Do not include config.h directly
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / gdbtypes.h
1
2 /* Internal type definitions for GDB.
3
4 Copyright (C) 1992-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 Contributed by Cygnus Support, using pieces from other GDB modules.
7
8 This file is part of GDB.
9
10 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
12 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
13 (at your option) any later version.
14
15 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
16 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
17 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
18 GNU General Public License for more details.
19
20 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
21 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
22
23 #if !defined (GDBTYPES_H)
24 #define GDBTYPES_H 1
25
26 /* * \page gdbtypes GDB Types
27
28 GDB represents all the different kinds of types in programming
29 languages using a common representation defined in gdbtypes.h.
30
31 The main data structure is main_type; it consists of a code (such
32 as #TYPE_CODE_ENUM for enumeration types), a number of
33 generally-useful fields such as the printable name, and finally a
34 field main_type::type_specific that is a union of info specific to
35 particular languages or other special cases (such as calling
36 convention).
37
38 The available type codes are defined in enum #type_code. The enum
39 includes codes both for types that are common across a variety
40 of languages, and for types that are language-specific.
41
42 Most accesses to type fields go through macros such as
43 #TYPE_CODE(thistype) and #TYPE_FN_FIELD_CONST(thisfn, n). These are
44 written such that they can be used as both rvalues and lvalues.
45 */
46
47 #include "hashtab.h"
48
49 /* Forward declarations for prototypes. */
50 struct field;
51 struct block;
52 struct value_print_options;
53 struct language_defn;
54
55 /* These declarations are DWARF-specific as some of the gdbtypes.h data types
56 are already DWARF-specific. */
57
58 /* * Offset relative to the start of its containing CU (compilation
59 unit). */
60 typedef struct
61 {
62 unsigned int cu_off;
63 } cu_offset;
64
65 /* * Offset relative to the start of its .debug_info or .debug_types
66 section. */
67
68 typedef struct
69 {
70 unsigned int sect_off;
71 } sect_offset;
72
73 /* Some macros for char-based bitfields. */
74
75 #define B_SET(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] |= (1 << ((x)&7)))
76 #define B_CLR(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] &= ~(1 << ((x)&7)))
77 #define B_TST(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] & (1 << ((x)&7)))
78 #define B_TYPE unsigned char
79 #define B_BYTES(x) ( 1 + ((x)>>3) )
80 #define B_CLRALL(a,x) memset ((a), 0, B_BYTES(x))
81
82 /* * Different kinds of data types are distinguished by the `code'
83 field. */
84
85 enum type_code
86 {
87 TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING = -1, /**< Deprecated */
88 TYPE_CODE_UNDEF = 0, /**< Not used; catches errors */
89 TYPE_CODE_PTR, /**< Pointer type */
90
91 /* * Array type with lower & upper bounds.
92
93 Regardless of the language, GDB represents multidimensional
94 array types the way C does: as arrays of arrays. So an
95 instance of a GDB array type T can always be seen as a series
96 of instances of TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (T) laid out sequentially in
97 memory.
98
99 Row-major languages like C lay out multi-dimensional arrays so
100 that incrementing the rightmost index in a subscripting
101 expression results in the smallest change in the address of the
102 element referred to. Column-major languages like Fortran lay
103 them out so that incrementing the leftmost index results in the
104 smallest change.
105
106 This means that, in column-major languages, working our way
107 from type to target type corresponds to working through indices
108 from right to left, not left to right. */
109 TYPE_CODE_ARRAY,
110
111 TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, /**< C struct or Pascal record */
112 TYPE_CODE_UNION, /**< C union or Pascal variant part */
113 TYPE_CODE_ENUM, /**< Enumeration type */
114 TYPE_CODE_FLAGS, /**< Bit flags type */
115 TYPE_CODE_FUNC, /**< Function type */
116 TYPE_CODE_INT, /**< Integer type */
117
118 /* * Floating type. This is *NOT* a complex type. Beware, there
119 are parts of GDB which bogusly assume that TYPE_CODE_FLT can
120 mean complex. */
121 TYPE_CODE_FLT,
122
123 /* * Void type. The length field specifies the length (probably
124 always one) which is used in pointer arithmetic involving
125 pointers to this type, but actually dereferencing such a
126 pointer is invalid; a void type has no length and no actual
127 representation in memory or registers. A pointer to a void
128 type is a generic pointer. */
129 TYPE_CODE_VOID,
130
131 TYPE_CODE_SET, /**< Pascal sets */
132 TYPE_CODE_RANGE, /**< Range (integers within spec'd bounds). */
133
134 /* * A string type which is like an array of character but prints
135 differently. It does not contain a length field as Pascal
136 strings (for many Pascals, anyway) do; if we want to deal with
137 such strings, we should use a new type code. */
138 TYPE_CODE_STRING,
139
140 /* * Unknown type. The length field is valid if we were able to
141 deduce that much about the type, or 0 if we don't even know
142 that. */
143 TYPE_CODE_ERROR,
144
145 /* C++ */
146 TYPE_CODE_METHOD, /**< Method type */
147
148 /* * Pointer-to-member-function type. This describes how to access a
149 particular member function of a class (possibly a virtual
150 member function). The representation may vary between different
151 C++ ABIs. */
152 TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR,
153
154 /* * Pointer-to-member type. This is the offset within a class to
155 some particular data member. The only currently supported
156 representation uses an unbiased offset, with -1 representing
157 NULL; this is used by the Itanium C++ ABI (used by GCC on all
158 platforms). */
159 TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR,
160
161 TYPE_CODE_REF, /**< C++ Reference types */
162
163 TYPE_CODE_CHAR, /**< *real* character type */
164
165 /* * Boolean type. 0 is false, 1 is true, and other values are
166 non-boolean (e.g. FORTRAN "logical" used as unsigned int). */
167 TYPE_CODE_BOOL,
168
169 /* Fortran */
170 TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX, /**< Complex float */
171
172 TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF,
173
174 TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE, /**< C++ namespace. */
175
176 TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT, /**< Decimal floating point. */
177
178 TYPE_CODE_MODULE, /**< Fortran module. */
179
180 /* * Internal function type. */
181 TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION,
182
183 /* * Methods implemented in extension languages. */
184 TYPE_CODE_XMETHOD
185 };
186
187 /* * For now allow source to use TYPE_CODE_CLASS for C++ classes, as
188 an alias for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT. This is for DWARF, which has a
189 distinct "class" attribute. Perhaps we should actually have a
190 separate TYPE_CODE so that we can print "class" or "struct"
191 depending on what the debug info said. It's not clear we should
192 bother. */
193
194 #define TYPE_CODE_CLASS TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
195
196 /* * Some constants representing each bit field in the main_type. See
197 the bit-field-specific macros, below, for documentation of each
198 constant in this enum. These enum values are only used with
199 init_type. Note that the values are chosen not to conflict with
200 type_instance_flag_value; this lets init_type error-check its
201 input. */
202
203 enum type_flag_value
204 {
205 TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED = (1 << 8),
206 TYPE_FLAG_NOSIGN = (1 << 9),
207 TYPE_FLAG_STUB = (1 << 10),
208 TYPE_FLAG_TARGET_STUB = (1 << 11),
209 TYPE_FLAG_STATIC = (1 << 12),
210 TYPE_FLAG_PROTOTYPED = (1 << 13),
211 TYPE_FLAG_INCOMPLETE = (1 << 14),
212 TYPE_FLAG_VARARGS = (1 << 15),
213 TYPE_FLAG_VECTOR = (1 << 16),
214 TYPE_FLAG_FIXED_INSTANCE = (1 << 17),
215 TYPE_FLAG_STUB_SUPPORTED = (1 << 18),
216 TYPE_FLAG_GNU_IFUNC = (1 << 19),
217
218 /* * Used for error-checking. */
219 TYPE_FLAG_MIN = TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED
220 };
221
222 /* * Some bits for the type's instance_flags word. See the macros
223 below for documentation on each bit. Note that if you add a value
224 here, you must update the enum type_flag_value as well. */
225
226 enum type_instance_flag_value
227 {
228 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CONST = (1 << 0),
229 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_VOLATILE = (1 << 1),
230 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CODE_SPACE = (1 << 2),
231 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_DATA_SPACE = (1 << 3),
232 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1 = (1 << 4),
233 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_2 = (1 << 5),
234 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_NOTTEXT = (1 << 6),
235 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_RESTRICT = (1 << 7)
236 };
237
238 /* * Unsigned integer type. If this is not set for a TYPE_CODE_INT,
239 the type is signed (unless TYPE_FLAG_NOSIGN (below) is set). */
240
241 #define TYPE_UNSIGNED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_unsigned)
242
243 /* * No sign for this type. In C++, "char", "signed char", and
244 "unsigned char" are distinct types; so we need an extra flag to
245 indicate the absence of a sign! */
246
247 #define TYPE_NOSIGN(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_nosign)
248
249 /* * This appears in a type's flags word if it is a stub type (e.g.,
250 if someone referenced a type that wasn't defined in a source file
251 via (struct sir_not_appearing_in_this_film *)). */
252
253 #define TYPE_STUB(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_stub)
254
255 /* * The target type of this type is a stub type, and this type needs
256 to be updated if it gets un-stubbed in check_typedef. Used for
257 arrays and ranges, in which TYPE_LENGTH of the array/range gets set
258 based on the TYPE_LENGTH of the target type. Also, set for
259 TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF. */
260
261 #define TYPE_TARGET_STUB(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_target_stub)
262
263 /* * Static type. If this is set, the corresponding type had
264 a static modifier.
265 Note: This may be unnecessary, since static data members
266 are indicated by other means (bitpos == -1). */
267
268 #define TYPE_STATIC(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_static)
269
270 /* * This is a function type which appears to have a prototype. We
271 need this for function calls in order to tell us if it's necessary
272 to coerce the args, or to just do the standard conversions. This
273 is used with a short field. */
274
275 #define TYPE_PROTOTYPED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_prototyped)
276
277 /* * This flag is used to indicate that processing for this type
278 is incomplete.
279
280 (Mostly intended for HP platforms, where class methods, for
281 instance, can be encountered before their classes in the debug
282 info; the incomplete type has to be marked so that the class and
283 the method can be assigned correct types.) */
284
285 #define TYPE_INCOMPLETE(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_incomplete)
286
287 /* * FIXME drow/2002-06-03: Only used for methods, but applies as well
288 to functions. */
289
290 #define TYPE_VARARGS(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_varargs)
291
292 /* * Identify a vector type. Gcc is handling this by adding an extra
293 attribute to the array type. We slurp that in as a new flag of a
294 type. This is used only in dwarf2read.c. */
295 #define TYPE_VECTOR(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_vector)
296
297 /* * The debugging formats (especially STABS) do not contain enough
298 information to represent all Ada types---especially those whose
299 size depends on dynamic quantities. Therefore, the GNAT Ada
300 compiler includes extra information in the form of additional type
301 definitions connected by naming conventions. This flag indicates
302 that the type is an ordinary (unencoded) GDB type that has been
303 created from the necessary run-time information, and does not need
304 further interpretation. Optionally marks ordinary, fixed-size GDB
305 type. */
306
307 #define TYPE_FIXED_INSTANCE(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_fixed_instance)
308
309 /* * This debug target supports TYPE_STUB(t). In the unsupported case
310 we have to rely on NFIELDS to be zero etc., see TYPE_IS_OPAQUE().
311 TYPE_STUB(t) with !TYPE_STUB_SUPPORTED(t) may exist if we only
312 guessed the TYPE_STUB(t) value (see dwarfread.c). */
313
314 #define TYPE_STUB_SUPPORTED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_stub_supported)
315
316 /* * Not textual. By default, GDB treats all single byte integers as
317 characters (or elements of strings) unless this flag is set. */
318
319 #define TYPE_NOTTEXT(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_NOTTEXT)
320
321 /* * Used only for TYPE_CODE_FUNC where it specifies the real function
322 address is returned by this function call. TYPE_TARGET_TYPE
323 determines the final returned function type to be presented to
324 user. */
325
326 #define TYPE_GNU_IFUNC(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_gnu_ifunc)
327
328 /* * Type owner. If TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED is true, the type is owned by
329 the objfile retrieved as TYPE_OBJFILE. Otherweise, the type is
330 owned by an architecture; TYPE_OBJFILE is NULL in this case. */
331
332 #define TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_objfile_owned)
333 #define TYPE_OWNER(t) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(t)->owner
334 #define TYPE_OBJFILE(t) (TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED(t)? TYPE_OWNER(t).objfile : NULL)
335
336 /* * True if this type was declared using the "class" keyword. This is
337 only valid for C++ structure and enum types. If false, a structure
338 was declared as a "struct"; if true it was declared "class". For
339 enum types, this is true when "enum class" or "enum struct" was
340 used to declare the type.. */
341
342 #define TYPE_DECLARED_CLASS(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_declared_class)
343
344 /* * True if this type is a "flag" enum. A flag enum is one where all
345 the values are pairwise disjoint when "and"ed together. This
346 affects how enum values are printed. */
347
348 #define TYPE_FLAG_ENUM(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_flag_enum)
349
350 /* * Constant type. If this is set, the corresponding type has a
351 const modifier. */
352
353 #define TYPE_CONST(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CONST)
354
355 /* * Volatile type. If this is set, the corresponding type has a
356 volatile modifier. */
357
358 #define TYPE_VOLATILE(t) \
359 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_VOLATILE)
360
361 /* * Restrict type. If this is set, the corresponding type has a
362 restrict modifier. */
363
364 #define TYPE_RESTRICT(t) \
365 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_RESTRICT)
366
367 /* * Instruction-space delimited type. This is for Harvard architectures
368 which have separate instruction and data address spaces (and perhaps
369 others).
370
371 GDB usually defines a flat address space that is a superset of the
372 architecture's two (or more) address spaces, but this is an extension
373 of the architecture's model.
374
375 If TYPE_FLAG_INST is set, an object of the corresponding type
376 resides in instruction memory, even if its address (in the extended
377 flat address space) does not reflect this.
378
379 Similarly, if TYPE_FLAG_DATA is set, then an object of the
380 corresponding type resides in the data memory space, even if
381 this is not indicated by its (flat address space) address.
382
383 If neither flag is set, the default space for functions / methods
384 is instruction space, and for data objects is data memory. */
385
386 #define TYPE_CODE_SPACE(t) \
387 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CODE_SPACE)
388
389 #define TYPE_DATA_SPACE(t) \
390 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_DATA_SPACE)
391
392 /* * Address class flags. Some environments provide for pointers
393 whose size is different from that of a normal pointer or address
394 types where the bits are interpreted differently than normal
395 addresses. The TYPE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_n flags may be used in
396 target specific ways to represent these different types of address
397 classes. */
398
399 #define TYPE_ADDRESS_CLASS_1(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(t) \
400 & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1)
401 #define TYPE_ADDRESS_CLASS_2(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(t) \
402 & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_2)
403 #define TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_ALL \
404 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1 | TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_2)
405 #define TYPE_ADDRESS_CLASS_ALL(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(t) \
406 & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_ALL)
407
408 /* * Used to store a dynamic property. */
409
410 struct dynamic_prop
411 {
412 /* Determine which field of the union dynamic_prop.data is used. */
413 enum
414 {
415 PROP_UNDEFINED, /* Not defined. */
416 PROP_CONST, /* Constant. */
417 PROP_LOCEXPR, /* Location expression. */
418 PROP_LOCLIST /* Location list. */
419 } kind;
420
421 /* Storage for dynamic or static value. */
422 union data
423 {
424 /* Storage for constant property. */
425
426 LONGEST const_val;
427
428 /* Storage for dynamic property. */
429
430 void *baton;
431 } data;
432 };
433
434
435 /* * Determine which field of the union main_type.fields[x].loc is
436 used. */
437
438 enum field_loc_kind
439 {
440 FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS, /**< bitpos */
441 FIELD_LOC_KIND_ENUMVAL, /**< enumval */
442 FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSADDR, /**< physaddr */
443 FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSNAME, /**< physname */
444 FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK /**< dwarf_block */
445 };
446
447 /* * A discriminant to determine which field in the
448 main_type.type_specific union is being used, if any.
449
450 For types such as TYPE_CODE_FLT or TYPE_CODE_FUNC, the use of this
451 discriminant is really redundant, as we know from the type code
452 which field is going to be used. As such, it would be possible to
453 reduce the size of this enum in order to save a bit or two for
454 other fields of struct main_type. But, since we still have extra
455 room , and for the sake of clarity and consistency, we treat all fields
456 of the union the same way. */
457
458 enum type_specific_kind
459 {
460 TYPE_SPECIFIC_NONE,
461 TYPE_SPECIFIC_CPLUS_STUFF,
462 TYPE_SPECIFIC_GNAT_STUFF,
463 TYPE_SPECIFIC_FLOATFORMAT,
464 TYPE_SPECIFIC_FUNC
465 };
466
467 /* * Main structure representing a type in GDB.
468
469 This structure is space-critical. Its layout has been tweaked to
470 reduce the space used. */
471
472 struct main_type
473 {
474 /* * Code for kind of type. */
475
476 ENUM_BITFIELD(type_code) code : 8;
477
478 /* * Flags about this type. These fields appear at this location
479 because they packs nicely here. See the TYPE_* macros for
480 documentation about these fields. */
481
482 unsigned int flag_unsigned : 1;
483 unsigned int flag_nosign : 1;
484 unsigned int flag_stub : 1;
485 unsigned int flag_target_stub : 1;
486 unsigned int flag_static : 1;
487 unsigned int flag_prototyped : 1;
488 unsigned int flag_incomplete : 1;
489 unsigned int flag_varargs : 1;
490 unsigned int flag_vector : 1;
491 unsigned int flag_stub_supported : 1;
492 unsigned int flag_gnu_ifunc : 1;
493 unsigned int flag_fixed_instance : 1;
494 unsigned int flag_objfile_owned : 1;
495
496 /* * True if this type was declared with "class" rather than
497 "struct". */
498
499 unsigned int flag_declared_class : 1;
500
501 /* * True if this is an enum type with disjoint values. This
502 affects how the enum is printed. */
503
504 unsigned int flag_flag_enum : 1;
505
506 /* * A discriminant telling us which field of the type_specific
507 union is being used for this type, if any. */
508
509 ENUM_BITFIELD(type_specific_kind) type_specific_field : 3;
510
511 /* * Number of fields described for this type. This field appears
512 at this location because it packs nicely here. */
513
514 short nfields;
515
516 /* * Field number of the virtual function table pointer in
517 VPTR_BASETYPE. If -1, we were unable to find the virtual
518 function table pointer in initial symbol reading, and
519 get_vptr_fieldno should be called to find it if possible.
520 get_vptr_fieldno will update this field if possible. Otherwise
521 the value is left at -1.
522
523 Unused if this type does not have virtual functions.
524
525 This field appears at this location because it packs nicely here. */
526
527 short vptr_fieldno;
528
529 /* * Name of this type, or NULL if none.
530
531 This is used for printing only, except by poorly designed C++
532 code. For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the
533 VAR_DOMAIN. This is generally allocated in the objfile's
534 obstack. However coffread.c uses malloc. */
535
536 const char *name;
537
538 /* * Tag name for this type, or NULL if none. This means that the
539 name of the type consists of a keyword followed by the tag name.
540 Which keyword is determined by the type code ("struct" for
541 TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, etc.). As far as I know C/C++ are the only
542 languages with this feature.
543
544 This is used for printing only, except by poorly designed C++ code.
545 For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the STRUCT_DOMAIN.
546 One more legitimate use is that if TYPE_FLAG_STUB is set, this is
547 the name to use to look for definitions in other files. */
548
549 const char *tag_name;
550
551 /* * Every type is now associated with a particular objfile, and the
552 type is allocated on the objfile_obstack for that objfile. One
553 problem however, is that there are times when gdb allocates new
554 types while it is not in the process of reading symbols from a
555 particular objfile. Fortunately, these happen when the type
556 being created is a derived type of an existing type, such as in
557 lookup_pointer_type(). So we can just allocate the new type
558 using the same objfile as the existing type, but to do this we
559 need a backpointer to the objfile from the existing type. Yes
560 this is somewhat ugly, but without major overhaul of the internal
561 type system, it can't be avoided for now. */
562
563 union type_owner
564 {
565 struct objfile *objfile;
566 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
567 } owner;
568
569 /* * For a pointer type, describes the type of object pointed to.
570 - For an array type, describes the type of the elements.
571 - For a function or method type, describes the type of the return value.
572 - For a range type, describes the type of the full range.
573 - For a complex type, describes the type of each coordinate.
574 - For a special record or union type encoding a dynamic-sized type
575 in GNAT, a memoized pointer to a corresponding static version of
576 the type.
577 - Unused otherwise. */
578
579 struct type *target_type;
580
581 /* * For structure and union types, a description of each field.
582 For set and pascal array types, there is one "field",
583 whose type is the domain type of the set or array.
584 For range types, there are two "fields",
585 the minimum and maximum values (both inclusive).
586 For enum types, each possible value is described by one "field".
587 For a function or method type, a "field" for each parameter.
588 For C++ classes, there is one field for each base class (if it is
589 a derived class) plus one field for each class data member. Member
590 functions are recorded elsewhere.
591
592 Using a pointer to a separate array of fields
593 allows all types to have the same size, which is useful
594 because we can allocate the space for a type before
595 we know what to put in it. */
596
597 union
598 {
599 struct field
600 {
601 union field_location
602 {
603 /* * Position of this field, counting in bits from start of
604 containing structure. For gdbarch_bits_big_endian=1
605 targets, it is the bit offset to the MSB. For
606 gdbarch_bits_big_endian=0 targets, it is the bit offset to
607 the LSB. */
608
609 int bitpos;
610
611 /* * Enum value. */
612 LONGEST enumval;
613
614 /* * For a static field, if TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_HAS_ADDR then
615 physaddr is the location (in the target) of the static
616 field. Otherwise, physname is the mangled label of the
617 static field. */
618
619 CORE_ADDR physaddr;
620 const char *physname;
621
622 /* * The field location can be computed by evaluating the
623 following DWARF block. Its DATA is allocated on
624 objfile_obstack - no CU load is needed to access it. */
625
626 struct dwarf2_locexpr_baton *dwarf_block;
627 }
628 loc;
629
630 /* * For a function or member type, this is 1 if the argument is
631 marked artificial. Artificial arguments should not be shown
632 to the user. For TYPE_CODE_RANGE it is set if the specific
633 bound is not defined. */
634 unsigned int artificial : 1;
635
636 /* * Discriminant for union field_location. */
637 ENUM_BITFIELD(field_loc_kind) loc_kind : 3;
638
639 /* * Size of this field, in bits, or zero if not packed.
640 If non-zero in an array type, indicates the element size in
641 bits (used only in Ada at the moment).
642 For an unpacked field, the field's type's length
643 says how many bytes the field occupies. */
644
645 unsigned int bitsize : 28;
646
647 /* * In a struct or union type, type of this field.
648 - In a function or member type, type of this argument.
649 - In an array type, the domain-type of the array. */
650
651 struct type *type;
652
653 /* * Name of field, value or argument.
654 NULL for range bounds, array domains, and member function
655 arguments. */
656
657 const char *name;
658 } *fields;
659
660 /* * Union member used for range types. */
661
662 struct range_bounds
663 {
664 /* * Low bound of range. */
665
666 struct dynamic_prop low;
667
668 /* * High bound of range. */
669
670 struct dynamic_prop high;
671
672 /* True if HIGH range bound contains the number of elements in the
673 subrange. This affects how the final hight bound is computed. */
674
675 int flag_upper_bound_is_count : 1;
676
677 /* True if LOW or/and HIGH are resolved into a static bound from
678 a dynamic one. */
679
680 int flag_bound_evaluated : 1;
681 } *bounds;
682
683 } flds_bnds;
684
685 /* * For types with virtual functions (TYPE_CODE_STRUCT),
686 VPTR_BASETYPE is the base class which defined the virtual
687 function table pointer.
688
689 For types that are pointer to member types (TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR,
690 TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR), VPTR_BASETYPE is the type that this pointer
691 is a member of.
692
693 For method types (TYPE_CODE_METHOD), VPTR_BASETYPE is the aggregate
694 type that contains the method.
695
696 Unused otherwise. */
697
698 struct type *vptr_basetype;
699
700 /* * Slot to point to additional language-specific fields of this
701 type. */
702
703 union type_specific
704 {
705 /* * CPLUS_STUFF is for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT. It is initialized to
706 point to cplus_struct_default, a default static instance of a
707 struct cplus_struct_type. */
708
709 struct cplus_struct_type *cplus_stuff;
710
711 /* * GNAT_STUFF is for types for which the GNAT Ada compiler
712 provides additional information. */
713
714 struct gnat_aux_type *gnat_stuff;
715
716 /* * FLOATFORMAT is for TYPE_CODE_FLT. It is a pointer to two
717 floatformat objects that describe the floating-point value
718 that resides within the type. The first is for big endian
719 targets and the second is for little endian targets. */
720
721 const struct floatformat **floatformat;
722
723 /* * For TYPE_CODE_FUNC types, */
724
725 struct func_type *func_stuff;
726 } type_specific;
727 };
728
729 /* * A ``struct type'' describes a particular instance of a type, with
730 some particular qualification. */
731
732 struct type
733 {
734 /* * Type that is a pointer to this type.
735 NULL if no such pointer-to type is known yet.
736 The debugger may add the address of such a type
737 if it has to construct one later. */
738
739 struct type *pointer_type;
740
741 /* * C++: also need a reference type. */
742
743 struct type *reference_type;
744
745 /* * Variant chain. This points to a type that differs from this
746 one only in qualifiers and length. Currently, the possible
747 qualifiers are const, volatile, code-space, data-space, and
748 address class. The length may differ only when one of the
749 address class flags are set. The variants are linked in a
750 circular ring and share MAIN_TYPE. */
751
752 struct type *chain;
753
754 /* * Flags specific to this instance of the type, indicating where
755 on the ring we are.
756
757 For TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF the flags of the typedef type should be
758 binary or-ed with the target type, with a special case for
759 address class and space class. For example if this typedef does
760 not specify any new qualifiers, TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS is 0 and the
761 instance flags are completely inherited from the target type. No
762 qualifiers can be cleared by the typedef. See also
763 check_typedef. */
764 int instance_flags;
765
766 /* * Length of storage for a value of this type. This is what
767 sizeof(type) would return; use it for address arithmetic, memory
768 reads and writes, etc. This size includes padding. For example,
769 an i386 extended-precision floating point value really only
770 occupies ten bytes, but most ABI's declare its size to be 12
771 bytes, to preserve alignment. A `struct type' representing such
772 a floating-point type would have a `length' value of 12, even
773 though the last two bytes are unused.
774
775 There's a bit of a host/target mess here, if you're concerned
776 about machines whose bytes aren't eight bits long, or who don't
777 have byte-addressed memory. Various places pass this to memcpy
778 and such, meaning it must be in units of host bytes. Various
779 other places expect they can calculate addresses by adding it
780 and such, meaning it must be in units of target bytes. For
781 some DSP targets, in which HOST_CHAR_BIT will (presumably) be 8
782 and TARGET_CHAR_BIT will be (say) 32, this is a problem.
783
784 One fix would be to make this field in bits (requiring that it
785 always be a multiple of HOST_CHAR_BIT and TARGET_CHAR_BIT) ---
786 the other choice would be to make it consistently in units of
787 HOST_CHAR_BIT. However, this would still fail to address
788 machines based on a ternary or decimal representation. */
789
790 unsigned length;
791
792 /* * Core type, shared by a group of qualified types. */
793
794 struct main_type *main_type;
795 };
796
797 #define NULL_TYPE ((struct type *) 0)
798
799 /* * C++ language-specific information for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT and
800 TYPE_CODE_UNION nodes. */
801
802 struct cplus_struct_type
803 {
804 /* * Number of base classes this type derives from. The
805 baseclasses are stored in the first N_BASECLASSES fields
806 (i.e. the `fields' field of the struct type). I think only the
807 `type' field of such a field has any meaning. */
808
809 short n_baseclasses;
810
811 /* * Number of methods with unique names. All overloaded methods
812 with the same name count only once. */
813
814 short nfn_fields;
815
816 /* * Number of template arguments. */
817
818 unsigned short n_template_arguments;
819
820 /* * One if this struct is a dynamic class, as defined by the
821 Itanium C++ ABI: if it requires a virtual table pointer,
822 because it or any of its base classes have one or more virtual
823 member functions or virtual base classes. Minus one if not
824 dynamic. Zero if not yet computed. */
825
826 int is_dynamic : 2;
827
828 /* * Non-zero if this type came from a Java CU. */
829
830 unsigned int is_java : 1;
831
832 /* * For derived classes, the number of base classes is given by
833 n_baseclasses and virtual_field_bits is a bit vector containing
834 one bit per base class. If the base class is virtual, the
835 corresponding bit will be set.
836 I.E, given:
837
838 class A{};
839 class B{};
840 class C : public B, public virtual A {};
841
842 B is a baseclass of C; A is a virtual baseclass for C.
843 This is a C++ 2.0 language feature. */
844
845 B_TYPE *virtual_field_bits;
846
847 /* * For classes with private fields, the number of fields is
848 given by nfields and private_field_bits is a bit vector
849 containing one bit per field.
850
851 If the field is private, the corresponding bit will be set. */
852
853 B_TYPE *private_field_bits;
854
855 /* * For classes with protected fields, the number of fields is
856 given by nfields and protected_field_bits is a bit vector
857 containing one bit per field.
858
859 If the field is private, the corresponding bit will be set. */
860
861 B_TYPE *protected_field_bits;
862
863 /* * For classes with fields to be ignored, either this is
864 optimized out or this field has length 0. */
865
866 B_TYPE *ignore_field_bits;
867
868 /* * For classes, structures, and unions, a description of each
869 field, which consists of an overloaded name, followed by the
870 types of arguments that the method expects, and then the name
871 after it has been renamed to make it distinct.
872
873 fn_fieldlists points to an array of nfn_fields of these. */
874
875 struct fn_fieldlist
876 {
877
878 /* * The overloaded name.
879 This is generally allocated in the objfile's obstack.
880 However stabsread.c sometimes uses malloc. */
881
882 const char *name;
883
884 /* * The number of methods with this name. */
885
886 int length;
887
888 /* * The list of methods. */
889
890 struct fn_field
891 {
892
893 /* * If is_stub is clear, this is the mangled name which
894 we can look up to find the address of the method
895 (FIXME: it would be cleaner to have a pointer to the
896 struct symbol here instead).
897
898 If is_stub is set, this is the portion of the mangled
899 name which specifies the arguments. For example, "ii",
900 if there are two int arguments, or "" if there are no
901 arguments. See gdb_mangle_name for the conversion from
902 this format to the one used if is_stub is clear. */
903
904 const char *physname;
905
906 /* * The function type for the method.
907
908 (This comment used to say "The return value of the
909 method", but that's wrong. The function type is
910 expected here, i.e. something with TYPE_CODE_FUNC, and
911 *not* the return-value type). */
912
913 struct type *type;
914
915 /* * For virtual functions.
916 First baseclass that defines this virtual function. */
917
918 struct type *fcontext;
919
920 /* Attributes. */
921
922 unsigned int is_const:1;
923 unsigned int is_volatile:1;
924 unsigned int is_private:1;
925 unsigned int is_protected:1;
926 unsigned int is_public:1;
927 unsigned int is_abstract:1;
928 unsigned int is_static:1;
929 unsigned int is_final:1;
930 unsigned int is_synchronized:1;
931 unsigned int is_native:1;
932 unsigned int is_artificial:1;
933
934 /* * A stub method only has some fields valid (but they
935 are enough to reconstruct the rest of the fields). */
936
937 unsigned int is_stub:1;
938
939 /* * True if this function is a constructor, false
940 otherwise. */
941
942 unsigned int is_constructor : 1;
943
944 /* * Unused. */
945
946 unsigned int dummy:3;
947
948 /* * Index into that baseclass's virtual function table,
949 minus 2; else if static: VOFFSET_STATIC; else: 0. */
950
951 unsigned int voffset:16;
952
953 #define VOFFSET_STATIC 1
954
955 }
956 *fn_fields;
957
958 }
959 *fn_fieldlists;
960
961 /* * typedefs defined inside this class. typedef_field points to
962 an array of typedef_field_count elements. */
963
964 struct typedef_field
965 {
966 /* * Unqualified name to be prefixed by owning class qualified
967 name. */
968
969 const char *name;
970
971 /* * Type this typedef named NAME represents. */
972
973 struct type *type;
974 }
975 *typedef_field;
976 unsigned typedef_field_count;
977
978 /* * The template arguments. This is an array with
979 N_TEMPLATE_ARGUMENTS elements. This is NULL for non-template
980 classes. */
981
982 struct symbol **template_arguments;
983 };
984
985 /* * Struct used to store conversion rankings. */
986
987 struct rank
988 {
989 short rank;
990
991 /* * When two conversions are of the same type and therefore have
992 the same rank, subrank is used to differentiate the two.
993
994 Eg: Two derived-class-pointer to base-class-pointer conversions
995 would both have base pointer conversion rank, but the
996 conversion with the shorter distance to the ancestor is
997 preferable. 'subrank' would be used to reflect that. */
998
999 short subrank;
1000 };
1001
1002 /* * Struct used for ranking a function for overload resolution. */
1003
1004 struct badness_vector
1005 {
1006 int length;
1007 struct rank *rank;
1008 };
1009
1010 /* * GNAT Ada-specific information for various Ada types. */
1011
1012 struct gnat_aux_type
1013 {
1014 /* * Parallel type used to encode information about dynamic types
1015 used in Ada (such as variant records, variable-size array,
1016 etc). */
1017 struct type* descriptive_type;
1018 };
1019
1020 /* * For TYPE_CODE_FUNC types. */
1021
1022 struct func_type
1023 {
1024 /* * The calling convention for targets supporting multiple ABIs.
1025 Right now this is only fetched from the Dwarf-2
1026 DW_AT_calling_convention attribute. */
1027
1028 unsigned calling_convention;
1029
1030 /* * Only those DW_TAG_GNU_call_site's in this function that have
1031 DW_AT_GNU_tail_call set are linked in this list. Function
1032 without its tail call list complete
1033 (DW_AT_GNU_all_tail_call_sites or its superset
1034 DW_AT_GNU_all_call_sites) has TAIL_CALL_LIST NULL, even if some
1035 DW_TAG_GNU_call_site's exist in such function. */
1036
1037 struct call_site *tail_call_list;
1038 };
1039
1040 /* struct call_site_parameter can be referenced in callees by several ways. */
1041
1042 enum call_site_parameter_kind
1043 {
1044 /* * Use field call_site_parameter.u.dwarf_reg. */
1045 CALL_SITE_PARAMETER_DWARF_REG,
1046
1047 /* * Use field call_site_parameter.u.fb_offset. */
1048 CALL_SITE_PARAMETER_FB_OFFSET,
1049
1050 /* * Use field call_site_parameter.u.param_offset. */
1051 CALL_SITE_PARAMETER_PARAM_OFFSET
1052 };
1053
1054 /* * A place where a function gets called from, represented by
1055 DW_TAG_GNU_call_site. It can be looked up from
1056 symtab->call_site_htab. */
1057
1058 struct call_site
1059 {
1060 /* * Address of the first instruction after this call. It must be
1061 the first field as we overload core_addr_hash and core_addr_eq
1062 for it. */
1063
1064 CORE_ADDR pc;
1065
1066 /* * List successor with head in FUNC_TYPE.TAIL_CALL_LIST. */
1067
1068 struct call_site *tail_call_next;
1069
1070 /* * Describe DW_AT_GNU_call_site_target. Missing attribute uses
1071 FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK with FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK == NULL. */
1072
1073 struct
1074 {
1075 union field_location loc;
1076
1077 /* * Discriminant for union field_location. */
1078
1079 ENUM_BITFIELD(field_loc_kind) loc_kind : 3;
1080 }
1081 target;
1082
1083 /* * Size of the PARAMETER array. */
1084
1085 unsigned parameter_count;
1086
1087 /* * CU of the function where the call is located. It gets used
1088 for DWARF blocks execution in the parameter array below. */
1089
1090 struct dwarf2_per_cu_data *per_cu;
1091
1092 /* * Describe DW_TAG_GNU_call_site's DW_TAG_formal_parameter. */
1093
1094 struct call_site_parameter
1095 {
1096 ENUM_BITFIELD (call_site_parameter_kind) kind : 2;
1097
1098 union call_site_parameter_u
1099 {
1100 /* * DW_TAG_formal_parameter's DW_AT_location's DW_OP_regX
1101 as DWARF register number, for register passed
1102 parameters. */
1103
1104 int dwarf_reg;
1105
1106 /* * Offset from the callee's frame base, for stack passed
1107 parameters. This equals offset from the caller's stack
1108 pointer. */
1109
1110 CORE_ADDR fb_offset;
1111
1112 /* * Offset relative to the start of this PER_CU to
1113 DW_TAG_formal_parameter which is referenced by both
1114 caller and the callee. */
1115
1116 cu_offset param_offset;
1117 }
1118 u;
1119
1120 /* * DW_TAG_formal_parameter's DW_AT_GNU_call_site_value. It
1121 is never NULL. */
1122
1123 const gdb_byte *value;
1124 size_t value_size;
1125
1126 /* * DW_TAG_formal_parameter's DW_AT_GNU_call_site_data_value.
1127 It may be NULL if not provided by DWARF. */
1128
1129 const gdb_byte *data_value;
1130 size_t data_value_size;
1131 }
1132 parameter[1];
1133 };
1134
1135 /* * The default value of TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(T) points to this shared
1136 static structure. */
1137
1138 extern const struct cplus_struct_type cplus_struct_default;
1139
1140 extern void allocate_cplus_struct_type (struct type *);
1141
1142 #define INIT_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(type) \
1143 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) = TYPE_SPECIFIC_CPLUS_STUFF, \
1144 TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (type) = (struct cplus_struct_type*) \
1145 &cplus_struct_default)
1146
1147 #define ALLOCATE_CPLUS_STRUCT_TYPE(type) allocate_cplus_struct_type (type)
1148
1149 #define HAVE_CPLUS_STRUCT(type) \
1150 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) == TYPE_SPECIFIC_CPLUS_STUFF \
1151 && TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (type) != &cplus_struct_default)
1152
1153 extern const struct gnat_aux_type gnat_aux_default;
1154
1155 extern void allocate_gnat_aux_type (struct type *);
1156
1157 #define INIT_GNAT_SPECIFIC(type) \
1158 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) = TYPE_SPECIFIC_GNAT_STUFF, \
1159 TYPE_GNAT_SPECIFIC (type) = (struct gnat_aux_type *) &gnat_aux_default)
1160 #define ALLOCATE_GNAT_AUX_TYPE(type) allocate_gnat_aux_type (type)
1161 /* * A macro that returns non-zero if the type-specific data should be
1162 read as "gnat-stuff". */
1163 #define HAVE_GNAT_AUX_INFO(type) \
1164 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) == TYPE_SPECIFIC_GNAT_STUFF)
1165
1166 #define INIT_FUNC_SPECIFIC(type) \
1167 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) = TYPE_SPECIFIC_FUNC, \
1168 TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (type)->type_specific.func_stuff \
1169 = TYPE_ZALLOC (type, \
1170 sizeof (*TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (type)->type_specific.func_stuff)))
1171
1172 #define TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(thistype) (thistype)->instance_flags
1173 #define TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype) (thistype)->main_type
1174 #define TYPE_NAME(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->name
1175 #define TYPE_TAG_NAME(type) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(type)->tag_name
1176 #define TYPE_TARGET_TYPE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->target_type
1177 #define TYPE_POINTER_TYPE(thistype) (thistype)->pointer_type
1178 #define TYPE_REFERENCE_TYPE(thistype) (thistype)->reference_type
1179 #define TYPE_CHAIN(thistype) (thistype)->chain
1180 /* * Note that if thistype is a TYPEDEF type, you have to call check_typedef.
1181 But check_typedef does set the TYPE_LENGTH of the TYPEDEF type,
1182 so you only have to call check_typedef once. Since allocate_value
1183 calls check_typedef, TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (X)) is safe. */
1184 #define TYPE_LENGTH(thistype) (thistype)->length
1185 /* * Note that TYPE_CODE can be TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF, so if you want the real
1186 type, you need to do TYPE_CODE (check_type (this_type)). */
1187 #define TYPE_CODE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->code
1188 #define TYPE_NFIELDS(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->nfields
1189 #define TYPE_FIELDS(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flds_bnds.fields
1190
1191 #define TYPE_INDEX_TYPE(type) TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, 0)
1192 #define TYPE_RANGE_DATA(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flds_bnds.bounds
1193 #define TYPE_LOW_BOUND(range_type) \
1194 TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->low.data.const_val
1195 #define TYPE_HIGH_BOUND(range_type) \
1196 TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->high.data.const_val
1197 #define TYPE_LOW_BOUND_UNDEFINED(range_type) \
1198 (TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->low.kind == PROP_UNDEFINED)
1199 #define TYPE_HIGH_BOUND_UNDEFINED(range_type) \
1200 (TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->high.kind == PROP_UNDEFINED)
1201 #define TYPE_HIGH_BOUND_KIND(range_type) \
1202 TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->high.kind
1203 #define TYPE_LOW_BOUND_KIND(range_type) \
1204 TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->low.kind
1205
1206 /* Moto-specific stuff for FORTRAN arrays. */
1207
1208 #define TYPE_ARRAY_UPPER_BOUND_IS_UNDEFINED(arraytype) \
1209 TYPE_HIGH_BOUND_UNDEFINED(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE(arraytype))
1210 #define TYPE_ARRAY_LOWER_BOUND_IS_UNDEFINED(arraytype) \
1211 TYPE_LOW_BOUND_UNDEFINED(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE(arraytype))
1212
1213 #define TYPE_ARRAY_UPPER_BOUND_VALUE(arraytype) \
1214 (TYPE_HIGH_BOUND(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE((arraytype))))
1215
1216 #define TYPE_ARRAY_LOWER_BOUND_VALUE(arraytype) \
1217 (TYPE_LOW_BOUND(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE((arraytype))))
1218
1219 /* C++ */
1220
1221 #define TYPE_VPTR_BASETYPE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->vptr_basetype
1222 #define TYPE_DOMAIN_TYPE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->vptr_basetype
1223 #define TYPE_VPTR_FIELDNO(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->vptr_fieldno
1224 #define TYPE_NFN_FIELDS(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->nfn_fields
1225 #define TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD(thistype) \
1226 TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific_field
1227 #define TYPE_TYPE_SPECIFIC(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific
1228 /* We need this tap-dance with the TYPE_RAW_SPECIFIC because of the case
1229 where we're trying to print an Ada array using the C language.
1230 In that case, there is no "cplus_stuff", but the C language assumes
1231 that there is. What we do, in that case, is pretend that there is
1232 an implicit one which is the default cplus stuff. */
1233 #define TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype) \
1234 (!HAVE_CPLUS_STRUCT(thistype) \
1235 ? (struct cplus_struct_type*)&cplus_struct_default \
1236 : TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype))
1237 #define TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.cplus_stuff
1238 #define TYPE_FLOATFORMAT(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.floatformat
1239 #define TYPE_GNAT_SPECIFIC(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.gnat_stuff
1240 #define TYPE_DESCRIPTIVE_TYPE(thistype) TYPE_GNAT_SPECIFIC(thistype)->descriptive_type
1241 #define TYPE_CALLING_CONVENTION(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.func_stuff->calling_convention
1242 #define TYPE_TAIL_CALL_LIST(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.func_stuff->tail_call_list
1243 #define TYPE_BASECLASS(thistype,index) TYPE_FIELD_TYPE(thistype, index)
1244 #define TYPE_N_BASECLASSES(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->n_baseclasses
1245 #define TYPE_BASECLASS_NAME(thistype,index) TYPE_FIELD_NAME(thistype, index)
1246 #define TYPE_BASECLASS_BITPOS(thistype,index) TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS(thistype,index)
1247 #define BASETYPE_VIA_PUBLIC(thistype, index) \
1248 ((!TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE(thistype, index)) && (!TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED(thistype, index)))
1249 #define TYPE_CPLUS_DYNAMIC(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->is_dynamic
1250 #define TYPE_CPLUS_REALLY_JAVA(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->is_java
1251
1252 #define BASETYPE_VIA_VIRTUAL(thistype, index) \
1253 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1254 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits, (index)))
1255
1256 #define FIELD_TYPE(thisfld) ((thisfld).type)
1257 #define FIELD_NAME(thisfld) ((thisfld).name)
1258 #define FIELD_LOC_KIND(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc_kind)
1259 #define FIELD_BITPOS_LVAL(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.bitpos)
1260 #define FIELD_BITPOS(thisfld) (FIELD_BITPOS_LVAL (thisfld) + 0)
1261 #define FIELD_ENUMVAL_LVAL(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.enumval)
1262 #define FIELD_ENUMVAL(thisfld) (FIELD_ENUMVAL_LVAL (thisfld) + 0)
1263 #define FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.physname)
1264 #define FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.physaddr)
1265 #define FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.dwarf_block)
1266 #define SET_FIELD_BITPOS(thisfld, bitpos) \
1267 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS, \
1268 FIELD_BITPOS_LVAL (thisfld) = (bitpos))
1269 #define SET_FIELD_ENUMVAL(thisfld, enumval) \
1270 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_ENUMVAL, \
1271 FIELD_ENUMVAL_LVAL (thisfld) = (enumval))
1272 #define SET_FIELD_PHYSNAME(thisfld, name) \
1273 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSNAME, \
1274 FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME (thisfld) = (name))
1275 #define SET_FIELD_PHYSADDR(thisfld, addr) \
1276 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSADDR, \
1277 FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR (thisfld) = (addr))
1278 #define SET_FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK(thisfld, addr) \
1279 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK, \
1280 FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK (thisfld) = (addr))
1281 #define FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(thisfld) ((thisfld).artificial)
1282 #define FIELD_BITSIZE(thisfld) ((thisfld).bitsize)
1283
1284 #define TYPE_FIELD(thistype, n) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flds_bnds.fields[n]
1285 #define TYPE_FIELD_TYPE(thistype, n) FIELD_TYPE(TYPE_FIELD(thistype, n))
1286 #define TYPE_FIELD_NAME(thistype, n) FIELD_NAME(TYPE_FIELD(thistype, n))
1287 #define TYPE_FIELD_LOC_KIND(thistype, n) FIELD_LOC_KIND (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
1288 #define TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS(thistype, n) FIELD_BITPOS (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
1289 #define TYPE_FIELD_ENUMVAL(thistype, n) FIELD_ENUMVAL (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
1290 #define TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME(thistype, n) FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
1291 #define TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR(thistype, n) FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
1292 #define TYPE_FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK(thistype, n) FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
1293 #define TYPE_FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(thistype, n) FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(TYPE_FIELD(thistype,n))
1294 #define TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE(thistype, n) FIELD_BITSIZE(TYPE_FIELD(thistype,n))
1295 #define TYPE_FIELD_PACKED(thistype, n) (FIELD_BITSIZE(TYPE_FIELD(thistype,n))!=0)
1296
1297 #define TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE_BITS(thistype) \
1298 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits
1299 #define TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED_BITS(thistype) \
1300 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits
1301 #define TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE_BITS(thistype) \
1302 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits
1303 #define TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL_BITS(thistype) \
1304 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits
1305 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE(thistype, n) \
1306 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits, (n))
1307 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED(thistype, n) \
1308 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits, (n))
1309 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE(thistype, n) \
1310 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits, (n))
1311 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL(thistype, n) \
1312 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits, (n))
1313 #define TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE(thistype, n) \
1314 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1315 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits, (n)))
1316 #define TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED(thistype, n) \
1317 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1318 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits, (n)))
1319 #define TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE(thistype, n) \
1320 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1321 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits, (n)))
1322 #define TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL(thistype, n) \
1323 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1324 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits, (n)))
1325
1326 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLISTS(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists
1327 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n]
1328 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST1(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n].fn_fields
1329 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST_NAME(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n].name
1330 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST_LENGTH(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n].length
1331
1332 #define TYPE_N_TEMPLATE_ARGUMENTS(thistype) \
1333 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->n_template_arguments
1334 #define TYPE_TEMPLATE_ARGUMENTS(thistype) \
1335 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->template_arguments
1336 #define TYPE_TEMPLATE_ARGUMENT(thistype, n) \
1337 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->template_arguments[n]
1338
1339 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD(thisfn, n) (thisfn)[n]
1340 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PHYSNAME(thisfn, n) (thisfn)[n].physname
1341 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_TYPE(thisfn, n) (thisfn)[n].type
1342 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_ARGS(thisfn, n) TYPE_FIELDS ((thisfn)[n].type)
1343 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_CONST(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_const)
1344 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_VOLATILE(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_volatile)
1345 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PRIVATE(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_private)
1346 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PROTECTED(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_protected)
1347 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PUBLIC(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_public)
1348 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_STATIC(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_static)
1349 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_FINAL(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_final)
1350 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_SYNCHRONIZED(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_synchronized)
1351 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_NATIVE(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_native)
1352 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_artificial)
1353 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_ABSTRACT(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_abstract)
1354 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_STUB(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_stub)
1355 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_CONSTRUCTOR(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_constructor)
1356 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_FCONTEXT(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].fcontext)
1357 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_VOFFSET(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].voffset-2)
1358 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_VIRTUAL_P(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].voffset > 1)
1359 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_STATIC_P(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].voffset == VOFFSET_STATIC)
1360
1361 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_ARRAY(thistype) \
1362 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->typedef_field
1363 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD(thistype, n) \
1364 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->typedef_field[n]
1365 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_NAME(thistype, n) \
1366 TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD (thistype, n).name
1367 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_TYPE(thistype, n) \
1368 TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD (thistype, n).type
1369 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_COUNT(thistype) \
1370 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->typedef_field_count
1371
1372 #define TYPE_IS_OPAQUE(thistype) \
1373 (((TYPE_CODE (thistype) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT) \
1374 || (TYPE_CODE (thistype) == TYPE_CODE_UNION)) \
1375 && (TYPE_NFIELDS (thistype) == 0) \
1376 && (!HAVE_CPLUS_STRUCT (thistype) \
1377 || TYPE_NFN_FIELDS (thistype) == 0) \
1378 && (TYPE_STUB (thistype) || !TYPE_STUB_SUPPORTED (thistype)))
1379
1380 /* * A helper macro that returns the name of a type or "unnamed type"
1381 if the type has no name. */
1382
1383 #define TYPE_SAFE_NAME(type) \
1384 (TYPE_NAME (type) ? TYPE_NAME (type) : _("<unnamed type>"))
1385
1386 /* * A helper macro that returns the name of an error type. If the
1387 type has a name, it is used; otherwise, a default is used. */
1388
1389 #define TYPE_ERROR_NAME(type) \
1390 (TYPE_NAME (type) ? TYPE_NAME (type) : _("<error type>"))
1391
1392 struct builtin_type
1393 {
1394 /* Integral types. */
1395
1396 /* Implicit size/sign (based on the architecture's ABI). */
1397 struct type *builtin_void;
1398 struct type *builtin_char;
1399 struct type *builtin_short;
1400 struct type *builtin_int;
1401 struct type *builtin_long;
1402 struct type *builtin_signed_char;
1403 struct type *builtin_unsigned_char;
1404 struct type *builtin_unsigned_short;
1405 struct type *builtin_unsigned_int;
1406 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long;
1407 struct type *builtin_float;
1408 struct type *builtin_double;
1409 struct type *builtin_long_double;
1410 struct type *builtin_complex;
1411 struct type *builtin_double_complex;
1412 struct type *builtin_string;
1413 struct type *builtin_bool;
1414 struct type *builtin_long_long;
1415 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long_long;
1416 struct type *builtin_decfloat;
1417 struct type *builtin_decdouble;
1418 struct type *builtin_declong;
1419
1420 /* "True" character types.
1421 We use these for the '/c' print format, because c_char is just a
1422 one-byte integral type, which languages less laid back than C
1423 will print as ... well, a one-byte integral type. */
1424 struct type *builtin_true_char;
1425 struct type *builtin_true_unsigned_char;
1426
1427 /* Explicit sizes - see C9X <intypes.h> for naming scheme. The "int0"
1428 is for when an architecture needs to describe a register that has
1429 no size. */
1430 struct type *builtin_int0;
1431 struct type *builtin_int8;
1432 struct type *builtin_uint8;
1433 struct type *builtin_int16;
1434 struct type *builtin_uint16;
1435 struct type *builtin_int32;
1436 struct type *builtin_uint32;
1437 struct type *builtin_int64;
1438 struct type *builtin_uint64;
1439 struct type *builtin_int128;
1440 struct type *builtin_uint128;
1441
1442 /* Wide character types. */
1443 struct type *builtin_char16;
1444 struct type *builtin_char32;
1445
1446 /* Pointer types. */
1447
1448 /* * `pointer to data' type. Some target platforms use an implicitly
1449 {sign,zero} -extended 32-bit ABI pointer on a 64-bit ISA. */
1450 struct type *builtin_data_ptr;
1451
1452 /* * `pointer to function (returning void)' type. Harvard
1453 architectures mean that ABI function and code pointers are not
1454 interconvertible. Similarly, since ANSI, C standards have
1455 explicitly said that pointers to functions and pointers to data
1456 are not interconvertible --- that is, you can't cast a function
1457 pointer to void * and back, and expect to get the same value.
1458 However, all function pointer types are interconvertible, so void
1459 (*) () can server as a generic function pointer. */
1460
1461 struct type *builtin_func_ptr;
1462
1463 /* * `function returning pointer to function (returning void)' type.
1464 The final void return type is not significant for it. */
1465
1466 struct type *builtin_func_func;
1467
1468 /* Special-purpose types. */
1469
1470 /* * This type is used to represent a GDB internal function. */
1471
1472 struct type *internal_fn;
1473
1474 /* * This type is used to represent an xmethod. */
1475 struct type *xmethod;
1476 };
1477
1478 /* * Return the type table for the specified architecture. */
1479
1480 extern const struct builtin_type *builtin_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
1481
1482 /* * Per-objfile types used by symbol readers. */
1483
1484 struct objfile_type
1485 {
1486 /* Basic types based on the objfile architecture. */
1487 struct type *builtin_void;
1488 struct type *builtin_char;
1489 struct type *builtin_short;
1490 struct type *builtin_int;
1491 struct type *builtin_long;
1492 struct type *builtin_long_long;
1493 struct type *builtin_signed_char;
1494 struct type *builtin_unsigned_char;
1495 struct type *builtin_unsigned_short;
1496 struct type *builtin_unsigned_int;
1497 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long;
1498 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long_long;
1499 struct type *builtin_float;
1500 struct type *builtin_double;
1501 struct type *builtin_long_double;
1502
1503 /* * This type is used to represent symbol addresses. */
1504 struct type *builtin_core_addr;
1505
1506 /* * This type represents a type that was unrecognized in symbol
1507 read-in. */
1508 struct type *builtin_error;
1509
1510 /* * Types used for symbols with no debug information. */
1511 struct type *nodebug_text_symbol;
1512 struct type *nodebug_text_gnu_ifunc_symbol;
1513 struct type *nodebug_got_plt_symbol;
1514 struct type *nodebug_data_symbol;
1515 struct type *nodebug_unknown_symbol;
1516 struct type *nodebug_tls_symbol;
1517 };
1518
1519 /* * Return the type table for the specified objfile. */
1520
1521 extern const struct objfile_type *objfile_type (struct objfile *objfile);
1522
1523 /* Explicit floating-point formats. See "floatformat.h". */
1524 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_half[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1525 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_single[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1526 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_double[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1527 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_double_littlebyte_bigword[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1528 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_i387_ext[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1529 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_m68881_ext[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1530 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_arm_ext[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1531 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ia64_spill[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1532 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ia64_quad[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1533 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_vax_f[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1534 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_vax_d[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1535 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ibm_long_double[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1536
1537
1538 /* * Allocate space for storing data associated with a particular
1539 type. We ensure that the space is allocated using the same
1540 mechanism that was used to allocate the space for the type
1541 structure itself. I.e. if the type is on an objfile's
1542 objfile_obstack, then the space for data associated with that type
1543 will also be allocated on the objfile_obstack. If the type is not
1544 associated with any particular objfile (such as builtin types),
1545 then the data space will be allocated with xmalloc, the same as for
1546 the type structure. */
1547
1548 #define TYPE_ALLOC(t,size) \
1549 (TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED (t) \
1550 ? obstack_alloc (&TYPE_OBJFILE (t) -> objfile_obstack, size) \
1551 : xmalloc (size))
1552
1553 #define TYPE_ZALLOC(t,size) \
1554 (TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED (t) \
1555 ? memset (obstack_alloc (&TYPE_OBJFILE (t)->objfile_obstack, size), \
1556 0, size) \
1557 : xzalloc (size))
1558
1559 /* Use alloc_type to allocate a type owned by an objfile. Use
1560 alloc_type_arch to allocate a type owned by an architecture. Use
1561 alloc_type_copy to allocate a type with the same owner as a
1562 pre-existing template type, no matter whether objfile or
1563 gdbarch. */
1564 extern struct type *alloc_type (struct objfile *);
1565 extern struct type *alloc_type_arch (struct gdbarch *);
1566 extern struct type *alloc_type_copy (const struct type *);
1567
1568 /* * Return the type's architecture. For types owned by an
1569 architecture, that architecture is returned. For types owned by an
1570 objfile, that objfile's architecture is returned. */
1571
1572 extern struct gdbarch *get_type_arch (const struct type *);
1573
1574 /* * This returns the target type (or NULL) of TYPE, also skipping
1575 past typedefs. */
1576
1577 extern struct type *get_target_type (struct type *type);
1578
1579 /* * Helper function to construct objfile-owned types. */
1580
1581 extern struct type *init_type (enum type_code, int, int, const char *,
1582 struct objfile *);
1583
1584 /* Helper functions to construct architecture-owned types. */
1585 extern struct type *arch_type (struct gdbarch *, enum type_code, int, char *);
1586 extern struct type *arch_integer_type (struct gdbarch *, int, int, char *);
1587 extern struct type *arch_character_type (struct gdbarch *, int, int, char *);
1588 extern struct type *arch_boolean_type (struct gdbarch *, int, int, char *);
1589 extern struct type *arch_float_type (struct gdbarch *, int, char *,
1590 const struct floatformat **);
1591 extern struct type *arch_complex_type (struct gdbarch *, char *,
1592 struct type *);
1593
1594 /* Helper functions to construct a struct or record type. An
1595 initially empty type is created using arch_composite_type().
1596 Fields are then added using append_composite_type_field*(). A union
1597 type has its size set to the largest field. A struct type has each
1598 field packed against the previous. */
1599
1600 extern struct type *arch_composite_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1601 char *name, enum type_code code);
1602 extern void append_composite_type_field (struct type *t, char *name,
1603 struct type *field);
1604 extern void append_composite_type_field_aligned (struct type *t,
1605 char *name,
1606 struct type *field,
1607 int alignment);
1608 struct field *append_composite_type_field_raw (struct type *t, char *name,
1609 struct type *field);
1610
1611 /* Helper functions to construct a bit flags type. An initially empty
1612 type is created using arch_flag_type(). Flags are then added using
1613 append_flag_type_flag(). */
1614 extern struct type *arch_flags_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1615 char *name, int length);
1616 extern void append_flags_type_flag (struct type *type, int bitpos, char *name);
1617
1618 extern void make_vector_type (struct type *array_type);
1619 extern struct type *init_vector_type (struct type *elt_type, int n);
1620
1621 extern struct type *lookup_reference_type (struct type *);
1622
1623 extern struct type *make_reference_type (struct type *, struct type **);
1624
1625 extern struct type *make_cv_type (int, int, struct type *, struct type **);
1626
1627 extern struct type *make_restrict_type (struct type *);
1628
1629 extern void replace_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1630
1631 extern int address_space_name_to_int (struct gdbarch *, char *);
1632
1633 extern const char *address_space_int_to_name (struct gdbarch *, int);
1634
1635 extern struct type *make_type_with_address_space (struct type *type,
1636 int space_identifier);
1637
1638 extern struct type *lookup_memberptr_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1639
1640 extern struct type *lookup_methodptr_type (struct type *);
1641
1642 extern void smash_to_method_type (struct type *type, struct type *domain,
1643 struct type *to_type, struct field *args,
1644 int nargs, int varargs);
1645
1646 extern void smash_to_memberptr_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1647 struct type *);
1648
1649 extern void smash_to_methodptr_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1650
1651 extern struct type *allocate_stub_method (struct type *);
1652
1653 extern const char *type_name_no_tag (const struct type *);
1654
1655 extern const char *type_name_no_tag_or_error (struct type *type);
1656
1657 extern struct type *lookup_struct_elt_type (struct type *, const char *, int);
1658
1659 extern struct type *make_pointer_type (struct type *, struct type **);
1660
1661 extern struct type *lookup_pointer_type (struct type *);
1662
1663 extern struct type *make_function_type (struct type *, struct type **);
1664
1665 extern struct type *lookup_function_type (struct type *);
1666
1667 extern struct type *lookup_function_type_with_arguments (struct type *,
1668 int,
1669 struct type **);
1670
1671 extern struct type *create_static_range_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1672 LONGEST, LONGEST);
1673
1674
1675 extern struct type *create_array_type_with_stride
1676 (struct type *, struct type *, struct type *, unsigned int);
1677
1678 extern struct type *create_range_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1679 const struct dynamic_prop *,
1680 const struct dynamic_prop *);
1681
1682 extern struct type *create_array_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1683 struct type *);
1684
1685 extern struct type *lookup_array_range_type (struct type *, LONGEST, LONGEST);
1686
1687 extern struct type *create_string_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1688 struct type *);
1689 extern struct type *lookup_string_range_type (struct type *, LONGEST, LONGEST);
1690
1691 extern struct type *create_set_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1692
1693 extern struct type *lookup_unsigned_typename (const struct language_defn *,
1694 struct gdbarch *, const char *);
1695
1696 extern struct type *lookup_signed_typename (const struct language_defn *,
1697 struct gdbarch *, const char *);
1698
1699 extern void get_unsigned_type_max (struct type *, ULONGEST *);
1700
1701 extern void get_signed_type_minmax (struct type *, LONGEST *, LONGEST *);
1702
1703 /* * Resolve all dynamic values of a type e.g. array bounds to static values.
1704 ADDR specifies the location of the variable the type is bound to.
1705 If TYPE has no dynamic properties return TYPE; otherwise a new type with
1706 static properties is returned. */
1707 extern struct type *resolve_dynamic_type (struct type *type, CORE_ADDR addr);
1708
1709 /* * Predicate if the type has dynamic values, which are not resolved yet. */
1710 extern int is_dynamic_type (struct type *type);
1711
1712 extern struct type *check_typedef (struct type *);
1713
1714 #define CHECK_TYPEDEF(TYPE) \
1715 do { \
1716 (TYPE) = check_typedef (TYPE); \
1717 } while (0)
1718
1719 extern void check_stub_method_group (struct type *, int);
1720
1721 extern char *gdb_mangle_name (struct type *, int, int);
1722
1723 extern struct type *lookup_typename (const struct language_defn *,
1724 struct gdbarch *, const char *,
1725 const struct block *, int);
1726
1727 extern struct type *lookup_template_type (char *, struct type *,
1728 const struct block *);
1729
1730 extern int get_vptr_fieldno (struct type *, struct type **);
1731
1732 extern int get_discrete_bounds (struct type *, LONGEST *, LONGEST *);
1733
1734 extern int get_array_bounds (struct type *type, LONGEST *low_bound,
1735 LONGEST *high_bound);
1736
1737 extern int class_types_same_p (const struct type *, const struct type *);
1738
1739 extern int is_ancestor (struct type *, struct type *);
1740
1741 extern int is_public_ancestor (struct type *, struct type *);
1742
1743 extern int is_unique_ancestor (struct type *, struct value *);
1744
1745 /* Overload resolution */
1746
1747 #define LENGTH_MATCH(bv) ((bv)->rank[0])
1748
1749 /* * Badness if parameter list length doesn't match arg list length. */
1750 extern const struct rank LENGTH_MISMATCH_BADNESS;
1751
1752 /* * Dummy badness value for nonexistent parameter positions. */
1753 extern const struct rank TOO_FEW_PARAMS_BADNESS;
1754 /* * Badness if no conversion among types. */
1755 extern const struct rank INCOMPATIBLE_TYPE_BADNESS;
1756
1757 /* * Badness of an exact match. */
1758 extern const struct rank EXACT_MATCH_BADNESS;
1759
1760 /* * Badness of integral promotion. */
1761 extern const struct rank INTEGER_PROMOTION_BADNESS;
1762 /* * Badness of floating promotion. */
1763 extern const struct rank FLOAT_PROMOTION_BADNESS;
1764 /* * Badness of converting a derived class pointer
1765 to a base class pointer. */
1766 extern const struct rank BASE_PTR_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1767 /* * Badness of integral conversion. */
1768 extern const struct rank INTEGER_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1769 /* * Badness of floating conversion. */
1770 extern const struct rank FLOAT_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1771 /* * Badness of integer<->floating conversions. */
1772 extern const struct rank INT_FLOAT_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1773 /* * Badness of conversion of pointer to void pointer. */
1774 extern const struct rank VOID_PTR_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1775 /* * Badness of conversion to boolean. */
1776 extern const struct rank BOOL_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1777 /* * Badness of converting derived to base class. */
1778 extern const struct rank BASE_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1779 /* * Badness of converting from non-reference to reference. */
1780 extern const struct rank REFERENCE_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1781 /* * Badness of converting integer 0 to NULL pointer. */
1782 extern const struct rank NULL_POINTER_CONVERSION;
1783
1784 /* Non-standard conversions allowed by the debugger */
1785
1786 /* * Converting a pointer to an int is usually OK. */
1787 extern const struct rank NS_POINTER_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1788
1789 /* * Badness of converting a (non-zero) integer constant
1790 to a pointer. */
1791 extern const struct rank NS_INTEGER_POINTER_CONVERSION_BADNESS;
1792
1793 extern struct rank sum_ranks (struct rank a, struct rank b);
1794 extern int compare_ranks (struct rank a, struct rank b);
1795
1796 extern int compare_badness (struct badness_vector *, struct badness_vector *);
1797
1798 extern struct badness_vector *rank_function (struct type **, int,
1799 struct value **, int);
1800
1801 extern struct rank rank_one_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1802 struct value *);
1803
1804 extern void recursive_dump_type (struct type *, int);
1805
1806 extern int field_is_static (struct field *);
1807
1808 /* printcmd.c */
1809
1810 extern void print_scalar_formatted (const void *, struct type *,
1811 const struct value_print_options *,
1812 int, struct ui_file *);
1813
1814 extern int can_dereference (struct type *);
1815
1816 extern int is_integral_type (struct type *);
1817
1818 extern int is_scalar_type_recursive (struct type *);
1819
1820 extern void maintenance_print_type (char *, int);
1821
1822 extern htab_t create_copied_types_hash (struct objfile *objfile);
1823
1824 extern struct type *copy_type_recursive (struct objfile *objfile,
1825 struct type *type,
1826 htab_t copied_types);
1827
1828 extern struct type *copy_type (const struct type *type);
1829
1830 extern int types_equal (struct type *, struct type *);
1831
1832 extern int types_deeply_equal (struct type *, struct type *);
1833
1834 #endif /* GDBTYPES_H */
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