Commit | Line | Data |
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252b5132 RH |
1 | Preliminary Notes on Porting BFD |
2 | -------------------------------- | |
3 | ||
4 | The 'host' is the system a tool runs *on*. | |
5 | The 'target' is the system a tool runs *for*, i.e. | |
6 | a tool can read/write the binaries of the target. | |
7 | ||
8 | Porting to a new host | |
9 | --------------------- | |
10 | Pick a name for your host. Call that <host>. | |
11 | (<host> might be sun4, ...) | |
12 | Create a file hosts/<host>.mh. | |
13 | ||
14 | Porting to a new target | |
15 | ----------------------- | |
16 | Pick a name for your target. Call that <target>. | |
17 | Call the name for your CPU architecture <cpu>. | |
18 | You need to create <target>.c and config/<target>.mt, | |
19 | and add a case for it to a case statements in bfd/configure.host and | |
20 | bfd/config.bfd, which associates each canonical host type with a BFD | |
21 | host type (used as the base of the makefile fragment names), and to the | |
22 | table in bfd/configure.in which associates each target vector with | |
23 | the .o files it uses. | |
24 | ||
25 | config/<target>.mt is a Makefile fragment. | |
26 | The following is usually enough: | |
27 | DEFAULT_VECTOR=<target>_vec | |
28 | SELECT_ARCHITECTURES=bfd_<cpu>_arch | |
29 | ||
30 | See the list of cpu types in archures.c, or "ls cpu-*.c". | |
31 | If your architecture is new, you need to add it to the tables | |
32 | in bfd/archures.c, opcodes/configure.in, and binutils/objdump.c. | |
33 | ||
34 | For more information about .mt and .mh files, see config/README. | |
35 | ||
36 | The file <target>.c is the hard part. It implements the | |
37 | bfd_target <target>_vec, which includes pointers to | |
38 | functions that do the actual <target>-specific methods. | |
39 | ||
40 | Porting to a <target> that uses the a.out binary format | |
41 | ------------------------------------------------------- | |
42 | ||
43 | In this case, the include file aout-target.h probaby does most | |
44 | of what you need. The program gen-aout generates <target>.c for | |
45 | you automatically for many a.out systems. Do: | |
46 | make gen-aout | |
47 | ./gen-aout <target> > <target>.c | |
48 | (This only works if you are building on the target ("native"). | |
49 | If you must make a cross-port from scratch, copy the most | |
50 | similar existing file that includes aout-target.h, and fix what is wrong.) | |
51 | ||
52 | Check the parameters in <target>.c, and fix anything that is wrong. | |
53 | (Also let us know about it; perhaps we can improve gen-aout.c.) | |
54 | ||
55 | TARGET_IS_BIG_ENDIAN_P | |
56 | Should be defined if <target> is big-endian. | |
57 | ||
58 | N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) | |
59 | See discussion in ../include/aout/aout64.h. | |
60 | ||
61 | BYTES_IN_WORD | |
62 | Number of bytes per word. (Usually 4 but can be 8.) | |
63 | ||
64 | ARCH | |
65 | Number of bits per word. (Usually 32, but can be 64.) | |
66 | ||
67 | ENTRY_CAN_BE_ZERO | |
68 | Define if the extry point (start address of an | |
69 | executable program) can be 0x0. | |
70 | ||
71 | TEXT_START_ADDR | |
72 | The address of the start of the text segemnt in | |
73 | virtual memory. Normally, the same as the entry point. | |
74 | ||
75 | TARGET_PAGE_SIZE | |
76 | ||
77 | SEGMENT_SIZE | |
78 | Usually, the same as the TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. | |
79 | Alignment needed for the data segment. | |
80 | ||
81 | TARGETNAME | |
82 | The name of the target, for run-time lookups. | |
83 | Usually "a.out-<target>" |