* bfd-in.h: Added more macros to COFF_SWAP_TABLE.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / include / bfd.h
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1/* A -*- C -*- header file for the bfd library
2 Copyright 1990, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Contributed by Cygnus Support.
a07cc613 4
2c346475 5This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library.
a07cc613 6
095c7223 7This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
a07cc613 8it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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9the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
10(at your option) any later version.
a07cc613 11
095c7223 12This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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13but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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18along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
19Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
20
21/* bfd.h -- The only header file required by users of the bfd library
22
23This file is generated from various .c files, if you change it, your
24bits may be lost.
25
26All the prototypes and definitions following the comment "THE FOLLOWING
27IS EXTRACTED FROM THE SOURCE" are extracted from the source files for
28BFD. If you change it, someone oneday will extract it from the source
29again, and your changes will be lost. To save yourself from this bind,
30change the definitions in the source in the bfd directory. Type "make
31docs" and then "make headers" in that directory, and magically this file
32will change to reflect your changes.
33
34If you don't have the tools to perform the extraction, then you are
35safe from someone on your system trampling over your header files.
36You should still maintain the equivalence between the source and this
37file though; every change you make to the .c file should be reflected
38here. */
a07cc613 39
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40#ifndef __BFD_H_SEEN__
41#define __BFD_H_SEEN__
42
43#include "ansidecl.h"
44#include "obstack.h"
45
46/* Make it easier to declare prototypes (puts conditional here) */
47#ifndef PROTO
48# if __STDC__
49# define PROTO(type, name, arglist) type name arglist
50# else
51# define PROTO(type, name, arglist) type name ()
52# endif
53#endif
54
40a08432 55#define BFD_VERSION "0.18"
ec08b077 56
a07cc613 57/* forward declaration */
9c6a9c92 58typedef struct _bfd bfd;
a07cc613 59
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60/* General rules: functions which are boolean return true on success
61 and false on failure (unless they're a predicate). -- bfd.doc */
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62/* I'm sure this is going to break something and someone is going to
63 force me to change it. */
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64/* typedef enum boolean {false, true} boolean; */
65/* Yup, SVR4 has a "typedef enum boolean" in <sys/types.h> -fnf */
66typedef enum bfd_boolean {false, true} boolean;
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67
68/* Try to avoid breaking stuff */
69typedef long int file_ptr;
70
9b9c5c39 71/* Support for different sizes of target format ints and addresses */
19b03b7a 72
9b9c5c39 73#ifdef HOST_64_BIT
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74typedef HOST_64_BIT rawdata_offset;
75typedef HOST_64_BIT bfd_vma;
76typedef HOST_64_BIT bfd_word;
77typedef HOST_64_BIT bfd_offset;
78typedef HOST_64_BIT bfd_size_type;
9b9c5c39 79typedef HOST_64_BIT symvalue;
7ed4093a 80typedef HOST_64_BIT bfd_64_type;
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81#define fprintf_vma(s,x) \
82 fprintf(s,"%08x%08x", uint64_typeHIGH(x), uint64_typeLOW(x))
83#define printf_vma(x) \
84 printf( "%08x%08x", uint64_typeHIGH(x), uint64_typeLOW(x))
19b03b7a 85#else
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86typedef struct {int a,b;} bfd_64_type;
87typedef unsigned long rawdata_offset;
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88typedef unsigned long bfd_vma;
89typedef unsigned long bfd_offset;
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90typedef unsigned long bfd_word;
91typedef unsigned long bfd_size;
92typedef unsigned long symvalue;
93typedef unsigned long bfd_size_type;
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94#define printf_vma(x) printf( "%08lx", x)
95#define fprintf_vma(s,x) fprintf(s, "%08lx", x)
19b03b7a 96#endif
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97
98typedef unsigned int flagword; /* 32 bits of flags */
99\f
100/** File formats */
101
102typedef enum bfd_format {
103 bfd_unknown = 0, /* file format is unknown */
104 bfd_object, /* linker/assember/compiler output */
105 bfd_archive, /* object archive file */
106 bfd_core, /* core dump */
107 bfd_type_end} /* marks the end; don't use it! */
108 bfd_format;
109
110/* Object file flag values */
9b9c5c39 111#define NO_FLAGS 0
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112#define HAS_RELOC 001
113#define EXEC_P 002
114#define HAS_LINENO 004
115#define HAS_DEBUG 010
116#define HAS_SYMS 020
117#define HAS_LOCALS 040
118#define DYNAMIC 0100
119#define WP_TEXT 0200
120#define D_PAGED 0400
121
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122\f
123/* symbols and relocation */
124
125typedef unsigned long symindex;
126
127#define BFD_NO_MORE_SYMBOLS ((symindex) ~0)
128
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129typedef enum bfd_symclass {
130 bfd_symclass_unknown = 0,
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131 bfd_symclass_fcommon, /* fortran common symbols */
132 bfd_symclass_global, /* global symbol, what a surprise */
133 bfd_symclass_debugger, /* some debugger symbol */
134 bfd_symclass_undefined /* none known */
135 } symclass;
136
19b03b7a 137
a07cc613 138typedef int symtype; /* Who knows, yet? */
19b03b7a 139
a07cc613 140
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141/* general purpose part of a symbol;
142 target specific parts will be found in libcoff.h, liba.out.h etc */
7a276b09 143
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144
145#define bfd_get_section(x) ((x)->section)
146#define bfd_get_output_section(x) ((x)->section->output_section)
147#define bfd_set_section(x,y) ((x)->section) = (y)
148#define bfd_asymbol_base(x) ((x)->section?((x)->section->vma):0)
149#define bfd_asymbol_value(x) (bfd_asymbol_base(x) + x->value)
150#define bfd_asymbol_name(x) ((x)->name)
151
a07cc613 152/* This is a type pun with struct ranlib on purpose! */
9c6a9c92 153typedef struct carsym {
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154 char *name;
155 file_ptr file_offset; /* look here to find the file */
156} carsym; /* to make these you call a carsymogen */
157
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158
159/* Used in generating armaps. Perhaps just a forward definition would do? */
160struct orl { /* output ranlib */
161 char **name; /* symbol name */
c93e2c55 162 file_ptr pos; /* bfd* or file position */
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163 int namidx; /* index into string table */
164};
165
166\f
167
168/* Linenumber stuff */
169typedef struct lineno_cache_entry {
170 unsigned int line_number; /* Linenumber from start of function*/
171 union {
7a276b09 172 struct symbol_cache_entry *sym; /* Function name */
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173 unsigned long offset; /* Offset into section */
174 } u;
175} alent;
176\f
177/* object and core file sections */
178
a07cc613 179
23adc117
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180/* Align an address upward to a power of two. Argument is the power
181 of two, e.g. 8-byte alignment uses argument of 3 (8 == 2^3). */
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182#define align_power(addr, align) \
183 ( ((addr) + ((1<<(align))-1)) & (-1 << (align)))
184
9c6a9c92 185typedef struct sec *sec_ptr;
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186
187#define bfd_section_name(bfd, ptr) ((ptr)->name)
188#define bfd_section_size(bfd, ptr) ((ptr)->size)
189#define bfd_section_vma(bfd, ptr) ((ptr)->vma)
190#define bfd_section_alignment(bfd, ptr) ((ptr)->alignment_power)
191#define bfd_get_section_flags(bfd, ptr) ((ptr)->flags)
192#define bfd_get_section_userdata(bfd, ptr) ((ptr)->userdata)
193
194#define bfd_set_section_vma(bfd, ptr, val) (((ptr)->vma = (val)), true)
195#define bfd_set_section_alignment(bfd, ptr, val) (((ptr)->alignment_power = (val)),true)
196#define bfd_set_section_userdata(bfd, ptr, val) (((ptr)->userdata = (val)),true)
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197
198typedef struct stat stat_type;
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199\f
200/** Error handling */
201
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202typedef enum bfd_error {
203 no_error = 0, system_call_error, invalid_target,
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204 wrong_format, invalid_operation, no_memory,
205 no_symbols, no_relocation_info,
206 no_more_archived_files, malformed_archive,
207 symbol_not_found, file_not_recognized,
208 file_ambiguously_recognized, no_contents,
209 bfd_error_nonrepresentable_section,
210 invalid_error_code} bfd_ec;
211
212extern bfd_ec bfd_error;
213
9c6a9c92 214typedef struct bfd_error_vector {
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215 PROTO(void,(* nonrepresentable_section ),(CONST bfd *CONST abfd,
216 CONST char *CONST name));
217} bfd_error_vector_type;
218
219PROTO (char *, bfd_errmsg, ());
220PROTO (void, bfd_perror, (CONST char *message));
221\f
222
9b9c5c39 223typedef enum bfd_print_symbol
a07cc613 224{
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225 bfd_print_symbol_name,
226 bfd_print_symbol_more,
227 bfd_print_symbol_all
228} bfd_print_symbol_type;
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229
230\f
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231\f
232/* The code that implements targets can initialize a jump table with this
233 macro. It must name all its routines the same way (a prefix plus
234 the standard routine suffix), or it must #define the routines that
235 are not so named, before calling JUMP_TABLE in the initializer. */
236
237/* Semi-portable string concatenation in cpp */
238#ifndef CAT
239#ifdef __STDC__
240#define CAT(a,b) a##b
241#else
242#define CAT(a,b) a/**/b
243#endif
244#endif
245
246#define JUMP_TABLE(NAME)\
247CAT(NAME,_core_file_failing_command),\
248CAT(NAME,_core_file_failing_signal),\
249CAT(NAME,_core_file_matches_executable_p),\
250CAT(NAME,_slurp_armap),\
251CAT(NAME,_slurp_extended_name_table),\
252CAT(NAME,_truncate_arname),\
253CAT(NAME,_write_armap),\
254CAT(NAME,_close_and_cleanup), \
255CAT(NAME,_set_section_contents),\
256CAT(NAME,_get_section_contents),\
257CAT(NAME,_new_section_hook),\
258CAT(NAME,_get_symtab_upper_bound),\
259CAT(NAME,_get_symtab),\
260CAT(NAME,_get_reloc_upper_bound),\
261CAT(NAME,_canonicalize_reloc),\
262CAT(NAME,_make_empty_symbol),\
263CAT(NAME,_print_symbol),\
264CAT(NAME,_get_lineno),\
265CAT(NAME,_set_arch_mach),\
266CAT(NAME,_openr_next_archived_file),\
267CAT(NAME,_find_nearest_line),\
268CAT(NAME,_generic_stat_arch_elt),\
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269CAT(NAME,_sizeof_headers),\
270CAT(NAME,_bfd_debug_info_start),\
271CAT(NAME,_bfd_debug_info_end),\
272CAT(NAME,_bfd_debug_info_accumulate)
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273
274#define COFF_SWAP_TABLE coff_swap_aux_in, coff_swap_sym_in, coff_swap_lineno_in,
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275\f
276/* User program access to BFD facilities */
277
278extern CONST short _bfd_host_big_endian;
279#define HOST_BYTE_ORDER_BIG_P (*(char *)&_bfd_host_big_endian)
280
281/* The bfd itself */
282
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283/* Cast from const char * to char * so that caller can assign to
284 a char * without a warning. */
285#define bfd_get_filename(abfd) ((char *) (abfd)->filename)
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286#define bfd_get_format(abfd) ((abfd)->format)
287#define bfd_get_target(abfd) ((abfd)->xvec->name)
288#define bfd_get_file_flags(abfd) ((abfd)->flags)
289#define bfd_applicable_file_flags(abfd) ((abfd)->xvec->object_flags)
290#define bfd_applicable_section_flags(abfd) ((abfd)->xvec->section_flags)
291#define bfd_my_archive(abfd) ((abfd)->my_archive);
292#define bfd_has_map(abfd) ((abfd)->has_armap)
293#define bfd_header_twiddle_required(abfd) \
294 ((((abfd)->xvec->header_byteorder_big_p) \
295 != (boolean)HOST_BYTE_ORDER_BIG_P) ? true:false)
296
297#define bfd_valid_reloc_types(abfd) ((abfd)->xvec->valid_reloc_types)
298#define bfd_usrdata(abfd) ((abfd)->usrdata)
299
300#define bfd_get_start_address(abfd) ((abfd)->start_address)
301#define bfd_get_symcount(abfd) ((abfd)->symcount)
302#define bfd_get_outsymbols(abfd) ((abfd)->outsymbols)
303#define bfd_count_sections(abfd) ((abfd)->section_count)
304#define bfd_get_architecture(abfd) ((abfd)->obj_arch)
305#define bfd_get_machine(abfd) ((abfd)->obj_machine)
306
a07cc613 307
a07cc613 308
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309#define BYTE_SIZE 1
310#define SHORT_SIZE 2
311#define LONG_SIZE 4
312
313
314
315/*THE FOLLOWING IS EXTRACTED FROM THE SOURCE */
316
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317
318/*:init.c*/
319/* bfd_init
320
321This routine must be called before any other bfd function to initialize
322magical internal data structures.
323*/
324
325 void EXFUN(bfd_init,(void));
326
327/*
328*/
329
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330/*:opncls.c*/
331/* *i bfd_openr
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332Opens the file supplied (using @code{fopen}) with the target supplied, it
333returns a pointer to the created BFD.
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334
335If NULL is returned then an error has occured.
336Possible errors are no_memory, invalid_target or system_call error.
337*/
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338 PROTO(bfd*, bfd_openr, (CONST char *filename,CONST char*target));
339
340/*
341
342*i bfd_fdopenr
2f60a880 343bfd_fdopenr is to bfd_fopenr much like fdopen is to fopen. It opens a BFD on
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344a file already described by the @var{fd} supplied.
345
346Possible errors are no_memory, invalid_target and system_call error.
347*/
bded7de2 348 PROTO(bfd *, bfd_fdopenr,
7a276b09 349 (CONST char *filename, CONST char *target, int fd));
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350
351/*
352
353 bfd_openw
2f60a880 354Creates a BFD, associated with file @var{filename}, using the file
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355format @var{target}, and returns a pointer to it.
356
357Possible errors are system_call_error, no_memory, invalid_target.
358*/
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359 PROTO(bfd *, bfd_openw, (CONST char *filename, CONST char *target));
360
361/*
362
363 bfd_close
2f60a880 364This function closes a BFD. If the BFD was open for writing, then
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365pending operations are completed and the file written out and closed.
366If the created file is executable, then @code{chmod} is called to mark
367it as such.
368
2f60a880 369All memory attached to the BFD's obstacks is released.
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370
371@code{true} is returned if all is ok, otherwise @code{false}.
372*/
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373 PROTO(boolean, bfd_close,(bfd *));
374
375/*
376
377 bfd_create
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378This routine creates a new BFD in the manner of @code{bfd_openw}, but without
379opening a file. The new BFD takes the target from the target used by
7a276b09 380@var{template}. The format is always set to @code{bfd_object}.
7a276b09 381*/
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382
383 PROTO(bfd *, bfd_create, (CONST char *filename, bfd *template));
384
385/*
386
387 bfd_alloc_size
388Return the number of bytes in the obstacks connected to the supplied
2f60a880 389BFD.
7a276b09 390*/
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391 PROTO(bfd_size_type,bfd_alloc_size,(bfd *abfd));
392
393/*
1ac2d1f2 394*/
bded7de2 395
7a276b09 396
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397/*:libbfd.c*/
398/* *i bfd_put_size
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399*i bfd_get_size
400These macros as used for reading and writing raw data in sections;
7a276b09 401each access (except for bytes) is vectored through the target format
2f60a880 402of the BFD and mangled accordingly. The mangling performs any
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403necessary endian translations and removes alignment restrictions.
404*/
405#define bfd_put_8(abfd, val, ptr) \
406 (*((char *)ptr) = (char)val)
407#define bfd_get_8(abfd, ptr) \
408 (*((char *)ptr))
409#define bfd_put_16(abfd, val, ptr) \
410 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_putx16, (val,ptr))
411#define bfd_get_16(abfd, ptr) \
412 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx16, (ptr))
413#define bfd_put_32(abfd, val, ptr) \
414 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_putx32, (val,ptr))
415#define bfd_get_32(abfd, ptr) \
416 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx32, (ptr))
417#define bfd_put_64(abfd, val, ptr) \
418 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_putx64, (val, ptr))
419#define bfd_get_64(abfd, ptr) \
420 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx64, (ptr))
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421/* *i bfd_h_put_size
422*i bfd_h_get_size
423These macros have the same function as their @code{bfd_get_x}
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424bretherin, except that they are used for removing information for the
425header records of object files. Believe it or not, some object files
426keep their header records in big endian order, and their data in little
427endan order.
428*/
429#define bfd_h_put_8(abfd, val, ptr) \
430 (*((char *)ptr) = (char)val)
431#define bfd_h_get_8(abfd, ptr) \
432 (*((char *)ptr))
433#define bfd_h_put_16(abfd, val, ptr) \
434 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_putx16,(val,ptr))
435#define bfd_h_get_16(abfd, ptr) \
436 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx16,(ptr))
437#define bfd_h_put_32(abfd, val, ptr) \
438 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_putx32,(val,ptr))
439#define bfd_h_get_32(abfd, ptr) \
440 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx32,(ptr))
441#define bfd_h_put_64(abfd, val, ptr) \
442 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_putx64,(val, ptr))
443#define bfd_h_get_64(abfd, ptr) \
444 BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx64,(ptr))
7a276b09 445
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446/*:section.c*/
447/* The shape of a section struct:
7a276b09 448*/
bded7de2 449
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450typedef struct sec {
451
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452/*
453The name of the section, the name isn't a copy, the pointer is
454the same as that passed to bfd_make_section.
455*/
456
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457 CONST char *name;
458
bded7de2 459/*
2f60a880 460The next section in the list belonging to the BFD, or NULL.
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461*/
462
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463 struct sec *next;
464
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465/*
466The field flags contains attributes of the section. Some of these
467flags are read in from the object file, and some are synthesized from
468other information.
469*/
470
7a276b09 471flagword flags;
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472
473/*
474*/
475
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476#define SEC_NO_FLAGS 0x000
477
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478/*
479Tells the OS to allocate space for this section when loaded.
480This would clear for a section containing debug information only.
481*/
482
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483#define SEC_ALLOC 0x001
484
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485/*
486Tells the OS to load the section from the file when loading.
487This would be clear for a .bss section
488*/
489
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490#define SEC_LOAD 0x002
491
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492/*
493The section contains data still to be relocated, so there will be some
494relocation information too.
495*/
496
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497#define SEC_RELOC 0x004
498
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499/*
500Obsolete ?
501*/
502
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503#define SEC_BALIGN 0x008
504
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505/*
506A signal to the OS that the section contains read only data.
507*/
508
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509#define SEC_READONLY 0x010
510
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511/*
512The section contains code only.
513*/
514
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515#define SEC_CODE 0x020
516
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517/*
518The section contains data only.
519*/
520
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521#define SEC_DATA 0x040
522
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523/*
524The section will reside in ROM.
525*/
526
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527#define SEC_ROM 0x080
528
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529/*
530The section contains constructor information. This section type is
531used by the linker to create lists of constructors and destructors
532used by @code{g++}. When a back end sees a symbol which should be used
533in a constructor list, it creates a new section for the type of name
2f60a880 534(eg @code{__CTOR_LIST__}), attaches the symbol to it and builds a
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535relocation. To build the lists of constructors, all the linker has to
536to is catenate all the sections called @code{__CTOR_LIST__} and
537relocte the data contained within - exactly the operations it would
538peform on standard data.
539*/
540
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541#define SEC_CONSTRUCTOR 0x100
542
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543/*
544The section is a constuctor, and should be placed at the end of the ..
545*/
546
1c6c6598 547#define SEC_CONSTRUCTOR_TEXT 0x1100
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548
549/*
550*/
1c6c6598 551#define SEC_CONSTRUCTOR_DATA 0x2100
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552
553/*
554*/
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555#define SEC_CONSTRUCTOR_BSS 0x3100
556
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557/*
558
559The section has contents - a bss section could be
560@code{SEC_ALLOC} | @code{SEC_HAS_CONTENTS}, a debug section could be
561@code{SEC_HAS_CONTENTS}
562*/
563
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564#define SEC_HAS_CONTENTS 0x200
565
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566/*
567An instruction to the linker not to output sections containing
568this flag even if they have information which would normally be written.
569*/
570
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571#define SEC_NEVER_LOAD 0x400
572
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573/*
574
575The base address of the section in the address space of the target.
576*/
577
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578 bfd_vma vma;
579
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580/*
581The size of the section in bytes of the loaded section. This contains
582a value even if the section has no contents (eg, the size of @code{.bss}).
583*/
584
7a276b09
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585 bfd_size_type size;
586
bded7de2
SC
587/*
588If this section is going to be output, then this value is the
589offset into the output section of the first byte in the input
590section. Eg, if this was going to start at the 100th byte in the
591output section, this value would be 100.
592*/
593
7a276b09
SC
594 bfd_vma output_offset;
595
bded7de2
SC
596/*
597The output section through which to map on output.
598*/
599
7a276b09
SC
600 struct sec *output_section;
601
bded7de2
SC
602/*
603The alignment requirement of the section, as an exponent - eg 3
604aligns to 2^3 (or 8)
605*/
606
7a276b09
SC
607 unsigned int alignment_power;
608
bded7de2
SC
609/*
610If an input section, a pointer to a vector of relocation records for
611the data in this section.
612*/
613
7a276b09
SC
614 struct reloc_cache_entry *relocation;
615
bded7de2
SC
616/*
617If an output section, a pointer to a vector of pointers to
618relocation records for the data in this section.
619*/
620
7a276b09
SC
621 struct reloc_cache_entry **orelocation;
622
bded7de2
SC
623/*
624The number of relocation records in one of the above
625*/
626
7a276b09
SC
627 unsigned reloc_count;
628
bded7de2
SC
629/*
630Which section is it 0..nth
631*/
632
7a276b09
SC
633 int index;
634
bded7de2
SC
635/*
636Information below is back end specific - and not always used or
637updated
638
639File position of section data
640*/
641
7a276b09 642 file_ptr filepos;
bded7de2
SC
643/* File position of relocation info
644*/
7a276b09 645
7a276b09
SC
646 file_ptr rel_filepos;
647
bded7de2
SC
648/*
649File position of line data
650*/
651
7a276b09
SC
652 file_ptr line_filepos;
653
bded7de2
SC
654/*
655Pointer to data for applications
656*/
657
7a276b09 658 PTR userdata;
bded7de2
SC
659
660/*
661*/
7a276b09
SC
662 struct lang_output_section *otheruserdata;
663
bded7de2
SC
664/*
665Attached line number information
666*/
667
7a276b09 668 alent *lineno;
bded7de2
SC
669/* Number of line number records
670*/
7a276b09 671
7a276b09
SC
672 unsigned int lineno_count;
673
bded7de2
SC
674/*
675When a section is being output, this value changes as more
676linenumbers are written out
677*/
678
7a276b09
SC
679 file_ptr moving_line_filepos;
680
bded7de2
SC
681/*
682what the section number is in the target world
683*/
684
7a276b09 685 unsigned int target_index;
bded7de2
SC
686
687/*
688*/
7a276b09
SC
689 PTR used_by_bfd;
690
bded7de2
SC
691/*
692If this is a constructor section then here is a list of the
693relocations created to relocate items within it.
694*/
695
7a276b09
SC
696 struct relent_chain *constructor_chain;
697
bded7de2 698/*
2f60a880 699The BFD which owns the section.
bded7de2
SC
700*/
701
7a276b09 702 bfd *owner;
bded7de2
SC
703
704/*
705*/
7a276b09
SC
706} asection ;
707
bded7de2 708/*
7a276b09 709
bded7de2
SC
710 bfd_get_section_by_name
711Runs through the provided @var{abfd} and returns the @code{asection}
712who's name matches that provided, otherwise NULL. @xref{Sections}, for more information.
7a276b09 713*/
bded7de2
SC
714
715 PROTO(asection *, bfd_get_section_by_name,
7a276b09 716 (bfd *abfd, CONST char *name));
bded7de2
SC
717
718/*
719
720 bfd_make_section
2f60a880
RP
721This function creates a new empty section called @var{name} and attaches it
722to the end of the chain of sections for the BFD supplied. An attempt to
7a276b09
SC
723create a section with a name which is already in use, returns the old
724section by that name instead.
725
726Possible errors are:
727@table @code
728@item invalid_operation
2f60a880 729If output has already started for this BFD.
7a276b09
SC
730@item no_memory
731If obstack alloc fails.
732@end table
7a276b09 733*/
bded7de2
SC
734
735 PROTO(asection *, bfd_make_section, (bfd *, CONST char *name));
736
737/*
738
739 bfd_set_section_flags
2f60a880 740Attempts to set the attributes of the section named in the BFD
7a276b09
SC
741supplied to the value. Returns true on success, false on error.
742Possible error returns are:
743@table @code
744@item invalid operation
745The section cannot have one or more of the attributes requested. For
746example, a .bss section in @code{a.out} may not have the
747@code{SEC_HAS_CONTENTS} field set.
748@end table
7a276b09 749*/
bded7de2
SC
750
751 PROTO(boolean, bfd_set_section_flags,
7a276b09 752 (bfd *, asection *, flagword));
bded7de2
SC
753
754/*
755
756 bfd_map_over_sections
2f60a880
RP
757Calls the provided function @var{func} for each section attached to
758the BFD @var{abfd}, passing @var{obj} as an argument. The function
7a276b09
SC
759will be called as if by
760
761@example
762 func(abfd, the_section, obj);
763@end example
7a276b09 764*/
bded7de2
SC
765
766 PROTO(void, bfd_map_over_sections,
7a276b09 767 (bfd *abfd, void (*func)(), PTR obj));
bded7de2
SC
768
769/*
770
771This is the prefered method for iterating over sections, an
7a276b09
SC
772alternative would be to use a loop:
773
774@example
775 section *p;
776 for (p = abfd->sections; p != NULL; p = p->next)
777 func(abfd, p, ...)
bded7de2 778@end example
7a276b09 779
bded7de2
SC
780 bfd_set_section_size
781Sets @var{section} to the size @var{val}. If the operation is ok, then
7a276b09
SC
782@code{true} is returned, else @code{false}.
783
784Possible error returns:
785@table @code
786@item invalid_operation
2f60a880 787Writing has started to the BFD, so setting the size is invalid
7a276b09 788@end table
7a276b09 789*/
bded7de2
SC
790
791 PROTO(boolean, bfd_set_section_size,
7a276b09 792 (bfd *, asection *, bfd_size_type val));
bded7de2
SC
793
794/*
795
796 bfd_set_section_contents
2f60a880 797Sets the contents of the section @var{section} in BFD @var{abfd} to
7a276b09
SC
798the data starting in memory at @var{data}. The data is written to the
799output section starting at offset @var{offset} for @var{count} bytes.
800
801Normally @code{true} is returned, else @code{false}. Possible error
802returns are:
803@table @code
804@item no_contents
805The output section does not have the @code{SEC_HAS_CONTENTS}
806attribute, so nothing can be written to it.
807@item and some more too
808@end table
809This routine is front end to the back end function @code{_bfd_set_section_contents}.
7a276b09 810*/
bded7de2
SC
811
812 PROTO(boolean, bfd_set_section_contents,
7a276b09
SC
813 (bfd *abfd,
814 asection *section,
815 PTR data,
816 file_ptr offset,
817 bfd_size_type count));
bded7de2
SC
818
819/*
820
821 bfd_get_section_contents
2f60a880 822This function reads data from @var{section} in BFD @var{abfd} into
7a276b09
SC
823memory starting at @var{location}. The data is read at an offset of
824@var{offset} from the start of the input section, and is read for
825@var{count} bytes.
826
827If the contents of a constuctor with the @code{SEC_CONSTUCTOR} flag
828set are requested, then the @var{location} is filled with zeroes.
829
830If no errors occur, @code{true} is returned, else @code{false}.
831Possible errors are:
832
833@table @code
834@item unknown yet
835@end table
7a276b09 836*/
bded7de2
SC
837
838 PROTO(boolean, bfd_get_section_contents,
7a276b09
SC
839 (bfd *abfd, asection *section, PTR location,
840 file_ptr offset, bfd_size_type count));
7a276b09 841
bded7de2 842/*
1ac2d1f2 843*/
bded7de2 844
bded7de2 845
b39096a4
SC
846
847/*:archures.c*/
848/* bfd_architecture
849This enum gives the object file's CPU
850architecture, in a global sense. E.g. what processor family does it
851belong to? There is another field, which indicates what processor
852within the family is in use. The machine gives a number which
853distingushes different versions of the architecture, containing for
854example 2 and 3 for Intel i960 KA and i960 KB, and 68020 and 68030 for
855Motorola 68020 and 68030.
7a276b09 856*/
bded7de2 857
b39096a4 858enum bfd_architecture
7a276b09 859{
b39096a4
SC
860 bfd_arch_unknown, /* File arch not known */
861 bfd_arch_obscure, /* Arch known, not one of these */
862 bfd_arch_m68k, /* Motorola 68xxx */
863 bfd_arch_vax, /* DEC Vax */
864 bfd_arch_i960, /* Intel 960 */
865 /* The order of the following is important.
866 lower number indicates a machine type that
867 only accepts a subset of the instructions
868 available to machines with higher numbers.
869 The exception is the "ca", which is
870 incompatible with all other machines except
871 "core". */
7a276b09 872
b39096a4
SC
873#define bfd_mach_i960_core 1
874#define bfd_mach_i960_ka_sa 2
875#define bfd_mach_i960_kb_sb 3
876#define bfd_mach_i960_mc 4
877#define bfd_mach_i960_xa 5
878#define bfd_mach_i960_ca 6
879
880 bfd_arch_a29k, /* AMD 29000 */
881 bfd_arch_sparc, /* SPARC */
882 bfd_arch_mips, /* MIPS Rxxxx */
883 bfd_arch_i386, /* Intel 386 */
884 bfd_arch_ns32k, /* National Semiconductor 32xxx */
885 bfd_arch_tahoe, /* CCI/Harris Tahoe */
886 bfd_arch_i860, /* Intel 860 */
887 bfd_arch_romp, /* IBM ROMP RS/6000 */
888 bfd_arch_alliant, /* Alliant */
889 bfd_arch_convex, /* Convex */
890 bfd_arch_m88k, /* Motorola 88xxx */
891 bfd_arch_pyramid, /* Pyramid Technology */
892 bfd_arch_h8300, /* Hitachi H8/300 */
893 bfd_arch_last
894 };
7a276b09 895
bded7de2 896/*
b39096a4
SC
897stuff
898
81f8fee9 899 bfd_arch_info
b39096a4 900This structure contains information on architectures.
bded7de2 901*/
81f8fee9 902typedef int bfd_reloc_code_type;
bded7de2 903
81f8fee9 904typedef struct bfd_arch_info
b39096a4
SC
905{
906 int bits_per_word;
907 int bits_per_address;
908 int bits_per_byte;
909 enum bfd_architecture arch;
910 long mach;
911 char *arch_name;
912 CONST char *printable_name;
913/* true if this is the default machine for the architecture */
914 boolean the_default;
81f8fee9
JG
915 CONST struct bfd_arch_info * EXFUN((*compatible),(CONST struct bfd_arch_info *a,
916 CONST struct bfd_arch_info *b));
b39096a4 917
81f8fee9 918 boolean EXFUN((*scan),(CONST struct bfd_arch_info *,CONST char *));
b39096a4
SC
919 unsigned int EXFUN((*disassemble),(bfd_vma addr, CONST char *data,
920 PTR stream));
de7e640d 921 CONST struct reloc_howto_struct *EXFUN((*reloc_type_lookup), (CONST struct
81f8fee9
JG
922 bfd_arch_info *,
923 bfd_reloc_code_type code));
b39096a4 924
81f8fee9 925 struct bfd_arch_info *next;
b39096a4 926
81f8fee9 927} bfd_arch_info_type;
b39096a4
SC
928
929/*
b39096a4 930 bfd_printable_name
7a276b09 931
b39096a4
SC
932Return a printable string representing the architecture and machine
933from the pointer to the arch info structure
bded7de2
SC
934*/
935
b39096a4 936 CONST char *EXFUN(bfd_printable_name,(bfd *abfd));
7a276b09 937
bded7de2 938/*
b39096a4
SC
939
940*i bfd_scan_arch
941This routine is provided with a string and tries to work out if bfd
942supports any cpu which could be described with the name provided. The
943routine returns a pointer to an arch_info structure if a machine is
944found, otherwise NULL.
bded7de2
SC
945*/
946
81f8fee9 947 bfd_arch_info_type *EXFUN(bfd_scan_arch,(CONST char *));
7a276b09 948
bded7de2 949/*
b39096a4
SC
950
951 bfd_arch_get_compatible
952This routine is used to determine whether two BFDs' architectures and
953machine types are compatible. It calculates the lowest common
954denominator between the two architectures and machine types implied by
955the BFDs and returns a pointer to an arch_info structure describing
956the compatible machine.
bded7de2
SC
957*/
958
81f8fee9 959 CONST bfd_arch_info_type *EXFUN(bfd_arch_get_compatible,
b39096a4
SC
960 (CONST bfd *abfd,
961 CONST bfd *bbfd));
7a276b09 962
bded7de2 963/*
b39096a4
SC
964
965 bfd_set_arch_info
bded7de2
SC
966*/
967
81f8fee9 968 void EXFUN(bfd_set_arch_info,(bfd *, bfd_arch_info_type *));
7a276b09 969
bded7de2 970/*
b39096a4
SC
971
972 bfd_get_arch
973
974Returns the enumerated type which describes the supplied bfd's
975architecture
bded7de2
SC
976*/
977
b39096a4 978 enum bfd_architecture EXFUN(bfd_get_arch, (bfd *abfd));
7a276b09 979
bded7de2 980/*
b39096a4
SC
981
982 bfd_get_mach
983
984Returns the long type which describes the supplied bfd's
985machine
bded7de2
SC
986*/
987
b39096a4 988 unsigned long EXFUN(bfd_get_mach, (bfd *abfd));
7a276b09 989
bded7de2 990/*
bded7de2 991
b39096a4
SC
992 bfd_arch_bits_per_byte
993
994Returns the number of bits in one of the architectures bytes
bded7de2
SC
995*/
996
b39096a4 997 unsigned int EXFUN(bfd_arch_bits_per_byte, (bfd *abfd));
7a276b09 998
bded7de2 999/*
b39096a4
SC
1000
1001 bfd_arch_bits_per_address
1002
1003Returns the number of bits in one of the architectures addresses
bded7de2
SC
1004*/
1005
b39096a4 1006 unsigned int EXFUN(bfd_arch_bits_per_address, (bfd *abfd));
7a276b09 1007
bded7de2 1008/*
b39096a4
SC
1009
1010 bfd_get_arch_info
bded7de2
SC
1011*/
1012
81f8fee9 1013 bfd_arch_info_type * EXFUN(bfd_get_arch_info,(bfd *));
7a276b09 1014
bded7de2 1015/*
7a276b09 1016
de7e640d
SC
1017 bfd_lookup_arch
1018
bded7de2 1019*/
81f8fee9 1020 bfd_arch_info_type * EXFUN(bfd_lookup_arch,(enum
de7e640d 1021 bfd_architecture arch,long machine));
7a276b09 1022
bded7de2 1023/*
1c6c6598 1024
de7e640d
SC
1025Look for the architecure info struct which matches the arguments
1026given. A machine of 0 will match the machine/architecture structure which
1027marks itself as the default.
bded7de2 1028
de7e640d
SC
1029 bfd_printable_arch_mach
1030Return a printable string representing the architecture and machine
1031type.
1c6c6598 1032
de7e640d 1033NB. The use of this routine is depreciated.
bded7de2
SC
1034*/
1035
de7e640d
SC
1036 PROTO(CONST char *,bfd_printable_arch_mach,
1037 (enum bfd_architecture arch, unsigned long machine));
1c6c6598 1038
bded7de2 1039/*
bded7de2
SC
1040*/
1041
b39096a4
SC
1042/*:reloc.c*/
1043/* bfd_perform_relocation
1044The relocation routine returns as a status an enumerated type:
1045*/
7a276b09 1046
b39096a4
SC
1047typedef enum bfd_reloc_status {
1048/* No errors detected
bded7de2
SC
1049*/
1050
b39096a4 1051 bfd_reloc_ok,
7a276b09 1052
bded7de2 1053/*
b39096a4 1054The relocation was performed, but there was an overflow.
bded7de2
SC
1055*/
1056
b39096a4 1057 bfd_reloc_overflow,
7a276b09 1058
bded7de2 1059/*
b39096a4 1060The address to relocate was not within the section supplied
7a276b09 1061*/
7a276b09 1062
b39096a4 1063 bfd_reloc_outofrange,
bded7de2 1064
b39096a4
SC
1065/*
1066Used by special functions
7a276b09 1067*/
bded7de2 1068
b39096a4 1069 bfd_reloc_continue,
7a276b09 1070
bded7de2 1071/*
b39096a4 1072Unused
7a276b09 1073*/
7a276b09 1074
b39096a4 1075 bfd_reloc_notsupported,
bded7de2
SC
1076
1077/*
b39096a4
SC
1078Unsupported relocation size requested.
1079*/
bded7de2 1080
b39096a4
SC
1081 bfd_reloc_other,
1082
1083/*
1084The symbol to relocate against was undefined.
7a276b09 1085*/
bded7de2 1086
b39096a4 1087 bfd_reloc_undefined,
bded7de2
SC
1088
1089/*
b39096a4
SC
1090The relocation was performed, but may not be ok - presently generated
1091only when linking i960 coff files with i960 b.out symbols.
1092*/
bded7de2 1093
b39096a4
SC
1094 bfd_reloc_dangerous
1095 }
81f8fee9 1096 bfd_reloc_status_type;
7a276b09 1097
b39096a4 1098/*
7a276b09 1099*/
7a276b09 1100
b39096a4
SC
1101typedef struct reloc_cache_entry
1102{
7a276b09 1103
b39096a4
SC
1104/*
1105A pointer into the canonical table of pointers
1106*/
7a276b09 1107
b39096a4
SC
1108 struct symbol_cache_entry **sym_ptr_ptr;
1109
1110/*
1111offset in section
7a276b09 1112*/
bded7de2 1113
b39096a4
SC
1114 rawdata_offset address;
1115
1116/*
1117addend for relocation value
bded7de2 1118*/
7a276b09 1119
b39096a4 1120 bfd_vma addend;
7a276b09 1121
bded7de2 1122/*
b39096a4 1123if sym is null this is the section
bded7de2
SC
1124*/
1125
b39096a4
SC
1126 struct sec *section;
1127
1128/*
1129Pointer to how to perform the required relocation
1130*/
1131
1132 CONST struct reloc_howto_struct *howto;
1133} arelent;
7a276b09 1134
bded7de2
SC
1135/*
1136
b39096a4
SC
1137 reloc_howto_type
1138The @code{reloc_howto_type} is a structure which contains all the
1139information that BFD needs to know to tie up a back end's data.
1140*/
bded7de2 1141
b39096a4
SC
1142typedef CONST struct reloc_howto_struct
1143{
1144/* The type field has mainly a documetary use - the back end can to what
1145it wants with it, though the normally the back end's external idea of
1146what a reloc number would be would be stored in this field. For
1147example, the a PC relative word relocation in a coff environment would
1148have the type 023 - because that's what the outside world calls a
1149R_PCRWORD reloc.
bded7de2
SC
1150*/
1151
b39096a4 1152 unsigned int type;
7a276b09 1153
bded7de2 1154/*
b39096a4
SC
1155The value the final relocation is shifted right by. This drops
1156unwanted data from the relocation.
bded7de2
SC
1157*/
1158
b39096a4 1159 unsigned int rightshift;
7a276b09 1160
bded7de2 1161/*
b39096a4
SC
1162The size of the item to be relocated - 0, is one byte, 1 is 2 bytes, 3
1163is four bytes.
bded7de2
SC
1164*/
1165
b39096a4 1166 unsigned int size;
7a276b09 1167
bded7de2 1168/*
b39096a4 1169Now obsolete
bded7de2
SC
1170*/
1171
b39096a4 1172 unsigned int bitsize;
7a276b09 1173
bded7de2 1174/*
b39096a4
SC
1175Notes that the relocation is relative to the location in the data
1176section of the addend. The relocation function will subtract from the
1177relocation value the address of the location being relocated.
bded7de2
SC
1178*/
1179
b39096a4 1180 boolean pc_relative;
7a276b09 1181
bded7de2 1182/*
b39096a4 1183Now obsolete
bded7de2
SC
1184*/
1185
b39096a4 1186 unsigned int bitpos;
bded7de2
SC
1187
1188/*
b39096a4 1189Now obsolete
bded7de2 1190*/
b39096a4
SC
1191
1192 boolean absolute;
1193
1194/*
1195Causes the relocation routine to return an error if overflow is
1196detected when relocating.
bded7de2 1197*/
7a276b09 1198
b39096a4 1199 boolean complain_on_overflow;
7a276b09 1200
bded7de2 1201/*
b39096a4
SC
1202If this field is non null, then the supplied function is called rather
1203than the normal function. This allows really strange relocation
1204methods to be accomodated (eg, i960 callj instructions).
bded7de2
SC
1205*/
1206
81f8fee9 1207 bfd_reloc_status_type (*special_function)();
7a276b09 1208
bded7de2 1209/*
b39096a4 1210The textual name of the relocation type.
bded7de2
SC
1211*/
1212
b39096a4 1213 char *name;
a07cc613 1214
bded7de2 1215/*
b39096a4
SC
1216When performing a partial link, some formats must modify the
1217relocations rather than the data - this flag signals this.
bded7de2
SC
1218*/
1219
b39096a4 1220 boolean partial_inplace;
7a276b09 1221
bded7de2 1222/*
b39096a4
SC
1223The src_mask is used to select what parts of the read in data are to
1224be used in the relocation sum. Eg, if this was an 8 bit bit of data
1225which we read and relocated, this would be 0x000000ff. When we have
1226relocs which have an addend, such as sun4 extended relocs, the value
1227in the offset part of a relocating field is garbage so we never use
1228it. In this case the mask would be 0x00000000.
bded7de2
SC
1229*/
1230
b39096a4
SC
1231 bfd_word src_mask;
1232/* The dst_mask is what parts of the instruction are replaced into the
1233instruction. In most cases src_mask == dst_mask, except in the above
1234special case, where dst_mask would be 0x000000ff, and src_mask would
1235be 0x00000000.
1236*/
1237
1238 bfd_word dst_mask;
7a276b09 1239
bded7de2 1240/*
b39096a4
SC
1241When some formats create PC relative instructions, they leave the
1242value of the pc of the place being relocated in the offset slot of the
1243instruction, so that a PC relative relocation can be made just by
1244adding in an ordinary offset (eg sun3 a.out). Some formats leave the
1245displacement part of an instruction empty (eg m88k bcs), this flag
1246signals the fact.
bded7de2
SC
1247*/
1248
b39096a4
SC
1249 boolean pcrel_offset;
1250} reloc_howto_type;
7a276b09 1251
bded7de2 1252/*
b39096a4
SC
1253
1254 HOWTO
1255The HOWTO define is horrible and will go away.
bded7de2 1256*/
b39096a4
SC
1257#define HOWTO(C, R,S,B, P, BI, ABS, O, SF, NAME, INPLACE, MASKSRC, MASKDST, PC) \
1258 {(unsigned)C,R,S,B, P, BI, ABS,O,SF,NAME,INPLACE,MASKSRC,MASKDST,PC}
bded7de2 1259
b39096a4
SC
1260/*
1261And will be replaced with the totally magic way. But for the moment,
1262we are compatible, so do it this way..
1263*/
1264
46773090 1265#define NEWHOWTO( FUNCTION, NAME,SIZE,REL,IN) HOWTO(0,0,SIZE,0,REL,0,false,false,FUNCTION, NAME,false,0,0,IN)
7a276b09 1266
bded7de2 1267/*
b39096a4 1268Helper routine to turn a symbol into a relocation value.
bded7de2
SC
1269*/
1270
b39096a4
SC
1271
1272#define HOWTO_PREPARE(relocation, symbol) \
1273 { \
1274 if (symbol != (asymbol *)NULL) { \
1275 if (symbol->flags & BSF_FORT_COMM) { \
1276 relocation = 0; \
1277 } \
1278 else { \
1279 relocation = symbol->value; \
1280 } \
1281 } \
1282 if (symbol->section != (asection *)NULL) { \
1283 relocation += symbol->section->output_section->vma + \
1284 symbol->section->output_offset; \
1285 } \
1286}
7a276b09 1287
bded7de2 1288/*
b39096a4 1289 reloc_chain
bded7de2 1290*/
b39096a4 1291typedef unsigned char bfd_byte;
bded7de2 1292
b39096a4
SC
1293typedef struct relent_chain {
1294 arelent relent;
1295 struct relent_chain *next;
1296} arelent_chain;
1297
1298/*
1299
1300If an output_bfd is supplied to this function the generated image
1301will be relocatable, the relocations are copied to the output file
1302after they have been changed to reflect the new state of the world.
1303There are two ways of reflecting the results of partial linkage in an
1304output file; by modifying the output data in place, and by modifying
1305the relocation record. Some native formats (eg basic a.out and basic
1306coff) have no way of specifying an addend in the relocation type, so
1307the addend has to go in the output data. This is no big deal since in
1308these formats the output data slot will always be big enough for the
1309addend. Complex reloc types with addends were invented to solve just
1310this problem.
1311*/
81f8fee9 1312 PROTO(bfd_reloc_status_type,
b39096a4
SC
1313 bfd_perform_relocation,
1314 (bfd * abfd,
1315 arelent *reloc_entry,
1316 PTR data,
1317 asection *input_section,
1318 bfd *output_bfd));
7a276b09 1319
de7e640d
SC
1320/*
1321
81f8fee9 1322 bfd_reloc_code_type
de7e640d
SC
1323*/
1324
81f8fee9 1325typedef enum bfd_reloc_code_real {
de7e640d
SC
1326
1327/*
132816 bits wide, simple reloc
1329*/
1330
1331 BFD_RELOC_16,
1332
1333/*
13348 bits wide, but used to form an address like 0xffnn
1335*/
1336
1337 BFD_RELOC_8_FFnn,
1338
1339/*
13408 bits wide, simple
1341*/
1342
1343 BFD_RELOC_8,
1344
1345/*
13468 bits wide, pc relative
1347*/
1348
1349 BFD_RELOC_8_PCREL
81f8fee9 1350 } bfd_reloc_code_real_type;
de7e640d
SC
1351
1352/*
1353
1354 bfd_reloc_type_lookup
1355This routine returns a pointer to a howto struct which when invoked,
1356will perform the supplied relocation on data from the architecture
1357noted.
1358
1359[Note] This function will go away.
1360*/
1361
1362 PROTO(CONST struct reloc_howto_struct *,
1363 bfd_reloc_type_lookup,
81f8fee9 1364 (CONST bfd_arch_info_type *arch, bfd_reloc_code_type code));
de7e640d 1365
bded7de2 1366/*
bded7de2
SC
1367*/
1368
b39096a4
SC
1369/*:syms.c*/
1370/* @subsection typedef asymbol
1371An @code{asymbol} has the form:
bded7de2 1372*/
7a276b09 1373
b39096a4
SC
1374typedef struct symbol_cache_entry
1375{
1376/* A pointer to the BFD which owns the symbol. This information is
1377necessary so that a back end can work out what additional (invisible to
1378the application writer) information is carried with the symbol.
bded7de2 1379*/
7a276b09 1380
b39096a4 1381 struct _bfd *the_bfd;
7a276b09 1382
bded7de2 1383/*
b39096a4
SC
1384The text of the symbol. The name is left alone, and not copied - the
1385application may not alter it.
bded7de2
SC
1386*/
1387
b39096a4 1388 CONST char *name;
7a276b09 1389
bded7de2 1390/*
b39096a4 1391The value of the symbol.
bded7de2
SC
1392*/
1393
b39096a4 1394 symvalue value;
7a276b09 1395
bded7de2 1396/*
b39096a4 1397Attributes of a symbol:
bded7de2
SC
1398*/
1399
b39096a4 1400#define BSF_NO_FLAGS 0x00
7a276b09 1401
bded7de2 1402/*
b39096a4
SC
1403The symbol has local scope; @code{static} in @code{C}. The value is
1404the offset into the section of the data.
bded7de2
SC
1405*/
1406
b39096a4 1407#define BSF_LOCAL 0x01
7a276b09 1408
bded7de2 1409/*
b39096a4
SC
1410The symbol has global scope; initialized data in @code{C}. The value
1411is the offset into the section of the data.
bded7de2
SC
1412*/
1413
b39096a4 1414#define BSF_GLOBAL 0x02
7a276b09 1415
bded7de2 1416/*
b39096a4 1417Obsolete
bded7de2
SC
1418*/
1419
b39096a4 1420#define BSF_IMPORT 0x04
a07cc613 1421
bded7de2 1422/*
b39096a4
SC
1423The symbol has global scope, and is exported. The value is the offset
1424into the section of the data.
1425*/
7a276b09 1426
b39096a4 1427#define BSF_EXPORT 0x08
bded7de2 1428
b39096a4
SC
1429/*
1430The symbol is undefined. @code{extern} in @code{C}. The value has no meaning.
7a276b09 1431*/
bded7de2 1432
b39096a4 1433#define BSF_UNDEFINED 0x10
bded7de2
SC
1434
1435/*
b39096a4
SC
1436The symbol is common, initialized to zero; default in @code{C}. The
1437value is the size of the object in bytes.
1438*/
bded7de2 1439
b39096a4 1440#define BSF_FORT_COMM 0x20
bded7de2 1441
b39096a4
SC
1442/*
1443A normal @code{C} symbol would be one of:
1444@code{BSF_LOCAL}, @code{BSF_FORT_COMM}, @code{BSF_UNDEFINED} or @code{BSF_EXPORT|BSD_GLOBAL}
1445
1446The symbol is a debugging record. The value has an arbitary meaning.
bded7de2
SC
1447*/
1448
b39096a4 1449#define BSF_DEBUGGING 0x40
a07cc613 1450
bded7de2 1451/*
b39096a4
SC
1452The symbol has no section attached, any value is the actual value and
1453is not a relative offset to a section.
1454*/
bded7de2 1455
b39096a4
SC
1456#define BSF_ABSOLUTE 0x80
1457
1458/*
1459Used by the linker
7a276b09 1460*/
bded7de2 1461
b39096a4
SC
1462#define BSF_KEEP 0x10000
1463#define BSF_KEEP_G 0x80000
bded7de2 1464
b39096a4
SC
1465/*
1466Unused
1467*/
a07cc613 1468
b39096a4
SC
1469#define BSF_WEAK 0x100000
1470#define BSF_CTOR 0x200000
1471#define BSF_FAKE 0x400000
a07cc613 1472
b39096a4
SC
1473/*
1474The symbol used to be a common symbol, but now it is allocated.
1475*/
a07cc613 1476
b39096a4 1477#define BSF_OLD_COMMON 0x800000
7a276b09 1478
b39096a4
SC
1479/*
1480The default value for common data.
1481*/
7a276b09 1482
b39096a4 1483#define BFD_FORT_COMM_DEFAULT_VALUE 0
a07cc613 1484
b39096a4
SC
1485/*
1486In some files the type of a symbol sometimes alters its location
1487in an output file - ie in coff a @code{ISFCN} symbol which is also @code{C_EXT}
1488symbol appears where it was declared and not at the end of a section.
1489This bit is set by the target BFD part to convey this information.
1490*/
e8929c8d 1491
b39096a4 1492#define BSF_NOT_AT_END 0x40000
e8929c8d 1493
b39096a4
SC
1494/*
1495Signal that the symbol is the label of constructor section.
1496*/
1497
1498#define BSF_CONSTRUCTOR 0x1000000
e8929c8d 1499
bded7de2 1500/*
b39096a4
SC
1501Signal that the symbol is a warning symbol. If the symbol is a warning
1502symbol, then the value field (I know this is tacky) will point to the
1503asymbol which when referenced will cause the warning.
1ac2d1f2 1504*/
bded7de2 1505
b39096a4
SC
1506#define BSF_WARNING 0x2000000
1507
1508/*
1509Signal that the symbol is indirect. The value of the symbol is a
1510pointer to an undefined asymbol which contains the name to use
1511instead.
7a276b09 1512*/
b39096a4
SC
1513
1514#define BSF_INDIRECT 0x4000000
bded7de2
SC
1515
1516/*
b39096a4
SC
1517*/
1518 flagword flags;
bded7de2 1519
b39096a4
SC
1520/*
1521A pointer to the section to which this symbol is relative, or 0 if the
1522symbol is absolute or undefined. Note that it is not sufficient to set
1523this location to 0 to mark a symbol as absolute - the flag
1524@code{BSF_ABSOLUTE} must be set also.
1525*/
2c346475 1526
b39096a4
SC
1527 struct sec *section;
1528
1529/*
1530Back end special data. This is being phased out in favour of making
1531this a union.
7a276b09 1532*/
2c346475 1533
b39096a4
SC
1534 PTR udata;
1535} asymbol;
bded7de2
SC
1536
1537/*
1538
b39096a4
SC
1539 get_symtab_upper_bound
1540Returns the number of bytes required in a vector of pointers to
1541@code{asymbols} for all the symbols in the supplied BFD, including a
1542terminal NULL pointer. If there are no symbols in the BFD, then 0 is
1543returned.
bded7de2 1544*/
b39096a4
SC
1545#define get_symtab_upper_bound(abfd) \
1546 BFD_SEND (abfd, _get_symtab_upper_bound, (abfd))
bded7de2
SC
1547
1548/*
1549
b39096a4
SC
1550 bfd_canonicalize_symtab
1551Supplied a BFD and a pointer to an uninitialized vector of pointers.
1552This reads in the symbols from the BFD, and fills in the table with
1553pointers to the symbols, and a trailing NULL. The routine returns the
1554actual number of symbol pointers not including the NULL.
7a276b09 1555*/
bded7de2 1556
b39096a4
SC
1557#define bfd_canonicalize_symtab(abfd, location) \
1558 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_canonicalize_symtab,\
1559 (abfd, location))
a737c70b 1560
bded7de2 1561/*
b39096a4
SC
1562 bfd_set_symtab
1563Provided a table of pointers to to symbols and a count, writes to the
1564output BFD the symbols when closed.
1ac2d1f2 1565*/
a737c70b 1566
b39096a4 1567 PROTO(boolean, bfd_set_symtab, (bfd *, asymbol **, unsigned int ));
2700c3c7 1568
b39096a4
SC
1569/*
1570
1571 bfd_print_symbol_vandf
1572Prints the value and flags of the symbol supplied to the stream file.
2f60a880
RP
1573*/
1574
b39096a4 1575 PROTO(void, bfd_print_symbol_vandf, (PTR file, asymbol *symbol));
2f60a880
RP
1576
1577/*
1578
b39096a4
SC
1579 bfd_make_empty_symbol
1580This function creates a new @code{asymbol} structure for the BFD, and
1581returns a pointer to it.
1582
1583This routine is necessary, since each back end has private information
1584surrounding the @code{asymbol}. Building your own @code{asymbol} and
1585pointing to it will not create the private information, and will cause
1586problems later on.
2f60a880 1587*/
b39096a4
SC
1588#define bfd_make_empty_symbol(abfd) \
1589 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_make_empty_symbol, (abfd))
2f60a880 1590
b39096a4
SC
1591/*:bfd.c*/
1592/* @section @code{typedef bfd}
2f60a880 1593
b39096a4
SC
1594A BFD is has type @code{bfd}; objects of this type are the cornerstone
1595of any application using @code{libbfd}. References though the BFD and
1596to data in the BFD give the entire BFD functionality.
2f60a880 1597
b39096a4
SC
1598Here is the struct used to define the type @code{bfd}. This contains
1599the major data about the file, and contains pointers to the rest of
1600the data.
2f60a880 1601*/
b39096a4
SC
1602
1603struct _bfd
1604{
1605/* The filename the application opened the BFD with.
1606*/
1607
1608 CONST char *filename;
2f60a880
RP
1609
1610/*
b39096a4 1611A pointer to the target jump table.
1ac2d1f2 1612*/
2f60a880 1613
b39096a4
SC
1614 struct bfd_target *xvec;
1615
1616/*
1617
1618To avoid dragging too many header files into every file that
1619includes @file{bfd.h}, IOSTREAM has been declared as a "char *", and MTIME
1620as a "long". Their correct types, to which they are cast when used,
1621are "FILE *" and "time_t".
1622
1623The iostream is the result of an fopen on the filename.
7a276b09 1624*/
bded7de2 1625
b39096a4
SC
1626 char *iostream;
1627
1628/*
1629Is the file being cached @xref{File Caching}.
bded7de2 1630*/
a07cc613 1631
b39096a4 1632 boolean cacheable;
a07cc613 1633
bded7de2 1634/*
b39096a4
SC
1635Marks whether there was a default target specified when the BFD was
1636opened. This is used to select what matching algorithm to use to chose
1637the back end.
bded7de2
SC
1638*/
1639
b39096a4 1640 boolean target_defaulted;
a07cc613 1641
bded7de2 1642/*
b39096a4
SC
1643The caching routines use these to maintain a least-recently-used list of
1644BFDs (@pxref{File Caching}).
bded7de2
SC
1645*/
1646
b39096a4 1647 struct _bfd *lru_prev, *lru_next;
a07cc613 1648
bded7de2 1649/*
b39096a4
SC
1650When a file is closed by the caching routines, BFD retains state
1651information on the file here:
bded7de2
SC
1652*/
1653
b39096a4 1654 file_ptr where;
a07cc613 1655
bded7de2 1656/*
b39096a4 1657and here:
bded7de2
SC
1658*/
1659
b39096a4 1660 boolean opened_once;
7a276b09 1661
bded7de2 1662/*
b39096a4
SC
1663*/
1664 boolean mtime_set;
1665/* File modified time
bded7de2
SC
1666*/
1667
b39096a4 1668 long mtime;
7a276b09 1669
bded7de2 1670/*
b39096a4 1671Reserved for an unimplemented file locking extension.
bded7de2
SC
1672*/
1673
b39096a4 1674int ifd;
7a276b09 1675
bded7de2 1676/*
b39096a4 1677The format which belongs to the BFD.
bded7de2
SC
1678*/
1679
b39096a4 1680 bfd_format format;
bded7de2
SC
1681
1682/*
b39096a4 1683The direction the BFD was opened with
bded7de2
SC
1684*/
1685
b39096a4
SC
1686 enum bfd_direction {no_direction = 0,
1687 read_direction = 1,
1688 write_direction = 2,
1689 both_direction = 3} direction;
7a276b09 1690
bded7de2 1691/*
b39096a4 1692Format_specific flags
bded7de2
SC
1693*/
1694
b39096a4 1695 flagword flags;
7a276b09 1696
bded7de2 1697/*
b39096a4
SC
1698Currently my_archive is tested before adding origin to anything. I
1699believe that this can become always an add of origin, with origin set
1700to 0 for non archive files.
bded7de2
SC
1701*/
1702
b39096a4 1703 file_ptr origin;
7a276b09 1704
bded7de2 1705/*
b39096a4 1706Remember when output has begun, to stop strange things happening.
bded7de2
SC
1707*/
1708
b39096a4 1709 boolean output_has_begun;
7a276b09 1710
bded7de2 1711/*
b39096a4 1712Pointer to linked list of sections
bded7de2
SC
1713*/
1714
b39096a4 1715 struct sec *sections;
7a276b09 1716
bded7de2 1717/*
b39096a4 1718The number of sections
bded7de2
SC
1719*/
1720
b39096a4 1721 unsigned int section_count;
7a276b09 1722
bded7de2 1723/*
b39096a4
SC
1724Stuff only useful for object files:
1725The start address.
1726*/
7a276b09 1727
b39096a4
SC
1728 bfd_vma start_address;
1729/* Used for input and output
7a276b09 1730*/
bded7de2 1731
b39096a4
SC
1732 unsigned int symcount;
1733/* Symbol table for output BFD
bded7de2 1734*/
19b03b7a 1735
b39096a4 1736 struct symbol_cache_entry **outsymbols;
a07cc613 1737
bded7de2 1738/*
b39096a4 1739Pointer to structure which contains architecture information
bded7de2
SC
1740*/
1741
81f8fee9 1742 struct bfd_arch_info *arch_info;
a07cc613 1743
bded7de2 1744/*
b39096a4 1745Stuff only useful for archives:
bded7de2
SC
1746*/
1747
b39096a4
SC
1748 PTR arelt_data;
1749 struct _bfd *my_archive;
1750 struct _bfd *next;
1751 struct _bfd *archive_head;
1752 boolean has_armap;
9b9c5c39 1753
bded7de2 1754/*
b39096a4 1755Used by the back end to hold private data.
bded7de2
SC
1756*/
1757
b39096a4 1758 PTR tdata;
a07cc613 1759
bded7de2 1760/*
b39096a4 1761Used by the application to hold private data
bded7de2
SC
1762*/
1763
b39096a4 1764 PTR usrdata;
a07cc613 1765
bded7de2 1766/*
b39096a4 1767Where all the allocated stuff under this BFD goes (@pxref{Memory Usage}).
bded7de2
SC
1768*/
1769
b39096a4
SC
1770 struct obstack memory;
1771};
a07cc613 1772
bded7de2 1773/*
b39096a4
SC
1774
1775 bfd_set_start_address
1776
1777Marks the entry point of an output BFD. Returns @code{true} on
1778success, @code{false} otherwise.
bded7de2
SC
1779*/
1780
b39096a4 1781 PROTO(boolean, bfd_set_start_address,(bfd *, bfd_vma));
19b03b7a 1782
bded7de2 1783/*
b39096a4
SC
1784
1785 bfd_get_mtime
1786
1787Return cached file modification time (e.g. as read from archive header
1788for archive members, or from file system if we have been called
1789before); else determine modify time, cache it, and return it.
bded7de2
SC
1790*/
1791
b39096a4 1792 PROTO(long, bfd_get_mtime, (bfd *));
a07cc613 1793
bded7de2 1794/*
b39096a4
SC
1795
1796 stuff
bded7de2
SC
1797*/
1798
b39096a4
SC
1799
1800#define bfd_sizeof_headers(abfd, reloc) \
1801 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_sizeof_headers, (abfd, reloc))
1802
1803#define bfd_find_nearest_line(abfd, section, symbols, offset, filename_ptr, func, line_ptr) \
1804 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_find_nearest_line, (abfd, section, symbols, offset, filename_ptr, func, line_ptr))
1805
1806#define bfd_debug_info_start(abfd) \
1807 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_debug_info_start, (abfd))
1808
1809#define bfd_debug_info_end(abfd) \
1810 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_debug_info_end, (abfd))
1811
1812#define bfd_debug_info_accumulate(abfd, section) \
1813 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_debug_info_accumulate, (abfd, section))
1814
1815#define bfd_stat_arch_elt(abfd, stat) \
1816 BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_stat_arch_elt,(abfd, stat))
1817
1818#define bfd_coff_swap_aux_in(a,e,t,c,i) \
1819 BFD_SEND (a, _bfd_coff_swap_aux_in, (a,e,t,c,i))
1820
1821#define bfd_coff_swap_sym_in(a,e,i) \
1822 BFD_SEND (a, _bfd_coff_swap_sym_in, (a,e,i))
1823
1824#define bfd_coff_swap_lineno_in(a,e,i) \
1825 BFD_SEND ( a, _bfd_coff_swap_lineno_in, (a,e,i))
1826
1827#define bfd_set_arch_mach(abfd, arch, mach)\
1828 BFD_SEND ( abfd, _bfd_set_arch_mach, (abfd, arch, mach))
7f3d9f46 1829
bded7de2 1830/*
bded7de2
SC
1831*/
1832
b39096a4
SC
1833/*:archive.c*/
1834/* bfd_get_next_mapent
1835What this does
1836*/
1837 PROTO(symindex, bfd_get_next_mapent, (bfd *, symindex, carsym **));
7f3d9f46 1838
bded7de2 1839/*
b39096a4
SC
1840
1841 bfd_set_archive_head
1842
1843Used whilst processing archives. Sets the head of the chain of BFDs
1844contained in an archive to @var{new_head}. (see chapter on archives)
bded7de2
SC
1845*/
1846
b39096a4 1847 PROTO(boolean, bfd_set_archive_head, (bfd *output, bfd *new_head));
7a276b09 1848
bded7de2 1849/*
bded7de2 1850
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1851 bfd_get_elt_at_index
1852Return the sub bfd contained within the archive at archive index n.
bded7de2 1853*/
7a276b09 1854
b39096a4 1855 PROTO(bfd *, bfd_get_elt_at_index, (bfd *, int));
7a276b09 1856
bded7de2 1857/*
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1858
1859 bfd_openr_next_archived_file
1860Initially provided a BFD containing an archive and NULL, opens a BFD
1861on the first contained element and returns that. Subsequent calls to
1862bfd_openr_next_archived_file should pass the archive and the previous
1863return value to return a created BFD to the next contained element.
1864NULL is returned when there are no more.
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1865*/
1866
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1867 PROTO(bfd*, bfd_openr_next_archived_file,
1868 (bfd *archive, bfd *previous));
7a276b09 1869
bded7de2 1870/*
b39096a4 1871*/
bded7de2 1872
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1873
1874/*:core.c*/
1875/* bfd_core_file_failing_command
1876Returns a read-only string explaining what program was running when
1877it failed and produced the core file being read
4322f04d 1878*/
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1879
1880 PROTO(CONST char *, bfd_core_file_failing_command, (bfd *));
bded7de2
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1881
1882/*
1883
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1884 bfd_core_file_failing_signal
1885Returns the signal number which caused the core dump which generated
1886the file the BFD is attached to.
bded7de2 1887*/
a07cc613 1888
b39096a4 1889 PROTO(int, bfd_core_file_failing_signal, (bfd *));
a07cc613 1890
bded7de2 1891/*
7f3d9f46 1892
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1893 core_file_matches_executable_p
1894Returns @code{true} if the core file attached to @var{core_bfd} was
1895generated by a run of the executable file attached to @var{exec_bfd},
1896or else @code{false}.
7a276b09 1897*/
b39096a4
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1898 PROTO(boolean, core_file_matches_executable_p,
1899 (bfd *core_bfd, bfd *exec_bfd));
bded7de2
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1900
1901/*
1ac2d1f2 1902*/
bded7de2 1903
1ac2d1f2
RP
1904/*:targets.c*/
1905/* bfd_target
bded7de2 1906@node bfd_target
a737c70b 1907@subsection bfd_target
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1908This structure contains everything that BFD knows about a target.
1909It includes things like its byte order, name, what routines to call
1910to do various operations, etc.
1911
1912Every BFD points to a target structure with its "xvec" member.
1913
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1914Shortcut for declaring fields which are prototyped function pointers,
1915while avoiding anguish on compilers that don't support protos.
1916*/
bded7de2 1917
7a276b09
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1918#define SDEF(ret, name, arglist) \
1919 PROTO(ret,(*name),arglist)
1920#define SDEF_FMT(ret, name, arglist) \
1921 PROTO(ret,(*name[bfd_type_end]),arglist)
a07cc613 1922
bded7de2
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1923/*
1924These macros are used to dispatch to functions through the bfd_target
2f60a880
RP
1925vector. They are used in a number of macros further down in @file{bfd.h}, and
1926are also used when calling various routines by hand inside the BFD
7a276b09
SC
1927implementation. The "arglist" argument must be parenthesized; it
1928contains all the arguments to the called function.
1929*/
bded7de2 1930
7a276b09
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1931#define BFD_SEND(bfd, message, arglist) \
1932 ((*((bfd)->xvec->message)) arglist)
a07cc613 1933
bded7de2 1934/*
2f60a880 1935For operations which index on the BFD format
7a276b09 1936*/
bded7de2 1937
7a276b09
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1938#define BFD_SEND_FMT(bfd, message, arglist) \
1939 (((bfd)->xvec->message[(int)((bfd)->format)]) arglist)
a07cc613 1940
bded7de2
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1941/*
1942This is the struct which defines the type of BFD this is. The
2f60a880 1943"xvec" member of the struct @code{bfd} itself points here. Each module
7a276b09
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1944that implements access to a different target under BFD, defines
1945one of these.
a07cc613 1946
7a276b09
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1947FIXME, these names should be rationalised with the names of the
1948entry points which call them. Too bad we can't have one macro to
1949define them both!
7a276b09 1950*/
bded7de2 1951
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1952typedef struct bfd_target
1953{
a07cc613 1954
bded7de2
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1955/*
1956identifies the kind of target, eg SunOS4, Ultrix, etc
1957*/
1958
7a276b09
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1959 char *name;
1960
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1961/*
1962The "flavour" of a back end is a general indication about the contents
1963of a file.
1964*/
1965
81f8fee9
JG
1966 enum target_flavour {
1967 bfd_target_unknown_flavour,
1968 bfd_target_aout_flavour,
1969 bfd_target_coff_flavour,
1970 bfd_target_elf_flavour,
1971 bfd_target_ieee_flavour,
1972 bfd_target_oasys_flavour,
1973 bfd_target_srec_flavour} flavour;
7a276b09 1974
bded7de2
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1975/*
1976The order of bytes within the data area of a file.
1977*/
1978
7a276b09
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1979 boolean byteorder_big_p;
1980
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1981/*
1982The order of bytes within the header parts of a file.
1983*/
1984
7a276b09
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1985 boolean header_byteorder_big_p;
1986
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1987/*
1988This is a mask of all the flags which an executable may have set -
1989from the set @code{NO_FLAGS}, @code{HAS_RELOC}, ...@code{D_PAGED}.
1990*/
1991
7a276b09
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1992 flagword object_flags;
1993
bded7de2
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1994/*
1995This is a mask of all the flags which a section may have set - from
1996the set @code{SEC_NO_FLAGS}, @code{SEC_ALLOC}, ...@code{SET_NEVER_LOAD}.
1997*/
1998
7a276b09
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1999 flagword section_flags;
2000
bded7de2
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2001/*
2002The pad character for filenames within an archive header.
2003*/
2004
7a276b09
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2005 char ar_pad_char;
2006
bded7de2
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2007/*
2008The maximum number of characters in an archive header.
2009*/
2010
7a276b09
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2011 unsigned short ar_max_namelen;
2012
bded7de2
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2013/*
2014The minimum alignment restriction for any section.
2015*/
2016
7a276b09
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2017 unsigned int align_power_min;
2018
bded7de2
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2019/*
2020Entries for byte swapping for data. These are different to the other
2f60a880 2021entry points, since they don't take BFD as first arg. Certain other handlers
bded7de2
SC
2022could do the same.
2023*/
2024
fcc654cb
SC
2025 SDEF (bfd_vma, bfd_getx64, (bfd_byte *));
2026 SDEF (void, bfd_putx64, (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *));
2027 SDEF (bfd_vma, bfd_getx32, (bfd_byte *));
2028 SDEF (void, bfd_putx32, (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *));
2029 SDEF (bfd_vma, bfd_getx16, (bfd_byte *));
2030 SDEF (void, bfd_putx16, (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *));
7a276b09 2031
bded7de2
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2032/*
2033Byte swapping for the headers
2034*/
2035
fcc654cb
SC
2036 SDEF (bfd_vma, bfd_h_getx64, (bfd_byte *));
2037 SDEF (void, bfd_h_putx64, (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *));
2038 SDEF (bfd_vma, bfd_h_getx32, (bfd_byte *));
2039 SDEF (void, bfd_h_putx32, (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *));
2040 SDEF (bfd_vma, bfd_h_getx16, (bfd_byte *));
2041 SDEF (void, bfd_h_putx16, (bfd_vma, bfd_byte *));
7a276b09 2042
bded7de2
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2043/*
2044Format dependent routines, these turn into vectors of entry points
2045within the target vector structure; one for each format to check.
2046
2047Check the format of a file being read. Return bfd_target * or zero.
2048*/
2049
7a276b09
SC
2050 SDEF_FMT (struct bfd_target *, _bfd_check_format, (bfd *));
2051
bded7de2
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2052/*
2053Set the format of a file being written.
2054*/
2055
7a276b09
SC
2056 SDEF_FMT (boolean, _bfd_set_format, (bfd *));
2057
bded7de2
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2058/*
2059Write cached information into a file being written, at bfd_close.
2060*/
2061
7a276b09
SC
2062 SDEF_FMT (boolean, _bfd_write_contents, (bfd *));
2063
bded7de2
SC
2064/*
2065The following functions are defined in @code{JUMP_TABLE}. The idea is
2066that the back end writer of @code{foo} names all the routines
2067@code{foo_}@var{entry_point}, @code{JUMP_TABLE} will built the entries
2068in this structure in the right order.
2069
2070Core file entry points
2071*/
2072
7a276b09
SC
2073 SDEF (char *, _core_file_failing_command, (bfd *));
2074 SDEF (int, _core_file_failing_signal, (bfd *));
2075 SDEF (boolean, _core_file_matches_executable_p, (bfd *, bfd *));
2076
bded7de2
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2077/*
2078Archive entry points
2079*/
2080
7a276b09
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2081 SDEF (boolean, _bfd_slurp_armap, (bfd *));
2082 SDEF (boolean, _bfd_slurp_extended_name_table, (bfd *));
2083 SDEF (void, _bfd_truncate_arname, (bfd *, CONST char *, char *));
2084 SDEF (boolean, write_armap, (bfd *arch,
2085 unsigned int elength,
2086 struct orl *map,
2087 int orl_count,
2088 int stridx));
2089
bded7de2
SC
2090/*
2091Standard stuff.
2092*/
2093
7a276b09
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2094 SDEF (boolean, _close_and_cleanup, (bfd *));
2095 SDEF (boolean, _bfd_set_section_contents, (bfd *, sec_ptr, PTR,
2096 file_ptr, bfd_size_type));
2097 SDEF (boolean, _bfd_get_section_contents, (bfd *, sec_ptr, PTR,
2098 file_ptr, bfd_size_type));
2099 SDEF (boolean, _new_section_hook, (bfd *, sec_ptr));
2100
bded7de2
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2101/*
2102Symbols and reloctions
2103*/
2104
de7e640d 2105 SDEF (unsigned int, _get_symtab_upper_bound, (bfd *));
7a276b09
SC
2106 SDEF (unsigned int, _bfd_canonicalize_symtab,
2107 (bfd *, struct symbol_cache_entry **));
2108 SDEF (unsigned int, _get_reloc_upper_bound, (bfd *, sec_ptr));
2109 SDEF (unsigned int, _bfd_canonicalize_reloc, (bfd *, sec_ptr, arelent **,
2110 struct symbol_cache_entry**));
2111 SDEF (struct symbol_cache_entry *, _bfd_make_empty_symbol, (bfd *));
2112 SDEF (void, _bfd_print_symbol, (bfd *, PTR, struct symbol_cache_entry *,
81f8fee9 2113 bfd_print_symbol_type));
7a276b09
SC
2114#define bfd_print_symbol(b,p,s,e) BFD_SEND(b, _bfd_print_symbol, (b,p,s,e))
2115 SDEF (alent *, _get_lineno, (bfd *, struct symbol_cache_entry *));
2116
2117 SDEF (boolean, _bfd_set_arch_mach, (bfd *, enum bfd_architecture,
2118 unsigned long));
2119
2120 SDEF (bfd *, openr_next_archived_file, (bfd *arch, bfd *prev));
2121 SDEF (boolean, _bfd_find_nearest_line,
2122 (bfd *abfd, struct sec *section,
2123 struct symbol_cache_entry **symbols,bfd_vma offset,
2124 CONST char **file, CONST char **func, unsigned int *line));
2125 SDEF (int, _bfd_stat_arch_elt, (bfd *, struct stat *));
2126
2127 SDEF (int, _bfd_sizeof_headers, (bfd *, boolean));
2128
2129 SDEF (void, _bfd_debug_info_start, (bfd *));
2130 SDEF (void, _bfd_debug_info_end, (bfd *));
2131 SDEF (void, _bfd_debug_info_accumulate, (bfd *, struct sec *));
2132
bded7de2
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2133/*
2134Special entry points for gdb to swap in coff symbol table parts
2135*/
2136
7a276b09
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2137 SDEF(void, _bfd_coff_swap_aux_in,(
2138 bfd *abfd ,
2139 PTR ext,
2140 int type,
2141 int class ,
2142 PTR in));
2143
2144 SDEF(void, _bfd_coff_swap_sym_in,(
2145 bfd *abfd ,
2146 PTR ext,
2147 PTR in));
2148
2149 SDEF(void, _bfd_coff_swap_lineno_in, (
2150 bfd *abfd,
2151 PTR ext,
2152 PTR in));
2153
2154} bfd_target;
2155
bded7de2
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2156/*
2157
2158*i bfd_find_target
2159Returns a pointer to the transfer vector for the object target
7a276b09
SC
2160named target_name. If target_name is NULL, chooses the one in the
2161environment variable GNUTARGET; if that is null or not defined then
2162the first entry in the target list is chosen. Passing in the
2163string "default" or setting the environment variable to "default"
2164will cause the first entry in the target list to be returned,
2f60a880
RP
2165and "target_defaulted" will be set in the BFD. This causes
2166@code{bfd_check_format} to loop over all the targets to find the one
7a276b09
SC
2167that matches the file being read.
2168*/
bded7de2
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2169 PROTO(bfd_target *, bfd_find_target,(CONST char *, bfd *));
2170
2171/*
2172
2173*i bfd_target_list
2174This function returns a freshly malloced NULL-terminated vector of the
2f60a880 2175names of all the valid BFD targets. Do not modify the names
7a276b09 2176*/
bded7de2
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2177 PROTO(CONST char **,bfd_target_list,());
2178
2179/*
1ac2d1f2 2180*/
bded7de2 2181
bded7de2 2182
1ac2d1f2
RP
2183/*:format.c*/
2184/* *i bfd_check_format
2f60a880
RP
2185This routine is supplied a BFD and a format. It attempts to verify if
2186the file attached to the BFD is indeed compatible with the format
7a276b09
SC
2187specified (ie, one of @code{bfd_object}, @code{bfd_archive} or
2188@code{bfd_core}).
2189
2f60a880 2190If the BFD has been set to a specific @var{target} before the call,
7a276b09
SC
2191only the named target and format combination will be checked. If the
2192target has not been set, or has been set to @code{default} then all
2193the known target backends will be interrogated to determine a match.
2194
2195The function returns @code{true} on success, otherwise @code{false}
2196with one of the following error codes:
2197@table @code
2198@item
2199invalid_operation
2200if @code{format} is not one of @code{bfd_object}, @code{bfd_archive}
2201or @code{bfd_core}.
2202@item system_call_error
2203if an error occured during a read - even some file mismatches can
2204cause system_call_errros
2205@item file_not_recognised
2206none of the backends recognised the file format
2207@item file_ambiguously_recognized
2208more than one backend recognised the file format.
2209@end table
2210*/
bded7de2
SC
2211 PROTO(boolean, bfd_check_format, (bfd *abfd, bfd_format format));
2212
2213/*
2214
2215*i bfd_set_format
2f60a880
RP
2216This function sets the file format of the supplied BFD to the format
2217requested. If the target set in the BFD does not support the format
2218requested, the format is illegal or the BFD is not open for writing
7a276b09
SC
2219than an error occurs.
2220*/
bded7de2
SC
2221 PROTO(boolean,bfd_set_format,(bfd *, bfd_format));
2222
2223/*
2224
2225*i bfd_format_string
2226This function takes one argument, and enumerated type (bfd_format) and
7a276b09
SC
2227returns a pointer to a const string "invalid", "object", "archive",
2228"core" or "unknown" depending upon the value of the enumeration.
2229*/
bded7de2 2230 PROTO(CONST char *, bfd_format_string, (bfd_format));
a07cc613 2231
bded7de2 2232/*
1ac2d1f2 2233*/
bded7de2
SC
2234
2235#endif
b39096a4
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2236
2237
2238
2239
2240
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