Split non-target-dependent code out of target_attach routines.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / symtab.h
CommitLineData
bd5635a1 1/* Symbol table definitions for GDB.
b0246b3b 2 Copyright (C) 1986, 1989, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3
4This file is part of GDB.
5
4a35d6e9 6This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
bd5635a1 7it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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8the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
9(at your option) any later version.
bd5635a1 10
4a35d6e9 11This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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12but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14GNU General Public License for more details.
15
16You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
4a35d6e9
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17along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
18Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
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19
20#if !defined (SYMTAB_H)
21#define SYMTAB_H 1
7d9884b9 22#include "obstack.h"
bd5635a1 23
b0246b3b 24/* See the comment in symfile.c about how current_objfile is used. */
bd5635a1 25
b0246b3b 26extern struct objfile *current_objfile;
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27
28/* Some definitions and declarations to go with use of obstacks. */
29#define obstack_chunk_alloc xmalloc
30#define obstack_chunk_free free
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31
32/* Some macros for char-based bitfields. */
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33#define B_SET(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] |= (1 << ((x)&7)))
34#define B_CLR(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] &= ~(1 << ((x)&7)))
35#define B_TST(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] & (1 << ((x)&7)))
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36#define B_TYPE unsigned char
37#define B_BYTES(x) ( 1 + ((x)>>3) )
4ed3a9ea 38#define B_CLRALL(a,x) memset ((a), 0, B_BYTES(x))
bd5635a1 39
bd5635a1 40
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41/* Define a simple structure used to hold some very basic information about
42 all defined global symbols (text, data, bss, abs, etc). The only two
43 required pieces of information are the symbol's name and the address
44 associated with that symbol. In many cases, even if a file was compiled
45 with no special options for debugging at all, as long as was not stripped
46 it will contain sufficient information to build a useful minimal symbol
47 table using this structure. Even when a file contains enough debugging
48 information to build a full symbol table, these minimal symbols are still
49 useful for quickly mapping between names and addresses, and vice versa.
50 They are also sometimes used to figure out what full symbol table entries
51 need to be read in. */
bd5635a1 52
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53struct minimal_symbol
54{
bd5635a1 55
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56 /* Name of the symbol. This is a required field. Storage for the name is
57 allocated on the symbol_obstack for the associated objfile. */
bd5635a1 58
bd5635a1 59 char *name;
bd5635a1 60
b0246b3b 61 /* Address of the symbol. This is a required field. */
bd5635a1 62
b0246b3b 63 CORE_ADDR address;
bd5635a1 64
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65 /* The info field is available for caching machine-specific information that
66 The AMD 29000 tdep.c uses it to remember things it has decoded from the
67 instructions in the function header, so it doesn't have to rederive the
68 info constantly (over a serial line). It is initialized to zero and
69 stays that way until target-dependent code sets it. Storage for any data
70 pointed to by this field should be allocated on the symbol_obstack for
71 the associated objfile. The type would be "void *" except for reasons
72 of compatibility with older compilers. This field is optional. */
73
74 char *info;
75
76 /* Classification types for this symbol. These should be taken as "advisory
77 only", since if gdb can't easily figure out a classification it simply
78 selects mst_unknown. It may also have to guess when it can't figure out
79 which is a better match between two types (mst_data versus mst_bss) for
80 example. Since the minimal symbol info is sometimes derived from the
81 BFD library's view of a file, we need to live with what information bfd
82 supplies. */
83
84 enum minimal_symbol_type
bd5635a1 85 {
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86 mst_unknown = 0, /* Unknown type, the default */
87 mst_text, /* Generally executable instructions */
88 mst_data, /* Generally initialized data */
89 mst_bss, /* Generally uninitialized data */
90 mst_abs /* Generally absolute (nonrelocatable) */
91 } type;
d018c8a6 92
bd5635a1 93};
7e258d18 94
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95\f
96/* All of the name-scope contours of the program
97 are represented by `struct block' objects.
98 All of these objects are pointed to by the blockvector.
99
100 Each block represents one name scope.
101 Each lexical context has its own block.
102
103 The first two blocks in the blockvector are special.
104 The first one contains all the symbols defined in this compilation
105 whose scope is the entire program linked together.
106 The second one contains all the symbols whose scope is the
107 entire compilation excluding other separate compilations.
108 In C, these correspond to global symbols and static symbols.
109
110 Each block records a range of core addresses for the code that
111 is in the scope of the block. The first two special blocks
112 give, for the range of code, the entire range of code produced
113 by the compilation that the symbol segment belongs to.
114
115 The blocks appear in the blockvector
116 in order of increasing starting-address,
117 and, within that, in order of decreasing ending-address.
118
119 This implies that within the body of one function
120 the blocks appear in the order of a depth-first tree walk. */
121
122struct blockvector
123{
124 /* Number of blocks in the list. */
125 int nblocks;
126 /* The blocks themselves. */
127 struct block *block[1];
128};
129
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130/* Special block numbers */
131#define GLOBAL_BLOCK 0
132#define STATIC_BLOCK 1
133#define FIRST_LOCAL_BLOCK 2
134
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135struct block
136{
137 /* Addresses in the executable code that are in this block.
138 Note: in an unrelocated symbol segment in a file,
139 these are always zero. They can be filled in from the
140 N_LBRAC and N_RBRAC symbols in the loader symbol table. */
141 CORE_ADDR startaddr, endaddr;
142 /* The symbol that names this block,
143 if the block is the body of a function;
144 otherwise, zero.
145 Note: In an unrelocated symbol segment in an object file,
146 this field may be zero even when the block has a name.
147 That is because the block is output before the name
148 (since the name resides in a higher block).
149 Since the symbol does point to the block (as its value),
150 it is possible to find the block and set its name properly. */
151 struct symbol *function;
152 /* The `struct block' for the containing block, or 0 if none. */
153 /* Note that in an unrelocated symbol segment in an object file
154 this pointer may be zero when the correct value should be
155 the second special block (for symbols whose scope is one compilation).
252f6c65 156 This is because the compiler outputs the special blocks at the
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157 very end, after the other blocks. */
158 struct block *superblock;
252f6c65 159 /* A flag indicating whether or not the function corresponding
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160 to this block was compiled with gcc or not. If there is no
161 function corresponding to this block, this meaning of this flag
162 is undefined. (In practice it will be 1 if the block was created
163 while processing a file compiled with gcc and 0 when not). */
164 unsigned char gcc_compile_flag;
165 /* Number of local symbols. */
166 int nsyms;
167 /* The symbols. */
168 struct symbol *sym[1];
169};
170\f
171/* Represent one symbol name; a variable, constant, function or typedef. */
172
173/* Different name spaces for symbols. Looking up a symbol specifies
174 a namespace and ignores symbol definitions in other name spaces.
175
176 VAR_NAMESPACE is the usual namespace.
177 In C, this contains variables, function names, typedef names
178 and enum type values.
179
180 STRUCT_NAMESPACE is used in C to hold struct, union and enum type names.
181 Thus, if `struct foo' is used in a C program,
182 it produces a symbol named `foo' in the STRUCT_NAMESPACE.
183
184 LABEL_NAMESPACE may be used for names of labels (for gotos);
185 currently it is not used and labels are not recorded at all. */
186
187/* For a non-global symbol allocated statically,
188 the correct core address cannot be determined by the compiler.
189 The compiler puts an index number into the symbol's value field.
190 This index number can be matched with the "desc" field of
191 an entry in the loader symbol table. */
192
193enum namespace
194{
0a5d35ed 195 UNDEF_NAMESPACE, VAR_NAMESPACE, STRUCT_NAMESPACE, LABEL_NAMESPACE
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196};
197
198/* An address-class says where to find the value of a symbol. */
199
200enum address_class
201{
202 LOC_UNDEF, /* Not used; catches errors */
203 LOC_CONST, /* Value is constant int SYMBOL_VALUE, host byteorder */
204 LOC_STATIC, /* Value is at fixed address SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS */
205 LOC_REGISTER, /* Value is in register */
206 LOC_ARG, /* Value is at spec'd offset in arglist */
207 LOC_REF_ARG, /* Value address is at spec'd offset in arglist. */
208 LOC_REGPARM, /* Value is at spec'd offset in register window */
209 LOC_LOCAL, /* Value is at spec'd offset in stack frame */
210 LOC_TYPEDEF, /* Value not used; definition in SYMBOL_TYPE
211 Symbols in the namespace STRUCT_NAMESPACE
212 all have this class. */
213 LOC_LABEL, /* Value is address SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS in the code */
214 LOC_BLOCK, /* Value is address SYMBOL_VALUE_BLOCK of a
215 `struct block'. Function names have this class. */
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216 LOC_CONST_BYTES, /* Value is a constant byte-sequence pointed to by
217 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS, in target byte order. */
0a5d35ed 218 LOC_LOCAL_ARG /* Value is arg at spec'd offset in stack frame.
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219 Differs from LOC_LOCAL in that symbol is an
220 argument; differs from LOC_ARG in that we find it
221 in the frame (FRAME_LOCALS_ADDRESS), not in the
222 arglist (FRAME_ARGS_ADDRESS). Added for i960,
223 which passes args in regs then copies to frame. */
224};
225
226struct symbol
227{
228 /* Symbol name */
229 char *name;
230 /* Name space code. */
231 enum namespace namespace;
232 /* Address class */
233 enum address_class class;
234 /* Data type of value */
235 struct type *type;
236
237 /* Line number of definition. */
238 unsigned short line;
239
240 /* constant value, or address if static, or register number,
241 or offset in arguments, or offset in stack frame. All of
242 these are in host byte order (though what they point to might
243 be in target byte order, e.g. LOC_CONST_BYTES). */
244 union
245 {
246 long value; /* for LOC_CONST, LOC_REGISTER, LOC_ARG,
247 LOC_REF_ARG, LOC_REGPARM, LOC_LOCAL */
248 struct block *block; /* for LOC_BLOCK */
249 char *bytes; /* for LOC_CONST_BYTES */
4a35d6e9 250 CORE_ADDR address; /* for LOC_STATIC, LOC_LABEL */
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251 struct symbol *chain; /* for opaque typedef struct chain */
252 }
253 value;
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254
255 /* Some symbols require an additional value to be recorded on a per-
256 symbol basis. Stash those values here. */
257 union
258 {
259 struct /* for OP_BASEREG in DWARF location specs */
260 {
261 short regno_valid; /* 0 == regno invalid; !0 == regno valid */
262 short regno; /* base register number {0, 1, 2, ...} */
263 } basereg;
264 }
265 aux_value;
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266};
267
268
269/* A partial_symbol records the name, namespace, and address class of
270 symbols whose types we have not parsed yet. For functions, it also
271 contains their memory address, so we can find them from a PC value.
272 Each partial_symbol sits in a partial_symtab, all of which are chained
b0246b3b 273 on a partial symtab list and which points to the corresponding
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274 normal symtab once the partial_symtab has been referenced. */
275
276struct partial_symbol
277{
278 /* Symbol name */
279 char *name;
280 /* Name space code. */
281 enum namespace namespace;
282 /* Address class (for info_symbols) */
283 enum address_class class;
284 /* Value (only used for static functions currently). Done this
285 way so that we can use the struct symbol macros.
286 Note that the address of a function is SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (pst)
287 in a partial symbol table, but BLOCK_START (SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE (st))
288 in a symbol table. */
289 union
290 {
291 long value;
292 CORE_ADDR address;
293 }
294 value;
295};
296\f
297/* Source-file information.
298 This describes the relation between source files and line numbers
299 and addresses in the program text. */
300
301struct sourcevector
302{
303 int length; /* Number of source files described */
304 struct source *source[1]; /* Descriptions of the files */
305};
306
307/* Each item represents a line-->pc (or the reverse) mapping. This is
308 somewhat more wasteful of space than one might wish, but since only
309 the files which are actually debugged are read in to core, we don't
310 waste much space.
311
312 Each item used to be an int; either minus a line number, or a
313 program counter. If it represents a line number, that is the line
314 described by the next program counter value. If it is positive, it
315 is the program counter at which the code for the next line starts. */
316
317struct linetable_entry
318{
319 int line;
320 CORE_ADDR pc;
321};
322
323struct linetable
324{
325 int nitems;
326 struct linetable_entry item[1];
327};
328
329/* All the information on one source file. */
330
331struct source
332{
333 char *name; /* Name of file */
334 struct linetable contents;
335};
336
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337/* How to relocate the symbols from each section in a symbol file.
338 Each struct contains an array of offsets.
339 The ordering and meaning of the offsets is file-type-dependent;
340 typically it is indexed by section numbers or symbol types or
341 something like that.
342
343 To give us flexibility in changing the internal representation
344 of these offsets, the ANOFFSET macro must be used to insert and
345 extract offset values in the struct. */
346
347struct section_offsets
348 {
349 CORE_ADDR offsets[1]; /* As many as needed. */
350 };
351
352#define ANOFFSET(secoff, whichone) (secoff->offsets[whichone])
353
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354/* Each source file is represented by a struct symtab.
355 These objects are chained through the `next' field. */
356
357struct symtab
358 {
359 /* Chain of all existing symtabs. */
360 struct symtab *next;
361 /* List of all symbol scope blocks for this symtab. */
362 struct blockvector *blockvector;
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363 /* Table mapping core addresses to line numbers for this file.
364 Can be NULL if none. */
bd5635a1 365 struct linetable *linetable;
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366 /* Name of this source file. */
367 char *filename;
368 /* Directory in which it was compiled, or NULL if we don't know. */
369 char *dirname;
370 /* This component says how to free the data we point to:
371 free_contents => do a tree walk and free each object.
372 free_nothing => do nothing; some other symtab will free
373 the data this one uses.
374 free_linetable => free just the linetable. */
375 enum free_code {free_nothing, free_contents, free_linetable}
376 free_code;
377 /* Pointer to one block of storage to be freed, if nonzero. */
378 /* This is IN ADDITION to the action indicated by free_code. */
379 char *free_ptr;
380 /* Total number of lines found in source file. */
381 int nlines;
382 /* Array mapping line number to character position. */
383 int *line_charpos;
384 /* Language of this source file. */
385 enum language language;
386 /* String of version information. May be zero. */
387 char *version;
388 /* Full name of file as found by searching the source path.
389 0 if not yet known. */
390 char *fullname;
8aa13b87 391
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392 /* Object file from which this symbol information was read. */
393 struct objfile *objfile;
a048c8f5 394
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395 /* Anything extra for this symtab. This is for target machines
396 with special debugging info of some sort (which cannot just
397 be represented in a normal symtab). */
398#if defined (EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO)
399 EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO
400#endif
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401 };
402
403/* Each source file that has not been fully read in is represented by
404 a partial_symtab. This contains the information on where in the
405 executable the debugging symbols for a specific file are, and a
406 list of names of global symbols which are located in this file.
b0246b3b 407 They are all chained on partial symtab lists.
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408
409 Even after the source file has been read into a symtab, the
410 partial_symtab remains around. They are allocated on an obstack,
411 psymbol_obstack. FIXME, this is bad for dynamic linking or VxWorks-
412 style execution of a bunch of .o's. */
b0246b3b 413
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414struct partial_symtab
415{
416 /* Chain of all existing partial symtabs. */
417 struct partial_symtab *next;
418 /* Name of the source file which this partial_symtab defines */
419 char *filename;
420
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421 /* Information about the object file from which symbols should be read. */
422 struct objfile *objfile;
a048c8f5 423
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424 /* Set of relocation offsets to apply to each section. */
425 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
426
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427 /* Range of text addresses covered by this file; texthigh is the
428 beginning of the next section. */
429 CORE_ADDR textlow, texthigh;
430 /* Array of pointers to all of the partial_symtab's which this one
431 depends on. Since this array can only be set to previous or
432 the current (?) psymtab, this dependency tree is guaranteed not
433 to have any loops. */
434 struct partial_symtab **dependencies;
435 int number_of_dependencies;
436 /* Global symbol list. This list will be sorted after readin to
437 improve access. Binary search will be the usual method of
438 finding a symbol within it. globals_offset is an integer offset
4a35d6e9 439 within global_psymbols[]. */
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440 int globals_offset, n_global_syms;
441 /* Static symbol list. This list will *not* be sorted after readin;
442 to find a symbol in it, exhaustive search must be used. This is
443 reasonable because searches through this list will eventually
444 lead to either the read in of a files symbols for real (assumed
445 to take a *lot* of time; check) or an error (and we don't care
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446 how long errors take). This is an offset and size within
447 static_psymbols[]. */
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448 int statics_offset, n_static_syms;
449 /* Pointer to symtab eventually allocated for this source file, 0 if
450 !readin or if we haven't looked for the symtab after it was readin. */
451 struct symtab *symtab;
452 /* Pointer to function which will read in the symtab corresponding to
453 this psymtab. */
b0246b3b 454 void (*read_symtab) PARAMS ((struct partial_symtab *));
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455 /* Information that lets read_symtab() locate the part of the symbol table
456 that this psymtab corresponds to. This information is private to the
457 format-dependent symbol reading routines. For further detail examine
458 the various symbol reading modules. Should really be (void *) but is
459 (char *) as with other such gdb variables. (FIXME) */
460 char *read_symtab_private;
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461 /* Non-zero if the symtab corresponding to this psymtab has been
462 readin */
463 unsigned char readin;
464};
465
466/* A fast way to get from a psymtab to its symtab (after the first time). */
467#define PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB(pst) ((pst)->symtab? \
468 (pst)->symtab: \
469 psymtab_to_symtab (pst) )
470
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471/* This symtab variable specifies the current file for printing source lines */
472
252f6c65 473extern struct symtab *current_source_symtab;
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474
475/* This is the next line to print for listing source lines. */
476
252f6c65 477extern int current_source_line;
bd5635a1 478
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479#define BLOCKVECTOR(symtab) (symtab)->blockvector
480
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481#define LINETABLE(symtab) (symtab)->linetable
482\f
483/* Macros normally used to access components of symbol table structures. */
484
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485#define BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS(blocklist) (blocklist)->nblocks
486#define BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK(blocklist,n) (blocklist)->block[n]
487
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488#define BLOCK_START(bl) (bl)->startaddr
489#define BLOCK_END(bl) (bl)->endaddr
490#define BLOCK_NSYMS(bl) (bl)->nsyms
491#define BLOCK_SYM(bl, n) (bl)->sym[n]
492#define BLOCK_FUNCTION(bl) (bl)->function
493#define BLOCK_SUPERBLOCK(bl) (bl)->superblock
494#define BLOCK_GCC_COMPILED(bl) (bl)->gcc_compile_flag
495
496/* Nonzero if symbols of block BL should be sorted alphabetically. */
497#define BLOCK_SHOULD_SORT(bl) ((bl)->nsyms >= 40)
498
499#define SYMBOL_NAME(symbol) (symbol)->name
500#define SYMBOL_NAMESPACE(symbol) (symbol)->namespace
501#define SYMBOL_CLASS(symbol) (symbol)->class
502#define SYMBOL_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.value
503#define SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS(symbol) (symbol)->value.address
504#define SYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES(symbol) (symbol)->value.bytes
505#define SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE(symbol) (symbol)->value.block
506#define SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN(symbol) (symbol)->value.chain
507#define SYMBOL_TYPE(symbol) (symbol)->type
508#define SYMBOL_LINE(symbol) (symbol)->line
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509#if 0
510/* This currently fails because some symbols are not being initialized
511 to zero on allocation, and no code is currently setting this value.
512 Basereg handling will probably change significantly in the next release.
513 FIXME -fnf */
252f6c65 514#define SYMBOL_BASEREG_VALID(symbol) (symbol)->aux_value.basereg.regno_valid
51b57ded
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515#else
516#define SYMBOL_BASEREG_VALID(symbol) 0
517#endif
252f6c65 518#define SYMBOL_BASEREG(symbol) (symbol)->aux_value.basereg.regno
bd5635a1 519
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520/* The virtual function table is now an array of structures
521 which have the form { int16 offset, delta; void *pfn; }.
aec4cb91 522
ea9cdf62
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523 In normal virtual function tables, OFFSET is unused.
524 DELTA is the amount which is added to the apparent object's base
525 address in order to point to the actual object to which the
526 virtual function should be applied.
527 PFN is a pointer to the virtual function. */
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528
529#define VTBL_FNADDR_OFFSET 2
ea9cdf62
JK
530
531/* Macro that yields non-zero value iff NAME is the prefix
532 for C++ operator names. If you leave out the parenthesis
533 here you will lose!
534
535 Currently 'o' 'p' CPLUS_MARKER is used for both the symbol in the
536 symbol-file and the names in gdb's symbol table. */
537#define OPNAME_PREFIX_P(NAME) ((NAME)[0] == 'o' && (NAME)[1] == 'p' \
538 && (NAME)[2] == CPLUS_MARKER)
539
540#define VTBL_PREFIX_P(NAME) ((NAME)[3] == CPLUS_MARKER \
541 && !strncmp ((NAME), "_vt", 3))
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542\f
543/* Functions that work on the objects described above */
544
b0246b3b
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545extern struct symtab *
546lookup_symtab PARAMS ((char *));
547
548extern struct symbol *
549lookup_symbol PARAMS ((const char *, const struct block *,
550 const enum namespace, int *, struct symtab **));
551
552extern struct symbol *
553lookup_block_symbol PARAMS ((const struct block *, const char *,
554 const enum namespace));
555
556extern struct type *
557lookup_struct PARAMS ((char *, struct block *));
558
559extern struct type *
560lookup_union PARAMS ((char *, struct block *));
561
562extern struct type *
563lookup_enum PARAMS ((char *, struct block *));
564
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PB
565extern struct type *
566check_struct PARAMS ((struct type *));
567
568extern struct type *
569check_union PARAMS ((struct type *));
570
571extern struct type *
572check_enum PARAMS ((struct type *));
573
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574extern struct symbol *
575block_function PARAMS ((struct block *));
576
577extern struct symbol *
578find_pc_function PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
579
580extern int
581find_pc_partial_function PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, char **, CORE_ADDR *));
582
583extern void
584clear_pc_function_cache PARAMS ((void));
585
586extern struct partial_symtab *
587lookup_partial_symtab PARAMS ((char *));
588
589extern struct partial_symtab *
590find_pc_psymtab PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
591
592extern struct symtab *
593find_pc_symtab PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
594
595extern struct partial_symbol *
596find_pc_psymbol PARAMS ((struct partial_symtab *, CORE_ADDR));
597
598extern int
599find_pc_line_pc_range PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR *, CORE_ADDR *));
600
601extern int
602contained_in PARAMS ((struct block *, struct block *));
603
604extern void
605reread_symbols PARAMS ((void));
606
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607/* Functions for dealing with the minimal symbol table, really a misc
608 address<->symbol mapping for things we don't have debug symbols for. */
609
b0246b3b
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610extern void
611prim_record_minimal_symbol PARAMS ((const char *, CORE_ADDR,
612 enum minimal_symbol_type));
613
51b57ded
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614extern void
615prim_record_minimal_symbol_and_info PARAMS ((const char *, CORE_ADDR,
616 enum minimal_symbol_type,
617 char *info));
618
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619extern struct minimal_symbol *
620lookup_minimal_symbol PARAMS ((const char *, struct objfile *));
621
622extern struct minimal_symbol *
623lookup_minimal_symbol_by_pc PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
624
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625extern void
626init_minimal_symbol_collection PARAMS ((void));
627
628extern void
629discard_minimal_symbols PARAMS ((int));
630
631extern void
632install_minimal_symbols PARAMS ((struct objfile *));
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633
634struct symtab_and_line
635{
636 struct symtab *symtab;
637 int line;
638 CORE_ADDR pc;
639 CORE_ADDR end;
640};
641
642struct symtabs_and_lines
643{
644 struct symtab_and_line *sals;
645 int nelts;
646};
647
648/* Given a pc value, return line number it is in.
649 Second arg nonzero means if pc is on the boundary
650 use the previous statement's line number. */
651
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652extern struct symtab_and_line
653find_pc_line PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, int));
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654
655/* Given a symtab and line number, return the pc there. */
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656
657extern CORE_ADDR
658find_line_pc PARAMS ((struct symtab *, int));
659
660extern int
661find_line_pc_range PARAMS ((struct symtab *, int, CORE_ADDR *, CORE_ADDR *));
662
663extern void
664resolve_sal_pc PARAMS ((struct symtab_and_line *));
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665
666/* Given a string, return the line specified by it.
667 For commands like "list" and "breakpoint". */
668
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669extern struct symtabs_and_lines
670decode_line_spec PARAMS ((char *, int));
671
672extern struct symtabs_and_lines
673decode_line_spec_1 PARAMS ((char *, int));
674
675extern struct symtabs_and_lines
676decode_line_1 PARAMS ((char **, int, struct symtab *, int));
bd5635a1 677
5c43db6b 678/* Symmisc.c */
b0246b3b 679
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680#if MAINTENANCE_CMDS
681
682void
683maintenance_print_symbols PARAMS ((char *, int));
684
685void
686maintenance_print_psymbols PARAMS ((char *, int));
687
688void
689maintenance_print_msymbols PARAMS ((char *, int));
690
691void
692maintenance_print_objfiles PARAMS ((char *, int));
693
694#endif
695
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696extern void
697free_symtab PARAMS ((struct symtab *));
5c43db6b 698
bd5635a1 699/* Symbol-reading stuff in symfile.c and solib.c. */
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700
701extern struct symtab *
702psymtab_to_symtab PARAMS ((struct partial_symtab *));
703
704extern void
705clear_solib PARAMS ((void));
706
707extern struct objfile *
708symbol_file_add PARAMS ((char *, int, CORE_ADDR, int, int, int));
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709
710/* source.c */
bd5635a1 711
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712extern int
713identify_source_line PARAMS ((struct symtab *, int, int));
714
715extern void
716print_source_lines PARAMS ((struct symtab *, int, int, int));
717
718extern void
719forget_cached_source_info PARAMS ((void));
720
721extern void
722select_source_symtab PARAMS ((struct symtab *));
723
724extern char **
725make_symbol_completion_list PARAMS ((char *));
726
727/* symtab.c */
728
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729extern void
730clear_symtab_users_once PARAMS ((void));
731
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732extern struct partial_symtab *
733find_main_psymtab PARAMS ((void));
734
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735extern struct type *
736find_nested_type PARAMS ((struct type *, char*));
737
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738/* blockframe.c */
739
740extern struct blockvector *
741blockvector_for_pc PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, int *));
bd5635a1 742
b0246b3b 743/* symfile.c */
4a35d6e9 744
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745extern enum language
746deduce_language_from_filename PARAMS ((char *));
4a35d6e9 747
b0246b3b 748#endif /* !defined(SYMTAB_H) */
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