeroes are being skipped, then when disassembly resumes,
1985tell the user how many zeroes were skipped and the file offset of the
32760852
NC
1986location from where the disassembly resumes. When dumping sections,
1987display the file offset of the location from where the dump starts.
98ec6e72 1988
f1563258
TW
1989@item --file-start-context
1990@cindex source code context
1991Specify that when displaying interlisted source code/disassembly
c7c55b78 1992(assumes @option{-S}) from a file that has not yet been displayed, extend the
f1563258
TW
1993context to the start of the file.
1994
252b5132 1995@item -h
947ed062
NC
1996@itemx --section-headers
1997@itemx --headers
252b5132
RH
1998@cindex section headers
1999Display summary information from the section headers of the
2000object file.
2001
2002File segments may be relocated to nonstandard addresses, for example by
c7c55b78
NC
2003using the @option{-Ttext}, @option{-Tdata}, or @option{-Tbss} options to
2004@command{ld}. However, some object file formats, such as a.out, do not
252b5132 2005store the starting address of the file segments. In those situations,
c7c55b78 2006although @command{ld} relocates the sections correctly, using @samp{objdump
252b5132
RH
2007-h} to list the file section headers cannot show the correct addresses.
2008Instead, it shows the usual addresses, which are implicit for the
2009target.
2010
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2011@item -H
2012@itemx --help
c7c55b78 2013Print a summary of the options to @command{objdump} and exit.
252b5132
RH
2014
2015@item -i
2016@itemx --info
2017@cindex architectures available
2018@cindex object formats available
2019Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available
c7c55b78 2020for specification with @option{-b} or @option{-m}.
252b5132
RH
2021
2022@item -j @var{name}
2023@itemx --section=@var{name}
2024@cindex section information
2025Display information only for section @var{name}.
2026
2027@item -l
2028@itemx --line-numbers
2029@cindex source filenames for object files
2030Label the display (using debugging information) with the filename and
2031source line numbers corresponding to the object code or relocs shown.
c7c55b78 2032Only useful with @option{-d}, @option{-D}, or @option{-r}.
252b5132
RH
2033
2034@item -m @var{machine}
2035@itemx --architecture=@var{machine}
2036@cindex architecture
2037@cindex disassembly architecture
2038Specify the architecture to use when disassembling object files. This
2039can be useful when disassembling object files which do not describe
2040architecture information, such as S-records. You can list the available
c7c55b78 2041architectures with the @option{-i} option.
252b5132 2042
0313a2b8
NC
2043If the target is an ARM architecture then this switch has an
2044additional effect. It restricts the disassembly to only those
2045instructions supported by the architecture specified by @var{machine}.
2046If it is necessary to use this switch because the input file does not
2047contain any architecture information, but it is also desired to
2048disassemble all the instructions use @option{-marm}.
2049
dd92f639
NC
2050@item -M @var{options}
2051@itemx --disassembler-options=@var{options}
2052Pass target specific information to the disassembler. Only supported on
31e0f3cd
NC
2053some targets. If it is necessary to specify more than one
2054disassembler option then multiple @option{-M} options can be used or
2055can be placed together into a comma separated list.
dd92f639
NC
2056
2057If the target is an ARM architecture then this switch can be used to
2058select which register name set is used during disassembler. Specifying
9c092ace 2059@option{-M reg-names-std} (the default) will select the register names as
58efb6c0
NC
2060used in ARM's instruction set documentation, but with register 13 called
2061'sp', register 14 called 'lr' and register 15 called 'pc'. Specifying
c7c55b78
NC
2062@option{-M reg-names-apcs} will select the name set used by the ARM
2063Procedure Call Standard, whilst specifying @option{-M reg-names-raw} will
58efb6c0
NC
2064just use @samp{r} followed by the register number.
2065
2066There are also two variants on the APCS register naming scheme enabled
c7c55b78
NC
2067by @option{-M reg-names-atpcs} and @option{-M reg-names-special-atpcs} which
2068use the ARM/Thumb Procedure Call Standard naming conventions. (Either
947ed062 2069with the normal register names or the special register names).
dd92f639 2070
8f915f68 2071This option can also be used for ARM architectures to force the
c36774d6 2072disassembler to interpret all instructions as Thumb instructions by
c7c55b78 2073using the switch @option{--disassembler-options=force-thumb}. This can be
8f915f68
NC
2074useful when attempting to disassemble thumb code produced by other
2075compilers.
2076
e396998b
AM
2077For the x86, some of the options duplicate functions of the @option{-m}
2078switch, but allow finer grained control. Multiple selections from the
2079following may be specified as a comma separated string.
b89e9eae 2080@option{x86-64}, @option{i386} and @option{i8086} select disassembly for
e396998b 2081the given architecture. @option{intel} and @option{att} select between
9d141669
L
2082intel syntax mode and AT&T syntax mode.
2083@option{intel-mnemonic} and @option{att-mnemonic} select between
2084intel mnemonic mode and AT&T mnemonic mode. @option{intel-mnemonic}
2085implies @option{intel} and @option{att-mnemonic} implies @option{att}.
2086@option{addr64}, @option{addr32},
e396998b
AM
2087@option{addr16}, @option{data32} and @option{data16} specify the default
2088address size and operand size. These four options will be overridden if
b89e9eae 2089@option{x86-64}, @option{i386} or @option{i8086} appear later in the
e396998b 2090option string. Lastly, @option{suffix}, when in AT&T mode,
b9e5d8e5 2091instructs the disassembler to print a mnemonic suffix even when the
e396998b
AM
2092suffix could be inferred by the operands.
2093
2f3bb96a
BE
2094For PowerPC, @option{booke} controls the disassembly of BookE
2095instructions. @option{32} and @option{64} select PowerPC and
2096PowerPC64 disassembly, respectively. @option{e300} selects
2097disassembly for the e300 family. @option{440} selects disassembly for
2098the PowerPC 440. @option{ppcps} selects disassembly for the paired
2099single instructions of the PPC750CL.
802a735e 2100
b45619c0 2101For MIPS, this option controls the printing of instruction mnemonic
e39893d7
FF
2102names and register names in disassembled instructions. Multiple
2103selections from the following may be specified as a comma separated
2104string, and invalid options are ignored:
640c0ccd
CD
2105
2106@table @code
e39893d7 2107@item no-aliases
b45619c0
NC
2108Print the 'raw' instruction mnemonic instead of some pseudo
2109instruction mnemonic. I.e., print 'daddu' or 'or' instead of 'move',
e39893d7
FF
2110'sll' instead of 'nop', etc.
2111
b015e599
AP
2112@item virt
2113Disassemble the virtualization ASE instructions.
2114
640c0ccd
CD
2115@item gpr-names=@var{ABI}
2116Print GPR (general-purpose register) names as appropriate
2117for the specified ABI. By default, GPR names are selected according to
2118the ABI of the binary being disassembled.
2119
2120@item fpr-names=@var{ABI}
2121Print FPR (floating-point register) names as
2122appropriate for the specified ABI. By default, FPR numbers are printed
2123rather than names.
2124
2125@item cp0-names=@var{ARCH}
2126Print CP0 (system control coprocessor; coprocessor 0) register names
2127as appropriate for the CPU or architecture specified by
2128@var{ARCH}. By default, CP0 register names are selected according to
2129the architecture and CPU of the binary being disassembled.
2130
af7ee8bf
CD
2131@item hwr-names=@var{ARCH}
2132Print HWR (hardware register, used by the @code{rdhwr} instruction) names
2133as appropriate for the CPU or architecture specified by
2134@var{ARCH}. By default, HWR names are selected according to
2135the architecture and CPU of the binary being disassembled.
2136
640c0ccd
CD
2137@item reg-names=@var{ABI}
2138Print GPR and FPR names as appropriate for the selected ABI.
2139
2140@item reg-names=@var{ARCH}
af7ee8bf
CD
2141Print CPU-specific register names (CP0 register and HWR names)
2142as appropriate for the selected CPU or architecture.
640c0ccd
CD
2143@end table
2144
2145For any of the options listed above, @var{ABI} or
2146@var{ARCH} may be specified as @samp{numeric} to have numbers printed
2147rather than names, for the selected types of registers.
2148You can list the available values of @var{ABI} and @var{ARCH} using
2149the @option{--help} option.
2150
ec72cfe5
NC
2151For VAX, you can specify function entry addresses with @option{-M
2152entry:0xf00ba}. You can use this multiple times to properly
2153disassemble VAX binary files that don't contain symbol tables (like
2154ROM dumps). In these cases, the function entry mask would otherwise
b45619c0 2155be decoded as VAX instructions, which would probably lead the rest
ec72cfe5
NC
2156of the function being wrongly disassembled.
2157
252b5132
RH
2158@item -p
2159@itemx --private-headers
2160Print information that is specific to the object file format. The exact
2161information printed depends upon the object file format. For some
2162object file formats, no additional information is printed.
2163
6abcee90
TG
2164@item -P @var{options}
2165@itemx --private=@var{options}
2166Print information that is specific to the object file format. The
2167argument @var{options} is a comma separated list that depends on the
2168format (the lists of options is displayed with the help).
2169
2170For XCOFF, the available options are: @option{header}, @option{aout},
2171@option{sections}, @option{syms}, @option{relocs}, @option{lineno},
868d1840
TG
2172@option{loader}, @option{except}, @option{typchk}, @option{traceback},
2173@option{toc} and @option{ldinfo}.
6abcee90 2174
252b5132
RH
2175@item -r
2176@itemx --reloc
2177@cindex relocation entries, in object file
c7c55b78
NC
2178Print the relocation entries of the file. If used with @option{-d} or
2179@option{-D}, the relocations are printed interspersed with the
252b5132
RH
2180disassembly.
2181
2182@item -R
2183@itemx --dynamic-reloc
2184@cindex dynamic relocation entries, in object file
2185Print the dynamic relocation entries of the file. This is only
2186meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared
840b96a7
AM
2187libraries. As for @option{-r}, if used with @option{-d} or
2188@option{-D}, the relocations are printed interspersed with the
2189disassembly.
252b5132
RH
2190
2191@item -s
2192@itemx --full-contents
2193@cindex sections, full contents
2194@cindex object file sections
155e0d23
NC
2195Display the full contents of any sections requested. By default all
2196non-empty sections are displayed.
252b5132
RH
2197
2198@item -S
2199@itemx --source
2200@cindex source disassembly
2201@cindex disassembly, with source
2202Display source code intermixed with disassembly, if possible. Implies
c7c55b78 2203@option{-d}.
252b5132 2204
0dafdf3f
L
2205@item --prefix=@var{prefix}
2206@cindex Add prefix to absolute paths
2207Specify @var{prefix} to add to the absolute paths when used with
b3364cb9 2208@option{-S}.
0dafdf3f
L
2209
2210@item --prefix-strip=@var{level}
2211@cindex Strip absolute paths
2212Indicate how many initial directory names to strip off the hardwired
2213absolute paths. It has no effect without @option{--prefix=}@var{prefix}.
2214
252b5132
RH
2215@item --show-raw-insn
2216When disassembling instructions, print the instruction in hex as well as
2217in symbolic form. This is the default except when
c7c55b78 2218@option{--prefix-addresses} is used.
252b5132
RH
2219
2220@item --no-show-raw-insn
2221When disassembling instructions, do not print the instruction bytes.
c7c55b78 2222This is the default when @option{--prefix-addresses} is used.
252b5132 2223
3dcb3fcb 2224@item --insn-width=@var{width}
b3364cb9 2225@cindex Instruction width
3dcb3fcb
L
2226Display @var{width} bytes on a single line when disassembling
2227instructions.
2228
f9f0e732 2229@item -W[lLiaprmfFsoRt]
5bbdf3d5 2230@itemx --dwarf[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index]
4de2ad99
L
2231@cindex DWARF
2232@cindex debug symbols
4cb93e3b
TG
2233Displays the contents of the debug sections in the file, if any are
2234present. If one of the optional letters or words follows the switch
2235then only data found in those specific sections will be dumped.
4de2ad99 2236
6f875884 2237Note that there is no single letter option to display the content of
5bbdf3d5 2238trace sections or .gdb_index.
6f875884 2239
fd2f0033 2240Note: the output from the @option{=info} option can also be affected
4723351a
CC
2241by the options @option{--dwarf-depth}, the @option{--dwarf-start} and
2242the @option{--dwarf-check}.
fd2f0033
TT
2243
2244@item --dwarf-depth=@var{n}
2245Limit the dump of the @code{.debug_info} section to @var{n} children.
2246This is only useful with @option{--dwarf=info}. The default is
2247to print all DIEs; the special value 0 for @var{n} will also have this
2248effect.
2249
2250With a non-zero value for @var{n}, DIEs at or deeper than @var{n}
2251levels will not be printed. The range for @var{n} is zero-based.
2252
2253@item --dwarf-start=@var{n}
2254Print only DIEs beginning with the DIE numbered @var{n}. This is only
2255useful with @option{--dwarf=info}.
2256
2257If specified, this option will suppress printing of any header
2258information and all DIEs before the DIE numbered @var{n}. Only
2259siblings and children of the specified DIE will be printed.
2260
2261This can be used in conjunction with @option{--dwarf-depth}.
2262
4723351a
CC
2263@item --dwarf-check
2264Enable additional checks for consistency of Dwarf information.
2265
1dada9c5 2266@item -G
947ed062 2267@itemx --stabs
252b5132
RH
2268@cindex stab
2269@cindex .stab
2270@cindex debug symbols
2271@cindex ELF object file format
2272Display the full contents of any sections requested. Display the
2273contents of the .stab and .stab.index and .stab.excl sections from an
2274ELF file. This is only useful on systems (such as Solaris 2.0) in which
2275@code{.stab} debugging symbol-table entries are carried in an ELF
2276section. In most other file formats, debugging symbol-table entries are
c7c55b78 2277interleaved with linkage symbols, and are visible in the @option{--syms}
0285c67d 2278output.
252b5132
RH
2279
2280@item --start-address=@var{address}
2281@cindex start-address
2282Start displaying data at the specified address. This affects the output
c7c55b78 2283of the @option{-d}, @option{-r} and @option{-s} options.
252b5132
RH
2284
2285@item --stop-address=@var{address}
2286@cindex stop-address
2287Stop displaying data at the specified address. This affects the output
c7c55b78 2288of the @option{-d}, @option{-r} and @option{-s} options.
252b5132
RH
2289
2290@item -t
2291@itemx --syms
2292@cindex symbol table entries, printing
2293Print the symbol table entries of the file.
a1039809
NC
2294This is similar to the information provided by the @samp{nm} program,
2295although the display format is different. The format of the output
2296depends upon the format of the file being dumped, but there are two main
2297types. One looks like this:
2298
2299@smallexample
2300[ 4](sec 3)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 3) (nx 1) 0x00000000 .bss
2301[ 6](sec 1)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 2) (nx 0) 0x00000000 fred
2302@end smallexample
2303
2304where the number inside the square brackets is the number of the entry
2305in the symbol table, the @var{sec} number is the section number, the
2306@var{fl} value are the symbol's flag bits, the @var{ty} number is the
2307symbol's type, the @var{scl} number is the symbol's storage class and
2308the @var{nx} value is the number of auxilary entries associated with
2309the symbol. The last two fields are the symbol's value and its name.
2310
2311The other common output format, usually seen with ELF based files,
2312looks like this:
2313
2314@smallexample
231500000000 l d .bss 00000000 .bss
231600000000 g .text 00000000 fred
2317@end smallexample
2318
2319Here the first number is the symbol's value (sometimes refered to as
2320its address). The next field is actually a set of characters and
2321spaces indicating the flag bits that are set on the symbol. These
af3e16d9
NC
2322characters are described below. Next is the section with which the
2323symbol is associated or @emph{*ABS*} if the section is absolute (ie
2324not connected with any section), or @emph{*UND*} if the section is
2325referenced in the file being dumped, but not defined there.
2326
2327After the section name comes another field, a number, which for common
2328symbols is the alignment and for other symbol is the size. Finally
2329the symbol's name is displayed.
a1039809
NC
2330
2331The flag characters are divided into 7 groups as follows:
2332@table @code
2333@item l
2334@itemx g
3e7a7d11 2335@itemx u
a1039809 2336@itemx !
3e7a7d11
NC
2337The symbol is a local (l), global (g), unique global (u), neither
2338global nor local (a space) or both global and local (!). A
928a4139 2339symbol can be neither local or global for a variety of reasons, e.g.,
a1039809 2340because it is used for debugging, but it is probably an indication of
3e7a7d11
NC
2341a bug if it is ever both local and global. Unique global symbols are
2342a GNU extension to the standard set of ELF symbol bindings. For such
2343a symbol the dynamic linker will make sure that in the entire process
2344there is just one symbol with this name and type in use.
a1039809
NC
2345
2346@item w
2347The symbol is weak (w) or strong (a space).
2348
2349@item C
2350The symbol denotes a constructor (C) or an ordinary symbol (a space).
2351
2352@item W
2353The symbol is a warning (W) or a normal symbol (a space). A warning
2354symbol's name is a message to be displayed if the symbol following the
2355warning symbol is ever referenced.
2356
2357@item I
171191ba
NC
2358@item i
2359The symbol is an indirect reference to another symbol (I), a function
2360to be evaluated during reloc processing (i) or a normal symbol (a
2361space).
a1039809
NC
2362
2363@item d
2364@itemx D
2365The symbol is a debugging symbol (d) or a dynamic symbol (D) or a
2366normal symbol (a space).
2367
2368@item F
2369@item f
2370@item O
af3e16d9 2371The symbol is the name of a function (F) or a file (f) or an object
a1039809
NC
2372(O) or just a normal symbol (a space).
2373@end table
252b5132
RH
2374
2375@item -T
2376@itemx --dynamic-syms
2377@cindex dynamic symbol table entries, printing
2378Print the dynamic symbol table entries of the file. This is only
2379meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared
2380libraries. This is similar to the information provided by the @samp{nm}
c7c55b78 2381program when given the @option{-D} (@option{--dynamic}) option.
252b5132 2382
3c9458e9
NC
2383@item --special-syms
2384When displaying symbols include those which the target considers to be
2385special in some way and which would not normally be of interest to the
2386user.
2387
947ed062
NC
2388@item -V
2389@itemx --version
c7c55b78 2390Print the version number of @command{objdump} and exit.
252b5132
RH
2391
2392@item -x
947ed062 2393@itemx --all-headers
252b5132
RH
2394@cindex all header information, object file
2395@cindex header information, all
2396Display all available header information, including the symbol table and
c7c55b78 2397relocation entries. Using @option{-x} is equivalent to specifying all of
04c34128 2398@option{-a -f -h -p -r -t}.
252b5132
RH
2399
2400@item -w
2401@itemx --wide
2402@cindex wide output, printing
2403Format some lines for output devices that have more than 80 columns.
31104126 2404Also do not truncate symbol names when they are displayed.
aefbdd67
BE
2405
2406@item -z
2c0c15f9 2407@itemx --disassemble-zeroes
aefbdd67
BE
2408Normally the disassembly output will skip blocks of zeroes. This
2409option directs the disassembler to disassemble those blocks, just like
2410any other data.
252b5132
RH
2411@end table
2412
0285c67d
NC
2413@c man end
2414
2415@ignore
2416@c man begin SEEALSO objdump
2417nm(1), readelf(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
2418@c man end
2419@end ignore
2420
252b5132
RH
2421@node ranlib
2422@chapter ranlib
2423
2424@kindex ranlib
2425@cindex archive contents
2426@cindex symbol index
2427
0285c67d
NC
2428@c man title ranlib generate index to archive.
2429
252b5132 2430@smallexample
0285c67d 2431@c man begin SYNOPSIS ranlib
36e32b27 2432ranlib [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [@option{-DhHvVt}] @var{archive}
0285c67d 2433@c man end
252b5132
RH
2434@end smallexample
2435
0285c67d
NC
2436@c man begin DESCRIPTION ranlib
2437
c7c55b78 2438@command{ranlib} generates an index to the contents of an archive and
252b5132 2439stores it in the archive. The index lists each symbol defined by a
c1c0eb9e 2440member of an archive that is a relocatable object file.
252b5132
RH
2441
2442You may use @samp{nm -s} or @samp{nm --print-armap} to list this index.
2443
2444An archive with such an index speeds up linking to the library and
2445allows routines in the library to call each other without regard to
2446their placement in the archive.
2447
c7c55b78
NC
2448The @sc{gnu} @command{ranlib} program is another form of @sc{gnu} @command{ar}; running
2449@command{ranlib} is completely equivalent to executing @samp{ar -s}.
252b5132
RH
2450@xref{ar}.
2451
0285c67d
NC
2452@c man end
2453
2454@c man begin OPTIONS ranlib
2455
c7c55b78 2456@table @env
b3364cb9
RM
2457@item -h
2458@itemx -H
2459@itemx --help
2460Show usage information for @command{ranlib}.
2461
252b5132
RH
2462@item -v
2463@itemx -V
f20a759a 2464@itemx --version
c7c55b78 2465Show the version number of @command{ranlib}.
b14f9da0 2466
b3364cb9
RM
2467@item -D
2468@cindex deterministic archives
9cb80f72 2469@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
b3364cb9
RM
2470Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. The symbol map archive member's
2471header will show zero for the UID, GID, and timestamp. When this
2472option is used, multiple runs will produce identical output files.
2473
9cb80f72
RM
2474This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with
2475@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}.
2476
b14f9da0
NC
2477@item -t
2478Update the timestamp of the symbol map of an archive.
9cb80f72
RM
2479
2480@item -U
2481@cindex deterministic archives
2482@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
2483Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the
2484inverse of the @samp{-D} option, above: the archive index will get
2485actual UID, GID, timestamp, and file mode values.
2486
2487This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with
2488@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}.
252b5132
RH
2489@end table
2490
0285c67d
NC
2491@c man end
2492
2493@ignore
2494@c man begin SEEALSO ranlib
2495ar(1), nm(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
2496@c man end
2497@end ignore
2498
252b5132
RH
2499@node size
2500@chapter size
2501
2502@kindex size
2503@cindex section sizes
2504
0285c67d
NC
2505@c man title size list section sizes and total size.
2506
252b5132 2507@smallexample
0285c67d 2508@c man begin SYNOPSIS size
c7c55b78 2509size [@option{-A}|@option{-B}|@option{--format=}@var{compatibility}]
15c82623
NC
2510 [@option{--help}]
2511 [@option{-d}|@option{-o}|@option{-x}|@option{--radix=}@var{number}]
29422971 2512 [@option{--common}]
15c82623 2513 [@option{-t}|@option{--totals}]
c1c0eb9e 2514 [@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
c7c55b78 2515 [@var{objfile}@dots{}]
0285c67d 2516@c man end
252b5132
RH
2517@end smallexample
2518
0285c67d
NC
2519@c man begin DESCRIPTION size
2520
c7c55b78 2521The @sc{gnu} @command{size} utility lists the section sizes---and the total
252b5132
RH
2522size---for each of the object or archive files @var{objfile} in its
2523argument list. By default, one line of output is generated for each
2524object file or each module in an archive.
2525
2526@var{objfile}@dots{} are the object files to be examined.
2527If none are specified, the file @code{a.out} will be used.
2528
0285c67d
NC
2529@c man end
2530
2531@c man begin OPTIONS size
2532
252b5132
RH
2533The command line options have the following meanings:
2534
c7c55b78 2535@table @env
252b5132
RH
2536@item -A
2537@itemx -B
2538@itemx --format=@var{compatibility}
c7c55b78 2539@cindex @command{size} display format
252b5132 2540Using one of these options, you can choose whether the output from @sc{gnu}
c7c55b78
NC
2541@command{size} resembles output from System V @command{size} (using @option{-A},
2542or @option{--format=sysv}), or Berkeley @command{size} (using @option{-B}, or
2543@option{--format=berkeley}). The default is the one-line format similar to
c1c0eb9e 2544Berkeley's.
252b5132
RH
2545@c Bonus for doc-source readers: you can also say --format=strange (or
2546@c anything else that starts with 's') for sysv, and --format=boring (or
2547@c anything else that starts with 'b') for Berkeley.
2548
2549Here is an example of the Berkeley (default) format of output from
c1c0eb9e 2550@command{size}:
252b5132 2551@smallexample
f20a759a 2552$ size --format=Berkeley ranlib size
252b5132
RH
2553text data bss dec hex filename
2554294880 81920 11592 388392 5ed28 ranlib
2555294880 81920 11888 388688 5ee50 size
2556@end smallexample
2557
2558@noindent
2559This is the same data, but displayed closer to System V conventions:
2560
2561@smallexample
f20a759a 2562$ size --format=SysV ranlib size
252b5132
RH
2563ranlib :
2564section size addr
c1c0eb9e
RM
2565.text 294880 8192
2566.data 81920 303104
2567.bss 11592 385024
2568Total 388392
252b5132
RH
2569
2570
2571size :
2572section size addr
c1c0eb9e
RM
2573.text 294880 8192
2574.data 81920 303104
2575.bss 11888 385024
2576Total 388688
252b5132
RH
2577@end smallexample
2578
2579@item --help
2580Show a summary of acceptable arguments and options.
2581
2582@item -d
2583@itemx -o
2584@itemx -x
2585@itemx --radix=@var{number}
c7c55b78 2586@cindex @command{size} number format
252b5132
RH
2587@cindex radix for section sizes
2588Using one of these options, you can control whether the size of each
c7c55b78
NC
2589section is given in decimal (@option{-d}, or @option{--radix=10}); octal
2590(@option{-o}, or @option{--radix=8}); or hexadecimal (@option{-x}, or
2591@option{--radix=16}). In @option{--radix=@var{number}}, only the three
252b5132 2592values (8, 10, 16) are supported. The total size is always given in two
c7c55b78
NC
2593radices; decimal and hexadecimal for @option{-d} or @option{-x} output, or
2594octal and hexadecimal if you're using @option{-o}.
252b5132 2595
29422971
AM
2596@item --common
2597Print total size of common symbols in each file. When using Berkeley
2598format these are included in the bss size.
2599
15c82623
NC
2600@item -t
2601@itemx --totals
2602Show totals of all objects listed (Berkeley format listing mode only).
2603
252b5132
RH
2604@item --target=@var{bfdname}
2605@cindex object code format
2606Specify that the object-code format for @var{objfile} is
c7c55b78 2607@var{bfdname}. This option may not be necessary; @command{size} can
252b5132
RH
2608automatically recognize many formats.
2609@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
2610
2611@item -V
2612@itemx --version
c7c55b78 2613Display the version number of @command{size}.
252b5132
RH
2614@end table
2615
0285c67d
NC
2616@c man end
2617
2618@ignore
2619@c man begin SEEALSO size
2620ar(1), objdump(1), readelf(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
2621@c man end
2622@end ignore
2623
252b5132
RH
2624@node strings
2625@chapter strings
2626@kindex strings
2627@cindex listings strings
2628@cindex printing strings
2629@cindex strings, printing
2630
0285c67d
NC
2631@c man title strings print the strings of printable characters in files.
2632
252b5132 2633@smallexample
0285c67d 2634@c man begin SYNOPSIS strings
ffbe5983 2635strings [@option{-afovV}] [@option{-}@var{min-len}]
d132876a
NC
2636 [@option{-n} @var{min-len}] [@option{--bytes=}@var{min-len}]
2637 [@option{-t} @var{radix}] [@option{--radix=}@var{radix}]
2638 [@option{-e} @var{encoding}] [@option{--encoding=}@var{encoding}]
2639 [@option{-}] [@option{--all}] [@option{--print-file-name}]
3bf31ec9 2640 [@option{-T} @var{bfdname}] [@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}]
c7c55b78 2641 [@option{--help}] [@option{--version}] @var{file}@dots{}
0285c67d 2642@c man end
252b5132
RH
2643@end smallexample
2644
0285c67d
NC
2645@c man begin DESCRIPTION strings
2646
c7c55b78 2647For each @var{file} given, @sc{gnu} @command{strings} prints the printable
252b5132
RH
2648character sequences that are at least 4 characters long (or the number
2649given with the options below) and are followed by an unprintable
2650character. By default, it only prints the strings from the initialized
2651and loaded sections of object files; for other types of files, it prints
2652the strings from the whole file.
2653
c7c55b78 2654@command{strings} is mainly useful for determining the contents of non-text
252b5132
RH
2655files.
2656
0285c67d
NC
2657@c man end
2658
2659@c man begin OPTIONS strings
2660
c7c55b78 2661@table @env
252b5132
RH
2662@item -a
2663@itemx --all
2664@itemx -
2665Do not scan only the initialized and loaded sections of object files;
2666scan the whole files.
2667
2668@item -f
2669@itemx --print-file-name
2670Print the name of the file before each string.
2671
2672@item --help
2673Print a summary of the program usage on the standard output and exit.
2674
2675@item -@var{min-len}
2676@itemx -n @var{min-len}
2677@itemx --bytes=@var{min-len}
2678Print sequences of characters that are at least @var{min-len} characters
2679long, instead of the default 4.
2680
2681@item -o
c7c55b78 2682Like @samp{-t o}. Some other versions of @command{strings} have @option{-o}
252b5132
RH
2683act like @samp{-t d} instead. Since we can not be compatible with both
2684ways, we simply chose one.
2685
2686@item -t @var{radix}
2687@itemx --radix=@var{radix}
2688Print the offset within the file before each string. The single
2689character argument specifies the radix of the offset---@samp{o} for
2690octal, @samp{x} for hexadecimal, or @samp{d} for decimal.
2691
d132876a
NC
2692@item -e @var{encoding}
2693@itemx --encoding=@var{encoding}
2694Select the character encoding of the strings that are to be found.
8745eafa
NC
2695Possible values for @var{encoding} are: @samp{s} = single-7-bit-byte
2696characters (ASCII, ISO 8859, etc., default), @samp{S} =
2697single-8-bit-byte characters, @samp{b} = 16-bit bigendian, @samp{l} =
269816-bit littleendian, @samp{B} = 32-bit bigendian, @samp{L} = 32-bit
830bf75c
NC
2699littleendian. Useful for finding wide character strings. (@samp{l}
2700and @samp{b} apply to, for example, Unicode UTF-16/UCS-2 encodings).
d132876a 2701
3bf31ec9
NC
2702@item -T @var{bfdname}
2703@itemx --target=@var{bfdname}
252b5132
RH
2704@cindex object code format
2705Specify an object code format other than your system's default format.
2706@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
2707
2708@item -v
ffbe5983 2709@itemx -V
252b5132
RH
2710@itemx --version
2711Print the program version number on the standard output and exit.
2712@end table
2713
0285c67d
NC
2714@c man end
2715
2716@ignore
2717@c man begin SEEALSO strings
2718ar(1), nm(1), objdump(1), ranlib(1), readelf(1)
2719and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
2720@c man end
2721@end ignore
2722
252b5132
RH
2723@node strip
2724@chapter strip
2725
2726@kindex strip
2727@cindex removing symbols
2728@cindex discarding symbols
2729@cindex symbols, discarding
2730
0285c67d
NC
2731@c man title strip Discard symbols from object files.
2732
252b5132 2733@smallexample
0285c67d 2734@c man begin SYNOPSIS strip
2593f09a
NC
2735strip [@option{-F} @var{bfdname} |@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}]
2736 [@option{-I} @var{bfdname} |@option{--input-target=}@var{bfdname}]
2737 [@option{-O} @var{bfdname} |@option{--output-target=}@var{bfdname}]
2738 [@option{-s}|@option{--strip-all}]
2739 [@option{-S}|@option{-g}|@option{-d}|@option{--strip-debug}]
96109726 2740 [@option{--strip-dwo}]
2593f09a
NC
2741 [@option{-K} @var{symbolname} |@option{--keep-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
2742 [@option{-N} @var{symbolname} |@option{--strip-symbol=}@var{symbolname}]
5fe11841 2743 [@option{-w}|@option{--wildcard}]
2593f09a
NC
2744 [@option{-x}|@option{--discard-all}] [@option{-X} |@option{--discard-locals}]
2745 [@option{-R} @var{sectionname} |@option{--remove-section=}@var{sectionname}]
2746 [@option{-o} @var{file}] [@option{-p}|@option{--preserve-dates}]
2e30cb57 2747 [@option{-D}|@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}]
955d0b3b 2748 [@option{-U}|@option{--disable-deterministic-archives}]
1637cd90 2749 [@option{--keep-file-symbols}]
ed1653a7 2750 [@option{--only-keep-debug}]
7c29036b
NC
2751 [@option{-v} |@option{--verbose}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
2752 [@option{--help}] [@option{--info}]
252b5132 2753 @var{objfile}@dots{}
0285c67d 2754@c man end
252b5132
RH
2755@end smallexample
2756
0285c67d
NC
2757@c man begin DESCRIPTION strip
2758
c7c55b78 2759@sc{gnu} @command{strip} discards all symbols from object files
252b5132
RH
2760@var{objfile}. The list of object files may include archives.
2761At least one object file must be given.
2762
c7c55b78 2763@command{strip} modifies the files named in its argument,
252b5132
RH
2764rather than writing modified copies under different names.
2765
0285c67d
NC
2766@c man end
2767
2768@c man begin OPTIONS strip
2769
c7c55b78 2770@table @env
252b5132
RH
2771@item -F @var{bfdname}
2772@itemx --target=@var{bfdname}
2773Treat the original @var{objfile} as a file with the object
2774code format @var{bfdname}, and rewrite it in the same format.
2775@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
2776
2777@item --help
c7c55b78 2778Show a summary of the options to @command{strip} and exit.
252b5132 2779
7c29036b
NC
2780@item --info
2781Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available.
2782
947ed062 2783@item -I @var{bfdname}
252b5132
RH
2784@itemx --input-target=@var{bfdname}
2785Treat the original @var{objfile} as a file with the object
2786code format @var{bfdname}.
2787@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
2788
2789@item -O @var{bfdname}
2790@itemx --output-target=@var{bfdname}
2791Replace @var{objfile} with a file in the output format @var{bfdname}.
2792@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
2793
2794@item -R @var{sectionname}
2795@itemx --remove-section=@var{sectionname}
2796Remove any section named @var{sectionname} from the output file. This
2797option may be given more than once. Note that using this option
2e62b721
NC
2798inappropriately may make the output file unusable. The wildcard
2799character @samp{*} may be given at the end of @var{sectionname}. If
2800so, then any section starting with @var{sectionname} will be removed.
252b5132
RH
2801
2802@item -s
2803@itemx --strip-all
2804Remove all symbols.
2805
2806@item -g
2807@itemx -S
15c82623 2808@itemx -d
252b5132
RH
2809@itemx --strip-debug
2810Remove debugging symbols only.
96109726
CC
2811
2812@item --strip-dwo
2813Remove the contents of all DWARF .dwo sections, leaving the
2814remaining debugging sections and all symbols intact.
2815See the description of this option in the @command{objcopy} section
2816for more information.
252b5132
RH
2817
2818@item --strip-unneeded
2819Remove all symbols that are not needed for relocation processing.
2820
2821@item -K @var{symbolname}
2822@itemx --keep-symbol=@var{symbolname}
e7f918ad
NC
2823When stripping symbols, keep symbol @var{symbolname} even if it would
2824normally be stripped. This option may be given more than once.
252b5132
RH
2825
2826@item -N @var{symbolname}
2827@itemx --strip-symbol=@var{symbolname}
2828Remove symbol @var{symbolname} from the source file. This option may be
2829given more than once, and may be combined with strip options other than
c7c55b78 2830@option{-K}.
252b5132
RH
2831
2832@item -o @var{file}
2833Put the stripped output in @var{file}, rather than replacing the
2834existing file. When this argument is used, only one @var{objfile}
2835argument may be specified.
2836
2837@item -p
2838@itemx --preserve-dates
2839Preserve the access and modification dates of the file.
2840
2e30cb57
CC
2841@item -D
2842@itemx --enable-deterministic-archives
955d0b3b
RM
2843@cindex deterministic archives
2844@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
2e30cb57
CC
2845Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. When copying archive members
2846and writing the archive index, use zero for UIDs, GIDs, timestamps,
2847and use consistent file modes for all files.
2848
955d0b3b
RM
2849If @file{binutils} was configured with
2850@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by default.
2851It can be disabled with the @samp{-U} option, below.
2852
2853@item -U
2854@itemx --disable-deterministic-archives
2855@cindex deterministic archives
2856@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives
2857Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the
2858inverse of the @option{-D} option, above: when copying archive members
2859and writing the archive index, use their actual UID, GID, timestamp,
2860and file mode values.
2861
2862This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with
2863@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}.
2864
5fe11841
NC
2865@item -w
2866@itemx --wildcard
2867Permit regular expressions in @var{symbolname}s used in other command
2868line options. The question mark (?), asterisk (*), backslash (\) and
2869square brackets ([]) operators can be used anywhere in the symbol
2870name. If the first character of the symbol name is the exclamation
2871point (!) then the sense of the switch is reversed for that symbol.
2872For example:
2873
2874@smallexample
2875 -w -K !foo -K fo*
2876@end smallexample
2877
2878would cause strip to only keep symbols that start with the letters
2879``fo'', but to discard the symbol ``foo''.
2880
252b5132
RH
2881@item -x
2882@itemx --discard-all
2883Remove non-global symbols.
2884
2885@item -X
2886@itemx --discard-locals
2887Remove compiler-generated local symbols.
2888(These usually start with @samp{L} or @samp{.}.)
2889
1637cd90
JB
2890@item --keep-file-symbols
2891When stripping a file, perhaps with @option{--strip-debug} or
2892@option{--strip-unneeded}, retain any symbols specifying source file names,
2893which would otherwise get stripped.
2894
ed1653a7 2895@item --only-keep-debug
c1c0eb9e
RM
2896Strip a file, removing contents of any sections that would not be
2897stripped by @option{--strip-debug} and leaving the debugging sections
2898intact. In ELF files, this preserves all note sections in the output.
ed1653a7
NC
2899
2900The intention is that this option will be used in conjunction with
2901@option{--add-gnu-debuglink} to create a two part executable. One a
2902stripped binary which will occupy less space in RAM and in a
2903distribution and the second a debugging information file which is only
2904needed if debugging abilities are required. The suggested procedure
2905to create these files is as follows:
2906
2907@enumerate
2908@item Link the executable as normal. Assuming that is is called
2909@code{foo} then...
2910@item Run @code{objcopy --only-keep-debug foo foo.dbg} to
2911create a file containing the debugging info.
2912@item Run @code{objcopy --strip-debug foo} to create a
2913stripped executable.
2914@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.dbg foo}
2915to add a link to the debugging info into the stripped executable.
2916@end enumerate
2917
928a4139 2918Note---the choice of @code{.dbg} as an extension for the debug info
ed1653a7
NC
2919file is arbitrary. Also the @code{--only-keep-debug} step is
2920optional. You could instead do this:
2921
2922@enumerate
2923@item Link the executable as normal.
928a4139 2924@item Copy @code{foo} to @code{foo.full}
ed1653a7
NC
2925@item Run @code{strip --strip-debug foo}
2926@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.full foo}
2927@end enumerate
2928
928a4139 2929i.e., the file pointed to by the @option{--add-gnu-debuglink} can be the
ed1653a7
NC
2930full executable. It does not have to be a file created by the
2931@option{--only-keep-debug} switch.
2932
928a4139 2933Note---this switch is only intended for use on fully linked files. It
91bb255c
NC
2934does not make sense to use it on object files where the debugging
2935information may be incomplete. Besides the gnu_debuglink feature
2936currently only supports the presence of one filename containing
2937debugging information, not multiple filenames on a one-per-object-file
2938basis.
2939
252b5132
RH
2940@item -V
2941@itemx --version
c7c55b78 2942Show the version number for @command{strip}.
252b5132
RH
2943
2944@item -v
2945@itemx --verbose
2946Verbose output: list all object files modified. In the case of
2947archives, @samp{strip -v} lists all members of the archive.
2948@end table
2949
0285c67d
NC
2950@c man end
2951
2952@ignore
2953@c man begin SEEALSO strip
2954the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
2955@c man end
2956@end ignore
2957
7ca01ed9 2958@node c++filt, addr2line, strip, Top
252b5132
RH
2959@chapter c++filt
2960
2961@kindex c++filt
2962@cindex demangling C++ symbols
2963
0285c67d
NC
2964@c man title cxxfilt Demangle C++ and Java symbols.
2965
252b5132 2966@smallexample
0285c67d 2967@c man begin SYNOPSIS cxxfilt
ae9ab7c0
NC
2968c++filt [@option{-_}|@option{--strip-underscore}]
2969 [@option{-n}|@option{--no-strip-underscore}]
4e48c9dd 2970 [@option{-p}|@option{--no-params}]
ec948987 2971 [@option{-t}|@option{--types}]
cbf1f5df 2972 [@option{-i}|@option{--no-verbose}]
c7c55b78
NC
2973 [@option{-s} @var{format}|@option{--format=}@var{format}]
2974 [@option{--help}] [@option{--version}] [@var{symbol}@dots{}]
0285c67d 2975@c man end
252b5132
RH
2976@end smallexample
2977
0285c67d
NC
2978@c man begin DESCRIPTION cxxfilt
2979
9d51cc66 2980@kindex cxxfilt
ec948987
NC
2981The C++ and Java languages provide function overloading, which means
2982that you can write many functions with the same name, providing that
2983each function takes parameters of different types. In order to be
2984able to distinguish these similarly named functions C++ and Java
2985encode them into a low-level assembler name which uniquely identifies
2986each different version. This process is known as @dfn{mangling}. The
2987@command{c++filt}
c1c0eb9e 2988@footnote{MS-DOS does not allow @kbd{+} characters in file names, so on
195a97ce 2989MS-DOS this program is named @command{CXXFILT}.}
9d51cc66 2990program does the inverse mapping: it decodes (@dfn{demangles}) low-level
ec948987 2991names into user-level names so that they can be read.
252b5132
RH
2992
2993Every alphanumeric word (consisting of letters, digits, underscores,
cbf1f5df
NC
2994dollars, or periods) seen in the input is a potential mangled name.
2995If the name decodes into a C++ name, the C++ name replaces the
ec948987
NC
2996low-level name in the output, otherwise the original word is output.
2997In this way you can pass an entire assembler source file, containing
2998mangled names, through @command{c++filt} and see the same source file
2999containing demangled names.
252b5132 3000
ec948987
NC
3001You can also use @command{c++filt} to decipher individual symbols by
3002passing them on the command line:
252b5132
RH
3003
3004@example
3005c++filt @var{symbol}
3006@end example
3007
c7c55b78 3008If no @var{symbol} arguments are given, @command{c++filt} reads symbol
ec948987
NC
3009names from the standard input instead. All the results are printed on
3010the standard output. The difference between reading names from the
3011command line versus reading names from the standard input is that
3012command line arguments are expected to be just mangled names and no
b45619c0 3013checking is performed to separate them from surrounding text. Thus
ec948987
NC
3014for example:
3015
3016@smallexample
3017c++filt -n _Z1fv
3018@end smallexample
3019
3020will work and demangle the name to ``f()'' whereas:
3021
3022@smallexample
3023c++filt -n _Z1fv,
3024@end smallexample
3025
3026will not work. (Note the extra comma at the end of the mangled
3027name which makes it invalid). This command however will work:
3028
3029@smallexample
3030echo _Z1fv, | c++filt -n
3031@end smallexample
3032
928a4139 3033and will display ``f(),'', i.e., the demangled name followed by a
ec948987
NC
3034trailing comma. This behaviour is because when the names are read
3035from the standard input it is expected that they might be part of an
3036assembler source file where there might be extra, extraneous
928a4139 3037characters trailing after a mangled name. For example:
ec948987
NC
3038
3039@smallexample
3040 .type _Z1fv, @@function
3041@end smallexample
252b5132 3042
0285c67d
NC
3043@c man end
3044
3045@c man begin OPTIONS cxxfilt
3046
c7c55b78 3047@table @env
252b5132 3048@item -_
ae9ab7c0 3049@itemx --strip-underscore
252b5132
RH
3050On some systems, both the C and C++ compilers put an underscore in front
3051of every name. For example, the C name @code{foo} gets the low-level
3052name @code{_foo}. This option removes the initial underscore. Whether
c7c55b78 3053@command{c++filt} removes the underscore by default is target dependent.
252b5132 3054
252b5132 3055@item -n
ae9ab7c0 3056@itemx --no-strip-underscore
252b5132
RH
3057Do not remove the initial underscore.
3058
4e48c9dd
ILT
3059@item -p
3060@itemx --no-params
3061When demangling the name of a function, do not display the types of
3062the function's parameters.
3063
cbf1f5df 3064@item -t
ec948987
NC
3065@itemx --types
3066Attempt to demangle types as well as function names. This is disabled
3067by default since mangled types are normally only used internally in
928a4139 3068the compiler, and they can be confused with non-mangled names. For example,
ec948987
NC
3069a function called ``a'' treated as a mangled type name would be
3070demangled to ``signed char''.
cbf1f5df
NC
3071
3072@item -i
3073@itemx --no-verbose
3074Do not include implementation details (if any) in the demangled
3075output.
3076
252b5132
RH
3077@item -s @var{format}
3078@itemx --format=@var{format}
947ed062
NC
3079@command{c++filt} can decode various methods of mangling, used by
3080different compilers. The argument to this option selects which
252b5132
RH
3081method it uses:
3082
3083@table @code
947ed062
NC
3084@item auto
3085Automatic selection based on executable (the default method)
252b5132 3086@item gnu
947ed062 3087the one used by the @sc{gnu} C++ compiler (g++)
252b5132 3088@item lucid
947ed062 3089the one used by the Lucid compiler (lcc)
252b5132
RH
3090@item arm
3091the one specified by the C++ Annotated Reference Manual
3092@item hp
947ed062 3093the one used by the HP compiler (aCC)
252b5132
RH
3094@item edg
3095the one used by the EDG compiler
b5e2a4f3 3096@item gnu-v3
947ed062
NC
3097the one used by the @sc{gnu} C++ compiler (g++) with the V3 ABI.
3098@item java
3099the one used by the @sc{gnu} Java compiler (gcj)
3100@item gnat
3101the one used by the @sc{gnu} Ada compiler (GNAT).
252b5132
RH
3102@end table
3103
3104@item --help
c7c55b78 3105Print a summary of the options to @command{c++filt} and exit.
252b5132
RH
3106
3107@item --version
c7c55b78 3108Print the version number of @command{c++filt} and exit.
252b5132
RH
3109@end table
3110
0285c67d
NC
3111@c man end
3112
3113@ignore
3114@c man begin SEEALSO cxxfilt
3115the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
3116@c man end
3117@end ignore
3118
252b5132 3119@quotation
c7c55b78 3120@emph{Warning:} @command{c++filt} is a new utility, and the details of its
252b5132 3121user interface are subject to change in future releases. In particular,
b45619c0 3122a command-line option may be required in the future to decode a name
c1c0eb9e 3123passed as an argument on the command line; in other words,
252b5132
RH
3124
3125@example
3126c++filt @var{symbol}
3127@end example
3128
3129@noindent
3130may in a future release become
3131
3132@example
3133c++filt @var{option} @var{symbol}
3134@end example
3135@end quotation
3136
3137@node addr2line
3138@chapter addr2line
3139
3140@kindex addr2line
3141@cindex address to file name and line number
3142
0285c67d
NC
3143@c man title addr2line convert addresses into file names and line numbers.
3144
252b5132 3145@smallexample
0285c67d 3146@c man begin SYNOPSIS addr2line
be6f6493
TG
3147addr2line [@option{-a}|@option{--addresses}]
3148 [@option{-b} @var{bfdname}|@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}]
bf44dd74 3149 [@option{-C}|@option{--demangle}[=@var{style}]]
c7c55b78
NC
3150 [@option{-e} @var{filename}|@option{--exe=}@var{filename}]
3151 [@option{-f}|@option{--functions}] [@option{-s}|@option{--basename}]
0c552dc1 3152 [@option{-i}|@option{--inlines}]
68cdf72f 3153 [@option{-p}|@option{--pretty-print}]
c5f8c388 3154 [@option{-j}|@option{--section=}@var{name}]
c7c55b78
NC
3155 [@option{-H}|@option{--help}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
3156 [addr addr @dots{}]
0285c67d 3157@c man end
252b5132
RH
3158@end smallexample
3159
0285c67d
NC
3160@c man begin DESCRIPTION addr2line
3161
c5f8c388
EB
3162@command{addr2line} translates addresses into file names and line numbers.
3163Given an address in an executable or an offset in a section of a relocatable
3164object, it uses the debugging information to figure out which file name and
3165line number are associated with it.
252b5132 3166
c5f8c388
EB
3167The executable or relocatable object to use is specified with the @option{-e}
3168option. The default is the file @file{a.out}. The section in the relocatable
3169object to use is specified with the @option{-j} option.
252b5132 3170
c7c55b78 3171@command{addr2line} has two modes of operation.
252b5132
RH
3172
3173In the first, hexadecimal addresses are specified on the command line,
c7c55b78 3174and @command{addr2line} displays the file name and line number for each
252b5132
RH
3175address.
3176
c7c55b78 3177In the second, @command{addr2line} reads hexadecimal addresses from
252b5132 3178standard input, and prints the file name and line number for each
c7c55b78 3179address on standard output. In this mode, @command{addr2line} may be used
252b5132
RH
3180in a pipe to convert dynamically chosen addresses.
3181
3182The format of the output is @samp{FILENAME:LINENO}. The file name and
9cf03b7e
NC
3183line number for each input address is printed on separate lines.
3184
3185If the @option{-f} option is used, then each @samp{FILENAME:LINENO}
3186line is preceded by @samp{FUNCTIONNAME} which is the name of the
3187function containing the address.
3188
3189If the @option{-i} option is used and the code at the given address is
3190present there because of inlining by the compiler then the
3191@samp{@{FUNCTIONNAME@} FILENAME:LINENO} information for the inlining
3192function will be displayed afterwards. This continues recursively
3193until there is no more inlining to report.
3194
3195If the @option{-a} option is used then the output is prefixed by the
3196input address.
3197
3198If the @option{-p} option is used then the output for each input
3199address is displayed on one, possibly quite long, line. If
3200@option{-p} is not used then the output is broken up into multiple
3201lines, based on the paragraphs above.
252b5132
RH
3202
3203If the file name or function name can not be determined,
c7c55b78
NC
3204@command{addr2line} will print two question marks in their place. If the
3205line number can not be determined, @command{addr2line} will print 0.
252b5132 3206
0285c67d
NC
3207@c man end
3208
3209@c man begin OPTIONS addr2line
3210
252b5132
RH
3211The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are
3212equivalent.
3213
c7c55b78 3214@table @env
be6f6493
TG
3215@item -a
3216@itemx --addresses
9cf03b7e 3217Display the address before the function name, file and line number
be6f6493
TG
3218information. The address is printed with a @samp{0x} prefix to easily
3219identify it.
3220
252b5132
RH
3221@item -b @var{bfdname}
3222@itemx --target=@var{bfdname}
3223@cindex object code format
3224Specify that the object-code format for the object files is
3225@var{bfdname}.
3226
3227@item -C
28c309a2 3228@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}]
252b5132
RH
3229@cindex demangling in objdump
3230Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names.
3231Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this
28c309a2 3232makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different
c1c0eb9e
RM
3233mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to
3234choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. @xref{c++filt},
28c309a2 3235for more information on demangling.
252b5132
RH
3236
3237@item -e @var{filename}
3238@itemx --exe=@var{filename}
3239Specify the name of the executable for which addresses should be
3240translated. The default file is @file{a.out}.
3241
3242@item -f
3243@itemx --functions
3244Display function names as well as file and line number information.
3245
3246@item -s
3247@itemx --basenames
3248Display only the base of each file name.
0c552dc1
FF
3249
3250@item -i
3251@itemx --inlines
3252If the address belongs to a function that was inlined, the source
3253information for all enclosing scopes back to the first non-inlined
3254function will also be printed. For example, if @code{main} inlines
3255@code{callee1} which inlines @code{callee2}, and address is from
3256@code{callee2}, the source information for @code{callee1} and @code{main}
3257will also be printed.
c5f8c388
EB
3258
3259@item -j
3260@itemx --section
3261Read offsets relative to the specified section instead of absolute addresses.
68cdf72f
TG
3262
3263@item -p
3264@itemx --pretty-print
3265Make the output more human friendly: each location are printed on one line.
3266If option @option{-i} is specified, lines for all enclosing scopes are
3267prefixed with @samp{(inlined by)}.
e107c42f 3268@end table
252b5132 3269
0285c67d
NC
3270@c man end
3271
3272@ignore
3273@c man begin SEEALSO addr2line
3274Info entries for @file{binutils}.
3275@c man end
3276@end ignore
3277
252b5132
RH
3278@node nlmconv
3279@chapter nlmconv
3280
c7c55b78 3281@command{nlmconv} converts a relocatable object file into a NetWare
252b5132
RH
3282Loadable Module.
3283
3284@ignore
c7c55b78 3285@command{nlmconv} currently works with @samp{i386} object
252b5132
RH
3286files in @code{coff}, @sc{elf}, or @code{a.out} format, and @sc{SPARC}
3287object files in @sc{elf}, or @code{a.out} format@footnote{
c7c55b78 3288@command{nlmconv} should work with any @samp{i386} or @sc{sparc} object
252b5132
RH
3289format in the Binary File Descriptor library. It has only been tested
3290with the above formats.}.
3291@end ignore
3292
3293@quotation
c7c55b78 3294@emph{Warning:} @command{nlmconv} is not always built as part of the binary
252b5132
RH
3295utilities, since it is only useful for NLM targets.
3296@end quotation
3297
0285c67d
NC
3298@c man title nlmconv converts object code into an NLM.
3299
252b5132 3300@smallexample
0285c67d 3301@c man begin SYNOPSIS nlmconv
c7c55b78
NC
3302nlmconv [@option{-I} @var{bfdname}|@option{--input-target=}@var{bfdname}]
3303 [@option{-O} @var{bfdname}|@option{--output-target=}@var{bfdname}]
3304 [@option{-T} @var{headerfile}|@option{--header-file=}@var{headerfile}]
3305 [@option{-d}|@option{--debug}] [@option{-l} @var{linker}|@option{--linker=}@var{linker}]
3306 [@option{-h}|@option{--help}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
252b5132 3307 @var{infile} @var{outfile}
0285c67d 3308@c man end
252b5132
RH
3309@end smallexample
3310
0285c67d
NC
3311@c man begin DESCRIPTION nlmconv
3312
c7c55b78 3313@command{nlmconv} converts the relocatable @samp{i386} object file
252b5132
RH
3314@var{infile} into the NetWare Loadable Module @var{outfile}, optionally
3315reading @var{headerfile} for NLM header information. For instructions
3316on writing the NLM command file language used in header files, see the
3317@samp{linkers} section, @samp{NLMLINK} in particular, of the @cite{NLM
3318Development and Tools Overview}, which is part of the NLM Software
3319Developer's Kit (``NLM SDK''), available from Novell, Inc.
c7c55b78 3320@command{nlmconv} uses the @sc{gnu} Binary File Descriptor library to read
0285c67d
NC
3321@var{infile};
3322@ifclear man
3323see @ref{BFD,,BFD,ld.info,Using LD}, for more information.
3324@end ifclear
252b5132 3325
c7c55b78 3326@command{nlmconv} can perform a link step. In other words, you can list
252b5132
RH
3327more than one object file for input if you list them in the definitions
3328file (rather than simply specifying one input file on the command line).
c7c55b78 3329In this case, @command{nlmconv} calls the linker for you.
252b5132 3330
0285c67d
NC
3331@c man end
3332
3333@c man begin OPTIONS nlmconv
3334
c7c55b78 3335@table @env
252b5132
RH
3336@item -I @var{bfdname}
3337@itemx --input-target=@var{bfdname}
c7c55b78 3338Object format of the input file. @command{nlmconv} can usually determine
252b5132
RH
3339the format of a given file (so no default is necessary).
3340@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
3341
3342@item -O @var{bfdname}
3343@itemx --output-target=@var{bfdname}
c7c55b78 3344Object format of the output file. @command{nlmconv} infers the output
252b5132
RH
3345format based on the input format, e.g. for a @samp{i386} input file the
3346output format is @samp{nlm32-i386}.
3347@xref{Target Selection}, for more information.
3348
3349@item -T @var{headerfile}
3350@itemx --header-file=@var{headerfile}
3351Reads @var{headerfile} for NLM header information. For instructions on
3352writing the NLM command file language used in header files, see@ see the
3353@samp{linkers} section, of the @cite{NLM Development and Tools
3354Overview}, which is part of the NLM Software Developer's Kit, available
3355from Novell, Inc.
3356
3357@item -d
3358@itemx --debug
c7c55b78 3359Displays (on standard error) the linker command line used by @command{nlmconv}.
252b5132
RH
3360
3361@item -l @var{linker}
3362@itemx --linker=@var{linker}
3363Use @var{linker} for any linking. @var{linker} can be an absolute or a
3364relative pathname.
3365
3366@item -h
3367@itemx --help
3368Prints a usage summary.
3369
3370@item -V
3371@itemx --version
c7c55b78 3372Prints the version number for @command{nlmconv}.
252b5132
RH
3373@end table
3374
0285c67d
NC
3375@c man end
3376
3377@ignore
3378@c man begin SEEALSO nlmconv
3379the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
692ed3e7
NC
3380@c man end
3381@end ignore
3382
3383@node windmc
3384@chapter windmc
3385
3386@command{windmc} may be used to generator Windows message resources.
3387
3388@quotation
3389@emph{Warning:} @command{windmc} is not always built as part of the binary
3390utilities, since it is only useful for Windows targets.
3391@end quotation
3392
3393@c man title windmc generates Windows message resources.
3394
3395@smallexample
826fec2f 3396@c man begin SYNOPSIS windmc
692ed3e7
NC
3397windmc [options] input-file
3398@c man end
3399@end smallexample
3400
3401@c man begin DESCRIPTION windmc
3402
3403@command{windmc} reads message definitions from an input file (.mc) and
3404translate them into a set of output files. The output files may be of
3405four kinds:
3406
3407@table @code
3408@item h
3409A C header file containing the message definitions.
3410
3411@item rc
3412A resource file compilable by the @command{windres} tool.
3413
3414@item bin
3415One or more binary files containing the resource data for a specific
3416message language.
3417
3418@item dbg
3419A C include file that maps message id's to their symbolic name.
3420@end table
3421
3422The exact description of these different formats is available in
3423documentation from Microsoft.
3424
3425When @command{windmc} converts from the @code{mc} format to the @code{bin}
3426format, @code{rc}, @code{h}, and optional @code{dbg} it is acting like the
3427Windows Message Compiler.
3428
3429@c man end
3430
3431@c man begin OPTIONS windmc
3432
3433@table @env
3434@item -a
3435@itemx --ascii_in
826fec2f 3436Specifies that the input file specified is ASCII. This is the default
692ed3e7
NC
3437behaviour.
3438
3439@item -A
3440@itemx --ascii_out
826fec2f 3441Specifies that messages in the output @code{bin} files should be in ASCII
692ed3e7
NC
3442format.
3443
3444@item -b
3445@itemx --binprefix
3446Specifies that @code{bin} filenames should have to be prefixed by the
3447basename of the source file.
3448
3449@item -c
3450@itemx --customflag
3451Sets the customer bit in all message id's.
3452
3453@item -C @var{codepage}
3454@itemx --codepage_in @var{codepage}
3455Sets the default codepage to be used to convert input file to UTF16. The
3456default is ocdepage 1252.
3457
3458@item -d
3459@itemx --decimal_values
3460Outputs the constants in the header file in decimal. Default is using
3461hexadecimal output.
3462
3463@item -e @var{ext}
3464@itemx --extension @var{ext}
3465The extension for the header file. The default is .h extension.
3466
3467@item -F @var{target}
3468@itemx --target @var{target}
3469Specify the BFD format to use for a bin file as output. This
3470is a BFD target name; you can use the @option{--help} option to see a list
3471of supported targets. Normally @command{windmc} will use the default
3472format, which is the first one listed by the @option{--help} option.
3473@ifclear man
3474@ref{Target Selection}.
3475@end ifclear
3476
3477@item -h @var{path}
3478@itemx --headerdir @var{path}
3479The target directory of the generated header file. The default is the
3480current directory.
3481
3482@item -H
3483@itemx --help
3484Displays a list of command line options and then exits.
3485
3486@item -m @var{characters}
3487@itemx --maxlength @var{characters}
3488Instructs @command{windmc} to generate a warning if the length
3489of any message exceeds the number specified.
3490
3491@item -n
3492@itemx --nullterminate
3493Terminate message text in @code{bin} files by zero. By default they are
3494terminated by CR/LF.
3495
3496@item -o
3497@itemx --hresult_use
3498Not yet implemented. Instructs @code{windmc} to generate an OLE2 header
3499file, using HRESULT definitions. Status codes are used if the flag is not
3500specified.
3501
3502@item -O @var{codepage}
3503@itemx --codepage_out @var{codepage}
3504Sets the default codepage to be used to output text files. The default
3505is ocdepage 1252.
3506
3507@item -r @var{path}
3508@itemx --rcdir @var{path}
3509The target directory for the generated @code{rc} script and the generated
3510@code{bin} files that the resource compiler script includes. The default
3511is the current directory.
3512
3513@item -u
3514@itemx --unicode_in
3515Specifies that the input file is UTF16.
3516
3517@item -U
3518@itemx --unicode_out
3519Specifies that messages in the output @code{bin} file should be in UTF16
3520format. This is the default behaviour.
3521
3522@item -v
3523@item --verbose
bd37ed49 3524Enable verbose mode.
692ed3e7
NC
3525
3526@item -V
3527@item --version
bd37ed49 3528Prints the version number for @command{windmc}.
692ed3e7
NC
3529
3530@item -x @var{path}
3531@itemx --xdgb @var{path}
3532The path of the @code{dbg} C include file that maps message id's to the
3533symbolic name. No such file is generated without specifying the switch.
3534@end table
3535
3536@c man end
3537
3538@ignore
3539@c man begin SEEALSO windmc
3540the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
0285c67d
NC
3541@c man end
3542@end ignore
3543
252b5132
RH
3544@node windres
3545@chapter windres
3546
c7c55b78 3547@command{windres} may be used to manipulate Windows resources.
252b5132
RH
3548
3549@quotation
c7c55b78 3550@emph{Warning:} @command{windres} is not always built as part of the binary
252b5132
RH
3551utilities, since it is only useful for Windows targets.
3552@end quotation
3553
0285c67d
NC
3554@c man title windres manipulate Windows resources.
3555
252b5132 3556@smallexample
0285c67d 3557@c man begin SYNOPSIS windres
252b5132 3558windres [options] [input-file] [output-file]
0285c67d 3559@c man end
252b5132
RH
3560@end smallexample
3561
0285c67d
NC
3562@c man begin DESCRIPTION windres
3563
c7c55b78 3564@command{windres} reads resources from an input file and copies them into
252b5132
RH
3565an output file. Either file may be in one of three formats:
3566
3567@table @code
3568@item rc
3569A text format read by the Resource Compiler.
3570
3571@item res
3572A binary format generated by the Resource Compiler.
3573
3574@item coff
3575A COFF object or executable.
3576@end table
3577
3578The exact description of these different formats is available in
3579documentation from Microsoft.
3580
c7c55b78 3581When @command{windres} converts from the @code{rc} format to the @code{res}
252b5132 3582format, it is acting like the Windows Resource Compiler. When
c7c55b78 3583@command{windres} converts from the @code{res} format to the @code{coff}
252b5132
RH
3584format, it is acting like the Windows @code{CVTRES} program.
3585
c7c55b78 3586When @command{windres} generates an @code{rc} file, the output is similar
252b5132
RH
3587but not identical to the format expected for the input. When an input
3588@code{rc} file refers to an external filename, an output @code{rc} file
3589will instead include the file contents.
3590
c7c55b78 3591If the input or output format is not specified, @command{windres} will
252b5132
RH
3592guess based on the file name, or, for the input file, the file contents.
3593A file with an extension of @file{.rc} will be treated as an @code{rc}
3594file, a file with an extension of @file{.res} will be treated as a
3595@code{res} file, and a file with an extension of @file{.o} or
3596@file{.exe} will be treated as a @code{coff} file.
3597
c7c55b78 3598If no output file is specified, @command{windres} will print the resources
252b5132
RH
3599in @code{rc} format to standard output.
3600
c7c55b78 3601The normal use is for you to write an @code{rc} file, use @command{windres}
252b5132
RH
3602to convert it to a COFF object file, and then link the COFF file into
3603your application. This will make the resources described in the
3604@code{rc} file available to Windows.
3605
0285c67d
NC
3606@c man end
3607
3608@c man begin OPTIONS windres
3609
c7c55b78 3610@table @env
252b5132
RH
3611@item -i @var{filename}
3612@itemx --input @var{filename}
3613The name of the input file. If this option is not used, then
c7c55b78
NC
3614@command{windres} will use the first non-option argument as the input file
3615name. If there are no non-option arguments, then @command{windres} will
3616read from standard input. @command{windres} can not read a COFF file from
edbedb71 3617standard input.
252b5132
RH
3618
3619@item -o @var{filename}
3620@itemx --output @var{filename}
3621The name of the output file. If this option is not used, then
c7c55b78 3622@command{windres} will use the first non-option argument, after any used
252b5132 3623for the input file name, as the output file name. If there is no
c7c55b78 3624non-option argument, then @command{windres} will write to standard output.
edbedb71 3625@command{windres} can not write a COFF file to standard output. Note,
b45619c0 3626for compatibility with @command{rc} the option @option{-fo} is also
edbedb71 3627accepted, but its use is not recommended.
252b5132 3628
85eb5110 3629@item -J @var{format}
252b5132
RH
3630@itemx --input-format @var{format}
3631The input format to read. @var{format} may be @samp{res}, @samp{rc}, or
c7c55b78 3632@samp{coff}. If no input format is specified, @command{windres} will
252b5132
RH
3633guess, as described above.
3634
3635@item -O @var{format}
3636@itemx --output-format @var{format}
3637The output format to generate. @var{format} may be @samp{res},
3638@samp{rc}, or @samp{coff}. If no output format is specified,
c7c55b78 3639@command{windres} will guess, as described above.
252b5132
RH
3640
3641@item -F @var{target}
3642@itemx --target @var{target}
3643Specify the BFD format to use for a COFF file as input or output. This
c7c55b78
NC
3644is a BFD target name; you can use the @option{--help} option to see a list
3645of supported targets. Normally @command{windres} will use the default
3646format, which is the first one listed by the @option{--help} option.
3647@ifclear man
252b5132 3648@ref{Target Selection}.
c7c55b78 3649@end ifclear
252b5132
RH
3650
3651@item --preprocessor @var{program}
c7c55b78 3652When @command{windres} reads an @code{rc} file, it runs it through the C
252b5132
RH
3653preprocessor first. This option may be used to specify the preprocessor
3654to use, including any leading arguments. The default preprocessor
3655argument is @code{gcc -E -xc-header -DRC_INVOKED}.
3656
ec25acb3
NC
3657@item --preprocessor-arg @var{option}
3658When @command{windres} reads an @code{rc} file, it runs it through
3659the C preprocessor first. This option may be used to specify additional
3660text to be passed to preprocessor on its command line.
3661This option can be used multiple times to add multiple options to the
3662preprocessor command line.
3663
85eb5110
NC
3664@item -I @var{directory}
3665@itemx --include-dir @var{directory}
252b5132 3666Specify an include directory to use when reading an @code{rc} file.
c7c55b78
NC
3667@command{windres} will pass this to the preprocessor as an @option{-I}
3668option. @command{windres} will also search this directory when looking for
85eb5110 3669files named in the @code{rc} file. If the argument passed to this command
c1c0eb9e 3670matches any of the supported @var{formats} (as described in the @option{-J}
85eb5110
NC
3671option), it will issue a deprecation warning, and behave just like the
3672@option{-J} option. New programs should not use this behaviour. If a
3673directory happens to match a @var{format}, simple prefix it with @samp{./}
3674to disable the backward compatibility.
252b5132 3675
751d21b5 3676@item -D @var{target}
ad0481cd 3677@itemx --define @var{sym}[=@var{val}]
c7c55b78 3678Specify a @option{-D} option to pass to the preprocessor when reading an
252b5132
RH
3679@code{rc} file.
3680
29b058f1
NC
3681@item -U @var{target}
3682@itemx --undefine @var{sym}
3683Specify a @option{-U} option to pass to the preprocessor when reading an
3684@code{rc} file.
3685
3126d709
CF
3686@item -r
3687Ignored for compatibility with rc.
3688
751d21b5
DD
3689@item -v
3690Enable verbose mode. This tells you what the preprocessor is if you
3691didn't specify one.
3692
30ff741f
NC
3693@item -c @var{val}
3694@item --codepage @var{val}
3695Specify the default codepage to use when reading an @code{rc} file.
3696@var{val} should be a hexadecimal prefixed by @samp{0x} or decimal
3697codepage code. The valid range is from zero up to 0xffff, but the
3698validity of the codepage is host and configuration dependent.
3699
3077f5d8 3700@item -l @var{val}
252b5132
RH
3701@item --language @var{val}
3702Specify the default language to use when reading an @code{rc} file.
3703@var{val} should be a hexadecimal language code. The low eight bits are
3704the language, and the high eight bits are the sublanguage.
3705
5a298d2d
NC
3706@item --use-temp-file
3707Use a temporary file to instead of using popen to read the output of
c1c0eb9e
RM
3708the preprocessor. Use this option if the popen implementation is buggy
3709on the host (eg., certain non-English language versions of Windows 95 and
5a298d2d
NC
3710Windows 98 are known to have buggy popen where the output will instead
3711go the console).
3712
3713@item --no-use-temp-file
3714Use popen, not a temporary file, to read the output of the preprocessor.
3715This is the default behaviour.
3716
3077f5d8 3717@item -h
252b5132
RH
3718@item --help
3719Prints a usage summary.
3720
3077f5d8 3721@item -V
252b5132 3722@item --version
c7c55b78 3723Prints the version number for @command{windres}.
252b5132
RH
3724
3725@item --yydebug
c7c55b78 3726If @command{windres} is compiled with @code{YYDEBUG} defined as @code{1},
252b5132
RH
3727this will turn on parser debugging.
3728@end table
3729
0285c67d
NC
3730@c man end
3731
3732@ignore
3733@c man begin SEEALSO windres
3734the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
3735@c man end
3736@end ignore
252b5132
RH
3737
3738@node dlltool
2aa9814e 3739@chapter dlltool
252b5132
RH
3740@cindex DLL
3741@kindex dlltool
3742
2aa9814e
BE
3743@command{dlltool} is used to create the files needed to create dynamic
3744link libraries (DLLs) on systems which understand PE format image
3745files such as Windows. A DLL contains an export table which contains
3746information that the runtime loader needs to resolve references from a
3747referencing program.
3748
3749The export table is generated by this program by reading in a
3750@file{.def} file or scanning the @file{.a} and @file{.o} files which
3751will be in the DLL. A @file{.o} file can contain information in
3752special @samp{.drectve} sections with export information.
252b5132
RH
3753
3754@quotation
2aa9814e
BE
3755@emph{Note:} @command{dlltool} is not always built as part of the
3756binary utilities, since it is only useful for those targets which
3757support DLLs.
252b5132
RH
3758@end quotation
3759
0285c67d
NC
3760@c man title dlltool Create files needed to build and use DLLs.
3761
252b5132 3762@smallexample
0285c67d 3763@c man begin SYNOPSIS dlltool
c7c55b78
NC
3764dlltool [@option{-d}|@option{--input-def} @var{def-file-name}]
3765 [@option{-b}|@option{--base-file} @var{base-file-name}]
3766 [@option{-e}|@option{--output-exp} @var{exports-file-name}]
3767 [@option{-z}|@option{--output-def} @var{def-file-name}]
c1c0eb9e 3768 [@option{-l}|@option{--output-lib} @var{library-file-name}]
10e636d2 3769 [@option{-y}|@option{--output-delaylib} @var{library-file-name}]
c7c55b78
NC
3770 [@option{--export-all-symbols}] [@option{--no-export-all-symbols}]
3771 [@option{--exclude-symbols} @var{list}]
3772 [@option{--no-default-excludes}]
3773 [@option{-S}|@option{--as} @var{path-to-assembler}] [@option{-f}|@option{--as-flags} @var{options}]
3774 [@option{-D}|@option{--dllname} @var{name}] [@option{-m}|@option{--machine} @var{machine}]
14288fdc
DS
3775 [@option{-a}|@option{--add-indirect}]
3776 [@option{-U}|@option{--add-underscore}] [@option{--add-stdcall-underscore}]
3777 [@option{-k}|@option{--kill-at}] [@option{-A}|@option{--add-stdcall-alias}]
607dea97 3778 [@option{-p}|@option{--ext-prefix-alias} @var{prefix}]
d4732f7c 3779 [@option{-x}|@option{--no-idata4}] [@option{-c}|@option{--no-idata5}]
e77b97d4 3780 [@option{--use-nul-prefixed-import-tables}]
71c57c16
NC
3781 [@option{-I}|@option{--identify} @var{library-file-name}] [@option{--identify-strict}]
3782 [@option{-i}|@option{--interwork}]
f9346411 3783 [@option{-n}|@option{--nodelete}] [@option{-t}|@option{--temp-prefix} @var{prefix}]
c1c0eb9e 3784 [@option{-v}|@option{--verbose}]
c7c55b78 3785 [@option{-h}|@option{--help}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}]
36d21de5 3786 [@option{--no-leading-underscore}] [@option{--leading-underscore}]
252b5132 3787 [object-file @dots{}]
0285c67d 3788@c man end
252b5132
RH
3789@end smallexample
3790
0285c67d
NC
3791@c man begin DESCRIPTION dlltool
3792
c7c55b78
NC
3793@command{dlltool} reads its inputs, which can come from the @option{-d} and
3794@option{-b} options as well as object files specified on the command
3795line. It then processes these inputs and if the @option{-e} option has
3796been specified it creates a exports file. If the @option{-l} option
3797has been specified it creates a library file and if the @option{-z} option
c1c0eb9e
RM
3798has been specified it creates a def file. Any or all of the @option{-e},
3799@option{-l} and @option{-z} options can be present in one invocation of
c7c55b78 3800dlltool.
252b5132
RH
3801
3802When creating a DLL, along with the source for the DLL, it is necessary
c7c55b78 3803to have three other files. @command{dlltool} can help with the creation of
252b5132
RH
3804these files.
3805
2aa9814e 3806The first file is a @file{.def} file which specifies which functions are
252b5132 3807exported from the DLL, which functions the DLL imports, and so on. This
c7c55b78
NC
3808is a text file and can be created by hand, or @command{dlltool} can be used
3809to create it using the @option{-z} option. In this case @command{dlltool}
252b5132
RH
3810will scan the object files specified on its command line looking for
3811those functions which have been specially marked as being exported and
2aa9814e 3812put entries for them in the @file{.def} file it creates.
252b5132
RH
3813
3814In order to mark a function as being exported from a DLL, it needs to
c7c55b78 3815have an @option{-export:<name_of_function>} entry in the @samp{.drectve}
252b5132
RH
3816section of the object file. This can be done in C by using the
3817asm() operator:
3818
3819@smallexample
c1c0eb9e 3820 asm (".section .drectve");
252b5132
RH
3821 asm (".ascii \"-export:my_func\"");
3822
3823 int my_func (void) @{ @dots{} @}
3824@end smallexample
3825
3826The second file needed for DLL creation is an exports file. This file
3827is linked with the object files that make up the body of the DLL and it
3828handles the interface between the DLL and the outside world. This is a
c7c55b78 3829binary file and it can be created by giving the @option{-e} option to
c1c0eb9e 3830@command{dlltool} when it is creating or reading in a @file{.def} file.
252b5132
RH
3831
3832The third file needed for DLL creation is the library file that programs
d4732f7c
CW
3833will link with in order to access the functions in the DLL (an `import
3834library'). This file can be created by giving the @option{-l} option to
3835dlltool when it is creating or reading in a @file{.def} file.
252b5132 3836
10e636d2
DK
3837If the @option{-y} option is specified, dlltool generates a delay-import
3838library that can be used instead of the normal import library to allow
3839a program to link to the dll only as soon as an imported function is
3840called for the first time. The resulting executable will need to be
3841linked to the static delayimp library containing __delayLoadHelper2(),
3842which in turn will import LoadLibraryA and GetProcAddress from kernel32.
3843
c7c55b78 3844@command{dlltool} builds the library file by hand, but it builds the
252b5132 3845exports file by creating temporary files containing assembler statements
c7c55b78 3846and then assembling these. The @option{-S} command line option can be
252b5132 3847used to specify the path to the assembler that dlltool will use,
c7c55b78
NC
3848and the @option{-f} option can be used to pass specific flags to that
3849assembler. The @option{-n} can be used to prevent dlltool from deleting
3850these temporary assembler files when it is done, and if @option{-n} is
252b5132
RH
3851specified twice then this will prevent dlltool from deleting the
3852temporary object files it used to build the library.
3853
3854Here is an example of creating a DLL from a source file @samp{dll.c} and
3855also creating a program (from an object file called @samp{program.o})
3856that uses that DLL:
3857
3858@smallexample
3859 gcc -c dll.c
3860 dlltool -e exports.o -l dll.lib dll.o
3861 gcc dll.o exports.o -o dll.dll
3862 gcc program.o dll.lib -o program
3863@end smallexample
3864
d4732f7c
CW
3865
3866@command{dlltool} may also be used to query an existing import library
b3364cb9 3867to determine the name of the DLL to which it is associated. See the
d4732f7c 3868description of the @option{-I} or @option{--identify} option.
b3364cb9 3869
0285c67d
NC
3870@c man end
3871
3872@c man begin OPTIONS dlltool
3873
252b5132
RH
3874The command line options have the following meanings:
3875
c7c55b78 3876@table @env
252b5132
RH
3877
3878@item -d @var{filename}
3879@itemx --input-def @var{filename}
3880@cindex input .def file
2aa9814e 3881Specifies the name of a @file{.def} file to be read in and processed.
252b5132
RH
3882
3883@item -b @var{filename}
3884@itemx --base-file @var{filename}
3885@cindex base files
3886Specifies the name of a base file to be read in and processed. The
3887contents of this file will be added to the relocation section in the
3888exports file generated by dlltool.
3889
3890@item -e @var{filename}
3891@itemx --output-exp @var{filename}
3892Specifies the name of the export file to be created by dlltool.
3893
3894@item -z @var{filename}
3895@itemx --output-def @var{filename}
2aa9814e 3896Specifies the name of the @file{.def} file to be created by dlltool.
252b5132
RH
3897
3898@item -l @var{filename}
3899@itemx --output-lib @var{filename}
3900Specifies the name of the library file to be created by dlltool.
3901
10e636d2
DK
3902@item -y @var{filename}
3903@itemx --output-delaylib @var{filename}
3904Specifies the name of the delay-import library file to be created by dlltool.
3905
252b5132
RH
3906@item --export-all-symbols
3907Treat all global and weak defined symbols found in the input object
3908files as symbols to be exported. There is a small list of symbols which
c7c55b78 3909are not exported by default; see the @option{--no-default-excludes}
252b5132 3910option. You may add to the list of symbols to not export by using the
c7c55b78 3911@option{--exclude-symbols} option.
252b5132
RH
3912
3913@item --no-export-all-symbols
2aa9814e 3914Only export symbols explicitly listed in an input @file{.def} file or in
252b5132
RH
3915@samp{.drectve} sections in the input object files. This is the default
3916behaviour. The @samp{.drectve} sections are created by @samp{dllexport}
3917attributes in the source code.
3918
3919@item --exclude-symbols @var{list}
3920Do not export the symbols in @var{list}. This is a list of symbol names
3921separated by comma or colon characters. The symbol names should not
3922contain a leading underscore. This is only meaningful when
c7c55b78 3923@option{--export-all-symbols} is used.
252b5132
RH
3924
3925@item --no-default-excludes
c7c55b78 3926When @option{--export-all-symbols} is used, it will by default avoid
252b5132
RH
3927exporting certain special symbols. The current list of symbols to avoid
3928exporting is @samp{DllMain@@12}, @samp{DllEntryPoint@@0},
c7c55b78 3929@samp{impure_ptr}. You may use the @option{--no-default-excludes} option
252b5132 3930to go ahead and export these special symbols. This is only meaningful
c7c55b78 3931when @option{--export-all-symbols} is used.
252b5132
RH
3932
3933@item -S @var{path}
3934@itemx --as @var{path}
3935Specifies the path, including the filename, of the assembler to be used
3936to create the exports file.
3937
6364e0b4
NC
3938@item -f @var{options}
3939@itemx --as-flags @var{options}
3940Specifies any specific command line options to be passed to the
252b5132 3941assembler when building the exports file. This option will work even if
c7c55b78 3942the @option{-S} option is not used. This option only takes one argument,
252b5132
RH
3943and if it occurs more than once on the command line, then later
3944occurrences will override earlier occurrences. So if it is necessary to
6364e0b4 3945pass multiple options to the assembler they should be enclosed in
252b5132
RH
3946double quotes.
3947
3948@item -D @var{name}
3949@itemx --dll-name @var{name}
2aa9814e
BE
3950Specifies the name to be stored in the @file{.def} file as the name of
3951the DLL when the @option{-e} option is used. If this option is not
3952present, then the filename given to the @option{-e} option will be
3953used as the name of the DLL.
252b5132
RH
3954
3955@item -m @var{machine}
3956@itemx -machine @var{machine}
3957Specifies the type of machine for which the library file should be
c7c55b78 3958built. @command{dlltool} has a built in default type, depending upon how
252b5132
RH
3959it was created, but this option can be used to override that. This is
3960normally only useful when creating DLLs for an ARM processor, when the
c36774d6 3961contents of the DLL are actually encode using Thumb instructions.
252b5132
RH
3962
3963@item -a
3964@itemx --add-indirect
c7c55b78 3965Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it
252b5132
RH
3966should add a section which allows the exported functions to be
3967referenced without using the import library. Whatever the hell that
c1c0eb9e 3968means!
252b5132
RH
3969
3970@item -U
3971@itemx --add-underscore
c7c55b78 3972Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it
c1c0eb9e 3973should prepend an underscore to the names of @emph{all} exported symbols.
14288fdc 3974
36d21de5
KT
3975@item --no-leading-underscore
3976@item --leading-underscore
3977Specifies whether standard symbol should be forced to be prefixed, or
3978not.
3979
14288fdc
DS
3980@item --add-stdcall-underscore
3981Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it
3982should prepend an underscore to the names of exported @emph{stdcall}
3983functions. Variable names and non-stdcall function names are not modified.
3984This option is useful when creating GNU-compatible import libs for third
3985party DLLs that were built with MS-Windows tools.
252b5132
RH
3986
3987@item -k
3988@itemx --kill-at
c7c55b78 3989Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it
d67a454c
NC
3990should not append the string @samp{@@ <number>}. These numbers are
3991called ordinal numbers and they represent another way of accessing the
3992function in a DLL, other than by name.
252b5132
RH
3993
3994@item -A
3995@itemx --add-stdcall-alias
c7c55b78 3996Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it
252b5132
RH
3997should add aliases for stdcall symbols without @samp{@@ <number>}
3998in addition to the symbols with @samp{@@ <number>}.
3999
607dea97
NC
4000@item -p
4001@itemx --ext-prefix-alias @var{prefix}
4002Causes @command{dlltool} to create external aliases for all DLL
4003imports with the specified prefix. The aliases are created for both
4004external and import symbols with no leading underscore.
4005
252b5132
RH
4006@item -x
4007@itemx --no-idata4
c7c55b78
NC
4008Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports and library
4009files it should omit the @code{.idata4} section. This is for compatibility
252b5132
RH
4010with certain operating systems.
4011
e77b97d4
KT
4012@item --use-nul-prefixed-import-tables
4013Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports and library
4014files it should prefix the @code{.idata4} and @code{.idata5} by zero an
4015element. This emulates old gnu import library generation of
4016@code{dlltool}. By default this option is turned off.
4017
252b5132
RH
4018@item -c
4019@itemx --no-idata5
c7c55b78
NC
4020Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports and library
4021files it should omit the @code{.idata5} section. This is for compatibility
252b5132
RH
4022with certain operating systems.
4023
d4732f7c
CW
4024@item -I @var{filename}
4025@itemx --identify @var{filename}
4026Specifies that @command{dlltool} should inspect the import library
71c57c16
NC
4027indicated by @var{filename} and report, on @code{stdout}, the name(s)
4028of the associated DLL(s). This can be performed in addition to any
4029other operations indicated by the other options and arguments.
4030@command{dlltool} fails if the import library does not exist or is not
4031actually an import library. See also @option{--identify-strict}.
4032
4033@item --identify-strict
4034Modifies the behavior of the @option{--identify} option, such
4035that an error is reported if @var{filename} is associated with
4036more than one DLL.
d4732f7c 4037
252b5132
RH
4038@item -i
4039@itemx --interwork
c7c55b78 4040Specifies that @command{dlltool} should mark the objects in the library
252b5132 4041file and exports file that it produces as supporting interworking
c36774d6 4042between ARM and Thumb code.
252b5132
RH
4043
4044@item -n
4045@itemx --nodelete
c7c55b78 4046Makes @command{dlltool} preserve the temporary assembler files it used to
252b5132
RH
4047create the exports file. If this option is repeated then dlltool will
4048also preserve the temporary object files it uses to create the library
f9346411
DS
4049file.
4050
4051@item -t @var{prefix}
4052@itemx --temp-prefix @var{prefix}
4053Makes @command{dlltool} use @var{prefix} when constructing the names of
4054temporary assembler and object files. By default, the temp file prefix
c1c0eb9e 4055is generated from the pid.
252b5132
RH
4056
4057@item -v
4058@itemx --verbose
4059Make dlltool describe what it is doing.
4060
4061@item -h
4062@itemx --help
4063Displays a list of command line options and then exits.
4064
4065@item -V
4066@itemx --version
4067Displays dlltool's version number and then exits.
4068
4069@end table
4070
0285c67d
NC
4071@c man end
4072
2aa9814e
BE
4073@menu
4074* def file format:: The format of the dlltool @file{.def} file
4075@end menu
4076
4077@node def file format
4078@section The format of the @command{dlltool} @file{.def} file
4079
4080A @file{.def} file contains any number of the following commands:
4081
4082@table @asis
4083
4084@item @code{NAME} @var{name} @code{[ ,} @var{base} @code{]}
4085The result is going to be named @var{name}@code{.exe}.
4086
4087@item @code{LIBRARY} @var{name} @code{[ ,} @var{base} @code{]}
4088The result is going to be named @var{name}@code{.dll}.
5b3d386e
KT
4089Note: If you want to use LIBRARY as name then you need to quote. Otherwise
4090this will fail due a necessary hack for libtool (see PR binutils/13710 for more
4091details).
2aa9814e 4092
bf201fdd 4093@item @code{EXPORTS ( ( (} @var{name1} @code{[ = } @var{name2} @code{] ) | ( } @var{name1} @code{=} @var{module-name} @code{.} @var{external-name} @code{) ) [ == } @var{its_name} @code{]}
2aa9814e
BE
4094@item @code{[} @var{integer} @code{] [ NONAME ] [ CONSTANT ] [ DATA ] [ PRIVATE ] ) *}
4095Declares @var{name1} as an exported symbol from the DLL, with optional
4096ordinal number @var{integer}, or declares @var{name1} as an alias
bf201fdd
KT
4097(forward) of the function @var{external-name} in the DLL.
4098If @var{its_name} is specified, this name is used as string in export table.
2aa9814e 4099@var{module-name}.
5b3d386e
KT
4100Note: The @code{EXPORTS} has to be the last command in .def file, as keywords
4101are treated - beside @code{LIBRARY} - as simple name-identifiers.
4102If you want to use LIBRARY as name then you need to quote it.
2aa9814e 4103
bf201fdd 4104@item @code{IMPORTS ( (} @var{internal-name} @code{=} @var{module-name} @code{.} @var{integer} @code{) | [} @var{internal-name} @code{= ]} @var{module-name} @code{.} @var{external-name} @code{) [ == ) @var{its_name} @code{]} *}
2aa9814e
BE
4105Declares that @var{external-name} or the exported function whose
4106ordinal number is @var{integer} is to be imported from the file
4107@var{module-name}. If @var{internal-name} is specified then this is
4108the name that the imported function will be referred to in the body of
4109the DLL.
bf201fdd 4110If @var{its_name} is specified, this name is used as string in import table.
5b3d386e
KT
4111Note: The @code{IMPORTS} has to be the last command in .def file, as keywords
4112are treated - beside @code{LIBRARY} - as simple name-identifiers.
4113If you want to use LIBRARY as name then you need to quote it.
2aa9814e
BE
4114
4115@item @code{DESCRIPTION} @var{string}
4116Puts @var{string} into the output @file{.exp} file in the
4117@code{.rdata} section.
4118
4119@item @code{STACKSIZE} @var{number-reserve} @code{[, } @var{number-commit} @code{]}
4120@item @code{HEAPSIZE} @var{number-reserve} @code{[, } @var{number-commit} @code{]}
4121Generates @code{--stack} or @code{--heap}
4122@var{number-reserve},@var{number-commit} in the output @code{.drectve}
4123section. The linker will see this and act upon it.
4124
4125@item @code{CODE} @var{attr} @code{+}
4126@item @code{DATA} @var{attr} @code{+}
4127@item @code{SECTIONS (} @var{section-name} @var{attr}@code{ + ) *}
4128Generates @code{--attr} @var{section-name} @var{attr} in the output
4129@code{.drectve} section, where @var{attr} is one of @code{READ},
4130@code{WRITE}, @code{EXECUTE} or @code{SHARED}. The linker will see
4131this and act upon it.
4132
4133@end table
4134
0285c67d
NC
4135@ignore
4136@c man begin SEEALSO dlltool
2aa9814e 4137The Info pages for @file{binutils}.
0285c67d
NC
4138@c man end
4139@end ignore
4140
252b5132
RH
4141@node readelf
4142@chapter readelf
4143
4144@cindex ELF file information
4145@kindex readelf
4146
0285c67d
NC
4147@c man title readelf Displays information about ELF files.
4148
252b5132 4149@smallexample
0285c67d 4150@c man begin SYNOPSIS readelf
c1c0eb9e 4151readelf [@option{-a}|@option{--all}]
c7c55b78
NC
4152 [@option{-h}|@option{--file-header}]
4153 [@option{-l}|@option{--program-headers}|@option{--segments}]
4154 [@option{-S}|@option{--section-headers}|@option{--sections}]
81fc812e 4155 [@option{-g}|@option{--section-groups}]
5477e8a0 4156 [@option{-t}|@option{--section-details}]
c7c55b78
NC
4157 [@option{-e}|@option{--headers}]
4158 [@option{-s}|@option{--syms}|@option{--symbols}]
2c610e4b 4159 [@option{--dyn-syms}]
c7c55b78
NC
4160 [@option{-n}|@option{--notes}]
4161 [@option{-r}|@option{--relocs}]
4162 [@option{-u}|@option{--unwind}]
4163 [@option{-d}|@option{--dynamic}]
4164 [@option{-V}|@option{--version-info}]
947ed062 4165 [@option{-A}|@option{--arch-specific}]
c7c55b78 4166 [@option{-D}|@option{--use-dynamic}]
aef1f6d0 4167 [@option{-x} <number or name>|@option{--hex-dump=}<number or name>]
09c11c86 4168 [@option{-p} <number or name>|@option{--string-dump=}<number or name>]
cf13d699 4169 [@option{-R} <number or name>|@option{--relocated-dump=}<number or name>]
4145f1d5 4170 [@option{-c}|@option{--archive-index}]
f9f0e732 4171 [@option{-w[lLiaprmfFsoRt]}|
5bbdf3d5 4172 @option{--debug-dump}[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index]]
fd2f0033
TT
4173 [@option{--dwarf-depth=@var{n}}]
4174 [@option{--dwarf-start=@var{n}}]
ed22650e 4175 [@option{-I}|@option{--histogram}]
c7c55b78 4176 [@option{-v}|@option{--version}]
d974e256 4177 [@option{-W}|@option{--wide}]
c7c55b78 4178 [@option{-H}|@option{--help}]
252b5132 4179 @var{elffile}@dots{}
0285c67d 4180@c man end
252b5132
RH
4181@end smallexample
4182
0285c67d
NC
4183@c man begin DESCRIPTION readelf
4184
c7c55b78 4185@command{readelf} displays information about one or more ELF format object
252b5132
RH
4186files. The options control what particular information to display.
4187
fb52b2f4
NC
4188@var{elffile}@dots{} are the object files to be examined. 32-bit and
418964-bit ELF files are supported, as are archives containing ELF files.
252b5132 4190
9eb20dd8
NC
4191This program performs a similar function to @command{objdump} but it
4192goes into more detail and it exists independently of the @sc{bfd}
4193library, so if there is a bug in @sc{bfd} then readelf will not be
4194affected.
4195
0285c67d
NC
4196@c man end
4197
4198@c man begin OPTIONS readelf
4199
252b5132
RH
4200The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are
4201equivalent. At least one option besides @samp{-v} or @samp{-H} must be
c1c0eb9e 4202given.
252b5132 4203
c7c55b78 4204@table @env
252b5132
RH
4205@item -a
4206@itemx --all
d95ef3ab 4207Equivalent to specifying @option{--file-header},
c7c55b78
NC
4208@option{--program-headers}, @option{--sections}, @option{--symbols},
4209@option{--relocs}, @option{--dynamic}, @option{--notes} and
c1c0eb9e 4210@option{--version-info}.
252b5132
RH
4211
4212@item -h
4213@itemx --file-header
4214@cindex ELF file header information
4215Displays the information contained in the ELF header at the start of the
4216file.
4217
4218@item -l
4219@itemx --program-headers
4220@itemx --segments
4221@cindex ELF program header information
4222@cindex ELF segment information
4223Displays the information contained in the file's segment headers, if it
4224has any.
4225
4226@item -S
4227@itemx --sections
4228@itemx --section-headers
4229@cindex ELF section information
4230Displays the information contained in the file's section headers, if it
4231has any.
4232
81fc812e
L
4233@item -g
4234@itemx --section-groups
4235@cindex ELF section group information
4236Displays the information contained in the file's section groups, if it
4237has any.
4238
5477e8a0
L
4239@item -t
4240@itemx --section-details
4241@cindex ELF section information
4242Displays the detailed section information. Implies @option{-S}.
81fc812e 4243
252b5132
RH
4244@item -s
4245@itemx --symbols
4246@itemx --syms
4247@cindex ELF symbol table information
4248Displays the entries in symbol table section of the file, if it has one.
4249
2c610e4b
L
4250@item --dyn-syms
4251@cindex ELF dynamic symbol table information
4252Displays the entries in dynamic symbol table section of the file, if it
4253has one.
4254
252b5132
RH
4255@item -e
4256@itemx --headers
c7c55b78 4257Display all the headers in the file. Equivalent to @option{-h -l -S}.
252b5132 4258
779fe533
NC
4259@item -n
4260@itemx --notes
1ec5cd37
NC
4261@cindex ELF notes
4262Displays the contents of the NOTE segments and/or sections, if any.
779fe533 4263
252b5132
RH
4264@item -r
4265@itemx --relocs
4266@cindex ELF reloc information
f5e21966
NC
4267Displays the contents of the file's relocation section, if it has one.
4268
4269@item -u
4270@itemx --unwind
4271@cindex unwind information
4272Displays the contents of the file's unwind section, if it has one. Only
ba7f2642
TS
4273the unwind sections for IA64 ELF files, as well as ARM unwind tables
4274(@code{.ARM.exidx} / @code{.ARM.extab}) are currently supported.
252b5132
RH
4275
4276@item -d
4277@itemx --dynamic
4278@cindex ELF dynamic section information
4279Displays the contents of the file's dynamic section, if it has one.
4280
4281@item -V
4282@itemx --version-info
a8685210 4283@cindex ELF version sections information
252b5132
RH
4284Displays the contents of the version sections in the file, it they
4285exist.
4286
947ed062
NC
4287@item -A
4288@itemx --arch-specific
4289Displays architecture-specific information in the file, if there
4290is any.
4291
252b5132
RH
4292@item -D
4293@itemx --use-dynamic
c7c55b78 4294When displaying symbols, this option makes @command{readelf} use the
2c610e4b
L
4295symbol hash tables in the file's dynamic section, rather than the
4296symbol table sections.
252b5132 4297
aef1f6d0
DJ
4298@item -x <number or name>
4299@itemx --hex-dump=<number or name>
cf13d699 4300Displays the contents of the indicated section as a hexadecimal bytes.
aef1f6d0
DJ
4301A number identifies a particular section by index in the section table;
4302any other string identifies all sections with that name in the object file.
252b5132 4303
cf13d699
NC
4304@item -R <number or name>
4305@itemx --relocated-dump=<number or name>
4306Displays the contents of the indicated section as a hexadecimal
4307bytes. A number identifies a particular section by index in the
4308section table; any other string identifies all sections with that name
4309in the object file. The contents of the section will be relocated
4310before they are displayed.
4311
09c11c86
NC
4312@item -p <number or name>
4313@itemx --string-dump=<number or name>
4314Displays the contents of the indicated section as printable strings.
4315A number identifies a particular section by index in the section table;
4316any other string identifies all sections with that name in the object file.
4317
4145f1d5
NC
4318@item -c
4319@itemx --archive-index
4320@cindex Archive file symbol index information
a8685210 4321Displays the file symbol index information contained in the header part
4145f1d5
NC
4322of binary archives. Performs the same function as the @option{t}
4323command to @command{ar}, but without using the BFD library. @xref{ar}.
4324
f9f0e732 4325@item -w[lLiaprmfFsoRt]
5bbdf3d5 4326@itemx --debug-dump[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index]
252b5132
RH
4327Displays the contents of the debug sections in the file, if any are
4328present. If one of the optional letters or words follows the switch
4329then only data found in those specific sections will be dumped.
4330
6f875884 4331Note that there is no single letter option to display the content of
5bbdf3d5 4332trace sections or .gdb_index.
6f875884 4333
a262ae96
NC
4334Note: the @option{=decodedline} option will display the interpreted
4335contents of a .debug_line section whereas the @option{=rawline} option
4336dumps the contents in a raw format.
4337
1ed06042
NC
4338Note: the @option{=frames-interp} option will display the interpreted
4339contents of a .debug_frame section whereas the @option{=frames} option
4340dumps the contents in a raw format.
4341
fd2f0033
TT
4342Note: the output from the @option{=info} option can also be affected
4343by the options @option{--dwarf-depth} and @option{--dwarf-start}.
4344
4345@item --dwarf-depth=@var{n}
4346Limit the dump of the @code{.debug_info} section to @var{n} children.
4347This is only useful with @option{--debug-dump=info}. The default is
4348to print all DIEs; the special value 0 for @var{n} will also have this
4349effect.
4350
4351With a non-zero value for @var{n}, DIEs at or deeper than @var{n}
4352levels will not be printed. The range for @var{n} is zero-based.
4353
4354@item --dwarf-start=@var{n}
4355Print only DIEs beginning with the DIE numbered @var{n}. This is only
4356useful with @option{--debug-dump=info}.
4357
4358If specified, this option will suppress printing of any header
4359information and all DIEs before the DIE numbered @var{n}. Only
4360siblings and children of the specified DIE will be printed.
4361
4362This can be used in conjunction with @option{--dwarf-depth}.
4363
947ed062
NC
4364@item -I
4365@itemx --histogram
252b5132
RH
4366Display a histogram of bucket list lengths when displaying the contents
4367of the symbol tables.
4368
4369@item -v
4370@itemx --version
4371Display the version number of readelf.
4372
d974e256
JJ
4373@item -W
4374@itemx --wide
4375Don't break output lines to fit into 80 columns. By default
4376@command{readelf} breaks section header and segment listing lines for
437764-bit ELF files, so that they fit into 80 columns. This option causes
4378@command{readelf} to print each section header resp. each segment one a
4379single line, which is far more readable on terminals wider than 80 columns.
4380
252b5132
RH
4381@item -H
4382@itemx --help
c7c55b78 4383Display the command line options understood by @command{readelf}.
252b5132
RH
4384
4385@end table
4386
0285c67d
NC
4387@c man end
4388
4389@ignore
4390@c man begin SEEALSO readelf
4391objdump(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
4392@c man end
4393@end ignore
252b5132 4394
30fd33bb
L
4395@node elfedit
4396@chapter elfedit
4397
4398@cindex Update ELF header
4399@kindex elfedit
4400
4401@c man title elfedit Update the ELF header of ELF files.
4402
4403@smallexample
4404@c man begin SYNOPSIS elfedit
4405elfedit [@option{--input-mach=}@var{machine}]
dd35de74 4406 [@option{--input-type=}@var{type}]
08ebfb8c 4407 [@option{--input-osabi=}@var{osabi}]
c7a795f8 4408 @option{--output-mach=}@var{machine}
dd35de74 4409 @option{--output-type=}@var{type}
08ebfb8c 4410 @option{--output-osabi=}@var{osabi}
30fd33bb
L
4411 [@option{-v}|@option{--version}]
4412 [@option{-h}|@option{--help}]
4413 @var{elffile}@dots{}
4414@c man end
4415@end smallexample
4416
4417@c man begin DESCRIPTION elfedit
4418
dd35de74
L
4419@command{elfedit} updates the ELF header of ELF files which have
4420the matching ELF machine and file types. The options control how and
4421which fields in the ELF header should be updated.
30fd33bb
L
4422
4423@var{elffile}@dots{} are the ELF files to be updated. 32-bit and
442464-bit ELF files are supported, as are archives containing ELF files.
4425@c man end
4426
4427@c man begin OPTIONS elfedit
4428
4429The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are
d0514c49
L
4430equivalent. At least one of the @option{--output-mach},
4431@option{--output-type} and @option{--output-osabi} options must be given.
30fd33bb
L
4432
4433@table @env
4434
574b25e8 4435@item --input-mach=@var{machine}
dd35de74
L
4436Set the matching input ELF machine type to @var{machine}. If
4437@option{--input-mach} isn't specified, it will match any ELF
4438machine types.
30fd33bb 4439
7a9068fe
L
4440The supported ELF machine types are, @var{L1OM}, @var{K1OM} and
4441@var{x86-64}.
30fd33bb 4442
574b25e8 4443@item --output-mach=@var{machine}
30fd33bb
L
4444Change the ELF machine type in the ELF header to @var{machine}. The
4445supported ELF machine types are the same as @option{--input-mach}.
4446
574b25e8 4447@item --input-type=@var{type}
dd35de74
L
4448Set the matching input ELF file type to @var{type}. If
4449@option{--input-type} isn't specified, it will match any ELF file types.
4450
4451The supported ELF file types are, @var{rel}, @var{exec} and @var{dyn}.
4452
574b25e8 4453@item --output-type=@var{type}
dd35de74
L
4454Change the ELF file type in the ELF header to @var{type}. The
4455supported ELF types are the same as @option{--input-type}.
4456
574b25e8 4457@item --input-osabi=@var{osabi}
08ebfb8c 4458Set the matching input ELF file OSABI to @var{osabi}. If
d0514c49
L
4459@option{--input-osabi} isn't specified, it will match any ELF OSABIs.
4460
4461The supported ELF OSABIs are, @var{none}, @var{HPUX}, @var{NetBSD},
9c55345c
TS
4462@var{GNU}, @var{Linux} (alias for @var{GNU}),
4463@var{Solaris}, @var{AIX}, @var{Irix},
d0514c49
L
4464@var{FreeBSD}, @var{TRU64}, @var{Modesto}, @var{OpenBSD}, @var{OpenVMS},
4465@var{NSK}, @var{AROS} and @var{FenixOS}.
4466
574b25e8 4467@item --output-osabi=@var{osabi}
08ebfb8c 4468Change the ELF OSABI in the ELF header to @var{osabi}. The
d0514c49
L
4469supported ELF OSABI are the same as @option{--input-osabi}.
4470
30fd33bb
L
4471@item -v
4472@itemx --version
4473Display the version number of @command{elfedit}.
4474
4475@item -h
4476@itemx --help
4477Display the command line options understood by @command{elfedit}.
4478
4479@end table
4480
4481@c man end
4482
4483@ignore
4484@c man begin SEEALSO elfedit
4485readelf(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}.
4486@c man end
4487@end ignore
4488
07012eee
MM
4489@node Common Options
4490@chapter Common Options
4491
4492The following command-line options are supported by all of the
4493programs described in this manual.
4494
dff70155 4495@c man begin OPTIONS
07012eee 4496@table @env
38fc1cb1 4497@include at-file.texi
dff70155 4498@c man end
07012eee
MM
4499
4500@item --help
4501Display the command-line options supported by the program.
4502
4503@item --version
4504Display the version number of the program.
4505
dff70155 4506@c man begin OPTIONS
07012eee 4507@end table
dff70155 4508@c man end
07012eee 4509
fff279a7 4510@node Selecting the Target System
947ed062 4511@chapter Selecting the Target System
252b5132 4512
947ed062 4513You can specify two aspects of the target system to the @sc{gnu}
252b5132
RH
4514binary file utilities, each in several ways:
4515
4516@itemize @bullet
4517@item
4518the target
4519
4520@item
4521the architecture
252b5132
RH
4522@end itemize
4523
4524In the following summaries, the lists of ways to specify values are in
4525order of decreasing precedence. The ways listed first override those
4526listed later.
4527
4528The commands to list valid values only list the values for which the
4529programs you are running were configured. If they were configured with
c7c55b78 4530@option{--enable-targets=all}, the commands list most of the available
252b5132
RH
4531values, but a few are left out; not all targets can be configured in at
4532once because some of them can only be configured @dfn{native} (on hosts
4533with the same type as the target system).
4534
4535@menu
c1c0eb9e
RM
4536* Target Selection::
4537* Architecture Selection::
252b5132
RH
4538@end menu
4539
4540@node Target Selection
4541@section Target Selection
4542
4543A @dfn{target} is an object file format. A given target may be
4544supported for multiple architectures (@pxref{Architecture Selection}).
4545A target selection may also have variations for different operating
4546systems or architectures.
4547
4548The command to list valid target values is @samp{objdump -i}
4549(the first column of output contains the relevant information).
4550
4551Some sample values are: @samp{a.out-hp300bsd}, @samp{ecoff-littlemips},
4552@samp{a.out-sunos-big}.
4553
4554You can also specify a target using a configuration triplet. This is
f20a759a
ILT
4555the same sort of name that is passed to @file{configure} to specify a
4556target. When you use a configuration triplet as an argument, it must be
4557fully canonicalized. You can see the canonical version of a triplet by
252b5132
RH
4558running the shell script @file{config.sub} which is included with the
4559sources.
4560
4561Some sample configuration triplets are: @samp{m68k-hp-bsd},
4562@samp{mips-dec-ultrix}, @samp{sparc-sun-sunos}.
4563
c7c55b78 4564@subheading @command{objdump} Target
252b5132
RH
4565
4566Ways to specify:
4567
4568@enumerate
4569@item
c7c55b78 4570command line option: @option{-b} or @option{--target}
252b5132
RH
4571
4572@item
4573environment variable @code{GNUTARGET}
4574
4575@item
4576deduced from the input file
4577@end enumerate
4578
c7c55b78 4579@subheading @command{objcopy} and @command{strip} Input Target
252b5132
RH
4580
4581Ways to specify:
4582
4583@enumerate
4584@item
c7c55b78 4585command line options: @option{-I} or @option{--input-target}, or @option{-F} or @option{--target}
252b5132
RH
4586
4587@item
4588environment variable @code{GNUTARGET}
4589
4590@item
4591deduced from the input file
4592@end enumerate
4593
c7c55b78 4594@subheading @command{objcopy} and @command{strip} Output Target
252b5132
RH
4595
4596Ways to specify:
4597
4598@enumerate
4599@item
c7c55b78 4600command line options: @option{-O} or @option{--output-target}, or @option{-F} or @option{--target}
252b5132
RH
4601
4602@item
c7c55b78 4603the input target (see ``@command{objcopy} and @command{strip} Input Target'' above)
252b5132
RH
4604
4605@item
4606environment variable @code{GNUTARGET}
4607
4608@item
4609deduced from the input file
4610@end enumerate
4611
c7c55b78 4612@subheading @command{nm}, @command{size}, and @command{strings} Target
252b5132
RH
4613
4614Ways to specify:
4615
4616@enumerate
4617@item
c7c55b78 4618command line option: @option{--target}
252b5132
RH
4619
4620@item
4621environment variable @code{GNUTARGET}
4622
4623@item
4624deduced from the input file
4625@end enumerate
4626
252b5132 4627@node Architecture Selection
947ed062 4628@section Architecture Selection
252b5132
RH
4629
4630An @dfn{architecture} is a type of @sc{cpu} on which an object file is
4631to run. Its name may contain a colon, separating the name of the
4632processor family from the name of the particular @sc{cpu}.
4633
4634The command to list valid architecture values is @samp{objdump -i} (the
4635second column contains the relevant information).
4636
4637Sample values: @samp{m68k:68020}, @samp{mips:3000}, @samp{sparc}.
4638
c7c55b78 4639@subheading @command{objdump} Architecture
252b5132
RH
4640
4641Ways to specify:
4642
4643@enumerate
4644@item
c7c55b78 4645command line option: @option{-m} or @option{--architecture}
252b5132
RH
4646
4647@item
4648deduced from the input file
4649@end enumerate
4650
c7c55b78 4651@subheading @command{objcopy}, @command{nm}, @command{size}, @command{strings} Architecture
252b5132
RH
4652
4653Ways to specify:
4654
4655@enumerate
4656@item
4657deduced from the input file
4658@end enumerate
4659
252b5132
RH
4660@node Reporting Bugs
4661@chapter Reporting Bugs
4662@cindex bugs
4663@cindex reporting bugs
4664
4665Your bug reports play an essential role in making the binary utilities
4666reliable.
4667
4668Reporting a bug may help you by bringing a solution to your problem, or
4669it may not. But in any case the principal function of a bug report is
4670to help the entire community by making the next version of the binary
4671utilities work better. Bug reports are your contribution to their
4672maintenance.
4673
4674In order for a bug report to serve its purpose, you must include the
4675information that enables us to fix the bug.
4676
4677@menu
4678* Bug Criteria:: Have you found a bug?
4679* Bug Reporting:: How to report bugs
4680@end menu
4681
4682@node Bug Criteria
947ed062 4683@section Have You Found a Bug?
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4684@cindex bug criteria
4685
4686If you are not sure whether you have found a bug, here are some guidelines:
4687
4688@itemize @bullet
4689@cindex fatal signal
4690@cindex crash
4691@item
4692If a binary utility gets a fatal signal, for any input whatever, that is
4693a bug. Reliable utilities never crash.
4694
4695@cindex error on valid input
4696@item
4697If a binary utility produces an error message for valid input, that is a
4698bug.
4699
4700@item
4701If you are an experienced user of binary utilities, your suggestions for
4702improvement are welcome in any case.
4703@end itemize
4704
4705@node Bug Reporting
947ed062 4706@section How to Report Bugs
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4707@cindex bug reports
4708@cindex bugs, reporting
4709
4710A number of companies and individuals offer support for @sc{gnu}
4711products. If you obtained the binary utilities from a support
4712organization, we recommend you contact that organization first.
4713
4714You can find contact information for many support companies and
4715individuals in the file @file{etc/SERVICE} in the @sc{gnu} Emacs
4716distribution.
4717
ad22bfe8 4718@ifset BUGURL
252b5132 4719In any event, we also recommend that you send bug reports for the binary
ad22bfe8
JM
4720utilities to @value{BUGURL}.
4721@end ifset
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4722
4723The fundamental principle of reporting bugs usefully is this:
4724@strong{report all the facts}. If you are not sure whether to state a
4725fact or leave it out, state it!
4726
4727Often people omit facts because they think they know what causes the
4728problem and assume that some details do not matter. Thus, you might
4729assume that the name of a file you use in an example does not matter.
4730Well, probably it does not, but one cannot be sure. Perhaps the bug is
4731a stray memory reference which happens to fetch from the location where
4732that pathname is stored in memory; perhaps, if the pathname were
4733different, the contents of that location would fool the utility into
4734doing the right thing despite the bug. Play it safe and give a
4735specific, complete example. That is the easiest thing for you to do,
4736and the most helpful.
4737
4738Keep in mind that the purpose of a bug report is to enable us to fix the bug if
4739it is new to us. Therefore, always write your bug reports on the assumption
4740that the bug has not been reported previously.
4741
4742Sometimes people give a few sketchy facts and ask, ``Does this ring a
947ed062
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4743bell?'' This cannot help us fix a bug, so it is basically useless. We
4744respond by asking for enough details to enable us to investigate.
4745You might as well expedite matters by sending them to begin with.
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4746
4747To enable us to fix the bug, you should include all these things:
4748
4749@itemize @bullet
4750@item
4751The version of the utility. Each utility announces it if you start it
c7c55b78 4752with the @option{--version} argument.
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4753
4754Without this, we will not know whether there is any point in looking for
4755the bug in the current version of the binary utilities.
4756
4757@item
4758Any patches you may have applied to the source, including any patches
4759made to the @code{BFD} library.
4760
4761@item
4762The type of machine you are using, and the operating system name and
4763version number.
4764
4765@item
4766What compiler (and its version) was used to compile the utilities---e.g.
4767``@code{gcc-2.7}''.
4768
4769@item
4770The command arguments you gave the utility to observe the bug. To
4771guarantee you will not omit something important, list them all. A copy
4772of the Makefile (or the output from make) is sufficient.
4773
4774If we were to try to guess the arguments, we would probably guess wrong
4775and then we might not encounter the bug.
4776
4777@item
4778A complete input file, or set of input files, that will reproduce the
4779bug. If the utility is reading an object file or files, then it is
ad22bfe8 4780generally most helpful to send the actual object files.
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4781
4782If the source files were produced exclusively using @sc{gnu} programs
c7c55b78 4783(e.g., @command{gcc}, @command{gas}, and/or the @sc{gnu} @command{ld}), then it
252b5132 4784may be OK to send the source files rather than the object files. In
c7c55b78 4785this case, be sure to say exactly what version of @command{gcc}, or
252b5132 4786whatever, was used to produce the object files. Also say how
c7c55b78 4787@command{gcc}, or whatever, was configured.
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4788
4789@item
4790A description of what behavior you observe that you believe is
4791incorrect. For example, ``It gets a fatal signal.''
4792
4793Of course, if the bug is that the utility gets a fatal signal, then we
4794will certainly notice it. But if the bug is incorrect output, we might
4795not notice unless it is glaringly wrong. You might as well not give us
4796a chance to make a mistake.
4797
4798Even if the problem you experience is a fatal signal, you should still
f20a759a 4799say so explicitly. Suppose something strange is going on, such as your
b45619c0 4800copy of the utility is out of sync, or you have encountered a bug in
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4801the C library on your system. (This has happened!) Your copy might
4802crash and ours would not. If you told us to expect a crash, then when
4803ours fails to crash, we would know that the bug was not happening for
4804us. If you had not told us to expect a crash, then we would not be able
4805to draw any conclusion from our observations.
4806
4807@item
4808If you wish to suggest changes to the source, send us context diffs, as
c7c55b78 4809generated by @command{diff} with the @option{-u}, @option{-c}, or @option{-p}
252b5132 4810option. Always send diffs from the old file to the new file. If you
c7c55b78 4811wish to discuss something in the @command{ld} source, refer to it by
f20a759a 4812context, not by line number.
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4813
4814The line numbers in our development sources will not match those in your
4815sources. Your line numbers would convey no useful information to us.
4816@end itemize
4817
4818Here are some things that are not necessary:
4819
4820@itemize @bullet
4821@item
4822A description of the envelope of the bug.
4823
4824Often people who encounter a bug spend a lot of time investigating
4825which changes to the input file will make the bug go away and which
4826changes will not affect it.
4827
4828This is often time consuming and not very useful, because the way we
4829will find the bug is by running a single example under the debugger
4830with breakpoints, not by pure deduction from a series of examples.
4831We recommend that you save your time for something else.
4832
4833Of course, if you can find a simpler example to report @emph{instead}
4834of the original one, that is a convenience for us. Errors in the
4835output will be easier to spot, running under the debugger will take
4836less time, and so on.
4837
4838However, simplification is not vital; if you do not want to do this,
4839report the bug anyway and send us the entire test case you used.
4840
4841@item
4842A patch for the bug.
4843
4844A patch for the bug does help us if it is a good one. But do not omit
4845the necessary information, such as the test case, on the assumption that
4846a patch is all we need. We might see problems with your patch and decide
4847to fix the problem another way, or we might not understand it at all.
4848
4849Sometimes with programs as complicated as the binary utilities it is
4850very hard to construct an example that will make the program follow a
4851certain path through the code. If you do not send us the example, we
4852will not be able to construct one, so we will not be able to verify that
4853the bug is fixed.
4854
4855And if we cannot understand what bug you are trying to fix, or why your
4856patch should be an improvement, we will not install it. A test case will
4857help us to understand.
4858
4859@item
4860A guess about what the bug is or what it depends on.
4861
4862Such guesses are usually wrong. Even we cannot guess right about such
4863things without first using the debugger to find the facts.
4864@end itemize
4865
fff279a7
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4866@node GNU Free Documentation License
4867@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
b3364cb9 4868
947ed062 4869@include fdl.texi
cf055d54 4870
fa0d8a3e
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4871@node Binutils Index
4872@unnumbered Binutils Index
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4873
4874@printindex cp
4875
252b5132 4876@bye
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