Fix setting breakpoints or stepping on line 65535
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / minsyms.h
1 /* Minimal symbol table definitions for GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 2011-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #ifndef MINSYMS_H
21 #define MINSYMS_H
22
23 struct type;
24
25 /* Several lookup functions return both a minimal symbol and the
26 objfile in which it is found. This structure is used in these
27 cases. */
28
29 struct bound_minimal_symbol
30 {
31 /* The minimal symbol that was found, or NULL if no minimal symbol
32 was found. */
33
34 struct minimal_symbol *minsym;
35
36 /* If MINSYM is not NULL, then this is the objfile in which the
37 symbol is defined. */
38
39 struct objfile *objfile;
40 };
41
42 /* This header declares most of the API for dealing with minimal
43 symbols and minimal symbol tables. A few things are declared
44 elsewhere; see below.
45
46 A minimal symbol is a symbol for which there is no direct debug
47 information. For example, for an ELF binary, minimal symbols are
48 created from the ELF symbol table.
49
50 For the definition of the minimal symbol structure, see struct
51 minimal_symbol in symtab.h.
52
53 Minimal symbols are stored in tables attached to an objfile; see
54 objfiles.h for details. Code should generally treat these tables
55 as opaque and use functions provided by minsyms.c to inspect them.
56 */
57
58 struct msym_bunch;
59
60 /* An RAII-based object that is used to record minimal symbols while
61 they are being read. */
62 class minimal_symbol_reader
63 {
64 public:
65
66 /* Prepare to start collecting minimal symbols. This should be
67 called by a symbol reader to initialize the minimal symbol
68 module. */
69
70 explicit minimal_symbol_reader (struct objfile *);
71
72 ~minimal_symbol_reader ();
73
74 /* Install the minimal symbols that have been collected into the
75 given objfile. */
76
77 void install ();
78
79 /* Record a new minimal symbol. This is the "full" entry point;
80 simpler convenience entry points are also provided below.
81
82 This returns a new minimal symbol. It is ok to modify the returned
83 minimal symbol (though generally not necessary). It is not ok,
84 though, to stash the pointer anywhere; as minimal symbols may be
85 moved after creation. The memory for the returned minimal symbol
86 is still owned by the minsyms.c code, and should not be freed.
87
88 Arguments are:
89
90 NAME - the symbol's name
91 COPY_NAME - if true, the minsym code must make a copy of NAME. If
92 false, then NAME must be NUL-terminated, and must have a lifetime
93 that is at least as long as OBJFILE's lifetime.
94 ADDRESS - the address of the symbol
95 MS_TYPE - the type of the symbol
96 SECTION - the symbol's section
97 */
98
99 struct minimal_symbol *record_full (gdb::string_view name,
100 bool copy_name,
101 CORE_ADDR address,
102 enum minimal_symbol_type ms_type,
103 int section);
104
105 /* Like record_full, but:
106 - computes the length of NAME
107 - passes COPY_NAME = true,
108 - and passes a default SECTION, depending on the type
109
110 This variant does not return the new symbol. */
111
112 void record (const char *name, CORE_ADDR address,
113 enum minimal_symbol_type ms_type);
114
115 /* Like record_full, but:
116 - computes the length of NAME
117 - passes COPY_NAME = true.
118
119 This variant does not return the new symbol. */
120
121 void record_with_info (const char *name, CORE_ADDR address,
122 enum minimal_symbol_type ms_type,
123 int section)
124 {
125 record_full (name, true, address, ms_type, section);
126 }
127
128 private:
129
130 DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (minimal_symbol_reader);
131
132 struct objfile *m_objfile;
133
134 /* Bunch currently being filled up.
135 The next field points to chain of filled bunches. */
136
137 struct msym_bunch *m_msym_bunch;
138
139 /* Number of slots filled in current bunch. */
140
141 int m_msym_bunch_index;
142
143 /* Total number of minimal symbols recorded so far for the
144 objfile. */
145
146 int m_msym_count;
147 };
148
149 \f
150
151 /* Return whether MSYMBOL is a function/method. If FUNC_ADDRESS_P is
152 non-NULL, and the MSYMBOL is a function, then *FUNC_ADDRESS_P is
153 set to the function's address, already resolved if MINSYM points to
154 a function descriptor. */
155
156 bool msymbol_is_function (struct objfile *objfile,
157 minimal_symbol *minsym,
158 CORE_ADDR *func_address_p = NULL);
159
160 /* Compute a hash code for the string argument. Unlike htab_hash_string,
161 this is a case-insensitive hash to support "set case-sensitive off". */
162
163 unsigned int msymbol_hash (const char *);
164
165 /* Like msymbol_hash, but compute a hash code that is compatible with
166 strcmp_iw. */
167
168 unsigned int msymbol_hash_iw (const char *);
169
170 /* Compute the next hash value from previous HASH and the character C. This
171 is only a GDB in-memory computed value with no external files compatibility
172 requirements. */
173
174 #define SYMBOL_HASH_NEXT(hash, c) \
175 ((hash) * 67 + TOLOWER ((unsigned char) (c)) - 113)
176
177 \f
178
179 /* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
180 first minimal symbol that matches NAME. If OBJF is non-NULL, limit
181 the search to that objfile. If SFILE is non-NULL, the only
182 file-scope symbols considered will be from that source file (global
183 symbols are still preferred). Returns a bound minimal symbol that
184 matches, or an empty bound minimal symbol if no match is found. */
185
186 struct bound_minimal_symbol lookup_minimal_symbol (const char *,
187 const char *,
188 struct objfile *);
189
190 /* Like lookup_minimal_symbol, but searches all files and
191 objfiles. */
192
193 struct bound_minimal_symbol lookup_bound_minimal_symbol (const char *);
194
195 /* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
196 first minimal symbol that matches NAME and has text type. If OBJF
197 is non-NULL, limit the search to that objfile. Returns a bound
198 minimal symbol that matches, or an "empty" bound minimal symbol
199 otherwise.
200
201 This function only searches the mangled (linkage) names. */
202
203 struct bound_minimal_symbol lookup_minimal_symbol_text (const char *,
204 struct objfile *);
205
206 /* Look through the minimal symbols in OBJF (and its separate debug
207 objfiles) for a global (not file-local) minsym whose linkage name
208 is NAME. This is somewhat similar to lookup_minimal_symbol_text,
209 only data symbols (not text symbols) are considered, and a non-NULL
210 objfile is not accepted. Returns a bound minimal symbol that
211 matches, or an "empty" bound minimal symbol otherwise. */
212
213 extern struct bound_minimal_symbol lookup_minimal_symbol_linkage
214 (const char *name, struct objfile *objf)
215 ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL (1) ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL (2);
216
217 /* Look through all the current minimal symbol tables and find the
218 first minimal symbol that matches NAME and PC. If OBJF is non-NULL,
219 limit the search to that objfile. Returns a pointer to the minimal
220 symbol that matches, or NULL if no match is found. */
221
222 struct minimal_symbol *lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc_name
223 (CORE_ADDR, const char *, struct objfile *);
224
225 enum class lookup_msym_prefer
226 {
227 /* Prefer mst_text symbols. */
228 TEXT,
229
230 /* Prefer mst_solib_trampoline symbols when there are text and
231 trampoline symbols at the same address. Otherwise prefer
232 mst_text symbols. */
233 TRAMPOLINE,
234
235 /* Prefer mst_text_gnu_ifunc symbols when there are text and ifunc
236 symbols at the same address. Otherwise prefer mst_text
237 symbols. */
238 GNU_IFUNC,
239 };
240
241 /* Search through the minimal symbol table for each objfile and find
242 the symbol whose address is the largest address that is still less
243 than or equal to PC, and which matches SECTION.
244
245 If SECTION is NULL, this uses the result of find_pc_section
246 instead.
247
248 The result has a non-NULL 'minsym' member if such a symbol is
249 found, or NULL if PC is not in a suitable range.
250
251 See definition of lookup_msym_prefer for description of PREFER. By
252 default mst_text symbols are preferred. */
253
254 struct bound_minimal_symbol lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc_section
255 (CORE_ADDR,
256 struct obj_section *,
257 lookup_msym_prefer prefer = lookup_msym_prefer::TEXT);
258
259 /* Backward compatibility: search through the minimal symbol table
260 for a matching PC (no section given).
261
262 This is a wrapper that calls lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc_section
263 with a NULL section argument. */
264
265 struct bound_minimal_symbol lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc (CORE_ADDR);
266
267 /* Iterate over all the minimal symbols in the objfile OBJF which
268 match NAME. Both the ordinary and demangled names of each symbol
269 are considered. The caller is responsible for canonicalizing NAME,
270 should that need to be done.
271
272 For each matching symbol, CALLBACK is called with the symbol. */
273
274 void iterate_over_minimal_symbols
275 (struct objfile *objf, const lookup_name_info &name,
276 gdb::function_view<bool (struct minimal_symbol *)> callback);
277
278 /* Compute the upper bound of MINSYM. The upper bound is the last
279 address thought to be part of the symbol. If the symbol has a
280 size, it is used. Otherwise use the lesser of the next minimal
281 symbol in the same section, or the end of the section, as the end
282 of the function. */
283
284 CORE_ADDR minimal_symbol_upper_bound (struct bound_minimal_symbol minsym);
285
286 /* Return the type of MSYMBOL, a minimal symbol of OBJFILE. If
287 ADDRESS_P is not NULL, set it to the MSYMBOL's resolved
288 address. */
289
290 type *find_minsym_type_and_address (minimal_symbol *msymbol, objfile *objf,
291 CORE_ADDR *address_p);
292
293 #endif /* MINSYMS_H */
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