* monitor.c (monitor_write_memory, monitor_read_memory_single):
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / symfile.c
1 /* Generic symbol file reading for the GNU debugger, GDB.
2 Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996
3 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 Contributed by Cygnus Support, using pieces from other GDB modules.
5
6 This file is part of GDB.
7
8 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
11 (at your option) any later version.
12
13 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
17
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
20 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
21
22 #include "defs.h"
23 #include "symtab.h"
24 #include "gdbtypes.h"
25 #include "gdbcore.h"
26 #include "frame.h"
27 #include "target.h"
28 #include "value.h"
29 #include "symfile.h"
30 #include "objfiles.h"
31 #include "gdbcmd.h"
32 #include "breakpoint.h"
33 #include "language.h"
34 #include "complaints.h"
35 #include "demangle.h"
36 #include "inferior.h" /* for write_pc */
37 #include "gdb-stabs.h"
38 #include "obstack.h"
39
40 #include <assert.h>
41 #include <sys/types.h>
42 #include <fcntl.h>
43 #include "gdb_string.h"
44 #include "gdb_stat.h"
45 #include <ctype.h>
46 #include <time.h>
47 #ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
48 #include <unistd.h>
49 #endif
50
51 #ifndef O_BINARY
52 #define O_BINARY 0
53 #endif
54
55 /* Global variables owned by this file */
56 int readnow_symbol_files; /* Read full symbols immediately */
57
58 struct complaint oldsyms_complaint = {
59 "Replacing old symbols for `%s'", 0, 0
60 };
61
62 struct complaint empty_symtab_complaint = {
63 "Empty symbol table found for `%s'", 0, 0
64 };
65
66 /* External variables and functions referenced. */
67
68 extern int info_verbose;
69
70 extern void report_transfer_performance PARAMS ((unsigned long,
71 time_t, time_t));
72
73 /* Functions this file defines */
74
75 static void set_initial_language PARAMS ((void));
76
77 static void load_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
78
79 static void add_symbol_file_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
80
81 static void add_shared_symbol_files_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
82
83 static void cashier_psymtab PARAMS ((struct partial_symtab *));
84
85 static int compare_psymbols PARAMS ((const void *, const void *));
86
87 static int compare_symbols PARAMS ((const void *, const void *));
88
89 static bfd *symfile_bfd_open PARAMS ((char *));
90
91 static void find_sym_fns PARAMS ((struct objfile *));
92
93 /* List of all available sym_fns. On gdb startup, each object file reader
94 calls add_symtab_fns() to register information on each format it is
95 prepared to read. */
96
97 static struct sym_fns *symtab_fns = NULL;
98
99 /* Flag for whether user will be reloading symbols multiple times.
100 Defaults to ON for VxWorks, otherwise OFF. */
101
102 #ifdef SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT
103 int symbol_reloading = SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT;
104 #else
105 int symbol_reloading = 0;
106 #endif
107
108 /* If true, then shared library symbols will be added automatically
109 when the inferior is created, new libraries are loaded, or when
110 attaching to the inferior. This is almost always what users
111 will want to have happen; but for very large programs, the startup
112 time will be excessive, and so if this is a problem, the user can
113 clear this flag and then add the shared library symbols as needed.
114 Note that there is a potential for confusion, since if the shared
115 library symbols are not loaded, commands like "info fun" will *not*
116 report all the functions that are actually present. */
117
118 int auto_solib_add = 1;
119
120 \f
121 /* Since this function is called from within qsort, in an ANSI environment
122 it must conform to the prototype for qsort, which specifies that the
123 comparison function takes two "void *" pointers. */
124
125 static int
126 compare_symbols (s1p, s2p)
127 const PTR s1p;
128 const PTR s2p;
129 {
130 register struct symbol **s1, **s2;
131
132 s1 = (struct symbol **) s1p;
133 s2 = (struct symbol **) s2p;
134
135 return (STRCMP (SYMBOL_NAME (*s1), SYMBOL_NAME (*s2)));
136 }
137
138 /*
139
140 LOCAL FUNCTION
141
142 compare_psymbols -- compare two partial symbols by name
143
144 DESCRIPTION
145
146 Given pointers to pointers to two partial symbol table entries,
147 compare them by name and return -N, 0, or +N (ala strcmp).
148 Typically used by sorting routines like qsort().
149
150 NOTES
151
152 Does direct compare of first two characters before punting
153 and passing to strcmp for longer compares. Note that the
154 original version had a bug whereby two null strings or two
155 identically named one character strings would return the
156 comparison of memory following the null byte.
157
158 */
159
160 static int
161 compare_psymbols (s1p, s2p)
162 const PTR s1p;
163 const PTR s2p;
164 {
165 register char *st1 = SYMBOL_NAME (*(struct partial_symbol **) s1p);
166 register char *st2 = SYMBOL_NAME (*(struct partial_symbol **) s2p);
167
168 if ((st1[0] - st2[0]) || !st1[0])
169 {
170 return (st1[0] - st2[0]);
171 }
172 else if ((st1[1] - st2[1]) || !st1[1])
173 {
174 return (st1[1] - st2[1]);
175 }
176 else
177 {
178 return (STRCMP (st1 + 2, st2 + 2));
179 }
180 }
181
182 void
183 sort_pst_symbols (pst)
184 struct partial_symtab *pst;
185 {
186 /* Sort the global list; don't sort the static list */
187
188 qsort (pst -> objfile -> global_psymbols.list + pst -> globals_offset,
189 pst -> n_global_syms, sizeof (struct partial_symbol *),
190 compare_psymbols);
191 }
192
193 /* Call sort_block_syms to sort alphabetically the symbols of one block. */
194
195 void
196 sort_block_syms (b)
197 register struct block *b;
198 {
199 qsort (&BLOCK_SYM (b, 0), BLOCK_NSYMS (b),
200 sizeof (struct symbol *), compare_symbols);
201 }
202
203 /* Call sort_symtab_syms to sort alphabetically
204 the symbols of each block of one symtab. */
205
206 void
207 sort_symtab_syms (s)
208 register struct symtab *s;
209 {
210 register struct blockvector *bv;
211 int nbl;
212 int i;
213 register struct block *b;
214
215 if (s == 0)
216 return;
217 bv = BLOCKVECTOR (s);
218 nbl = BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bv);
219 for (i = 0; i < nbl; i++)
220 {
221 b = BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bv, i);
222 if (BLOCK_SHOULD_SORT (b))
223 sort_block_syms (b);
224 }
225 }
226
227 /* Make a null terminated copy of the string at PTR with SIZE characters in
228 the obstack pointed to by OBSTACKP . Returns the address of the copy.
229 Note that the string at PTR does not have to be null terminated, I.E. it
230 may be part of a larger string and we are only saving a substring. */
231
232 char *
233 obsavestring (ptr, size, obstackp)
234 char *ptr;
235 int size;
236 struct obstack *obstackp;
237 {
238 register char *p = (char *) obstack_alloc (obstackp, size + 1);
239 /* Open-coded memcpy--saves function call time. These strings are usually
240 short. FIXME: Is this really still true with a compiler that can
241 inline memcpy? */
242 {
243 register char *p1 = ptr;
244 register char *p2 = p;
245 char *end = ptr + size;
246 while (p1 != end)
247 *p2++ = *p1++;
248 }
249 p[size] = 0;
250 return p;
251 }
252
253 /* Concatenate strings S1, S2 and S3; return the new string. Space is found
254 in the obstack pointed to by OBSTACKP. */
255
256 char *
257 obconcat (obstackp, s1, s2, s3)
258 struct obstack *obstackp;
259 const char *s1, *s2, *s3;
260 {
261 register int len = strlen (s1) + strlen (s2) + strlen (s3) + 1;
262 register char *val = (char *) obstack_alloc (obstackp, len);
263 strcpy (val, s1);
264 strcat (val, s2);
265 strcat (val, s3);
266 return val;
267 }
268
269 /* True if we are nested inside psymtab_to_symtab. */
270
271 int currently_reading_symtab = 0;
272
273 static void
274 decrement_reading_symtab (dummy)
275 void *dummy;
276 {
277 currently_reading_symtab--;
278 }
279
280 /* Get the symbol table that corresponds to a partial_symtab.
281 This is fast after the first time you do it. In fact, there
282 is an even faster macro PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB that does the fast
283 case inline. */
284
285 struct symtab *
286 psymtab_to_symtab (pst)
287 register struct partial_symtab *pst;
288 {
289 /* If it's been looked up before, return it. */
290 if (pst->symtab)
291 return pst->symtab;
292
293 /* If it has not yet been read in, read it. */
294 if (!pst->readin)
295 {
296 struct cleanup *back_to = make_cleanup (decrement_reading_symtab, NULL);
297 currently_reading_symtab++;
298 (*pst->read_symtab) (pst);
299 do_cleanups (back_to);
300 }
301
302 return pst->symtab;
303 }
304
305 /* Initialize entry point information for this objfile. */
306
307 void
308 init_entry_point_info (objfile)
309 struct objfile *objfile;
310 {
311 /* Save startup file's range of PC addresses to help blockframe.c
312 decide where the bottom of the stack is. */
313
314 if (bfd_get_file_flags (objfile -> obfd) & EXEC_P)
315 {
316 /* Executable file -- record its entry point so we'll recognize
317 the startup file because it contains the entry point. */
318 objfile -> ei.entry_point = bfd_get_start_address (objfile -> obfd);
319 }
320 else
321 {
322 /* Examination of non-executable.o files. Short-circuit this stuff. */
323 objfile -> ei.entry_point = INVALID_ENTRY_POINT;
324 }
325 objfile -> ei.entry_file_lowpc = INVALID_ENTRY_LOWPC;
326 objfile -> ei.entry_file_highpc = INVALID_ENTRY_HIGHPC;
327 objfile -> ei.entry_func_lowpc = INVALID_ENTRY_LOWPC;
328 objfile -> ei.entry_func_highpc = INVALID_ENTRY_HIGHPC;
329 objfile -> ei.main_func_lowpc = INVALID_ENTRY_LOWPC;
330 objfile -> ei.main_func_highpc = INVALID_ENTRY_HIGHPC;
331 }
332
333 /* Get current entry point address. */
334
335 CORE_ADDR
336 entry_point_address()
337 {
338 return symfile_objfile ? symfile_objfile->ei.entry_point : 0;
339 }
340
341 /* Remember the lowest-addressed loadable section we've seen.
342 This function is called via bfd_map_over_sections.
343
344 In case of equal vmas, the section with the largest size becomes the
345 lowest-addressed loadable section.
346
347 If the vmas and sizes are equal, the last section is considered the
348 lowest-addressed loadable section. */
349
350 void
351 find_lowest_section (abfd, sect, obj)
352 bfd *abfd;
353 asection *sect;
354 PTR obj;
355 {
356 asection **lowest = (asection **)obj;
357
358 if (0 == (bfd_get_section_flags (abfd, sect) & SEC_LOAD))
359 return;
360 if (!*lowest)
361 *lowest = sect; /* First loadable section */
362 else if (bfd_section_vma (abfd, *lowest) > bfd_section_vma (abfd, sect))
363 *lowest = sect; /* A lower loadable section */
364 else if (bfd_section_vma (abfd, *lowest) == bfd_section_vma (abfd, sect)
365 && (bfd_section_size (abfd, (*lowest))
366 <= bfd_section_size (abfd, sect)))
367 *lowest = sect;
368 }
369
370 /* Parse the user's idea of an offset for dynamic linking, into our idea
371 of how to represent it for fast symbol reading. This is the default
372 version of the sym_fns.sym_offsets function for symbol readers that
373 don't need to do anything special. It allocates a section_offsets table
374 for the objectfile OBJFILE and stuffs ADDR into all of the offsets. */
375
376 struct section_offsets *
377 default_symfile_offsets (objfile, addr)
378 struct objfile *objfile;
379 CORE_ADDR addr;
380 {
381 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
382 int i;
383
384 objfile->num_sections = SECT_OFF_MAX;
385 section_offsets = (struct section_offsets *)
386 obstack_alloc (&objfile -> psymbol_obstack, SIZEOF_SECTION_OFFSETS);
387
388 for (i = 0; i < SECT_OFF_MAX; i++)
389 ANOFFSET (section_offsets, i) = addr;
390
391 return section_offsets;
392 }
393
394
395 /* Process a symbol file, as either the main file or as a dynamically
396 loaded file.
397
398 NAME is the file name (which will be tilde-expanded and made
399 absolute herein) (but we don't free or modify NAME itself).
400 FROM_TTY says how verbose to be. MAINLINE specifies whether this
401 is the main symbol file, or whether it's an extra symbol file such
402 as dynamically loaded code. If !mainline, ADDR is the address
403 where the text segment was loaded. If VERBO, the caller has printed
404 a verbose message about the symbol reading (and complaints can be
405 more terse about it). */
406
407 void
408 syms_from_objfile (objfile, addr, mainline, verbo)
409 struct objfile *objfile;
410 CORE_ADDR addr;
411 int mainline;
412 int verbo;
413 {
414 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
415 asection *lowest_sect;
416 struct cleanup *old_chain;
417
418 init_entry_point_info (objfile);
419 find_sym_fns (objfile);
420
421 /* Make sure that partially constructed symbol tables will be cleaned up
422 if an error occurs during symbol reading. */
423 old_chain = make_cleanup (free_objfile, objfile);
424
425 if (mainline)
426 {
427 /* We will modify the main symbol table, make sure that all its users
428 will be cleaned up if an error occurs during symbol reading. */
429 make_cleanup (clear_symtab_users, 0);
430
431 /* Since no error yet, throw away the old symbol table. */
432
433 if (symfile_objfile != NULL)
434 {
435 free_objfile (symfile_objfile);
436 symfile_objfile = NULL;
437 }
438
439 /* Currently we keep symbols from the add-symbol-file command.
440 If the user wants to get rid of them, they should do "symbol-file"
441 without arguments first. Not sure this is the best behavior
442 (PR 2207). */
443
444 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_new_init) (objfile);
445 }
446
447 /* Convert addr into an offset rather than an absolute address.
448 We find the lowest address of a loaded segment in the objfile,
449 and assume that <addr> is where that got loaded. Due to historical
450 precedent, we warn if that doesn't happen to be a text segment. */
451
452 if (mainline)
453 {
454 addr = 0; /* No offset from objfile addresses. */
455 }
456 else
457 {
458 lowest_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (objfile->obfd, ".text");
459 if (lowest_sect == NULL)
460 bfd_map_over_sections (objfile->obfd, find_lowest_section,
461 (PTR) &lowest_sect);
462
463 if (lowest_sect == NULL)
464 warning ("no loadable sections found in added symbol-file %s",
465 objfile->name);
466 else if ((bfd_get_section_flags (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect) & SEC_CODE)
467 == 0)
468 /* FIXME-32x64--assumes bfd_vma fits in long. */
469 warning ("Lowest section in %s is %s at 0x%lx",
470 objfile->name,
471 bfd_section_name (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect),
472 (unsigned long) bfd_section_vma (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect));
473
474 if (lowest_sect)
475 addr -= bfd_section_vma (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect);
476 }
477
478 /* Initialize symbol reading routines for this objfile, allow complaints to
479 appear for this new file, and record how verbose to be, then do the
480 initial symbol reading for this file. */
481
482 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_init) (objfile);
483 clear_complaints (1, verbo);
484
485 section_offsets = (*objfile -> sf -> sym_offsets) (objfile, addr);
486 objfile->section_offsets = section_offsets;
487
488 #ifndef IBM6000_TARGET
489 /* This is a SVR4/SunOS specific hack, I think. In any event, it
490 screws RS/6000. sym_offsets should be doing this sort of thing,
491 because it knows the mapping between bfd sections and
492 section_offsets. */
493 /* This is a hack. As far as I can tell, section offsets are not
494 target dependent. They are all set to addr with a couple of
495 exceptions. The exceptions are sysvr4 shared libraries, whose
496 offsets are kept in solib structures anyway and rs6000 xcoff
497 which handles shared libraries in a completely unique way.
498
499 Section offsets are built similarly, except that they are built
500 by adding addr in all cases because there is no clear mapping
501 from section_offsets into actual sections. Note that solib.c
502 has a different algorythm for finding section offsets.
503
504 These should probably all be collapsed into some target
505 independent form of shared library support. FIXME. */
506
507 if (addr)
508 {
509 struct obj_section *s;
510
511 for (s = objfile->sections; s < objfile->sections_end; ++s)
512 {
513 s->addr -= s->offset;
514 s->addr += addr;
515 s->endaddr -= s->offset;
516 s->endaddr += addr;
517 s->offset += addr;
518 }
519 }
520 #endif /* not IBM6000_TARGET */
521
522 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_read) (objfile, section_offsets, mainline);
523
524 if (!have_partial_symbols () && !have_full_symbols ())
525 {
526 wrap_here ("");
527 printf_filtered ("(no debugging symbols found)...");
528 wrap_here ("");
529 }
530
531 /* Don't allow char * to have a typename (else would get caddr_t).
532 Ditto void *. FIXME: Check whether this is now done by all the
533 symbol readers themselves (many of them now do), and if so remove
534 it from here. */
535
536 TYPE_NAME (lookup_pointer_type (builtin_type_char)) = 0;
537 TYPE_NAME (lookup_pointer_type (builtin_type_void)) = 0;
538
539 /* Mark the objfile has having had initial symbol read attempted. Note
540 that this does not mean we found any symbols... */
541
542 objfile -> flags |= OBJF_SYMS;
543
544 /* Discard cleanups as symbol reading was successful. */
545
546 discard_cleanups (old_chain);
547
548 /* Call this after reading in a new symbol table to give target dependant code
549 a crack at the new symbols. For instance, this could be used to update the
550 values of target-specific symbols GDB needs to keep track of (such as
551 _sigtramp, or whatever). */
552
553 TARGET_SYMFILE_POSTREAD (objfile);
554 }
555
556 /* Perform required actions after either reading in the initial
557 symbols for a new objfile, or mapping in the symbols from a reusable
558 objfile. */
559
560 void
561 new_symfile_objfile (objfile, mainline, verbo)
562 struct objfile *objfile;
563 int mainline;
564 int verbo;
565 {
566
567 /* If this is the main symbol file we have to clean up all users of the
568 old main symbol file. Otherwise it is sufficient to fixup all the
569 breakpoints that may have been redefined by this symbol file. */
570 if (mainline)
571 {
572 /* OK, make it the "real" symbol file. */
573 symfile_objfile = objfile;
574
575 clear_symtab_users ();
576 }
577 else
578 {
579 breakpoint_re_set ();
580 }
581
582 /* We're done reading the symbol file; finish off complaints. */
583 clear_complaints (0, verbo);
584 }
585
586 /* Process a symbol file, as either the main file or as a dynamically
587 loaded file.
588
589 NAME is the file name (which will be tilde-expanded and made
590 absolute herein) (but we don't free or modify NAME itself).
591 FROM_TTY says how verbose to be. MAINLINE specifies whether this
592 is the main symbol file, or whether it's an extra symbol file such
593 as dynamically loaded code. If !mainline, ADDR is the address
594 where the text segment was loaded.
595
596 Upon success, returns a pointer to the objfile that was added.
597 Upon failure, jumps back to command level (never returns). */
598
599 struct objfile *
600 symbol_file_add (name, from_tty, addr, mainline, mapped, readnow)
601 char *name;
602 int from_tty;
603 CORE_ADDR addr;
604 int mainline;
605 int mapped;
606 int readnow;
607 {
608 struct objfile *objfile;
609 struct partial_symtab *psymtab;
610 bfd *abfd;
611
612 /* Open a bfd for the file, and give user a chance to burp if we'd be
613 interactively wiping out any existing symbols. */
614
615 abfd = symfile_bfd_open (name);
616
617 if ((have_full_symbols () || have_partial_symbols ())
618 && mainline
619 && from_tty
620 && !query ("Load new symbol table from \"%s\"? ", name))
621 error ("Not confirmed.");
622
623 objfile = allocate_objfile (abfd, mapped);
624
625 /* If the objfile uses a mapped symbol file, and we have a psymtab for
626 it, then skip reading any symbols at this time. */
627
628 if ((objfile -> flags & OBJF_MAPPED) && (objfile -> flags & OBJF_SYMS))
629 {
630 /* We mapped in an existing symbol table file that already has had
631 initial symbol reading performed, so we can skip that part. Notify
632 the user that instead of reading the symbols, they have been mapped.
633 */
634 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
635 {
636 printf_filtered ("Mapped symbols for %s...", name);
637 wrap_here ("");
638 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
639 }
640 init_entry_point_info (objfile);
641 find_sym_fns (objfile);
642 }
643 else
644 {
645 /* We either created a new mapped symbol table, mapped an existing
646 symbol table file which has not had initial symbol reading
647 performed, or need to read an unmapped symbol table. */
648 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
649 {
650 printf_filtered ("Reading symbols from %s...", name);
651 wrap_here ("");
652 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
653 }
654 syms_from_objfile (objfile, addr, mainline, from_tty);
655 }
656
657 /* We now have at least a partial symbol table. Check to see if the
658 user requested that all symbols be read on initial access via either
659 the gdb startup command line or on a per symbol file basis. Expand
660 all partial symbol tables for this objfile if so. */
661
662 if (readnow || readnow_symbol_files)
663 {
664 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
665 {
666 printf_filtered ("expanding to full symbols...");
667 wrap_here ("");
668 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
669 }
670
671 for (psymtab = objfile -> psymtabs;
672 psymtab != NULL;
673 psymtab = psymtab -> next)
674 {
675 psymtab_to_symtab (psymtab);
676 }
677 }
678
679 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
680 {
681 printf_filtered ("done.\n");
682 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
683 }
684
685 new_symfile_objfile (objfile, mainline, from_tty);
686
687 target_new_objfile (objfile);
688
689 return (objfile);
690 }
691
692 /* This is the symbol-file command. Read the file, analyze its
693 symbols, and add a struct symtab to a symtab list. The syntax of
694 the command is rather bizarre--(1) buildargv implements various
695 quoting conventions which are undocumented and have little or
696 nothing in common with the way things are quoted (or not quoted)
697 elsewhere in GDB, (2) options are used, which are not generally
698 used in GDB (perhaps "set mapped on", "set readnow on" would be
699 better), (3) the order of options matters, which is contrary to GNU
700 conventions (because it is confusing and inconvenient). */
701
702 void
703 symbol_file_command (args, from_tty)
704 char *args;
705 int from_tty;
706 {
707 char **argv;
708 char *name = NULL;
709 CORE_ADDR text_relocation = 0; /* text_relocation */
710 struct cleanup *cleanups;
711 int mapped = 0;
712 int readnow = 0;
713
714 dont_repeat ();
715
716 if (args == NULL)
717 {
718 if ((have_full_symbols () || have_partial_symbols ())
719 && from_tty
720 && !query ("Discard symbol table from `%s'? ",
721 symfile_objfile -> name))
722 error ("Not confirmed.");
723 free_all_objfiles ();
724 symfile_objfile = NULL;
725 if (from_tty)
726 {
727 printf_unfiltered ("No symbol file now.\n");
728 }
729 }
730 else
731 {
732 if ((argv = buildargv (args)) == NULL)
733 {
734 nomem (0);
735 }
736 cleanups = make_cleanup (freeargv, (char *) argv);
737 while (*argv != NULL)
738 {
739 if (STREQ (*argv, "-mapped"))
740 {
741 mapped = 1;
742 }
743 else if (STREQ (*argv, "-readnow"))
744 {
745 readnow = 1;
746 }
747 else if (**argv == '-')
748 {
749 error ("unknown option `%s'", *argv);
750 }
751 else
752 {
753 char *p;
754
755 name = *argv;
756
757 /* this is for rombug remote only, to get the text relocation by
758 using link command */
759 p = strrchr(name, '/');
760 if (p != NULL) p++;
761 else p = name;
762
763 target_link(p, &text_relocation);
764
765 if (text_relocation == (CORE_ADDR)0)
766 return;
767 else if (text_relocation == (CORE_ADDR)-1)
768 symbol_file_add (name, from_tty, (CORE_ADDR)0, 1, mapped,
769 readnow);
770 else
771 symbol_file_add (name, from_tty, (CORE_ADDR)text_relocation,
772 0, mapped, readnow);
773
774 /* Getting new symbols may change our opinion about what is
775 frameless. */
776 reinit_frame_cache ();
777
778 set_initial_language ();
779 }
780 argv++;
781 }
782
783 if (name == NULL)
784 {
785 error ("no symbol file name was specified");
786 }
787 do_cleanups (cleanups);
788 }
789 }
790
791 /* Set the initial language.
792
793 A better solution would be to record the language in the psymtab when reading
794 partial symbols, and then use it (if known) to set the language. This would
795 be a win for formats that encode the language in an easily discoverable place,
796 such as DWARF. For stabs, we can jump through hoops looking for specially
797 named symbols or try to intuit the language from the specific type of stabs
798 we find, but we can't do that until later when we read in full symbols.
799 FIXME. */
800
801 static void
802 set_initial_language ()
803 {
804 struct partial_symtab *pst;
805 enum language lang = language_unknown;
806
807 pst = find_main_psymtab ();
808 if (pst != NULL)
809 {
810 if (pst -> filename != NULL)
811 {
812 lang = deduce_language_from_filename (pst -> filename);
813 }
814 if (lang == language_unknown)
815 {
816 /* Make C the default language */
817 lang = language_c;
818 }
819 set_language (lang);
820 expected_language = current_language; /* Don't warn the user */
821 }
822 }
823
824 /* Open file specified by NAME and hand it off to BFD for preliminary
825 analysis. Result is a newly initialized bfd *, which includes a newly
826 malloc'd` copy of NAME (tilde-expanded and made absolute).
827 In case of trouble, error() is called. */
828
829 static bfd *
830 symfile_bfd_open (name)
831 char *name;
832 {
833 bfd *sym_bfd;
834 int desc;
835 char *absolute_name;
836
837 name = tilde_expand (name); /* Returns 1st new malloc'd copy */
838
839 /* Look down path for it, allocate 2nd new malloc'd copy. */
840 desc = openp (getenv ("PATH"), 1, name, O_RDONLY | O_BINARY, 0, &absolute_name);
841 if (desc < 0)
842 {
843 make_cleanup (free, name);
844 perror_with_name (name);
845 }
846 free (name); /* Free 1st new malloc'd copy */
847 name = absolute_name; /* Keep 2nd malloc'd copy in bfd */
848 /* It'll be freed in free_objfile(). */
849
850 sym_bfd = bfd_fdopenr (name, gnutarget, desc);
851 if (!sym_bfd)
852 {
853 close (desc);
854 make_cleanup (free, name);
855 error ("\"%s\": can't open to read symbols: %s.", name,
856 bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
857 }
858 sym_bfd->cacheable = true;
859
860 if (!bfd_check_format (sym_bfd, bfd_object))
861 {
862 /* FIXME: should be checking for errors from bfd_close (for one thing,
863 on error it does not free all the storage associated with the
864 bfd). */
865 bfd_close (sym_bfd); /* This also closes desc */
866 make_cleanup (free, name);
867 error ("\"%s\": can't read symbols: %s.", name,
868 bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
869 }
870
871 return (sym_bfd);
872 }
873
874 /* Link a new symtab_fns into the global symtab_fns list. Called on gdb
875 startup by the _initialize routine in each object file format reader,
876 to register information about each format the the reader is prepared
877 to handle. */
878
879 void
880 add_symtab_fns (sf)
881 struct sym_fns *sf;
882 {
883 sf->next = symtab_fns;
884 symtab_fns = sf;
885 }
886
887
888 /* Initialize to read symbols from the symbol file sym_bfd. It either
889 returns or calls error(). The result is an initialized struct sym_fns
890 in the objfile structure, that contains cached information about the
891 symbol file. */
892
893 static void
894 find_sym_fns (objfile)
895 struct objfile *objfile;
896 {
897 struct sym_fns *sf;
898 enum bfd_flavour our_flavour = bfd_get_flavour (objfile -> obfd);
899 char *our_target = bfd_get_target (objfile -> obfd);
900
901 /* Special kludge for RS/6000 and PowerMac. See xcoffread.c. */
902 if (STREQ (our_target, "aixcoff-rs6000") ||
903 STREQ (our_target, "xcoff-powermac"))
904 our_flavour = (enum bfd_flavour)-1;
905
906 /* Special kludge for apollo. See dstread.c. */
907 if (STREQN (our_target, "apollo", 6))
908 our_flavour = (enum bfd_flavour)-2;
909
910 for (sf = symtab_fns; sf != NULL; sf = sf -> next)
911 {
912 if (our_flavour == sf -> sym_flavour)
913 {
914 objfile -> sf = sf;
915 return;
916 }
917 }
918 error ("I'm sorry, Dave, I can't do that. Symbol format `%s' unknown.",
919 bfd_get_target (objfile -> obfd));
920 }
921 \f
922 /* This function runs the load command of our current target. */
923
924 static void
925 load_command (arg, from_tty)
926 char *arg;
927 int from_tty;
928 {
929 if (arg == NULL)
930 arg = get_exec_file (1);
931 target_load (arg, from_tty);
932 }
933
934 /* This version of "load" should be usable for any target. Currently
935 it is just used for remote targets, not inftarg.c or core files,
936 on the theory that only in that case is it useful.
937
938 Avoiding xmodem and the like seems like a win (a) because we don't have
939 to worry about finding it, and (b) On VMS, fork() is very slow and so
940 we don't want to run a subprocess. On the other hand, I'm not sure how
941 performance compares. */
942 void
943 generic_load (filename, from_tty)
944 char *filename;
945 int from_tty;
946 {
947 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
948 asection *s;
949 bfd *loadfile_bfd;
950 time_t start_time, end_time; /* Start and end times of download */
951 unsigned long data_count = 0; /* Number of bytes transferred to memory */
952 int n;
953 unsigned long load_offset = 0; /* offset to add to vma for each section */
954 char buf[128];
955
956 /* enable user to specify address for downloading as 2nd arg to load */
957 n = sscanf(filename, "%s 0x%x", buf, &load_offset);
958 if (n > 1 )
959 filename = buf;
960 else
961 load_offset = 0;
962
963 loadfile_bfd = bfd_openr (filename, gnutarget);
964 if (loadfile_bfd == NULL)
965 {
966 perror_with_name (filename);
967 return;
968 }
969 /* FIXME: should be checking for errors from bfd_close (for one thing,
970 on error it does not free all the storage associated with the
971 bfd). */
972 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (bfd_close, loadfile_bfd);
973
974 if (!bfd_check_format (loadfile_bfd, bfd_object))
975 {
976 error ("\"%s\" is not an object file: %s", filename,
977 bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
978 }
979
980 start_time = time (NULL);
981
982 for (s = loadfile_bfd->sections; s; s = s->next)
983 {
984 if (s->flags & SEC_LOAD)
985 {
986 bfd_size_type size;
987
988 size = bfd_get_section_size_before_reloc (s);
989 if (size > 0)
990 {
991 char *buffer;
992 struct cleanup *old_chain;
993 bfd_vma vma;
994
995 data_count += size;
996
997 buffer = xmalloc (size);
998 old_chain = make_cleanup (free, buffer);
999
1000 vma = bfd_get_section_vma (loadfile_bfd, s);
1001 vma += load_offset;
1002
1003 /* Is this really necessary? I guess it gives the user something
1004 to look at during a long download. */
1005 printf_filtered ("Loading section %s, size 0x%lx vma ",
1006 bfd_get_section_name (loadfile_bfd, s),
1007 (unsigned long) size);
1008 print_address_numeric (vma, 1, gdb_stdout);
1009 printf_filtered ("\n");
1010
1011 bfd_get_section_contents (loadfile_bfd, s, buffer, 0, size);
1012
1013 target_write_memory (vma, buffer, size);
1014
1015 do_cleanups (old_chain);
1016 }
1017 }
1018 }
1019
1020 end_time = time (NULL);
1021
1022 printf_filtered ("Start address 0x%lx\n", loadfile_bfd->start_address);
1023
1024 /* We were doing this in remote-mips.c, I suspect it is right
1025 for other targets too. */
1026 write_pc (loadfile_bfd->start_address);
1027
1028 /* FIXME: are we supposed to call symbol_file_add or not? According to
1029 a comment from remote-mips.c (where a call to symbol_file_add was
1030 commented out), making the call confuses GDB if more than one file is
1031 loaded in. remote-nindy.c had no call to symbol_file_add, but remote-vx.c
1032 does. */
1033
1034 report_transfer_performance (data_count, start_time, end_time);
1035
1036 do_cleanups (old_cleanups);
1037 }
1038
1039 /* Report how fast the transfer went. */
1040
1041 void
1042 report_transfer_performance (data_count, start_time, end_time)
1043 unsigned long data_count;
1044 time_t start_time, end_time;
1045 {
1046 printf_filtered ("Transfer rate: ");
1047 if (end_time != start_time)
1048 printf_filtered ("%d bits/sec",
1049 (data_count * 8) / (end_time - start_time));
1050 else
1051 printf_filtered ("%d bits in <1 sec", (data_count * 8));
1052 printf_filtered (".\n");
1053 }
1054
1055 /* This function allows the addition of incrementally linked object files.
1056 It does not modify any state in the target, only in the debugger. */
1057
1058 /* ARGSUSED */
1059 static void
1060 add_symbol_file_command (args, from_tty)
1061 char *args;
1062 int from_tty;
1063 {
1064 char *name = NULL;
1065 CORE_ADDR text_addr;
1066 char *arg;
1067 int readnow = 0;
1068 int mapped = 0;
1069
1070 dont_repeat ();
1071
1072 if (args == NULL)
1073 {
1074 error ("add-symbol-file takes a file name and an address");
1075 }
1076
1077 /* Make a copy of the string that we can safely write into. */
1078
1079 args = strdup (args);
1080 make_cleanup (free, args);
1081
1082 /* Pick off any -option args and the file name. */
1083
1084 while ((*args != '\000') && (name == NULL))
1085 {
1086 while (isspace (*args)) {args++;}
1087 arg = args;
1088 while ((*args != '\000') && !isspace (*args)) {args++;}
1089 if (*args != '\000')
1090 {
1091 *args++ = '\000';
1092 }
1093 if (*arg != '-')
1094 {
1095 name = arg;
1096 }
1097 else if (STREQ (arg, "-mapped"))
1098 {
1099 mapped = 1;
1100 }
1101 else if (STREQ (arg, "-readnow"))
1102 {
1103 readnow = 1;
1104 }
1105 else
1106 {
1107 error ("unknown option `%s'", arg);
1108 }
1109 }
1110
1111 /* After picking off any options and the file name, args should be
1112 left pointing at the remainder of the command line, which should
1113 be the address expression to evaluate. */
1114
1115 if (name == NULL)
1116 {
1117 error ("add-symbol-file takes a file name");
1118 }
1119 name = tilde_expand (name);
1120 make_cleanup (free, name);
1121
1122 if (*args != '\000')
1123 {
1124 text_addr = parse_and_eval_address (args);
1125 }
1126 else
1127 {
1128 target_link(name, &text_addr);
1129 if (text_addr == (CORE_ADDR)-1)
1130 error("Don't know how to get text start location for this file");
1131 }
1132
1133 /* FIXME-32x64: Assumes text_addr fits in a long. */
1134 if (!query ("add symbol table from file \"%s\" at text_addr = %s?\n",
1135 name, local_hex_string ((unsigned long)text_addr)))
1136 error ("Not confirmed.");
1137
1138 symbol_file_add (name, 0, text_addr, 0, mapped, readnow);
1139
1140 /* Getting new symbols may change our opinion about what is
1141 frameless. */
1142 reinit_frame_cache ();
1143 }
1144 \f
1145 static void
1146 add_shared_symbol_files_command (args, from_tty)
1147 char *args;
1148 int from_tty;
1149 {
1150 #ifdef ADD_SHARED_SYMBOL_FILES
1151 ADD_SHARED_SYMBOL_FILES (args, from_tty);
1152 #else
1153 error ("This command is not available in this configuration of GDB.");
1154 #endif
1155 }
1156 \f
1157 /* Re-read symbols if a symbol-file has changed. */
1158 void
1159 reread_symbols ()
1160 {
1161 struct objfile *objfile;
1162 long new_modtime;
1163 int reread_one = 0;
1164 struct stat new_statbuf;
1165 int res;
1166
1167 /* With the addition of shared libraries, this should be modified,
1168 the load time should be saved in the partial symbol tables, since
1169 different tables may come from different source files. FIXME.
1170 This routine should then walk down each partial symbol table
1171 and see if the symbol table that it originates from has been changed */
1172
1173 for (objfile = object_files; objfile; objfile = objfile->next) {
1174 if (objfile->obfd) {
1175 #ifdef IBM6000_TARGET
1176 /* If this object is from a shared library, then you should
1177 stat on the library name, not member name. */
1178
1179 if (objfile->obfd->my_archive)
1180 res = stat (objfile->obfd->my_archive->filename, &new_statbuf);
1181 else
1182 #endif
1183 res = stat (objfile->name, &new_statbuf);
1184 if (res != 0) {
1185 /* FIXME, should use print_sys_errmsg but it's not filtered. */
1186 printf_filtered ("`%s' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.\n",
1187 objfile->name);
1188 continue;
1189 }
1190 new_modtime = new_statbuf.st_mtime;
1191 if (new_modtime != objfile->mtime)
1192 {
1193 struct cleanup *old_cleanups;
1194 struct section_offsets *offsets;
1195 int num_offsets;
1196 int section_offsets_size;
1197 char *obfd_filename;
1198
1199 printf_filtered ("`%s' has changed; re-reading symbols.\n",
1200 objfile->name);
1201
1202 /* There are various functions like symbol_file_add,
1203 symfile_bfd_open, syms_from_objfile, etc., which might
1204 appear to do what we want. But they have various other
1205 effects which we *don't* want. So we just do stuff
1206 ourselves. We don't worry about mapped files (for one thing,
1207 any mapped file will be out of date). */
1208
1209 /* If we get an error, blow away this objfile (not sure if
1210 that is the correct response for things like shared
1211 libraries). */
1212 old_cleanups = make_cleanup (free_objfile, objfile);
1213 /* We need to do this whenever any symbols go away. */
1214 make_cleanup (clear_symtab_users, 0);
1215
1216 /* Clean up any state BFD has sitting around. We don't need
1217 to close the descriptor but BFD lacks a way of closing the
1218 BFD without closing the descriptor. */
1219 obfd_filename = bfd_get_filename (objfile->obfd);
1220 if (!bfd_close (objfile->obfd))
1221 error ("Can't close BFD for %s: %s", objfile->name,
1222 bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
1223 objfile->obfd = bfd_openr (obfd_filename, gnutarget);
1224 if (objfile->obfd == NULL)
1225 error ("Can't open %s to read symbols.", objfile->name);
1226 /* bfd_openr sets cacheable to true, which is what we want. */
1227 if (!bfd_check_format (objfile->obfd, bfd_object))
1228 error ("Can't read symbols from %s: %s.", objfile->name,
1229 bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
1230
1231 /* Save the offsets, we will nuke them with the rest of the
1232 psymbol_obstack. */
1233 num_offsets = objfile->num_sections;
1234 section_offsets_size =
1235 sizeof (struct section_offsets)
1236 + sizeof (objfile->section_offsets->offsets) * num_offsets;
1237 offsets = (struct section_offsets *) alloca (section_offsets_size);
1238 memcpy (offsets, objfile->section_offsets, section_offsets_size);
1239
1240 /* Nuke all the state that we will re-read. Much of the following
1241 code which sets things to NULL really is necessary to tell
1242 other parts of GDB that there is nothing currently there. */
1243
1244 /* FIXME: Do we have to free a whole linked list, or is this
1245 enough? */
1246 if (objfile->global_psymbols.list)
1247 mfree (objfile->md, objfile->global_psymbols.list);
1248 memset (&objfile -> global_psymbols, 0,
1249 sizeof (objfile -> global_psymbols));
1250 if (objfile->static_psymbols.list)
1251 mfree (objfile->md, objfile->static_psymbols.list);
1252 memset (&objfile -> static_psymbols, 0,
1253 sizeof (objfile -> static_psymbols));
1254
1255 /* Free the obstacks for non-reusable objfiles */
1256 obstack_free (&objfile -> psymbol_cache.cache, 0);
1257 memset (&objfile -> psymbol_cache, 0,
1258 sizeof (objfile -> psymbol_cache));
1259 obstack_free (&objfile -> psymbol_obstack, 0);
1260 obstack_free (&objfile -> symbol_obstack, 0);
1261 obstack_free (&objfile -> type_obstack, 0);
1262 objfile->sections = NULL;
1263 objfile->symtabs = NULL;
1264 objfile->psymtabs = NULL;
1265 objfile->free_psymtabs = NULL;
1266 objfile->msymbols = NULL;
1267 objfile->minimal_symbol_count= 0;
1268 objfile->fundamental_types = NULL;
1269 if (objfile -> sf != NULL)
1270 {
1271 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_finish) (objfile);
1272 }
1273
1274 /* We never make this a mapped file. */
1275 objfile -> md = NULL;
1276 /* obstack_specify_allocation also initializes the obstack so
1277 it is empty. */
1278 obstack_specify_allocation (&objfile -> psymbol_cache.cache, 0, 0,
1279 xmalloc, free);
1280 obstack_specify_allocation (&objfile -> psymbol_obstack, 0, 0,
1281 xmalloc, free);
1282 obstack_specify_allocation (&objfile -> symbol_obstack, 0, 0,
1283 xmalloc, free);
1284 obstack_specify_allocation (&objfile -> type_obstack, 0, 0,
1285 xmalloc, free);
1286 if (build_objfile_section_table (objfile))
1287 {
1288 error ("Can't find the file sections in `%s': %s",
1289 objfile -> name, bfd_errmsg (bfd_get_error ()));
1290 }
1291
1292 /* We use the same section offsets as from last time. I'm not
1293 sure whether that is always correct for shared libraries. */
1294 objfile->section_offsets = (struct section_offsets *)
1295 obstack_alloc (&objfile -> psymbol_obstack, section_offsets_size);
1296 memcpy (objfile->section_offsets, offsets, section_offsets_size);
1297 objfile->num_sections = num_offsets;
1298
1299 /* What the hell is sym_new_init for, anyway? The concept of
1300 distinguishing between the main file and additional files
1301 in this way seems rather dubious. */
1302 if (objfile == symfile_objfile)
1303 (*objfile->sf->sym_new_init) (objfile);
1304
1305 (*objfile->sf->sym_init) (objfile);
1306 clear_complaints (1, 1);
1307 /* The "mainline" parameter is a hideous hack; I think leaving it
1308 zero is OK since dbxread.c also does what it needs to do if
1309 objfile->global_psymbols.size is 0. */
1310 (*objfile->sf->sym_read) (objfile, objfile->section_offsets, 0);
1311 if (!have_partial_symbols () && !have_full_symbols ())
1312 {
1313 wrap_here ("");
1314 printf_filtered ("(no debugging symbols found)\n");
1315 wrap_here ("");
1316 }
1317 objfile -> flags |= OBJF_SYMS;
1318
1319 /* We're done reading the symbol file; finish off complaints. */
1320 clear_complaints (0, 1);
1321
1322 /* Getting new symbols may change our opinion about what is
1323 frameless. */
1324
1325 reinit_frame_cache ();
1326
1327 /* Discard cleanups as symbol reading was successful. */
1328 discard_cleanups (old_cleanups);
1329
1330 /* If the mtime has changed between the time we set new_modtime
1331 and now, we *want* this to be out of date, so don't call stat
1332 again now. */
1333 objfile->mtime = new_modtime;
1334 reread_one = 1;
1335
1336 /* Call this after reading in a new symbol table to give target
1337 dependant code a crack at the new symbols. For instance, this
1338 could be used to update the values of target-specific symbols GDB
1339 needs to keep track of (such as _sigtramp, or whatever). */
1340
1341 TARGET_SYMFILE_POSTREAD (objfile);
1342 }
1343 }
1344 }
1345
1346 if (reread_one)
1347 clear_symtab_users ();
1348 }
1349
1350 \f
1351 enum language
1352 deduce_language_from_filename (filename)
1353 char *filename;
1354 {
1355 char *c;
1356
1357 if (0 == filename)
1358 ; /* Get default */
1359 else if (0 == (c = strrchr (filename, '.')))
1360 ; /* Get default. */
1361 else if (STREQ (c, ".c"))
1362 return language_c;
1363 else if (STREQ (c, ".cc") || STREQ (c, ".C") || STREQ (c, ".cxx")
1364 || STREQ (c, ".cpp") || STREQ (c, ".cp") || STREQ (c, ".c++"))
1365 return language_cplus;
1366 else if (STREQ (c, ".ch") || STREQ (c, ".c186") || STREQ (c, ".c286"))
1367 return language_chill;
1368 else if (STREQ (c, ".f") || STREQ (c, ".F"))
1369 return language_fortran;
1370 else if (STREQ (c, ".mod"))
1371 return language_m2;
1372 else if (STREQ (c, ".s") || STREQ (c, ".S"))
1373 return language_asm;
1374
1375 return language_unknown; /* default */
1376 }
1377 \f
1378 /* allocate_symtab:
1379
1380 Allocate and partly initialize a new symbol table. Return a pointer
1381 to it. error() if no space.
1382
1383 Caller must set these fields:
1384 LINETABLE(symtab)
1385 symtab->blockvector
1386 symtab->dirname
1387 symtab->free_code
1388 symtab->free_ptr
1389 initialize any EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO
1390 possibly free_named_symtabs (symtab->filename);
1391 */
1392
1393 struct symtab *
1394 allocate_symtab (filename, objfile)
1395 char *filename;
1396 struct objfile *objfile;
1397 {
1398 register struct symtab *symtab;
1399
1400 symtab = (struct symtab *)
1401 obstack_alloc (&objfile -> symbol_obstack, sizeof (struct symtab));
1402 memset (symtab, 0, sizeof (*symtab));
1403 symtab -> filename = obsavestring (filename, strlen (filename),
1404 &objfile -> symbol_obstack);
1405 symtab -> fullname = NULL;
1406 symtab -> language = deduce_language_from_filename (filename);
1407
1408 /* Hook it to the objfile it comes from */
1409
1410 symtab -> objfile = objfile;
1411 symtab -> next = objfile -> symtabs;
1412 objfile -> symtabs = symtab;
1413
1414 #ifdef INIT_EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO
1415 INIT_EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO (symtab);
1416 #endif
1417
1418 return (symtab);
1419 }
1420
1421 struct partial_symtab *
1422 allocate_psymtab (filename, objfile)
1423 char *filename;
1424 struct objfile *objfile;
1425 {
1426 struct partial_symtab *psymtab;
1427
1428 if (objfile -> free_psymtabs)
1429 {
1430 psymtab = objfile -> free_psymtabs;
1431 objfile -> free_psymtabs = psymtab -> next;
1432 }
1433 else
1434 psymtab = (struct partial_symtab *)
1435 obstack_alloc (&objfile -> psymbol_obstack,
1436 sizeof (struct partial_symtab));
1437
1438 memset (psymtab, 0, sizeof (struct partial_symtab));
1439 psymtab -> filename = obsavestring (filename, strlen (filename),
1440 &objfile -> psymbol_obstack);
1441 psymtab -> symtab = NULL;
1442
1443 /* Hook it to the objfile it comes from */
1444
1445 psymtab -> objfile = objfile;
1446 psymtab -> next = objfile -> psymtabs;
1447 objfile -> psymtabs = psymtab;
1448
1449 return (psymtab);
1450 }
1451
1452 \f
1453 /* Reset all data structures in gdb which may contain references to symbol
1454 table date. */
1455
1456 void
1457 clear_symtab_users ()
1458 {
1459 /* Someday, we should do better than this, by only blowing away
1460 the things that really need to be blown. */
1461 clear_value_history ();
1462 clear_displays ();
1463 clear_internalvars ();
1464 breakpoint_re_set ();
1465 set_default_breakpoint (0, 0, 0, 0);
1466 current_source_symtab = 0;
1467 current_source_line = 0;
1468 clear_pc_function_cache ();
1469 target_new_objfile (NULL);
1470 }
1471
1472 /* clear_symtab_users_once:
1473
1474 This function is run after symbol reading, or from a cleanup.
1475 If an old symbol table was obsoleted, the old symbol table
1476 has been blown away, but the other GDB data structures that may
1477 reference it have not yet been cleared or re-directed. (The old
1478 symtab was zapped, and the cleanup queued, in free_named_symtab()
1479 below.)
1480
1481 This function can be queued N times as a cleanup, or called
1482 directly; it will do all the work the first time, and then will be a
1483 no-op until the next time it is queued. This works by bumping a
1484 counter at queueing time. Much later when the cleanup is run, or at
1485 the end of symbol processing (in case the cleanup is discarded), if
1486 the queued count is greater than the "done-count", we do the work
1487 and set the done-count to the queued count. If the queued count is
1488 less than or equal to the done-count, we just ignore the call. This
1489 is needed because reading a single .o file will often replace many
1490 symtabs (one per .h file, for example), and we don't want to reset
1491 the breakpoints N times in the user's face.
1492
1493 The reason we both queue a cleanup, and call it directly after symbol
1494 reading, is because the cleanup protects us in case of errors, but is
1495 discarded if symbol reading is successful. */
1496
1497 #if 0
1498 /* FIXME: As free_named_symtabs is currently a big noop this function
1499 is no longer needed. */
1500 static void
1501 clear_symtab_users_once PARAMS ((void));
1502
1503 static int clear_symtab_users_queued;
1504 static int clear_symtab_users_done;
1505
1506 static void
1507 clear_symtab_users_once ()
1508 {
1509 /* Enforce once-per-`do_cleanups'-semantics */
1510 if (clear_symtab_users_queued <= clear_symtab_users_done)
1511 return;
1512 clear_symtab_users_done = clear_symtab_users_queued;
1513
1514 clear_symtab_users ();
1515 }
1516 #endif
1517
1518 /* Delete the specified psymtab, and any others that reference it. */
1519
1520 static void
1521 cashier_psymtab (pst)
1522 struct partial_symtab *pst;
1523 {
1524 struct partial_symtab *ps, *pprev = NULL;
1525 int i;
1526
1527 /* Find its previous psymtab in the chain */
1528 for (ps = pst->objfile->psymtabs; ps; ps = ps->next) {
1529 if (ps == pst)
1530 break;
1531 pprev = ps;
1532 }
1533
1534 if (ps) {
1535 /* Unhook it from the chain. */
1536 if (ps == pst->objfile->psymtabs)
1537 pst->objfile->psymtabs = ps->next;
1538 else
1539 pprev->next = ps->next;
1540
1541 /* FIXME, we can't conveniently deallocate the entries in the
1542 partial_symbol lists (global_psymbols/static_psymbols) that
1543 this psymtab points to. These just take up space until all
1544 the psymtabs are reclaimed. Ditto the dependencies list and
1545 filename, which are all in the psymbol_obstack. */
1546
1547 /* We need to cashier any psymtab that has this one as a dependency... */
1548 again:
1549 for (ps = pst->objfile->psymtabs; ps; ps = ps->next) {
1550 for (i = 0; i < ps->number_of_dependencies; i++) {
1551 if (ps->dependencies[i] == pst) {
1552 cashier_psymtab (ps);
1553 goto again; /* Must restart, chain has been munged. */
1554 }
1555 }
1556 }
1557 }
1558 }
1559
1560 /* If a symtab or psymtab for filename NAME is found, free it along
1561 with any dependent breakpoints, displays, etc.
1562 Used when loading new versions of object modules with the "add-file"
1563 command. This is only called on the top-level symtab or psymtab's name;
1564 it is not called for subsidiary files such as .h files.
1565
1566 Return value is 1 if we blew away the environment, 0 if not.
1567 FIXME. The return valu appears to never be used.
1568
1569 FIXME. I think this is not the best way to do this. We should
1570 work on being gentler to the environment while still cleaning up
1571 all stray pointers into the freed symtab. */
1572
1573 int
1574 free_named_symtabs (name)
1575 char *name;
1576 {
1577 #if 0
1578 /* FIXME: With the new method of each objfile having it's own
1579 psymtab list, this function needs serious rethinking. In particular,
1580 why was it ever necessary to toss psymtabs with specific compilation
1581 unit filenames, as opposed to all psymtabs from a particular symbol
1582 file? -- fnf
1583 Well, the answer is that some systems permit reloading of particular
1584 compilation units. We want to blow away any old info about these
1585 compilation units, regardless of which objfiles they arrived in. --gnu. */
1586
1587 register struct symtab *s;
1588 register struct symtab *prev;
1589 register struct partial_symtab *ps;
1590 struct blockvector *bv;
1591 int blewit = 0;
1592
1593 /* We only wack things if the symbol-reload switch is set. */
1594 if (!symbol_reloading)
1595 return 0;
1596
1597 /* Some symbol formats have trouble providing file names... */
1598 if (name == 0 || *name == '\0')
1599 return 0;
1600
1601 /* Look for a psymtab with the specified name. */
1602
1603 again2:
1604 for (ps = partial_symtab_list; ps; ps = ps->next) {
1605 if (STREQ (name, ps->filename)) {
1606 cashier_psymtab (ps); /* Blow it away...and its little dog, too. */
1607 goto again2; /* Must restart, chain has been munged */
1608 }
1609 }
1610
1611 /* Look for a symtab with the specified name. */
1612
1613 for (s = symtab_list; s; s = s->next)
1614 {
1615 if (STREQ (name, s->filename))
1616 break;
1617 prev = s;
1618 }
1619
1620 if (s)
1621 {
1622 if (s == symtab_list)
1623 symtab_list = s->next;
1624 else
1625 prev->next = s->next;
1626
1627 /* For now, queue a delete for all breakpoints, displays, etc., whether
1628 or not they depend on the symtab being freed. This should be
1629 changed so that only those data structures affected are deleted. */
1630
1631 /* But don't delete anything if the symtab is empty.
1632 This test is necessary due to a bug in "dbxread.c" that
1633 causes empty symtabs to be created for N_SO symbols that
1634 contain the pathname of the object file. (This problem
1635 has been fixed in GDB 3.9x). */
1636
1637 bv = BLOCKVECTOR (s);
1638 if (BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bv) > 2
1639 || BLOCK_NSYMS (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bv, GLOBAL_BLOCK))
1640 || BLOCK_NSYMS (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bv, STATIC_BLOCK)))
1641 {
1642 complain (&oldsyms_complaint, name);
1643
1644 clear_symtab_users_queued++;
1645 make_cleanup (clear_symtab_users_once, 0);
1646 blewit = 1;
1647 } else {
1648 complain (&empty_symtab_complaint, name);
1649 }
1650
1651 free_symtab (s);
1652 }
1653 else
1654 {
1655 /* It is still possible that some breakpoints will be affected
1656 even though no symtab was found, since the file might have
1657 been compiled without debugging, and hence not be associated
1658 with a symtab. In order to handle this correctly, we would need
1659 to keep a list of text address ranges for undebuggable files.
1660 For now, we do nothing, since this is a fairly obscure case. */
1661 ;
1662 }
1663
1664 /* FIXME, what about the minimal symbol table? */
1665 return blewit;
1666 #else
1667 return (0);
1668 #endif
1669 }
1670 \f
1671 /* Allocate and partially fill a partial symtab. It will be
1672 completely filled at the end of the symbol list.
1673
1674 SYMFILE_NAME is the name of the symbol-file we are reading from, and ADDR
1675 is the address relative to which its symbols are (incremental) or 0
1676 (normal). */
1677
1678
1679 struct partial_symtab *
1680 start_psymtab_common (objfile, section_offsets,
1681 filename, textlow, global_syms, static_syms)
1682 struct objfile *objfile;
1683 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
1684 char *filename;
1685 CORE_ADDR textlow;
1686 struct partial_symbol **global_syms;
1687 struct partial_symbol **static_syms;
1688 {
1689 struct partial_symtab *psymtab;
1690
1691 psymtab = allocate_psymtab (filename, objfile);
1692 psymtab -> section_offsets = section_offsets;
1693 psymtab -> textlow = textlow;
1694 psymtab -> texthigh = psymtab -> textlow; /* default */
1695 psymtab -> globals_offset = global_syms - objfile -> global_psymbols.list;
1696 psymtab -> statics_offset = static_syms - objfile -> static_psymbols.list;
1697 return (psymtab);
1698 }
1699 \f
1700 /* Add a symbol with a long value to a psymtab.
1701 Since one arg is a struct, we pass in a ptr and deref it (sigh). */
1702
1703 void
1704 add_psymbol_to_list (name, namelength, namespace, class, list, val, coreaddr,
1705 language, objfile)
1706 char *name;
1707 int namelength;
1708 namespace_enum namespace;
1709 enum address_class class;
1710 struct psymbol_allocation_list *list;
1711 long val; /* Value as a long */
1712 CORE_ADDR coreaddr; /* Value as a CORE_ADDR */
1713 enum language language;
1714 struct objfile *objfile;
1715 {
1716 register struct partial_symbol *psym;
1717 char *buf = alloca (namelength + 1);
1718 /* psymbol is static so that there will be no uninitialized gaps in the
1719 structure which might contain random data, causing cache misses in
1720 bcache. */
1721 static struct partial_symbol psymbol;
1722
1723 /* Create local copy of the partial symbol */
1724 memcpy (buf, name, namelength);
1725 buf[namelength] = '\0';
1726 SYMBOL_NAME (&psymbol) = bcache (buf, namelength + 1, &objfile->psymbol_cache);
1727 /* val and coreaddr are mutually exclusive, one of them *will* be zero */
1728 if (val != 0)
1729 {
1730 SYMBOL_VALUE (&psymbol) = val;
1731 }
1732 else
1733 {
1734 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (&psymbol) = coreaddr;
1735 }
1736 SYMBOL_SECTION (&psymbol) = 0;
1737 SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (&psymbol) = language;
1738 PSYMBOL_NAMESPACE (&psymbol) = namespace;
1739 PSYMBOL_CLASS (&psymbol) = class;
1740 SYMBOL_INIT_LANGUAGE_SPECIFIC (&psymbol, language);
1741
1742 /* Stash the partial symbol away in the cache */
1743 psym = bcache (&psymbol, sizeof (struct partial_symbol), &objfile->psymbol_cache);
1744
1745 /* Save pointer to partial symbol in psymtab, growing symtab if needed. */
1746 if (list->next >= list->list + list->size)
1747 {
1748 extend_psymbol_list (list, objfile);
1749 }
1750 *list->next++ = psym;
1751 OBJSTAT (objfile, n_psyms++);
1752 }
1753
1754 /* Initialize storage for partial symbols. */
1755
1756 void
1757 init_psymbol_list (objfile, total_symbols)
1758 struct objfile *objfile;
1759 int total_symbols;
1760 {
1761 /* Free any previously allocated psymbol lists. */
1762
1763 if (objfile -> global_psymbols.list)
1764 {
1765 mfree (objfile -> md, (PTR)objfile -> global_psymbols.list);
1766 }
1767 if (objfile -> static_psymbols.list)
1768 {
1769 mfree (objfile -> md, (PTR)objfile -> static_psymbols.list);
1770 }
1771
1772 /* Current best guess is that approximately a twentieth
1773 of the total symbols (in a debugging file) are global or static
1774 oriented symbols */
1775
1776 objfile -> global_psymbols.size = total_symbols / 10;
1777 objfile -> static_psymbols.size = total_symbols / 10;
1778 objfile -> global_psymbols.next =
1779 objfile -> global_psymbols.list = (struct partial_symbol **)
1780 xmmalloc (objfile -> md, objfile -> global_psymbols.size
1781 * sizeof (struct partial_symbol *));
1782 objfile -> static_psymbols.next =
1783 objfile -> static_psymbols.list = (struct partial_symbol **)
1784 xmmalloc (objfile -> md, objfile -> static_psymbols.size
1785 * sizeof (struct partial_symbol *));
1786 }
1787 \f
1788 void
1789 _initialize_symfile ()
1790 {
1791 struct cmd_list_element *c;
1792
1793 c = add_cmd ("symbol-file", class_files, symbol_file_command,
1794 "Load symbol table from executable file FILE.\n\
1795 The `file' command can also load symbol tables, as well as setting the file\n\
1796 to execute.", &cmdlist);
1797 c->completer = filename_completer;
1798
1799 c = add_cmd ("add-symbol-file", class_files, add_symbol_file_command,
1800 "Usage: add-symbol-file FILE ADDR\n\
1801 Load the symbols from FILE, assuming FILE has been dynamically loaded.\n\
1802 ADDR is the starting address of the file's text.",
1803 &cmdlist);
1804 c->completer = filename_completer;
1805
1806 c = add_cmd ("add-shared-symbol-files", class_files,
1807 add_shared_symbol_files_command,
1808 "Load the symbols from shared objects in the dynamic linker's link map.",
1809 &cmdlist);
1810 c = add_alias_cmd ("assf", "add-shared-symbol-files", class_files, 1,
1811 &cmdlist);
1812
1813 c = add_cmd ("load", class_files, load_command,
1814 "Dynamically load FILE into the running program, and record its symbols\n\
1815 for access from GDB.", &cmdlist);
1816 c->completer = filename_completer;
1817
1818 add_show_from_set
1819 (add_set_cmd ("symbol-reloading", class_support, var_boolean,
1820 (char *)&symbol_reloading,
1821 "Set dynamic symbol table reloading multiple times in one run.",
1822 &setlist),
1823 &showlist);
1824
1825 }
This page took 0.066023 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.