Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
c906108c | 1 | /* Machine independent variables that describe the core file under GDB. |
00e32a35 AC |
2 | |
3 | Copyright 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, | |
4 | 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004 Free Software Foundation, | |
5 | Inc. | |
c906108c | 6 | |
c5aa993b | 7 | This file is part of GDB. |
c906108c | 8 | |
c5aa993b JM |
9 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
10 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
11 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or | |
12 | (at your option) any later version. | |
c906108c | 13 | |
c5aa993b JM |
14 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
15 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
16 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
17 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
c906108c | 18 | |
c5aa993b JM |
19 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
20 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | |
21 | Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, | |
22 | Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ | |
c906108c SS |
23 | |
24 | /* Interface routines for core, executable, etc. */ | |
25 | ||
26 | #if !defined (GDBCORE_H) | |
27 | #define GDBCORE_H 1 | |
28 | ||
da3331ec AC |
29 | struct type; |
30 | ||
c906108c SS |
31 | #include "bfd.h" |
32 | ||
33 | /* Return the name of the executable file as a string. | |
34 | ERR nonzero means get error if there is none specified; | |
35 | otherwise return 0 in that case. */ | |
36 | ||
a14ed312 | 37 | extern char *get_exec_file (int err); |
c906108c SS |
38 | |
39 | /* Nonzero if there is a core file. */ | |
40 | ||
a14ed312 | 41 | extern int have_core_file_p (void); |
c906108c SS |
42 | |
43 | /* Read "memory data" from whatever target or inferior we have. | |
44 | Returns zero if successful, errno value if not. EIO is used for | |
45 | address out of bounds. If breakpoints are inserted, returns shadow | |
46 | contents, not the breakpoints themselves. From breakpoint.c. */ | |
47 | ||
1f602b35 AC |
48 | /* NOTE: cagney/2004-06-10: Code reading from a live inferior can use |
49 | the get_frame_memory methods, code reading from an exec can use the | |
50 | target methods. */ | |
51 | ||
52 | extern int deprecated_read_memory_nobpt (CORE_ADDR memaddr, char *myaddr, | |
53 | unsigned len); | |
c906108c SS |
54 | |
55 | /* Report a memory error with error(). */ | |
56 | ||
a14ed312 | 57 | extern void memory_error (int status, CORE_ADDR memaddr); |
c906108c SS |
58 | |
59 | /* Like target_read_memory, but report an error if can't read. */ | |
60 | ||
a14ed312 | 61 | extern void read_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, char *myaddr, int len); |
c906108c | 62 | |
c906108c SS |
63 | /* Read an integer from debugged memory, given address and number of |
64 | bytes. */ | |
65 | ||
a14ed312 | 66 | extern LONGEST read_memory_integer (CORE_ADDR memaddr, int len); |
16a0f3e7 | 67 | extern int safe_read_memory_integer (CORE_ADDR memaddr, int len, LONGEST *return_value); |
c906108c SS |
68 | |
69 | /* Read an unsigned integer from debugged memory, given address and | |
70 | number of bytes. */ | |
71 | ||
a14ed312 | 72 | extern ULONGEST read_memory_unsigned_integer (CORE_ADDR memaddr, int len); |
c906108c SS |
73 | |
74 | /* Read a null-terminated string from the debuggee's memory, given address, | |
c5aa993b | 75 | * a buffer into which to place the string, and the maximum available space */ |
0d540cdf | 76 | |
a14ed312 | 77 | extern void read_memory_string (CORE_ADDR, char *, int); |
c906108c | 78 | |
0d540cdf KD |
79 | /* Read the pointer of type TYPE at ADDR, and return the address it |
80 | represents. */ | |
81 | ||
570b8f7c | 82 | CORE_ADDR read_memory_typed_address (CORE_ADDR addr, struct type *type); |
0d540cdf | 83 | |
c906108c SS |
84 | /* This takes a char *, not void *. This is probably right, because |
85 | passing in an int * or whatever is wrong with respect to | |
86 | byteswapping, alignment, different sizes for host vs. target types, | |
87 | etc. */ | |
88 | ||
10e2d419 | 89 | extern void write_memory (CORE_ADDR memaddr, const bfd_byte *myaddr, int len); |
c906108c | 90 | |
c26e4683 JB |
91 | /* Store VALUE at ADDR in the inferior as a LEN-byte unsigned integer. */ |
92 | extern void write_memory_unsigned_integer (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, | |
93 | ULONGEST value); | |
94 | ||
95 | /* Store VALUE at ADDR in the inferior as a LEN-byte unsigned integer. */ | |
96 | extern void write_memory_signed_integer (CORE_ADDR addr, int len, | |
97 | LONGEST value); | |
98 | ||
a14ed312 KB |
99 | extern void generic_search (int len, char *data, char *mask, |
100 | CORE_ADDR startaddr, int increment, | |
101 | CORE_ADDR lorange, CORE_ADDR hirange, | |
102 | CORE_ADDR * addr_found, char *data_found); | |
c906108c SS |
103 | \f |
104 | /* Hook for `exec_file_command' command to call. */ | |
105 | ||
9a4105ab | 106 | extern void (*deprecated_exec_file_display_hook) (char *filename); |
c906108c SS |
107 | |
108 | /* Hook for "file_command", which is more useful than above | |
3a9a986f | 109 | (because it is invoked AFTER symbols are read, not before). */ |
c906108c | 110 | |
9a4105ab | 111 | extern void (*deprecated_file_changed_hook) (char *filename); |
c906108c | 112 | |
a14ed312 | 113 | extern void specify_exec_file_hook (void (*hook) (char *filename)); |
c906108c | 114 | |
3a9a986f | 115 | /* Binary File Diddlers for the exec and core files. */ |
c906108c SS |
116 | |
117 | extern bfd *core_bfd; | |
118 | extern bfd *exec_bfd; | |
119 | ||
120 | /* Whether to open exec and core files read-only or read-write. */ | |
121 | ||
122 | extern int write_files; | |
123 | ||
a14ed312 | 124 | extern void core_file_command (char *filename, int from_tty); |
c906108c | 125 | |
1adeb98a FN |
126 | extern void exec_open (char *filename, int from_tty); |
127 | ||
a14ed312 | 128 | extern void exec_file_attach (char *filename, int from_tty); |
c906108c | 129 | |
1adeb98a | 130 | extern void exec_file_clear (int from_tty); |
c906108c | 131 | |
a14ed312 | 132 | extern void validate_files (void); |
c906108c | 133 | |
a14ed312 | 134 | extern CORE_ADDR register_addr (int regno, CORE_ADDR blockend); |
c906108c | 135 | |
c906108c SS |
136 | #if !defined (KERNEL_U_ADDR) |
137 | extern CORE_ADDR kernel_u_addr; | |
138 | #define KERNEL_U_ADDR kernel_u_addr | |
139 | #endif | |
140 | ||
141 | /* The target vector for core files. */ | |
142 | ||
143 | extern struct target_ops core_ops; | |
144 | ||
145 | /* The current default bfd target. */ | |
146 | ||
147 | extern char *gnutarget; | |
148 | ||
a14ed312 | 149 | extern void set_gnutarget (char *); |
c906108c SS |
150 | |
151 | /* Structure to keep track of core register reading functions for | |
152 | various core file types. */ | |
153 | ||
c5aa993b JM |
154 | struct core_fns |
155 | { | |
c906108c | 156 | |
2acceee2 JM |
157 | /* BFD flavour that a core file handler is prepared to read. This |
158 | can be used by the handler's core tasting function as a first | |
159 | level filter to reject BFD's that don't have the right | |
160 | flavour. */ | |
c906108c | 161 | |
c5aa993b | 162 | enum bfd_flavour core_flavour; |
c906108c | 163 | |
2acceee2 JM |
164 | /* Core file handler function to call to recognize corefile |
165 | formats that BFD rejects. Some core file format just don't fit | |
166 | into the BFD model, or may require other resources to identify | |
167 | them, that simply aren't available to BFD (such as symbols from | |
168 | another file). Returns nonzero if the handler recognizes the | |
169 | format, zero otherwise. */ | |
170 | ||
507f3c78 | 171 | int (*check_format) (bfd *); |
2acceee2 JM |
172 | |
173 | /* Core file handler function to call to ask if it can handle a | |
174 | given core file format or not. Returns zero if it can't, | |
175 | nonzero otherwise. */ | |
176 | ||
507f3c78 | 177 | int (*core_sniffer) (struct core_fns *, bfd *); |
2acceee2 | 178 | |
c5aa993b JM |
179 | /* Extract the register values out of the core file and store them where |
180 | `read_register' will find them. | |
c906108c | 181 | |
c5aa993b JM |
182 | CORE_REG_SECT points to the register values themselves, read into |
183 | memory. | |
c906108c | 184 | |
c5aa993b | 185 | CORE_REG_SIZE is the size of that area. |
c906108c | 186 | |
de57eccd JM |
187 | WHICH says which set of registers we are handling: |
188 | 0 --- integer registers | |
189 | 2 --- floating-point registers, on machines where they are | |
190 | discontiguous | |
191 | 3 --- extended floating-point registers, on machines where | |
192 | these are present in yet a third area. (GNU/Linux uses | |
193 | this to get at the SSE registers.) | |
c906108c | 194 | |
c5aa993b JM |
195 | REG_ADDR is the offset from u.u_ar0 to the register values relative to |
196 | core_reg_sect. This is used with old-fashioned core files to locate the | |
197 | registers in a large upage-plus-stack ".reg" section. Original upage | |
198 | address X is at location core_reg_sect+x+reg_addr. */ | |
c906108c | 199 | |
507f3c78 KB |
200 | void (*core_read_registers) (char *core_reg_sect, |
201 | unsigned core_reg_size, | |
202 | int which, CORE_ADDR reg_addr); | |
c906108c | 203 | |
00e32a35 AC |
204 | /* Finds the next struct core_fns. They are allocated and |
205 | initialized in whatever module implements the functions pointed | |
206 | to; an initializer calls deprecated_add_core_fns to add them to | |
207 | the global chain. */ | |
c906108c | 208 | |
c5aa993b | 209 | struct core_fns *next; |
c906108c | 210 | |
c5aa993b | 211 | }; |
c906108c | 212 | |
00e32a35 AC |
213 | /* NOTE: cagney/2004-04-05: Replaced by "regset.h" and |
214 | regset_from_core_section(). */ | |
215 | extern void deprecated_add_core_fns (struct core_fns *cf); | |
a14ed312 KB |
216 | extern int default_core_sniffer (struct core_fns *cf, bfd * abfd); |
217 | extern int default_check_format (bfd * abfd); | |
c906108c | 218 | |
c5aa993b | 219 | #endif /* !defined (GDBCORE_H) */ |