gdb/
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / minsyms.c
1 /* GDB routines for manipulating the minimal symbol tables.
2 Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
3 2002, 2003, 2004
4 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 Contributed by Cygnus Support, using pieces from other GDB modules.
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
21 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
22 Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */
23
24
25 /* This file contains support routines for creating, manipulating, and
26 destroying minimal symbol tables.
27
28 Minimal symbol tables are used to hold some very basic information about
29 all defined global symbols (text, data, bss, abs, etc). The only two
30 required pieces of information are the symbol's name and the address
31 associated with that symbol.
32
33 In many cases, even if a file was compiled with no special options for
34 debugging at all, as long as was not stripped it will contain sufficient
35 information to build useful minimal symbol tables using this structure.
36
37 Even when a file contains enough debugging information to build a full
38 symbol table, these minimal symbols are still useful for quickly mapping
39 between names and addresses, and vice versa. They are also sometimes used
40 to figure out what full symbol table entries need to be read in. */
41
42
43 #include "defs.h"
44 #include <ctype.h>
45 #include "gdb_string.h"
46 #include "symtab.h"
47 #include "bfd.h"
48 #include "symfile.h"
49 #include "objfiles.h"
50 #include "demangle.h"
51 #include "value.h"
52 #include "cp-abi.h"
53
54 /* Accumulate the minimal symbols for each objfile in bunches of BUNCH_SIZE.
55 At the end, copy them all into one newly allocated location on an objfile's
56 symbol obstack. */
57
58 #define BUNCH_SIZE 127
59
60 struct msym_bunch
61 {
62 struct msym_bunch *next;
63 struct minimal_symbol contents[BUNCH_SIZE];
64 };
65
66 /* Bunch currently being filled up.
67 The next field points to chain of filled bunches. */
68
69 static struct msym_bunch *msym_bunch;
70
71 /* Number of slots filled in current bunch. */
72
73 static int msym_bunch_index;
74
75 /* Total number of minimal symbols recorded so far for the objfile. */
76
77 static int msym_count;
78
79 /* Compute a hash code based using the same criteria as `strcmp_iw'. */
80
81 unsigned int
82 msymbol_hash_iw (const char *string)
83 {
84 unsigned int hash = 0;
85 while (*string && *string != '(')
86 {
87 while (isspace (*string))
88 ++string;
89 if (*string && *string != '(')
90 {
91 hash = hash * 67 + *string - 113;
92 ++string;
93 }
94 }
95 return hash;
96 }
97
98 /* Compute a hash code for a string. */
99
100 unsigned int
101 msymbol_hash (const char *string)
102 {
103 unsigned int hash = 0;
104 for (; *string; ++string)
105 hash = hash * 67 + *string - 113;
106 return hash;
107 }
108
109 /* Add the minimal symbol SYM to an objfile's minsym hash table, TABLE. */
110 void
111 add_minsym_to_hash_table (struct minimal_symbol *sym,
112 struct minimal_symbol **table)
113 {
114 if (sym->hash_next == NULL)
115 {
116 unsigned int hash
117 = msymbol_hash (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym)) % MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE;
118 sym->hash_next = table[hash];
119 table[hash] = sym;
120 }
121 }
122
123 /* Add the minimal symbol SYM to an objfile's minsym demangled hash table,
124 TABLE. */
125 static void
126 add_minsym_to_demangled_hash_table (struct minimal_symbol *sym,
127 struct minimal_symbol **table)
128 {
129 if (sym->demangled_hash_next == NULL)
130 {
131 unsigned int hash = msymbol_hash_iw (SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME (sym)) % MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE;
132 sym->demangled_hash_next = table[hash];
133 table[hash] = sym;
134 }
135 }
136
137
138 /* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
139 first minimal symbol that matches NAME. If OBJF is non-NULL, limit
140 the search to that objfile. If SFILE is non-NULL, the only file-scope
141 symbols considered will be from that source file (global symbols are
142 still preferred). Returns a pointer to the minimal symbol that
143 matches, or NULL if no match is found.
144
145 Note: One instance where there may be duplicate minimal symbols with
146 the same name is when the symbol tables for a shared library and the
147 symbol tables for an executable contain global symbols with the same
148 names (the dynamic linker deals with the duplication).
149
150 It's also possible to have minimal symbols with different mangled
151 names, but identical demangled names. For example, the GNU C++ v3
152 ABI requires the generation of two (or perhaps three) copies of
153 constructor functions --- "in-charge", "not-in-charge", and
154 "allocate" copies; destructors may be duplicated as well.
155 Obviously, there must be distinct mangled names for each of these,
156 but the demangled names are all the same: S::S or S::~S. */
157
158 struct minimal_symbol *
159 lookup_minimal_symbol (const char *name, const char *sfile,
160 struct objfile *objf)
161 {
162 struct objfile *objfile;
163 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
164 struct minimal_symbol *found_symbol = NULL;
165 struct minimal_symbol *found_file_symbol = NULL;
166 struct minimal_symbol *trampoline_symbol = NULL;
167
168 unsigned int hash = msymbol_hash (name) % MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE;
169 unsigned int dem_hash = msymbol_hash_iw (name) % MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE;
170
171 #ifdef SOFUN_ADDRESS_MAYBE_MISSING
172 if (sfile != NULL)
173 {
174 char *p = strrchr (sfile, '/');
175 if (p != NULL)
176 sfile = p + 1;
177 }
178 #endif
179
180 for (objfile = object_files;
181 objfile != NULL && found_symbol == NULL;
182 objfile = objfile->next)
183 {
184 if (objf == NULL || objf == objfile)
185 {
186 /* Do two passes: the first over the ordinary hash table,
187 and the second over the demangled hash table. */
188 int pass;
189
190 for (pass = 1; pass <= 2 && found_symbol == NULL; pass++)
191 {
192 /* Select hash list according to pass. */
193 if (pass == 1)
194 msymbol = objfile->msymbol_hash[hash];
195 else
196 msymbol = objfile->msymbol_demangled_hash[dem_hash];
197
198 while (msymbol != NULL && found_symbol == NULL)
199 {
200 /* FIXME: carlton/2003-02-27: This is an unholy
201 mixture of linkage names and natural names. If
202 you want to test the linkage names with strcmp,
203 do that. If you want to test the natural names
204 with strcmp_iw, use SYMBOL_MATCHES_NATURAL_NAME. */
205 if (strcmp (DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME (msymbol), (name)) == 0
206 || (SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME (msymbol) != NULL
207 && strcmp_iw (SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME (msymbol),
208 (name)) == 0))
209 {
210 switch (MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol))
211 {
212 case mst_file_text:
213 case mst_file_data:
214 case mst_file_bss:
215 #ifdef SOFUN_ADDRESS_MAYBE_MISSING
216 if (sfile == NULL
217 || strcmp (msymbol->filename, sfile) == 0)
218 found_file_symbol = msymbol;
219 #else
220 /* We have neither the ability nor the need to
221 deal with the SFILE parameter. If we find
222 more than one symbol, just return the latest
223 one (the user can't expect useful behavior in
224 that case). */
225 found_file_symbol = msymbol;
226 #endif
227 break;
228
229 case mst_solib_trampoline:
230
231 /* If a trampoline symbol is found, we prefer to
232 keep looking for the *real* symbol. If the
233 actual symbol is not found, then we'll use the
234 trampoline entry. */
235 if (trampoline_symbol == NULL)
236 trampoline_symbol = msymbol;
237 break;
238
239 case mst_unknown:
240 default:
241 found_symbol = msymbol;
242 break;
243 }
244 }
245
246 /* Find the next symbol on the hash chain. */
247 if (pass == 1)
248 msymbol = msymbol->hash_next;
249 else
250 msymbol = msymbol->demangled_hash_next;
251 }
252 }
253 }
254 }
255 /* External symbols are best. */
256 if (found_symbol)
257 return found_symbol;
258
259 /* File-local symbols are next best. */
260 if (found_file_symbol)
261 return found_file_symbol;
262
263 /* Symbols for shared library trampolines are next best. */
264 if (trampoline_symbol)
265 return trampoline_symbol;
266
267 return NULL;
268 }
269
270 /* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
271 first minimal symbol that matches NAME and has text type. If OBJF
272 is non-NULL, limit the search to that objfile. Returns a pointer
273 to the minimal symbol that matches, or NULL if no match is found.
274
275 This function only searches the mangled (linkage) names. */
276
277 struct minimal_symbol *
278 lookup_minimal_symbol_text (const char *name, struct objfile *objf)
279 {
280 struct objfile *objfile;
281 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
282 struct minimal_symbol *found_symbol = NULL;
283 struct minimal_symbol *found_file_symbol = NULL;
284
285 unsigned int hash = msymbol_hash (name) % MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE;
286
287 for (objfile = object_files;
288 objfile != NULL && found_symbol == NULL;
289 objfile = objfile->next)
290 {
291 if (objf == NULL || objf == objfile)
292 {
293 for (msymbol = objfile->msymbol_hash[hash];
294 msymbol != NULL && found_symbol == NULL;
295 msymbol = msymbol->hash_next)
296 {
297 if (strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (msymbol), name) == 0 &&
298 (MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) == mst_text ||
299 MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) == mst_file_text))
300 {
301 switch (MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol))
302 {
303 case mst_file_text:
304 found_file_symbol = msymbol;
305 break;
306 default:
307 found_symbol = msymbol;
308 break;
309 }
310 }
311 }
312 }
313 }
314 /* External symbols are best. */
315 if (found_symbol)
316 return found_symbol;
317
318 /* File-local symbols are next best. */
319 if (found_file_symbol)
320 return found_file_symbol;
321
322 return NULL;
323 }
324
325 /* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
326 first minimal symbol that matches NAME and is a solib trampoline.
327 If OBJF is non-NULL, limit the search to that objfile. Returns a
328 pointer to the minimal symbol that matches, or NULL if no match is
329 found.
330
331 This function only searches the mangled (linkage) names. */
332
333 struct minimal_symbol *
334 lookup_minimal_symbol_solib_trampoline (const char *name,
335 struct objfile *objf)
336 {
337 struct objfile *objfile;
338 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
339 struct minimal_symbol *found_symbol = NULL;
340
341 unsigned int hash = msymbol_hash (name) % MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE;
342
343 for (objfile = object_files;
344 objfile != NULL && found_symbol == NULL;
345 objfile = objfile->next)
346 {
347 if (objf == NULL || objf == objfile)
348 {
349 for (msymbol = objfile->msymbol_hash[hash];
350 msymbol != NULL && found_symbol == NULL;
351 msymbol = msymbol->hash_next)
352 {
353 if (strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (msymbol), name) == 0 &&
354 MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) == mst_solib_trampoline)
355 return msymbol;
356 }
357 }
358 }
359
360 return NULL;
361 }
362
363 /* Search through the minimal symbol table for each objfile and find
364 the symbol whose address is the largest address that is still less
365 than or equal to PC, and matches SECTION (if non-NULL). Returns a
366 pointer to the minimal symbol if such a symbol is found, or NULL if
367 PC is not in a suitable range. Note that we need to look through
368 ALL the minimal symbol tables before deciding on the symbol that
369 comes closest to the specified PC. This is because objfiles can
370 overlap, for example objfile A has .text at 0x100 and .data at
371 0x40000 and objfile B has .text at 0x234 and .data at 0x40048. */
372
373 struct minimal_symbol *
374 lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc_section (CORE_ADDR pc, asection *section)
375 {
376 int lo;
377 int hi;
378 int new;
379 struct objfile *objfile;
380 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
381 struct minimal_symbol *best_symbol = NULL;
382 struct obj_section *pc_section;
383
384 /* PC has to be in a known section. This ensures that anything
385 beyond the end of the last segment doesn't appear to be part of
386 the last function in the last segment. */
387 pc_section = find_pc_section (pc);
388 if (pc_section == NULL)
389 return NULL;
390
391 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-01-27: Removed code (added 2003-07-19) that was
392 trying to force the PC into a valid section as returned by
393 find_pc_section. It broke IRIX 6.5 mdebug which relies on this
394 code returning an absolute symbol - the problem was that
395 find_pc_section wasn't returning an absolute section and hence
396 the code below would skip over absolute symbols. Since the
397 original problem was with finding a frame's function, and that
398 uses [indirectly] lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc, the original
399 problem has been fixed by having that function use
400 find_pc_section. */
401
402 for (objfile = object_files;
403 objfile != NULL;
404 objfile = objfile->next)
405 {
406 /* If this objfile has a minimal symbol table, go search it using
407 a binary search. Note that a minimal symbol table always consists
408 of at least two symbols, a "real" symbol and the terminating
409 "null symbol". If there are no real symbols, then there is no
410 minimal symbol table at all. */
411
412 if (objfile->minimal_symbol_count > 0)
413 {
414 int best_zero_sized = -1;
415
416 msymbol = objfile->msymbols;
417 lo = 0;
418 hi = objfile->minimal_symbol_count - 1;
419
420 /* This code assumes that the minimal symbols are sorted by
421 ascending address values. If the pc value is greater than or
422 equal to the first symbol's address, then some symbol in this
423 minimal symbol table is a suitable candidate for being the
424 "best" symbol. This includes the last real symbol, for cases
425 where the pc value is larger than any address in this vector.
426
427 By iterating until the address associated with the current
428 hi index (the endpoint of the test interval) is less than
429 or equal to the desired pc value, we accomplish two things:
430 (1) the case where the pc value is larger than any minimal
431 symbol address is trivially solved, (2) the address associated
432 with the hi index is always the one we want when the interation
433 terminates. In essence, we are iterating the test interval
434 down until the pc value is pushed out of it from the high end.
435
436 Warning: this code is trickier than it would appear at first. */
437
438 /* Should also require that pc is <= end of objfile. FIXME! */
439 if (pc >= SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[lo]))
440 {
441 while (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[hi]) > pc)
442 {
443 /* pc is still strictly less than highest address */
444 /* Note "new" will always be >= lo */
445 new = (lo + hi) / 2;
446 if ((SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[new]) >= pc) ||
447 (lo == new))
448 {
449 hi = new;
450 }
451 else
452 {
453 lo = new;
454 }
455 }
456
457 /* If we have multiple symbols at the same address, we want
458 hi to point to the last one. That way we can find the
459 right symbol if it has an index greater than hi. */
460 while (hi < objfile->minimal_symbol_count - 1
461 && (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[hi])
462 == SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[hi + 1])))
463 hi++;
464
465 /* Skip various undesirable symbols. */
466 while (hi >= 0)
467 {
468 /* Skip any absolute symbols. This is apparently
469 what adb and dbx do, and is needed for the CM-5.
470 There are two known possible problems: (1) on
471 ELF, apparently end, edata, etc. are absolute.
472 Not sure ignoring them here is a big deal, but if
473 we want to use them, the fix would go in
474 elfread.c. (2) I think shared library entry
475 points on the NeXT are absolute. If we want
476 special handling for this it probably should be
477 triggered by a special mst_abs_or_lib or some
478 such. */
479
480 if (msymbol[hi].type == mst_abs)
481 {
482 hi--;
483 continue;
484 }
485
486 /* If SECTION was specified, skip any symbol from
487 wrong section. */
488 if (section
489 /* Some types of debug info, such as COFF,
490 don't fill the bfd_section member, so don't
491 throw away symbols on those platforms. */
492 && SYMBOL_BFD_SECTION (&msymbol[hi]) != NULL
493 && (!matching_bfd_sections
494 (SYMBOL_BFD_SECTION (&msymbol[hi]), section)))
495 {
496 hi--;
497 continue;
498 }
499
500 /* If the minimal symbol has a zero size, save it
501 but keep scanning backwards looking for one with
502 a non-zero size. A zero size may mean that the
503 symbol isn't an object or function (e.g. a
504 label), or it may just mean that the size was not
505 specified. */
506 if (MSYMBOL_SIZE (&msymbol[hi]) == 0
507 && best_zero_sized == -1)
508 {
509 best_zero_sized = hi;
510 hi--;
511 continue;
512 }
513
514 /* Otherwise, this symbol must be as good as we're going
515 to get. */
516 break;
517 }
518
519 /* If HI has a zero size, and best_zero_sized is set,
520 then we had two or more zero-sized symbols; prefer
521 the first one we found (which may have a higher
522 address). Also, if we ran off the end, be sure
523 to back up. */
524 if (best_zero_sized != -1
525 && (hi < 0 || MSYMBOL_SIZE (&msymbol[hi]) == 0))
526 hi = best_zero_sized;
527
528 /* If the minimal symbol has a non-zero size, and this
529 PC appears to be outside the symbol's contents, then
530 refuse to use this symbol. If we found a zero-sized
531 symbol with an address greater than this symbol's,
532 use that instead. We assume that if symbols have
533 specified sizes, they do not overlap. */
534
535 if (hi >= 0
536 && MSYMBOL_SIZE (&msymbol[hi]) != 0
537 && pc >= (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[hi])
538 + MSYMBOL_SIZE (&msymbol[hi])))
539 {
540 if (best_zero_sized != -1)
541 hi = best_zero_sized;
542 else
543 /* Go on to the next object file. */
544 continue;
545 }
546
547 /* The minimal symbol indexed by hi now is the best one in this
548 objfile's minimal symbol table. See if it is the best one
549 overall. */
550
551 if (hi >= 0
552 && ((best_symbol == NULL) ||
553 (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (best_symbol) <
554 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbol[hi]))))
555 {
556 best_symbol = &msymbol[hi];
557 }
558 }
559 }
560 }
561 return (best_symbol);
562 }
563
564 /* Backward compatibility: search through the minimal symbol table
565 for a matching PC (no section given) */
566
567 struct minimal_symbol *
568 lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (CORE_ADDR pc)
569 {
570 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-01-27: This was using find_pc_mapped_section to
571 force the section but that (well unless you're doing overlay
572 debugging) always returns NULL making the call somewhat useless. */
573 struct obj_section *section = find_pc_section (pc);
574 if (section == NULL)
575 return NULL;
576 return lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc_section (pc, section->the_bfd_section);
577 }
578 \f
579
580 /* Return leading symbol character for a BFD. If BFD is NULL,
581 return the leading symbol character from the main objfile. */
582
583 static int get_symbol_leading_char (bfd *);
584
585 static int
586 get_symbol_leading_char (bfd *abfd)
587 {
588 if (abfd != NULL)
589 return bfd_get_symbol_leading_char (abfd);
590 if (symfile_objfile != NULL && symfile_objfile->obfd != NULL)
591 return bfd_get_symbol_leading_char (symfile_objfile->obfd);
592 return 0;
593 }
594
595 /* Prepare to start collecting minimal symbols. Note that presetting
596 msym_bunch_index to BUNCH_SIZE causes the first call to save a minimal
597 symbol to allocate the memory for the first bunch. */
598
599 void
600 init_minimal_symbol_collection (void)
601 {
602 msym_count = 0;
603 msym_bunch = NULL;
604 msym_bunch_index = BUNCH_SIZE;
605 }
606
607 void
608 prim_record_minimal_symbol (const char *name, CORE_ADDR address,
609 enum minimal_symbol_type ms_type,
610 struct objfile *objfile)
611 {
612 int section;
613
614 switch (ms_type)
615 {
616 case mst_text:
617 case mst_file_text:
618 case mst_solib_trampoline:
619 section = SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile);
620 break;
621 case mst_data:
622 case mst_file_data:
623 section = SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile);
624 break;
625 case mst_bss:
626 case mst_file_bss:
627 section = SECT_OFF_BSS (objfile);
628 break;
629 default:
630 section = -1;
631 }
632
633 prim_record_minimal_symbol_and_info (name, address, ms_type,
634 NULL, section, NULL, objfile);
635 }
636
637 /* Record a minimal symbol in the msym bunches. Returns the symbol
638 newly created. */
639
640 struct minimal_symbol *
641 prim_record_minimal_symbol_and_info (const char *name, CORE_ADDR address,
642 enum minimal_symbol_type ms_type,
643 char *info, int section,
644 asection *bfd_section,
645 struct objfile *objfile)
646 {
647 struct msym_bunch *new;
648 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
649
650 /* Don't put gcc_compiled, __gnu_compiled_cplus, and friends into
651 the minimal symbols, because if there is also another symbol
652 at the same address (e.g. the first function of the file),
653 lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc would have no way of getting the
654 right one. */
655 if (ms_type == mst_file_text && name[0] == 'g'
656 && (strcmp (name, GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0
657 || strcmp (name, GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0))
658 return (NULL);
659
660 /* It's safe to strip the leading char here once, since the name
661 is also stored stripped in the minimal symbol table. */
662 if (name[0] == get_symbol_leading_char (objfile->obfd))
663 ++name;
664
665 if (ms_type == mst_file_text && strncmp (name, "__gnu_compiled", 14) == 0)
666 return (NULL);
667
668 if (msym_bunch_index == BUNCH_SIZE)
669 {
670 new = (struct msym_bunch *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct msym_bunch));
671 msym_bunch_index = 0;
672 new->next = msym_bunch;
673 msym_bunch = new;
674 }
675 msymbol = &msym_bunch->contents[msym_bunch_index];
676 SYMBOL_INIT_LANGUAGE_SPECIFIC (msymbol, language_unknown);
677 SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (msymbol) = language_auto;
678 SYMBOL_SET_NAMES (msymbol, (char *)name, strlen (name), objfile);
679
680 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol) = address;
681 SYMBOL_SECTION (msymbol) = section;
682 SYMBOL_BFD_SECTION (msymbol) = bfd_section;
683
684 MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) = ms_type;
685 /* FIXME: This info, if it remains, needs its own field. */
686 MSYMBOL_INFO (msymbol) = info; /* FIXME! */
687 MSYMBOL_SIZE (msymbol) = 0;
688
689 /* The hash pointers must be cleared! If they're not,
690 add_minsym_to_hash_table will NOT add this msymbol to the hash table. */
691 msymbol->hash_next = NULL;
692 msymbol->demangled_hash_next = NULL;
693
694 msym_bunch_index++;
695 msym_count++;
696 OBJSTAT (objfile, n_minsyms++);
697 return msymbol;
698 }
699
700 /* Compare two minimal symbols by address and return a signed result based
701 on unsigned comparisons, so that we sort into unsigned numeric order.
702 Within groups with the same address, sort by name. */
703
704 static int
705 compare_minimal_symbols (const void *fn1p, const void *fn2p)
706 {
707 const struct minimal_symbol *fn1;
708 const struct minimal_symbol *fn2;
709
710 fn1 = (const struct minimal_symbol *) fn1p;
711 fn2 = (const struct minimal_symbol *) fn2p;
712
713 if (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (fn1) < SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (fn2))
714 {
715 return (-1); /* addr 1 is less than addr 2 */
716 }
717 else if (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (fn1) > SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (fn2))
718 {
719 return (1); /* addr 1 is greater than addr 2 */
720 }
721 else
722 /* addrs are equal: sort by name */
723 {
724 char *name1 = SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (fn1);
725 char *name2 = SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (fn2);
726
727 if (name1 && name2) /* both have names */
728 return strcmp (name1, name2);
729 else if (name2)
730 return 1; /* fn1 has no name, so it is "less" */
731 else if (name1) /* fn2 has no name, so it is "less" */
732 return -1;
733 else
734 return (0); /* neither has a name, so they're equal. */
735 }
736 }
737
738 /* Discard the currently collected minimal symbols, if any. If we wish
739 to save them for later use, we must have already copied them somewhere
740 else before calling this function.
741
742 FIXME: We could allocate the minimal symbol bunches on their own
743 obstack and then simply blow the obstack away when we are done with
744 it. Is it worth the extra trouble though? */
745
746 static void
747 do_discard_minimal_symbols_cleanup (void *arg)
748 {
749 struct msym_bunch *next;
750
751 while (msym_bunch != NULL)
752 {
753 next = msym_bunch->next;
754 xfree (msym_bunch);
755 msym_bunch = next;
756 }
757 }
758
759 struct cleanup *
760 make_cleanup_discard_minimal_symbols (void)
761 {
762 return make_cleanup (do_discard_minimal_symbols_cleanup, 0);
763 }
764
765
766
767 /* Compact duplicate entries out of a minimal symbol table by walking
768 through the table and compacting out entries with duplicate addresses
769 and matching names. Return the number of entries remaining.
770
771 On entry, the table resides between msymbol[0] and msymbol[mcount].
772 On exit, it resides between msymbol[0] and msymbol[result_count].
773
774 When files contain multiple sources of symbol information, it is
775 possible for the minimal symbol table to contain many duplicate entries.
776 As an example, SVR4 systems use ELF formatted object files, which
777 usually contain at least two different types of symbol tables (a
778 standard ELF one and a smaller dynamic linking table), as well as
779 DWARF debugging information for files compiled with -g.
780
781 Without compacting, the minimal symbol table for gdb itself contains
782 over a 1000 duplicates, about a third of the total table size. Aside
783 from the potential trap of not noticing that two successive entries
784 identify the same location, this duplication impacts the time required
785 to linearly scan the table, which is done in a number of places. So we
786 just do one linear scan here and toss out the duplicates.
787
788 Note that we are not concerned here about recovering the space that
789 is potentially freed up, because the strings themselves are allocated
790 on the objfile_obstack, and will get automatically freed when the symbol
791 table is freed. The caller can free up the unused minimal symbols at
792 the end of the compacted region if their allocation strategy allows it.
793
794 Also note we only go up to the next to last entry within the loop
795 and then copy the last entry explicitly after the loop terminates.
796
797 Since the different sources of information for each symbol may
798 have different levels of "completeness", we may have duplicates
799 that have one entry with type "mst_unknown" and the other with a
800 known type. So if the one we are leaving alone has type mst_unknown,
801 overwrite its type with the type from the one we are compacting out. */
802
803 static int
804 compact_minimal_symbols (struct minimal_symbol *msymbol, int mcount,
805 struct objfile *objfile)
806 {
807 struct minimal_symbol *copyfrom;
808 struct minimal_symbol *copyto;
809
810 if (mcount > 0)
811 {
812 copyfrom = copyto = msymbol;
813 while (copyfrom < msymbol + mcount - 1)
814 {
815 if (SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (copyfrom)
816 == SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS ((copyfrom + 1))
817 && strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (copyfrom),
818 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME ((copyfrom + 1))) == 0)
819 {
820 if (MSYMBOL_TYPE ((copyfrom + 1)) == mst_unknown)
821 {
822 MSYMBOL_TYPE ((copyfrom + 1)) = MSYMBOL_TYPE (copyfrom);
823 }
824 copyfrom++;
825 }
826 else
827 *copyto++ = *copyfrom++;
828 }
829 *copyto++ = *copyfrom++;
830 mcount = copyto - msymbol;
831 }
832 return (mcount);
833 }
834
835 /* Build (or rebuild) the minimal symbol hash tables. This is necessary
836 after compacting or sorting the table since the entries move around
837 thus causing the internal minimal_symbol pointers to become jumbled. */
838
839 static void
840 build_minimal_symbol_hash_tables (struct objfile *objfile)
841 {
842 int i;
843 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
844
845 /* Clear the hash tables. */
846 for (i = 0; i < MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE; i++)
847 {
848 objfile->msymbol_hash[i] = 0;
849 objfile->msymbol_demangled_hash[i] = 0;
850 }
851
852 /* Now, (re)insert the actual entries. */
853 for (i = objfile->minimal_symbol_count, msym = objfile->msymbols;
854 i > 0;
855 i--, msym++)
856 {
857 msym->hash_next = 0;
858 add_minsym_to_hash_table (msym, objfile->msymbol_hash);
859
860 msym->demangled_hash_next = 0;
861 if (SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME (msym) != SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (msym))
862 add_minsym_to_demangled_hash_table (msym,
863 objfile->msymbol_demangled_hash);
864 }
865 }
866
867 /* Add the minimal symbols in the existing bunches to the objfile's official
868 minimal symbol table. In most cases there is no minimal symbol table yet
869 for this objfile, and the existing bunches are used to create one. Once
870 in a while (for shared libraries for example), we add symbols (e.g. common
871 symbols) to an existing objfile.
872
873 Because of the way minimal symbols are collected, we generally have no way
874 of knowing what source language applies to any particular minimal symbol.
875 Specifically, we have no way of knowing if the minimal symbol comes from a
876 C++ compilation unit or not. So for the sake of supporting cached
877 demangled C++ names, we have no choice but to try and demangle each new one
878 that comes in. If the demangling succeeds, then we assume it is a C++
879 symbol and set the symbol's language and demangled name fields
880 appropriately. Note that in order to avoid unnecessary demanglings, and
881 allocating obstack space that subsequently can't be freed for the demangled
882 names, we mark all newly added symbols with language_auto. After
883 compaction of the minimal symbols, we go back and scan the entire minimal
884 symbol table looking for these new symbols. For each new symbol we attempt
885 to demangle it, and if successful, record it as a language_cplus symbol
886 and cache the demangled form on the symbol obstack. Symbols which don't
887 demangle are marked as language_unknown symbols, which inhibits future
888 attempts to demangle them if we later add more minimal symbols. */
889
890 void
891 install_minimal_symbols (struct objfile *objfile)
892 {
893 int bindex;
894 int mcount;
895 struct msym_bunch *bunch;
896 struct minimal_symbol *msymbols;
897 int alloc_count;
898
899 if (msym_count > 0)
900 {
901 /* Allocate enough space in the obstack, into which we will gather the
902 bunches of new and existing minimal symbols, sort them, and then
903 compact out the duplicate entries. Once we have a final table,
904 we will give back the excess space. */
905
906 alloc_count = msym_count + objfile->minimal_symbol_count + 1;
907 obstack_blank (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
908 alloc_count * sizeof (struct minimal_symbol));
909 msymbols = (struct minimal_symbol *)
910 obstack_base (&objfile->objfile_obstack);
911
912 /* Copy in the existing minimal symbols, if there are any. */
913
914 if (objfile->minimal_symbol_count)
915 memcpy ((char *) msymbols, (char *) objfile->msymbols,
916 objfile->minimal_symbol_count * sizeof (struct minimal_symbol));
917
918 /* Walk through the list of minimal symbol bunches, adding each symbol
919 to the new contiguous array of symbols. Note that we start with the
920 current, possibly partially filled bunch (thus we use the current
921 msym_bunch_index for the first bunch we copy over), and thereafter
922 each bunch is full. */
923
924 mcount = objfile->minimal_symbol_count;
925
926 for (bunch = msym_bunch; bunch != NULL; bunch = bunch->next)
927 {
928 for (bindex = 0; bindex < msym_bunch_index; bindex++, mcount++)
929 msymbols[mcount] = bunch->contents[bindex];
930 msym_bunch_index = BUNCH_SIZE;
931 }
932
933 /* Sort the minimal symbols by address. */
934
935 qsort (msymbols, mcount, sizeof (struct minimal_symbol),
936 compare_minimal_symbols);
937
938 /* Compact out any duplicates, and free up whatever space we are
939 no longer using. */
940
941 mcount = compact_minimal_symbols (msymbols, mcount, objfile);
942
943 obstack_blank (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
944 (mcount + 1 - alloc_count) * sizeof (struct minimal_symbol));
945 msymbols = (struct minimal_symbol *)
946 obstack_finish (&objfile->objfile_obstack);
947
948 /* We also terminate the minimal symbol table with a "null symbol",
949 which is *not* included in the size of the table. This makes it
950 easier to find the end of the table when we are handed a pointer
951 to some symbol in the middle of it. Zero out the fields in the
952 "null symbol" allocated at the end of the array. Note that the
953 symbol count does *not* include this null symbol, which is why it
954 is indexed by mcount and not mcount-1. */
955
956 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (&msymbols[mcount]) = NULL;
957 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&msymbols[mcount]) = 0;
958 MSYMBOL_INFO (&msymbols[mcount]) = NULL;
959 MSYMBOL_SIZE (&msymbols[mcount]) = 0;
960 MSYMBOL_TYPE (&msymbols[mcount]) = mst_unknown;
961 SYMBOL_INIT_LANGUAGE_SPECIFIC (&msymbols[mcount], language_unknown);
962
963 /* Attach the minimal symbol table to the specified objfile.
964 The strings themselves are also located in the objfile_obstack
965 of this objfile. */
966
967 objfile->minimal_symbol_count = mcount;
968 objfile->msymbols = msymbols;
969
970 /* Try to guess the appropriate C++ ABI by looking at the names
971 of the minimal symbols in the table. */
972 {
973 int i;
974
975 for (i = 0; i < mcount; i++)
976 {
977 /* If a symbol's name starts with _Z and was successfully
978 demangled, then we can assume we've found a GNU v3 symbol.
979 For now we set the C++ ABI globally; if the user is
980 mixing ABIs then the user will need to "set cp-abi"
981 manually. */
982 const char *name = SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (&objfile->msymbols[i]);
983 if (name[0] == '_' && name[1] == 'Z'
984 && SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME (&objfile->msymbols[i]) != NULL)
985 {
986 set_cp_abi_as_auto_default ("gnu-v3");
987 break;
988 }
989 }
990 }
991
992 /* Now build the hash tables; we can't do this incrementally
993 at an earlier point since we weren't finished with the obstack
994 yet. (And if the msymbol obstack gets moved, all the internal
995 pointers to other msymbols need to be adjusted.) */
996 build_minimal_symbol_hash_tables (objfile);
997 }
998 }
999
1000 /* Sort all the minimal symbols in OBJFILE. */
1001
1002 void
1003 msymbols_sort (struct objfile *objfile)
1004 {
1005 qsort (objfile->msymbols, objfile->minimal_symbol_count,
1006 sizeof (struct minimal_symbol), compare_minimal_symbols);
1007 build_minimal_symbol_hash_tables (objfile);
1008 }
1009
1010 /* Check if PC is in a shared library trampoline code stub.
1011 Return minimal symbol for the trampoline entry or NULL if PC is not
1012 in a trampoline code stub. */
1013
1014 struct minimal_symbol *
1015 lookup_solib_trampoline_symbol_by_pc (CORE_ADDR pc)
1016 {
1017 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol = lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (pc);
1018
1019 if (msymbol != NULL && MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) == mst_solib_trampoline)
1020 return msymbol;
1021 return NULL;
1022 }
1023
1024 /* If PC is in a shared library trampoline code stub, return the
1025 address of the `real' function belonging to the stub.
1026 Return 0 if PC is not in a trampoline code stub or if the real
1027 function is not found in the minimal symbol table.
1028
1029 We may fail to find the right function if a function with the
1030 same name is defined in more than one shared library, but this
1031 is considered bad programming style. We could return 0 if we find
1032 a duplicate function in case this matters someday. */
1033
1034 CORE_ADDR
1035 find_solib_trampoline_target (CORE_ADDR pc)
1036 {
1037 struct objfile *objfile;
1038 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
1039 struct minimal_symbol *tsymbol = lookup_solib_trampoline_symbol_by_pc (pc);
1040
1041 if (tsymbol != NULL)
1042 {
1043 ALL_MSYMBOLS (objfile, msymbol)
1044 {
1045 if (MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol) == mst_text
1046 && strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (msymbol),
1047 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (tsymbol)) == 0)
1048 return SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol);
1049 }
1050 }
1051 return 0;
1052 }
This page took 0.07126 seconds and 5 git commands to generate.