* remote.texi (Bootstrapping): Clarify that flush_i_cache is only
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / doc / stabs.texinfo
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1\input texinfo
2@setfilename stabs.info
3
6fe91f2c 4@c @finalout
a9ded3ac 5
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6@ifinfo
7@format
8START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
95cb23dc 9* Stabs: (stabs). The "stabs" debugging information format.
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10END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
11@end format
12@end ifinfo
13
14@ifinfo
8c59ee11 15This document describes the stabs debugging symbol tables.
e505224d 16
6fe91f2c 17Copyright 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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18Contributed by Cygnus Support. Written by Julia Menapace, Jim Kingdon,
19and David MacKenzie.
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20
21Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
22this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
23are preserved on all copies.
24
25@ignore
26Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
27results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
28notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
29(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
30
31@end ignore
32Permission is granted to copy or distribute modified versions of this
33manual under the terms of the GPL (for which purpose this text may be
34regarded as a program in the language TeX).
35@end ifinfo
36
139741da 37@setchapternewpage odd
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38@settitle STABS
39@titlepage
139741da 40@title The ``stabs'' debug format
f958d5cd 41@author Julia Menapace, Jim Kingdon, David MacKenzie
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42@author Cygnus Support
43@page
44@tex
45\def\$#1${{#1}} % Kluge: collect RCS revision info without $...$
46\xdef\manvers{\$Revision$} % For use in headers, footers too
47{\parskip=0pt
48\hfill Cygnus Support\par
49\hfill \manvers\par
50\hfill \TeX{}info \texinfoversion\par
51}
52@end tex
53
54@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
6fe91f2c 55Copyright @copyright{} 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
899bafeb 56Contributed by Cygnus Support.
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57
58Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
59this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
60are preserved on all copies.
61
62@end titlepage
63
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64@ifinfo
65@node Top
66@top The "stabs" representation of debugging information
e505224d 67
6ae55c65 68This document describes the stabs debugging format.
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69
70@menu
8eb5e289 71* Overview:: Overview of stabs
bf9d2537 72* Program Structure:: Encoding of the structure of the program
6897f9ec 73* Constants:: Constants
6fe91f2c 74* Variables::
8c59ee11 75* Types:: Type definitions
bf9d2537 76* Symbol Tables:: Symbol information in symbol tables
8eb5e289 77* Cplusplus:: Appendixes:
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78* Stab Types:: Symbol types in a.out files
79* Symbol Descriptors:: Table of symbol descriptors
80* Type Descriptors:: Table of type descriptors
81* Expanded Reference:: Reference information by stab type
8eb5e289 82* Questions:: Questions and anomolies
bf9d2537 83* XCOFF Differences:: Differences between GNU stabs in a.out
f958d5cd 84 and GNU stabs in XCOFF
bf9d2537 85* Sun Differences:: Differences between GNU stabs and Sun
139741da 86 native stabs
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87* Stab Sections:: In some object file formats, stabs are
88 in sections.
bf9d2537 89* Symbol Types Index:: Index of symbolic stab symbol type names.
e505224d 90@end menu
899bafeb 91@end ifinfo
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92
93
899bafeb 94@node Overview
bf9d2537 95@chapter Overview of Stabs
e505224d 96
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97@dfn{Stabs} refers to a format for information that describes a program
98to a debugger. This format was apparently invented by
534694b3 99Peter Kessler at
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100the University of California at Berkeley, for the @code{pdx} Pascal
101debugger; the format has spread widely since then.
102
8c59ee11 103This document is one of the few published sources of documentation on
dd8126d9 104stabs. It is believed to be comprehensive for stabs used by C. The
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105lists of symbol descriptors (@pxref{Symbol Descriptors}) and type
106descriptors (@pxref{Type Descriptors}) are believed to be completely
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107comprehensive. Stabs for COBOL-specific features and for variant
108records (used by Pascal and Modula-2) are poorly documented here.
109
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110@c FIXME: Need to document all OS9000 stuff in GDB; see all references
111@c to os9k_stabs in stabsread.c.
112
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113Other sources of information on stabs are @cite{Dbx and Dbxtool
114Interfaces}, 2nd edition, by Sun, 1988, and @cite{AIX Version 3.2 Files
115Reference}, Fourth Edition, September 1992, "dbx Stabstring Grammar" in
116the a.out section, page 2-31. This document is believed to incorporate
b857d956 117the information from those two sources except where it explicitly directs
dd8126d9 118you to them for more information.
8c59ee11 119
e505224d 120@menu
8eb5e289 121* Flow:: Overview of debugging information flow
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122* Stabs Format:: Overview of stab format
123* String Field:: The string field
124* C Example:: A simple example in C source
125* Assembly Code:: The simple example at the assembly level
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126@end menu
127
899bafeb 128@node Flow
bf9d2537 129@section Overview of Debugging Information Flow
e505224d 130
139741da 131The GNU C compiler compiles C source in a @file{.c} file into assembly
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132language in a @file{.s} file, which the assembler translates into
133a @file{.o} file, which the linker combines with other @file{.o} files and
139741da 134libraries to produce an executable file.
e505224d 135
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136With the @samp{-g} option, GCC puts in the @file{.s} file additional
137debugging information, which is slightly transformed by the assembler
138and linker, and carried through into the final executable. This
139debugging information describes features of the source file like line
140numbers, the types and scopes of variables, and function names,
141parameters, and scopes.
e505224d 142
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143For some object file formats, the debugging information is encapsulated
144in assembler directives known collectively as @dfn{stab} (symbol table)
145directives, which are interspersed with the generated code. Stabs are
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146the native format for debugging information in the a.out and XCOFF
147object file formats. The GNU tools can also emit stabs in the COFF and
148ECOFF object file formats.
e505224d 149
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150The assembler adds the information from stabs to the symbol information
151it places by default in the symbol table and the string table of the
152@file{.o} file it is building. The linker consolidates the @file{.o}
153files into one executable file, with one symbol table and one string
154table. Debuggers use the symbol and string tables in the executable as
155a source of debugging information about the program.
e505224d 156
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157@node Stabs Format
158@section Overview of Stab Format
e505224d 159
6fe91f2c 160There are three overall formats for stab assembler directives,
139741da 161differentiated by the first word of the stab. The name of the directive
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162describes which combination of four possible data fields follows. It is
163either @code{.stabs} (string), @code{.stabn} (number), or @code{.stabd}
f958d5cd 164(dot). IBM's XCOFF assembler uses @code{.stabx} (and some other
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165directives such as @code{.file} and @code{.bi}) instead of
166@code{.stabs}, @code{.stabn} or @code{.stabd}.
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167
168The overall format of each class of stab is:
169
170@example
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171.stabs "@var{string}",@var{type},@var{other},@var{desc},@var{value}
172.stabn @var{type},@var{other},@var{desc},@var{value}
173.stabd @var{type},@var{other},@var{desc}
6fe91f2c 174.stabx "@var{string}",@var{value},@var{type},@var{sdb-type}
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175@end example
176
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177@c what is the correct term for "current file location"? My AIX
178@c assembler manual calls it "the value of the current location counter".
6fe91f2c 179For @code{.stabn} and @code{.stabd}, there is no @var{string} (the
bf9d2537 180@code{n_strx} field is zero; see @ref{Symbol Tables}). For
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181@code{.stabd}, the @var{value} field is implicit and has the value of
182the current file location. For @code{.stabx}, the @var{sdb-type} field
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183is unused for stabs and can always be set to zero. The @var{other}
184field is almost always unused and can be set to zero.
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185
186The number in the @var{type} field gives some basic information about
187which type of stab this is (or whether it @emph{is} a stab, as opposed
188to an ordinary symbol). Each valid type number defines a different stab
685a5e86 189type; further, the stab type defines the exact interpretation of, and
6fe91f2c 190possible values for, any remaining @var{string}, @var{desc}, or
bf9d2537 191@var{value} fields present in the stab. @xref{Stab Types}, for a list
685a5e86 192in numeric order of the valid @var{type} field values for stab directives.
6fe91f2c 193
bf9d2537 194@node String Field
0a95c18c 195@section The String Field
e505224d 196
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197For most stabs the string field holds the meat of the
198debugging information. The flexible nature of this field
199is what makes stabs extensible. For some stab types the string field
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200contains only a name. For other stab types the contents can be a great
201deal more complex.
e505224d 202
0a95c18c 203The overall format of the string field for most stab types is:
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204
205@example
46351197 206"@var{name}:@var{symbol-descriptor} @var{type-information}"
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207@end example
208
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209@var{name} is the name of the symbol represented by the stab; it can
210contain a pair of colons (@pxref{Nested Symbols}). @var{name} can be
211omitted, which means the stab represents an unnamed object. For
212example, @samp{:t10=*2} defines type 10 as a pointer to type 2, but does
213not give the type a name. Omitting the @var{name} field is supported by
214AIX dbx and GDB after about version 4.8, but not other debuggers. GCC
215sometimes uses a single space as the name instead of omitting the name
216altogether; apparently that is supported by most debuggers.
e505224d 217
685a5e86 218The @var{symbol-descriptor} following the @samp{:} is an alphabetic
139741da 219character that tells more specifically what kind of symbol the stab
685a5e86 220represents. If the @var{symbol-descriptor} is omitted, but type
139741da 221information follows, then the stab represents a local variable. For a
bf9d2537 222list of symbol descriptors, see @ref{Symbol Descriptors}. The @samp{c}
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223symbol descriptor is an exception in that it is not followed by type
224information. @xref{Constants}.
e505224d 225
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226@var{type-information} is either a @var{type-number}, or
227@samp{@var{type-number}=}. A @var{type-number} alone is a type
139741da 228reference, referring directly to a type that has already been defined.
e505224d 229
685a5e86 230The @samp{@var{type-number}=} form is a type definition, where the
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231number represents a new type which is about to be defined. The type
232definition may refer to other types by number, and those type numbers
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233may be followed by @samp{=} and nested definitions. Also, the Lucid
234compiler will repeat @samp{@var{type-number}=} more than once if it
235wants to define several type numbers at once.
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236
237In a type definition, if the character that follows the equals sign is
685a5e86 238non-numeric then it is a @var{type-descriptor}, and tells what kind of
139741da 239type is about to be defined. Any other values following the
685a5e86 240@var{type-descriptor} vary, depending on the @var{type-descriptor}.
bf9d2537 241@xref{Type Descriptors}, for a list of @var{type-descriptor} values. If
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242a number follows the @samp{=} then the number is a @var{type-reference}.
243For a full description of types, @ref{Types}.
139741da 244
6897f9ec 245There is an AIX extension for type attributes. Following the @samp{=}
685a5e86 246are any number of type attributes. Each one starts with @samp{@@} and
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247ends with @samp{;}. Debuggers, including AIX's dbx and GDB 4.10, skip
248any type attributes they do not recognize. GDB 4.9 and other versions
249of dbx may not do this. Because of a conflict with C++
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250(@pxref{Cplusplus}), new attributes should not be defined which begin
251with a digit, @samp{(}, or @samp{-}; GDB may be unable to distinguish
252those from the C++ type descriptor @samp{@@}. The attributes are:
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253
254@table @code
255@item a@var{boundary}
8c59ee11 256@var{boundary} is an integer specifying the alignment. I assume it
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257applies to all variables of this type.
258
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259@item p@var{integer}
260Pointer class (for checking). Not sure what this means, or how
261@var{integer} is interpreted.
262
263@item P
264Indicate this is a packed type, meaning that structure fields or array
265elements are placed more closely in memory, to save memory at the
266expense of speed.
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267
268@item s@var{size}
269Size in bits of a variable of this type. This is fully supported by GDB
2704.11 and later.
271
272@item S
273Indicate that this type is a string instead of an array of characters,
274or a bitstring instead of a set. It doesn't change the layout of the
275data being represented, but does enable the debugger to know which type
276it is.
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277@end table
278
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279All of this can make the string field quite long. All versions of GDB,
280and some versions of dbx, can handle arbitrarily long strings. But many
281versions of dbx (or assemblers or linkers, I'm not sure which)
282cretinously limit the strings to about 80 characters, so compilers which
283must work with such systems need to split the @code{.stabs} directive
284into several @code{.stabs} directives. Each stab duplicates every field
285except the string field. The string field of every stab except the last
286is marked as continued with a backslash at the end (in the assembly code
287this may be written as a double backslash, depending on the assembler).
288Removing the backslashes and concatenating the string fields of each
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289stab produces the original, long string. Just to be incompatible (or so
290they don't have to worry about what the assembler does with
291backslashes), AIX can use @samp{?} instead of backslash.
e505224d 292
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293@node C Example
294@section A Simple Example in C Source
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295
296To get the flavor of how stabs describe source information for a C
297program, let's look at the simple program:
298
299@example
6fe91f2c 300main()
e505224d 301@{
139741da 302 printf("Hello world");
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303@}
304@end example
305
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306When compiled with @samp{-g}, the program above yields the following
307@file{.s} file. Line numbers have been added to make it easier to refer
308to parts of the @file{.s} file in the description of the stabs that
309follows.
e505224d 310
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311@node Assembly Code
312@section The Simple Example at the Assembly Level
e505224d 313
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314This simple ``hello world'' example demonstrates several of the stab
315types used to describe C language source files.
316
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317@example
3181 gcc2_compiled.:
3192 .stabs "/cygint/s1/users/jcm/play/",100,0,0,Ltext0
3203 .stabs "hello.c",100,0,0,Ltext0
3214 .text
3225 Ltext0:
3236 .stabs "int:t1=r1;-2147483648;2147483647;",128,0,0,0
3247 .stabs "char:t2=r2;0;127;",128,0,0,0
3258 .stabs "long int:t3=r1;-2147483648;2147483647;",128,0,0,0
3269 .stabs "unsigned int:t4=r1;0;-1;",128,0,0,0
32710 .stabs "long unsigned int:t5=r1;0;-1;",128,0,0,0
32811 .stabs "short int:t6=r1;-32768;32767;",128,0,0,0
32912 .stabs "long long int:t7=r1;0;-1;",128,0,0,0
33013 .stabs "short unsigned int:t8=r1;0;65535;",128,0,0,0
33114 .stabs "long long unsigned int:t9=r1;0;-1;",128,0,0,0
33215 .stabs "signed char:t10=r1;-128;127;",128,0,0,0
33316 .stabs "unsigned char:t11=r1;0;255;",128,0,0,0
33417 .stabs "float:t12=r1;4;0;",128,0,0,0
33518 .stabs "double:t13=r1;8;0;",128,0,0,0
33619 .stabs "long double:t14=r1;8;0;",128,0,0,0
33720 .stabs "void:t15=15",128,0,0,0
139741da 33821 .align 4
e505224d 33922 LC0:
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34023 .ascii "Hello, world!\12\0"
34124 .align 4
34225 .global _main
34326 .proc 1
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34427 _main:
34528 .stabn 68,0,4,LM1
34629 LM1:
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34730 !#PROLOGUE# 0
34831 save %sp,-136,%sp
34932 !#PROLOGUE# 1
35033 call ___main,0
35134 nop
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35235 .stabn 68,0,5,LM2
35336 LM2:
35437 LBB2:
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35538 sethi %hi(LC0),%o1
35639 or %o1,%lo(LC0),%o0
35740 call _printf,0
35841 nop
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35942 .stabn 68,0,6,LM3
36043 LM3:
36144 LBE2:
36245 .stabn 68,0,6,LM4
36346 LM4:
36447 L1:
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36548 ret
36649 restore
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36750 .stabs "main:F1",36,0,0,_main
36851 .stabn 192,0,0,LBB2
36952 .stabn 224,0,0,LBE2
370@end example
371
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372@node Program Structure
373@chapter Encoding the Structure of the Program
e505224d 374
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375The elements of the program structure that stabs encode include the name
376of the main function, the names of the source and include files, the
377line numbers, procedure names and types, and the beginnings and ends of
378blocks of code.
379
e505224d 380@menu
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381* Main Program:: Indicate what the main program is
382* Source Files:: The path and name of the source file
383* Include Files:: Names of include files
384* Line Numbers::
6fe91f2c 385* Procedures::
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386* Nested Procedures::
387* Block Structure::
6d244da7 388* Alternate Entry Points:: Entering procedures except at the beginning.
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389@end menu
390
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391@node Main Program
392@section Main Program
499a5faa 393
685a5e86 394@findex N_MAIN
499a5faa 395Most languages allow the main program to have any name. The
685a5e86 396@code{N_MAIN} stab type tells the debugger the name that is used in this
0a95c18c 397program. Only the string field is significant; it is the name of
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398a function which is the main program. Most C compilers do not use this
399stab (they expect the debugger to assume that the name is @code{main}),
400but some C compilers emit an @code{N_MAIN} stab for the @code{main}
401function.
499a5faa 402
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403@node Source Files
404@section Paths and Names of the Source Files
e505224d 405
685a5e86 406@findex N_SO
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407Before any other stabs occur, there must be a stab specifying the source
408file. This information is contained in a symbol of stab type
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409@code{N_SO}; the string field contains the name of the file. The
410value of the symbol is the start address of the portion of the
685a5e86 411text section corresponding to that file.
e505224d 412
0a95c18c 413With the Sun Solaris2 compiler, the desc field contains a
ded6bcab 414source-language code.
685a5e86 415@c Do the debuggers use it? What are the codes? -djm
ded6bcab 416
6fe91f2c 417Some compilers (for example, GCC2 and SunOS4 @file{/bin/cc}) also
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418include the directory in which the source was compiled, in a second
419@code{N_SO} symbol preceding the one containing the file name. This
ded6bcab 420symbol can be distinguished by the fact that it ends in a slash. Code
685a5e86 421from the @code{cfront} C++ compiler can have additional @code{N_SO} symbols for
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422nonexistent source files after the @code{N_SO} for the real source file;
423these are believed to contain no useful information.
e505224d 424
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425For example:
426
427@example
baf4ded0 428.stabs "/cygint/s1/users/jcm/play/",100,0,0,Ltext0 # @r{100 is N_SO}
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429.stabs "hello.c",100,0,0,Ltext0
430 .text
431Ltext0:
432@end example
433
434Instead of @code{N_SO} symbols, XCOFF uses a @code{.file} assembler
435directive which assembles to a standard COFF @code{.file} symbol;
436explaining this in detail is outside the scope of this document.
437
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438@c FIXME: Exactly when should the empty N_SO be used? Why?
439If it is useful to indicate the end of a source file, this is done with
440an @code{N_SO} symbol with an empty string for the name. The value is
441the address of the end of the text section for the file. For some
442systems, there is no indication of the end of a source file, and you
443just need to figure it ended when you see an @code{N_SO} for a different
444source file, or a symbol ending in @code{.o} (which at least some
445linkers insert to mark the start of a new @code{.o} file).
446
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447@node Include Files
448@section Names of Include Files
6fe91f2c 449
685a5e86 450There are several schemes for dealing with include files: the
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451traditional @code{N_SOL} approach, Sun's @code{N_BINCL} approach, and the
452XCOFF @code{C_BINCL} approach (which despite the similar name has little in
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453common with @code{N_BINCL}).
454
685a5e86 455@findex N_SOL
63cef7d7 456An @code{N_SOL} symbol specifies which include file subsequent symbols
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457refer to. The string field is the name of the file and the value is the
458text address corresponding to the end of the previous include file and
459the start of this one. To specify the main source file again, use an
460@code{N_SOL} symbol with the name of the main source file.
685a5e86 461
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462@findex N_BINCL
463@findex N_EINCL
464@findex N_EXCL
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465The @code{N_BINCL} approach works as follows. An @code{N_BINCL} symbol
466specifies the start of an include file. In an object file, only the
0a95c18c 467string is significant; the Sun linker puts data into some of the
43603088 468other fields. The end of the include file is marked by an
0a95c18c 469@code{N_EINCL} symbol (which has no string field). In an object
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470file, there is no significant data in the @code{N_EINCL} symbol; the Sun
471linker puts data into some of the fields. @code{N_BINCL} and
472@code{N_EINCL} can be nested.
473
474If the linker detects that two source files have identical stabs between
475an @code{N_BINCL} and @code{N_EINCL} pair (as will generally be the case
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476for a header file), then it only puts out the stabs once. Each
477additional occurance is replaced by an @code{N_EXCL} symbol. I believe
478the Sun (SunOS4, not sure about Solaris) linker is the only one which
479supports this feature.
480@c What do the fields of N_EXCL contain? -djm
685a5e86 481
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482@findex C_BINCL
483@findex C_EINCL
63cef7d7 484For the start of an include file in XCOFF, use the @file{.bi} assembler
6fe91f2c 485directive, which generates a @code{C_BINCL} symbol. A @file{.ei}
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486directive, which generates a @code{C_EINCL} symbol, denotes the end of
487the include file. Both directives are followed by the name of the
0a95c18c
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488source file in quotes, which becomes the string for the symbol.
489The value of each symbol, produced automatically by the assembler
685a5e86
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490and linker, is the offset into the executable of the beginning
491(inclusive, as you'd expect) or end (inclusive, as you would not expect)
492of the portion of the COFF line table that corresponds to this include
493file. @code{C_BINCL} and @code{C_EINCL} do not nest.
63cef7d7 494
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495@node Line Numbers
496@section Line Numbers
e505224d 497
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498@findex N_SLINE
499An @code{N_SLINE} symbol represents the start of a source line. The
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500desc field contains the line number and the value contains the code
501address for the start of that source line. On most machines the address
502is absolute; for stabs in sections (@pxref{Stab Sections}), it is
503relative to the function in which the @code{N_SLINE} symbol occurs.
e505224d 504
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505@findex N_DSLINE
506@findex N_BSLINE
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507GNU documents @code{N_DSLINE} and @code{N_BSLINE} symbols for line
508numbers in the data or bss segments, respectively. They are identical
509to @code{N_SLINE} but are relocated differently by the linker. They
510were intended to be used to describe the source location of a variable
6fe91f2c 511declaration, but I believe that GCC2 actually puts the line number in
0a95c18c
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512the desc field of the stab for the variable itself. GDB has been
513ignoring these symbols (unless they contain a string field) since
685a5e86 514at least GDB 3.5.
139741da 515
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516For single source lines that generate discontiguous code, such as flow
517of control statements, there may be more than one line number entry for
518the same source line. In this case there is a line number entry at the
519start of each code range, each with the same line number.
e505224d 520
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521XCOFF does not use stabs for line numbers. Instead, it uses COFF line
522numbers (which are outside the scope of this document). Standard COFF
523line numbers cannot deal with include files, but in XCOFF this is fixed
f19027a6 524with the @code{C_BINCL} method of marking include files (@pxref{Include
408f6c34 525Files}).
685a5e86 526
899bafeb 527@node Procedures
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528@section Procedures
529
f19027a6 530@findex N_FUN, for functions
43603088
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531@findex N_FNAME
532@findex N_STSYM, for functions (Sun acc)
533@findex N_GSYM, for functions (Sun acc)
534All of the following stabs normally use the @code{N_FUN} symbol type.
535However, Sun's @code{acc} compiler on SunOS4 uses @code{N_GSYM} and
536@code{N_STSYM}, which means that the value of the stab for the function
537is useless and the debugger must get the address of the function from
538the non-stab symbols instead. BSD Fortran is said to use @code{N_FNAME}
539with the same restriction; the value of the symbol is not useful (I'm
540not sure it really does use this, because GDB doesn't handle this and no
541one has complained).
6897f9ec 542
dd8126d9 543A function is represented by an @samp{F} symbol descriptor for a global
43603088 544(extern) function, and @samp{f} for a static (local) function. The
50cca378 545value is the address of the start of the function. For a.out, it
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546is already relocated. For stabs in ELF, the SunPRO compiler version
5472.0.1 and GCC put out an address which gets relocated by the linker. In
548a future release SunPRO is planning to put out zero, in which case the
549address can be found from the ELF (non-stab) symbol. Because looking
550things up in the ELF symbols would probably be slow, I'm not sure how to
551find which symbol of that name is the right one, and this doesn't
552provide any way to deal with nested functions, it would probably be
553better to make the value of the stab an address relative to the start of
9a22aed5
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554the file, or just absolute. See @ref{ELF Linker Relocation} for more
555information on linker relocation of stabs in ELF files.
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556
557The type information of the stab represents the return type of the
558function; thus @samp{foo:f5} means that foo is a function returning type
5595. There is no need to try to get the line number of the start of the
560function from the stab for the function; it is in the next
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561@code{N_SLINE} symbol.
562
563@c FIXME: verify whether the "I suspect" below is true or not.
564Some compilers (such as Sun's Solaris compiler) support an extension for
565specifying the types of the arguments. I suspect this extension is not
566used for old (non-prototyped) function definitions in C. If the
567extension is in use, the type information of the stab for the function
568is followed by type information for each argument, with each argument
569preceded by @samp{;}. An argument type of 0 means that additional
570arguments are being passed, whose types and number may vary (@samp{...}
571in ANSI C). GDB has tolerated this extension (parsed the syntax, if not
572necessarily used the information) since at least version 4.8; I don't
573know whether all versions of dbx tolerate it. The argument types given
574here are not redundant with the symbols for the formal parameters
575(@pxref{Parameters}); they are the types of the arguments as they are
576passed, before any conversions might take place. For example, if a C
577function which is declared without a prototype takes a @code{float}
578argument, the value is passed as a @code{double} but then converted to a
579@code{float}. Debuggers need to use the types given in the arguments
580when printing values, but when calling the function they need to use the
581types given in the symbol defining the function.
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582
583If the return type and types of arguments of a function which is defined
6fe91f2c 584in another source file are specified (i.e., a function prototype in ANSI
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585C), traditionally compilers emit no stab; the only way for the debugger
586to find the information is if the source file where the function is
587defined was also compiled with debugging symbols. As an extension the
588Solaris compiler uses symbol descriptor @samp{P} followed by the return
589type of the function, followed by the arguments, each preceded by
590@samp{;}, as in a stab with symbol descriptor @samp{f} or @samp{F}.
591This use of symbol descriptor @samp{P} can be distinguished from its use
bf9d2537 592for register parameters (@pxref{Register Parameters}) by the fact that it has
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593symbol type @code{N_FUN}.
594
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595The AIX documentation also defines symbol descriptor @samp{J} as an
596internal function. I assume this means a function nested within another
6fe91f2c 597function. It also says symbol descriptor @samp{m} is a module in
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598Modula-2 or extended Pascal.
599
600Procedures (functions which do not return values) are represented as
6fe91f2c
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601functions returning the @code{void} type in C. I don't see why this couldn't
602be used for all languages (inventing a @code{void} type for this purpose if
6897f9ec
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603necessary), but the AIX documentation defines @samp{I}, @samp{P}, and
604@samp{Q} for internal, global, and static procedures, respectively.
605These symbol descriptors are unusual in that they are not followed by
606type information.
607
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608The following example shows a stab for a function @code{main} which
609returns type number @code{1}. The @code{_main} specified for the value
610is a reference to an assembler label which is used to fill in the start
611address of the function.
685a5e86
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612
613@example
43603088 614.stabs "main:F1",36,0,0,_main # @r{36 is N_FUN}
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615@end example
616
617The stab representing a procedure is located immediately following the
618code of the procedure. This stab is in turn directly followed by a
619group of other stabs describing elements of the procedure. These other
620stabs describe the procedure's parameters, its block local variables, and
621its block structure.
685a5e86 622
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623@node Nested Procedures
624@section Nested Procedures
685a5e86 625
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626For any of the symbol descriptors representing procedures, after the
627symbol descriptor and the type information is optionally a scope
628specifier. This consists of a comma, the name of the procedure, another
629comma, and the name of the enclosing procedure. The first name is local
630to the scope specified, and seems to be redundant with the name of the
631symbol (before the @samp{:}). This feature is used by GCC, and
632presumably Pascal, Modula-2, etc., compilers, for nested functions.
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633
634If procedures are nested more than one level deep, only the immediately
685a5e86 635containing scope is specified. For example, this code:
6ea34847
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636
637@example
638int
639foo (int x)
640@{
641 int bar (int y)
642 @{
643 int baz (int z)
6fe91f2c
DM
644 @{
645 return x + y + z;
646 @}
6ea34847
JK
647 return baz (x + 2 * y);
648 @}
649 return x + bar (3 * x);
650@}
651@end example
652
653@noindent
654produces the stabs:
655
656@example
baf4ded0 657.stabs "baz:f1,baz,bar",36,0,0,_baz.15 # @r{36 is N_FUN}
6ea34847
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658.stabs "bar:f1,bar,foo",36,0,0,_bar.12
659.stabs "foo:F1",36,0,0,_foo
660@end example
6897f9ec 661
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662@node Block Structure
663@section Block Structure
e505224d 664
685a5e86
DM
665@findex N_LBRAC
666@findex N_RBRAC
9a22aed5
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667@c For GCC 2.5.8 or so stabs-in-coff, these are absolute instead of
668@c function relative (as documented below). But GDB has never been able
669@c to deal with that (it had wanted them to be relative to the file, but
670@c I just fixed that (between GDB 4.12 and 4.13)), so it is function
671@c relative just like ELF and SOM and the below documentation.
139741da 672The program's block structure is represented by the @code{N_LBRAC} (left
f0f4b04e 673brace) and the @code{N_RBRAC} (right brace) stab types. The variables
dd8126d9 674defined inside a block precede the @code{N_LBRAC} symbol for most
f0f4b04e 675compilers, including GCC. Other compilers, such as the Convex, Acorn
f958d5cd 676RISC machine, and Sun @code{acc} compilers, put the variables after the
0a95c18c 677@code{N_LBRAC} symbol. The values of the @code{N_LBRAC} and
f0f4b04e
JK
678@code{N_RBRAC} symbols are the start and end addresses of the code of
679the block, respectively. For most machines, they are relative to the
680starting address of this source file. For the Gould NP1, they are
9a22aed5
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681absolute. For stabs in sections (@pxref{Stab Sections}), they are
682relative to the function in which they occur.
e505224d 683
139741da 684The @code{N_LBRAC} and @code{N_RBRAC} stabs that describe the block
f0f4b04e 685scope of a procedure are located after the @code{N_FUN} stab that
6fe91f2c 686represents the procedure itself.
e505224d 687
0a95c18c 688Sun documents the desc field of @code{N_LBRAC} and
f0f4b04e 689@code{N_RBRAC} symbols as containing the nesting level of the block.
0a95c18c 690However, dbx seems to not care, and GCC always sets desc to
f0f4b04e 691zero.
e505224d 692
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693@node Alternate Entry Points
694@section Alternate Entry Points
695
696Some languages, like Fortran, have the ability to enter procedures at
697some place other than the beginning. One can declare an alternate entry
698point. The @code{N_ENTRY} stab is for this; however, the Sun FORTRAN compiler
699doesn't use it. According to AIX documentation, only the name of a
700@code{C_ENTRY} stab is significant; the address of the alternate entry
701point comes from the corresponding external symbol. A previous revision
702of this document said that the value of an @code{N_ENTRY} stab was the
703address of the alternate entry point, but I don't know the source for
704that information.
705
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706@node Constants
707@chapter Constants
708
709The @samp{c} symbol descriptor indicates that this stab represents a
710constant. This symbol descriptor is an exception to the general rule
711that symbol descriptors are followed by type information. Instead, it
712is followed by @samp{=} and one of the following:
713
714@table @code
b273dc0f 715@item b @var{value}
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716Boolean constant. @var{value} is a numeric value; I assume it is 0 for
717false or 1 for true.
718
b273dc0f 719@item c @var{value}
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720Character constant. @var{value} is the numeric value of the constant.
721
b273dc0f
JK
722@item e @var{type-information} , @var{value}
723Constant whose value can be represented as integral.
724@var{type-information} is the type of the constant, as it would appear
bf9d2537 725after a symbol descriptor (@pxref{String Field}). @var{value} is the
b273dc0f
JK
726numeric value of the constant. GDB 4.9 does not actually get the right
727value if @var{value} does not fit in a host @code{int}, but it does not
728do anything violent, and future debuggers could be extended to accept
729integers of any size (whether unsigned or not). This constant type is
730usually documented as being only for enumeration constants, but GDB has
731never imposed that restriction; I don't know about other debuggers.
732
733@item i @var{value}
734Integer constant. @var{value} is the numeric value. The type is some
735sort of generic integer type (for GDB, a host @code{int}); to specify
736the type explicitly, use @samp{e} instead.
737
738@item r @var{value}
6897f9ec
JK
739Real constant. @var{value} is the real value, which can be @samp{INF}
740(optionally preceded by a sign) for infinity, @samp{QNAN} for a quiet
741NaN (not-a-number), or @samp{SNAN} for a signalling NaN. If it is a
742normal number the format is that accepted by the C library function
743@code{atof}.
744
b273dc0f 745@item s @var{string}
6897f9ec
JK
746String constant. @var{string} is a string enclosed in either @samp{'}
747(in which case @samp{'} characters within the string are represented as
748@samp{\'} or @samp{"} (in which case @samp{"} characters within the
749string are represented as @samp{\"}).
750
b273dc0f 751@item S @var{type-information} , @var{elements} , @var{bits} , @var{pattern}
6897f9ec 752Set constant. @var{type-information} is the type of the constant, as it
bf9d2537 753would appear after a symbol descriptor (@pxref{String Field}).
685a5e86 754@var{elements} is the number of elements in the set (does this means
a03f27c3
JK
755how many bits of @var{pattern} are actually used, which would be
756redundant with the type, or perhaps the number of bits set in
757@var{pattern}? I don't get it), @var{bits} is the number of bits in the
758constant (meaning it specifies the length of @var{pattern}, I think),
759and @var{pattern} is a hexadecimal representation of the set. AIX
760documentation refers to a limit of 32 bytes, but I see no reason why
761this limit should exist. This form could probably be used for arbitrary
762constants, not just sets; the only catch is that @var{pattern} should be
763understood to be target, not host, byte order and format.
6897f9ec
JK
764@end table
765
766The boolean, character, string, and set constants are not supported by
685a5e86 767GDB 4.9, but it ignores them. GDB 4.8 and earlier gave an error
6897f9ec
JK
768message and refused to read symbols from the file containing the
769constants.
770
685a5e86 771The above information is followed by @samp{;}.
e505224d 772
899bafeb 773@node Variables
e505224d
PB
774@chapter Variables
775
685a5e86
DM
776Different types of stabs describe the various ways that variables can be
777allocated: on the stack, globally, in registers, in common blocks,
778statically, or as arguments to a function.
779
e505224d 780@menu
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781* Stack Variables:: Variables allocated on the stack.
782* Global Variables:: Variables used by more than one source file.
783* Register Variables:: Variables in registers.
784* Common Blocks:: Variables statically allocated together.
24dcc707 785* Statics:: Variables local to one source file.
f19027a6 786* Based Variables:: Fortran pointer based variables.
24dcc707 787* Parameters:: Variables for arguments to functions.
e505224d
PB
788@end menu
789
bf9d2537
DM
790@node Stack Variables
791@section Automatic Variables Allocated on the Stack
e505224d 792
685a5e86
DM
793If a variable's scope is local to a function and its lifetime is only as
794long as that function executes (C calls such variables
795@dfn{automatic}), it can be allocated in a register (@pxref{Register
bf9d2537 796Variables}) or on the stack.
e505224d 797
685a5e86 798@findex N_LSYM
43603088
JK
799Each variable allocated on the stack has a stab with the symbol
800descriptor omitted. Since type information should begin with a digit,
801@samp{-}, or @samp{(}, only those characters precluded from being used
802for symbol descriptors. However, the Acorn RISC machine (ARM) is said
803to get this wrong: it puts out a mere type definition here, without the
804preceding @samp{@var{type-number}=}. This is a bad idea; there is no
805guarantee that type descriptors are distinct from symbol descriptors.
806Stabs for stack variables use the @code{N_LSYM} stab type.
e505224d 807
0a95c18c 808The value of the stab is the offset of the variable within the
685a5e86
DM
809local variables. On most machines this is an offset from the frame
810pointer and is negative. The location of the stab specifies which block
bf9d2537 811it is defined in; see @ref{Block Structure}.
e505224d 812
685a5e86 813For example, the following C code:
e505224d 814
e7bb76cc
JK
815@example
816int
817main ()
818@{
819 int x;
820@}
821@end example
139741da 822
685a5e86 823produces the following stabs:
e505224d 824
e7bb76cc 825@example
baf4ded0
JK
826.stabs "main:F1",36,0,0,_main # @r{36 is N_FUN}
827.stabs "x:1",128,0,0,-12 # @r{128 is N_LSYM}
828.stabn 192,0,0,LBB2 # @r{192 is N_LBRAC}
829.stabn 224,0,0,LBE2 # @r{224 is N_RBRAC}
e505224d
PB
830@end example
831
685a5e86 832@xref{Procedures} for more information on the @code{N_FUN} stab, and
bf9d2537 833@ref{Block Structure} for more information on the @code{N_LBRAC} and
685a5e86 834@code{N_RBRAC} stabs.
e505224d 835
bf9d2537
DM
836@node Global Variables
837@section Global Variables
e505224d 838
685a5e86
DM
839@findex N_GSYM
840A variable whose scope is not specific to just one source file is
baf4ded0
JK
841represented by the @samp{G} symbol descriptor. These stabs use the
842@code{N_GSYM} stab type. The type information for the stab
bf9d2537 843(@pxref{String Field}) gives the type of the variable.
e505224d 844
baf4ded0 845For example, the following source code:
6fe91f2c 846
e505224d 847@example
baf4ded0 848char g_foo = 'c';
e505224d
PB
849@end example
850
139741da 851@noindent
baf4ded0 852yields the following assembly code:
e505224d
PB
853
854@example
baf4ded0
JK
855.stabs "g_foo:G2",32,0,0,0 # @r{32 is N_GSYM}
856 .global _g_foo
857 .data
858_g_foo:
859 .byte 99
e505224d
PB
860@end example
861
baf4ded0
JK
862The address of the variable represented by the @code{N_GSYM} is not
863contained in the @code{N_GSYM} stab. The debugger gets this information
864from the external symbol for the global variable. In the example above,
865the @code{.global _g_foo} and @code{_g_foo:} lines tell the assembler to
866produce an external symbol.
e505224d 867
8816824a
JK
868Some compilers, like GCC, output @code{N_GSYM} stabs only once, where
869the variable is defined. Other compilers, like SunOS4 /bin/cc, output a
870@code{N_GSYM} stab for each compilation unit which references the
871variable.
872
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873@node Register Variables
874@section Register Variables
139741da 875
685a5e86 876@findex N_RSYM
8c59ee11
JK
877@c According to an old version of this manual, AIX uses C_RPSYM instead
878@c of C_RSYM. I am skeptical; this should be verified.
6897f9ec 879Register variables have their own stab type, @code{N_RSYM}, and their
ac31351a 880own symbol descriptor, @samp{r}. The stab's value is the
6897f9ec 881number of the register where the variable data will be stored.
685a5e86 882@c .stabs "name:type",N_RSYM,0,RegSize,RegNumber (Sun doc)
e505224d 883
6897f9ec 884AIX defines a separate symbol descriptor @samp{d} for floating point
935d305d 885registers. This seems unnecessary; why not just just give floating
807e8368
JK
886point registers different register numbers? I have not verified whether
887the compiler actually uses @samp{d}.
e505224d 888
6897f9ec 889If the register is explicitly allocated to a global variable, but not
685a5e86 890initialized, as in:
e505224d
PB
891
892@example
6897f9ec 893register int g_bar asm ("%g5");
e505224d
PB
894@end example
895
685a5e86
DM
896@noindent
897then the stab may be emitted at the end of the object file, with
6897f9ec 898the other bss symbols.
e505224d 899
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900@node Common Blocks
901@section Common Blocks
807e8368
JK
902
903A common block is a statically allocated section of memory which can be
904referred to by several source files. It may contain several variables.
685a5e86
DM
905I believe Fortran is the only language with this feature.
906
685a5e86
DM
907@findex N_BCOMM
908@findex N_ECOMM
05238df4
JK
909@findex C_BCOMM
910@findex C_ECOMM
685a5e86
DM
911A @code{N_BCOMM} stab begins a common block and an @code{N_ECOMM} stab
912ends it. The only field that is significant in these two stabs is the
0a95c18c 913string, which names a normal (non-debugging) symbol that gives the
05238df4
JK
914address of the common block. According to IBM documentation, only the
915@code{N_BCOMM} has the name of the common block (even though their
916compiler actually puts it both places).
685a5e86 917
685a5e86 918@findex N_ECOML
05238df4
JK
919@findex C_ECOML
920The stabs for the members of the common block are between the
921@code{N_BCOMM} and the @code{N_ECOMM}; the value of each stab is the
922offset within the common block of that variable. IBM uses the
923@code{C_ECOML} stab type, and there is a corresponding @code{N_ECOML}
924stab type, but Sun's Fortran compiler uses @code{N_GSYM} instead. The
925variables within a common block use the @samp{V} symbol descriptor (I
926believe this is true of all Fortran variables). Other stabs (at least
927type declarations using @code{C_DECL}) can also be between the
928@code{N_BCOMM} and the @code{N_ECOMM}.
807e8368 929
24dcc707 930@node Statics
bf9d2537 931@section Static Variables
e505224d 932
24dcc707
JK
933Initialized static variables are represented by the @samp{S} and
934@samp{V} symbol descriptors. @samp{S} means file scope static, and
8f85a435
JK
935@samp{V} means procedure scope static. One exception: in XCOFF, IBM's
936xlc compiler always uses @samp{V}, and whether it is file scope or not
937is distinguished by whether the stab is located within a function.
e505224d 938
935d305d
JK
939@c This is probably not worth mentioning; it is only true on the sparc
940@c for `double' variables which although declared const are actually in
941@c the data segment (the text segment can't guarantee 8 byte alignment).
6fe91f2c 942@c (although GCC
dd8126d9 943@c 2.4.5 has a bug in that it uses @code{N_FUN}, so neither dbx nor GDB can
935d305d 944@c find the variables)
685a5e86
DM
945@findex N_STSYM
946@findex N_LCSYM
f19027a6
JK
947@findex N_FUN, for variables
948@findex N_ROSYM
31a932d8
JK
949In a.out files, @code{N_STSYM} means the data section, @code{N_FUN}
950means the text section, and @code{N_LCSYM} means the bss section. For
951those systems with a read-only data section separate from the text
952section (Solaris), @code{N_ROSYM} means the read-only data section.
e505224d 953
685a5e86 954For example, the source lines:
e505224d
PB
955
956@example
24dcc707
JK
957static const int var_const = 5;
958static int var_init = 2;
959static int var_noinit;
e505224d
PB
960@end example
961
24dcc707
JK
962@noindent
963yield the following stabs:
e505224d
PB
964
965@example
baf4ded0 966.stabs "var_const:S1",36,0,0,_var_const # @r{36 is N_FUN}
685a5e86 967@dots{}
baf4ded0 968.stabs "var_init:S1",38,0,0,_var_init # @r{38 is N_STSYM}
685a5e86 969@dots{}
baf4ded0 970.stabs "var_noinit:S1",40,0,0,_var_noinit # @r{40 is N_LCSYM}
e505224d 971@end example
685a5e86 972
8f85a435
JK
973In XCOFF files, the stab type need not indicate the section;
974@code{C_STSYM} can be used for all statics. Also, each static variable
975is enclosed in a static block. A @code{C_BSTAT} (emitted with a
976@samp{.bs} assembler directive) symbol begins the static block; its
cb0520c4
JK
977value is the symbol number of the csect symbol whose value is the
978address of the static block, its section is the section of the variables
979in that static block, and its name is @samp{.bs}. A @code{C_ESTAT}
980(emitted with a @samp{.es} assembler directive) symbol ends the static
981block; its name is @samp{.es} and its value and section are ignored.
685a5e86
DM
982
983In ECOFF files, the storage class is used to specify the section, so the
31a932d8 984stab type need not indicate the section.
685a5e86 985
f8cbe518
JK
986In ELF files, for the SunPRO compiler version 2.0.1, symbol descriptor
987@samp{S} means that the address is absolute (the linker relocates it)
988and symbol descriptor @samp{V} means that the address is relative to the
989start of the relevant section for that compilation unit. SunPRO has
990plans to have the linker stop relocating stabs; I suspect that their the
991debugger gets the address from the corresponding ELF (not stab) symbol.
992I'm not sure how to find which symbol of that name is the right one.
993The clean way to do all this would be to have a the value of a symbol
994descriptor @samp{S} symbol be an offset relative to the start of the
995file, just like everything else, but that introduces obvious
996compatibility problems. For more information on linker stab relocation,
9a22aed5 997@xref{ELF Linker Relocation}.
e505224d 998
f19027a6
JK
999@node Based Variables
1000@section Fortran Based Variables
1001
1002Fortran (at least, the Sun and SGI dialects of FORTRAN-77) has a feature
1003which allows allocating arrays with @code{malloc}, but which avoids
1004blurring the line between arrays and pointers the way that C does. In
1005stabs such a variable uses the @samp{b} symbol descriptor.
1006
1007For example, the Fortran declarations
1008
1009@example
1010real foo, foo10(10), foo10_5(10,5)
1011pointer (foop, foo)
1012pointer (foo10p, foo10)
1013pointer (foo105p, foo10_5)
1014@end example
1015
1016produce the stabs
1017
1018@example
1019foo:b6
1020foo10:bar3;1;10;6
1021foo10_5:bar3;1;5;ar3;1;10;6
1022@end example
1023
1024In this example, @code{real} is type 6 and type 3 is an integral type
1025which is the type of the subscripts of the array (probably
1026@code{integer}).
1027
1028The @samp{b} symbol descriptor is like @samp{V} in that it denotes a
1029statically allocated symbol whose scope is local to a function; see
1030@xref{Statics}. The value of the symbol, instead of being the address
1031of the variable itself, is the address of a pointer to that variable.
1032So in the above example, the value of the @code{foo} stab is the address
1033of a pointer to a real, the value of the @code{foo10} stab is the
1034address of a pointer to a 10-element array of reals, and the value of
1035the @code{foo10_5} stab is the address of a pointer to a 5-element array
1036of 10-element arrays of reals.
1037
899bafeb 1038@node Parameters
907a9cab
JK
1039@section Parameters
1040
43603088 1041Formal parameters to a function are represented by a stab (or sometimes
685a5e86
DM
1042two; see below) for each parameter. The stabs are in the order in which
1043the debugger should print the parameters (i.e., the order in which the
dd8126d9
JK
1044parameters are declared in the source file). The exact form of the stab
1045depends on how the parameter is being passed.
e505224d 1046
685a5e86
DM
1047@findex N_PSYM
1048Parameters passed on the stack use the symbol descriptor @samp{p} and
0a95c18c 1049the @code{N_PSYM} symbol type. The value of the symbol is an offset
dd8126d9 1050used to locate the parameter on the stack; its exact meaning is
685a5e86 1051machine-dependent, but on most machines it is an offset from the frame
dd8126d9 1052pointer.
b82ea042 1053
685a5e86
DM
1054As a simple example, the code:
1055
1056@example
1057main (argc, argv)
1058 int argc;
1059 char **argv;
1060@end example
1061
1062produces the stabs:
1063
1064@example
1065.stabs "main:F1",36,0,0,_main # @r{36 is N_FUN}
1066.stabs "argc:p1",160,0,0,68 # @r{160 is N_PSYM}
1067.stabs "argv:p20=*21=*2",160,0,0,72
1068@end example
1069
1070The type definition of @code{argv} is interesting because it contains
1071several type definitions. Type 21 is pointer to type 2 (char) and
1072@code{argv} (type 20) is pointer to type 21.
43603088
JK
1073
1074@c FIXME: figure out what these mean and describe them coherently.
408f6c34
JK
1075The following symbol descriptors are also said to go with @code{N_PSYM}.
1076The value of the symbol is said to be an offset from the argument
1077pointer (I'm not sure whether this is true or not).
43603088
JK
1078
1079@example
408f6c34
JK
1080pP (<<??>>)
1081pF Fortran function parameter
1082X (function result variable)
43603088 1083@end example
685a5e86
DM
1084
1085@menu
bf9d2537
DM
1086* Register Parameters::
1087* Local Variable Parameters::
1088* Reference Parameters::
1089* Conformant Arrays::
685a5e86
DM
1090@end menu
1091
bf9d2537
DM
1092@node Register Parameters
1093@subsection Passing Parameters in Registers
685a5e86
DM
1094
1095If the parameter is passed in a register, then traditionally there are
1096two symbols for each argument:
e505224d
PB
1097
1098@example
baf4ded0
JK
1099.stabs "arg:p1" . . . ; N_PSYM
1100.stabs "arg:r1" . . . ; N_RSYM
e505224d
PB
1101@end example
1102
685a5e86
DM
1103Debuggers use the second one to find the value, and the first one to
1104know that it is an argument.
1105
685a5e86 1106@findex C_RPSYM
43603088 1107@findex N_RSYM, for parameters
685a5e86
DM
1108Because that approach is kind of ugly, some compilers use symbol
1109descriptor @samp{P} or @samp{R} to indicate an argument which is in a
1110register. Symbol type @code{C_RPSYM} is used with @samp{R} and
ac31351a 1111@code{N_RSYM} is used with @samp{P}. The symbol's value is
685a5e86
DM
1112the register number. @samp{P} and @samp{R} mean the same thing; the
1113difference is that @samp{P} is a GNU invention and @samp{R} is an IBM
1114(XCOFF) invention. As of version 4.9, GDB should handle either one.
e505224d 1115
685a5e86
DM
1116There is at least one case where GCC uses a @samp{p} and @samp{r} pair
1117rather than @samp{P}; this is where the argument is passed in the
1118argument list and then loaded into a register.
b82ea042 1119
685a5e86 1120According to the AIX documentation, symbol descriptor @samp{D} is for a
acf7d010
JK
1121parameter passed in a floating point register. This seems
1122unnecessary---why not just use @samp{R} with a register number which
23aed449 1123indicates that it's a floating point register? I haven't verified
6897f9ec
JK
1124whether the system actually does what the documentation indicates.
1125
43603088
JK
1126@c FIXME: On the hppa this is for any type > 8 bytes, I think, and not
1127@c for small structures (investigate).
c156f3c1
JK
1128On the sparc and hppa, for a @samp{P} symbol whose type is a structure
1129or union, the register contains the address of the structure. On the
685a5e86
DM
1130sparc, this is also true of a @samp{p} and @samp{r} pair (using Sun
1131@code{cc}) or a @samp{p} symbol. However, if a (small) structure is
1132really in a register, @samp{r} is used. And, to top it all off, on the
1133hppa it might be a structure which was passed on the stack and loaded
1134into a register and for which there is a @samp{p} and @samp{r} pair! I
1135believe that symbol descriptor @samp{i} is supposed to deal with this
1136case (it is said to mean "value parameter by reference, indirect
1137access"; I don't know the source for this information), but I don't know
1138details or what compilers or debuggers use it, if any (not GDB or GCC).
1139It is not clear to me whether this case needs to be dealt with
bf9d2537 1140differently than parameters passed by reference (@pxref{Reference Parameters}).
685a5e86 1141
bf9d2537
DM
1142@node Local Variable Parameters
1143@subsection Storing Parameters as Local Variables
685a5e86
DM
1144
1145There is a case similar to an argument in a register, which is an
1146argument that is actually stored as a local variable. Sometimes this
98ef6f31
JK
1147happens when the argument was passed in a register and then the compiler
1148stores it as a local variable. If possible, the compiler should claim
685a5e86
DM
1149that it's in a register, but this isn't always done.
1150
9ab86fa3
JK
1151If a parameter is passed as one type and converted to a smaller type by
1152the prologue (for example, the parameter is declared as a @code{float},
1153but the calling conventions specify that it is passed as a
1154@code{double}), then GCC2 (sometimes) uses a pair of symbols. The first
1155symbol uses symbol descriptor @samp{p} and the type which is passed.
1156The second symbol has the type and location which the parameter actually
1157has after the prologue. For example, suppose the following C code
1158appears with no prototypes involved:
1159
1160@example
1161void
1162subr (f)
1163 float f;
1164@{
1165@end example
f3bb0be2 1166
e2525986
JK
1167if @code{f} is passed as a double at stack offset 8, and the prologue
1168converts it to a float in register number 0, then the stabs look like:
9ab86fa3 1169
9ab86fa3 1170@example
e2525986
JK
1171.stabs "f:p13",160,0,3,8 # @r{160 is @code{N_PSYM}, here 13 is @code{double}}
1172.stabs "f:r12",64,0,3,0 # @r{64 is @code{N_RSYM}, here 12 is @code{float}}
9ab86fa3
JK
1173@end example
1174
e2525986
JK
1175In both stabs 3 is the line number where @code{f} is declared
1176(@pxref{Line Numbers}).
1177
9ab86fa3 1178@findex N_LSYM, for parameter
f3bb0be2
JK
1179GCC, at least on the 960, has another solution to the same problem. It
1180uses a single @samp{p} symbol descriptor for an argument which is stored
1181as a local variable but uses @code{N_LSYM} instead of @code{N_PSYM}. In
1182this case, the value of the symbol is an offset relative to the local
1183variables for that function, not relative to the arguments; on some
1184machines those are the same thing, but not on all.
1185
1186@c This is mostly just background info; the part that logically belongs
1187@c here is the last sentence.
1188On the VAX or on other machines in which the calling convention includes
1189the number of words of arguments actually passed, the debugger (GDB at
1190least) uses the parameter symbols to keep track of whether it needs to
1191print nameless arguments in addition to the formal parameters which it
1192has printed because each one has a stab. For example, in
1193
1194@example
1195extern int fprintf (FILE *stream, char *format, @dots{});
1196@dots{}
1197fprintf (stdout, "%d\n", x);
1198@end example
1199
1200there are stabs for @code{stream} and @code{format}. On most machines,
1201the debugger can only print those two arguments (because it has no way
1202of knowing that additional arguments were passed), but on the VAX or
1203other machines with a calling convention which indicates the number of
1204words of arguments, the debugger can print all three arguments. To do
1205so, the parameter symbol (symbol descriptor @samp{p}) (not necessarily
1206@samp{r} or symbol descriptor omitted symbols) needs to contain the
1207actual type as passed (for example, @code{double} not @code{float} if it
1208is passed as a double and converted to a float).
685a5e86 1209
bf9d2537
DM
1210@node Reference Parameters
1211@subsection Passing Parameters by Reference
685a5e86
DM
1212
1213If the parameter is passed by reference (e.g., Pascal @code{VAR}
1214parameters), then the symbol descriptor is @samp{v} if it is in the
1215argument list, or @samp{a} if it in a register. Other than the fact
1216that these contain the address of the parameter rather than the
1217parameter itself, they are identical to @samp{p} and @samp{R},
1218respectively. I believe @samp{a} is an AIX invention; @samp{v} is
1219supported by all stabs-using systems as far as I know.
1220
bf9d2537
DM
1221@node Conformant Arrays
1222@subsection Passing Conformant Array Parameters
6897f9ec
JK
1223
1224@c Is this paragraph correct? It is based on piecing together patchy
1225@c information and some guesswork
685a5e86 1226Conformant arrays are a feature of Modula-2, and perhaps other
6897f9ec 1227languages, in which the size of an array parameter is not known to the
685a5e86 1228called function until run-time. Such parameters have two stabs: a
6897f9ec 1229@samp{x} for the array itself, and a @samp{C}, which represents the size
0a95c18c 1230of the array. The value of the @samp{x} stab is the offset in the
6897f9ec 1231argument list where the address of the array is stored (it this right?
0a95c18c 1232it is a guess); the value of the @samp{C} stab is the offset in the
6897f9ec
JK
1233argument list where the size of the array (in elements? in bytes?) is
1234stored.
1235
8c59ee11 1236@node Types
bf9d2537 1237@chapter Defining Types
e505224d 1238
685a5e86
DM
1239The examples so far have described types as references to previously
1240defined types, or defined in terms of subranges of or pointers to
1241previously defined types. This chapter describes the other type
1242descriptors that may follow the @samp{=} in a type definition.
e505224d
PB
1243
1244@menu
bf9d2537
DM
1245* Builtin Types:: Integers, floating point, void, etc.
1246* Miscellaneous Types:: Pointers, sets, files, etc.
1247* Cross-References:: Referring to a type not yet defined.
8c59ee11
JK
1248* Subranges:: A type with a specific range.
1249* Arrays:: An aggregate type of same-typed elements.
1250* Strings:: Like an array but also has a length.
1251* Enumerations:: Like an integer but the values have names.
1252* Structures:: An aggregate type of different-typed elements.
ded6bcab
JK
1253* Typedefs:: Giving a type a name.
1254* Unions:: Different types sharing storage.
bf9d2537 1255* Function Types::
e505224d
PB
1256@end menu
1257
bf9d2537
DM
1258@node Builtin Types
1259@section Builtin Types
e505224d 1260
8c59ee11
JK
1261Certain types are built in (@code{int}, @code{short}, @code{void},
1262@code{float}, etc.); the debugger recognizes these types and knows how
685a5e86 1263to handle them. Thus, don't be surprised if some of the following ways
8c59ee11
JK
1264of specifying builtin types do not specify everything that a debugger
1265would need to know about the type---in some cases they merely specify
1266enough information to distinguish the type from other types.
1267
1268The traditional way to define builtin types is convolunted, so new ways
dd8126d9
JK
1269have been invented to describe them. Sun's @code{acc} uses special
1270builtin type descriptors (@samp{b} and @samp{R}), and IBM uses negative
685a5e86 1271type numbers. GDB accepts all three ways, as of version 4.8; dbx just
dd8126d9
JK
1272accepts the traditional builtin types and perhaps one of the other two
1273formats. The following sections describe each of these formats.
8c59ee11
JK
1274
1275@menu
bf9d2537
DM
1276* Traditional Builtin Types:: Put on your seatbelts and prepare for kludgery
1277* Builtin Type Descriptors:: Builtin types with special type descriptors
1278* Negative Type Numbers:: Builtin types using negative type numbers
8c59ee11
JK
1279@end menu
1280
bf9d2537
DM
1281@node Traditional Builtin Types
1282@subsection Traditional Builtin Types
8c59ee11 1283
685a5e86
DM
1284This is the traditional, convoluted method for defining builtin types.
1285There are several classes of such type definitions: integer, floating
1286point, and @code{void}.
1287
1288@menu
bf9d2537
DM
1289* Traditional Integer Types::
1290* Traditional Other Types::
685a5e86
DM
1291@end menu
1292
bf9d2537
DM
1293@node Traditional Integer Types
1294@subsubsection Traditional Integer Types
685a5e86
DM
1295
1296Often types are defined as subranges of themselves. If the bounding values
1297fit within an @code{int}, then they are given normally. For example:
8c59ee11
JK
1298
1299@example
baf4ded0 1300.stabs "int:t1=r1;-2147483648;2147483647;",128,0,0,0 # @r{128 is N_LSYM}
8c59ee11
JK
1301.stabs "char:t2=r2;0;127;",128,0,0,0
1302@end example
1303
1304Builtin types can also be described as subranges of @code{int}:
1305
1306@example
1307.stabs "unsigned short:t6=r1;0;65535;",128,0,0,0
1308@end example
1309
685a5e86
DM
1310If the lower bound of a subrange is 0 and the upper bound is -1,
1311the type is an unsigned integral type whose bounds are too
1312big to describe in an @code{int}. Traditionally this is only used for
1313@code{unsigned int} and @code{unsigned long}:
8c59ee11
JK
1314
1315@example
1316.stabs "unsigned int:t4=r1;0;-1;",128,0,0,0
8c59ee11
JK
1317@end example
1318
f8cbe518
JK
1319For larger types, GCC 2.4.5 puts out bounds in octal, with one or more
1320leading zeroes. In this case a negative bound consists of a number
1321which is a 1 bit (for the sign bit) followed by a 0 bit for each bit in
1322the number (except the sign bit), and a positive bound is one which is a
13231 bit for each bit in the number (except possibly the sign bit). All
1324known versions of dbx and GDB version 4 accept this (at least in the
1325sense of not refusing to process the file), but GDB 3.5 refuses to read
1326the whole file containing such symbols. So GCC 2.3.3 did not output the
1327proper size for these types. As an example of octal bounds, the string
1328fields of the stabs for 64 bit integer types look like:
1329
1330@c .stabs directives, etc., omitted to make it fit on the page.
1331@example
1332long int:t3=r1;001000000000000000000000;000777777777777777777777;
1333long unsigned int:t5=r1;000000000000000000000000;001777777777777777777777;
1334@end example
685a5e86 1335
b273dc0f 1336If the lower bound of a subrange is 0 and the upper bound is negative,
685a5e86 1337the type is an unsigned integral type whose size in bytes is the
b273dc0f
JK
1338absolute value of the upper bound. I believe this is a Convex
1339convention for @code{unsigned long long}.
1340
1341If the lower bound of a subrange is negative and the upper bound is 0,
685a5e86 1342the type is a signed integral type whose size in bytes is
b273dc0f
JK
1343the absolute value of the lower bound. I believe this is a Convex
1344convention for @code{long long}. To distinguish this from a legitimate
1345subrange, the type should be a subrange of itself. I'm not sure whether
1346this is the case for Convex.
1347
bf9d2537
DM
1348@node Traditional Other Types
1349@subsubsection Traditional Other Types
685a5e86
DM
1350
1351If the upper bound of a subrange is 0 and the lower bound is positive,
1352the type is a floating point type, and the lower bound of the subrange
1353indicates the number of bytes in the type:
8c59ee11
JK
1354
1355@example
1356.stabs "float:t12=r1;4;0;",128,0,0,0
1357.stabs "double:t13=r1;8;0;",128,0,0,0
1358@end example
1359
1360However, GCC writes @code{long double} the same way it writes
dd8126d9 1361@code{double}, so there is no way to distinguish.
8c59ee11
JK
1362
1363@example
1364.stabs "long double:t14=r1;8;0;",128,0,0,0
1365@end example
1366
dd8126d9
JK
1367Complex types are defined the same way as floating-point types; there is
1368no way to distinguish a single-precision complex from a double-precision
1369floating-point type.
8c59ee11
JK
1370
1371The C @code{void} type is defined as itself:
1372
1373@example
1374.stabs "void:t15=15",128,0,0,0
1375@end example
1376
1377I'm not sure how a boolean type is represented.
1378
bf9d2537
DM
1379@node Builtin Type Descriptors
1380@subsection Defining Builtin Types Using Builtin Type Descriptors
8c59ee11 1381
685a5e86
DM
1382This is the method used by Sun's @code{acc} for defining builtin types.
1383These are the type descriptors to define builtin types:
8c59ee11
JK
1384
1385@table @code
1a8b5668
JK
1386@c FIXME: clean up description of width and offset, once we figure out
1387@c what they mean
8c59ee11
JK
1388@item b @var{signed} @var{char-flag} @var{width} ; @var{offset} ; @var{nbits} ;
1389Define an integral type. @var{signed} is @samp{u} for unsigned or
1390@samp{s} for signed. @var{char-flag} is @samp{c} which indicates this
1391is a character type, or is omitted. I assume this is to distinguish an
1392integral type from a character type of the same size, for example it
1393might make sense to set it for the C type @code{wchar_t} so the debugger
1394can print such variables differently (Solaris does not do this). Sun
1395sets it on the C types @code{signed char} and @code{unsigned char} which
1396arguably is wrong. @var{width} and @var{offset} appear to be for small
1397objects stored in larger ones, for example a @code{short} in an
1398@code{int} register. @var{width} is normally the number of bytes in the
1399type. @var{offset} seems to always be zero. @var{nbits} is the number
1400of bits in the type.
1401
1402Note that type descriptor @samp{b} used for builtin types conflicts with
bf9d2537 1403its use for Pascal space types (@pxref{Miscellaneous Types}); they can
8c59ee11
JK
1404be distinguished because the character following the type descriptor
1405will be a digit, @samp{(}, or @samp{-} for a Pascal space type, or
1406@samp{u} or @samp{s} for a builtin type.
1407
1408@item w
1409Documented by AIX to define a wide character type, but their compiler
bf9d2537 1410actually uses negative type numbers (@pxref{Negative Type Numbers}).
8c59ee11 1411
685a5e86
DM
1412@item R @var{fp-type} ; @var{bytes} ;
1413Define a floating point type. @var{fp-type} has one of the following values:
1a8b5668
JK
1414
1415@table @code
1416@item 1 (NF_SINGLE)
1417IEEE 32-bit (single precision) floating point format.
1418
1419@item 2 (NF_DOUBLE)
1420IEEE 64-bit (double precision) floating point format.
1421
1422@item 3 (NF_COMPLEX)
1423@item 4 (NF_COMPLEX16)
1424@item 5 (NF_COMPLEX32)
3d4cf720
JK
1425@c "GDB source" really means @file{include/aout/stab_gnu.h}, but trying
1426@c to put that here got an overfull hbox.
1427These are for complex numbers. A comment in the GDB source describes
685a5e86
DM
1428them as Fortran @code{complex}, @code{double complex}, and
1429@code{complex*16}, respectively, but what does that mean? (i.e., Single
1430precision? Double precison?).
1a8b5668
JK
1431
1432@item 6 (NF_LDOUBLE)
43603088 1433Long double. This should probably only be used for Sun format
685a5e86
DM
1434@code{long double}, and new codes should be used for other floating
1435point formats (@code{NF_DOUBLE} can be used if a @code{long double} is
1436really just an IEEE double, of course).
1a8b5668
JK
1437@end table
1438
1439@var{bytes} is the number of bytes occupied by the type. This allows a
1440debugger to perform some operations with the type even if it doesn't
685a5e86 1441understand @var{fp-type}.
8c59ee11
JK
1442
1443@item g @var{type-information} ; @var{nbits}
1444Documented by AIX to define a floating type, but their compiler actually
bf9d2537 1445uses negative type numbers (@pxref{Negative Type Numbers}).
8c59ee11
JK
1446
1447@item c @var{type-information} ; @var{nbits}
1448Documented by AIX to define a complex type, but their compiler actually
bf9d2537 1449uses negative type numbers (@pxref{Negative Type Numbers}).
8c59ee11
JK
1450@end table
1451
1452The C @code{void} type is defined as a signed integral type 0 bits long:
1453@example
1454.stabs "void:t19=bs0;0;0",128,0,0,0
1455@end example
e9f687d5
JK
1456The Solaris compiler seems to omit the trailing semicolon in this case.
1457Getting sloppy in this way is not a swift move because if a type is
1458embedded in a more complex expression it is necessary to be able to tell
1459where it ends.
8c59ee11
JK
1460
1461I'm not sure how a boolean type is represented.
1462
bf9d2537
DM
1463@node Negative Type Numbers
1464@subsection Negative Type Numbers
8c59ee11 1465
685a5e86 1466This is the method used in XCOFF for defining builtin types.
8c59ee11
JK
1467Since the debugger knows about the builtin types anyway, the idea of
1468negative type numbers is simply to give a special type number which
685a5e86 1469indicates the builtin type. There is no stab defining these types.
8c59ee11 1470
23afb447
JK
1471There are several subtle issues with negative type numbers.
1472
1473One is the size of the type. A builtin type (for example the C types
1474@code{int} or @code{long}) might have different sizes depending on
1475compiler options, the target architecture, the ABI, etc. This issue
1476doesn't come up for IBM tools since (so far) they just target the
1477RS/6000; the sizes indicated below for each size are what the IBM
1478RS/6000 tools use. To deal with differing sizes, either define separate
1479negative type numbers for each size (which works but requires changing
1480the debugger, and, unless you get both AIX dbx and GDB to accept the
1481change, introduces an incompatibility), or use a type attribute
1482(@pxref{String Field}) to define a new type with the appropriate size
1483(which merely requires a debugger which understands type attributes,
b11bd281 1484like AIX dbx or GDB). For example,
23afb447
JK
1485
1486@example
1487.stabs "boolean:t10=@@s8;-16",128,0,0,0
1488@end example
1489
1490defines an 8-bit boolean type, and
1491
1492@example
1493.stabs "boolean:t10=@@s64;-16",128,0,0,0
1494@end example
1495
1496defines a 64-bit boolean type.
1497
1498A similar issue is the format of the type. This comes up most often for
1499floating-point types, which could have various formats (particularly
1500extended doubles, which vary quite a bit even among IEEE systems).
1501Again, it is best to define a new negative type number for each
1502different format; changing the format based on the target system has
1503various problems. One such problem is that the Alpha has both VAX and
1504IEEE floating types. One can easily imagine one library using the VAX
1505types and another library in the same executable using the IEEE types.
1506Another example is that the interpretation of whether a boolean is true
1507or false can be based on the least significant bit, most significant
1508bit, whether it is zero, etc., and different compilers (or different
1509options to the same compiler) might provide different kinds of boolean.
1510
1511The last major issue is the names of the types. The name of a given
1512type depends @emph{only} on the negative type number given; these do not
1513vary depending on the language, the target system, or anything else.
1514One can always define separate type numbers---in the following list you
1515will see for example separate @code{int} and @code{integer*4} types
1516which are identical except for the name. But compatibility can be
1517maintained by not inventing new negative type numbers and instead just
1518defining a new type with a new name. For example:
1519
1520@example
1521.stabs "CARDINAL:t10=-8",128,0,0,0
1522@end example
1523
1524Here is the list of negative type numbers. The phrase @dfn{integral
1525type} is used to mean twos-complement (I strongly suspect that all
1526machines which use stabs use twos-complement; most machines use
1527twos-complement these days).
b273dc0f 1528
8c59ee11
JK
1529@table @code
1530@item -1
1531@code{int}, 32 bit signed integral type.
1532
1533@item -2
dd8126d9 1534@code{char}, 8 bit type holding a character. Both GDB and dbx on AIX
8c59ee11 1535treat this as signed. GCC uses this type whether @code{char} is signed
685a5e86 1536or not, which seems like a bad idea. The AIX compiler (@code{xlc}) seems to
8c59ee11
JK
1537avoid this type; it uses -5 instead for @code{char}.
1538
1539@item -3
1540@code{short}, 16 bit signed integral type.
1541
1542@item -4
1543@code{long}, 32 bit signed integral type.
1544
1545@item -5
1546@code{unsigned char}, 8 bit unsigned integral type.
1547
1548@item -6
1549@code{signed char}, 8 bit signed integral type.
1550
1551@item -7
1552@code{unsigned short}, 16 bit unsigned integral type.
1553
1554@item -8
1555@code{unsigned int}, 32 bit unsigned integral type.
1556
1557@item -9
1558@code{unsigned}, 32 bit unsigned integral type.
1559
1560@item -10
1561@code{unsigned long}, 32 bit unsigned integral type.
1562
1563@item -11
1564@code{void}, type indicating the lack of a value.
1565
1566@item -12
1567@code{float}, IEEE single precision.
1568
1569@item -13
1570@code{double}, IEEE double precision.
1571
1572@item -14
b273dc0f
JK
1573@code{long double}, IEEE double precision. The compiler claims the size
1574will increase in a future release, and for binary compatibility you have
1575to avoid using @code{long double}. I hope when they increase it they
1576use a new negative type number.
8c59ee11
JK
1577
1578@item -15
b273dc0f 1579@code{integer}. 32 bit signed integral type.
8c59ee11
JK
1580
1581@item -16
a9a4aec8
JK
1582@code{boolean}. 32 bit type. GDB and GCC assume that zero is false,
1583one is true, and other values have unspecified meaning. I hope this
1584agrees with how the IBM tools use the type.
8c59ee11
JK
1585
1586@item -17
b273dc0f 1587@code{short real}. IEEE single precision.
8c59ee11
JK
1588
1589@item -18
b273dc0f 1590@code{real}. IEEE double precision.
8c59ee11
JK
1591
1592@item -19
b273dc0f 1593@code{stringptr}. @xref{Strings}.
8c59ee11
JK
1594
1595@item -20
dcb9e869 1596@code{character}, 8 bit unsigned character type.
8c59ee11
JK
1597
1598@item -21
6fe91f2c 1599@code{logical*1}, 8 bit type. This Fortran type has a split
01c4b039 1600personality in that it is used for boolean variables, but can also be
03ffea63
JK
1601used for unsigned integers. 0 is false, 1 is true, and other values are
1602non-boolean.
8c59ee11
JK
1603
1604@item -22
6fe91f2c 1605@code{logical*2}, 16 bit type. This Fortran type has a split
01c4b039 1606personality in that it is used for boolean variables, but can also be
03ffea63
JK
1607used for unsigned integers. 0 is false, 1 is true, and other values are
1608non-boolean.
8c59ee11
JK
1609
1610@item -23
6fe91f2c 1611@code{logical*4}, 32 bit type. This Fortran type has a split
01c4b039 1612personality in that it is used for boolean variables, but can also be
03ffea63
JK
1613used for unsigned integers. 0 is false, 1 is true, and other values are
1614non-boolean.
8c59ee11
JK
1615
1616@item -24
6fe91f2c 1617@code{logical}, 32 bit type. This Fortran type has a split
0e84d6ec 1618personality in that it is used for boolean variables, but can also be
03ffea63
JK
1619used for unsigned integers. 0 is false, 1 is true, and other values are
1620non-boolean.
8c59ee11
JK
1621
1622@item -25
b273dc0f
JK
1623@code{complex}. A complex type consisting of two IEEE single-precision
1624floating point values.
8c59ee11
JK
1625
1626@item -26
b273dc0f
JK
1627@code{complex}. A complex type consisting of two IEEE double-precision
1628floating point values.
8c59ee11
JK
1629
1630@item -27
1631@code{integer*1}, 8 bit signed integral type.
1632
1633@item -28
1634@code{integer*2}, 16 bit signed integral type.
1635
1636@item -29
1637@code{integer*4}, 32 bit signed integral type.
1638
1639@item -30
dcb9e869
JK
1640@code{wchar}. Wide character, 16 bits wide, unsigned (what format?
1641Unicode?).
ffcee888
JK
1642
1643@item -31
1644@code{long long}, 64 bit signed integral type.
1645
1646@item -32
1647@code{unsigned long long}, 64 bit unsigned integral type.
1648
1649@item -33
1650@code{logical*8}, 64 bit unsigned integral type.
1651
1652@item -34
1653@code{integer*8}, 64 bit signed integral type.
8c59ee11
JK
1654@end table
1655
bf9d2537
DM
1656@node Miscellaneous Types
1657@section Miscellaneous Types
8c59ee11
JK
1658
1659@table @code
1660@item b @var{type-information} ; @var{bytes}
1661Pascal space type. This is documented by IBM; what does it mean?
1662
685a5e86 1663This use of the @samp{b} type descriptor can be distinguished
bf9d2537
DM
1664from its use for builtin integral types (@pxref{Builtin Type
1665Descriptors}) because the character following the type descriptor is
8c59ee11
JK
1666always a digit, @samp{(}, or @samp{-}.
1667
1668@item B @var{type-information}
43603088 1669A volatile-qualified version of @var{type-information}. This is
685a5e86 1670a Sun extension. References and stores to a variable with a
43603088 1671volatile-qualified type must not be optimized or cached; they
685a5e86 1672must occur as the user specifies them.
8c59ee11
JK
1673
1674@item d @var{type-information}
1675File of type @var{type-information}. As far as I know this is only used
1676by Pascal.
1677
1678@item k @var{type-information}
43603088
JK
1679A const-qualified version of @var{type-information}. This is a Sun
1680extension. A variable with a const-qualified type cannot be modified.
8c59ee11
JK
1681
1682@item M @var{type-information} ; @var{length}
1683Multiple instance type. The type seems to composed of @var{length}
1684repetitions of @var{type-information}, for example @code{character*3} is
1685represented by @samp{M-2;3}, where @samp{-2} is a reference to a
bf9d2537 1686character type (@pxref{Negative Type Numbers}). I'm not sure how this
6fe91f2c
DM
1687differs from an array. This appears to be a Fortran feature.
1688@var{length} is a bound, like those in range types; see @ref{Subranges}.
8c59ee11
JK
1689
1690@item S @var{type-information}
1691Pascal set type. @var{type-information} must be a small type such as an
1692enumeration or a subrange, and the type is a bitmask whose length is
1693specified by the number of elements in @var{type-information}.
1694
168e8087
JK
1695In CHILL, if it is a bitstring instead of a set, also use the @samp{S}
1696type attribute (@pxref{String Field}).
1697
8c59ee11
JK
1698@item * @var{type-information}
1699Pointer to @var{type-information}.
139741da 1700@end table
e505224d 1701
bf9d2537
DM
1702@node Cross-References
1703@section Cross-References to Other Types
8c59ee11 1704
685a5e86
DM
1705A type can be used before it is defined; one common way to deal with
1706that situation is just to use a type reference to a type which has not
1707yet been defined.
8c59ee11
JK
1708
1709Another way is with the @samp{x} type descriptor, which is followed by
1710@samp{s} for a structure tag, @samp{u} for a union tag, or @samp{e} for
1711a enumerator tag, followed by the name of the tag, followed by @samp{:}.
6c06a518
JK
1712If the name contains @samp{::} between a @samp{<} and @samp{>} pair (for
1713C++ templates), such a @samp{::} does not end the name---only a single
1714@samp{:} ends the name; see @ref{Nested Symbols}.
f50cb1a3 1715
685a5e86 1716For example, the following C declarations:
e505224d
PB
1717
1718@example
8c59ee11
JK
1719struct foo;
1720struct foo *bar;
e505224d
PB
1721@end example
1722
685a5e86
DM
1723@noindent
1724produce:
8c59ee11
JK
1725
1726@example
1727.stabs "bar:G16=*17=xsfoo:",32,0,0,0
1728@end example
1729
1730Not all debuggers support the @samp{x} type descriptor, so on some
1731machines GCC does not use it. I believe that for the above example it
1732would just emit a reference to type 17 and never define it, but I
1733haven't verified that.
1734
1735Modula-2 imported types, at least on AIX, use the @samp{i} type
1736descriptor, which is followed by the name of the module from which the
1737type is imported, followed by @samp{:}, followed by the name of the
1738type. There is then optionally a comma followed by type information for
685a5e86 1739the type. This differs from merely naming the type (@pxref{Typedefs}) in
8c59ee11
JK
1740that it identifies the module; I don't understand whether the name of
1741the type given here is always just the same as the name we are giving
1742it, or whether this type descriptor is used with a nameless stab
bf9d2537 1743(@pxref{String Field}), or what. The symbol ends with @samp{;}.
e505224d 1744
8c59ee11 1745@node Subranges
bf9d2537 1746@section Subrange Types
8c59ee11
JK
1747
1748The @samp{r} type descriptor defines a type as a subrange of another
685a5e86
DM
1749type. It is followed by type information for the type of which it is a
1750subrange, a semicolon, an integral lower bound, a semicolon, an
8c59ee11 1751integral upper bound, and a semicolon. The AIX documentation does not
63cef7d7
JK
1752specify the trailing semicolon, in an effort to specify array indexes
1753more cleanly, but a subrange which is not an array index has always
466bdeb2 1754included a trailing semicolon (@pxref{Arrays}).
8c59ee11 1755
8cfe3beb 1756Instead of an integer, either bound can be one of the following:
8c59ee11
JK
1757
1758@table @code
1759@item A @var{offset}
1760The bound is passed by reference on the stack at offset @var{offset}
1761from the argument list. @xref{Parameters}, for more information on such
1762offsets.
1763
1764@item T @var{offset}
1765The bound is passed by value on the stack at offset @var{offset} from
1766the argument list.
1767
1768@item a @var{register-number}
1769The bound is pased by reference in register number
1770@var{register-number}.
1771
1772@item t @var{register-number}
1773The bound is passed by value in register number @var{register-number}.
1774
1775@item J
1776There is no bound.
1777@end table
1778
bf9d2537 1779Subranges are also used for builtin types; see @ref{Traditional Builtin Types}.
8c59ee11
JK
1780
1781@node Arrays
bf9d2537 1782@section Array Types
8c59ee11
JK
1783
1784Arrays use the @samp{a} type descriptor. Following the type descriptor
63cef7d7 1785is the type of the index and the type of the array elements. If the
685a5e86
DM
1786index type is a range type, it ends in a semicolon; otherwise
1787(for example, if it is a type reference), there does not
63cef7d7
JK
1788appear to be any way to tell where the types are separated. In an
1789effort to clean up this mess, IBM documents the two types as being
1790separated by a semicolon, and a range type as not ending in a semicolon
1791(but this is not right for range types which are not array indexes,
1792@pxref{Subranges}). I think probably the best solution is to specify
1793that a semicolon ends a range type, and that the index type and element
1794type of an array are separated by a semicolon, but that if the index
1795type is a range type, the extra semicolon can be omitted. GDB (at least
1796through version 4.9) doesn't support any kind of index type other than a
1797range anyway; I'm not sure about dbx.
6aa83a79 1798
ee59134e 1799It is well established, and widely used, that the type of the index,
3d4cf720 1800unlike most types found in the stabs, is merely a type definition, not
bf9d2537 1801type information (@pxref{String Field}) (that is, it need not start with
685a5e86 1802@samp{@var{type-number}=} if it is defining a new type). According to a
3d4cf720
JK
1803comment in GDB, this is also true of the type of the array elements; it
1804gives @samp{ar1;1;10;ar1;1;10;4} as a legitimate way to express a two
1805dimensional array. According to AIX documentation, the element type
1806must be type information. GDB accepts either.
ee59134e 1807
43603088
JK
1808The type of the index is often a range type, expressed as the type
1809descriptor @samp{r} and some parameters. It defines the size of the
1810array. In the example below, the range @samp{r1;0;2;} defines an index
1811type which is a subrange of type 1 (integer), with a lower bound of 0
1812and an upper bound of 2. This defines the valid range of subscripts of
1813a three-element C array.
e505224d 1814
685a5e86 1815For example, the definition:
e505224d
PB
1816
1817@example
8c59ee11
JK
1818char char_vec[3] = @{'a','b','c'@};
1819@end example
e505224d 1820
8c59ee11 1821@noindent
685a5e86 1822produces the output:
8c59ee11
JK
1823
1824@example
1825.stabs "char_vec:G19=ar1;0;2;2",32,0,0,0
1826 .global _char_vec
1827 .align 4
1828_char_vec:
1829 .byte 97
1830 .byte 98
1831 .byte 99
1832@end example
1833
685a5e86 1834If an array is @dfn{packed}, the elements are spaced more
8c59ee11
JK
1835closely than normal, saving memory at the expense of speed. For
1836example, an array of 3-byte objects might, if unpacked, have each
1837element aligned on a 4-byte boundary, but if packed, have no padding.
1838One way to specify that something is packed is with type attributes
bf9d2537 1839(@pxref{String Field}). In the case of arrays, another is to use the
8c59ee11
JK
1840@samp{P} type descriptor instead of @samp{a}. Other than specifying a
1841packed array, @samp{P} is identical to @samp{a}.
1842
1843@c FIXME-what is it? A pointer?
1844An open array is represented by the @samp{A} type descriptor followed by
1845type information specifying the type of the array elements.
1846
1847@c FIXME: what is the format of this type? A pointer to a vector of pointers?
1848An N-dimensional dynamic array is represented by
1849
1850@example
1851D @var{dimensions} ; @var{type-information}
1852@end example
1853
1854@c Does dimensions really have this meaning? The AIX documentation
1855@c doesn't say.
1856@var{dimensions} is the number of dimensions; @var{type-information}
1857specifies the type of the array elements.
1858
1859@c FIXME: what is the format of this type? A pointer to some offsets in
1860@c another array?
1861A subarray of an N-dimensional array is represented by
1862
1863@example
1864E @var{dimensions} ; @var{type-information}
e505224d
PB
1865@end example
1866
8c59ee11
JK
1867@c Does dimensions really have this meaning? The AIX documentation
1868@c doesn't say.
1869@var{dimensions} is the number of dimensions; @var{type-information}
1870specifies the type of the array elements.
1871
1872@node Strings
1873@section Strings
1874
1875Some languages, like C or the original Pascal, do not have string types,
1876they just have related things like arrays of characters. But most
1877Pascals and various other languages have string types, which are
1878indicated as follows:
1879
1880@table @code
1881@item n @var{type-information} ; @var{bytes}
1882@var{bytes} is the maximum length. I'm not sure what
1883@var{type-information} is; I suspect that it means that this is a string
1884of @var{type-information} (thus allowing a string of integers, a string
1885of wide characters, etc., as well as a string of characters). Not sure
1886what the format of this type is. This is an AIX feature.
1887
1888@item z @var{type-information} ; @var{bytes}
1889Just like @samp{n} except that this is a gstring, not an ordinary
1890string. I don't know the difference.
1891
1892@item N
1893Pascal Stringptr. What is this? This is an AIX feature.
1894@end table
1895
168e8087
JK
1896Languages, such as CHILL which have a string type which is basically
1897just an array of characters use the @samp{S} type attribute
1898(@pxref{String Field}).
1899
899bafeb 1900@node Enumerations
6fe91f2c 1901@section Enumerations
e505224d 1902
8c59ee11 1903Enumerations are defined with the @samp{e} type descriptor.
e505224d 1904
8c59ee11
JK
1905@c FIXME: Where does this information properly go? Perhaps it is
1906@c redundant with something we already explain.
685a5e86 1907The source line below declares an enumeration type at file scope.
6fe91f2c
DM
1908The type definition is located after the @code{N_RBRAC} that marks the end of
1909the previous procedure's block scope, and before the @code{N_FUN} that marks
8c59ee11 1910the beginning of the next procedure's block scope. Therefore it does not
6fe91f2c 1911describe a block local symbol, but a file local one.
8c59ee11
JK
1912
1913The source line:
e505224d
PB
1914
1915@example
8c59ee11 1916enum e_places @{first,second=3,last@};
e505224d
PB
1917@end example
1918
899bafeb 1919@noindent
685a5e86 1920generates the following stab:
e505224d 1921
899bafeb 1922@example
8c59ee11 1923.stabs "e_places:T22=efirst:0,second:3,last:4,;",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 1924@end example
e505224d 1925
685a5e86
DM
1926The symbol descriptor (@samp{T}) says that the stab describes a
1927structure, enumeration, or union tag. The type descriptor @samp{e},
1928following the @samp{22=} of the type definition narrows it down to an
1929enumeration type. Following the @samp{e} is a list of the elements of
1930the enumeration. The format is @samp{@var{name}:@var{value},}. The
ae701604
JK
1931list of elements ends with @samp{;}. The fact that @var{value} is
1932specified as an integer can cause problems if the value is large. GCC
19332.5.2 tries to output it in octal in that case with a leading zero,
1934which is probably a good thing, although GDB 4.11 supports octal only in
1935cases where decimal is perfectly good. Negative decimal values are
1936supported by both GDB and dbx.
e505224d 1937
8c59ee11
JK
1938There is no standard way to specify the size of an enumeration type; it
1939is determined by the architecture (normally all enumerations types are
ae701604
JK
194032 bits). Type attributes can be used to specify an enumeration type of
1941another size for debuggers which support them; see @ref{String Field}.
8c59ee11 1942
cf7416ec
JK
1943Enumeration types are unusual in that they define symbols for the
1944enumeration values (@code{first}, @code{second}, and @code{third} in the
1945above example), and even though these symbols are visible in the file as
1946a whole (rather than being in a more local namespace like structure
1947member names), they are defined in the type definition for the
1948enumeration type rather than each having their own symbol. In order to
1949be fast, GDB will only get symbols from such types (in its initial scan
1950of the stabs) if the type is the first thing defined after a @samp{T} or
1951@samp{t} symbol descriptor (the above example fulfills this
1952requirement). If the type does not have a name, the compiler should
1953emit it in a nameless stab (@pxref{String Field}); GCC does this.
1954
8c59ee11
JK
1955@node Structures
1956@section Structures
e505224d 1957
685a5e86 1958The encoding of structures in stabs can be shown with an example.
e505224d
PB
1959
1960The following source code declares a structure tag and defines an
685a5e86
DM
1961instance of the structure in global scope. Then a @code{typedef} equates the
1962structure tag with a new type. Seperate stabs are generated for the
1963structure tag, the structure @code{typedef}, and the structure instance. The
1964stabs for the tag and the @code{typedef} are emited when the definitions are
e505224d
PB
1965encountered. Since the structure elements are not initialized, the
1966stab and code for the structure variable itself is located at the end
685a5e86 1967of the program in the bss section.
e505224d
PB
1968
1969@example
685a5e86
DM
1970struct s_tag @{
1971 int s_int;
1972 float s_float;
1973 char s_char_vec[8];
1974 struct s_tag* s_next;
1975@} g_an_s;
e505224d 1976
685a5e86
DM
1977typedef struct s_tag s_typedef;
1978@end example
e505224d 1979
685a5e86
DM
1980The structure tag has an @code{N_LSYM} stab type because, like the
1981enumeration, the symbol has file scope. Like the enumeration, the
1982symbol descriptor is @samp{T}, for enumeration, structure, or tag type.
43603088 1983The type descriptor @samp{s} following the @samp{16=} of the type
685a5e86 1984definition narrows the symbol type to structure.
e505224d 1985
43603088 1986Following the @samp{s} type descriptor is the number of bytes the
685a5e86
DM
1987structure occupies, followed by a description of each structure element.
1988The structure element descriptions are of the form @var{name:type, bit
1989offset from the start of the struct, number of bits in the element}.
e505224d 1990
43603088
JK
1991@c FIXME: phony line break. Can probably be fixed by using an example
1992@c with fewer fields.
685a5e86 1993@example
43603088 1994# @r{128 is N_LSYM}
685a5e86
DM
1995.stabs "s_tag:T16=s20s_int:1,0,32;s_float:12,32,32;
1996 s_char_vec:17=ar1;0;7;2,64,64;s_next:18=*16,128,32;;",128,0,0,0
612dbd4c 1997@end example
6fe91f2c 1998
685a5e86
DM
1999In this example, the first two structure elements are previously defined
2000types. For these, the type following the @samp{@var{name}:} part of the
2001element description is a simple type reference. The other two structure
e505224d 2002elements are new types. In this case there is a type definition
685a5e86
DM
2003embedded after the @samp{@var{name}:}. The type definition for the
2004array element looks just like a type definition for a standalone array.
2005The @code{s_next} field is a pointer to the same kind of structure that
2006the field is an element of. So the definition of structure type 16
2007contains a type definition for an element which is a pointer to type 16.
e505224d 2008
6c06a518
JK
2009If a field is a static member (this is a C++ feature in which a single
2010variable appears to be a field of every structure of a given type) it
2011still starts out with the field name, a colon, and the type, but then
2012instead of a comma, bit position, comma, and bit size, there is a colon
2013followed by the name of the variable which each such field refers to.
2014
2015If the structure has methods (a C++ feature), they follow the non-method
2016fields; see @ref{Cplusplus}.
2017
899bafeb 2018@node Typedefs
bf9d2537 2019@section Giving a Type a Name
e505224d 2020
e7bb76cc 2021To give a type a name, use the @samp{t} symbol descriptor. The type
bf9d2537 2022is specified by the type information (@pxref{String Field}) for the stab.
e7bb76cc 2023For example,
e505224d 2024
899bafeb 2025@example
43603088 2026.stabs "s_typedef:t16",128,0,0,0 # @r{128 is N_LSYM}
899bafeb 2027@end example
e505224d 2028
8c59ee11 2029specifies that @code{s_typedef} refers to type number 16. Such stabs
43603088 2030have symbol type @code{N_LSYM} (or @code{C_DECL} for XCOFF).
e505224d 2031
685a5e86 2032If you are specifying the tag name for a structure, union, or
8c59ee11
JK
2033enumeration, use the @samp{T} symbol descriptor instead. I believe C is
2034the only language with this feature.
e505224d 2035
8c59ee11
JK
2036If the type is an opaque type (I believe this is a Modula-2 feature),
2037AIX provides a type descriptor to specify it. The type descriptor is
2038@samp{o} and is followed by a name. I don't know what the name
2039means---is it always the same as the name of the type, or is this type
bf9d2537 2040descriptor used with a nameless stab (@pxref{String Field})? There
8c59ee11
JK
2041optionally follows a comma followed by type information which defines
2042the type of this type. If omitted, a semicolon is used in place of the
e7bb76cc 2043comma and the type information, and the type is much like a generic
8c59ee11
JK
2044pointer type---it has a known size but little else about it is
2045specified.
e505224d 2046
899bafeb 2047@node Unions
6fe91f2c 2048@section Unions
e505224d 2049
e505224d 2050@example
685a5e86
DM
2051union u_tag @{
2052 int u_int;
2053 float u_float;
2054 char* u_char;
2055@} an_u;
e505224d
PB
2056@end example
2057
685a5e86
DM
2058This code generates a stab for a union tag and a stab for a union
2059variable. Both use the @code{N_LSYM} stab type. If a union variable is
e505224d 2060scoped locally to the procedure in which it is defined, its stab is
6fe91f2c 2061located immediately preceding the @code{N_LBRAC} for the procedure's block
e505224d
PB
2062start.
2063
685a5e86 2064The stab for the union tag, however, is located preceding the code for
6fe91f2c 2065the procedure in which it is defined. The stab type is @code{N_LSYM}. This
e505224d 2066would seem to imply that the union type is file scope, like the struct
f958d5cd
DM
2067type @code{s_tag}. This is not true. The contents and position of the stab
2068for @code{u_type} do not convey any infomation about its procedure local
e505224d
PB
2069scope.
2070
43603088
JK
2071@c FIXME: phony line break. Can probably be fixed by using an example
2072@c with fewer fields.
5bc927fb 2073@smallexample
43603088 2074# @r{128 is N_LSYM}
685a5e86
DM
2075.stabs "u_tag:T23=u4u_int:1,0,32;u_float:12,0,32;u_char:21,0,32;;",
2076 128,0,0,0
5bc927fb 2077@end smallexample
e505224d 2078
685a5e86
DM
2079The symbol descriptor @samp{T}, following the @samp{name:} means that
2080the stab describes an enumeration, structure, or union tag. The type
2081descriptor @samp{u}, following the @samp{23=} of the type definition,
2082narrows it down to a union type definition. Following the @samp{u} is
2083the number of bytes in the union. After that is a list of union element
2084descriptions. Their format is @var{name:type, bit offset into the
2085union, number of bytes for the element;}.
e505224d 2086
685a5e86 2087The stab for the union variable is:
e505224d 2088
899bafeb 2089@example
43603088 2090.stabs "an_u:23",128,0,0,-20 # @r{128 is N_LSYM}
899bafeb 2091@end example
e505224d 2092
43603088 2093@samp{-20} specifies where the variable is stored (@pxref{Stack
bf9d2537 2094Variables}).
43603088 2095
bf9d2537
DM
2096@node Function Types
2097@section Function Types
e505224d 2098
685a5e86
DM
2099Various types can be defined for function variables. These types are
2100not used in defining functions (@pxref{Procedures}); they are used for
2101things like pointers to functions.
e505224d 2102
8c59ee11
JK
2103The simple, traditional, type is type descriptor @samp{f} is followed by
2104type information for the return type of the function, followed by a
2105semicolon.
2106
685a5e86
DM
2107This does not deal with functions for which the number and types of the
2108parameters are part of the type, as in Modula-2 or ANSI C. AIX provides
2109extensions to specify these, using the @samp{f}, @samp{F}, @samp{p}, and
2110@samp{R} type descriptors.
8c59ee11 2111
685a5e86 2112First comes the type descriptor. If it is @samp{f} or @samp{F}, this
43603088
JK
2113type involves a function rather than a procedure, and the type
2114information for the return type of the function follows, followed by a
2115comma. Then comes the number of parameters to the function and a
2116semicolon. Then, for each parameter, there is the name of the parameter
2117followed by a colon (this is only present for type descriptors @samp{R}
2118and @samp{F} which represent Pascal function or procedure parameters),
2119type information for the parameter, a comma, 0 if passed by reference or
21201 if passed by value, and a semicolon. The type definition ends with a
2121semicolon.
8c59ee11 2122
685a5e86 2123For example, this variable definition:
e505224d
PB
2124
2125@example
8c59ee11 2126int (*g_pf)();
e505224d
PB
2127@end example
2128
8c59ee11
JK
2129@noindent
2130generates the following code:
e505224d 2131
899bafeb 2132@example
8c59ee11
JK
2133.stabs "g_pf:G24=*25=f1",32,0,0,0
2134 .common _g_pf,4,"bss"
899bafeb 2135@end example
e505224d 2136
8c59ee11 2137The variable defines a new type, 24, which is a pointer to another new
685a5e86 2138type, 25, which is a function returning @code{int}.
e505224d 2139
bf9d2537
DM
2140@node Symbol Tables
2141@chapter Symbol Information in Symbol Tables
e505224d 2142
6fe91f2c
DM
2143This chapter describes the format of symbol table entries
2144and how stab assembler directives map to them. It also describes the
2145transformations that the assembler and linker make on data from stabs.
e505224d 2146
685a5e86 2147@menu
bf9d2537
DM
2148* Symbol Table Format::
2149* Transformations On Symbol Tables::
685a5e86
DM
2150@end menu
2151
bf9d2537
DM
2152@node Symbol Table Format
2153@section Symbol Table Format
685a5e86
DM
2154
2155Each time the assembler encounters a stab directive, it puts
2156each field of the stab into a corresponding field in a symbol table
0a95c18c 2157entry of its output file. If the stab contains a string field, the
e505224d
PB
2158symbol table entry for that stab points to a string table entry
2159containing the string data from the stab. Assembler labels become
2160relocatable addresses. Symbol table entries in a.out have the format:
2161
dd8126d9 2162@c FIXME: should refer to external, not internal.
e505224d
PB
2163@example
2164struct internal_nlist @{
139741da
RP
2165 unsigned long n_strx; /* index into string table of name */
2166 unsigned char n_type; /* type of symbol */
2167 unsigned char n_other; /* misc info (usually empty) */
2168 unsigned short n_desc; /* description field */
2169 bfd_vma n_value; /* value of symbol */
e505224d
PB
2170@};
2171@end example
2172
0a95c18c
JK
2173If the stab has a string, the @code{n_strx} field holds the offset in
2174bytes of the string within the string table. The string is terminated
2175by a NUL character. If the stab lacks a string (for example, it was
2176produced by a @code{.stabn} or @code{.stabd} directive), the
2177@code{n_strx} field is zero.
685a5e86
DM
2178
2179Symbol table entries with @code{n_type} field values greater than 0x1f
2180originated as stabs generated by the compiler (with one random
2181exception). The other entries were placed in the symbol table of the
2182executable by the assembler or the linker.
e505224d 2183
bf9d2537
DM
2184@node Transformations On Symbol Tables
2185@section Transformations on Symbol Tables
e505224d
PB
2186
2187The linker concatenates object files and does fixups of externally
685a5e86 2188defined symbols.
e505224d 2189
685a5e86
DM
2190You can see the transformations made on stab data by the assembler and
2191linker by examining the symbol table after each pass of the build. To
2192do this, use @samp{nm -ap}, which dumps the symbol table, including
6fe91f2c
DM
2193debugging information, unsorted. For stab entries the columns are:
2194@var{value}, @var{other}, @var{desc}, @var{type}, @var{string}. For
2195assembler and linker symbols, the columns are: @var{value}, @var{type},
2196@var{string}.
e505224d 2197
43603088
JK
2198The low 5 bits of the stab type tell the linker how to relocate the
2199value of the stab. Thus for stab types like @code{N_RSYM} and
2200@code{N_LSYM}, where the value is an offset or a register number, the
2201low 5 bits are @code{N_ABS}, which tells the linker not to relocate the
2202value.
e505224d 2203
0a95c18c 2204Where the value of a stab contains an assembly language label,
e505224d
PB
2205it is transformed by each build step. The assembler turns it into a
2206relocatable address and the linker turns it into an absolute address.
685a5e86
DM
2207
2208@menu
bf9d2537
DM
2209* Transformations On Static Variables::
2210* Transformations On Global Variables::
9a22aed5
JK
2211* Stab Section Transformations:: For some object file formats,
2212 things are a bit different.
685a5e86
DM
2213@end menu
2214
bf9d2537
DM
2215@node Transformations On Static Variables
2216@subsection Transformations on Static Variables
685a5e86 2217
e505224d
PB
2218This source line defines a static variable at file scope:
2219
899bafeb 2220@example
685a5e86 2221static int s_g_repeat
899bafeb 2222@end example
e505224d 2223
899bafeb 2224@noindent
6fe91f2c 2225The following stab describes the symbol:
e505224d 2226
899bafeb 2227@example
685a5e86 2228.stabs "s_g_repeat:S1",38,0,0,_s_g_repeat
899bafeb 2229@end example
e505224d 2230
899bafeb 2231@noindent
e505224d 2232The assembler transforms the stab into this symbol table entry in the
899bafeb 2233@file{.o} file. The location is expressed as a data segment offset.
e505224d 2234
899bafeb 2235@example
685a5e86 223600000084 - 00 0000 STSYM s_g_repeat:S1
899bafeb 2237@end example
e505224d 2238
899bafeb 2239@noindent
685a5e86 2240In the symbol table entry from the executable, the linker has made the
e505224d
PB
2241relocatable address absolute.
2242
899bafeb 2243@example
685a5e86 22440000e00c - 00 0000 STSYM s_g_repeat:S1
899bafeb 2245@end example
e505224d 2246
bf9d2537
DM
2247@node Transformations On Global Variables
2248@subsection Transformations on Global Variables
685a5e86 2249
e505224d 2250Stabs for global variables do not contain location information. In
685a5e86 2251this case, the debugger finds location information in the assembler or
e505224d
PB
2252linker symbol table entry describing the variable. The source line:
2253
899bafeb 2254@example
685a5e86 2255char g_foo = 'c';
899bafeb 2256@end example
e505224d 2257
899bafeb 2258@noindent
e505224d
PB
2259generates the stab:
2260
899bafeb 2261@example
685a5e86 2262.stabs "g_foo:G2",32,0,0,0
899bafeb 2263@end example
e505224d 2264
685a5e86
DM
2265The variable is represented by two symbol table entries in the object
2266file (see below). The first one originated as a stab. The second one
2267is an external symbol. The upper case @samp{D} signifies that the
2268@code{n_type} field of the symbol table contains 7, @code{N_DATA} with
ac31351a
JK
2269local linkage. The stab's value is zero since the value is not used for
2270@code{N_GSYM} stabs. The value of the linker symbol is the relocatable
2271address corresponding to the variable.
e505224d 2272
899bafeb 2273@example
685a5e86
DM
227400000000 - 00 0000 GSYM g_foo:G2
227500000080 D _g_foo
899bafeb 2276@end example
e505224d 2277
899bafeb 2278@noindent
e505224d 2279These entries as transformed by the linker. The linker symbol table
685a5e86 2280entry now holds an absolute address:
e505224d 2281
899bafeb 2282@example
685a5e86 228300000000 - 00 0000 GSYM g_foo:G2
899bafeb 2284@dots{}
685a5e86 22850000e008 D _g_foo
899bafeb 2286@end example
e505224d 2287
9a22aed5
JK
2288@node Stab Section Transformations
2289@subsection Transformations of Stabs in separate sections
cd61aa60 2290
9a22aed5
JK
2291For object file formats using stabs in separate sections (@pxref{Stab
2292Sections}), use @code{objdump --stabs} instead of @code{nm} to show the
2293stabs in an object or executable file. @code{objdump} is a GNU utility;
2294Sun does not provide any equivalent.
cd61aa60
JK
2295
2296The following example is for a stab whose value is an address is
9a22aed5
JK
2297relative to the compilation unit (@pxref{ELF Linker Relocation}). For
2298example, if the source line
cd61aa60
JK
2299
2300@example
2301static int ld = 5;
2302@end example
2303
2304appears within a function, then the assembly language output from the
2305compiler contains:
2306
2307@example
2308.Ddata.data:
2309@dots{}
2310 .stabs "ld:V(0,3)",0x26,0,4,.L18-Ddata.data # @r{0x26 is N_STSYM}
2311@dots{}
2312.L18:
2313 .align 4
2314 .word 0x5
2315@end example
2316
2317Because the value is formed by subtracting one symbol from another, the
2318value is absolute, not relocatable, and so the object file contains
2319
2320@example
2321Symnum n_type n_othr n_desc n_value n_strx String
232231 STSYM 0 4 00000004 680 ld:V(0,3)
2323@end example
2324
2325without any relocations, and the executable file also contains
2326
2327@example
2328Symnum n_type n_othr n_desc n_value n_strx String
232931 STSYM 0 4 00000004 680 ld:V(0,3)
2330@end example
2331
8c59ee11 2332@node Cplusplus
bf9d2537 2333@chapter GNU C++ Stabs
e505224d
PB
2334
2335@menu
bb190834 2336* Class Names:: C++ class names are both tags and typedefs.
397f9dcd 2337* Nested Symbols:: C++ symbol names can be within other types.
bf9d2537
DM
2338* Basic Cplusplus Types::
2339* Simple Classes::
2340* Class Instance::
8eb5e289 2341* Methods:: Method definition
2b7ac6fd
JK
2342* Method Type Descriptor:: The @samp{#} type descriptor
2343* Member Type Descriptor:: The @samp{@@} type descriptor
6fe91f2c 2344* Protections::
bf9d2537
DM
2345* Method Modifiers::
2346* Virtual Methods::
6fe91f2c 2347* Inheritence::
bf9d2537
DM
2348* Virtual Base Classes::
2349* Static Members::
e505224d
PB
2350@end menu
2351
bb190834
JK
2352@node Class Names
2353@section C++ Class Names
2354
2355In C++, a class name which is declared with @code{class}, @code{struct},
2356or @code{union}, is not only a tag, as in C, but also a type name. Thus
2357there should be stabs with both @samp{t} and @samp{T} symbol descriptors
2358(@pxref{Typedefs}).
2359
2360To save space, there is a special abbreviation for this case. If the
2361@samp{T} symbol descriptor is followed by @samp{t}, then the stab
2362defines both a type name and a tag.
2363
2364For example, the C++ code
2365
2366@example
2367struct foo @{int x;@};
2368@end example
2369
2370can be represented as either
2371
2372@example
2373.stabs "foo:T19=s4x:1,0,32;;",128,0,0,0 # @r{128 is N_LSYM}
2374.stabs "foo:t19",128,0,0,0
2375@end example
2376
2377or
2378
2379@example
2380.stabs "foo:Tt19=s4x:1,0,32;;",128,0,0,0
2381@end example
2382
397f9dcd
JK
2383@node Nested Symbols
2384@section Defining a Symbol Within Another Type
2385
2386In C++, a symbol (such as a type name) can be defined within another type.
2387@c FIXME: Needs example.
2388
2389In stabs, this is sometimes represented by making the name of a symbol
2390which contains @samp{::}. Such a pair of colons does not end the name
2391of the symbol, the way a single colon would (@pxref{String Field}). I'm
2392not sure how consistently used or well thought out this mechanism is.
2393So that a pair of colons in this position always has this meaning,
2394@samp{:} cannot be used as a symbol descriptor.
2395
2396For example, if the string for a stab is @samp{foo::bar::baz:t5=*6},
2397then @code{foo::bar::baz} is the name of the symbol, @samp{t} is the
2398symbol descriptor, and @samp{5=*6} is the type information.
2399
bf9d2537
DM
2400@node Basic Cplusplus Types
2401@section Basic Types For C++
e505224d
PB
2402
2403<< the examples that follow are based on a01.C >>
2404
2405
2406C++ adds two more builtin types to the set defined for C. These are
2407the unknown type and the vtable record type. The unknown type, type
240816, is defined in terms of itself like the void type.
2409
2410The vtable record type, type 17, is defined as a structure type and
6fe91f2c 2411then as a structure tag. The structure has four fields: delta, index,
e505224d
PB
2412pfn, and delta2. pfn is the function pointer.
2413
2414<< In boilerplate $vtbl_ptr_type, what are the fields delta,
2415index, and delta2 used for? >>
2416
2417This basic type is present in all C++ programs even if there are no
2418virtual methods defined.
2419
899bafeb 2420@display
e505224d 2421.stabs "struct_name:sym_desc(type)type_def(17)=type_desc(struct)struct_bytes(8)
139741da
RP
2422 elem_name(delta):type_ref(short int),bit_offset(0),field_bits(16);
2423 elem_name(index):type_ref(short int),bit_offset(16),field_bits(16);
2424 elem_name(pfn):type_def(18)=type_desc(ptr to)type_ref(void),
2425 bit_offset(32),field_bits(32);
2426 elem_name(delta2):type_def(short int);bit_offset(32),field_bits(16);;"
2427 N_LSYM, NIL, NIL
899bafeb 2428@end display
6fe91f2c 2429
899bafeb 2430@smallexample
e505224d 2431.stabs "$vtbl_ptr_type:t17=s8
139741da
RP
2432 delta:6,0,16;index:6,16,16;pfn:18=*15,32,32;delta2:6,32,16;;"
2433 ,128,0,0,0
899bafeb 2434@end smallexample
e505224d 2435
899bafeb 2436@display
e505224d 2437.stabs "name:sym_dec(struct tag)type_ref($vtbl_ptr_type)",N_LSYM,NIL,NIL,NIL
899bafeb 2438@end display
e505224d 2439
899bafeb 2440@example
e505224d 2441.stabs "$vtbl_ptr_type:T17",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 2442@end example
e505224d 2443
bf9d2537
DM
2444@node Simple Classes
2445@section Simple Class Definition
e505224d
PB
2446
2447The stabs describing C++ language features are an extension of the
2448stabs describing C. Stabs representing C++ class types elaborate
2449extensively on the stab format used to describe structure types in C.
2450Stabs representing class type variables look just like stabs
2451representing C language variables.
2452
2453Consider the following very simple class definition.
2454
2455@example
2456class baseA @{
2457public:
139741da
RP
2458 int Adat;
2459 int Ameth(int in, char other);
e505224d
PB
2460@};
2461@end example
2462
6fe91f2c 2463The class @code{baseA} is represented by two stabs. The first stab describes
e505224d 2464the class as a structure type. The second stab describes a structure
6fe91f2c 2465tag of the class type. Both stabs are of stab type @code{N_LSYM}. Since the
685a5e86 2466stab is not located between an @code{N_FUN} and an @code{N_LBRAC} stab this indicates
6fe91f2c 2467that the class is defined at file scope. If it were, then the @code{N_LSYM}
e505224d
PB
2468would signify a local variable.
2469
2470A stab describing a C++ class type is similar in format to a stab
2471describing a C struct, with each class member shown as a field in the
2472structure. The part of the struct format describing fields is
2473expanded to include extra information relevent to C++ class members.
2474In addition, if the class has multiple base classes or virtual
2475functions the struct format outside of the field parts is also
2476augmented.
2477
2478In this simple example the field part of the C++ class stab
2479representing member data looks just like the field part of a C struct
2480stab. The section on protections describes how its format is
2481sometimes extended for member data.
2482
2483The field part of a C++ class stab representing a member function
2484differs substantially from the field part of a C struct stab. It
6fe91f2c 2485still begins with @samp{name:} but then goes on to define a new type number
e505224d
PB
2486for the member function, describe its return type, its argument types,
2487its protection level, any qualifiers applied to the method definition,
2488and whether the method is virtual or not. If the method is virtual
2489then the method description goes on to give the vtable index of the
2490method, and the type number of the first base class defining the
6fe91f2c 2491method.
e505224d 2492
dd8126d9
JK
2493When the field name is a method name it is followed by two colons rather
2494than one. This is followed by a new type definition for the method.
2b7ac6fd
JK
2495This is a number followed by an equal sign and the type of the method.
2496Normally this will be a type declared using the @samp{#} type
2497descriptor; see @ref{Method Type Descriptor}; static member functions
2498are declared using the @samp{f} type descriptor instead; see
2499@ref{Function Types}.
e505224d 2500
dd8126d9
JK
2501The format of an overloaded operator method name differs from that of
2502other methods. It is @samp{op$::@var{operator-name}.} where
2503@var{operator-name} is the operator name such as @samp{+} or @samp{+=}.
2504The name ends with a period, and any characters except the period can
2505occur in the @var{operator-name} string.
e505224d 2506
dd8126d9
JK
2507The next part of the method description represents the arguments to the
2508method, preceeded by a colon and ending with a semi-colon. The types of
2509the arguments are expressed in the same way argument types are expressed
2510in C++ name mangling. In this example an @code{int} and a @code{char}
6fe91f2c 2511map to @samp{ic}.
e505224d
PB
2512
2513This is followed by a number, a letter, and an asterisk or period,
2514followed by another semicolon. The number indicates the protections
2515that apply to the member function. Here the 2 means public. The
2516letter encodes any qualifier applied to the method definition. In
6fe91f2c 2517this case, @samp{A} means that it is a normal function definition. The dot
e505224d
PB
2518shows that the method is not virtual. The sections that follow
2519elaborate further on these fields and describe the additional
2520information present for virtual methods.
2521
2522
899bafeb 2523@display
e505224d 2524.stabs "class_name:sym_desc(type)type_def(20)=type_desc(struct)struct_bytes(4)
139741da 2525 field_name(Adat):type(int),bit_offset(0),field_bits(32);
e505224d 2526
139741da 2527 method_name(Ameth)::type_def(21)=type_desc(method)return_type(int);
6fe91f2c 2528 :arg_types(int char);
139741da
RP
2529 protection(public)qualifier(normal)virtual(no);;"
2530 N_LSYM,NIL,NIL,NIL
899bafeb 2531@end display
e505224d 2532
899bafeb 2533@smallexample
e505224d
PB
2534.stabs "baseA:t20=s4Adat:1,0,32;Ameth::21=##1;:ic;2A.;;",128,0,0,0
2535
2536.stabs "class_name:sym_desc(struct tag)",N_LSYM,NIL,NIL,NIL
2537
2538.stabs "baseA:T20",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 2539@end smallexample
e505224d 2540
bf9d2537
DM
2541@node Class Instance
2542@section Class Instance
e505224d
PB
2543
2544As shown above, describing even a simple C++ class definition is
2545accomplished by massively extending the stab format used in C to
2546describe structure types. However, once the class is defined, C stabs
2547with no modifications can be used to describe class instances. The
2548following source:
2549
2550@example
2551main () @{
139741da 2552 baseA AbaseA;
e505224d
PB
2553@}
2554@end example
2555
899bafeb
RP
2556@noindent
2557yields the following stab describing the class instance. It looks no
e505224d
PB
2558different from a standard C stab describing a local variable.
2559
899bafeb 2560@display
e505224d 2561.stabs "name:type_ref(baseA)", N_LSYM, NIL, NIL, frame_ptr_offset
899bafeb 2562@end display
e505224d 2563
899bafeb 2564@example
e505224d 2565.stabs "AbaseA:20",128,0,0,-20
899bafeb 2566@end example
e505224d 2567
899bafeb 2568@node Methods
9d719a9c 2569@section Method Definition
e505224d
PB
2570
2571The class definition shown above declares Ameth. The C++ source below
2572defines Ameth:
2573
2574@example
6fe91f2c
DM
2575int
2576baseA::Ameth(int in, char other)
e505224d 2577@{
139741da 2578 return in;
e505224d
PB
2579@};
2580@end example
2581
2582
2583This method definition yields three stabs following the code of the
3a642a82
JK
2584method. One stab describes the method itself and following two describe
2585its parameters. Although there is only one formal argument all methods
6fe91f2c 2586have an implicit argument which is the @code{this} pointer. The @code{this}
3a642a82
JK
2587pointer is a pointer to the object on which the method was called. Note
2588that the method name is mangled to encode the class name and argument
2589types. Name mangling is described in the @sc{arm} (@cite{The Annotated
2590C++ Reference Manual}, by Ellis and Stroustrup, @sc{isbn}
25910-201-51459-1); @file{gpcompare.texi} in Cygnus GCC distributions
6fe91f2c 2592describes the differences between GNU mangling and @sc{arm}
3a642a82
JK
2593mangling.
2594@c FIXME: Use @xref, especially if this is generally installed in the
2595@c info tree.
2596@c FIXME: This information should be in a net release, either of GCC or
2597@c GDB. But gpcompare.texi doesn't seem to be in the FSF GCC.
e505224d 2598
612dbd4c 2599@example
e505224d 2600.stabs "name:symbol_desriptor(global function)return_type(int)",
6fe91f2c 2601 N_FUN, NIL, NIL, code_addr_of_method_start
e505224d
PB
2602
2603.stabs "Ameth__5baseAic:F1",36,0,0,_Ameth__5baseAic
612dbd4c 2604@end example
e505224d 2605
6fe91f2c
DM
2606Here is the stab for the @code{this} pointer implicit argument. The
2607name of the @code{this} pointer is always @code{this}. Type 19, the
2608@code{this} pointer is defined as a pointer to type 20, @code{baseA},
2609but a stab defining @code{baseA} has not yet been emited. Since the
2610compiler knows it will be emited shortly, here it just outputs a cross
2611reference to the undefined symbol, by prefixing the symbol name with
2612@samp{xs}.
e505224d 2613
612dbd4c 2614@example
e505224d 2615.stabs "name:sym_desc(register param)type_def(19)=
139741da 2616 type_desc(ptr to)type_ref(baseA)=
6fe91f2c 2617 type_desc(cross-reference to)baseA:",N_RSYM,NIL,NIL,register_number
e505224d 2618
c2dc518b 2619.stabs "this:P19=*20=xsbaseA:",64,0,0,8
612dbd4c 2620@end example
e505224d
PB
2621
2622The stab for the explicit integer argument looks just like a parameter
2623to a C function. The last field of the stab is the offset from the
2624argument pointer, which in most systems is the same as the frame
2625pointer.
2626
612dbd4c 2627@example
e505224d 2628.stabs "name:sym_desc(value parameter)type_ref(int)",
6fe91f2c 2629 N_PSYM,NIL,NIL,offset_from_arg_ptr
e505224d
PB
2630
2631.stabs "in:p1",160,0,0,72
612dbd4c 2632@end example
e505224d
PB
2633
2634<< The examples that follow are based on A1.C >>
2635
2b7ac6fd
JK
2636@node Method Type Descriptor
2637@section The @samp{#} Type Descriptor
2638
2639This is like the @samp{f} type descriptor for functions (@pxref{Function
2640Types}), except that a function which uses the @samp{#} type descriptor
2641takes an extra argument as its first argument, for the @code{this}
2642pointer. The @samp{#} type descriptor is optionally followed by the
2643types of the arguments, then another @samp{#}. If the types of the
2644arguments are omitted, so that the second @samp{#} immediately follows
2645the @samp{#} which is the type descriptor, the arguments are being
2646omitted (to save space) and can be deduced from the mangled name of the
2647method. After the second @samp{#} there is type information for the
2648return type of the method and a semicolon.
2649
2650Note that although such a type will normally be used to describe fields
2651in structures, unions, or classes, for at least some versions of the
2652compiler it can also be used in other contexts.
2653
2654@node Member Type Descriptor
2655@section The @samp{@@} Type Descriptor
2656
2657The @samp{@@} type descriptor is for a member (class and variable) type.
2658It is followed by type information for the offset basetype, a comma, and
2659type information for the type of the field being pointed to. (FIXME:
2660this is acknowledged to be gibberish. Can anyone say what really goes
2661here?).
2662
2663Note that there is a conflict between this and type attributes
2664(@pxref{String Field}); both use type descriptor @samp{@@}.
2665Fortunately, the @samp{@@} type descriptor used in this C++ sense always
2666will be followed by a digit, @samp{(}, or @samp{-}, and type attributes
2667never start with those things.
2668
899bafeb 2669@node Protections
e505224d
PB
2670@section Protections
2671
e505224d
PB
2672In the simple class definition shown above all member data and
2673functions were publicly accessable. The example that follows
2674contrasts public, protected and privately accessable fields and shows
2675how these protections are encoded in C++ stabs.
2676
b857d956
JK
2677If the character following the @samp{@var{field-name}:} part of the
2678string is @samp{/}, then the next character is the visibility. @samp{0}
2679means private, @samp{1} means protected, and @samp{2} means public.
2680Debuggers should ignore visibility characters they do not recognize, and
2681assume a reasonable default (such as public) (GDB 4.11 does not, but
2682this should be fixed in the next GDB release). If no visibility is
2683specified the field is public. The visibility @samp{9} means that the
2684field has been optimized out and is public (there is no way to specify
2685an optimized out field with a private or protected visibility).
2686Visibility @samp{9} is not supported by GDB 4.11; this should be fixed
2687in the next GDB release.
2688
2689The following C++ source:
e505224d
PB
2690
2691@example
b857d956 2692class vis @{
6fe91f2c 2693private:
b857d956 2694 int priv;
e505224d 2695protected:
b857d956 2696 char prot;
e505224d 2697public:
b857d956 2698 float pub;
e505224d
PB
2699@};
2700@end example
2701
899bafeb 2702@noindent
b857d956 2703generates the following stab:
e505224d 2704
b857d956
JK
2705@example
2706# @r{128 is N_LSYM}
2707.stabs "vis:T19=s12priv:/01,0,32;prot:/12,32,8;pub:12,64,32;;",128,0,0,0
2708@end example
e505224d 2709
b857d956
JK
2710@samp{vis:T19=s12} indicates that type number 19 is a 12 byte structure
2711named @code{vis} The @code{priv} field has public visibility
2712(@samp{/0}), type int (@samp{1}), and offset and size @samp{,0,32;}.
2713The @code{prot} field has protected visibility (@samp{/1}), type char
2714(@samp{2}) and offset and size @samp{,32,8;}. The @code{pub} field has
2715type float (@samp{12}), and offset and size @samp{,64,32;}.
e505224d
PB
2716
2717Protections for member functions are signified by one digit embeded in
2718the field part of the stab describing the method. The digit is 0 if
2719private, 1 if protected and 2 if public. Consider the C++ class
2720definition below:
2721
2722@example
2723class all_methods @{
2724private:
139741da 2725 int priv_meth(int in)@{return in;@};
e505224d 2726protected:
139741da 2727 char protMeth(char in)@{return in;@};
e505224d 2728public:
139741da 2729 float pubMeth(float in)@{return in;@};
e505224d
PB
2730@};
2731@end example
2732
2733It generates the following stab. The digit in question is to the left
6fe91f2c 2734of an @samp{A} in each case. Notice also that in this case two symbol
e505224d
PB
2735descriptors apply to the class name struct tag and struct type.
2736
899bafeb 2737@display
e505224d 2738.stabs "class_name:sym_desc(struct tag&type)type_def(21)=
139741da
RP
2739 sym_desc(struct)struct_bytes(1)
2740 meth_name::type_def(22)=sym_desc(method)returning(int);
2741 :args(int);protection(private)modifier(normal)virtual(no);
2742 meth_name::type_def(23)=sym_desc(method)returning(char);
2743 :args(char);protection(protected)modifier(normal)virual(no);
2744 meth_name::type_def(24)=sym_desc(method)returning(float);
2745 :args(float);protection(public)modifier(normal)virtual(no);;",
2746 N_LSYM,NIL,NIL,NIL
899bafeb 2747@end display
6fe91f2c 2748
899bafeb 2749@smallexample
e505224d 2750.stabs "all_methods:Tt21=s1priv_meth::22=##1;:i;0A.;protMeth::23=##2;:c;1A.;
139741da 2751 pubMeth::24=##12;:f;2A.;;",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 2752@end smallexample
e505224d 2753
bf9d2537
DM
2754@node Method Modifiers
2755@section Method Modifiers (@code{const}, @code{volatile}, @code{const volatile})
e505224d
PB
2756
2757<< based on a6.C >>
2758
2759In the class example described above all the methods have the normal
2760modifier. This method modifier information is located just after the
2761protection information for the method. This field has four possible
6fe91f2c
DM
2762character values. Normal methods use @samp{A}, const methods use
2763@samp{B}, volatile methods use @samp{C}, and const volatile methods use
2764@samp{D}. Consider the class definition below:
e505224d
PB
2765
2766@example
2767class A @{
2768public:
139741da
RP
2769 int ConstMeth (int arg) const @{ return arg; @};
2770 char VolatileMeth (char arg) volatile @{ return arg; @};
2771 float ConstVolMeth (float arg) const volatile @{return arg; @};
e505224d
PB
2772@};
2773@end example
2774
2775This class is described by the following stab:
2776
899bafeb 2777@display
e505224d 2778.stabs "class(A):sym_desc(struct)type_def(20)=type_desc(struct)struct_bytes(1)
139741da
RP
2779 meth_name(ConstMeth)::type_def(21)sym_desc(method)
2780 returning(int);:arg(int);protection(public)modifier(const)virtual(no);
2781 meth_name(VolatileMeth)::type_def(22)=sym_desc(method)
2782 returning(char);:arg(char);protection(public)modifier(volatile)virt(no)
2783 meth_name(ConstVolMeth)::type_def(23)=sym_desc(method)
2784 returning(float);:arg(float);protection(public)modifer(const volatile)
2785 virtual(no);;", @dots{}
899bafeb 2786@end display
6fe91f2c 2787
899bafeb 2788@example
e505224d 2789.stabs "A:T20=s1ConstMeth::21=##1;:i;2B.;VolatileMeth::22=##2;:c;2C.;
139741da 2790 ConstVolMeth::23=##12;:f;2D.;;",128,0,0,0
612dbd4c 2791@end example
e505224d 2792
bf9d2537
DM
2793@node Virtual Methods
2794@section Virtual Methods
e505224d 2795
6fe91f2c 2796<< The following examples are based on a4.C >>
e505224d
PB
2797
2798The presence of virtual methods in a class definition adds additional
2799data to the class description. The extra data is appended to the
2800description of the virtual method and to the end of the class
2801description. Consider the class definition below:
2802
2803@example
2804class A @{
2805public:
139741da
RP
2806 int Adat;
2807 virtual int A_virt (int arg) @{ return arg; @};
e505224d
PB
2808@};
2809@end example
6fe91f2c 2810
e505224d
PB
2811This results in the stab below describing class A. It defines a new
2812type (20) which is an 8 byte structure. The first field of the class
6fe91f2c
DM
2813struct is @samp{Adat}, an integer, starting at structure offset 0 and
2814occupying 32 bits.
e505224d
PB
2815
2816The second field in the class struct is not explicitly defined by the
2817C++ class definition but is implied by the fact that the class
2818contains a virtual method. This field is the vtable pointer. The
6fe91f2c 2819name of the vtable pointer field starts with @samp{$vf} and continues with a
e505224d
PB
2820type reference to the class it is part of. In this example the type
2821reference for class A is 20 so the name of its vtable pointer field is
6fe91f2c 2822@samp{$vf20}, followed by the usual colon.
e505224d
PB
2823
2824Next there is a type definition for the vtable pointer type (21).
6fe91f2c 2825This is in turn defined as a pointer to another new type (22).
e505224d
PB
2826
2827Type 22 is the vtable itself, which is defined as an array, indexed by
6aa83a79
JG
2828a range of integers between 0 and 1, and whose elements are of type
282917. Type 17 was the vtable record type defined by the boilerplate C++
2830type definitions, as shown earlier.
e505224d
PB
2831
2832The bit offset of the vtable pointer field is 32. The number of bits
2833in the field are not specified when the field is a vtable pointer.
6fe91f2c
DM
2834
2835Next is the method definition for the virtual member function @code{A_virt}.
e505224d
PB
2836Its description starts out using the same format as the non-virtual
2837member functions described above, except instead of a dot after the
6fe91f2c 2838@samp{A} there is an asterisk, indicating that the function is virtual.
e505224d 2839Since is is virtual some addition information is appended to the end
6fe91f2c 2840of the method description.
e505224d
PB
2841
2842The first number represents the vtable index of the method. This is a
284332 bit unsigned number with the high bit set, followed by a
2844semi-colon.
2845
2846The second number is a type reference to the first base class in the
2847inheritence hierarchy defining the virtual member function. In this
2848case the class stab describes a base class so the virtual function is
2849not overriding any other definition of the method. Therefore the
2850reference is to the type number of the class that the stab is
6fe91f2c 2851describing (20).
e505224d
PB
2852
2853This is followed by three semi-colons. One marks the end of the
2854current sub-section, one marks the end of the method field, and the
2855third marks the end of the struct definition.
2856
2857For classes containing virtual functions the very last section of the
2858string part of the stab holds a type reference to the first base
6fe91f2c 2859class. This is preceeded by @samp{~%} and followed by a final semi-colon.
e505224d 2860
899bafeb 2861@display
e505224d 2862.stabs "class_name(A):type_def(20)=sym_desc(struct)struct_bytes(8)
139741da
RP
2863 field_name(Adat):type_ref(int),bit_offset(0),field_bits(32);
2864 field_name(A virt func ptr):type_def(21)=type_desc(ptr to)type_def(22)=
6aa83a79 2865 sym_desc(array)index_type_ref(range of int from 0 to 1);
6fe91f2c 2866 elem_type_ref(vtbl elem type),
139741da
RP
2867 bit_offset(32);
2868 meth_name(A_virt)::typedef(23)=sym_desc(method)returning(int);
2869 :arg_type(int),protection(public)normal(yes)virtual(yes)
2870 vtable_index(1);class_first_defining(A);;;~%first_base(A);",
2871 N_LSYM,NIL,NIL,NIL
899bafeb 2872@end display
e505224d 2873
3d4cf720 2874@c FIXME: bogus line break.
899bafeb 2875@example
3d4cf720 2876.stabs "A:t20=s8Adat:1,0,32;$vf20:21=*22=ar1;0;1;17,32;
6fe91f2c 2877 A_virt::23=##1;:i;2A*-2147483647;20;;;~%20;",128,0,0,0
612dbd4c 2878@end example
e505224d 2879
2dd00294
JG
2880@node Inheritence
2881@section Inheritence
e505224d
PB
2882
2883Stabs describing C++ derived classes include additional sections that
2884describe the inheritence hierarchy of the class. A derived class stab
2885also encodes the number of base classes. For each base class it tells
2886if the base class is virtual or not, and if the inheritence is private
2887or public. It also gives the offset into the object of the portion of
6fe91f2c 2888the object corresponding to each base class.
e505224d
PB
2889
2890This additional information is embeded in the class stab following the
2891number of bytes in the struct. First the number of base classes
6fe91f2c 2892appears bracketed by an exclamation point and a comma.
e505224d 2893
b857d956
JK
2894Then for each base type there repeats a series: a virtual character, a
2895visibilty character, a number, a comma, another number, and a
2896semi-colon.
e505224d 2897
b857d956
JK
2898The virtual character is @samp{1} if the base class is virtual and
2899@samp{0} if not. The visibility character is @samp{2} if the derivation
2900is public, @samp{1} if it is protected, and @samp{0} if it is private.
2901Debuggers should ignore virtual or visibility characters they do not
2902recognize, and assume a reasonable default (such as public and
2903non-virtual) (GDB 4.11 does not, but this should be fixed in the next
2904GDB release).
e505224d 2905
b857d956
JK
2906The number following the virtual and visibility characters is the offset
2907from the start of the object to the part of the object pertaining to the
2908base class.
e505224d
PB
2909
2910After the comma, the second number is a type_descriptor for the base
2911type. Finally a semi-colon ends the series, which repeats for each
2912base class.
2913
6fe91f2c
DM
2914The source below defines three base classes @code{A}, @code{B}, and
2915@code{C} and the derived class @code{D}.
e505224d
PB
2916
2917
2918@example
2919class A @{
2920public:
139741da
RP
2921 int Adat;
2922 virtual int A_virt (int arg) @{ return arg; @};
e505224d
PB
2923@};
2924
2925class B @{
2926public:
6fe91f2c 2927 int B_dat;
139741da 2928 virtual int B_virt (int arg) @{return arg; @};
6fe91f2c 2929@};
e505224d
PB
2930
2931class C @{
6fe91f2c 2932public:
139741da 2933 int Cdat;
6fe91f2c 2934 virtual int C_virt (int arg) @{return arg; @};
e505224d
PB
2935@};
2936
2937class D : A, virtual B, public C @{
2938public:
139741da
RP
2939 int Ddat;
2940 virtual int A_virt (int arg ) @{ return arg+1; @};
2941 virtual int B_virt (int arg) @{ return arg+2; @};
2942 virtual int C_virt (int arg) @{ return arg+3; @};
2943 virtual int D_virt (int arg) @{ return arg; @};
e505224d
PB
2944@};
2945@end example
2946
2947Class stabs similar to the ones described earlier are generated for
6fe91f2c 2948each base class.
e505224d 2949
5bc927fb
RP
2950@c FIXME!!! the linebreaks in the following example probably make the
2951@c examples literally unusable, but I don't know any other way to get
2952@c them on the page.
63cef7d7
JK
2953@c One solution would be to put some of the type definitions into
2954@c separate stabs, even if that's not exactly what the compiler actually
2955@c emits.
899bafeb 2956@smallexample
5bc927fb
RP
2957.stabs "A:T20=s8Adat:1,0,32;$vf20:21=*22=ar1;0;1;17,32;
2958 A_virt::23=##1;:i;2A*-2147483647;20;;;~%20;",128,0,0,0
e505224d 2959
5bc927fb
RP
2960.stabs "B:Tt25=s8Bdat:1,0,32;$vf25:21,32;B_virt::26=##1;
2961 :i;2A*-2147483647;25;;;~%25;",128,0,0,0
e505224d 2962
5bc927fb
RP
2963.stabs "C:Tt28=s8Cdat:1,0,32;$vf28:21,32;C_virt::29=##1;
2964 :i;2A*-2147483647;28;;;~%28;",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 2965@end smallexample
e505224d 2966
6fe91f2c 2967In the stab describing derived class @code{D} below, the information about
e505224d
PB
2968the derivation of this class is encoded as follows.
2969
899bafeb 2970@display
e505224d 2971.stabs "derived_class_name:symbol_descriptors(struct tag&type)=
139741da
RP
2972 type_descriptor(struct)struct_bytes(32)!num_bases(3),
2973 base_virtual(no)inheritence_public(no)base_offset(0),
2974 base_class_type_ref(A);
2975 base_virtual(yes)inheritence_public(no)base_offset(NIL),
2976 base_class_type_ref(B);
2977 base_virtual(no)inheritence_public(yes)base_offset(64),
2978 base_class_type_ref(C); @dots{}
899bafeb 2979@end display
6fe91f2c 2980
5bc927fb 2981@c FIXME! fake linebreaks.
899bafeb 2982@smallexample
5bc927fb
RP
2983.stabs "D:Tt31=s32!3,000,20;100,25;0264,28;$vb25:24,128;Ddat:
2984 1,160,32;A_virt::32=##1;:i;2A*-2147483647;20;;B_virt:
2985 :32:i;2A*-2147483647;25;;C_virt::32:i;2A*-2147483647;
2986 28;;D_virt::32:i;2A*-2147483646;31;;;~%20;",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 2987@end smallexample
e505224d 2988
bf9d2537
DM
2989@node Virtual Base Classes
2990@section Virtual Base Classes
e505224d 2991
dd8126d9
JK
2992A derived class object consists of a concatination in memory of the data
2993areas defined by each base class, starting with the leftmost and ending
2994with the rightmost in the list of base classes. The exception to this
2995rule is for virtual inheritence. In the example above, class @code{D}
2996inherits virtually from base class @code{B}. This means that an
2997instance of a @code{D} object will not contain its own @code{B} part but
2998merely a pointer to a @code{B} part, known as a virtual base pointer.
e505224d
PB
2999
3000In a derived class stab, the base offset part of the derivation
3001information, described above, shows how the base class parts are
dd8126d9
JK
3002ordered. The base offset for a virtual base class is always given as 0.
3003Notice that the base offset for @code{B} is given as 0 even though
3004@code{B} is not the first base class. The first base class @code{A}
3005starts at offset 0.
e505224d 3006
6fe91f2c
DM
3007The field information part of the stab for class @code{D} describes the field
3008which is the pointer to the virtual base class @code{B}. The vbase pointer
3009name is @samp{$vb} followed by a type reference to the virtual base class.
3010Since the type id for @code{B} in this example is 25, the vbase pointer name
3011is @samp{$vb25}.
e505224d 3012
5bc927fb 3013@c FIXME!! fake linebreaks below
899bafeb 3014@smallexample
5bc927fb
RP
3015.stabs "D:Tt31=s32!3,000,20;100,25;0264,28;$vb25:24,128;Ddat:1,
3016 160,32;A_virt::32=##1;:i;2A*-2147483647;20;;B_virt::32:i;
3017 2A*-2147483647;25;;C_virt::32:i;2A*-2147483647;28;;D_virt:
3018 :32:i;2A*-2147483646;31;;;~%20;",128,0,0,0
899bafeb 3019@end smallexample
e505224d
PB
3020
3021Following the name and a semicolon is a type reference describing the
3022type of the virtual base class pointer, in this case 24. Type 24 was
6fe91f2c
DM
3023defined earlier as the type of the @code{B} class @code{this} pointer. The
3024@code{this} pointer for a class is a pointer to the class type.
e505224d 3025
899bafeb 3026@example
c2dc518b 3027.stabs "this:P24=*25=xsB:",64,0,0,8
899bafeb 3028@end example
e505224d
PB
3029
3030Finally the field offset part of the vbase pointer field description
6fe91f2c
DM
3031shows that the vbase pointer is the first field in the @code{D} object,
3032before any data fields defined by the class. The layout of a @code{D}
3033class object is a follows, @code{Adat} at 0, the vtable pointer for
3034@code{A} at 32, @code{Cdat} at 64, the vtable pointer for C at 96, the
3035virtual base pointer for @code{B} at 128, and @code{Ddat} at 160.
e505224d
PB
3036
3037
bf9d2537
DM
3038@node Static Members
3039@section Static Members
e505224d 3040
446e5d80
JG
3041The data area for a class is a concatenation of the space used by the
3042data members of the class. If the class has virtual methods, a vtable
e505224d 3043pointer follows the class data. The field offset part of each field
446e5d80 3044description in the class stab shows this ordering.
e505224d 3045
446e5d80 3046<< How is this reflected in stabs? See Cygnus bug #677 for some info. >>
e505224d 3047
bf9d2537
DM
3048@node Stab Types
3049@appendix Table of Stab Types
e505224d 3050
0a95c18c 3051The following are all the possible values for the stab type field, for
50cca378 3052a.out files, in numeric order. This does not apply to XCOFF, but
9a22aed5
JK
3053it does apply to stabs in sections (@pxref{Stab Sections}). Stabs in
3054ECOFF use these values but add 0x8f300 to distinguish them from non-stab
3055symbols.
e505224d 3056
6fe91f2c
DM
3057The symbolic names are defined in the file @file{include/aout/stabs.def}.
3058
3059@menu
bf9d2537
DM
3060* Non-Stab Symbol Types:: Types from 0 to 0x1f
3061* Stab Symbol Types:: Types from 0x20 to 0xff
6fe91f2c
DM
3062@end menu
3063
bf9d2537
DM
3064@node Non-Stab Symbol Types
3065@appendixsec Non-Stab Symbol Types
6fe91f2c
DM
3066
3067The following types are used by the linker and assembler, not by stab
3068directives. Since this document does not attempt to describe aspects of
3069object file format other than the debugging format, no details are
3070given.
e505224d 3071
3d4cf720
JK
3072@c Try to get most of these to fit on a single line.
3073@iftex
3074@tableindent=1.5in
3075@end iftex
e505224d 3076
3d4cf720 3077@table @code
6fe91f2c 3078@item 0x0 N_UNDF
3d4cf720 3079Undefined symbol
e505224d 3080
6fe91f2c 3081@item 0x2 N_ABS
3d4cf720 3082File scope absolute symbol
e505224d 3083
6fe91f2c 3084@item 0x3 N_ABS | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3085External absolute symbol
3086
6fe91f2c 3087@item 0x4 N_TEXT
3d4cf720
JK
3088File scope text symbol
3089
6fe91f2c 3090@item 0x5 N_TEXT | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3091External text symbol
3092
6fe91f2c 3093@item 0x6 N_DATA
3d4cf720
JK
3094File scope data symbol
3095
6fe91f2c 3096@item 0x7 N_DATA | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3097External data symbol
3098
6fe91f2c 3099@item 0x8 N_BSS
3d4cf720
JK
3100File scope BSS symbol
3101
6fe91f2c 3102@item 0x9 N_BSS | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3103External BSS symbol
3104
6fe91f2c
DM
3105@item 0x0c N_FN_SEQ
3106Same as @code{N_FN}, for Sequent compilers
3d4cf720 3107
6fe91f2c 3108@item 0x0a N_INDR
3d4cf720
JK
3109Symbol is indirected to another symbol
3110
6fe91f2c 3111@item 0x12 N_COMM
dd8126d9 3112Common---visible after shared library dynamic link
3d4cf720 3113
6fe91f2c 3114@item 0x14 N_SETA
59502c19 3115@itemx 0x15 N_SETA | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3116Absolute set element
3117
6fe91f2c 3118@item 0x16 N_SETT
59502c19 3119@itemx 0x17 N_SETT | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3120Text segment set element
3121
6fe91f2c 3122@item 0x18 N_SETD
59502c19 3123@itemx 0x19 N_SETD | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3124Data segment set element
3125
6fe91f2c 3126@item 0x1a N_SETB
59502c19 3127@itemx 0x1b N_SETB | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3128BSS segment set element
3129
6fe91f2c 3130@item 0x1c N_SETV
59502c19 3131@itemx 0x1d N_SETV | N_EXT
3d4cf720
JK
3132Pointer to set vector
3133
6fe91f2c 3134@item 0x1e N_WARNING
3d4cf720
JK
3135Print a warning message during linking
3136
6fe91f2c
DM
3137@item 0x1f N_FN
3138File name of a @file{.o} file
3d4cf720
JK
3139@end table
3140
bf9d2537
DM
3141@node Stab Symbol Types
3142@appendixsec Stab Symbol Types
6fe91f2c 3143
3d4cf720
JK
3144The following symbol types indicate that this is a stab. This is the
3145full list of stab numbers, including stab types that are used in
3146languages other than C.
3147
3148@table @code
3149@item 0x20 N_GSYM
bf9d2537 3150Global symbol; see @ref{Global Variables}.
3d4cf720
JK
3151
3152@item 0x22 N_FNAME
43603088 3153Function name (for BSD Fortran); see @ref{Procedures}.
3d4cf720 3154
24dcc707
JK
3155@item 0x24 N_FUN
3156Function name (@pxref{Procedures}) or text segment variable
3157(@pxref{Statics}).
3d4cf720 3158
24dcc707 3159@item 0x26 N_STSYM
6fe91f2c 3160Data segment file-scope variable; see @ref{Statics}.
3d4cf720 3161
24dcc707 3162@item 0x28 N_LCSYM
6fe91f2c 3163BSS segment file-scope variable; see @ref{Statics}.
3d4cf720 3164
6fe91f2c 3165@item 0x2a N_MAIN
bf9d2537 3166Name of main routine; see @ref{Main Program}.
3d4cf720 3167
ded6bcab 3168@item 0x2c N_ROSYM
6fe91f2c 3169Variable in @code{.rodata} section; see @ref{Statics}.
ded6bcab 3170
6fe91f2c
DM
3171@item 0x30 N_PC
3172Global symbol (for Pascal); see @ref{N_PC}.
3d4cf720 3173
6fe91f2c
DM
3174@item 0x32 N_NSYMS
3175Number of symbols (according to Ultrix V4.0); see @ref{N_NSYMS}.
3d4cf720 3176
6fe91f2c
DM
3177@item 0x34 N_NOMAP
3178No DST map; see @ref{N_NOMAP}.
3d4cf720 3179
ded6bcab
JK
3180@c FIXME: describe this solaris feature in the body of the text (see
3181@c comments in include/aout/stab.def).
3182@item 0x38 N_OBJ
3183Object file (Solaris2).
3184
3185@c See include/aout/stab.def for (a little) more info.
3186@item 0x3c N_OPT
3187Debugger options (Solaris2).
3188
6fe91f2c 3189@item 0x40 N_RSYM
bf9d2537 3190Register variable; see @ref{Register Variables}.
3d4cf720 3191
6fe91f2c
DM
3192@item 0x42 N_M2C
3193Modula-2 compilation unit; see @ref{N_M2C}.
3d4cf720 3194
6fe91f2c 3195@item 0x44 N_SLINE
bf9d2537 3196Line number in text segment; see @ref{Line Numbers}.
3d4cf720 3197
6fe91f2c 3198@item 0x46 N_DSLINE
bf9d2537 3199Line number in data segment; see @ref{Line Numbers}.
3d4cf720 3200
6fe91f2c 3201@item 0x48 N_BSLINE
bf9d2537 3202Line number in bss segment; see @ref{Line Numbers}.
3d4cf720 3203
6fe91f2c
DM
3204@item 0x48 N_BROWS
3205Sun source code browser, path to @file{.cb} file; see @ref{N_BROWS}.
3d4cf720 3206
6fe91f2c
DM
3207@item 0x4a N_DEFD
3208GNU Modula2 definition module dependency; see @ref{N_DEFD}.
3d4cf720 3209
ded6bcab
JK
3210@item 0x4c N_FLINE
3211Function start/body/end line numbers (Solaris2).
3212
6fe91f2c
DM
3213@item 0x50 N_EHDECL
3214GNU C++ exception variable; see @ref{N_EHDECL}.
3d4cf720 3215
6fe91f2c
DM
3216@item 0x50 N_MOD2
3217Modula2 info "for imc" (according to Ultrix V4.0); see @ref{N_MOD2}.
3d4cf720 3218
6fe91f2c
DM
3219@item 0x54 N_CATCH
3220GNU C++ @code{catch} clause; see @ref{N_CATCH}.
3d4cf720 3221
6fe91f2c
DM
3222@item 0x60 N_SSYM
3223Structure of union element; see @ref{N_SSYM}.
3d4cf720 3224
ded6bcab
JK
3225@item 0x62 N_ENDM
3226Last stab for module (Solaris2).
3227
6fe91f2c 3228@item 0x64 N_SO
bf9d2537 3229Path and name of source file; see @ref{Source Files}.
3d4cf720 3230
935d305d 3231@item 0x80 N_LSYM
bf9d2537 3232Stack variable (@pxref{Stack Variables}) or type (@pxref{Typedefs}).
3d4cf720 3233
6fe91f2c 3234@item 0x82 N_BINCL
bf9d2537 3235Beginning of an include file (Sun only); see @ref{Include Files}.
3d4cf720 3236
6fe91f2c 3237@item 0x84 N_SOL
bf9d2537 3238Name of include file; see @ref{Include Files}.
3d4cf720 3239
6fe91f2c
DM
3240@item 0xa0 N_PSYM
3241Parameter variable; see @ref{Parameters}.
3d4cf720 3242
6fe91f2c 3243@item 0xa2 N_EINCL
bf9d2537 3244End of an include file; see @ref{Include Files}.
3d4cf720 3245
6fe91f2c 3246@item 0xa4 N_ENTRY
6d244da7 3247Alternate entry point; see @ref{Alternate Entry Points}.
3d4cf720 3248
6fe91f2c 3249@item 0xc0 N_LBRAC
bf9d2537 3250Beginning of a lexical block; see @ref{Block Structure}.
3d4cf720 3251
6fe91f2c 3252@item 0xc2 N_EXCL
bf9d2537 3253Place holder for a deleted include file; see @ref{Include Files}.
3d4cf720 3254
6fe91f2c
DM
3255@item 0xc4 N_SCOPE
3256Modula2 scope information (Sun linker); see @ref{N_SCOPE}.
3d4cf720 3257
6fe91f2c 3258@item 0xe0 N_RBRAC
bf9d2537 3259End of a lexical block; see @ref{Block Structure}.
3d4cf720 3260
6fe91f2c 3261@item 0xe2 N_BCOMM
bf9d2537 3262Begin named common block; see @ref{Common Blocks}.
3d4cf720 3263
6fe91f2c 3264@item 0xe4 N_ECOMM
bf9d2537 3265End named common block; see @ref{Common Blocks}.
3d4cf720 3266
6fe91f2c 3267@item 0xe8 N_ECOML
bf9d2537 3268Member of a common block; see @ref{Common Blocks}.
3d4cf720 3269
ded6bcab
JK
3270@c FIXME: How does this really work? Move it to main body of document.
3271@item 0xea N_WITH
3272Pascal @code{with} statement: type,,0,0,offset (Solaris2).
3273
6fe91f2c
DM
3274@item 0xf0 N_NBTEXT
3275Gould non-base registers; see @ref{Gould}.
3d4cf720 3276
6fe91f2c
DM
3277@item 0xf2 N_NBDATA
3278Gould non-base registers; see @ref{Gould}.
3d4cf720
JK
3279
3280@item 0xf4 N_NBBSS
6fe91f2c 3281Gould non-base registers; see @ref{Gould}.
3d4cf720 3282
6fe91f2c
DM
3283@item 0xf6 N_NBSTS
3284Gould non-base registers; see @ref{Gould}.
3d4cf720 3285
6fe91f2c
DM
3286@item 0xf8 N_NBLCS
3287Gould non-base registers; see @ref{Gould}.
3d4cf720
JK
3288@end table
3289
3290@c Restore the default table indent
3291@iftex
3292@tableindent=.8in
3293@end iftex
e505224d 3294
bf9d2537
DM
3295@node Symbol Descriptors
3296@appendix Table of Symbol Descriptors
e505224d 3297
0a95c18c 3298The symbol descriptor is the character which follows the colon in many
bf9d2537 3299stabs, and which tells what kind of stab it is. @xref{String Field},
0a95c18c 3300for more information about their use.
6fe91f2c 3301
ed9708e2 3302@c Please keep this alphabetical
497e44a5 3303@table @code
466bdeb2
JK
3304@c In TeX, this looks great, digit is in italics. But makeinfo insists
3305@c on putting it in `', not realizing that @var should override @code.
3306@c I don't know of any way to make makeinfo do the right thing. Seems
3307@c like a makeinfo bug to me.
3308@item @var{digit}
8c59ee11
JK
3309@itemx (
3310@itemx -
bf9d2537 3311Variable on the stack; see @ref{Stack Variables}.
497e44a5 3312
397f9dcd
JK
3313@item :
3314C++ nested symbol; see @xref{Nested Symbols}
3315
6897f9ec 3316@item a
bf9d2537 3317Parameter passed by reference in register; see @ref{Reference Parameters}.
6897f9ec 3318
408f6c34 3319@item b
f19027a6 3320Based variable; see @ref{Based Variables}.
408f6c34 3321
6897f9ec 3322@item c
6fe91f2c 3323Constant; see @ref{Constants}.
6897f9ec 3324
ed9708e2 3325@item C
43603088 3326Conformant array bound (Pascal, maybe other languages); @ref{Conformant
bf9d2537 3327Arrays}. Name of a caught exception (GNU C++). These can be
685a5e86 3328distinguished because the latter uses @code{N_CATCH} and the former uses
8c59ee11 3329another symbol type.
6897f9ec
JK
3330
3331@item d
bf9d2537 3332Floating point register variable; see @ref{Register Variables}.
6897f9ec
JK
3333
3334@item D
bf9d2537 3335Parameter in floating point register; see @ref{Register Parameters}.
ed9708e2 3336
497e44a5 3337@item f
6fe91f2c 3338File scope function; see @ref{Procedures}.
497e44a5
JK
3339
3340@item F
6fe91f2c 3341Global function; see @ref{Procedures}.
497e44a5 3342
497e44a5 3343@item G
bf9d2537 3344Global variable; see @ref{Global Variables}.
497e44a5 3345
ed9708e2 3346@item i
bf9d2537 3347@xref{Register Parameters}.
ed9708e2 3348
6897f9ec 3349@item I
bf9d2537 3350Internal (nested) procedure; see @ref{Nested Procedures}.
6897f9ec
JK
3351
3352@item J
bf9d2537 3353Internal (nested) function; see @ref{Nested Procedures}.
6897f9ec
JK
3354
3355@item L
3356Label name (documented by AIX, no further information known).
3357
3358@item m
6fe91f2c 3359Module; see @ref{Procedures}.
6897f9ec 3360
ed9708e2 3361@item p
6fe91f2c 3362Argument list parameter; see @ref{Parameters}.
ed9708e2
JK
3363
3364@item pP
3365@xref{Parameters}.
3366
3367@item pF
6fe91f2c 3368Fortran Function parameter; see @ref{Parameters}.
ed9708e2
JK
3369
3370@item P
1a8b5668
JK
3371Unfortunately, three separate meanings have been independently invented
3372for this symbol descriptor. At least the GNU and Sun uses can be
3373distinguished by the symbol type. Global Procedure (AIX) (symbol type
685a5e86
DM
3374used unknown); see @ref{Procedures}. Register parameter (GNU) (symbol
3375type @code{N_PSYM}); see @ref{Parameters}. Prototype of function
3376referenced by this file (Sun @code{acc}) (symbol type @code{N_FUN}).
6897f9ec
JK
3377
3378@item Q
6fe91f2c 3379Static Procedure; see @ref{Procedures}.
6897f9ec
JK
3380
3381@item R
bf9d2537 3382Register parameter; see @ref{Register Parameters}.
ed9708e2 3383
497e44a5 3384@item r
bf9d2537 3385Register variable; see @ref{Register Variables}.
497e44a5
JK
3386
3387@item S
6fe91f2c 3388File scope variable; see @ref{Statics}.
497e44a5 3389
594eeceb
JK
3390@item s
3391Local variable (OS9000).
3392
ed9708e2 3393@item t
6fe91f2c 3394Type name; see @ref{Typedefs}.
ed9708e2
JK
3395
3396@item T
685a5e86 3397Enumeration, structure, or union tag; see @ref{Typedefs}.
ed9708e2
JK
3398
3399@item v
bf9d2537 3400Parameter passed by reference; see @ref{Reference Parameters}.
ed9708e2 3401
497e44a5 3402@item V
6fe91f2c 3403Procedure scope static variable; see @ref{Statics}.
497e44a5 3404
6897f9ec 3405@item x
bf9d2537 3406Conformant array; see @ref{Conformant Arrays}.
6897f9ec 3407
ed9708e2 3408@item X
6fe91f2c 3409Function return variable; see @ref{Parameters}.
497e44a5 3410@end table
e505224d 3411
bf9d2537
DM
3412@node Type Descriptors
3413@appendix Table of Type Descriptors
e505224d 3414
0a95c18c
JK
3415The type descriptor is the character which follows the type number and
3416an equals sign. It specifies what kind of type is being defined.
bf9d2537 3417@xref{String Field}, for more information about their use.
6fe91f2c 3418
6897f9ec 3419@table @code
8c59ee11
JK
3420@item @var{digit}
3421@itemx (
bf9d2537 3422Type reference; see @ref{String Field}.
8c59ee11
JK
3423
3424@item -
bf9d2537 3425Reference to builtin type; see @ref{Negative Type Numbers}.
8c59ee11
JK
3426
3427@item #
2b7ac6fd 3428Method (C++); see @ref{Method Type Descriptor}.
6897f9ec
JK
3429
3430@item *
bf9d2537 3431Pointer; see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}.
8c59ee11
JK
3432
3433@item &
3434Reference (C++).
6897f9ec
JK
3435
3436@item @@
bf9d2537 3437Type Attributes (AIX); see @ref{String Field}. Member (class and variable)
2b7ac6fd 3438type (GNU C++); see @ref{Member Type Descriptor}.
e505224d 3439
6897f9ec 3440@item a
6fe91f2c 3441Array; see @ref{Arrays}.
8c59ee11
JK
3442
3443@item A
6fe91f2c 3444Open array; see @ref{Arrays}.
8c59ee11
JK
3445
3446@item b
bf9d2537 3447Pascal space type (AIX); see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}. Builtin integer
2084230d
JK
3448type (Sun); see @ref{Builtin Type Descriptors}. Const and volatile
3449qualfied type (OS9000).
8c59ee11
JK
3450
3451@item B
bf9d2537 3452Volatile-qualified type; see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}.
8c59ee11
JK
3453
3454@item c
2084230d
JK
3455Complex builtin type (AIX); see @ref{Builtin Type Descriptors}.
3456Const-qualified type (OS9000).
8c59ee11
JK
3457
3458@item C
3459COBOL Picture type. See AIX documentation for details.
3460
3461@item d
bf9d2537 3462File type; see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}.
8c59ee11
JK
3463
3464@item D
6fe91f2c 3465N-dimensional dynamic array; see @ref{Arrays}.
6897f9ec
JK
3466
3467@item e
6fe91f2c 3468Enumeration type; see @ref{Enumerations}.
8c59ee11
JK
3469
3470@item E
6fe91f2c 3471N-dimensional subarray; see @ref{Arrays}.
6897f9ec
JK
3472
3473@item f
bf9d2537 3474Function type; see @ref{Function Types}.
a03f27c3
JK
3475
3476@item F
bf9d2537 3477Pascal function parameter; see @ref{Function Types}
8c59ee11
JK
3478
3479@item g
bf9d2537 3480Builtin floating point type; see @ref{Builtin Type Descriptors}.
8c59ee11
JK
3481
3482@item G
3483COBOL Group. See AIX documentation for details.
3484
3485@item i
2084230d
JK
3486Imported type (AIX); see @ref{Cross-References}. Volatile-qualified
3487type (OS9000).
8c59ee11
JK
3488
3489@item k
bf9d2537 3490Const-qualified type; see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}.
8c59ee11
JK
3491
3492@item K
3493COBOL File Descriptor. See AIX documentation for details.
3494
a03f27c3 3495@item M
bf9d2537 3496Multiple instance type; see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}.
a03f27c3 3497
8c59ee11 3498@item n
6fe91f2c 3499String type; see @ref{Strings}.
8c59ee11
JK
3500
3501@item N
6fe91f2c 3502Stringptr; see @ref{Strings}.
8c59ee11 3503
8c59ee11 3504@item o
6fe91f2c 3505Opaque type; see @ref{Typedefs}.
8c59ee11 3506
a03f27c3 3507@item p
bf9d2537 3508Procedure; see @ref{Function Types}.
a03f27c3 3509
8c59ee11 3510@item P
6fe91f2c 3511Packed array; see @ref{Arrays}.
6897f9ec
JK
3512
3513@item r
6fe91f2c 3514Range type; see @ref{Subranges}.
8c59ee11
JK
3515
3516@item R
bf9d2537
DM
3517Builtin floating type; see @ref{Builtin Type Descriptors} (Sun). Pascal
3518subroutine parameter; see @ref{Function Types} (AIX). Detecting this
a03f27c3
JK
3519conflict is possible with careful parsing (hint: a Pascal subroutine
3520parameter type will always contain a comma, and a builtin type
3521descriptor never will).
6897f9ec
JK
3522
3523@item s
6fe91f2c 3524Structure type; see @ref{Structures}.
8c59ee11
JK
3525
3526@item S
bf9d2537 3527Set type; see @ref{Miscellaneous Types}.
6897f9ec
JK
3528
3529@item u
6fe91f2c 3530Union; see @ref{Unions}.
8c59ee11
JK
3531
3532@item v
3533Variant record. This is a Pascal and Modula-2 feature which is like a
3534union within a struct in C. See AIX documentation for details.
3535
3536@item w
bf9d2537 3537Wide character; see @ref{Builtin Type Descriptors}.
8c59ee11
JK
3538
3539@item x
bf9d2537 3540Cross-reference; see @ref{Cross-References}.
6897f9ec 3541
ac83d595
JK
3542@item Y
3543Used by IBM's xlC C++ compiler (for structures, I think).
3544
8c59ee11 3545@item z
6fe91f2c 3546gstring; see @ref{Strings}.
6897f9ec 3547@end table
e505224d 3548
bf9d2537
DM
3549@node Expanded Reference
3550@appendix Expanded Reference by Stab Type
e505224d 3551
685a5e86 3552@c FIXME: This appendix should go away; see N_PSYM or N_SO for an example.
8c59ee11 3553
3d4cf720 3554For a full list of stab types, and cross-references to where they are
bf9d2537 3555described, see @ref{Stab Types}. This appendix just duplicates certain
3d4cf720
JK
3556information from the main body of this document; eventually the
3557information will all be in one place.
8c59ee11 3558
e505224d 3559Format of an entry:
6fe91f2c 3560
685a5e86 3561The first line is the symbol type (see @file{include/aout/stab.def}).
e505224d
PB
3562
3563The second line describes the language constructs the symbol type
3564represents.
3565
3566The third line is the stab format with the significant stab fields
3567named and the rest NIL.
3568
3569Subsequent lines expand upon the meaning and possible values for each
2b7ac6fd 3570significant stab field.
e505224d
PB
3571
3572Finally, any further information.
3573
899bafeb 3574@menu
8eb5e289
DZ
3575* N_PC:: Pascal global symbol
3576* N_NSYMS:: Number of symbols
3577* N_NOMAP:: No DST map
8eb5e289
DZ
3578* N_M2C:: Modula-2 compilation unit
3579* N_BROWS:: Path to .cb file for Sun source code browser
3580* N_DEFD:: GNU Modula2 definition module dependency
3581* N_EHDECL:: GNU C++ exception variable
3582* N_MOD2:: Modula2 information "for imc"
3583* N_CATCH:: GNU C++ "catch" clause
3584* N_SSYM:: Structure or union element
8eb5e289
DZ
3585* N_SCOPE:: Modula2 scope information (Sun only)
3586* Gould:: non-base register symbols used on Gould systems
3587* N_LENG:: Length of preceding entry
899bafeb
RP
3588@end menu
3589
899bafeb 3590@node N_PC
685a5e86 3591@section N_PC
e505224d 3592
685a5e86
DM
3593@deffn @code{.stabs} N_PC
3594@findex N_PC
3595Global symbol (for Pascal).
e505224d 3596
899bafeb 3597@example
e505224d
PB
3598"name" -> "symbol_name" <<?>>
3599value -> supposedly the line number (stab.def is skeptical)
899bafeb 3600@end example
e505224d 3601
899bafeb 3602@display
f958d5cd 3603@file{stabdump.c} says:
e505224d 3604
6fe91f2c 3605global pascal symbol: name,,0,subtype,line
e505224d 3606<< subtype? >>
899bafeb 3607@end display
685a5e86 3608@end deffn
e505224d 3609
899bafeb 3610@node N_NSYMS
685a5e86
DM
3611@section N_NSYMS
3612
3613@deffn @code{.stabn} N_NSYMS
3614@findex N_NSYMS
3615Number of symbols (according to Ultrix V4.0).
e505224d 3616
899bafeb 3617@display
139741da 3618 0, files,,funcs,lines (stab.def)
899bafeb 3619@end display
685a5e86 3620@end deffn
e505224d 3621
899bafeb 3622@node N_NOMAP
685a5e86
DM
3623@section N_NOMAP
3624
3625@deffn @code{.stabs} N_NOMAP
3626@findex N_NOMAP
935d305d
JK
3627No DST map for symbol (according to Ultrix V4.0). I think this means a
3628variable has been optimized out.
e505224d 3629
899bafeb 3630@display
139741da 3631 name, ,0,type,ignored (stab.def)
899bafeb 3632@end display
685a5e86 3633@end deffn
e505224d 3634
899bafeb 3635@node N_M2C
685a5e86 3636@section N_M2C
e505224d 3637
685a5e86
DM
3638@deffn @code{.stabs} N_M2C
3639@findex N_M2C
3640Modula-2 compilation unit.
e505224d 3641
899bafeb 3642@example
685a5e86 3643"string" -> "unit_name,unit_time_stamp[,code_time_stamp]"
e505224d
PB
3644desc -> unit_number
3645value -> 0 (main unit)
139741da 3646 1 (any other unit)
899bafeb 3647@end example
b857d956
JK
3648
3649See @cite{Dbx and Dbxtool Interfaces}, 2nd edition, by Sun, 1988, for
3650more information.
3651
685a5e86 3652@end deffn
e505224d 3653
899bafeb 3654@node N_BROWS
685a5e86
DM
3655@section N_BROWS
3656
3657@deffn @code{.stabs} N_BROWS
3658@findex N_BROWS
6fe91f2c 3659Sun source code browser, path to @file{.cb} file
e505224d 3660
6fe91f2c 3661<<?>>
685a5e86 3662"path to associated @file{.cb} file"
e505224d 3663
0a95c18c 3664Note: N_BROWS has the same value as N_BSLINE.
685a5e86 3665@end deffn
e505224d 3666
899bafeb 3667@node N_DEFD
685a5e86
DM
3668@section N_DEFD
3669
3670@deffn @code{.stabn} N_DEFD
3671@findex N_DEFD
3672GNU Modula2 definition module dependency.
e505224d 3673
0a95c18c
JK
3674GNU Modula-2 definition module dependency. The value is the
3675modification time of the definition file. The other field is non-zero
3676if it is imported with the GNU M2 keyword @code{%INITIALIZE}. Perhaps
3677@code{N_M2C} can be used if there are enough empty fields?
685a5e86 3678@end deffn
e505224d 3679
899bafeb 3680@node N_EHDECL
685a5e86 3681@section N_EHDECL
e505224d 3682
685a5e86
DM
3683@deffn @code{.stabs} N_EHDECL
3684@findex N_EHDECL
3685GNU C++ exception variable <<?>>.
e505224d 3686
685a5e86
DM
3687"@var{string} is variable name"
3688
3689Note: conflicts with @code{N_MOD2}.
3690@end deffn
e505224d 3691
899bafeb 3692@node N_MOD2
685a5e86
DM
3693@section N_MOD2
3694
3695@deffn @code{.stab?} N_MOD2
3696@findex N_MOD2
899bafeb 3697Modula2 info "for imc" (according to Ultrix V4.0)
e505224d 3698
685a5e86
DM
3699Note: conflicts with @code{N_EHDECL} <<?>>
3700@end deffn
e505224d 3701
899bafeb 3702@node N_CATCH
685a5e86
DM
3703@section N_CATCH
3704
3705@deffn @code{.stabn} N_CATCH
3706@findex N_CATCH
6fe91f2c 3707GNU C++ @code{catch} clause
e505224d 3708
0a95c18c 3709GNU C++ @code{catch} clause. The value is its address. The desc field
685a5e86
DM
3710is nonzero if this entry is immediately followed by a @code{CAUGHT} stab
3711saying what exception was caught. Multiple @code{CAUGHT} stabs means
0a95c18c
JK
3712that multiple exceptions can be caught here. If desc is 0, it means all
3713exceptions are caught here.
685a5e86 3714@end deffn
e505224d 3715
899bafeb 3716@node N_SSYM
685a5e86
DM
3717@section N_SSYM
3718
3719@deffn @code{.stabn} N_SSYM
3720@findex N_SSYM
3721Structure or union element.
e505224d 3722
0a95c18c 3723The value is the offset in the structure.
899bafeb
RP
3724
3725<<?looking at structs and unions in C I didn't see these>>
685a5e86 3726@end deffn
e505224d 3727
899bafeb 3728@node N_SCOPE
685a5e86 3729@section N_SCOPE
e505224d 3730
685a5e86
DM
3731@deffn @code{.stab?} N_SCOPE
3732@findex N_SCOPE
e505224d
PB
3733Modula2 scope information (Sun linker)
3734<<?>>
685a5e86 3735@end deffn
e505224d 3736
899bafeb
RP
3737@node Gould
3738@section Non-base registers on Gould systems
ded6bcab 3739
685a5e86
DM
3740@deffn @code{.stab?} N_NBTEXT
3741@deffnx @code{.stab?} N_NBDATA
3742@deffnx @code{.stab?} N_NBBSS
3743@deffnx @code{.stab?} N_NBSTS
3744@deffnx @code{.stab?} N_NBLCS
3745@findex N_NBTEXT
3746@findex N_NBDATA
3747@findex N_NBBSS
3748@findex N_NBSTS
3749@findex N_NBLCS
ded6bcab
JK
3750These are used on Gould systems for non-base registers syms.
3751
3752However, the following values are not the values used by Gould; they are
3753the values which GNU has been documenting for these values for a long
3754time, without actually checking what Gould uses. I include these values
3755only because perhaps some someone actually did something with the GNU
3756information (I hope not, why GNU knowingly assigned wrong values to
3757these in the header file is a complete mystery to me).
e505224d 3758
899bafeb 3759@example
139741da
RP
3760240 0xf0 N_NBTEXT ??
3761242 0xf2 N_NBDATA ??
3762244 0xf4 N_NBBSS ??
3763246 0xf6 N_NBSTS ??
3764248 0xf8 N_NBLCS ??
899bafeb 3765@end example
685a5e86 3766@end deffn
e505224d 3767
899bafeb 3768@node N_LENG
685a5e86 3769@section N_LENG
e505224d 3770
685a5e86
DM
3771@deffn @code{.stabn} N_LENG
3772@findex N_LENG
e505224d 3773Second symbol entry containing a length-value for the preceding entry.
0a95c18c 3774The value is the length.
685a5e86 3775@end deffn
e505224d 3776
899bafeb 3777@node Questions
bf9d2537 3778@appendix Questions and Anomalies
e505224d
PB
3779
3780@itemize @bullet
3781@item
dd8126d9 3782@c I think this is changed in GCC 2.4.5 to put the line number there.
6fe91f2c 3783For GNU C stabs defining local and global variables (@code{N_LSYM} and
0a95c18c
JK
3784@code{N_GSYM}), the desc field is supposed to contain the source
3785line number on which the variable is defined. In reality the desc
dd8126d9 3786field is always 0. (This behavior is defined in @file{dbxout.c} and
0a95c18c 3787putting a line number in desc is controlled by @samp{#ifdef
dd8126d9
JK
3788WINNING_GDB}, which defaults to false). GDB supposedly uses this
3789information if you say @samp{list @var{var}}. In reality, @var{var} can
3790be a variable defined in the program and GDB says @samp{function
6fe91f2c 3791@var{var} not defined}.
e505224d
PB
3792
3793@item
6fe91f2c
DM
3794In GNU C stabs, there seems to be no way to differentiate tag types:
3795structures, unions, and enums (symbol descriptor @samp{T}) and typedefs
3796(symbol descriptor @samp{t}) defined at file scope from types defined locally
3797to a procedure or other more local scope. They all use the @code{N_LSYM}
e505224d 3798stab type. Types defined at procedure scope are emited after the
6fe91f2c 3799@code{N_RBRAC} of the preceding function and before the code of the
e505224d
PB
3800procedure in which they are defined. This is exactly the same as
3801types defined in the source file between the two procedure bodies.
4d7f562d 3802GDB overcompensates by placing all types in block #1, the block for
6fe91f2c
DM
3803symbols of file scope. This is true for default, @samp{-ansi} and
3804@samp{-traditional} compiler options. (Bugs gcc/1063, gdb/1066.)
e505224d
PB
3805
3806@item
6fe91f2c
DM
3807What ends the procedure scope? Is it the proc block's @code{N_RBRAC} or the
3808next @code{N_FUN}? (I believe its the first.)
e505224d
PB
3809
3810@item
24dcc707 3811@c FIXME: This should go with the other stuff about global variables.
e505224d
PB
3812Global variable stabs don't have location information. This comes
3813from the external symbol for the same variable. The external symbol
3814has a leading underbar on the _name of the variable and the stab does
3815not. How do we know these two symbol table entries are talking about
24dcc707
JK
3816the same symbol when their names are different? (Answer: the debugger
3817knows that external symbols have leading underbars).
e505224d 3818
24dcc707
JK
3819@c FIXME: This is absurdly vague; there all kinds of differences, some
3820@c of which are the same between gnu & sun, and some of which aren't.
dd8126d9
JK
3821@c In particular, I'm pretty sure GCC works with Sun dbx by default.
3822@c @item
3823@c Can GCC be configured to output stabs the way the Sun compiler
3824@c does, so that their native debugging tools work? <NO?> It doesn't by
3825@c default. GDB reads either format of stab. (GCC or SunC). How about
3826@c dbx?
e505224d
PB
3827@end itemize
3828
bf9d2537
DM
3829@node XCOFF Differences
3830@appendix Differences Between GNU Stabs in a.out and GNU Stabs in XCOFF
e505224d 3831
497e44a5 3832@c FIXME: Merge *all* these into the main body of the document.
f958d5cd 3833The AIX/RS6000 native object file format is XCOFF with stabs. This
497e44a5
JK
3834appendix only covers those differences which are not covered in the main
3835body of this document.
e505224d
PB
3836
3837@itemize @bullet
e505224d 3838@item
dd8126d9
JK
3839BSD a.out stab types correspond to AIX XCOFF storage classes. In general
3840the mapping is @code{N_@var{stabtype}} becomes @code{C_@var{stabtype}}.
3841Some stab types in a.out are not supported in XCOFF; most of these use
3842@code{C_DECL}.
e505224d 3843
24dcc707
JK
3844@c FIXME: I think they are trying to say something about whether the
3845@c assembler defaults the value to the location counter.
e505224d 3846@item
685a5e86 3847If the XCOFF stab is an @code{N_FUN} (@code{C_FUN}) then follow the
dd8126d9 3848string field with @samp{,.} instead of just @samp{,}.
e505224d
PB
3849@end itemize
3850
6fe91f2c 3851I think that's it for @file{.s} file differences. They could stand to be
e505224d 3852better presented. This is just a list of what I have noticed so far.
6fe91f2c
DM
3853There are a @emph{lot} of differences in the information in the symbol
3854tables of the executable and object files.
e505224d 3855
f958d5cd 3856Mapping of a.out stab types to XCOFF storage classes:
e505224d
PB
3857
3858@example
139741da 3859stab type storage class
e505224d 3860-------------------------------
139741da 3861N_GSYM C_GSYM
43603088 3862N_FNAME unused
139741da
RP
3863N_FUN C_FUN
3864N_STSYM C_STSYM
3865N_LCSYM C_STSYM
43603088 3866N_MAIN unknown
139741da
RP
3867N_PC unknown
3868N_RSYM C_RSYM
dd8126d9 3869unknown C_RPSYM
139741da
RP
3870N_M2C unknown
3871N_SLINE unknown
3872N_DSLINE unknown
3873N_BSLINE unknown
3874N_BROWSE unchanged
3875N_CATCH unknown
3876N_SSYM unknown
3877N_SO unknown
3878N_LSYM C_LSYM
dd8126d9 3879various C_DECL
139741da
RP
3880N_BINCL unknown
3881N_SOL unknown
3882N_PSYM C_PSYM
3883N_EINCL unknown
3884N_ENTRY C_ENTRY
3885N_LBRAC unknown
3886N_EXCL unknown
3887N_SCOPE unknown
3888N_RBRAC unknown
3889N_BCOMM C_BCOMM
3890N_ECOMM C_ECOMM
3891N_ECOML C_ECOML
3892
3893N_LENG unknown
e505224d
PB
3894@end example
3895
bf9d2537
DM
3896@node Sun Differences
3897@appendix Differences Between GNU Stabs and Sun Native Stabs
e505224d 3898
497e44a5
JK
3899@c FIXME: Merge all this stuff into the main body of the document.
3900
e505224d
PB
3901@itemize @bullet
3902@item
6fe91f2c
DM
3903GNU C stabs define @emph{all} types, file or procedure scope, as
3904@code{N_LSYM}. Sun doc talks about using @code{N_GSYM} too.
e505224d 3905
e505224d 3906@item
4e9570e8
JK
3907Sun C stabs use type number pairs in the format
3908(@var{file-number},@var{type-number}) where @var{file-number} is a
3909number starting with 1 and incremented for each sub-source file in the
3910compilation. @var{type-number} is a number starting with 1 and
6fe91f2c
DM
3911incremented for each new type defined in the compilation. GNU C stabs
3912use the type number alone, with no source file number.
e505224d
PB
3913@end itemize
3914
9a22aed5
JK
3915@node Stab Sections
3916@appendix Using Stabs in Their Own Sections
3917
3918Many object file formats allow tools to create object files with custom
3919sections containing any arbitrary data. For any such object file
3920format, stabs can be embedded in special sections. This is how stabs
3921are used with ELF and SOM, and aside from ECOFF and XCOFF, is how stabs
3922are used with COFF.
3923
3924@menu
3925* Stab Section Basics:: How to embed stabs in sections
3926* ELF Linker Relocation:: Sun ELF hacks
3927@end menu
935d305d 3928
9a22aed5
JK
3929@node Stab Section Basics
3930@appendixsec How to Embed Stabs in Sections
3931
3932The assembler creates two custom sections, a section named @code{.stab}
3933which contains an array of fixed length structures, one struct per stab,
3934and a section named @code{.stabstr} containing all the variable length
3935strings that are referenced by stabs in the @code{.stab} section. The
3936byte order of the stabs binary data depends on the object file format.
3937For ELF, it matches the byte order of the ELF file itself, as determined
3938from the @code{EI_DATA} field in the @code{e_ident} member of the ELF
3939header. For SOM, it is always big-endian (is this true??? FIXME). For
50cca378
JK
3940COFF, it matches the byte order of the COFF headers. The meaning of the
3941fields is the same as for a.out (@pxref{Symbol Table Format}), except
3942that the @code{n_strx} field is relative to the strings for the current
3943compilation unit (which can be found using the synthetic N_UNDF stab
3944described below), rather than the entire string table.
935d305d 3945
4e9570e8 3946The first stab in the @code{.stab} section for each compilation unit is
935d305d
JK
3947synthetic, generated entirely by the assembler, with no corresponding
3948@code{.stab} directive as input to the assembler. This stab contains
3949the following fields:
cc4fb848 3950
935d305d
JK
3951@table @code
3952@item n_strx
3953Offset in the @code{.stabstr} section to the source filename.
cc4fb848 3954
935d305d
JK
3955@item n_type
3956@code{N_UNDF}.
cc4fb848 3957
935d305d 3958@item n_other
cc4fb848 3959Unused field, always zero.
87d62f67
SS
3960This may eventually be used to hold overflows from the count in
3961the @code{n_desc} field.
cc4fb848 3962
935d305d 3963@item n_desc
6fe91f2c 3964Count of upcoming symbols, i.e., the number of remaining stabs for this
935d305d 3965source file.
cc4fb848 3966
935d305d
JK
3967@item n_value
3968Size of the string table fragment associated with this source file, in
cc4fb848 3969bytes.
935d305d 3970@end table
cc4fb848 3971
935d305d 3972The @code{.stabstr} section always starts with a null byte (so that string
cc4fb848
FF
3973offsets of zero reference a null string), followed by random length strings,
3974each of which is null byte terminated.
3975
6fe91f2c 3976The ELF section header for the @code{.stab} section has its
935d305d 3977@code{sh_link} member set to the section number of the @code{.stabstr}
6fe91f2c 3978section, and the @code{.stabstr} section has its ELF section
935d305d 3979header @code{sh_type} member set to @code{SHT_STRTAB} to mark it as a
9a22aed5
JK
3980string table. SOM and COFF have no way of linking the sections together
3981or marking them as string tables.
3982
87d62f67
SS
3983For COFF, the @code{.stab} and @code{.stabstr} sections are simply
3984concatenated by the linker. GDB then uses the @code{n_desc} fields to
3985figure out the extent of the original sections. Similarly, the
3986@code{n_value} fields of the header symbols are added together in order
3987to get the actual position of the strings in a desired @code{.stabstr}
3988section. Although this design obviates any need for the linker to relocate
3989or otherwise manipulate @code{.stab} and @code{.stabstr} sections, it also
3990requires some care to ensure that the offsets are calculated correctly.
3991For instance, if the linker were to pad in between the @code{.stabstr}
3992sections before concatenating, then the offsets to strings in the middle
3993of the executable's @code{.stabstr} section would be wrong.
3994
9a22aed5
JK
3995@node ELF Linker Relocation
3996@appendixsec Having the Linker Relocate Stabs in ELF
3997
3998This section describes some Sun hacks for Stabs in ELF; it does not
3999apply to COFF or SOM.
935d305d 4000
577379ab 4001To keep linking fast, you don't want the linker to have to relocate very
9a22aed5
JK
4002many stabs. Making sure this is done for @code{N_SLINE},
4003@code{N_RBRAC}, and @code{N_LBRAC} stabs is the most important thing
4004(see the descriptions of those stabs for more information). But Sun's
4005stabs in ELF has taken this further, to make all addresses in the
4006@code{n_value} field (functions and static variables) relative to the
4007source file. For the @code{N_SO} symbol itself, Sun simply omits the
4008address. To find the address of each section corresponding to a given
4009source file, the compiler puts out symbols giving the address of each
4010section for a given source file. Since these are ELF (not stab)
4011symbols, the linker relocates them correctly without having to touch the
4012stabs section. They are named @code{Bbss.bss} for the bss section,
4013@code{Ddata.data} for the data section, and @code{Drodata.rodata} for
4014the rodata section. For the text section, there is no such symbol (but
4015there should be, see below). For an example of how these symbols work,
4016@xref{Stab Section Transformations}. GCC does not provide these symbols;
4017it instead relies on the stabs getting relocated. Thus addresses which
4018would normally be relative to @code{Bbss.bss}, etc., are already
4019relocated. The Sun linker provided with Solaris 2.2 and earlier
4020relocates stabs using normal ELF relocation information, as it would do
4021for any section. Sun has been threatening to kludge their linker to not
4022do this (to speed up linking), even though the correct way to avoid
4023having the linker do these relocations is to have the compiler no longer
4024output relocatable values. Last I heard they had been talked out of the
4025linker kludge. See Sun point patch 101052-01 and Sun bug 1142109. With
4026the Sun compiler this affects @samp{S} symbol descriptor stabs
4027(@pxref{Statics}) and functions (@pxref{Procedures}). In the latter
4028case, to adopt the clean solution (making the value of the stab relative
4029to the start of the compilation unit), it would be necessary to invent a
4030@code{Ttext.text} symbol, analogous to the @code{Bbss.bss}, etc.,
4031symbols. I recommend this rather than using a zero value and getting
4032the address from the ELF symbols.
cc4fb848 4033
577379ab
JK
4034Finding the correct @code{Bbss.bss}, etc., symbol is difficult, because
4035the linker simply concatenates the @code{.stab} sections from each
4036@file{.o} file without including any information about which part of a
4037@code{.stab} section comes from which @file{.o} file. The way GDB does
4038this is to look for an ELF @code{STT_FILE} symbol which has the same
4039name as the last component of the file name from the @code{N_SO} symbol
4040in the stabs (for example, if the file name is @file{../../gdb/main.c},
4041it looks for an ELF @code{STT_FILE} symbol named @code{main.c}). This
4042loses if different files have the same name (they could be in different
4043directories, a library could have been copied from one system to
4044another, etc.). It would be much cleaner to have the @code{Bbss.bss}
4045symbols in the stabs themselves. Having the linker relocate them there
4046is no more work than having the linker relocate ELF symbols, and it
4047solves the problem of having to associate the ELF and stab symbols.
4048However, no one has yet designed or implemented such a scheme.
4049
685a5e86
DM
4050@node Symbol Types Index
4051@unnumbered Symbol Types Index
4052
4053@printindex fn
4054
e505224d
PB
4055@contents
4056@bye
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