* config/tc-alpha.c (md_shortopts, md_longopts, md_parse_option):
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / bfd / doc / bfd.texinfo
... / ...
CommitLineData
1\input texinfo.tex
2@setfilename bfd.info
3@c $Id$
4@tex
5% NOTE LOCAL KLUGE TO AVOID TOO MUCH WHITESPACE
6\global\long\def\example{%
7\begingroup
8\let\aboveenvbreak=\par
9\let\afterenvbreak=\par
10\parskip=0pt
11\lisp}
12\global\long\def\Eexample{%
13\Elisp
14\endgroup
15\vskip -\parskip% to cancel out effect of following \par
16}
17@end tex
18@synindex fn cp
19
20@ifinfo
21@format
22START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
23* Bfd:: The Binary File Descriptor library.
24END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
25@end format
26@end ifinfo
27
28@ifinfo
29This file documents the BFD library.
30
31Copyright (C) 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
32
33Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
34this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
35are preserved on all copies.
36
37@ignore
38Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
39results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
40notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
41(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
42
43@end ignore
44Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
45manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, subject to the terms
46of the GNU General Public License, which includes the provision that the
47entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
48permission notice identical to this one.
49
50Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
51into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
52@end ifinfo
53@iftex
54@c@finalout
55@setchapternewpage on
56@c@setchapternewpage odd
57@settitle LIB BFD, the Binary File Descriptor Library
58@titlepage
59@title{libbfd}
60@subtitle{The Binary File Descriptor Library}
61@sp 1
62@subtitle First Edition---BFD version < 3.0
63@subtitle April 1991
64@author {Steve Chamberlain}
65@author {Cygnus Support}
66@page
67
68@tex
69\def\$#1${{#1}} % Kluge: collect RCS revision info without $...$
70\xdef\manvers{\$Revision$} % For use in headers, footers too
71{\parskip=0pt
72\hfill Cygnus Support\par
73\hfill sac\@cygnus.com\par
74\hfill {\it BFD}, \manvers\par
75\hfill \TeX{}info \texinfoversion\par
76}
77\global\parindent=0pt % Steve likes it this way
78@end tex
79
80@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
81Copyright @copyright{} 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
82
83Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
84this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
85are preserved on all copies.
86
87Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
88manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, subject to the terms
89of the GNU General Public License, which includes the provision that the
90entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
91permission notice identical to this one.
92
93Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
94into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
95@end titlepage
96@end iftex
97
98@node Top, Overview, (dir), (dir)
99@ifinfo
100This file documents the binary file descriptor library libbfd.
101@end ifinfo
102
103@menu
104* Overview:: Overview of BFD
105* BFD front end:: BFD front end
106* BFD back end:: BFD back end
107* Index:: Index
108@end menu
109
110@node Overview, BFD front end, Top, Top
111@chapter Introduction
112@cindex BFD
113@cindex what is it?
114BFD is a package which allows applications to use the
115same routines to operate on object files whatever the object file
116format. A new object file format can be supported simply by
117creating a new BFD back end and adding it to the library.
118
119BFD is split into two parts: the front end, and the back ends (one for
120each object file format).
121@itemize @bullet
122@item The front end of BFD provides the interface to the user. It manages
123memory and various canonical data structures. The front end also
124decides which back end to use and when to call back end routines.
125@item The back ends provide BFD its view of the real world. Each back
126end provides a set of calls which the BFD front end can use to maintain
127its canonical form. The back ends also may keep around information for
128their own use, for greater efficiency.
129@end itemize
130@menu
131* History:: History
132* How It Works:: How It Works
133* What BFD Version 2 Can Do:: What BFD Version 2 Can Do
134@end menu
135
136@node History, How It Works, Overview, Overview
137@section History
138
139One spur behind BFD was the desire, on the part of the GNU 960 team at
140Intel Oregon, for interoperability of applications on their COFF and
141b.out file formats. Cygnus was providing GNU support for the team, and
142was contracted to provide the required functionality.
143
144The name came from a conversation David Wallace was having with Richard
145Stallman about the library: RMS said that it would be quite hard---David
146said ``BFD''. Stallman was right, but the name stuck.
147
148At the same time, Ready Systems wanted much the same thing, but for
149different object file formats: IEEE-695, Oasys, Srecords, a.out and 68k
150coff.
151
152BFD was first implemented by members of Cygnus Support; Steve
153Chamberlain (@code{sac@@cygnus.com}), John Gilmore
154(@code{gnu@@cygnus.com}), K. Richard Pixley (@code{rich@@cygnus.com})
155and David Henkel-Wallace (@code{gumby@@cygnus.com}).
156
157
158
159@node How It Works, What BFD Version 2 Can Do, History, Overview
160@section How To Use BFD
161
162To use the library, include @file{bfd.h} and link with @file{libbfd.a}.
163
164BFD provides a common interface to the parts of an object file
165for a calling application.
166
167When an application sucessfully opens a target file (object, archive, or
168whatever), a pointer to an internal structure is returned. This pointer
169points to a structure called @code{bfd}, described in
170@file{bfd.h}. Our convention is to call this pointer a BFD, and
171instances of it within code @code{abfd}. All operations on
172the target object file are applied as methods to the BFD. The mapping is
173defined within @code{bfd.h} in a set of macros, all beginning
174with @samp{bfd_} to reduce namespace pollution.
175
176For example, this sequence does what you would probably expect:
177return the number of sections in an object file attached to a BFD
178@code{abfd}.
179
180@lisp
181@c @cartouche
182#include "bfd.h"
183
184unsigned int number_of_sections(abfd)
185bfd *abfd;
186@{
187 return bfd_count_sections(abfd);
188@}
189@c @end cartouche
190@end lisp
191
192The abstraction used within BFD is that an object file has:
193
194@itemize @bullet
195@item
196a header,
197@item
198a number of sections containing raw data (@pxref{Sections}),
199@item
200a set of relocations (@pxref{Relocations}), and
201@item
202some symbol information (@pxref{Symbols}).
203@end itemize
204@noindent
205Also, BFDs opened for archives have the additional attribute of an index
206and contain subordinate BFDs. This approach is fine for a.out and coff,
207but loses efficiency when applied to formats such as S-records and
208IEEE-695.
209
210@node What BFD Version 2 Can Do, , How It Works, Overview
211@section What BFD Version 2 Can Do
212@include bfdsumm.texi
213
214@node BFD front end, BFD back end, Overview, Top
215@chapter BFD front end
216@include bfd.texi
217
218@menu
219* Memory Usage::
220* Initialization::
221* Sections::
222* Symbols::
223* Archives::
224* Formats::
225* Relocations::
226* Core Files::
227* Targets::
228* Architectures::
229* Opening and Closing::
230* Constructors::
231* Internal::
232* File Caching::
233@end menu
234
235@node Memory Usage, Initialization, BFD front end, BFD front end
236@section Memory Usage
237BFD keeps all its internal structures in obstacks. There is one obstack
238per open BFD file, into which the current state is stored. When a BFD is
239closed, the obstack is deleted, and so everything which has been
240allocated by @code{libbfd} for the closing file will be thrown away.
241
242BFD will not free anything created by an application, but pointers into
243@code{bfd} structures will be invalidated on a @code{bfd_close}; for example,
244after a @code{bfd_close} the vector passed to
245@code{bfd_canonicalize_symtab} will still be around, since it has been
246allocated by the application, but the data that it pointed to will be
247lost.
248
249The general rule is not to close a BFD until all operations dependent
250upon data from the BFD have been completed, or all the data from within
251the file has been copied. To help with the management of memory, there
252is a function (@code{bfd_alloc_size}) which returns the number of bytes
253in obstacks associated with the supplied BFD. This could be used to
254select the greediest open BFD, close it to reclaim the memory, perform
255some operation and reopen the BFD again, to get a fresh copy of the data
256structures.
257
258@node Initialization, Sections, Memory Usage, BFD front end
259@include init.texi
260
261@node Sections, Symbols, Initialization, BFD front end
262@include section.texi
263
264@node Symbols, Archives, Sections, BFD front end
265@include syms.texi
266
267@node Archives, Formats, Symbols, BFD front end
268@include archive.texi
269
270@node Formats, Relocations, Archives, BFD front end
271@include format.texi
272
273@node Relocations, Core Files, Formats, BFD front end
274@include reloc.texi
275
276@node Core Files, Targets, Relocations, BFD front end
277@include core.texi
278
279@node Targets, Architectures, Core Files, BFD front end
280@include targets.texi
281
282@node Architectures, Opening and Closing, Targets, BFD front end
283@include archures.texi
284
285@node Opening and Closing, Constructors, Architectures, BFD front end
286@include opncls.texi
287
288@node Constructors, Internal, Opening and Closing, BFD front end
289@include ctor.texi
290
291@node Internal, File Caching, Constructors, BFD front end
292@include libbfd.texi
293
294@node File Caching, , Internal, BFD front end
295@include cache.texi
296
297@node BFD back end, Index, BFD front end, Top
298@chapter BFD back end
299@menu
300* What to Put Where::
301* aout :: a.out backends
302* coff :: coff backends
303* elf :: elf backends
304@ignore
305* oasys :: oasys backends
306* ieee :: ieee backend
307* srecord :: s-record backend
308@end ignore
309@end menu
310@node What to Put Where, aout, BFD back end, BFD back end
311All of BFD lives in one directory.
312
313@node aout, coff, What to Put Where, BFD back end
314@include aoutx.texi
315
316@node coff, elf, aout, BFD back end
317@include coffcode.texi
318
319@node elf, , coff, BFD back end
320@include elf.texi
321@include elfcode.texi
322
323@node Index, , BFD back end, Top
324@unnumbered Index
325@printindex cp
326
327@tex
328% I think something like @colophon should be in texinfo. In the
329% meantime:
330\long\def\colophon{\hbox to0pt{}\vfill
331\centerline{The body of this manual is set in}
332\centerline{\fontname\tenrm,}
333\centerline{with headings in {\bf\fontname\tenbf}}
334\centerline{and examples in {\tt\fontname\tentt}.}
335\centerline{{\it\fontname\tenit\/} and}
336\centerline{{\sl\fontname\tensl\/}}
337\centerline{are used for emphasis.}\vfill}
338\page\colophon
339% Blame: pesch@cygnus.com, 28mar91.
340@end tex
341
342@contents
343@bye
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