2008-08-21 Sterling Augustine <sterling@tensilica.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / objfiles.h
CommitLineData
c906108c 1/* Definitions for symbol file management in GDB.
af5f3db6 2
6aba47ca 3 Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
9b254dd1 4 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
c906108c 5
c5aa993b 6 This file is part of GDB.
c906108c 7
c5aa993b
JM
8 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
a9762ec7 10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
c5aa993b 11 (at your option) any later version.
c906108c 12
c5aa993b
JM
13 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
c906108c 17
c5aa993b 18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
a9762ec7 19 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
c906108c
SS
20
21#if !defined (OBJFILES_H)
22#define OBJFILES_H
23
3956d554
JB
24#include "gdb_obstack.h" /* For obstack internals. */
25#include "symfile.h" /* For struct psymbol_allocation_list */
26
af5f3db6 27struct bcache;
2de7ced7 28struct htab;
5c4e30ca 29struct symtab;
4a4b3fed 30struct objfile_data;
08c0b5bc 31
c906108c
SS
32/* This structure maintains information on a per-objfile basis about the
33 "entry point" of the objfile, and the scope within which the entry point
34 exists. It is possible that gdb will see more than one objfile that is
35 executable, each with its own entry point.
36
37 For example, for dynamically linked executables in SVR4, the dynamic linker
38 code is contained within the shared C library, which is actually executable
39 and is run by the kernel first when an exec is done of a user executable
40 that is dynamically linked. The dynamic linker within the shared C library
41 then maps in the various program segments in the user executable and jumps
42 to the user executable's recorded entry point, as if the call had been made
43 directly by the kernel.
44
73c1e0a1
AC
45 The traditional gdb method of using this info was to use the
46 recorded entry point to set the entry-file's lowpc and highpc from
627b3ba2
AC
47 the debugging information, where these values are the starting
48 address (inclusive) and ending address (exclusive) of the
49 instruction space in the executable which correspond to the
50 "startup file", I.E. crt0.o in most cases. This file is assumed to
51 be a startup file and frames with pc's inside it are treated as
52 nonexistent. Setting these variables is necessary so that
53 backtraces do not fly off the bottom of the stack.
54
55 NOTE: cagney/2003-09-09: It turns out that this "traditional"
56 method doesn't work. Corinna writes: ``It turns out that the call
2f72f850 57 to test for "inside entry file" destroys a meaningful backtrace
627b3ba2
AC
58 under some conditions. E. g. the backtrace tests in the asm-source
59 testcase are broken for some targets. In this test the functions
60 are all implemented as part of one file and the testcase is not
61 necessarily linked with a start file (depending on the target).
62 What happens is, that the first frame is printed normaly and
63 following frames are treated as being inside the enttry file then.
64 This way, only the #0 frame is printed in the backtrace output.''
65 Ref "frame.c" "NOTE: vinschen/2003-04-01".
c906108c
SS
66
67 Gdb also supports an alternate method to avoid running off the bottom
68 of the stack.
69
70 There are two frames that are "special", the frame for the function
71 containing the process entry point, since it has no predecessor frame,
72 and the frame for the function containing the user code entry point
73 (the main() function), since all the predecessor frames are for the
74 process startup code. Since we have no guarantee that the linked
75 in startup modules have any debugging information that gdb can use,
76 we need to avoid following frame pointers back into frames that might
77 have been built in the startup code, as we might get hopelessly
78 confused. However, we almost always have debugging information
79 available for main().
80
618ce49f
AC
81 These variables are used to save the range of PC values which are
82 valid within the main() function and within the function containing
83 the process entry point. If we always consider the frame for
84 main() as the outermost frame when debugging user code, and the
85 frame for the process entry point function as the outermost frame
86 when debugging startup code, then all we have to do is have
87 DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN_VALID return false whenever a frame's
88 current PC is within the range specified by these variables. In
89 essence, we set "ceilings" in the frame chain beyond which we will
c906108c
SS
90 not proceed when following the frame chain back up the stack.
91
92 A nice side effect is that we can still debug startup code without
93 running off the end of the frame chain, assuming that we have usable
94 debugging information in the startup modules, and if we choose to not
95 use the block at main, or can't find it for some reason, everything
96 still works as before. And if we have no startup code debugging
97 information but we do have usable information for main(), backtraces
6e4c6c91 98 from user code don't go wandering off into the startup code. */
c906108c
SS
99
100struct entry_info
c5aa993b 101 {
c906108c 102
c5aa993b
JM
103 /* The value we should use for this objects entry point.
104 The illegal/unknown value needs to be something other than 0, ~0
105 for instance, which is much less likely than 0. */
c906108c 106
c5aa993b 107 CORE_ADDR entry_point;
c906108c 108
c5aa993b 109#define INVALID_ENTRY_POINT (~0) /* ~0 will not be in any file, we hope. */
c906108c 110
c5aa993b 111 };
c906108c 112
f1f6aadf
PA
113/* Sections in an objfile. The section offsets are stored in the
114 OBJFILE. */
c906108c 115
c5aa993b
JM
116struct obj_section
117 {
7be0c536 118 struct bfd_section *the_bfd_section; /* BFD section pointer */
c906108c 119
c5aa993b
JM
120 /* Objfile this section is part of. */
121 struct objfile *objfile;
c906108c 122
c5aa993b
JM
123 /* True if this "overlay section" is mapped into an "overlay region". */
124 int ovly_mapped;
125 };
c906108c 126
f1f6aadf
PA
127/* Relocation offset applied to S. */
128#define obj_section_offset(s) \
129 (((s)->objfile->section_offsets)->offsets[(s)->the_bfd_section->index])
130
131/* The memory address of section S (vma + offset). */
132#define obj_section_addr(s) \
133 (bfd_get_section_vma ((s)->objfile->abfd, s->the_bfd_section) \
134 + obj_section_offset (s))
135
136/* The one-passed-the-end memory address of section S
137 (vma + size + offset). */
138#define obj_section_endaddr(s) \
139 (bfd_get_section_vma ((s)->objfile->abfd, s->the_bfd_section) \
140 + bfd_get_section_size ((s)->the_bfd_section) \
141 + obj_section_offset (s))
c906108c 142
c906108c
SS
143/* The "objstats" structure provides a place for gdb to record some
144 interesting information about its internal state at runtime, on a
145 per objfile basis, such as information about the number of symbols
146 read, size of string table (if any), etc. */
147
c5aa993b
JM
148struct objstats
149 {
150 int n_minsyms; /* Number of minimal symbols read */
151 int n_psyms; /* Number of partial symbols read */
152 int n_syms; /* Number of full symbols read */
153 int n_stabs; /* Number of ".stabs" read (if applicable) */
154 int n_types; /* Number of types */
155 int sz_strtab; /* Size of stringtable, (if applicable) */
156 };
c906108c
SS
157
158#define OBJSTAT(objfile, expr) (objfile -> stats.expr)
159#define OBJSTATS struct objstats stats
a14ed312
KB
160extern void print_objfile_statistics (void);
161extern void print_symbol_bcache_statistics (void);
c906108c 162
9227b5eb 163/* Number of entries in the minimal symbol hash table. */
375f3d86 164#define MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE 2039
9227b5eb 165
c906108c
SS
166/* Master structure for keeping track of each file from which
167 gdb reads symbols. There are several ways these get allocated: 1.
168 The main symbol file, symfile_objfile, set by the symbol-file command,
169 2. Additional symbol files added by the add-symbol-file command,
170 3. Shared library objfiles, added by ADD_SOLIB, 4. symbol files
171 for modules that were loaded when GDB attached to a remote system
172 (see remote-vx.c). */
173
174struct objfile
c5aa993b 175 {
c906108c 176
c5aa993b
JM
177 /* All struct objfile's are chained together by their next pointers.
178 The global variable "object_files" points to the first link in this
179 chain.
c906108c 180
c5aa993b
JM
181 FIXME: There is a problem here if the objfile is reusable, and if
182 multiple users are to be supported. The problem is that the objfile
183 list is linked through a member of the objfile struct itself, which
184 is only valid for one gdb process. The list implementation needs to
185 be changed to something like:
c906108c 186
c5aa993b 187 struct list {struct list *next; struct objfile *objfile};
c906108c 188
c5aa993b
JM
189 where the list structure is completely maintained separately within
190 each gdb process. */
c906108c 191
c5aa993b 192 struct objfile *next;
c906108c 193
c63f977f
JB
194 /* The object file's name, tilde-expanded and absolute.
195 Malloc'd; free it if you free this struct. */
c906108c 196
c5aa993b 197 char *name;
c906108c 198
c5aa993b 199 /* Some flag bits for this objfile. */
c906108c 200
c5aa993b 201 unsigned short flags;
c906108c 202
c5aa993b
JM
203 /* Each objfile points to a linked list of symtabs derived from this file,
204 one symtab structure for each compilation unit (source file). Each link
205 in the symtab list contains a backpointer to this objfile. */
c906108c 206
c5aa993b 207 struct symtab *symtabs;
c906108c 208
c5aa993b
JM
209 /* Each objfile points to a linked list of partial symtabs derived from
210 this file, one partial symtab structure for each compilation unit
211 (source file). */
c906108c 212
c5aa993b 213 struct partial_symtab *psymtabs;
c906108c 214
ff013f42
JK
215 /* Map addresses to the entries of PSYMTABS. It would be more efficient to
216 have a map per the whole process but ADDRMAP cannot selectively remove
217 its items during FREE_OBJFILE. This mapping is already present even for
218 PARTIAL_SYMTABs which still have no corresponding full SYMTABs read. */
219
220 struct addrmap *psymtabs_addrmap;
221
c5aa993b 222 /* List of freed partial symtabs, available for re-use */
c906108c 223
c5aa993b 224 struct partial_symtab *free_psymtabs;
c906108c 225
c5aa993b
JM
226 /* The object file's BFD. Can be null if the objfile contains only
227 minimal symbols, e.g. the run time common symbols for SunOS4. */
c906108c 228
c5aa993b 229 bfd *obfd;
c906108c 230
5e2b427d
UW
231 /* The gdbarch associated with the BFD. Note that this gdbarch is
232 determined solely from BFD information, without looking at target
233 information. The gdbarch determined from a running target may
234 differ from this e.g. with respect to register types and names. */
235
236 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
237
c5aa993b
JM
238 /* The modification timestamp of the object file, as of the last time
239 we read its symbols. */
c906108c 240
c5aa993b 241 long mtime;
c906108c 242
b99607ea
EZ
243 /* Obstack to hold objects that should be freed when we load a new symbol
244 table from this object file. */
245
b99607ea
EZ
246 struct obstack objfile_obstack;
247
c5aa993b
JM
248 /* A byte cache where we can stash arbitrary "chunks" of bytes that
249 will not change. */
c906108c 250
af5f3db6
AC
251 struct bcache *psymbol_cache; /* Byte cache for partial syms */
252 struct bcache *macro_cache; /* Byte cache for macros */
c906108c 253
2de7ced7
DJ
254 /* Hash table for mapping symbol names to demangled names. Each
255 entry in the hash table is actually two consecutive strings,
256 both null-terminated; the first one is a mangled or linkage
257 name, and the second is the demangled name or just a zero byte
258 if the name doesn't demangle. */
259 struct htab *demangled_names_hash;
260
c5aa993b 261 /* Vectors of all partial symbols read in from file. The actual data
8b92e4d5 262 is stored in the objfile_obstack. */
c906108c 263
c5aa993b
JM
264 struct psymbol_allocation_list global_psymbols;
265 struct psymbol_allocation_list static_psymbols;
c906108c 266
c5aa993b
JM
267 /* Each file contains a pointer to an array of minimal symbols for all
268 global symbols that are defined within the file. The array is terminated
269 by a "null symbol", one that has a NULL pointer for the name and a zero
270 value for the address. This makes it easy to walk through the array
271 when passed a pointer to somewhere in the middle of it. There is also
272 a count of the number of symbols, which does not include the terminating
273 null symbol. The array itself, as well as all the data that it points
4a146b47 274 to, should be allocated on the objfile_obstack for this file. */
c906108c 275
c5aa993b
JM
276 struct minimal_symbol *msymbols;
277 int minimal_symbol_count;
c906108c 278
9227b5eb
JB
279 /* This is a hash table used to index the minimal symbols by name. */
280
281 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol_hash[MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE];
282
283 /* This hash table is used to index the minimal symbols by their
284 demangled names. */
285
286 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol_demangled_hash[MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE];
287
c5aa993b
JM
288 /* Structure which keeps track of functions that manipulate objfile's
289 of the same type as this objfile. I.E. the function to read partial
290 symbols for example. Note that this structure is in statically
291 allocated memory, and is shared by all objfiles that use the
292 object module reader of this type. */
c906108c 293
c5aa993b 294 struct sym_fns *sf;
c906108c 295
c5aa993b
JM
296 /* The per-objfile information about the entry point, the scope (file/func)
297 containing the entry point, and the scope of the user's main() func. */
c906108c 298
c5aa993b 299 struct entry_info ei;
c906108c 300
c5aa993b
JM
301 /* Information about stabs. Will be filled in with a dbx_symfile_info
302 struct by those readers that need it. */
0a6ddd08
AC
303 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-10-23: This has been replaced by per-objfile
304 data points implemented using "data" and "num_data" below. For
305 an example of how to use this replacement, see "objfile_data"
306 in "mips-tdep.c". */
c906108c 307
0a6ddd08 308 struct dbx_symfile_info *deprecated_sym_stab_info;
c906108c 309
c5aa993b
JM
310 /* Hook for information for use by the symbol reader (currently used
311 for information shared by sym_init and sym_read). It is
312 typically a pointer to malloc'd memory. The symbol reader's finish
313 function is responsible for freeing the memory thusly allocated. */
0a6ddd08
AC
314 /* NOTE: cagney/2004-10-23: This has been replaced by per-objfile
315 data points implemented using "data" and "num_data" below. For
316 an example of how to use this replacement, see "objfile_data"
317 in "mips-tdep.c". */
c906108c 318
0a6ddd08 319 void *deprecated_sym_private;
c906108c 320
0d0e1a63
MK
321 /* Per objfile data-pointers required by other GDB modules. */
322 /* FIXME: kettenis/20030711: This mechanism could replace
f98dfd4b
TT
323 deprecated_sym_stab_info and deprecated_sym_private
324 entirely. */
0d0e1a63
MK
325
326 void **data;
327 unsigned num_data;
328
c5aa993b 329 /* Set of relocation offsets to apply to each section.
8b92e4d5 330 Currently on the objfile_obstack (which makes no sense, but I'm
c5aa993b 331 not sure it's harming anything).
c906108c 332
c5aa993b
JM
333 These offsets indicate that all symbols (including partial and
334 minimal symbols) which have been read have been relocated by this
335 much. Symbols which are yet to be read need to be relocated by
336 it. */
c906108c 337
c5aa993b
JM
338 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
339 int num_sections;
c906108c 340
b8fbeb18
EZ
341 /* Indexes in the section_offsets array. These are initialized by the
342 *_symfile_offsets() family of functions (som_symfile_offsets,
343 xcoff_symfile_offsets, default_symfile_offsets). In theory they
344 should correspond to the section indexes used by bfd for the
345 current objfile. The exception to this for the time being is the
346 SOM version. */
347
348 int sect_index_text;
349 int sect_index_data;
350 int sect_index_bss;
351 int sect_index_rodata;
352
96baa820 353 /* These pointers are used to locate the section table, which
5c44784c 354 among other things, is used to map pc addresses into sections.
96baa820
JM
355 SECTIONS points to the first entry in the table, and
356 SECTIONS_END points to the first location past the last entry
357 in the table. Currently the table is stored on the
8b92e4d5 358 objfile_obstack (which makes no sense, but I'm not sure it's
96baa820 359 harming anything). */
c906108c 360
c5aa993b
JM
361 struct obj_section
362 *sections, *sections_end;
c906108c 363
5b5d99cf
JB
364 /* Link to objfile that contains the debug symbols for this one.
365 One is loaded if this file has an debug link to an existing
366 debug file with the right checksum */
367 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile;
368
369 /* If this is a separate debug object, this is used as a link to the
370 actual executable objfile. */
371 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile_backlink;
372
c5aa993b
JM
373 /* Place to stash various statistics about this objfile */
374 OBJSTATS;
5c4e30ca
DC
375
376 /* A symtab that the C++ code uses to stash special symbols
377 associated to namespaces. */
378
379 /* FIXME/carlton-2003-06-27: Delete this in a few years once
380 "possible namespace symbols" go away. */
381 struct symtab *cp_namespace_symtab;
c5aa993b 382 };
c906108c
SS
383
384/* Defines for the objfile flag word. */
385
c906108c
SS
386/* When using mapped/remapped predigested gdb symbol information, we need
387 a flag that indicates that we have previously done an initial symbol
388 table read from this particular objfile. We can't just look for the
389 absence of any of the three symbol tables (msymbols, psymtab, symtab)
390 because if the file has no symbols for example, none of these will
391 exist. */
392
393#define OBJF_SYMS (1 << 1) /* Have tried to read symbols */
394
395/* When an object file has its functions reordered (currently Irix-5.2
396 shared libraries exhibit this behaviour), we will need an expensive
397 algorithm to locate a partial symtab or symtab via an address.
398 To avoid this penalty for normal object files, we use this flag,
399 whose setting is determined upon symbol table read in. */
400
401#define OBJF_REORDERED (1 << 2) /* Functions are reordered */
c5aa993b 402
2df3850c
JM
403/* Distinguish between an objfile for a shared library and a "vanilla"
404 objfile. (If not set, the objfile may still actually be a solib.
405 This can happen if the user created the objfile by using the
406 add-symbol-file command. GDB doesn't in that situation actually
407 check whether the file is a solib. Rather, the target's
408 implementation of the solib interface is responsible for setting
409 this flag when noticing solibs used by an inferior.) */
c906108c 410
c5aa993b 411#define OBJF_SHARED (1 << 3) /* From a shared library */
c906108c 412
2acceee2
JM
413/* User requested that this objfile be read in it's entirety. */
414
415#define OBJF_READNOW (1 << 4) /* Immediate full read */
416
2df3850c
JM
417/* This objfile was created because the user explicitly caused it
418 (e.g., used the add-symbol-file command). This bit offers a way
419 for run_command to remove old objfile entries which are no longer
420 valid (i.e., are associated with an old inferior), but to preserve
421 ones that the user explicitly loaded via the add-symbol-file
422 command. */
423
424#define OBJF_USERLOADED (1 << 5) /* User loaded */
425
c906108c
SS
426/* The object file that the main symbol table was loaded from (e.g. the
427 argument to the "symbol-file" or "file" command). */
428
429extern struct objfile *symfile_objfile;
430
431/* The object file that contains the runtime common minimal symbols
432 for SunOS4. Note that this objfile has no associated BFD. */
433
434extern struct objfile *rt_common_objfile;
435
b99607ea 436/* When we need to allocate a new type, we need to know which objfile_obstack
c906108c
SS
437 to allocate the type on, since there is one for each objfile. The places
438 where types are allocated are deeply buried in function call hierarchies
439 which know nothing about objfiles, so rather than trying to pass a
440 particular objfile down to them, we just do an end run around them and
441 set current_objfile to be whatever objfile we expect to be using at the
442 time types are being allocated. For instance, when we start reading
443 symbols for a particular objfile, we set current_objfile to point to that
444 objfile, and when we are done, we set it back to NULL, to ensure that we
445 never put a type someplace other than where we are expecting to put it.
446 FIXME: Maybe we should review the entire type handling system and
447 see if there is a better way to avoid this problem. */
448
449extern struct objfile *current_objfile;
450
451/* All known objfiles are kept in a linked list. This points to the
452 root of this list. */
453
454extern struct objfile *object_files;
455
456/* Declarations for functions defined in objfiles.c */
457
a14ed312 458extern struct objfile *allocate_objfile (bfd *, int);
c906108c 459
5e2b427d
UW
460extern struct gdbarch *get_objfile_arch (struct objfile *);
461
9ab9195f
EZ
462extern void init_entry_point_info (struct objfile *);
463
464extern CORE_ADDR entry_point_address (void);
465
a14ed312 466extern int build_objfile_section_table (struct objfile *);
c906108c 467
15831452
JB
468extern void terminate_minimal_symbol_table (struct objfile *objfile);
469
5b5d99cf
JB
470extern void put_objfile_before (struct objfile *, struct objfile *);
471
a14ed312 472extern void objfile_to_front (struct objfile *);
c906108c 473
a14ed312 474extern void unlink_objfile (struct objfile *);
c906108c 475
a14ed312 476extern void free_objfile (struct objfile *);
c906108c 477
74b7792f
AC
478extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_free_objfile (struct objfile *);
479
a14ed312 480extern void free_all_objfiles (void);
c906108c 481
a14ed312 482extern void objfile_relocate (struct objfile *, struct section_offsets *);
c906108c 483
a14ed312 484extern int have_partial_symbols (void);
c906108c 485
a14ed312 486extern int have_full_symbols (void);
c906108c
SS
487
488/* This operation deletes all objfile entries that represent solibs that
489 weren't explicitly loaded by the user, via e.g., the add-symbol-file
490 command.
c5aa993b 491 */
a14ed312 492extern void objfile_purge_solibs (void);
c906108c
SS
493
494/* Functions for dealing with the minimal symbol table, really a misc
495 address<->symbol mapping for things we don't have debug symbols for. */
496
a14ed312 497extern int have_minimal_symbols (void);
c906108c 498
a14ed312 499extern struct obj_section *find_pc_section (CORE_ADDR pc);
c906108c 500
a14ed312
KB
501extern struct obj_section *find_pc_sect_section (CORE_ADDR pc,
502 asection * section);
c906108c 503
a14ed312 504extern int in_plt_section (CORE_ADDR, char *);
c906108c 505
0d0e1a63
MK
506/* Keep a registry of per-objfile data-pointers required by other GDB
507 modules. */
508
509extern const struct objfile_data *register_objfile_data (void);
60c5725c
DJ
510extern const struct objfile_data *register_objfile_data_with_cleanup
511 (void (*cleanup) (struct objfile *, void *));
7b097ae3 512extern void clear_objfile_data (struct objfile *objfile);
0d0e1a63
MK
513extern void set_objfile_data (struct objfile *objfile,
514 const struct objfile_data *data, void *value);
515extern void *objfile_data (struct objfile *objfile,
516 const struct objfile_data *data);
517\f
518
c906108c
SS
519/* Traverse all object files. ALL_OBJFILES_SAFE works even if you delete
520 the objfile during the traversal. */
521
522#define ALL_OBJFILES(obj) \
523 for ((obj) = object_files; (obj) != NULL; (obj) = (obj)->next)
524
525#define ALL_OBJFILES_SAFE(obj,nxt) \
526 for ((obj) = object_files; \
527 (obj) != NULL? ((nxt)=(obj)->next,1) :0; \
528 (obj) = (nxt))
529
530/* Traverse all symtabs in one objfile. */
531
532#define ALL_OBJFILE_SYMTABS(objfile, s) \
533 for ((s) = (objfile) -> symtabs; (s) != NULL; (s) = (s) -> next)
534
535/* Traverse all psymtabs in one objfile. */
536
537#define ALL_OBJFILE_PSYMTABS(objfile, p) \
538 for ((p) = (objfile) -> psymtabs; (p) != NULL; (p) = (p) -> next)
539
540/* Traverse all minimal symbols in one objfile. */
541
542#define ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS(objfile, m) \
22abf04a 543 for ((m) = (objfile) -> msymbols; DEPRECATED_SYMBOL_NAME(m) != NULL; (m)++)
c906108c
SS
544
545/* Traverse all symtabs in all objfiles. */
546
547#define ALL_SYMTABS(objfile, s) \
548 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
549 ALL_OBJFILE_SYMTABS (objfile, s)
550
11309657
DJ
551/* Traverse all symtabs in all objfiles, skipping included files
552 (which share a blockvector with their primary symtab). */
553
554#define ALL_PRIMARY_SYMTABS(objfile, s) \
555 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
556 ALL_OBJFILE_SYMTABS (objfile, s) \
557 if ((s)->primary)
558
c906108c
SS
559/* Traverse all psymtabs in all objfiles. */
560
561#define ALL_PSYMTABS(objfile, p) \
562 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
563 ALL_OBJFILE_PSYMTABS (objfile, p)
564
565/* Traverse all minimal symbols in all objfiles. */
566
567#define ALL_MSYMBOLS(objfile, m) \
568 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
15831452 569 ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS (objfile, m)
c906108c
SS
570
571#define ALL_OBJFILE_OSECTIONS(objfile, osect) \
572 for (osect = objfile->sections; osect < objfile->sections_end; osect++)
573
574#define ALL_OBJSECTIONS(objfile, osect) \
575 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
576 ALL_OBJFILE_OSECTIONS (objfile, osect)
577
b8fbeb18 578#define SECT_OFF_DATA(objfile) \
8e65ff28 579 ((objfile->sect_index_data == -1) \
e2e0b3e5 580 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("sect_index_data not initialized")), -1) \
8e65ff28 581 : objfile->sect_index_data)
b8fbeb18
EZ
582
583#define SECT_OFF_RODATA(objfile) \
8e65ff28 584 ((objfile->sect_index_rodata == -1) \
e2e0b3e5 585 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("sect_index_rodata not initialized")), -1) \
8e65ff28 586 : objfile->sect_index_rodata)
b8fbeb18
EZ
587
588#define SECT_OFF_TEXT(objfile) \
8e65ff28 589 ((objfile->sect_index_text == -1) \
e2e0b3e5 590 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, _("sect_index_text not initialized")), -1) \
8e65ff28 591 : objfile->sect_index_text)
b8fbeb18 592
a4c8257b
EZ
593/* Sometimes the .bss section is missing from the objfile, so we don't
594 want to die here. Let the users of SECT_OFF_BSS deal with an
595 uninitialized section index. */
596#define SECT_OFF_BSS(objfile) (objfile)->sect_index_bss
b8fbeb18 597
c5aa993b 598#endif /* !defined (OBJFILES_H) */
This page took 0.833916 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.