2000-02-22 Alexandre Oliva <oliva@lsd.ic.unicamp.br>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gas / README-vms
CommitLineData
252b5132
RH
1 This document explains a couple of things that are specific to VMS.
2There are currently two "chapters", the first deals with cross-assembly
3issues, and the second deals with the VMS debugger and GNU-CC.
4
5
6***********************************************************************
7****************** Notes for Cross Assembly with VMS ******************
8***********************************************************************
9
10 If you wish to build gas on a non-VMS system to cross-assemble,
11you should use:
12
13configure ${hosttype} -target=vms
14
15and then follow the usual procedure. The object files generated on
16Unix will be correct from a binary point of view, but the real trick is
17getting them to the VMS machine. The format of the object file is
18a variable-length record, but each record contains binary data. gas
19writes the records in the same format that VMS would expect,
20namely a two-byte count followed by that number of bytes.
21
22 If you try to copy the file to a VMS system using ftp, the ftp
23protocol will screw up the file by looking for nulls (record terminator for
24unix) and it will insert it's own record terminators at that point. This
25will obviously corrupt the file.
26
27 If you try to transfer the file with ftp in binary mode, the
28file itself will not be corrupt, but VMS will think that the file contains
29fixed-length records of 512 bytes. You can use the public-domain FILE
30utility to change this with a command like:
31
32$FILE foo.o/type=variable
33
34If you do not have this utility available, the following program can be
35used to perform this task:
36
37 #include <fab.h>
38
39 #define RME$C_SETRFM 1
40
41 struct FAB * fab;
42
43 main(int argc, char * argv[]){
44 int i, status;
45 fab = (struct FAB*) malloc(sizeof(struct FAB));
46 *fab = cc$rms_fab; /* initialize FAB*/
47 fab->fab$b_fac = FAB$M_PUT;
48 fab->fab$l_fop |= FAB$M_ESC;
49 fab->fab$l_ctx = RME$C_SETRFM;
50 fab->fab$w_ifi = 0;
51 for(i=1;i<argc;i++){
52 printf("Setting %s to variable length records.\n",argv[i]);
53 fab->fab$l_fna = argv[i];
54 fab->fab$b_fns = strlen(argv[i]);
55 status = sys$open(fab,0,0);
56 if((status & 7) != 1) lib$signal(status);
57 fab->fab$b_rfm = FAB$C_VAR;
58 status = sys$modify(fab,0,0);
59 if((status & 7) != 1) lib$signal(status);
60 status = sys$close(fab,0,0);
61 if((status & 7) != 1) lib$signal(status);
62 };
63 }
64
65 If you have NFS running on the VMS system, what you need to do
66depends upon which NFS software you are running on the VMS system. There
67are a number of different TCP/IP packages for VMS available, and only very
68limited testing has been performed. In the tests that has been done so
69far, the contents of the file will always be correct when transferring the
70file via NFS, but the record attributes may or may not be correct.
71
72 One proprietary TCP/IP/NFS package for VMS is known to
73automatically fix the record attributes of the object file if you NFS mount
74a unix disk from the VMS system, and if the file has a ".obj" extension on
75the unix system. Other TCP/IP packages might do this for you as well, but
76they have not been checked.
77
78No matter what method you use to get the file to the VMS system, it is
79always a good idea to check to make sure that it is the correct type by
80doing a "$dir/full" on the object file. The desired record attributes will
81be "None". Undesirable record attributes will be "Stream-LF" or anything
82else.
83
84Once you get the files on the VMS system, you can check their integrity
85with the "$anal/obj" command. (Naturally at some point you should rename
86the .o files to .obj). As far as the debugger is concerned, the records
87will be correct, but the debugger will not be able to find the source files,
88since it only has the file name, and not the full directory specification.
89You must give the debugger some help by telling it which directories to
90search for the individual files - once you have done this you should be
91able to proceed normally.
92
93 It is a good idea to use names for your files which will be valid
94under VMS, since otherwise you will have no way of getting the debugger to
95find the source file when deugging.
96
97The reason for this is that the object file normally contins specific
98information that the debugger can use to positively identify a file, and if
99you are assembling on a unix system this information simply does not exist
100in a meaningful way. You must help the debugger by using the "SET FILE="
101command to tell the debugger where to look for source files. The debugger
102records will be correct, except that the debugger will not be initially
103able to find the source files. You can use the "SET FILE" command to tell
104the debugger where to look for the source files.
105
106I have only tested this with a SVr4 i486 machine, and everything seems to
107work OK, with the limited testing that I have done. Other machines may
108or may not work. You should read the chapters on cross-compilers in the gcc
109manual before fooling with this. Since gas does not need to do any floating
110point arithmetic, the floating point constants that are generated here should
111be correct - the only concern is with constant folding in the main compiler.
112The range and precision of floats and doubles are similar on the 486 (with
113a builtin 80387) and the VAX, although there is a factor of 2 to 4
114difference in the range. The double, as implemented on the 486, is quite
115similar to the G_FLOAT on the VAX.
116
117***********************************************************************
118****************** Notes for using GNU CC with the VMS debugger********
119***********************************************************************
120
121
122 1) You should be aware that GNU-C, as with any other decent compiler,
123will do things when optimization is turned on that you may not expect.
124Sometimes intermediate results are not written to variables, if they are only
125used in one place, and sometimes variables that are not used at all will not be
126written to the symbol table. Also, parameters to inline functions are often
127inaccessible. You can see the assembly code equivalent by using KP7 in the
128debugger, and from this you can tell if in fact a variable should have the
129value that you expect. You can find out if a variable lives withing a register
130by doing a 'show symbol/addr'.
131
132 2) Overly complex data types, such as:
133
134int (*(*(*(*(*(* sarr6)[1])[1])[2])[3])[4])[5];
135
136will not be debugged properly, since the debugging record overflows an internal
137debugger buffer. gcc-as will convert these to *void as far as the debugger
138symbol table is concerned, which will avoid any problems, and the assembler
139will give you a message informing you that this has happened.
140
141 3) You must, of course, compile and link with /debug. If you link
142without debug, you still get traceback table in the executable, but there is no
143symbol table for variables.
144
145 4) Included in the patches to VMS.C are fixes to two bugs that are
146unrelated to the changes that I have made. One of these made it impossible to
147debug small programs sometimes, and the other caused the debugger to become
148confused about which routine it was in, and give this incorrect info in
149tracebacks.
150
151 5) If you are using the GNU-C++ compiler, you should modify the
152compiler driver file GNU_CC:[000000]GCC.COM (or GXX.COM). If you have a
153seperate GXX.COM, then you need to change one line in GXX.COM to:
154$ if f$locate("D",p2) .ne. P2_Length then Debug = " ""-G0"""
155 Notice zero---> ^
156If you are using a GCC.COM that does both C and C++, add the following lines to
157GCC.COM:
158
159$!
160$! Use old style debugging records for VMS
161$!
162$ if (Debug.nes."" ).and. Plus then Debug = " ""-G0"""
163
164after the variables Plus and Debug are set. The reason for this, is that C++
165compiler by default generates debugging records that are more complex,
166with many new syntactical elements that allow for the new features of the
167language. The -G0 switch tells the C++ compiler to use the old style debugging
168records. Until the debugger understands C++ there is not any point to try and
169use the expanded syntax.
170
171 6) When you have nested scopes, i.e.:
172main(){
173 int i;
174 {int i;
175 {int i;
176};};}
177and you say "EXAM i" the debugger needs to figure out which variable you
178actually want to reference. I have arranged things to define a block to the
179debugger when you use brackets to enter a new scope, so in the example above,
180the variables would be described as:
181TEST\main\i
182TEST\main\$0\i
183TEST\main\$0\$0\i
184At each level, the block name is a number with a dollar sign prefix, the
185numbers start with 0 and count upward. When you say EXAM i, the debugger looks
186at the current PC, and decides which block it is currently in. It works from
187the innermost level outward until it finds a block that has the variable "i"
188defined. You can always specify the scope explicitly.
189
190 7) With C++, there can be a lot of inline functions, and it would be
191rather restrictive to force the user to debug the program by converting all of
192the inline functions to normal functions. What I have done is to essentially
193"add" (with the debugger) source lines from the include files that contain the
194inline functions. Thus when you step into an inline function it appears as if
195you have called the function, and you can examine variables and so forth.
196There are several *very* important differences, however. First of all, since
197there is no function call involved, you cannot step over the inline function
198call - you always step into it. Secondly, since the same source lines are used
199in many locations, there is a seperate copy of the source for *each* usage.
200Without this, breakpoints do not work, since we must have a 1-to-1 mapping
201between source lines and PC.
202 Since you cannot step over inline function calls, it can be a real pain
203if you are not really interested in what is going on for that function call.
204What I have done is to use the "-D" switch for the assembler to toggle the
205following behavior. With the "-D" switch, all inline functions are included in
206the object file, and you can debug everything. Without the "-D" switch
207(default case with VMS implementation), inline functions are included *only* if
208they did not come from system header files (i.e. from GNU_CC_INCLUDE: or
209GNU_GXX_INCLUDE:). Thus, without the switch the user only debugs his/her own
210inline functions, and not the system ones. (This is especially useful if you do
211a lot of stream I/O in C++). This probably will not provide enough granularity
212for many users, but for now this is still somewhat experimental, and I would
213like to reflect upon it and get some feedback before I go any further.
214Possible solutions include an interactive prompting, a logical name, or a new
215command line option in gcc.c (which is then passed through somehow to the guts
216of the assembler).
217 The inline functions from header files appear after the source code
218for the source file. This has the advantage that the source file itself is
219numbered with the same line numbers that you get with an editor. In addition,
220the entire header file is not included, since the assembler makes a list of
221the min and max source lines that are used, and only includes those lines from
222the first to the last actually used. (It is easy to change it to include the
223whole file).
224
225 8) When you are debugging C++ objects, the object "this" is refered to
226as "$this". Actually, the compiler writes it as ".this", but the period is
227not good for the debugger, so I have a routine to convert it to a $. (It
228actually converts all periods to $, but only for variables, since this was
229intended to allow us to access "this".
230
231 9) If you use the asm("...") keyword for global symbols, you will not
232be able to see that symbol with the debugger. The reason is that there are two
233records for the symbol stored in the data structures of the assembler. One
234contains the info such as psect number and offset, and the other one contains
235the information having to do with the data type of the variable. In order to
236debug as symbol, you need to be able to coorelate these records, and the only
237way to do this is by name. The record with the storage attributes will take
238the name used in the asm directive, and the record that specifies the data type
239has the actual variable name, and thus when you use the asm directive to change
240a variable name, the symbol becomes invisible.
241
242 10) Older versions of the compiler ( GNU-C 1.37.92 and earlier) place
243global constants in the text psect. This is unfortunate, since to the linker
244this appears to be an entry point. I sent a patch to the compiler to RMS,
245which will generate a .const section for these variables, and patched the
246assembler to put these variables into a psect just like that for normal
247variables, except that they are marked NOWRT. static constants are still
248placed in the text psect, since there is no need for any external access.
This page took 0.051553 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.