Fix RX linker testsuite failures by making the assembler use conventional section...
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gas / doc / internals.texi
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252b5132 1\input texinfo
4b95cf5c 2@c Copyright (C) 1991-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3@setfilename internals.info
4@node Top
5@top Assembler Internals
6@raisesections
7@cindex internals
8
9This chapter describes the internals of the assembler. It is incomplete, but
10it may help a bit.
11
43da67e8 12This chapter is not updated regularly, and it may be out of date.
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13
14@menu
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15* Data types:: Data types
16* GAS processing:: What GAS does when it runs
17* Porting GAS:: Porting GAS
18* Relaxation:: Relaxation
19* Broken words:: Broken words
20* Internal functions:: Internal functions
21* Test suite:: Test suite
22@end menu
23
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24@node Data types
25@section Data types
26@cindex internals, data types
27
28This section describes some fundamental GAS data types.
29
30@menu
31* Symbols:: The symbolS structure
32* Expressions:: The expressionS structure
33* Fixups:: The fixS structure
34* Frags:: The fragS structure
35@end menu
36
37@node Symbols
38@subsection Symbols
39@cindex internals, symbols
40@cindex symbols, internal
41@cindex symbolS structure
42
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43The definition for the symbol structure, @code{symbolS}, is located in
44@file{struc-symbol.h}.
45
46In general, the fields of this structure may not be referred to directly.
47Instead, you must use one of the accessor functions defined in @file{symbol.h}.
48These accessor functions should work for any GAS version.
49
50Symbol structures contain the following fields:
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51
52@table @code
53@item sy_value
54This is an @code{expressionS} that describes the value of the symbol. It might
55refer to one or more other symbols; if so, its true value may not be known
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56until @code{resolve_symbol_value} is called with @var{finalize_syms} non-zero
57in @code{write_object_file}.
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58
59The expression is often simply a constant. Before @code{resolve_symbol_value}
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60is called with @var{finalize_syms} set, the value is the offset from the frag
61(@pxref{Frags}). Afterward, the frag address has been added in.
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62
63@item sy_resolved
64This field is non-zero if the symbol's value has been completely resolved. It
65is used during the final pass over the symbol table.
66
67@item sy_resolving
68This field is used to detect loops while resolving the symbol's value.
69
70@item sy_used_in_reloc
71This field is non-zero if the symbol is used by a relocation entry. If a local
72symbol is used in a relocation entry, it must be possible to redirect those
73relocations to other symbols, or this symbol cannot be removed from the final
74symbol list.
75
76@item sy_next
77@itemx sy_previous
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78These pointers to other @code{symbolS} structures describe a doubly
79linked list. These fields should be accessed with
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80the @code{symbol_next} and @code{symbol_previous} macros.
81
82@item sy_frag
83This points to the frag (@pxref{Frags}) that this symbol is attached to.
84
85@item sy_used
86Whether the symbol is used as an operand or in an expression. Note: Not all of
87the backends keep this information accurate; backends which use this bit are
88responsible for setting it when a symbol is used in backend routines.
89
90@item sy_mri_common
91Whether the symbol is an MRI common symbol created by the @code{COMMON}
92pseudo-op when assembling in MRI mode.
93
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94@item sy_volatile
95Whether the symbol can be re-defined.
96
97@item sy_forward_ref
98Whether the symbol's value must only be evaluated upon use.
99
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100@item sy_weakrefr
101Whether the symbol is a @code{weakref} alias to another symbol.
102
103@item sy_weakrefd
104Whether the symbol is or was referenced by one or more @code{weakref} aliases,
105and has not had any direct references.
106
252b5132 107@item bsym
829c3ed3 108This points to the BFD @code{asymbol} that
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109will be used in writing the object file.
110
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111@item sy_obj
112This format-specific data is of type @code{OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE}. If no macro by
113that name is defined in @file{obj-format.h}, this field is not defined.
114
115@item sy_tc
116This processor-specific data is of type @code{TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE}. If no macro
117by that name is defined in @file{targ-cpu.h}, this field is not defined.
118
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119@end table
120
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121Here is a description of the accessor functions. These should be used rather
122than referring to the fields of @code{symbolS} directly.
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123
124@table @code
125@item S_SET_VALUE
126@cindex S_SET_VALUE
127Set the symbol's value.
128
129@item S_GET_VALUE
130@cindex S_GET_VALUE
131Get the symbol's value. This will cause @code{resolve_symbol_value} to be
6386f3a7 132called if necessary.
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133
134@item S_SET_SEGMENT
135@cindex S_SET_SEGMENT
136Set the section of the symbol.
137
138@item S_GET_SEGMENT
139@cindex S_GET_SEGMENT
140Get the symbol's section.
141
142@item S_GET_NAME
143@cindex S_GET_NAME
144Get the name of the symbol.
145
146@item S_SET_NAME
147@cindex S_SET_NAME
148Set the name of the symbol.
149
150@item S_IS_EXTERNAL
151@cindex S_IS_EXTERNAL
152Return non-zero if the symbol is externally visible.
153
154@item S_IS_EXTERN
155@cindex S_IS_EXTERN
156A synonym for @code{S_IS_EXTERNAL}. Don't use it.
157
158@item S_IS_WEAK
159@cindex S_IS_WEAK
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160Return non-zero if the symbol is weak, or if it is a @code{weakref} alias or
161symbol that has not been strongly referenced.
162
163@item S_IS_WEAKREFR
164@cindex S_IS_WEAKREFR
165Return non-zero if the symbol is a @code{weakref} alias.
166
167@item S_IS_WEAKREFD
168@cindex S_IS_WEAKREFD
169Return non-zero if the symbol was aliased by a @code{weakref} alias and has not
170had any strong references.
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172@item S_IS_VOLATILE
173@cindex S_IS_VOLATILE
174Return non-zero if the symbol may be re-defined. Such symbols get created by
175the @code{=} operator, @code{equ}, or @code{set}.
176
177@item S_IS_FORWARD_REF
178@cindex S_IS_FORWARD_REF
179Return non-zero if the symbol is a forward reference, that is its value must
180only be determined upon use.
181
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182@item S_IS_COMMON
183@cindex S_IS_COMMON
184Return non-zero if this is a common symbol. Common symbols are sometimes
185represented as undefined symbols with a value, in which case this function will
186not be reliable.
187
188@item S_IS_DEFINED
189@cindex S_IS_DEFINED
190Return non-zero if this symbol is defined. This function is not reliable when
191called on a common symbol.
192
193@item S_IS_DEBUG
194@cindex S_IS_DEBUG
195Return non-zero if this is a debugging symbol.
196
197@item S_IS_LOCAL
198@cindex S_IS_LOCAL
199Return non-zero if this is a local assembler symbol which should not be
200included in the final symbol table. Note that this is not the opposite of
201@code{S_IS_EXTERNAL}. The @samp{-L} assembler option affects the return value
202of this function.
203
204@item S_SET_EXTERNAL
205@cindex S_SET_EXTERNAL
206Mark the symbol as externally visible.
207
208@item S_CLEAR_EXTERNAL
209@cindex S_CLEAR_EXTERNAL
210Mark the symbol as not externally visible.
211
212@item S_SET_WEAK
213@cindex S_SET_WEAK
214Mark the symbol as weak.
215
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216@item S_SET_WEAKREFR
217@cindex S_SET_WEAKREFR
218Mark the symbol as the referrer in a @code{weakref} directive. The symbol it
219aliases must have been set to the value expression before this point. If the
220alias has already been used, the symbol is marked as used too.
221
222@item S_CLEAR_WEAKREFR
223@cindex S_CLEAR_WEAKREFR
224Clear the @code{weakref} alias status of a symbol. This is implicitly called
225whenever a symbol is defined or set to a new expression.
226
227@item S_SET_WEAKREFD
228@cindex S_SET_WEAKREFD
229Mark the symbol as the referred symbol in a @code{weakref} directive.
230Implicitly marks the symbol as weak, but see below. It should only be called
231if the referenced symbol has just been added to the symbol table.
232
233@item S_SET_WEAKREFD
234@cindex S_SET_WEAKREFD
235Clear the @code{weakref} aliased status of a symbol. This is implicitly called
236whenever the symbol is looked up, as part of a direct reference or a
237definition, but not as part of a @code{weakref} directive.
238
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239@item S_SET_VOLATILE
240@cindex S_SET_VOLATILE
241Indicate that the symbol may be re-defined.
242
243@item S_CLEAR_VOLATILE
244@cindex S_CLEAR_VOLATILE
245Indicate that the symbol may no longer be re-defined.
246
247@item S_SET_FORWARD_REF
248@cindex S_SET_FORWARD_REF
249Indicate that the symbol is a forward reference, that is its value must only
250be determined upon use.
251
252b5132 252@item S_GET_TYPE
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253@itemx S_GET_DESC
254@itemx S_GET_OTHER
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255@cindex S_GET_TYPE
256@cindex S_GET_DESC
257@cindex S_GET_OTHER
258Get the @code{type}, @code{desc}, and @code{other} fields of the symbol. These
259are only defined for object file formats for which they make sense (primarily
260a.out).
261
262@item S_SET_TYPE
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263@itemx S_SET_DESC
264@itemx S_SET_OTHER
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265@cindex S_SET_TYPE
266@cindex S_SET_DESC
267@cindex S_SET_OTHER
268Set the @code{type}, @code{desc}, and @code{other} fields of the symbol. These
269are only defined for object file formats for which they make sense (primarily
270a.out).
271
272@item S_GET_SIZE
273@cindex S_GET_SIZE
274Get the size of a symbol. This is only defined for object file formats for
275which it makes sense (primarily ELF).
276
277@item S_SET_SIZE
278@cindex S_SET_SIZE
279Set the size of a symbol. This is only defined for object file formats for
280which it makes sense (primarily ELF).
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281
282@item symbol_get_value_expression
283@cindex symbol_get_value_expression
284Get a pointer to an @code{expressionS} structure which represents the value of
285the symbol as an expression.
286
287@item symbol_set_value_expression
288@cindex symbol_set_value_expression
289Set the value of a symbol to an expression.
290
291@item symbol_set_frag
292@cindex symbol_set_frag
293Set the frag where a symbol is defined.
294
295@item symbol_get_frag
296@cindex symbol_get_frag
297Get the frag where a symbol is defined.
298
299@item symbol_mark_used
300@cindex symbol_mark_used
301Mark a symbol as having been used in an expression.
302
303@item symbol_clear_used
304@cindex symbol_clear_used
305Clear the mark indicating that a symbol was used in an expression.
306
307@item symbol_used_p
308@cindex symbol_used_p
309Return whether a symbol was used in an expression.
310
311@item symbol_mark_used_in_reloc
312@cindex symbol_mark_used_in_reloc
313Mark a symbol as having been used by a relocation.
314
315@item symbol_clear_used_in_reloc
316@cindex symbol_clear_used_in_reloc
317Clear the mark indicating that a symbol was used in a relocation.
318
319@item symbol_used_in_reloc_p
320@cindex symbol_used_in_reloc_p
321Return whether a symbol was used in a relocation.
322
323@item symbol_mark_mri_common
324@cindex symbol_mark_mri_common
325Mark a symbol as an MRI common symbol.
326
327@item symbol_clear_mri_common
328@cindex symbol_clear_mri_common
329Clear the mark indicating that a symbol is an MRI common symbol.
330
331@item symbol_mri_common_p
332@cindex symbol_mri_common_p
333Return whether a symbol is an MRI common symbol.
334
335@item symbol_mark_written
336@cindex symbol_mark_written
337Mark a symbol as having been written.
338
339@item symbol_clear_written
340@cindex symbol_clear_written
341Clear the mark indicating that a symbol was written.
342
343@item symbol_written_p
344@cindex symbol_written_p
345Return whether a symbol was written.
346
347@item symbol_mark_resolved
348@cindex symbol_mark_resolved
349Mark a symbol as having been resolved.
350
351@item symbol_resolved_p
352@cindex symbol_resolved_p
353Return whether a symbol has been resolved.
354
355@item symbol_section_p
356@cindex symbol_section_p
357Return whether a symbol is a section symbol.
358
359@item symbol_equated_p
360@cindex symbol_equated_p
361Return whether a symbol is equated to another symbol.
362
363@item symbol_constant_p
364@cindex symbol_constant_p
365Return whether a symbol has a constant value, including being an offset within
366some frag.
367
368@item symbol_get_bfdsym
369@cindex symbol_get_bfdsym
370Return the BFD symbol associated with a symbol.
371
372@item symbol_set_bfdsym
373@cindex symbol_set_bfdsym
374Set the BFD symbol associated with a symbol.
375
376@item symbol_get_obj
377@cindex symbol_get_obj
378Return a pointer to the @code{OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol.
379
380@item symbol_set_obj
381@cindex symbol_set_obj
382Set the @code{OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol.
383
384@item symbol_get_tc
385@cindex symbol_get_tc
386Return a pointer to the @code{TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol.
387
388@item symbol_set_tc
389@cindex symbol_set_tc
390Set the @code{TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol.
391
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392@end table
393
829c3ed3 394GAS attempts to store local
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395symbols--symbols which will not be written to the output file--using a
396different structure, @code{struct local_symbol}. This structure can only
397represent symbols whose value is an offset within a frag.
398
399Code outside of the symbol handler will always deal with @code{symbolS}
400structures and use the accessor functions. The accessor functions correctly
401deal with local symbols. @code{struct local_symbol} is much smaller than
402@code{symbolS} (which also automatically creates a bfd @code{asymbol}
403structure), so this saves space when assembling large files.
404
405The first field of @code{symbolS} is @code{bsym}, the pointer to the BFD
406symbol. The first field of @code{struct local_symbol} is a pointer which is
407always set to NULL. This is how the symbol accessor functions can distinguish
408local symbols from ordinary symbols. The symbol accessor functions
409automatically convert a local symbol into an ordinary symbol when necessary.
410
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411@node Expressions
412@subsection Expressions
413@cindex internals, expressions
414@cindex expressions, internal
415@cindex expressionS structure
416
417Expressions are stored in an @code{expressionS} structure. The structure is
418defined in @file{expr.h}.
419
420@cindex expression
421The macro @code{expression} will create an @code{expressionS} structure based
422on the text found at the global variable @code{input_line_pointer}.
423
424@cindex make_expr_symbol
425@cindex expr_symbol_where
426A single @code{expressionS} structure can represent a single operation.
427Complex expressions are formed by creating @dfn{expression symbols} and
428combining them in @code{expressionS} structures. An expression symbol is
429created by calling @code{make_expr_symbol}. An expression symbol should
430naturally never appear in a symbol table, and the implementation of
431@code{S_IS_LOCAL} (@pxref{Symbols}) reflects that. The function
432@code{expr_symbol_where} returns non-zero if a symbol is an expression symbol,
433and also returns the file and line for the expression which caused it to be
434created.
435
436The @code{expressionS} structure has two symbol fields, a number field, an
437operator field, and a field indicating whether the number is unsigned.
438
439The operator field is of type @code{operatorT}, and describes how to interpret
440the other fields; see the definition in @file{expr.h} for the possibilities.
441
442An @code{operatorT} value of @code{O_big} indicates either a floating point
443number, stored in the global variable @code{generic_floating_point_number}, or
623aa224 444an integer too large to store in an @code{offsetT} type, stored in the global
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445array @code{generic_bignum}. This rather inflexible approach makes it
446impossible to use floating point numbers or large expressions in complex
447expressions.
448
449@node Fixups
450@subsection Fixups
451@cindex internals, fixups
452@cindex fixups
453@cindex fixS structure
454
455A @dfn{fixup} is basically anything which can not be resolved in the first
456pass. Sometimes a fixup can be resolved by the end of the assembly; if not,
457the fixup becomes a relocation entry in the object file.
458
459@cindex fix_new
460@cindex fix_new_exp
461A fixup is created by a call to @code{fix_new} or @code{fix_new_exp}. Both
462take a frag (@pxref{Frags}), a position within the frag, a size, an indication
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463of whether the fixup is PC relative, and a type.
464The type is nominally a @code{bfd_reloc_code_real_type}, but several
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465targets use other type codes to represent fixups that can not be described as
466relocations.
467
468The @code{fixS} structure has a number of fields, several of which are obsolete
469or are only used by a particular target. The important fields are:
470
471@table @code
472@item fx_frag
473The frag (@pxref{Frags}) this fixup is in.
474
475@item fx_where
476The location within the frag where the fixup occurs.
477
478@item fx_addsy
479The symbol this fixup is against. Typically, the value of this symbol is added
480into the object contents. This may be NULL.
481
482@item fx_subsy
483The value of this symbol is subtracted from the object contents. This is
484normally NULL.
485
486@item fx_offset
487A number which is added into the fixup.
488
489@item fx_addnumber
490Some CPU backends use this field to convey information between
55cf6793 491@code{md_apply_fix} and @code{tc_gen_reloc}. The machine independent code does
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492not use it.
493
494@item fx_next
495The next fixup in the section.
496
497@item fx_r_type
829c3ed3 498The type of the fixup.
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499
500@item fx_size
501The size of the fixup. This is mostly used for error checking.
502
503@item fx_pcrel
504Whether the fixup is PC relative.
505
506@item fx_done
507Non-zero if the fixup has been applied, and no relocation entry needs to be
508generated.
509
510@item fx_file
511@itemx fx_line
512The file and line where the fixup was created.
513
514@item tc_fix_data
515This has the type @code{TC_FIX_TYPE}, and is only defined if the target defines
516that macro.
517@end table
518
519@node Frags
520@subsection Frags
521@cindex internals, frags
522@cindex frags
523@cindex fragS structure.
524
525The @code{fragS} structure is defined in @file{as.h}. Each frag represents a
526portion of the final object file. As GAS reads the source file, it creates
527frags to hold the data that it reads. At the end of the assembly the frags and
528fixups are processed to produce the final contents.
529
530@table @code
531@item fr_address
532The address of the frag. This is not set until the assembler rescans the list
533of all frags after the entire input file is parsed. The function
534@code{relax_segment} fills in this field.
535
536@item fr_next
537Pointer to the next frag in this (sub)section.
538
539@item fr_fix
540Fixed number of characters we know we're going to emit to the output file. May
541be zero.
542
543@item fr_var
544Variable number of characters we may output, after the initial @code{fr_fix}
545characters. May be zero.
546
547@item fr_offset
548The interpretation of this field is controlled by @code{fr_type}. Generally,
549if @code{fr_var} is non-zero, this is a repeat count: the @code{fr_var}
550characters are output @code{fr_offset} times.
551
552@item line
553Holds line number info when an assembler listing was requested.
554
555@item fr_type
556Relaxation state. This field indicates the interpretation of @code{fr_offset},
557@code{fr_symbol} and the variable-length tail of the frag, as well as the
558treatment it gets in various phases of processing. It does not affect the
559initial @code{fr_fix} characters; they are always supposed to be output
560verbatim (fixups aside). See below for specific values this field can have.
561
562@item fr_subtype
563Relaxation substate. If the macro @code{md_relax_frag} isn't defined, this is
564assumed to be an index into @code{TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE} for the generic
565relaxation code to process (@pxref{Relaxation}). If @code{md_relax_frag} is
566defined, this field is available for any use by the CPU-specific code.
567
568@item fr_symbol
569This normally indicates the symbol to use when relaxing the frag according to
570@code{fr_type}.
571
572@item fr_opcode
573Points to the lowest-addressed byte of the opcode, for use in relaxation.
574
575@item tc_frag_data
576Target specific fragment data of type TC_FRAG_TYPE.
577Only present if @code{TC_FRAG_TYPE} is defined.
578
579@item fr_file
580@itemx fr_line
581The file and line where this frag was last modified.
582
583@item fr_literal
584Declared as a one-character array, this last field grows arbitrarily large to
585hold the actual contents of the frag.
586@end table
587
588These are the possible relaxation states, provided in the enumeration type
589@code{relax_stateT}, and the interpretations they represent for the other
590fields:
591
592@table @code
593@item rs_align
594@itemx rs_align_code
595The start of the following frag should be aligned on some boundary. In this
596frag, @code{fr_offset} is the logarithm (base 2) of the alignment in bytes.
597(For example, if alignment on an 8-byte boundary were desired, @code{fr_offset}
598would have a value of 3.) The variable characters indicate the fill pattern to
599be used. The @code{fr_subtype} field holds the maximum number of bytes to skip
600when doing this alignment. If more bytes are needed, the alignment is not
601done. An @code{fr_subtype} value of 0 means no maximum, which is the normal
602case. Target backends can use @code{rs_align_code} to handle certain types of
603alignment differently.
604
605@item rs_broken_word
606This indicates that ``broken word'' processing should be done (@pxref{Broken
607words}). If broken word processing is not necessary on the target machine,
608this enumerator value will not be defined.
609
610@item rs_cfa
611This state is used to implement exception frame optimizations. The
612@code{fr_symbol} is an expression symbol for the subtraction which may be
613relaxed. The @code{fr_opcode} field holds the frag for the preceding command
614byte. The @code{fr_offset} field holds the offset within that frag. The
615@code{fr_subtype} field is used during relaxation to hold the current size of
616the frag.
617
618@item rs_fill
619The variable characters are to be repeated @code{fr_offset} times. If
620@code{fr_offset} is 0, this frag has a length of @code{fr_fix}. Most frags
621have this type.
622
623@item rs_leb128
58a77e41 624This state is used to implement the DWARF ``little endian base 128''
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625variable length number format. The @code{fr_symbol} is always an expression
626symbol, as constant expressions are emitted directly. The @code{fr_offset}
627field is used during relaxation to hold the previous size of the number so
628that we can determine if the fragment changed size.
629
630@item rs_machine_dependent
631Displacement relaxation is to be done on this frag. The target is indicated by
632@code{fr_symbol} and @code{fr_offset}, and @code{fr_subtype} indicates the
633particular machine-specific addressing mode desired. @xref{Relaxation}.
634
635@item rs_org
636The start of the following frag should be pushed back to some specific offset
637within the section. (Some assemblers use the value as an absolute address; GAS
638does not handle final absolute addresses, but rather requires that the linker
639set them.) The offset is given by @code{fr_symbol} and @code{fr_offset}; one
640character from the variable-length tail is used as the fill character.
641@end table
642
643@cindex frchainS structure
644A chain of frags is built up for each subsection. The data structure
645describing a chain is called a @code{frchainS}, and contains the following
646fields:
647
648@table @code
649@item frch_root
650Points to the first frag in the chain. May be NULL if there are no frags in
651this chain.
652@item frch_last
653Points to the last frag in the chain, or NULL if there are none.
654@item frch_next
655Next in the list of @code{frchainS} structures.
656@item frch_seg
657Indicates the section this frag chain belongs to.
658@item frch_subseg
659Subsection (subsegment) number of this frag chain.
660@item fix_root, fix_tail
829c3ed3 661Point to first and last @code{fixS} structures associated with this subsection.
252b5132
RH
662@item frch_obstack
663Not currently used. Intended to be used for frag allocation for this
664subsection. This should reduce frag generation caused by switching sections.
665@item frch_frag_now
666The current frag for this subsegment.
667@end table
668
669A @code{frchainS} corresponds to a subsection; each section has a list of
670@code{frchainS} records associated with it. In most cases, only one subsection
671of each section is used, so the list will only be one element long, but any
672processing of frag chains should be prepared to deal with multiple chains per
673section.
674
675After the input files have been completely processed, and no more frags are to
676be generated, the frag chains are joined into one per section for further
677processing. After this point, it is safe to operate on one chain per section.
678
679The assembler always has a current frag, named @code{frag_now}. More space is
680allocated for the current frag using the @code{frag_more} function; this
0530d30a
RS
681returns a pointer to the amount of requested space. The function
682@code{frag_room} says by how much the current frag can be extended.
683Relaxing is done using variant frags allocated by @code{frag_var}
684or @code{frag_variant} (@pxref{Relaxation}).
252b5132
RH
685
686@node GAS processing
687@section What GAS does when it runs
688@cindex internals, overview
689
690This is a quick look at what an assembler run looks like.
691
692@itemize @bullet
693@item
694The assembler initializes itself by calling various init routines.
695
696@item
697For each source file, the @code{read_a_source_file} function reads in the file
698and parses it. The global variable @code{input_line_pointer} points to the
699current text; it is guaranteed to be correct up to the end of the line, but not
700farther.
701
702@item
703For each line, the assembler passes labels to the @code{colon} function, and
704isolates the first word. If it looks like a pseudo-op, the word is looked up
705in the pseudo-op hash table @code{po_hash} and dispatched to a pseudo-op
706routine. Otherwise, the target dependent @code{md_assemble} routine is called
707to parse the instruction.
708
709@item
710When pseudo-ops or instructions output data, they add it to a frag, calling
711@code{frag_more} to get space to store it in.
712
713@item
714Pseudo-ops and instructions can also output fixups created by @code{fix_new} or
715@code{fix_new_exp}.
716
717@item
718For certain targets, instructions can create variant frags which are used to
719store relaxation information (@pxref{Relaxation}).
720
721@item
722When the input file is finished, the @code{write_object_file} routine is
723called. It assigns addresses to all the frags (@code{relax_segment}), resolves
724all the fixups (@code{fixup_segment}), resolves all the symbol values (using
829c3ed3 725@code{resolve_symbol_value}), and finally writes out the file.
252b5132
RH
726@end itemize
727
728@node Porting GAS
729@section Porting GAS
730@cindex porting
731
732Each GAS target specifies two main things: the CPU file and the object format
733file. Two main switches in the @file{configure.in} file handle this. The
734first switches on CPU type to set the shell variable @code{cpu_type}. The
735second switches on the entire target to set the shell variable @code{fmt}.
736
737The configure script uses the value of @code{cpu_type} to select two files in
738the @file{config} directory: @file{tc-@var{CPU}.c} and @file{tc-@var{CPU}.h}.
739The configuration process will create a file named @file{targ-cpu.h} in the
740build directory which includes @file{tc-@var{CPU}.h}.
741
742The configure script also uses the value of @code{fmt} to select two files:
743@file{obj-@var{fmt}.c} and @file{obj-@var{fmt}.h}. The configuration process
744will create a file named @file{obj-format.h} in the build directory which
745includes @file{obj-@var{fmt}.h}.
746
747You can also set the emulation in the configure script by setting the @code{em}
748variable. Normally the default value of @samp{generic} is fine. The
749configuration process will create a file named @file{targ-env.h} in the build
750directory which includes @file{te-@var{em}.h}.
751
56385375
L
752There is a special case for COFF. For historical reason, the GNU COFF
753assembler doesn't follow the documented behavior on certain debug symbols for
754the compatibility with other COFF assemblers. A port can define
755@code{STRICTCOFF} in the configure script to make the GNU COFF assembler
756to follow the documented behavior.
757
252b5132
RH
758Porting GAS to a new CPU requires writing the @file{tc-@var{CPU}} files.
759Porting GAS to a new object file format requires writing the
760@file{obj-@var{fmt}} files. There is sometimes some interaction between these
761two files, but it is normally minimal.
762
763The best approach is, of course, to copy existing files. The documentation
764below assumes that you are looking at existing files to see usage details.
765
766These interfaces have grown over time, and have never been carefully thought
767out or designed. Nothing about the interfaces described here is cast in stone.
768It is possible that they will change from one version of the assembler to the
769next. Also, new macros are added all the time as they are needed.
770
771@menu
772* CPU backend:: Writing a CPU backend
773* Object format backend:: Writing an object format backend
774* Emulations:: Writing emulation files
775@end menu
776
777@node CPU backend
778@subsection Writing a CPU backend
779@cindex CPU backend
780@cindex @file{tc-@var{CPU}}
781
782The CPU backend files are the heart of the assembler. They are the only parts
783of the assembler which actually know anything about the instruction set of the
784processor.
785
786You must define a reasonably small list of macros and functions in the CPU
787backend files. You may define a large number of additional macros in the CPU
788backend files, not all of which are documented here. You must, of course,
789define macros in the @file{.h} file, which is included by every assembler
790source file. You may define the functions as macros in the @file{.h} file, or
791as functions in the @file{.c} file.
792
793@table @code
794@item TC_@var{CPU}
795@cindex TC_@var{CPU}
796By convention, you should define this macro in the @file{.h} file. For
797example, @file{tc-m68k.h} defines @code{TC_M68K}. You might have to use this
798if it is necessary to add CPU specific code to the object format file.
799
800@item TARGET_FORMAT
801This macro is the BFD target name to use when creating the output file. This
802will normally depend upon the @code{OBJ_@var{FMT}} macro.
803
804@item TARGET_ARCH
805This macro is the BFD architecture to pass to @code{bfd_set_arch_mach}.
806
807@item TARGET_MACH
808This macro is the BFD machine number to pass to @code{bfd_set_arch_mach}. If
809it is not defined, GAS will use 0.
810
811@item TARGET_BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN
812You should define this macro to be non-zero if the target is big endian, and
813zero if the target is little endian.
814
815@item md_shortopts
816@itemx md_longopts
817@itemx md_longopts_size
818@itemx md_parse_option
819@itemx md_show_usage
acebd4ce 820@itemx md_after_parse_args
252b5132
RH
821@cindex md_shortopts
822@cindex md_longopts
823@cindex md_longopts_size
824@cindex md_parse_option
825@cindex md_show_usage
acebd4ce 826@cindex md_after_parse_args
252b5132
RH
827GAS uses these variables and functions during option processing.
828@code{md_shortopts} is a @code{const char *} which GAS adds to the machine
829independent string passed to @code{getopt}. @code{md_longopts} is a
830@code{struct option []} which GAS adds to the machine independent long options
831passed to @code{getopt}; you may use @code{OPTION_MD_BASE}, defined in
832@file{as.h}, as the start of a set of long option indices, if necessary.
833@code{md_longopts_size} is a @code{size_t} holding the size @code{md_longopts}.
329e276d 834
252b5132
RH
835GAS will call @code{md_parse_option} whenever @code{getopt} returns an
836unrecognized code, presumably indicating a special code value which appears in
329e276d
NC
837@code{md_longopts}. This function should return non-zero if it handled the
838option and zero otherwise. There is no need to print a message about an option
b45619c0 839not being recognized. This will be handled by the generic code.
329e276d
NC
840
841GAS will call @code{md_show_usage} when a usage message is printed; it should
842print a description of the machine specific options. @code{md_after_pase_args},
843if defined, is called after all options are processed, to let the backend
844override settings done by the generic option parsing.
252b5132
RH
845
846@item md_begin
847@cindex md_begin
848GAS will call this function at the start of the assembly, after the command
849line arguments have been parsed and all the machine independent initializations
850have been completed.
851
852@item md_cleanup
853@cindex md_cleanup
854If you define this macro, GAS will call it at the end of each input file.
855
856@item md_assemble
857@cindex md_assemble
858GAS will call this function for each input line which does not contain a
859pseudo-op. The argument is a null terminated string. The function should
860assemble the string as an instruction with operands. Normally
861@code{md_assemble} will do this by calling @code{frag_more} and writing out
862some bytes (@pxref{Frags}). @code{md_assemble} will call @code{fix_new} to
863create fixups as needed (@pxref{Fixups}). Targets which need to do special
864purpose relaxation will call @code{frag_var}.
865
866@item md_pseudo_table
867@cindex md_pseudo_table
868This is a const array of type @code{pseudo_typeS}. It is a mapping from
869pseudo-op names to functions. You should use this table to implement
870pseudo-ops which are specific to the CPU.
871
872@item tc_conditional_pseudoop
873@cindex tc_conditional_pseudoop
874If this macro is defined, GAS will call it with a @code{pseudo_typeS} argument.
875It should return non-zero if the pseudo-op is a conditional which controls
876whether code is assembled, such as @samp{.if}. GAS knows about the normal
8108ad8e 877conditional pseudo-ops, and you should normally not have to define this macro.
252b5132
RH
878
879@item comment_chars
880@cindex comment_chars
881This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which start a
882comment.
883
884@item tc_comment_chars
885@cindex tc_comment_chars
886If this macro is defined, GAS will use it instead of @code{comment_chars}.
887
888@item tc_symbol_chars
889@cindex tc_symbol_chars
890If this macro is defined, it is a pointer to a null terminated list of
891characters which may appear in an operand. GAS already assumes that all
b45619c0 892alphanumeric characters, and @samp{$}, @samp{.}, and @samp{_} may appear in an
252b5132
RH
893operand (see @samp{symbol_chars} in @file{app.c}). This macro may be defined
894to treat additional characters as appearing in an operand. This affects the
895way in which GAS removes whitespace before passing the string to
896@samp{md_assemble}.
897
898@item line_comment_chars
899@cindex line_comment_chars
900This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which start a
901comment when they appear at the start of a line.
902
903@item line_separator_chars
904@cindex line_separator_chars
905This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which separate
63a0b638 906lines (null and newline are such characters by default, and need not be
65fd87bc
ILT
907listed in this array). Note that line_separator_chars do not separate lines
908if found in a comment, such as after a character in line_comment_chars or
909comment_chars.
252b5132
RH
910
911@item EXP_CHARS
912@cindex EXP_CHARS
913This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which may be
914used as the exponent character in a floating point number. This is normally
915@code{"eE"}.
916
917@item FLT_CHARS
918@cindex FLT_CHARS
919This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which may be
920used to indicate a floating point constant. A zero followed by one of these
921characters is assumed to be followed by a floating point number; thus they
922operate the way that @code{0x} is used to indicate a hexadecimal constant.
923Usually this includes @samp{r} and @samp{f}.
924
925@item LEX_AT
926@cindex LEX_AT
65fd87bc 927You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{@@} character. The
252b5132
RH
928default is zero.
929
930Lexical types are a combination of @code{LEX_NAME} and @code{LEX_BEGIN_NAME},
931both defined in @file{read.h}. @code{LEX_NAME} indicates that the character
932may appear in a name. @code{LEX_BEGIN_NAME} indicates that the character may
65fd87bc 933appear at the beginning of a name.
252b5132
RH
934
935@item LEX_BR
936@cindex LEX_BR
937You may define this macro to the lexical type of the brace characters @kbd{@{},
938@kbd{@}}, @kbd{[}, and @kbd{]}. The default value is zero.
939
940@item LEX_PCT
941@cindex LEX_PCT
942You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{%} character. The
943default value is zero.
944
945@item LEX_QM
946@cindex LEX_QM
947You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{?} character. The
948default value it zero.
949
950@item LEX_DOLLAR
951@cindex LEX_DOLLAR
952You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{$} character. The
953default value is @code{LEX_NAME | LEX_BEGIN_NAME}.
954
f805106c
TW
955@item NUMBERS_WITH_SUFFIX
956@cindex NUMBERS_WITH_SUFFIX
957When this macro is defined to be non-zero, the parser allows the radix of a
58a77e41 958constant to be indicated with a suffix. Valid suffixes are binary (B),
f805106c
TW
959octal (Q), and hexadecimal (H). Case is not significant.
960
252b5132
RH
961@item SINGLE_QUOTE_STRINGS
962@cindex SINGLE_QUOTE_STRINGS
963If you define this macro, GAS will treat single quotes as string delimiters.
964Normally only double quotes are accepted as string delimiters.
965
966@item NO_STRING_ESCAPES
967@cindex NO_STRING_ESCAPES
968If you define this macro, GAS will not permit escape sequences in a string.
969
970@item ONLY_STANDARD_ESCAPES
971@cindex ONLY_STANDARD_ESCAPES
972If you define this macro, GAS will warn about the use of nonstandard escape
973sequences in a string.
974
975@item md_start_line_hook
976@cindex md_start_line_hook
977If you define this macro, GAS will call it at the start of each line.
978
979@item LABELS_WITHOUT_COLONS
980@cindex LABELS_WITHOUT_COLONS
981If you define this macro, GAS will assume that any text at the start of a line
982is a label, even if it does not have a colon.
983
984@item TC_START_LABEL
39bec121 985@itemx TC_START_LABEL_WITHOUT_COLON
252b5132
RH
986@cindex TC_START_LABEL
987You may define this macro to control what GAS considers to be a label. The
988default definition is to accept any name followed by a colon character.
989
f28e8eb3
TW
990@item TC_START_LABEL_WITHOUT_COLON
991@cindex TC_START_LABEL_WITHOUT_COLON
992Same as TC_START_LABEL, but should be used instead of TC_START_LABEL when
58a77e41 993LABELS_WITHOUT_COLONS is defined.
f28e8eb3 994
c9cd7160
L
995@item TC_FAKE_LABEL
996@cindex TC_FAKE_LABEL
997You may define this macro to control what GAS considers to be a fake
998label. The default fake label is FAKE_LABEL_NAME.
999
252b5132
RH
1000@item NO_PSEUDO_DOT
1001@cindex NO_PSEUDO_DOT
1002If you define this macro, GAS will not require pseudo-ops to start with a
1003@kbd{.} character.
1004
ee3c9814
CM
1005@item TC_EQUAL_IN_INSN
1006@cindex TC_EQUAL_IN_INSN
1007If you define this macro, it should return nonzero if the instruction is
1008permitted to contain an @kbd{=} character. GAS will call it with two
1009arguments, the character before the @kbd{=} character, and the value of
1010the string preceding the equal sign. GAS uses this macro to decide if a
1011@kbd{=} is an assignment or an instruction.
1012
252b5132
RH
1013@item TC_EOL_IN_INSN
1014@cindex TC_EOL_IN_INSN
1015If you define this macro, it should return nonzero if the current input line
1016pointer should be treated as the end of a line.
1017
a8a3b3b2
NS
1018@item TC_CASE_SENSITIVE
1019@cindex TC_CASE_SENSITIVE
1020Define this macro if instruction mnemonics and pseudos are case sensitive.
1021The default is to have it undefined giving case insensitive names.
1022
252b5132
RH
1023@item md_parse_name
1024@cindex md_parse_name
1025If this macro is defined, GAS will call it for any symbol found in an
1026expression. You can define this to handle special symbols in a special way.
1027If a symbol always has a certain value, you should normally enter it in the
1028symbol table, perhaps using @code{reg_section}.
1029
1030@item md_undefined_symbol
1031@cindex md_undefined_symbol
1032GAS will call this function when a symbol table lookup fails, before it
1033creates a new symbol. Typically this would be used to supply symbols whose
1034name or value changes dynamically, possibly in a context sensitive way.
1035Predefined symbols with fixed values, such as register names or condition
1036codes, are typically entered directly into the symbol table when @code{md_begin}
65fd87bc 1037is called. One argument is passed, a @code{char *} for the symbol.
252b5132
RH
1038
1039@item md_operand
1040@cindex md_operand
65fd87bc
ILT
1041GAS will call this function with one argument, an @code{expressionS}
1042pointer, for any expression that can not be recognized. When the function
1043is called, @code{input_line_pointer} will point to the start of the
1044expression.
252b5132 1045
5a918ce7
JB
1046@item md_register_arithmetic
1047@cindex md_register_arithmetic
1048If this macro is defined and evaluates to zero then GAS will not fold
1049expressions that add or subtract a constant to/from a register to give
1050another register. For example GAS's default behaviour is to fold the
1051expression "r8 + 1" into "r9", which is probably not the result
1052intended by the programmer. The default is to allow such folding,
1053since this maintains backwards compatibility with earlier releases of
1054GAS.
1055
252b5132
RH
1056@item tc_unrecognized_line
1057@cindex tc_unrecognized_line
1058If you define this macro, GAS will call it when it finds a line that it can not
1059parse.
1060
1061@item md_do_align
1062@cindex md_do_align
1063You may define this macro to handle an alignment directive. GAS will call it
1064when the directive is seen in the input file. For example, the i386 backend
1065uses this to generate efficient nop instructions of varying lengths, depending
1066upon the number of bytes that the alignment will skip.
1067
1068@item HANDLE_ALIGN
1069@cindex HANDLE_ALIGN
1070You may define this macro to do special handling for an alignment directive.
1071GAS will call it at the end of the assembly.
1072
8684e216
HPN
1073@item TC_IMPLICIT_LCOMM_ALIGNMENT (@var{size}, @var{p2var})
1074@cindex TC_IMPLICIT_LCOMM_ALIGNMENT
1075An @code{.lcomm} directive with no explicit alignment parameter will use this
1076macro to set @var{p2var} to the alignment that a request for @var{size} bytes
1077will have. The alignment is expressed as a power of two. If no alignment
1078should take place, the macro definition should do nothing. Some targets define
1079a @code{.bss} directive that is also affected by this macro. The default
1080definition will set @var{p2var} to the truncated power of two of sizes up to
1081eight bytes.
1082
252b5132
RH
1083@item md_flush_pending_output
1084@cindex md_flush_pending_output
1085If you define this macro, GAS will call it each time it skips any space because of a
1086space filling or alignment or data allocation pseudo-op.
1087
1088@item TC_PARSE_CONS_EXPRESSION
1089@cindex TC_PARSE_CONS_EXPRESSION
1090You may define this macro to parse an expression used in a data allocation
1091pseudo-op such as @code{.word}. You can use this to recognize relocation
1092directives that may appear in such directives.
1093
1094@item BITFIELD_CONS_EXPRESSION
1095@cindex BITFIELD_CONS_EXPRESSION
1096If you define this macro, GAS will recognize bitfield instructions in data
1097allocation pseudo-ops, as used on the i960.
1098
1099@item REPEAT_CONS_EXPRESSION
1100@cindex REPEAT_CONS_EXPRESSION
1101If you define this macro, GAS will recognize repeat counts in data allocation
1102pseudo-ops, as used on the MIPS.
1103
1104@item md_cons_align
1105@cindex md_cons_align
1106You may define this macro to do any special alignment before a data allocation
1107pseudo-op.
1108
1109@item TC_CONS_FIX_NEW
1110@cindex TC_CONS_FIX_NEW
1111You may define this macro to generate a fixup for a data allocation pseudo-op.
1112
cc1bc22a
AM
1113@item TC_ADDRESS_BYTES
1114@cindex TC_ADDRESS_BYTES
1115Define this macro to specify the number of bytes used to store an address.
1116Used to implement @code{dc.a}. The target must have a reloc for this size.
1117
252b5132
RH
1118@item TC_INIT_FIX_DATA (@var{fixp})
1119@cindex TC_INIT_FIX_DATA
1120A C statement to initialize the target specific fields of fixup @var{fixp}.
1121These fields are defined with the @code{TC_FIX_TYPE} macro.
1122
1123@item TC_FIX_DATA_PRINT (@var{stream}, @var{fixp})
1124@cindex TC_FIX_DATA_PRINT
1125A C statement to output target specific debugging information for
1126fixup @var{fixp} to @var{stream}. This macro is called by @code{print_fixup}.
1127
1128@item TC_FRAG_INIT (@var{fragp})
1129@cindex TC_FRAG_INIT
1130A C statement to initialize the target specific fields of frag @var{fragp}.
1131These fields are defined with the @code{TC_FRAG_TYPE} macro.
1132
1133@item md_number_to_chars
1134@cindex md_number_to_chars
1135This should just call either @code{number_to_chars_bigendian} or
1136@code{number_to_chars_littleendian}, whichever is appropriate. On targets like
1137the MIPS which support options to change the endianness, which function to call
1138is a runtime decision. On other targets, @code{md_number_to_chars} can be a
1139simple macro.
1140
dd9b19ab
NC
1141@item md_atof (@var{type},@var{litP},@var{sizeP})
1142@cindex md_atof
1143This function is called to convert an ASCII string into a floating point value
1144in format used by the CPU. It takes three arguments. The first is @var{type}
499ac353 1145which is a byte describing the type of floating point number to be created. It
adfd7328 1146is one of the characters defined in the @code{FLT_CHARS} macro. Possible
499ac353
NC
1147values are @var{'f'} or @var{'s'} for single precision, @var{'d'} or @var{'r'}
1148for double precision and @var{'x'} or @var{'p'} for extended precision. Either
1149lower or upper case versions of these letters can be used. Note: some targets
1150do not support all of these types, and some targets may also support other
1151types not mentioned here.
dd9b19ab
NC
1152
1153The second parameter is @var{litP} which is a pointer to a byte array where the
499ac353
NC
1154converted value should be stored. The value is converted into LITTLENUMs and
1155is stored in the target's endian-ness order. (@var{LITTLENUM} is defined in
1156gas/bignum.h). Single precision values occupy 2 littlenums. Double precision
1157values occupy 4 littlenums and extended precision values occupy either 5 or 6
1158littlenums, depending upon the target.
1159
1160The third argument is @var{sizeP}, which is a pointer to a integer that should
1161be filled in with the number of chars emitted into the byte array.
1162
1163The function should return NULL upon success or an error string upon failure.
dd9b19ab 1164
580a832e
RS
1165@item TC_LARGEST_EXPONENT_IS_NORMAL
1166@cindex TC_LARGEST_EXPONENT_IS_NORMAL (@var{precision})
1167This macro is used only by @file{atof-ieee.c}. It should evaluate to true
1168if floats of the given precision use the largest exponent for normal numbers
1169instead of NaNs and infinities. @var{precision} is @samp{F_PRECISION} for
1170single precision, @samp{D_PRECISION} for double precision, or
1171@samp{X_PRECISION} for extended double precision.
1172
1173The macro has a default definition which returns 0 for all cases.
1174
252b5132
RH
1175@item WORKING_DOT_WORD
1176@itemx md_short_jump_size
1177@itemx md_long_jump_size
1178@itemx md_create_short_jump
1179@itemx md_create_long_jump
e30e5a6a 1180@itemx TC_CHECK_ADJUSTED_BROKEN_DOT_WORD
252b5132
RH
1181@cindex WORKING_DOT_WORD
1182@cindex md_short_jump_size
1183@cindex md_long_jump_size
1184@cindex md_create_short_jump
1185@cindex md_create_long_jump
e30e5a6a 1186@cindex TC_CHECK_ADJUSTED_BROKEN_DOT_WORD
252b5132
RH
1187If @code{WORKING_DOT_WORD} is defined, GAS will not do broken word processing
1188(@pxref{Broken words}). Otherwise, you should set @code{md_short_jump_size} to
65fd87bc
ILT
1189the size of a short jump (a jump that is just long enough to jump around a
1190number of long jumps) and @code{md_long_jump_size} to the size of a long jump
1191(a jump that can go anywhere in the function). You should define
1192@code{md_create_short_jump} to create a short jump around a number of long
1193jumps, and define @code{md_create_long_jump} to create a long jump.
e30e5a6a
HPN
1194If defined, the macro TC_CHECK_ADJUSTED_BROKEN_DOT_WORD will be called for each
1195adjusted word just before the word is output. The macro takes two arguments,
1196an @code{addressT} with the adjusted word and a pointer to the current
1197@code{struct broken_word}.
252b5132
RH
1198
1199@item md_estimate_size_before_relax
1200@cindex md_estimate_size_before_relax
1201This function returns an estimate of the size of a @code{rs_machine_dependent}
1202frag before any relaxing is done. It may also create any necessary
1203relocations.
1204
1205@item md_relax_frag
1206@cindex md_relax_frag
c842b53a
ILT
1207This macro may be defined to relax a frag. GAS will call this with the
1208segment, the frag, and the change in size of all previous frags;
1209@code{md_relax_frag} should return the change in size of the frag.
1210@xref{Relaxation}.
252b5132
RH
1211
1212@item TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE
1213@cindex TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE
1214If you do not define @code{md_relax_frag}, you may define
1215@code{TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE} as a table of @code{relax_typeS} structures. The
1216machine independent code knows how to use such a table to relax PC relative
1217references. See @file{tc-m68k.c} for an example. @xref{Relaxation}.
1218
1219@item md_prepare_relax_scan
1220@cindex md_prepare_relax_scan
1221If defined, it is a C statement that is invoked prior to scanning
1222the relax table.
1223
1224@item LINKER_RELAXING_SHRINKS_ONLY
1225@cindex LINKER_RELAXING_SHRINKS_ONLY
1226If you define this macro, and the global variable @samp{linkrelax} is set
1227(because of a command line option, or unconditionally in @code{md_begin}), a
1228@samp{.align} directive will cause extra space to be allocated. The linker can
1229then discard this space when relaxing the section.
1230
8108ad8e 1231@item TC_LINKRELAX_FIXUP (@var{segT})
58a77e41
EC
1232@cindex TC_LINKRELAX_FIXUP
1233If defined, this macro allows control over whether fixups for a
1234given section will be processed when the @var{linkrelax} variable is
1235set. The macro is given the N_TYPE bits for the section in its
1236@var{segT} argument. If the macro evaluates to a non-zero value
1237then the fixups will be converted into relocs, otherwise they will
55cf6793 1238be passed to @var{md_apply_fix} as normal.
58a77e41 1239
252b5132
RH
1240@item md_convert_frag
1241@cindex md_convert_frag
1242GAS will call this for each rs_machine_dependent fragment.
1243The instruction is completed using the data from the relaxation pass.
1244It may also create any necessary relocations.
1245@xref{Relaxation}.
1246
87548816
NC
1247@item TC_FINALIZE_SYMS_BEFORE_SIZE_SEG
1248@cindex TC_FINALIZE_SYMS_BEFORE_SIZE_SEG
1249Specifies the value to be assigned to @code{finalize_syms} before the function
1250@code{size_segs} is called. Since @code{size_segs} calls @code{cvt_frag_to_fill}
34bca508 1251which can call @code{md_convert_frag}, this constant governs whether the symbols
87548816
NC
1252accessed in @code{md_convert_frag} will be fully resolved. In particular it
1253governs whether local symbols will have been resolved, and had their frag
1254information removed. Depending upon the processing performed by
1255@code{md_convert_frag} the frag information may or may not be necessary, as may
1256the resolved values of the symbols. The default value is 1.
1257
a161fe53
AM
1258@item TC_VALIDATE_FIX (@var{fixP}, @var{seg}, @var{skip})
1259@cindex TC_VALIDATE_FIX
1260This macro is evaluated for each fixup (when @var{linkrelax} is not set).
1261It may be used to change the fixup in @code{struct fix *@var{fixP}} before
1262the generic code sees it, or to fully process the fixup. In the latter case,
1263a @code{goto @var{skip}} will bypass the generic code.
252b5132 1264
55cf6793
ZW
1265@item md_apply_fix (@var{fixP}, @var{valP}, @var{seg})
1266@cindex md_apply_fix
a161fe53
AM
1267GAS will call this for each fixup that passes the @code{TC_VALIDATE_FIX} test
1268when @var{linkrelax} is not set. It should store the correct value in the
55cf6793 1269object file. @code{struct fix *@var{fixP}} is the fixup @code{md_apply_fix}
a161fe53
AM
1270is operating on. @code{valueT *@var{valP}} is the value to store into the
1271object files, or at least is the generic code's best guess. Specifically,
1272*@var{valP} is the value of the fixup symbol, perhaps modified by
1273@code{MD_APPLY_SYM_VALUE}, plus @code{@var{fixP}->fx_offset} (symbol addend),
1274less @code{MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION} for pc-relative fixups.
1275@code{segT @var{seg}} is the section the fix is in.
1276@code{fixup_segment} performs a generic overflow check on *@var{valP} after
55cf6793
ZW
1277@code{md_apply_fix} returns. If the overflow check is relevant for the target
1278machine, then @code{md_apply_fix} should modify *@var{valP}, typically to the
a161fe53
AM
1279value stored in the object file.
1280
1281@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION (@var{fix})
1282@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION
1283If this macro returns non-zero, it guarantees that a relocation will be emitted
1284even when the value can be resolved locally, as @code{fixup_segment} tries to
1285reduce the number of relocations emitted. For example, a fixup expression
1286against an absolute symbol will normally not require a reloc. If undefined,
1287a default of @w{@code{(S_FORCE_RELOC ((@var{fix})->fx_addsy))}} is used.
1288
1289@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_ABS (@var{fix})
1290@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_ABS
1291Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION}, but used only for fixup expressions against an
1292absolute symbol. If undefined, @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION} will be used.
1293
1294@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_LOCAL (@var{fix})
1295@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_LOCAL
1296Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION}, but used only for fixup expressions against a
1297symbol in the current section. If undefined, fixups that are not
20ee54e8 1298@code{fx_pcrel} or for which @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION}
a161fe53
AM
1299returns non-zero, will emit relocs.
1300
1301@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_SAME (@var{fix}, @var{seg})
ae6063d4 1302@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_SAME
a161fe53
AM
1303This macro controls resolution of fixup expressions involving the
1304difference of two symbols in the same section. If this macro returns zero,
1305the subtrahend will be resolved and @code{fx_subsy} set to @code{NULL} for
55cf6793 1306@code{md_apply_fix}. If undefined, the default of
621e3db6 1307@w{@code{! SEG_NORMAL (@var{seg})}} will be used.
a161fe53 1308
adfd7328 1309@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_ABS (@var{fix}, @var{seg})
a161fe53
AM
1310@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_ABS
1311Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_SAME}, but used when the subtrahend is an
4f3cafa2 1312absolute symbol. If the macro is undefined a default of @code{0} is used.
a161fe53 1313
adfd7328 1314@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_LOCAL (@var{fix}, @var{seg})
a161fe53
AM
1315@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_LOCAL
1316Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_ABS}, but the subtrahend is a symbol in the
1317same section as the fixup.
1318
5db484ff 1319@item TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB (@var{fix}, @var{seg})
a161fe53
AM
1320@cindex TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB
1321This macro is evaluated for any fixup with a @code{fx_subsy} that
1322@code{fixup_segment} cannot reduce to a number. If the macro returns
1323@code{false} an error will be reported.
1324
97c4f2d9
L
1325@item TC_GLOBAL_REGISTER_SYMBOL_OK
1326@cindex TC_GLOBAL_REGISTER_SYMBOL_OK
1327Define this macro if global register symbols are supported. The default
1328is to disallow global register symbols.
1329
a161fe53
AM
1330@item MD_APPLY_SYM_VALUE (@var{fix})
1331@cindex MD_APPLY_SYM_VALUE
1332This macro controls whether the symbol value becomes part of the value passed
55cf6793 1333to @code{md_apply_fix}. If the macro is undefined, or returns non-zero, the
a161fe53
AM
1334symbol value will be included. For ELF, a suitable definition might simply be
1335@code{0}, because ELF relocations don't include the symbol value in the addend.
1336
ae6063d4 1337@item S_FORCE_RELOC (@var{sym}, @var{strict})
a161fe53 1338@cindex S_FORCE_RELOC
829c3ed3 1339This function returns true for symbols
a161fe53
AM
1340that should not be reduced to section symbols or eliminated from expressions,
1341because they may be overridden by the linker. ie. for symbols that are
ae6063d4
AM
1342undefined or common, and when @var{strict} is set, weak, or global (for ELF
1343assemblers that support ELF shared library linking semantics).
a161fe53
AM
1344
1345@item EXTERN_FORCE_RELOC
1346@cindex EXTERN_FORCE_RELOC
1347This macro controls whether @code{S_FORCE_RELOC} returns true for global
1348symbols. If undefined, the default is @code{true} for ELF assemblers, and
1349@code{false} for non-ELF.
252b5132
RH
1350
1351@item tc_gen_reloc
1352@cindex tc_gen_reloc
829c3ed3 1353GAS will call this to generate a reloc. GAS will pass
252b5132
RH
1354the resulting reloc to @code{bfd_install_relocation}. This currently works
1355poorly, as @code{bfd_install_relocation} often does the wrong thing, and
1356instances of @code{tc_gen_reloc} have been written to work around the problems,
1357which in turns makes it difficult to fix @code{bfd_install_relocation}.
1358
1359@item RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE
1360@cindex RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE
1361If you define this macro, it means that @code{tc_gen_reloc} may return multiple
1362relocation entries for a single fixup. In this case, the return value of
1363@code{tc_gen_reloc} is a pointer to a null terminated array.
1364
1365@item MAX_RELOC_EXPANSION
1366@cindex MAX_RELOC_EXPANSION
1367You must define this if @code{RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE} is defined; it
1368indicates the largest number of relocs which @code{tc_gen_reloc} may return for
1369a single fixup.
1370
1371@item tc_fix_adjustable
1372@cindex tc_fix_adjustable
1373You may define this macro to indicate whether a fixup against a locally defined
1374symbol should be adjusted to be against the section symbol. It should return a
1375non-zero value if the adjustment is acceptable.
1376
1262d520 1377@item MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION (@var{fixp}, @var{section})
252b5132 1378@cindex MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION
1262d520
JR
1379If you define this macro, it should return the position from which the PC
1380relative adjustment for a PC relative fixup should be made. On many
1381processors, the base of a PC relative instruction is the next instruction,
1382so this macro would return the length of an instruction, plus the address of
1383the PC relative fixup. The latter can be calculated as
1384@var{fixp}->fx_where + @var{fixp}->fx_frag->fr_address .
252b5132
RH
1385
1386@item md_pcrel_from
1387@cindex md_pcrel_from
1388This is the default value of @code{MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION}. The difference is
1389that @code{md_pcrel_from} does not take a section argument.
1390
1391@item tc_frob_label
1392@cindex tc_frob_label
1393If you define this macro, GAS will call it each time a label is defined.
1394
a1facbec
MR
1395@item tc_new_dot_label
1396@cindex tc_new_dot_label
1397If you define this macro, GAS will call it each time a fake label is created
1398off the special dot symbol.
1399
252b5132
RH
1400@item md_section_align
1401@cindex md_section_align
1402GAS will call this function for each section at the end of the assembly, to
65fd87bc
ILT
1403permit the CPU backend to adjust the alignment of a section. The function
1404must take two arguments, a @code{segT} for the section and a @code{valueT}
1405for the size of the section, and return a @code{valueT} for the rounded
1406size.
252b5132 1407
9f10757c
TW
1408@item md_macro_start
1409@cindex md_macro_start
1410If defined, GAS will call this macro when it starts to include a macro
1411expansion. @code{macro_nest} indicates the current macro nesting level, which
58a77e41 1412includes the one being expanded.
9f10757c
TW
1413
1414@item md_macro_info
1415@cindex md_macro_info
1416If defined, GAS will call this macro after the macro expansion has been
1417included in the input and after parsing the macro arguments. The single
1418argument is a pointer to the macro processing's internal representation of the
1419macro (macro_entry *), which includes expansion of the formal arguments.
1420
1421@item md_macro_end
1422@cindex md_macro_end
1423Complement to md_macro_start. If defined, it is called when finished
58a77e41 1424processing an inserted macro expansion, just before decrementing macro_nest.
9f10757c 1425
f28e8eb3
TW
1426@item DOUBLEBAR_PARALLEL
1427@cindex DOUBLEBAR_PARALLEL
1428Affects the preprocessor so that lines containing '||' don't have their
1429whitespace stripped following the double bar. This is useful for targets that
1430implement parallel instructions.
1431
1432@item KEEP_WHITE_AROUND_COLON
1433@cindex KEEP_WHITE_AROUND_COLON
1434Normally, whitespace is compressed and removed when, in the presence of the
1435colon, the adjoining tokens can be distinguished. This option affects the
1436preprocessor so that whitespace around colons is preserved. This is useful
1437when colons might be removed from the input after preprocessing but before
1438assembling, so that adjoining tokens can still be distinguished if there is
062b7c0c 1439whitespace, or concatenated if there is not.
f28e8eb3 1440
252b5132
RH
1441@item tc_frob_section
1442@cindex tc_frob_section
829c3ed3 1443If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each
252b5132
RH
1444section at the end of the assembly.
1445
1446@item tc_frob_file_before_adjust
1447@cindex tc_frob_file_before_adjust
1448If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol values are
1449resolved, but before the fixups have been changed from local symbols to section
1450symbols.
1451
1452@item tc_frob_symbol
1453@cindex tc_frob_symbol
1454If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each symbol. You can indicate
062b7c0c 1455that the symbol should not be included in the object file by defining this
252b5132
RH
1456macro to set its second argument to a non-zero value.
1457
1458@item tc_frob_file
1459@cindex tc_frob_file
1460If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol table has been
1461completed, but before the relocations have been generated.
1462
1463@item tc_frob_file_after_relocs
1464If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the relocs have been
1465generated.
1466
e0001a05
NC
1467@item md_post_relax_hook
1468If you define this macro, GAS will call it after relaxing and sizing the
1469segments.
1470
252b5132
RH
1471@item LISTING_HEADER
1472A string to use on the header line of a listing. The default value is simply
1473@code{"GAS LISTING"}.
1474
1475@item LISTING_WORD_SIZE
1476The number of bytes to put into a word in a listing. This affects the way the
1477bytes are clumped together in the listing. For example, a value of 2 might
1478print @samp{1234 5678} where a value of 1 would print @samp{12 34 56 78}. The
1479default value is 4.
1480
1481@item LISTING_LHS_WIDTH
1482The number of words of data to print on the first line of a listing for a
1483particular source line, where each word is @code{LISTING_WORD_SIZE} bytes. The
1484default value is 1.
1485
1486@item LISTING_LHS_WIDTH_SECOND
1487Like @code{LISTING_LHS_WIDTH}, but applying to the second and subsequent line
1488of the data printed for a particular source line. The default value is 1.
1489
1490@item LISTING_LHS_CONT_LINES
1491The maximum number of continuation lines to print in a listing for a particular
1492source line. The default value is 4.
1493
1494@item LISTING_RHS_WIDTH
1495The maximum number of characters to print from one line of the input file. The
1496default value is 100.
b8a9dcab
NC
1497
1498@item TC_COFF_SECTION_DEFAULT_ATTRIBUTES
1499@cindex TC_COFF_SECTION_DEFAULT_ATTRIBUTES
1500The COFF @code{.section} directive will use the value of this macro to set
1501a new section's attributes when a directive has no valid flags or when the
1502flag is @code{w}. The default value of the macro is @code{SEC_LOAD | SEC_DATA}.
1503
c3c36456 1504@item DWARF2_FORMAT (@var{sec})
14e777e0
KB
1505@cindex DWARF2_FORMAT
1506If you define this, it should return one of @code{dwarf2_format_32bit},
1507@code{dwarf2_format_64bit}, or @code{dwarf2_format_64bit_irix} to indicate
1508the size of internal DWARF section offsets and the format of the DWARF initial
1509length fields. When @code{dwarf2_format_32bit} is returned, the initial
1510length field will be 4 bytes long and section offsets are 32 bits in size.
1511For @code{dwarf2_format_64bit} and @code{dwarf2_format_64bit_irix}, section
1512offsets are 64 bits in size, but the initial length field differs. An 8 byte
1513initial length is indicated by @code{dwarf2_format_64bit_irix} and
1514@code{dwarf2_format_64bit} indicates a 12 byte initial length field in
1515which the first four bytes are 0xffffffff and the next 8 bytes are
1516the section's length.
1517
1518If you don't define this, @code{dwarf2_format_32bit} will be used as
1519the default.
1520
c3c36456 1521This define only affects debug
14e777e0
KB
1522sections generated by the assembler. DWARF 2 sections generated by
1523other tools will be unaffected by this setting.
1524
9605f328
AO
1525@item DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE (@var{bfd})
1526@cindex DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE
1527It should return the size of an address, as it should be represented in
1528debugging info. If you don't define this macro, the default definition uses
1529the number of bits per address, as defined in @var{bfd}, divided by 8.
1530
329e276d
NC
1531@item MD_DEBUG_FORMAT_SELECTOR
1532@cindex MD_DEBUG_FORMAT_SELECTOR
1533If defined this macro is the name of a function to be called when the
1534@samp{--gen-debug} switch is detected on the assembler's command line. The
1535prototype for the function looks like this:
1536
1537@smallexample
1538 enum debug_info_type MD_DEBUG_FORMAT_SELECTOR (int * use_gnu_extensions)
1539@end smallexample
1540
1541The function should return the debug format that is preferred by the CPU
1542backend. This format will be used when generating assembler specific debug
1543information.
1544
bfff1642
NC
1545@item md_allow_local_subtract (@var{left}, @var{right}, @var{section})
1546If defined, GAS will call this macro when evaluating an expression which is the
1547difference of two symbols defined in the same section. It takes three
1548arguments: @code{expressioS * @var{left}} which is the symbolic expression on
1549the left hand side of the subtraction operation, @code{expressionS *
1550@var{right}} which is the symbolic expression on the right hand side of the
1551subtraction, and @code{segT @var{section}} which is the section containing the two
1552symbols. The macro should return a non-zero value if the expression should be
1553evaluated. Targets which implement link time relaxation which may change the
1554position of the two symbols relative to each other should ensure that this
1555macro returns zero in situations where this can occur.
1556
8c750480
NC
1557@item md_allow_eh_opt
1558If defined, GAS will check this macro before performing any optimizations on
1559the DWARF call frame debug information that is emitted. Targets which
1560implement link time relaxation may need to define this macro and set it to zero
1561if it is possible to change the size of a function's prologue.
252b5132
RH
1562@end table
1563
1564@node Object format backend
1565@subsection Writing an object format backend
1566@cindex object format backend
1567@cindex @file{obj-@var{fmt}}
1568
1569As with the CPU backend, the object format backend must define a few things,
1570and may define some other things. The interface to the object format backend
1571is generally simpler; most of the support for an object file format consists of
1572defining a number of pseudo-ops.
1573
1574The object format @file{.h} file must include @file{targ-cpu.h}.
1575
252b5132
RH
1576@table @code
1577@item OBJ_@var{format}
1578@cindex OBJ_@var{format}
1579By convention, you should define this macro in the @file{.h} file. For
1580example, @file{obj-elf.h} defines @code{OBJ_ELF}. You might have to use this
1581if it is necessary to add object file format specific code to the CPU file.
1582
1583@item obj_begin
1584If you define this macro, GAS will call it at the start of the assembly, after
1585the command line arguments have been parsed and all the machine independent
1586initializations have been completed.
1587
1588@item obj_app_file
1589@cindex obj_app_file
1590If you define this macro, GAS will invoke it when it sees a @code{.file}
1591pseudo-op or a @samp{#} line as used by the C preprocessor.
1592
1593@item OBJ_COPY_SYMBOL_ATTRIBUTES
1594@cindex OBJ_COPY_SYMBOL_ATTRIBUTES
1595You should define this macro to copy object format specific information from
1596one symbol to another. GAS will call it when one symbol is equated to
1597another.
1598
252b5132
RH
1599@item obj_sec_sym_ok_for_reloc
1600@cindex obj_sec_sym_ok_for_reloc
1601You may define this macro to indicate that it is OK to use a section symbol in
062b7c0c 1602a relocation entry. If it is not, GAS will define a new symbol at the start
252b5132
RH
1603of a section.
1604
1605@item EMIT_SECTION_SYMBOLS
1606@cindex EMIT_SECTION_SYMBOLS
1607You should define this macro with a zero value if you do not want to include
1608section symbols in the output symbol table. The default value for this macro
1609is one.
1610
1611@item obj_adjust_symtab
1612@cindex obj_adjust_symtab
1613If you define this macro, GAS will invoke it just before setting the symbol
1614table of the output BFD. For example, the COFF support uses this macro to
1615generate a @code{.file} symbol if none was generated previously.
1616
1617@item SEPARATE_STAB_SECTIONS
1618@cindex SEPARATE_STAB_SECTIONS
0aa5d426
HPN
1619You may define this macro to a nonzero value to indicate that stabs should be
1620placed in separate sections, as in ELF.
252b5132
RH
1621
1622@item INIT_STAB_SECTION
1623@cindex INIT_STAB_SECTION
1624You may define this macro to initialize the stabs section in the output file.
1625
1626@item OBJ_PROCESS_STAB
1627@cindex OBJ_PROCESS_STAB
1628You may define this macro to do specific processing on a stabs entry.
1629
1630@item obj_frob_section
1631@cindex obj_frob_section
1632If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each section at the end of the
1633assembly.
1634
1635@item obj_frob_file_before_adjust
1636@cindex obj_frob_file_before_adjust
1637If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol values are
1638resolved, but before the fixups have been changed from local symbols to section
1639symbols.
1640
1641@item obj_frob_symbol
1642@cindex obj_frob_symbol
1643If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each symbol. You can indicate
062b7c0c 1644that the symbol should not be included in the object file by defining this
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RH
1645macro to set its second argument to a non-zero value.
1646
06e77878
AO
1647@item obj_set_weak_hook
1648@cindex obj_set_weak_hook
1649If you define this macro, @code{S_SET_WEAK} will call it before modifying the
1650symbol's flags.
1651
1652@item obj_clear_weak_hook
1653@cindex obj_clear_weak_hook
b45619c0 1654If you define this macro, @code{S_CLEAR_WEAKREFD} will call it after cleaning
06e77878
AO
1655the @code{weakrefd} flag, but before modifying any other flags.
1656
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RH
1657@item obj_frob_file
1658@cindex obj_frob_file
1659If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol table has been
1660completed, but before the relocations have been generated.
1661
1662@item obj_frob_file_after_relocs
1663If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the relocs have been
1664generated.
945a1a6b
ILT
1665
1666@item SET_SECTION_RELOCS (@var{sec}, @var{relocs}, @var{n})
1667@cindex SET_SECTION_RELOCS
1668If you define this, it will be called after the relocations have been set for
1669the section @var{sec}. The list of relocations is in @var{relocs}, and the
829c3ed3 1670number of relocations is in @var{n}.
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RH
1671@end table
1672
1673@node Emulations
1674@subsection Writing emulation files
1675
1676Normally you do not have to write an emulation file. You can just use
1677@file{te-generic.h}.
1678
1679If you do write your own emulation file, it must include @file{obj-format.h}.
1680
1681An emulation file will often define @code{TE_@var{EM}}; this may then be used
1682in other files to change the output.
1683
1684@node Relaxation
1685@section Relaxation
1686@cindex relaxation
1687
1688@dfn{Relaxation} is a generic term used when the size of some instruction or
1689data depends upon the value of some symbol or other data.
1690
1691GAS knows to relax a particular type of PC relative relocation using a table.
1692You can also define arbitrarily complex forms of relaxation yourself.
1693
1694@menu
1695* Relaxing with a table:: Relaxing with a table
1696* General relaxing:: General relaxing
1697@end menu
1698
1699@node Relaxing with a table
1700@subsection Relaxing with a table
1701
1702If you do not define @code{md_relax_frag}, and you do define
1703@code{TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE}, GAS will relax @code{rs_machine_dependent} frags
1704based on the frag subtype and the displacement to some specified target
1705address. The basic idea is that several machines have different addressing
1706modes for instructions that can specify different ranges of values, with
1707successive modes able to access wider ranges, including the entirety of the
1708previous range. Smaller ranges are assumed to be more desirable (perhaps the
1709instruction requires one word instead of two or three); if this is not the
1710case, don't describe the smaller-range, inferior mode.
1711
1712The @code{fr_subtype} field of a frag is an index into a CPU-specific
1713relaxation table. That table entry indicates the range of values that can be
1714stored, the number of bytes that will have to be added to the frag to
062b7c0c 1715accommodate the addressing mode, and the index of the next entry to examine if
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RH
1716the value to be stored is outside the range accessible by the current
1717addressing mode. The @code{fr_symbol} field of the frag indicates what symbol
1718is to be accessed; the @code{fr_offset} field is added in.
1719
1720If the @code{TC_PCREL_ADJUST} macro is defined, which currently should only happen
1721for the NS32k family, the @code{TC_PCREL_ADJUST} macro is called on the frag to
1722compute an adjustment to be made to the displacement.
1723
1724The value fitted by the relaxation code is always assumed to be a displacement
1725from the current frag. (More specifically, from @code{fr_fix} bytes into the
1726frag.)
1727@ignore
1728This seems kinda silly. What about fitting small absolute values? I suppose
1729@code{md_assemble} is supposed to take care of that, but if the operand is a
1730difference between symbols, it might not be able to, if the difference was not
1731computable yet.
1732@end ignore
1733
1734The end of the relaxation sequence is indicated by a ``next'' value of 0. This
1735means that the first entry in the table can't be used.
1736
1737For some configurations, the linker can do relaxing within a section of an
1738object file. If call instructions of various sizes exist, the linker can
1739determine which should be used in each instance, when a symbol's value is
1740resolved. In order for the linker to avoid wasting space and having to insert
1741no-op instructions, it must be able to expand or shrink the section contents
1742while still preserving intra-section references and meeting alignment
1743requirements.
1744
1745For the i960 using b.out format, no expansion is done; instead, each
1746@samp{.align} directive causes extra space to be allocated, enough that when
1747the linker is relaxing a section and removing unneeded space, it can discard
1748some or all of this extra padding and cause the following data to be correctly
1749aligned.
1750
1751For the H8/300, I think the linker expands calls that can't reach, and doesn't
1752worry about alignment issues; the cpu probably never needs any significant
1753alignment beyond the instruction size.
1754
1755The relaxation table type contains these fields:
1756
1757@table @code
1758@item long rlx_forward
1759Forward reach, must be non-negative.
1760@item long rlx_backward
1761Backward reach, must be zero or negative.
1762@item rlx_length
1763Length in bytes of this addressing mode.
1764@item rlx_more
1765Index of the next-longer relax state, or zero if there is no next relax state.
1766@end table
1767
1768The relaxation is done in @code{relax_segment} in @file{write.c}. The
1769difference in the length fields between the original mode and the one finally
1770chosen by the relaxing code is taken as the size by which the current frag will
1771be increased in size. For example, if the initial relaxing mode has a length
1772of 2 bytes, and because of the size of the displacement, it gets upgraded to a
1773mode with a size of 6 bytes, it is assumed that the frag will grow by 4 bytes.
1774(The initial two bytes should have been part of the fixed portion of the frag,
1775since it is already known that they will be output.) This growth must be
1776effected by @code{md_convert_frag}; it should increase the @code{fr_fix} field
1777by the appropriate size, and fill in the appropriate bytes of the frag.
1778(Enough space for the maximum growth should have been allocated in the call to
1779frag_var as the second argument.)
1780
1781If relocation records are needed, they should be emitted by
1782@code{md_estimate_size_before_relax}. This function should examine the target
1783symbol of the supplied frag and correct the @code{fr_subtype} of the frag if
1784needed. When this function is called, if the symbol has not yet been defined,
1785it will not become defined later; however, its value may still change if the
1786section it is in gets relaxed.
1787
1788Usually, if the symbol is in the same section as the frag (given by the
1789@var{sec} argument), the narrowest likely relaxation mode is stored in
1790@code{fr_subtype}, and that's that.
1791
60493797 1792If the symbol is undefined, or in a different section (and therefore movable
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RH
1793to an arbitrarily large distance), the largest available relaxation mode is
1794specified, @code{fix_new} is called to produce the relocation record,
1795@code{fr_fix} is increased to include the relocated field (remember, this
1796storage was allocated when @code{frag_var} was called), and @code{frag_wane} is
1797called to convert the frag to an @code{rs_fill} frag with no variant part.
1798Sometimes changing addressing modes may also require rewriting the instruction.
1799It can be accessed via @code{fr_opcode} or @code{fr_fix}.
1800
67db5ab4
HPN
1801If you generate frags separately for the basic insn opcode and any relaxable
1802operands, do not call @code{fix_new} thinking you can emit fixups for the
062b7c0c 1803opcode field from the relaxable frag. It is not guaranteed to be the same frag.
67db5ab4
HPN
1804If you need to emit fixups for the opcode field from inspection of the
1805relaxable frag, then you need to generate a common frag for both the basic
1806opcode and relaxable fields, or you need to provide the frag for the opcode to
1807pass to @code{fix_new}. The latter can be done for example by defining
1808@code{TC_FRAG_TYPE} to include a pointer to it and defining @code{TC_FRAG_INIT}
1809to set the pointer.
1810
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RH
1811Sometimes @code{fr_var} is increased instead, and @code{frag_wane} is not
1812called. I'm not sure, but I think this is to keep @code{fr_fix} referring to
1813an earlier byte, and @code{fr_subtype} set to @code{rs_machine_dependent} so
1814that @code{md_convert_frag} will get called.
1815
1816@node General relaxing
1817@subsection General relaxing
1818
1819If using a simple table is not suitable, you may implement arbitrarily complex
1820relaxation semantics yourself. For example, the MIPS backend uses this to emit
1821different instruction sequences depending upon the size of the symbol being
1822accessed.
1823
1824When you assemble an instruction that may need relaxation, you should allocate
1825a frag using @code{frag_var} or @code{frag_variant} with a type of
1826@code{rs_machine_dependent}. You should store some sort of information in the
1827@code{fr_subtype} field so that you can figure out what to do with the frag
1828later.
1829
1830When GAS reaches the end of the input file, it will look through the frags and
1831work out their final sizes.
1832
1833GAS will first call @code{md_estimate_size_before_relax} on each
1834@code{rs_machine_dependent} frag. This function must return an estimated size
1835for the frag.
1836
1837GAS will then loop over the frags, calling @code{md_relax_frag} on each
1838@code{rs_machine_dependent} frag. This function should return the change in
1839size of the frag. GAS will keep looping over the frags until none of the frags
1840changes size.
1841
1842@node Broken words
1843@section Broken words
1844@cindex internals, broken words
1845@cindex broken words
1846
1847Some compilers, including GCC, will sometimes emit switch tables specifying
184816-bit @code{.word} displacements to branch targets, and branch instructions
1849that load entries from that table to compute the target address. If this is
1850done on a 32-bit machine, there is a chance (at least with really large
1851functions) that the displacement will not fit in 16 bits. The assembler
1852handles this using a concept called @dfn{broken words}. This idea is well
1853named, since there is an implied promise that the 16-bit field will in fact
1854hold the specified displacement.
1855
1856If broken word processing is enabled, and a situation like this is encountered,
1857the assembler will insert a jump instruction into the instruction stream, close
1858enough to be reached with the 16-bit displacement. This jump instruction will
1859transfer to the real desired target address. Thus, as long as the @code{.word}
1860value really is used as a displacement to compute an address to jump to, the
1861net effect will be correct (minus a very small efficiency cost). If
1862@code{.word} directives with label differences for values are used for other
1863purposes, however, things may not work properly. For targets which use broken
1864words, the @samp{-K} option will warn when a broken word is discovered.
1865
1866The broken word code is turned off by the @code{WORKING_DOT_WORD} macro. It
1867isn't needed if @code{.word} emits a value large enough to contain an address
1868(or, more correctly, any possible difference between two addresses).
1869
1870@node Internal functions
1871@section Internal functions
1872
1873This section describes basic internal functions used by GAS.
1874
1875@menu
1876* Warning and error messages:: Warning and error messages
1877* Hash tables:: Hash tables
1878@end menu
1879
1880@node Warning and error messages
1881@subsection Warning and error messages
1882
1883@deftypefun @{@} int had_warnings (void)
1884@deftypefunx @{@} int had_errors (void)
1885Returns non-zero if any warnings or errors, respectively, have been printed
1886during this invocation.
1887@end deftypefun
1888
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RH
1889@deftypefun @{@} void as_tsktsk (const char *@var{format}, ...)
1890@deftypefunx @{@} void as_warn (const char *@var{format}, ...)
1891@deftypefunx @{@} void as_bad (const char *@var{format}, ...)
1892@deftypefunx @{@} void as_fatal (const char *@var{format}, ...)
1893These functions display messages about something amiss with the input file, or
1894internal problems in the assembler itself. The current file name and line
1895number are printed, followed by the supplied message, formatted using
1896@code{vfprintf}, and a final newline.
1897
1898An error indicated by @code{as_bad} will result in a non-zero exit status when
1899the assembler has finished. Calling @code{as_fatal} will result in immediate
1900termination of the assembler process.
1901@end deftypefun
1902
1903@deftypefun @{@} void as_warn_where (char *@var{file}, unsigned int @var{line}, const char *@var{format}, ...)
1904@deftypefunx @{@} void as_bad_where (char *@var{file}, unsigned int @var{line}, const char *@var{format}, ...)
1905These variants permit specification of the file name and line number, and are
1906used when problems are detected when reprocessing information saved away when
1907processing some earlier part of the file. For example, fixups are processed
1908after all input has been read, but messages about fixups should refer to the
1909original filename and line number that they are applicable to.
1910@end deftypefun
1911
87c245cc
BE
1912@deftypefun @{@} void sprint_value (char *@var{buf}, valueT @var{val})
1913This function is helpful for converting a @code{valueT} value into printable
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RH
1914format, in case it's wider than modes that @code{*printf} can handle. If the
1915type is narrow enough, a decimal number will be produced; otherwise, it will be
1916in hexadecimal. The value itself is not examined to make this determination.
1917@end deftypefun
1918
1919@node Hash tables
1920@subsection Hash tables
1921@cindex hash tables
1922
1923@deftypefun @{@} @{struct hash_control *@} hash_new (void)
1924Creates the hash table control structure.
1925@end deftypefun
1926
1927@deftypefun @{@} void hash_die (struct hash_control *)
1928Destroy a hash table.
1929@end deftypefun
1930
5a49b8ac 1931@deftypefun @{@} void *hash_delete (struct hash_control *, const char *, int)
818236e5
AM
1932Deletes entry from the hash table, returns the value it had. If the last
1933arg is non-zero, free memory allocated for this entry and all entries
1934allocated more recently than this entry.
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RH
1935@end deftypefun
1936
5a49b8ac 1937@deftypefun @{@} void *hash_replace (struct hash_control *, const char *, void *)
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RH
1938Updates the value for an entry already in the table, returning the old value.
1939If no entry was found, just returns NULL.
1940@end deftypefun
1941
5a49b8ac 1942@deftypefun @{@} @{const char *@} hash_insert (struct hash_control *, const char *, void *)
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RH
1943Inserting a value already in the table is an error.
1944Returns an error message or NULL.
1945@end deftypefun
1946
5a49b8ac 1947@deftypefun @{@} @{const char *@} hash_jam (struct hash_control *, const char *, void *)
252b5132
RH
1948Inserts if the value isn't already present, updates it if it is.
1949@end deftypefun
1950
1951@node Test suite
1952@section Test suite
1953@cindex test suite
1954
1955The test suite is kind of lame for most processors. Often it only checks to
1956see if a couple of files can be assembled without the assembler reporting any
1957errors. For more complete testing, write a test which either examines the
1958assembler listing, or runs @code{objdump} and examines its output. For the
1959latter, the TCL procedure @code{run_dump_test} may come in handy. It takes the
1960base name of a file, and looks for @file{@var{file}.d}. This file should
1961contain as its initial lines a set of variable settings in @samp{#} comments,
1962in the form:
1963
1964@example
1965 #@var{varname}: @var{value}
1966@end example
1967
1968The @var{varname} may be @code{objdump}, @code{nm}, or @code{as}, in which case
1969it specifies the options to be passed to the specified programs. Exactly one
1970of @code{objdump} or @code{nm} must be specified, as that also specifies which
1971program to run after the assembler has finished. If @var{varname} is
1972@code{source}, it specifies the name of the source file; otherwise,
1973@file{@var{file}.s} is used. If @var{varname} is @code{name}, it specifies the
1974name of the test to be used in the @code{pass} or @code{fail} messages.
1975
1976The non-commented parts of the file are interpreted as regular expressions, one
1977per line. Blank lines in the @code{objdump} or @code{nm} output are skipped,
1978as are blank lines in the @code{.d} file; the other lines are tested to see if
1979the regular expression matches the program output. If it does not, the test
1980fails.
1981
1982Note that this means the tests must be modified if the @code{objdump} output
1983style is changed.
1984
1985@bye
1986@c Local Variables:
1987@c fill-column: 79
1988@c End:
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