* libbfd.c: bfd_put*: Remove casts to bfd_vma.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / bfd / libbfd.c
1 /* Assorted BFD support routines, only used internally.
2 Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Written by Cygnus Support.
4
5 This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
19 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
20
21 #include "bfd.h"
22 #include "sysdep.h"
23 #include "libbfd.h"
24
25 /*
26 SECTION
27 libbfd
28
29 DESCRIPTION
30 This file contains various routines which are used within BFD.
31 They are not intended for export, but are documented here for
32 completeness.
33 */
34
35 boolean
36 DEFUN(_bfd_dummy_new_section_hook,(ignore, ignore_newsect),
37 bfd *ignore AND
38 asection *ignore_newsect)
39 {
40 return true;
41 }
42
43 boolean
44 DEFUN(bfd_false ,(ignore),
45 bfd *ignore)
46 {
47 return false;
48 }
49
50 boolean
51 DEFUN(bfd_true,(ignore),
52 bfd *ignore)
53 {
54 return true;
55 }
56
57 PTR
58 DEFUN(bfd_nullvoidptr,(ignore),
59 bfd *ignore)
60 {
61 return (PTR)NULL;
62 }
63
64 int
65 DEFUN(bfd_0,(ignore),
66 bfd *ignore)
67 {
68 return 0;
69 }
70
71 unsigned int
72 DEFUN(bfd_0u,(ignore),
73 bfd *ignore)
74 {
75 return 0;
76 }
77
78 void
79 DEFUN(bfd_void,(ignore),
80 bfd *ignore)
81 {
82 }
83
84 boolean
85 DEFUN(_bfd_dummy_core_file_matches_executable_p,(ignore_core_bfd, ignore_exec_bfd),
86 bfd *ignore_core_bfd AND
87 bfd *ignore_exec_bfd)
88 {
89 bfd_error = invalid_operation;
90 return false;
91 }
92
93 /* of course you can't initialize a function to be the same as another, grr */
94
95 char *
96 DEFUN(_bfd_dummy_core_file_failing_command,(ignore_abfd),
97 bfd *ignore_abfd)
98 {
99 return (char *)NULL;
100 }
101
102 int
103 DEFUN(_bfd_dummy_core_file_failing_signal,(ignore_abfd),
104 bfd *ignore_abfd)
105 {
106 return 0;
107 }
108
109 bfd_target *
110 DEFUN(_bfd_dummy_target,(ignore_abfd),
111 bfd *ignore_abfd)
112 {
113 return 0;
114 }
115 \f
116 /** zalloc -- allocate and clear storage */
117
118
119 #ifndef zalloc
120 char *
121 DEFUN(zalloc,(size),
122 bfd_size_type size)
123 {
124 char *ptr = (char *) malloc ((int)size);
125
126 if ((ptr != NULL) && (size != 0))
127 memset(ptr,0, size);
128
129 return ptr;
130 }
131 #endif
132
133 /*
134 INTERNAL_FUNCTION
135 bfd_xmalloc
136
137 SYNOPSIS
138 PTR bfd_xmalloc( bfd_size_type size);
139
140 DESCRIPTION
141 Like malloc, but exit if no more memory.
142
143 */
144
145 /** There is major inconsistency in how running out of memory is handled.
146 Some routines return a NULL, and set bfd_error to no_memory.
147 However, obstack routines can't do this ... */
148
149
150 DEFUN(PTR bfd_xmalloc,(size),
151 bfd_size_type size)
152 {
153 static CONST char no_memory_message[] = "Virtual memory exhausted!\n";
154 PTR ptr;
155 if (size == 0) size = 1;
156 ptr = (PTR)malloc(size);
157 if (!ptr)
158 {
159 write (2, no_memory_message, sizeof(no_memory_message)-1);
160 exit (-1);
161 }
162 return ptr;
163 }
164 \f
165 /* Some IO code */
166
167
168 /* Note that archive entries don't have streams; they share their parent's.
169 This allows someone to play with the iostream behind BFD's back.
170
171 Also, note that the origin pointer points to the beginning of a file's
172 contents (0 for non-archive elements). For archive entries this is the
173 first octet in the file, NOT the beginning of the archive header. */
174
175 static
176 int DEFUN(real_read,(where, a,b, file),
177 PTR where AND
178 int a AND
179 int b AND
180 FILE *file)
181 {
182 return fread(where, a,b,file);
183 }
184 bfd_size_type
185 DEFUN(bfd_read,(ptr, size, nitems, abfd),
186 PTR ptr AND
187 bfd_size_type size AND
188 bfd_size_type nitems AND
189 bfd *abfd)
190 {
191 int nread;
192 nread = real_read (ptr, 1, (int)(size*nitems), bfd_cache_lookup(abfd));
193 #ifdef FILE_OFFSET_IS_CHAR_INDEX
194 if (nread > 0)
195 abfd->where += nread;
196 #endif
197 return nread;
198 }
199
200 bfd_size_type
201 DEFUN(bfd_write,(ptr, size, nitems, abfd),
202 CONST PTR ptr AND
203 bfd_size_type size AND
204 bfd_size_type nitems AND
205 bfd *abfd)
206 {
207 int nwrote = fwrite (ptr, 1, (int)(size*nitems), bfd_cache_lookup(abfd));
208 #ifdef FILE_OFFSET_IS_CHAR_INDEX
209 if (nwrote > 0)
210 abfd->where += nwrote;
211 #endif
212 return nwrote;
213 }
214
215 /*
216 INTERNAL_FUNCTION
217 bfd_write_bigendian_4byte_int
218
219 SYNOPSIS
220 void bfd_write_bigendian_4byte_int(bfd *abfd, int i);
221
222 DESCRIPTION
223 Writes a 4 byte integer to the outputing bfd, in big endian
224 mode regardless of what else is going on. This is usefull in
225 archives.
226
227 */
228 void
229 DEFUN(bfd_write_bigendian_4byte_int,(abfd, i),
230 bfd *abfd AND
231 int i)
232 {
233 bfd_byte buffer[4];
234 _do_putb32(i, buffer);
235 bfd_write((PTR)buffer, 4, 1, abfd);
236 }
237
238 long
239 DEFUN(bfd_tell,(abfd),
240 bfd *abfd)
241 {
242 file_ptr ptr;
243
244 ptr = ftell (bfd_cache_lookup(abfd));
245
246 if (abfd->my_archive)
247 ptr -= abfd->origin;
248 abfd->where = ptr;
249 return ptr;
250 }
251
252 int
253 DEFUN(bfd_seek,(abfd, position, direction),
254 bfd * CONST abfd AND
255 CONST file_ptr position AND
256 CONST int direction)
257 {
258 int result;
259 FILE *f;
260 file_ptr file_position;
261 /* For the time being, a BFD may not seek to it's end. The problem
262 is that we don't easily have a way to recognize the end of an
263 element in an archive. */
264
265 BFD_ASSERT (direction == SEEK_SET || direction == SEEK_CUR);
266
267 if (direction == SEEK_CUR && position == 0)
268 return 0;
269 #ifdef FILE_OFFSET_IS_CHAR_INDEX
270 if (abfd->format != bfd_archive && abfd->my_archive == 0)
271 {
272 #ifndef NDEBUG
273 /* Explanation for this code: I'm only about 95+% sure that the above
274 conditions are sufficient and that all i/o calls are properly
275 adjusting the `where' field. So this is sort of an `assert'
276 that the `where' field is correct. If we can go a while without
277 tripping the abort, we can probably safely disable this code,
278 so that the real optimizations happen. */
279 file_ptr where_am_i_now;
280 where_am_i_now = ftell (bfd_cache_lookup (abfd));
281 if (abfd->my_archive)
282 where_am_i_now -= abfd->origin;
283 if (where_am_i_now != abfd->where)
284 abort ();
285 #endif
286 if (direction == SEEK_SET && position == abfd->where)
287 return 0;
288 }
289 else
290 {
291 /* We need something smarter to optimize access to archives.
292 Currently, anything inside an archive is read via the file
293 handle for the archive. Which means that a bfd_seek on one
294 component affects the `current position' in the archive, as
295 well as in any other component.
296
297 It might be sufficient to put a spike through the cache
298 abstraction, and look to the archive for the file position,
299 but I think we should try for something cleaner.
300
301 In the meantime, no optimization for archives. */
302 }
303 #endif
304
305 f = bfd_cache_lookup (abfd);
306 file_position = position;
307 if (direction == SEEK_SET && abfd->my_archive != NULL)
308 file_position += abfd->origin;
309
310 result = fseek (f, file_position, direction);
311
312 if (result != 0)
313 /* Force redetermination of `where' field. */
314 bfd_tell (abfd);
315 else
316 {
317 #ifdef FILE_OFFSET_IS_CHAR_INDEX
318 /* Adjust `where' field. */
319 if (direction == SEEK_SET)
320 abfd->where = position;
321 else
322 abfd->where += position;
323 #endif
324 }
325 return result;
326 }
327 \f
328 /** Make a string table */
329
330 /*>bfd.h<
331 Add string to table pointed to by table, at location starting with free_ptr.
332 resizes the table if necessary (if it's NULL, creates it, ignoring
333 table_length). Updates free_ptr, table, table_length */
334
335 boolean
336 DEFUN(bfd_add_to_string_table,(table, new_string, table_length, free_ptr),
337 char **table AND
338 char *new_string AND
339 unsigned int *table_length AND
340 char **free_ptr)
341 {
342 size_t string_length = strlen (new_string) + 1; /* include null here */
343 char *base = *table;
344 size_t space_length = *table_length;
345 unsigned int offset = (base ? *free_ptr - base : 0);
346
347 if (base == NULL) {
348 /* Avoid a useless regrow if we can (but of course we still
349 take it next time */
350 space_length = (string_length < DEFAULT_STRING_SPACE_SIZE ?
351 DEFAULT_STRING_SPACE_SIZE : string_length+1);
352 base = zalloc (space_length);
353
354 if (base == NULL) {
355 bfd_error = no_memory;
356 return false;
357 }
358 }
359
360 if ((size_t)(offset + string_length) >= space_length) {
361 /* Make sure we will have enough space */
362 while ((size_t)(offset + string_length) >= space_length)
363 space_length += space_length/2; /* grow by 50% */
364
365 base = (char *) realloc (base, space_length);
366 if (base == NULL) {
367 bfd_error = no_memory;
368 return false;
369 }
370
371 }
372
373 memcpy (base + offset, new_string, string_length);
374 *table = base;
375 *table_length = space_length;
376 *free_ptr = base + offset + string_length;
377
378 return true;
379 }
380 \f
381 /** The do-it-yourself (byte) sex-change kit */
382
383 /* The middle letter e.g. get<b>short indicates Big or Little endian
384 target machine. It doesn't matter what the byte order of the host
385 machine is; these routines work for either. */
386
387 /* FIXME: Should these take a count argument?
388 Answer (gnu@cygnus.com): No, but perhaps they should be inline
389 functions in swap.h #ifdef __GNUC__.
390 Gprof them later and find out. */
391
392 /*
393 FUNCTION
394 bfd_put_size
395 FUNCTION
396 bfd_get_size
397
398 DESCRIPTION
399 These macros as used for reading and writing raw data in
400 sections; each access (except for bytes) is vectored through
401 the target format of the BFD and mangled accordingly. The
402 mangling performs any necessary endian translations and
403 removes alignment restrictions. Note that types accepted and
404 returned by these macros are identical so they can be swapped
405 around in macros--for example libaout.h defines GET_WORD to
406 either bfd_get_32 or bfd_get_64.
407
408 In the put routines, val must be a bfd_vma. If we are on a
409 system without prototypes, the caller is responsible for making
410 sure that is true, with a cast if necessary. We don't cast
411 them in the macro definitions because that would prevent lint
412 or gcc -Wall from detecting sins such as passing a pointer.
413 To detect calling these with less than a bfd_vma, use gcc
414 -Wconversion on a host with 64 bit bfd_vma's.
415
416 .#define bfd_put_8(abfd, val, ptr) \
417 . (*((unsigned char *)ptr) = (unsigned char)val)
418 .#define bfd_put_signed_8(abfd, val, ptr) (*((char *)(ptr)) = (char)(val))
419 .#define bfd_get_8(abfd, ptr) \
420 . (*((unsigned char *)(ptr)))
421 .#define bfd_get_signed_8(abfd, ptr) (((*(char *)(ptr) ^ 0x80) & 0xff) - 0x80)
422 .#define bfd_put_16(abfd, val, ptr) \
423 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_putx16, ((val),(ptr)))
424 .#define bfd_put_signed_16 bfd_put_16
425 .#define bfd_get_16(abfd, ptr) \
426 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx16, (ptr))
427 .#define bfd_get_signed_16(abfd, ptr) \
428 . BFD_SEND (abfd, bfd_getx_signed_16, (ptr))
429 .#define bfd_put_32(abfd, val, ptr) \
430 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_putx32, ((val),(ptr)))
431 .#define bfd_put_signed_32 bfd_put_32
432 .#define bfd_get_32(abfd, ptr) \
433 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx32, (ptr))
434 .#define bfd_get_signed_32(abfd, ptr) \
435 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx_signed_32, (ptr))
436 .#define bfd_put_64(abfd, val, ptr) \
437 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_putx64, ((val), (ptr)))
438 .#define bfd_put_signed_64 bfd_put_64
439 .#define bfd_get_64(abfd, ptr) \
440 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx64, (ptr))
441 .#define bfd_get_signed_64(abfd, ptr) \
442 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_getx_signed_64, (ptr))
443
444 */
445
446 /*
447 FUNCTION
448 bfd_h_put_size
449 FUNCTION
450 bfd_h_get_size
451
452 DESCRIPTION
453 These macros have the same function as their <<bfd_get_x>>
454 bretherin, except that they are used for removing information
455 for the header records of object files. Believe it or not,
456 some object files keep their header records in big endian
457 order, and their data in little endan order.
458
459 .#define bfd_h_put_8(abfd, val, ptr) \
460 . (*((unsigned char *)ptr) = (unsigned char)val)
461 .#define bfd_h_put_signed_8(abfd, val, ptr) (*((char *)(ptr)) = (char)(val))
462 .#define bfd_h_get_8(abfd, ptr) \
463 . (*((unsigned char *)(ptr)))
464 .#define bfd_h_get_signed_8 bfd_get_signed_8
465 .#define bfd_h_put_16(abfd, val, ptr) \
466 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_putx16,(val,ptr))
467 .#define bfd_h_put_signed_16 bfd_h_put_16
468 .#define bfd_h_get_16(abfd, ptr) \
469 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx16,(ptr))
470 .#define bfd_h_get_signed_16(abfd, ptr) \
471 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx_signed_16, (ptr))
472 .#define bfd_h_put_32(abfd, val, ptr) \
473 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_putx32,(val,ptr))
474 .#define bfd_h_put_signed_32 bfd_h_put_32
475 .#define bfd_h_get_32(abfd, ptr) \
476 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx32,(ptr))
477 .#define bfd_h_get_signed_32(abfd, ptr) \
478 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx_signed_32, (ptr))
479 .#define bfd_h_put_64(abfd, val, ptr) \
480 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_putx64,(val, ptr))
481 .#define bfd_h_put_signed_64 bfd_h_put_64
482 .#define bfd_h_get_64(abfd, ptr) \
483 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx64,(ptr))
484 .#define bfd_h_get_signed_64(abfd, ptr) \
485 . BFD_SEND(abfd, bfd_h_getx_signed_64, (ptr))
486
487 */
488
489 /* Sign extension to bfd_signed_vma. */
490 #define COERCE16(x) ((bfd_signed_vma) (((x) ^ 0x8000) - 0x8000))
491 #define COERCE32(x) ((bfd_signed_vma) (((x) ^ 0x80000000) - 0x80000000))
492 #define COERCE64(x) ((bfd_signed_vma)\
493 (((x) ^ 0x8000000000000000) - 0x8000000000000000))
494
495 bfd_vma
496 DEFUN(_do_getb16,(addr),
497 register bfd_byte *addr)
498 {
499 return (addr[0] << 8) | addr[1];
500 }
501
502 bfd_vma
503 DEFUN(_do_getl16,(addr),
504 register bfd_byte *addr)
505 {
506 return (addr[1] << 8) | addr[0];
507 }
508
509 bfd_signed_vma
510 DEFUN(_do_getb_signed_16,(addr),
511 register bfd_byte *addr)
512 {
513 return COERCE16((addr[0] << 8) | addr[1]);
514 }
515
516 bfd_signed_vma
517 DEFUN(_do_getl_signed_16,(addr),
518 register bfd_byte *addr)
519 {
520 return COERCE16((addr[1] << 8) | addr[0]);
521 }
522
523 void
524 DEFUN(_do_putb16,(data, addr),
525 bfd_vma data AND
526 register bfd_byte *addr)
527 {
528 addr[0] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8);
529 addr[1] = (bfd_byte )data;
530 }
531
532 void
533 DEFUN(_do_putl16,(data, addr),
534 bfd_vma data AND
535 register bfd_byte *addr)
536 {
537 addr[0] = (bfd_byte )data;
538 addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8);
539 }
540
541 bfd_vma
542 _do_getb32 (addr)
543 register bfd_byte *addr;
544 {
545 return ((((addr[0] << 8) | addr[1]) << 8) | addr[2]) << 8 | addr[3];
546 }
547
548 bfd_vma
549 _do_getl32 (addr)
550 register bfd_byte *addr;
551 {
552 return ((((addr[3] << 8) | addr[2]) << 8) | addr[1]) << 8 | addr[0];
553 }
554
555 bfd_signed_vma
556 _do_getb_signed_32 (addr)
557 register bfd_byte *addr;
558 {
559 return COERCE32(((((addr[0] << 8) | addr[1]) << 8)
560 | addr[2]) << 8 | addr[3]);
561 }
562
563 bfd_signed_vma
564 _do_getl_signed_32 (addr)
565 register bfd_byte *addr;
566 {
567 return COERCE32(((((addr[3] << 8) | addr[2]) << 8)
568 | addr[1]) << 8 | addr[0]);
569 }
570
571 bfd_vma
572 DEFUN(_do_getb64,(addr),
573 register bfd_byte *addr)
574 {
575 #ifdef HOST_64_BIT
576 bfd_vma low, high;
577
578 high= ((((((((addr[0]) << 8) |
579 addr[1]) << 8) |
580 addr[2]) << 8) |
581 addr[3]) );
582
583 low = ((((((((addr[4]) << 8) |
584 addr[5]) << 8) |
585 addr[6]) << 8) |
586 addr[7]));
587
588 return high << 32 | low;
589 #else
590 BFD_FAIL();
591 return 0;
592 #endif
593
594 }
595
596 bfd_vma
597 DEFUN(_do_getl64,(addr),
598 register bfd_byte *addr)
599 {
600
601 #ifdef HOST_64_BIT
602 bfd_vma low, high;
603 high= (((((((addr[7] << 8) |
604 addr[6]) << 8) |
605 addr[5]) << 8) |
606 addr[4]));
607
608 low = (((((((addr[3] << 8) |
609 addr[2]) << 8) |
610 addr[1]) << 8) |
611 addr[0]) );
612
613 return high << 32 | low;
614 #else
615 BFD_FAIL();
616 return 0;
617 #endif
618
619 }
620
621 bfd_signed_vma
622 DEFUN(_do_getb_signed_64,(addr),
623 register bfd_byte *addr)
624 {
625 #ifdef HOST_64_BIT
626 bfd_vma low, high;
627
628 high= ((((((((addr[0]) << 8) |
629 addr[1]) << 8) |
630 addr[2]) << 8) |
631 addr[3]) );
632
633 low = ((((((((addr[4]) << 8) |
634 addr[5]) << 8) |
635 addr[6]) << 8) |
636 addr[7]));
637
638 return COERCE64(high << 32 | low);
639 #else
640 BFD_FAIL();
641 return 0;
642 #endif
643
644 }
645
646 bfd_signed_vma
647 DEFUN(_do_getl_signed_64,(addr),
648 register bfd_byte *addr)
649 {
650
651 #ifdef HOST_64_BIT
652 bfd_vma low, high;
653 high= (((((((addr[7] << 8) |
654 addr[6]) << 8) |
655 addr[5]) << 8) |
656 addr[4]));
657
658 low = (((((((addr[3] << 8) |
659 addr[2]) << 8) |
660 addr[1]) << 8) |
661 addr[0]) );
662
663 return COERCE64(high << 32 | low);
664 #else
665 BFD_FAIL();
666 return 0;
667 #endif
668
669 }
670
671 void
672 DEFUN(_do_putb32,(data, addr),
673 bfd_vma data AND
674 register bfd_byte *addr)
675 {
676 addr[0] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 24);
677 addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 16);
678 addr[2] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8);
679 addr[3] = (bfd_byte)data;
680 }
681
682 void
683 DEFUN(_do_putl32,(data, addr),
684 bfd_vma data AND
685 register bfd_byte *addr)
686 {
687 addr[0] = (bfd_byte)data;
688 addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8);
689 addr[2] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 16);
690 addr[3] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 24);
691 }
692 void
693 DEFUN(_do_putb64,(data, addr),
694 bfd_vma data AND
695 register bfd_byte *addr)
696 {
697 #ifdef HOST_64_BIT
698 addr[0] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (7*8));
699 addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (6*8));
700 addr[2] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (5*8));
701 addr[3] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (4*8));
702 addr[4] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (3*8));
703 addr[5] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (2*8));
704 addr[6] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (1*8));
705 addr[7] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (0*8));
706 #else
707 BFD_FAIL();
708 #endif
709
710 }
711
712 void
713 DEFUN(_do_putl64,(data, addr),
714 bfd_vma data AND
715 register bfd_byte *addr)
716 {
717 #ifdef HOST_64_BIT
718 addr[7] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (7*8));
719 addr[6] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (6*8));
720 addr[5] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (5*8));
721 addr[4] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (4*8));
722 addr[3] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (3*8));
723 addr[2] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (2*8));
724 addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (1*8));
725 addr[0] = (bfd_byte)(data >> (0*8));
726 #else
727 BFD_FAIL();
728 #endif
729
730 }
731
732 \f
733 /* Default implementation */
734
735 boolean
736 DEFUN(bfd_generic_get_section_contents, (abfd, section, location, offset, count),
737 bfd *abfd AND
738 sec_ptr section AND
739 PTR location AND
740 file_ptr offset AND
741 bfd_size_type count)
742 {
743 if (count == 0)
744 return true;
745 if ((bfd_size_type)(offset+count) > section->_raw_size
746 || bfd_seek(abfd, (file_ptr)(section->filepos + offset), SEEK_SET) == -1
747 || bfd_read(location, (bfd_size_type)1, count, abfd) != count)
748 return (false); /* on error */
749 return (true);
750 }
751
752 /* This generic function can only be used in implementations where creating
753 NEW sections is disallowed. It is useful in patching existing sections
754 in read-write files, though. See other set_section_contents functions
755 to see why it doesn't work for new sections. */
756 boolean
757 DEFUN(bfd_generic_set_section_contents, (abfd, section, location, offset, count),
758 bfd *abfd AND
759 sec_ptr section AND
760 PTR location AND
761 file_ptr offset AND
762 bfd_size_type count)
763 {
764 if (count == 0)
765 return true;
766 if ((bfd_size_type)(offset+count) > bfd_get_section_size_after_reloc(section)
767 || bfd_seek(abfd, (file_ptr)(section->filepos + offset), SEEK_SET) == -1
768 || bfd_write(location, (bfd_size_type)1, count, abfd) != count)
769 return (false); /* on error */
770 return (true);
771 }
772
773 /*
774 INTERNAL_FUNCTION
775 bfd_log2
776
777 DESCRIPTION
778 Return the log base 2 of the value supplied, rounded up. eg an
779 arg of 1025 would return 11.
780
781 SYNOPSIS
782 bfd_vma bfd_log2(bfd_vma x);
783 */
784
785 bfd_vma bfd_log2(x)
786 bfd_vma x;
787 {
788 bfd_vma result = 0;
789 while ( (bfd_vma)(1<< result) < x)
790 result++;
791 return result;
792 }
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