Wed Jun 28 18:04:42 1995 Steve Chamberlain <sac@slash.cygnus.com>
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / bfd / syms.c
1 /* Generic symbol-table support for the BFD library.
2 Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 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 /*
22 SECTION
23 Symbols
24
25 BFD tries to maintain as much symbol information as it can when
26 it moves information from file to file. BFD passes information
27 to applications though the <<asymbol>> structure. When the
28 application requests the symbol table, BFD reads the table in
29 the native form and translates parts of it into the internal
30 format. To maintain more than the information passed to
31 applications, some targets keep some information ``behind the
32 scenes'' in a structure only the particular back end knows
33 about. For example, the coff back end keeps the original
34 symbol table structure as well as the canonical structure when
35 a BFD is read in. On output, the coff back end can reconstruct
36 the output symbol table so that no information is lost, even
37 information unique to coff which BFD doesn't know or
38 understand. If a coff symbol table were read, but were written
39 through an a.out back end, all the coff specific information
40 would be lost. The symbol table of a BFD
41 is not necessarily read in until a canonicalize request is
42 made. Then the BFD back end fills in a table provided by the
43 application with pointers to the canonical information. To
44 output symbols, the application provides BFD with a table of
45 pointers to pointers to <<asymbol>>s. This allows applications
46 like the linker to output a symbol as it was read, since the ``behind
47 the scenes'' information will be still available.
48 @menu
49 @* Reading Symbols::
50 @* Writing Symbols::
51 @* typedef asymbol::
52 @* symbol handling functions::
53 @end menu
54
55 INODE
56 Reading Symbols, Writing Symbols, Symbols, Symbols
57 SUBSECTION
58 Reading symbols
59
60 There are two stages to reading a symbol table from a BFD:
61 allocating storage, and the actual reading process. This is an
62 excerpt from an application which reads the symbol table:
63
64 | long storage_needed;
65 | asymbol **symbol_table;
66 | long number_of_symbols;
67 | long i;
68 |
69 | storage_needed = bfd_get_symtab_upper_bound (abfd);
70 |
71 | if (storage_needed < 0)
72 | FAIL
73 |
74 | if (storage_needed == 0) {
75 | return ;
76 | }
77 | symbol_table = (asymbol **) xmalloc (storage_needed);
78 | ...
79 | number_of_symbols =
80 | bfd_canonicalize_symtab (abfd, symbol_table);
81 |
82 | if (number_of_symbols < 0)
83 | FAIL
84 |
85 | for (i = 0; i < number_of_symbols; i++) {
86 | process_symbol (symbol_table[i]);
87 | }
88
89 All storage for the symbols themselves is in an obstack
90 connected to the BFD; it is freed when the BFD is closed.
91
92
93 INODE
94 Writing Symbols, typedef asymbol, Reading Symbols, Symbols
95 SUBSECTION
96 Writing symbols
97
98 Writing of a symbol table is automatic when a BFD open for
99 writing is closed. The application attaches a vector of
100 pointers to pointers to symbols to the BFD being written, and
101 fills in the symbol count. The close and cleanup code reads
102 through the table provided and performs all the necessary
103 operations. The BFD output code must always be provided with an
104 ``owned'' symbol: one which has come from another BFD, or one
105 which has been created using <<bfd_make_empty_symbol>>. Here is an
106 example showing the creation of a symbol table with only one element:
107
108 | #include "bfd.h"
109 | main()
110 | {
111 | bfd *abfd;
112 | asymbol *ptrs[2];
113 | asymbol *new;
114 |
115 | abfd = bfd_openw("foo","a.out-sunos-big");
116 | bfd_set_format(abfd, bfd_object);
117 | new = bfd_make_empty_symbol(abfd);
118 | new->name = "dummy_symbol";
119 | new->section = bfd_make_section_old_way(abfd, ".text");
120 | new->flags = BSF_GLOBAL;
121 | new->value = 0x12345;
122 |
123 | ptrs[0] = new;
124 | ptrs[1] = (asymbol *)0;
125 |
126 | bfd_set_symtab(abfd, ptrs, 1);
127 | bfd_close(abfd);
128 | }
129 |
130 | ./makesym
131 | nm foo
132 | 00012345 A dummy_symbol
133
134 Many formats cannot represent arbitary symbol information; for
135 instance, the <<a.out>> object format does not allow an
136 arbitary number of sections. A symbol pointing to a section
137 which is not one of <<.text>>, <<.data>> or <<.bss>> cannot
138 be described.
139
140 */
141
142
143
144 /*
145 DOCDD
146 INODE
147 typedef asymbol, symbol handling functions, Writing Symbols, Symbols
148
149 */
150 /*
151 SUBSECTION
152 typedef asymbol
153
154 An <<asymbol>> has the form:
155
156 */
157
158 /*
159 CODE_FRAGMENT
160
161 .
162 .typedef struct symbol_cache_entry
163 .{
164 . {* A pointer to the BFD which owns the symbol. This information
165 . is necessary so that a back end can work out what additional
166 . information (invisible to the application writer) is carried
167 . with the symbol.
168 .
169 . This field is *almost* redundant, since you can use section->owner
170 . instead, except that some symbols point to the global sections
171 . bfd_{abs,com,und}_section. This could be fixed by making
172 . these globals be per-bfd (or per-target-flavor). FIXME. *}
173 .
174 . struct _bfd *the_bfd; {* Use bfd_asymbol_bfd(sym) to access this field. *}
175 .
176 . {* The text of the symbol. The name is left alone, and not copied; the
177 . application may not alter it. *}
178 . CONST char *name;
179 .
180 . {* The value of the symbol. This really should be a union of a
181 . numeric value with a pointer, since some flags indicate that
182 . a pointer to another symbol is stored here. *}
183 . symvalue value;
184 .
185 . {* Attributes of a symbol: *}
186 .
187 .#define BSF_NO_FLAGS 0x00
188 .
189 . {* The symbol has local scope; <<static>> in <<C>>. The value
190 . is the offset into the section of the data. *}
191 .#define BSF_LOCAL 0x01
192 .
193 . {* The symbol has global scope; initialized data in <<C>>. The
194 . value is the offset into the section of the data. *}
195 .#define BSF_GLOBAL 0x02
196 .
197 . {* The symbol has global scope and is exported. The value is
198 . the offset into the section of the data. *}
199 .#define BSF_EXPORT BSF_GLOBAL {* no real difference *}
200 .
201 . {* A normal C symbol would be one of:
202 . <<BSF_LOCAL>>, <<BSF_FORT_COMM>>, <<BSF_UNDEFINED>> or
203 . <<BSF_GLOBAL>> *}
204 .
205 . {* The symbol is a debugging record. The value has an arbitary
206 . meaning. *}
207 .#define BSF_DEBUGGING 0x08
208 .
209 . {* The symbol denotes a function entry point. Used in ELF,
210 . perhaps others someday. *}
211 .#define BSF_FUNCTION 0x10
212 .
213 . {* Used by the linker. *}
214 .#define BSF_KEEP 0x20
215 .#define BSF_KEEP_G 0x40
216 .
217 . {* A weak global symbol, overridable without warnings by
218 . a regular global symbol of the same name. *}
219 .#define BSF_WEAK 0x80
220 .
221 . {* This symbol was created to point to a section, e.g. ELF's
222 . STT_SECTION symbols. *}
223 .#define BSF_SECTION_SYM 0x100
224 .
225 . {* The symbol used to be a common symbol, but now it is
226 . allocated. *}
227 .#define BSF_OLD_COMMON 0x200
228 .
229 . {* The default value for common data. *}
230 .#define BFD_FORT_COMM_DEFAULT_VALUE 0
231 .
232 . {* In some files the type of a symbol sometimes alters its
233 . location in an output file - ie in coff a <<ISFCN>> symbol
234 . which is also <<C_EXT>> symbol appears where it was
235 . declared and not at the end of a section. This bit is set
236 . by the target BFD part to convey this information. *}
237 .
238 .#define BSF_NOT_AT_END 0x400
239 .
240 . {* Signal that the symbol is the label of constructor section. *}
241 .#define BSF_CONSTRUCTOR 0x800
242 .
243 . {* Signal that the symbol is a warning symbol. If the symbol
244 . is a warning symbol, then the value field (I know this is
245 . tacky) will point to the asymbol which when referenced will
246 . cause the warning. *}
247 .#define BSF_WARNING 0x1000
248 .
249 . {* Signal that the symbol is indirect. The value of the symbol
250 . is a pointer to an undefined asymbol which contains the
251 . name to use instead. *}
252 .#define BSF_INDIRECT 0x2000
253 .
254 . {* BSF_FILE marks symbols that contain a file name. This is used
255 . for ELF STT_FILE symbols. *}
256 .#define BSF_FILE 0x4000
257 .
258 . {* Symbol is from dynamic linking information. *}
259 .#define BSF_DYNAMIC 0x8000
260 .
261 . flagword flags;
262 .
263 . {* A pointer to the section to which this symbol is
264 . relative. This will always be non NULL, there are special
265 . sections for undefined and absolute symbols. *}
266 . struct sec *section;
267 .
268 . {* Back end special data. *}
269 . union
270 . {
271 . PTR p;
272 . bfd_vma i;
273 . } udata;
274 .
275 .} asymbol;
276 */
277
278 #include "bfd.h"
279 #include "sysdep.h"
280
281 #include "libbfd.h"
282 #include "aout/stab_gnu.h"
283
284 /*
285 DOCDD
286 INODE
287 symbol handling functions, , typedef asymbol, Symbols
288 SUBSECTION
289 Symbol handling functions
290 */
291
292 /*
293 FUNCTION
294 bfd_get_symtab_upper_bound
295
296 DESCRIPTION
297 Return the number of bytes required to store a vector of pointers
298 to <<asymbols>> for all the symbols in the BFD @var{abfd},
299 including a terminal NULL pointer. If there are no symbols in
300 the BFD, then return 0. If an error occurs, return -1.
301
302 .#define bfd_get_symtab_upper_bound(abfd) \
303 . BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_get_symtab_upper_bound, (abfd))
304
305 */
306
307 /*
308 FUNCTION
309 bfd_is_local_label
310
311 SYNOPSIS
312 boolean bfd_is_local_label(bfd *abfd, asymbol *sym);
313
314 DESCRIPTION
315 Return true if the given symbol @var{sym} in the BFD @var{abfd} is
316 a compiler generated local label, else return false.
317 .#define bfd_is_local_label(abfd, sym) \
318 . BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_is_local_label,(abfd, sym))
319 */
320
321 /*
322 FUNCTION
323 bfd_canonicalize_symtab
324
325 DESCRIPTION
326 Read the symbols from the BFD @var{abfd}, and fills in
327 the vector @var{location} with pointers to the symbols and
328 a trailing NULL.
329 Return the actual number of symbol pointers, not
330 including the NULL.
331
332
333 .#define bfd_canonicalize_symtab(abfd, location) \
334 . BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_canonicalize_symtab,\
335 . (abfd, location))
336
337 */
338
339
340 /*
341 FUNCTION
342 bfd_set_symtab
343
344 SYNOPSIS
345 boolean bfd_set_symtab (bfd *abfd, asymbol **location, unsigned int count);
346
347 DESCRIPTION
348 Arrange that when the output BFD @var{abfd} is closed,
349 the table @var{location} of @var{count} pointers to symbols
350 will be written.
351 */
352
353 boolean
354 bfd_set_symtab (abfd, location, symcount)
355 bfd *abfd;
356 asymbol **location;
357 unsigned int symcount;
358 {
359 if ((abfd->format != bfd_object) || (bfd_read_p (abfd)))
360 {
361 bfd_set_error (bfd_error_invalid_operation);
362 return false;
363 }
364
365 bfd_get_outsymbols (abfd) = location;
366 bfd_get_symcount (abfd) = symcount;
367 return true;
368 }
369
370 /*
371 FUNCTION
372 bfd_print_symbol_vandf
373
374 SYNOPSIS
375 void bfd_print_symbol_vandf(PTR file, asymbol *symbol);
376
377 DESCRIPTION
378 Print the value and flags of the @var{symbol} supplied to the
379 stream @var{file}.
380 */
381 void
382 bfd_print_symbol_vandf (arg, symbol)
383 PTR arg;
384 asymbol *symbol;
385 {
386 FILE *file = (FILE *) arg;
387 flagword type = symbol->flags;
388 if (symbol->section != (asection *) NULL)
389 {
390 fprintf_vma (file, symbol->value + symbol->section->vma);
391 }
392 else
393 {
394 fprintf_vma (file, symbol->value);
395 }
396
397 /* This presumes that a symbol can not be both BSF_DEBUGGING and
398 BSF_DYNAMIC, nor both BSF_FUNCTION and BSF_FILE. */
399 fprintf (file, " %c%c%c%c%c%c%c",
400 ((type & BSF_LOCAL)
401 ? (type & BSF_GLOBAL) ? '!' : 'l'
402 : (type & BSF_GLOBAL) ? 'g' : ' '),
403 (type & BSF_WEAK) ? 'w' : ' ',
404 (type & BSF_CONSTRUCTOR) ? 'C' : ' ',
405 (type & BSF_WARNING) ? 'W' : ' ',
406 (type & BSF_INDIRECT) ? 'I' : ' ',
407 (type & BSF_DEBUGGING) ? 'd' : (type & BSF_DYNAMIC) ? 'D' : ' ',
408 (type & BSF_FUNCTION) ? 'F' : (type & BSF_FILE) ? 'f' : ' ');
409 }
410
411
412 /*
413 FUNCTION
414 bfd_make_empty_symbol
415
416 DESCRIPTION
417 Create a new <<asymbol>> structure for the BFD @var{abfd}
418 and return a pointer to it.
419
420 This routine is necessary because each back end has private
421 information surrounding the <<asymbol>>. Building your own
422 <<asymbol>> and pointing to it will not create the private
423 information, and will cause problems later on.
424
425 .#define bfd_make_empty_symbol(abfd) \
426 . BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_make_empty_symbol, (abfd))
427 */
428
429 /*
430 FUNCTION
431 bfd_make_debug_symbol
432
433 DESCRIPTION
434 Create a new <<asymbol>> structure for the BFD @var{abfd},
435 to be used as a debugging symbol. Further details of its use have
436 yet to be worked out.
437
438 .#define bfd_make_debug_symbol(abfd,ptr,size) \
439 . BFD_SEND (abfd, _bfd_make_debug_symbol, (abfd, ptr, size))
440 */
441
442 struct section_to_type
443 {
444 CONST char *section;
445 char type;
446 };
447
448 /* Map section names to POSIX/BSD single-character symbol types.
449 This table is probably incomplete. It is sorted for convenience of
450 adding entries. Since it is so short, a linear search is used. */
451 static CONST struct section_to_type stt[] =
452 {
453 {"*DEBUG*", 'N'},
454 {".bss", 'b'},
455 {".data", 'd'},
456 {".rdata", 'r'}, /* Read only data. */
457 {".rodata", 'r'}, /* Read only data. */
458 {".sbss", 's'}, /* Small BSS (uninitialized data). */
459 {".scommon", 'c'}, /* Small common. */
460 {".sdata", 'g'}, /* Small initialized data. */
461 {".text", 't'},
462 {0, 0}
463 };
464
465 /* Return the single-character symbol type corresponding to
466 section S, or '?' for an unknown COFF section.
467
468 Check for any leading string which matches, so .text5 returns
469 't' as well as .text */
470
471 static char
472 coff_section_type (s)
473 char *s;
474 {
475 CONST struct section_to_type *t;
476
477 for (t = &stt[0]; t->section; t++)
478 if (!strncmp (s, t->section, strlen (t->section)))
479 return t->type;
480
481 return '?';
482 }
483
484 #ifndef islower
485 #define islower(c) ((c) >= 'a' && (c) <= 'z')
486 #endif
487 #ifndef toupper
488 #define toupper(c) (islower(c) ? ((c) & ~0x20) : (c))
489 #endif
490
491 /*
492 FUNCTION
493 bfd_decode_symclass
494
495 DESCRIPTION
496 Return a character corresponding to the symbol
497 class of @var{symbol}, or '?' for an unknown class.
498
499 SYNOPSIS
500 int bfd_decode_symclass(asymbol *symbol);
501 */
502 int
503 bfd_decode_symclass (symbol)
504 asymbol *symbol;
505 {
506 char c;
507
508 if (bfd_is_com_section (symbol->section))
509 return 'C';
510 if (bfd_is_und_section (symbol->section))
511 return 'U';
512 if (bfd_is_ind_section (symbol->section))
513 return 'I';
514 if (symbol->flags & BSF_WEAK)
515 return 'W';
516 if (!(symbol->flags & (BSF_GLOBAL | BSF_LOCAL)))
517 return '?';
518
519 if (bfd_is_abs_section (symbol->section))
520 c = 'a';
521 else if (symbol->section)
522 c = coff_section_type (symbol->section->name);
523 else
524 return '?';
525 if (symbol->flags & BSF_GLOBAL)
526 c = toupper (c);
527 return c;
528
529 /* We don't have to handle these cases just yet, but we will soon:
530 N_SETV: 'v';
531 N_SETA: 'l';
532 N_SETT: 'x';
533 N_SETD: 'z';
534 N_SETB: 's';
535 N_INDR: 'i';
536 */
537 }
538
539 /*
540 FUNCTION
541 bfd_symbol_info
542
543 DESCRIPTION
544 Fill in the basic info about symbol that nm needs.
545 Additional info may be added by the back-ends after
546 calling this function.
547
548 SYNOPSIS
549 void bfd_symbol_info(asymbol *symbol, symbol_info *ret);
550 */
551
552 void
553 bfd_symbol_info (symbol, ret)
554 asymbol *symbol;
555 symbol_info *ret;
556 {
557 ret->type = bfd_decode_symclass (symbol);
558 if (ret->type != 'U')
559 ret->value = symbol->value + symbol->section->vma;
560 else
561 ret->value = 0;
562 ret->name = symbol->name;
563 }
564
565 void
566 bfd_symbol_is_absolute ()
567 {
568 abort ();
569 }
570
571 /*
572 FUNCTION
573 bfd_copy_private_symbol_data
574
575 SYNOPSIS
576 boolean bfd_copy_private_symbol_data(bfd *ibfd, asymbol *isym, bfd *obfd, asymbol *osym);
577
578 DESCRIPTION
579 Copy private symbol information from @var{isym} in the BFD
580 @var{ibfd} to the symbol @var{osym} in the BFD @var{obfd}.
581 Return <<true>> on success, <<false>> on error. Possible error
582 returns are:
583
584 o <<bfd_error_no_memory>> -
585 Not enough memory exists to create private data for @var{osec}.
586
587 .#define bfd_copy_private_symbol_data(ibfd, isymbol, obfd, osymbol) \
588 . BFD_SEND (ibfd, _bfd_copy_private_symbol_data, \
589 . (ibfd, isymbol, obfd, osymbol))
590
591 */
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