gdb/
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / gdbtypes.h
1 /* Internal type definitions for GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001,
4 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
5 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 Contributed by Cygnus Support, using pieces from other GDB modules.
8
9 This file is part of GDB.
10
11 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
14 (at your option) any later version.
15
16 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 GNU General Public License for more details.
20
21 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
23
24 #if !defined (GDBTYPES_H)
25 #define GDBTYPES_H 1
26
27 #include "hashtab.h"
28
29 /* Forward declarations for prototypes. */
30 struct field;
31 struct block;
32 struct value_print_options;
33 struct language_defn;
34
35 /* Some macros for char-based bitfields. */
36
37 #define B_SET(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] |= (1 << ((x)&7)))
38 #define B_CLR(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] &= ~(1 << ((x)&7)))
39 #define B_TST(a,x) ((a)[(x)>>3] & (1 << ((x)&7)))
40 #define B_TYPE unsigned char
41 #define B_BYTES(x) ( 1 + ((x)>>3) )
42 #define B_CLRALL(a,x) memset ((a), 0, B_BYTES(x))
43
44 /* Different kinds of data types are distinguished by the `code' field. */
45
46 enum type_code
47 {
48 TYPE_CODE_UNDEF, /* Not used; catches errors */
49 TYPE_CODE_PTR, /* Pointer type */
50
51 /* Array type with lower & upper bounds.
52
53 Regardless of the language, GDB represents multidimensional
54 array types the way C does: as arrays of arrays. So an
55 instance of a GDB array type T can always be seen as a series
56 of instances of TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (T) laid out sequentially in
57 memory.
58
59 Row-major languages like C lay out multi-dimensional arrays so
60 that incrementing the rightmost index in a subscripting
61 expression results in the smallest change in the address of the
62 element referred to. Column-major languages like Fortran lay
63 them out so that incrementing the leftmost index results in the
64 smallest change.
65
66 This means that, in column-major languages, working our way
67 from type to target type corresponds to working through indices
68 from right to left, not left to right. */
69 TYPE_CODE_ARRAY,
70
71 TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, /* C struct or Pascal record */
72 TYPE_CODE_UNION, /* C union or Pascal variant part */
73 TYPE_CODE_ENUM, /* Enumeration type */
74 TYPE_CODE_FLAGS, /* Bit flags type */
75 TYPE_CODE_FUNC, /* Function type */
76 TYPE_CODE_INT, /* Integer type */
77
78 /* Floating type. This is *NOT* a complex type. Beware, there are parts
79 of GDB which bogusly assume that TYPE_CODE_FLT can mean complex. */
80 TYPE_CODE_FLT,
81
82 /* Void type. The length field specifies the length (probably always
83 one) which is used in pointer arithmetic involving pointers to
84 this type, but actually dereferencing such a pointer is invalid;
85 a void type has no length and no actual representation in memory
86 or registers. A pointer to a void type is a generic pointer. */
87 TYPE_CODE_VOID,
88
89 TYPE_CODE_SET, /* Pascal sets */
90 TYPE_CODE_RANGE, /* Range (integers within spec'd bounds) */
91
92 /* A string type which is like an array of character but prints
93 differently (at least for (the deleted) CHILL). It does not
94 contain a length field as Pascal strings (for many Pascals,
95 anyway) do; if we want to deal with such strings, we should use
96 a new type code. */
97 TYPE_CODE_STRING,
98
99 /* String of bits; like TYPE_CODE_SET but prints differently (at
100 least for (the deleted) CHILL). */
101 TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING,
102
103 /* Unknown type. The length field is valid if we were able to
104 deduce that much about the type, or 0 if we don't even know that. */
105 TYPE_CODE_ERROR,
106
107 /* C++ */
108 TYPE_CODE_METHOD, /* Method type */
109
110 /* Pointer-to-member-function type. This describes how to access a
111 particular member function of a class (possibly a virtual
112 member function). The representation may vary between different
113 C++ ABIs. */
114 TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR,
115
116 /* Pointer-to-member type. This is the offset within a class to some
117 particular data member. The only currently supported representation
118 uses an unbiased offset, with -1 representing NULL; this is used
119 by the Itanium C++ ABI (used by GCC on all platforms). */
120 TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR,
121
122 TYPE_CODE_REF, /* C++ Reference types */
123
124 TYPE_CODE_CHAR, /* *real* character type */
125
126 /* Boolean type. 0 is false, 1 is true, and other values are non-boolean
127 (e.g. FORTRAN "logical" used as unsigned int). */
128 TYPE_CODE_BOOL,
129
130 /* Fortran */
131 TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX, /* Complex float */
132
133 TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF,
134
135 TYPE_CODE_NAMESPACE, /* C++ namespace. */
136
137 TYPE_CODE_DECFLOAT, /* Decimal floating point. */
138
139 TYPE_CODE_MODULE, /* Fortran module. */
140
141 /* Internal function type. */
142 TYPE_CODE_INTERNAL_FUNCTION
143 };
144
145 /* For now allow source to use TYPE_CODE_CLASS for C++ classes, as an
146 alias for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT. This is for DWARF, which has a distinct
147 "class" attribute. Perhaps we should actually have a separate TYPE_CODE
148 so that we can print "class" or "struct" depending on what the debug
149 info said. It's not clear we should bother. */
150
151 #define TYPE_CODE_CLASS TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
152
153 /* Some constants representing each bit field in the main_type. See
154 the bit-field-specific macros, below, for documentation of each
155 constant in this enum. These enum values are only used with
156 init_type. Note that the values are chosen not to conflict with
157 type_instance_flag_value; this lets init_type error-check its
158 input. */
159
160 enum type_flag_value
161 {
162 TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED = (1 << 6),
163 TYPE_FLAG_NOSIGN = (1 << 7),
164 TYPE_FLAG_STUB = (1 << 8),
165 TYPE_FLAG_TARGET_STUB = (1 << 9),
166 TYPE_FLAG_STATIC = (1 << 10),
167 TYPE_FLAG_PROTOTYPED = (1 << 11),
168 TYPE_FLAG_INCOMPLETE = (1 << 12),
169 TYPE_FLAG_VARARGS = (1 << 13),
170 TYPE_FLAG_VECTOR = (1 << 14),
171 TYPE_FLAG_FIXED_INSTANCE = (1 << 15),
172 TYPE_FLAG_STUB_SUPPORTED = (1 << 16),
173 TYPE_FLAG_NOTTEXT = (1 << 17),
174
175 /* Used for error-checking. */
176 TYPE_FLAG_MIN = TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED
177 };
178
179 /* Some bits for the type's instance_flags word. See the macros below
180 for documentation on each bit. Note that if you add a value here,
181 you must update the enum type_flag_value as well. */
182 enum type_instance_flag_value
183 {
184 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CONST = (1 << 0),
185 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_VOLATILE = (1 << 1),
186 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CODE_SPACE = (1 << 2),
187 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_DATA_SPACE = (1 << 3),
188 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1 = (1 << 4),
189 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_2 = (1 << 5)
190 };
191
192 /* Unsigned integer type. If this is not set for a TYPE_CODE_INT, the
193 type is signed (unless TYPE_FLAG_NOSIGN (below) is set). */
194
195 #define TYPE_UNSIGNED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_unsigned)
196
197 /* No sign for this type. In C++, "char", "signed char", and "unsigned
198 char" are distinct types; so we need an extra flag to indicate the
199 absence of a sign! */
200
201 #define TYPE_NOSIGN(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_nosign)
202
203 /* This appears in a type's flags word if it is a stub type (e.g., if
204 someone referenced a type that wasn't defined in a source file
205 via (struct sir_not_appearing_in_this_film *)). */
206
207 #define TYPE_STUB(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_stub)
208
209 /* The target type of this type is a stub type, and this type needs to
210 be updated if it gets un-stubbed in check_typedef.
211 Used for arrays and ranges, in which TYPE_LENGTH of the array/range
212 gets set based on the TYPE_LENGTH of the target type.
213 Also, set for TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF. */
214
215 #define TYPE_TARGET_STUB(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_target_stub)
216
217 /* Static type. If this is set, the corresponding type had
218 * a static modifier.
219 * Note: This may be unnecessary, since static data members
220 * are indicated by other means (bitpos == -1)
221 */
222
223 #define TYPE_STATIC(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_static)
224
225 /* This is a function type which appears to have a prototype. We need this
226 for function calls in order to tell us if it's necessary to coerce the args,
227 or to just do the standard conversions. This is used with a short field. */
228
229 #define TYPE_PROTOTYPED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_prototyped)
230
231 /* This flag is used to indicate that processing for this type
232 is incomplete.
233
234 (Mostly intended for HP platforms, where class methods, for
235 instance, can be encountered before their classes in the debug
236 info; the incomplete type has to be marked so that the class and
237 the method can be assigned correct types.) */
238
239 #define TYPE_INCOMPLETE(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_incomplete)
240
241 /* FIXME drow/2002-06-03: Only used for methods, but applies as well
242 to functions. */
243
244 #define TYPE_VARARGS(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_varargs)
245
246 /* Identify a vector type. Gcc is handling this by adding an extra
247 attribute to the array type. We slurp that in as a new flag of a
248 type. This is used only in dwarf2read.c. */
249 #define TYPE_VECTOR(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_vector)
250
251 /* The debugging formats (especially STABS) do not contain enough information
252 to represent all Ada types---especially those whose size depends on
253 dynamic quantities. Therefore, the GNAT Ada compiler includes
254 extra information in the form of additional type definitions
255 connected by naming conventions. This flag indicates that the
256 type is an ordinary (unencoded) GDB type that has been created from
257 the necessary run-time information, and does not need further
258 interpretation. Optionally marks ordinary, fixed-size GDB type. */
259
260 #define TYPE_FIXED_INSTANCE(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_fixed_instance)
261
262 /* This debug target supports TYPE_STUB(t). In the unsupported case we have to
263 rely on NFIELDS to be zero etc., see TYPE_IS_OPAQUE ().
264 TYPE_STUB(t) with !TYPE_STUB_SUPPORTED(t) may exist if we only guessed
265 the TYPE_STUB(t) value (see dwarfread.c). */
266
267 #define TYPE_STUB_SUPPORTED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_stub_supported)
268
269 /* Not textual. By default, GDB treats all single byte integers as
270 characters (or elements of strings) unless this flag is set. */
271
272 #define TYPE_NOTTEXT(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_nottext)
273
274 /* Type owner. If TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED is true, the type is owned by
275 the objfile retrieved as TYPE_OBJFILE. Otherweise, the type is
276 owned by an architecture; TYPE_OBJFILE is NULL in this case. */
277
278 #define TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_objfile_owned)
279 #define TYPE_OWNER(t) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(t)->owner
280 #define TYPE_OBJFILE(t) (TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED(t)? TYPE_OWNER(t).objfile : NULL)
281
282 /* True if this type was declared using the "class" keyword. This is
283 only valid for C++ structure types, and only used for displaying
284 the type. If false, the structure was declared as a "struct". */
285
286 #define TYPE_DECLARED_CLASS(t) (TYPE_MAIN_TYPE (t)->flag_declared_class)
287
288 /* Constant type. If this is set, the corresponding type has a
289 * const modifier.
290 */
291
292 #define TYPE_CONST(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CONST)
293
294 /* Volatile type. If this is set, the corresponding type has a
295 * volatile modifier.
296 */
297
298 #define TYPE_VOLATILE(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_VOLATILE)
299
300 /* Instruction-space delimited type. This is for Harvard architectures
301 which have separate instruction and data address spaces (and perhaps
302 others).
303
304 GDB usually defines a flat address space that is a superset of the
305 architecture's two (or more) address spaces, but this is an extension
306 of the architecture's model.
307
308 If TYPE_FLAG_INST is set, an object of the corresponding type
309 resides in instruction memory, even if its address (in the extended
310 flat address space) does not reflect this.
311
312 Similarly, if TYPE_FLAG_DATA is set, then an object of the
313 corresponding type resides in the data memory space, even if
314 this is not indicated by its (flat address space) address.
315
316 If neither flag is set, the default space for functions / methods
317 is instruction space, and for data objects is data memory. */
318
319 #define TYPE_CODE_SPACE(t) \
320 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_CODE_SPACE)
321
322 #define TYPE_DATA_SPACE(t) \
323 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (t) & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_DATA_SPACE)
324
325 /* Address class flags. Some environments provide for pointers whose
326 size is different from that of a normal pointer or address types
327 where the bits are interpreted differently than normal addresses. The
328 TYPE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_n flags may be used in target specific
329 ways to represent these different types of address classes. */
330 #define TYPE_ADDRESS_CLASS_1(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(t) \
331 & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1)
332 #define TYPE_ADDRESS_CLASS_2(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(t) \
333 & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_2)
334 #define TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_ALL \
335 (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_1 | TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_2)
336 #define TYPE_ADDRESS_CLASS_ALL(t) (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(t) \
337 & TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAG_ADDRESS_CLASS_ALL)
338
339 /* Determine which field of the union main_type.fields[x].loc is used. */
340
341 enum field_loc_kind
342 {
343 FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS, /* bitpos */
344 FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSADDR, /* physaddr */
345 FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSNAME, /* physname */
346 FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK /* dwarf_block */
347 };
348
349 /* A discriminant to determine which field in the main_type.type_specific
350 union is being used, if any.
351
352 For types such as TYPE_CODE_FLT or TYPE_CODE_FUNC, the use of this
353 discriminant is really redundant, as we know from the type code
354 which field is going to be used. As such, it would be possible to
355 reduce the size of this enum in order to save a bit or two for
356 other fields of struct main_type. But, since we still have extra
357 room , and for the sake of clarity and consistency, we treat all fields
358 of the union the same way. */
359
360 enum type_specific_kind
361 {
362 TYPE_SPECIFIC_NONE,
363 TYPE_SPECIFIC_CPLUS_STUFF,
364 TYPE_SPECIFIC_GNAT_STUFF,
365 TYPE_SPECIFIC_FLOATFORMAT,
366 TYPE_SPECIFIC_CALLING_CONVENTION
367 };
368
369 /* This structure is space-critical.
370 Its layout has been tweaked to reduce the space used. */
371
372 struct main_type
373 {
374 /* Code for kind of type */
375
376 ENUM_BITFIELD(type_code) code : 8;
377
378 /* Flags about this type. These fields appear at this location
379 because they packs nicely here. See the TYPE_* macros for
380 documentation about these fields. */
381
382 unsigned int flag_unsigned : 1;
383 unsigned int flag_nosign : 1;
384 unsigned int flag_stub : 1;
385 unsigned int flag_target_stub : 1;
386 unsigned int flag_static : 1;
387 unsigned int flag_prototyped : 1;
388 unsigned int flag_incomplete : 1;
389 unsigned int flag_varargs : 1;
390 unsigned int flag_vector : 1;
391 unsigned int flag_stub_supported : 1;
392 unsigned int flag_nottext : 1;
393 unsigned int flag_fixed_instance : 1;
394 unsigned int flag_objfile_owned : 1;
395 /* True if this type was declared with "class" rather than
396 "struct". */
397 unsigned int flag_declared_class : 1;
398
399 /* A discriminant telling us which field of the type_specific union
400 is being used for this type, if any. */
401 ENUM_BITFIELD(type_specific_kind) type_specific_field : 3;
402
403 /* Number of fields described for this type. This field appears at
404 this location because it packs nicely here. */
405
406 short nfields;
407
408 /* Field number of the virtual function table pointer in
409 VPTR_BASETYPE. If -1, we were unable to find the virtual
410 function table pointer in initial symbol reading, and
411 get_vptr_fieldno should be called to find it if possible.
412 get_vptr_fieldno will update this field if possible.
413 Otherwise the value is left at -1.
414
415 Unused if this type does not have virtual functions.
416
417 This field appears at this location because it packs nicely here. */
418
419 short vptr_fieldno;
420
421 /* Name of this type, or NULL if none.
422
423 This is used for printing only, except by poorly designed C++ code.
424 For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the VAR_DOMAIN. */
425
426 char *name;
427
428 /* Tag name for this type, or NULL if none. This means that the
429 name of the type consists of a keyword followed by the tag name.
430 Which keyword is determined by the type code ("struct" for
431 TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, etc.). As far as I know C/C++ are the only languages
432 with this feature.
433
434 This is used for printing only, except by poorly designed C++ code.
435 For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the STRUCT_DOMAIN.
436 One more legitimate use is that if TYPE_FLAG_STUB is set, this is
437 the name to use to look for definitions in other files. */
438
439 char *tag_name;
440
441 /* Every type is now associated with a particular objfile, and the
442 type is allocated on the objfile_obstack for that objfile. One problem
443 however, is that there are times when gdb allocates new types while
444 it is not in the process of reading symbols from a particular objfile.
445 Fortunately, these happen when the type being created is a derived
446 type of an existing type, such as in lookup_pointer_type(). So
447 we can just allocate the new type using the same objfile as the
448 existing type, but to do this we need a backpointer to the objfile
449 from the existing type. Yes this is somewhat ugly, but without
450 major overhaul of the internal type system, it can't be avoided
451 for now. */
452
453 union type_owner
454 {
455 struct objfile *objfile;
456 struct gdbarch *gdbarch;
457 } owner;
458
459 /* For a pointer type, describes the type of object pointed to.
460 For an array type, describes the type of the elements.
461 For a function or method type, describes the type of the return value.
462 For a range type, describes the type of the full range.
463 For a complex type, describes the type of each coordinate.
464 For a special record or union type encoding a dynamic-sized type
465 in GNAT, a memoized pointer to a corresponding static version of
466 the type.
467 Unused otherwise. */
468
469 struct type *target_type;
470
471 /* For structure and union types, a description of each field.
472 For set and pascal array types, there is one "field",
473 whose type is the domain type of the set or array.
474 For range types, there are two "fields",
475 the minimum and maximum values (both inclusive).
476 For enum types, each possible value is described by one "field".
477 For a function or method type, a "field" for each parameter.
478 For C++ classes, there is one field for each base class (if it is
479 a derived class) plus one field for each class data member. Member
480 functions are recorded elsewhere.
481
482 Using a pointer to a separate array of fields
483 allows all types to have the same size, which is useful
484 because we can allocate the space for a type before
485 we know what to put in it. */
486
487 union
488 {
489 struct field
490 {
491 union field_location
492 {
493 /* Position of this field, counting in bits from start of
494 containing structure.
495 For gdbarch_bits_big_endian=1 targets, it is the bit offset to the MSB.
496 For gdbarch_bits_big_endian=0 targets, it is the bit offset to the LSB.
497 For a range bound or enum value, this is the value itself. */
498
499 int bitpos;
500
501 /* For a static field, if TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_HAS_ADDR then physaddr
502 is the location (in the target) of the static field.
503 Otherwise, physname is the mangled label of the static field. */
504
505 CORE_ADDR physaddr;
506 char *physname;
507
508 /* The field location can be computed by evaluating the following DWARF
509 block. This can be used in Fortran variable-length arrays, for
510 instance. */
511
512 struct dwarf2_locexpr_baton *dwarf_block;
513 }
514 loc;
515
516 /* For a function or member type, this is 1 if the argument is marked
517 artificial. Artificial arguments should not be shown to the
518 user. For TYPE_CODE_RANGE it is set if the specific bound is not
519 defined. */
520 unsigned int artificial : 1;
521
522 /* Discriminant for union field_location. */
523 ENUM_BITFIELD(field_loc_kind) loc_kind : 2;
524
525 /* Size of this field, in bits, or zero if not packed.
526 If non-zero in an array type, indicates the element size in
527 bits (used only in Ada at the moment).
528 For an unpacked field, the field's type's length
529 says how many bytes the field occupies. */
530
531 unsigned int bitsize : 29;
532
533 /* In a struct or union type, type of this field.
534 In a function or member type, type of this argument.
535 In an array type, the domain-type of the array. */
536
537 struct type *type;
538
539 /* Name of field, value or argument.
540 NULL for range bounds, array domains, and member function
541 arguments. */
542
543 char *name;
544 } *fields;
545
546 /* Union member used for range types. */
547
548 struct range_bounds
549 {
550 /* Low bound of range. */
551
552 LONGEST low;
553
554 /* High bound of range. */
555
556 LONGEST high;
557
558 /* Flags indicating whether the values of low and high are
559 valid. When true, the respective range value is
560 undefined. Currently used only for FORTRAN arrays. */
561
562 char low_undefined;
563 char high_undefined;
564
565 } *bounds;
566
567 } flds_bnds;
568
569 /* For types with virtual functions (TYPE_CODE_STRUCT), VPTR_BASETYPE
570 is the base class which defined the virtual function table pointer.
571
572 For types that are pointer to member types (TYPE_CODE_METHODPTR,
573 TYPE_CODE_MEMBERPTR), VPTR_BASETYPE is the type that this pointer
574 is a member of.
575
576 For method types (TYPE_CODE_METHOD), VPTR_BASETYPE is the aggregate
577 type that contains the method.
578
579 Unused otherwise. */
580
581 struct type *vptr_basetype;
582
583 /* Slot to point to additional language-specific fields of this type. */
584
585 union type_specific
586 {
587 /* CPLUS_STUFF is for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT. It is initialized to point to
588 cplus_struct_default, a default static instance of a struct
589 cplus_struct_type. */
590
591 struct cplus_struct_type *cplus_stuff;
592
593 /* GNAT_STUFF is for types for which the GNAT Ada compiler
594 provides additional information. */
595 struct gnat_aux_type *gnat_stuff;
596
597 /* FLOATFORMAT is for TYPE_CODE_FLT. It is a pointer to two
598 floatformat objects that describe the floating-point value
599 that resides within the type. The first is for big endian
600 targets and the second is for little endian targets. */
601
602 const struct floatformat **floatformat;
603
604 /* For TYPE_CODE_FUNC types, the calling convention for targets
605 supporting multiple ABIs. Right now this is only fetched from
606 the Dwarf-2 DW_AT_calling_convention attribute. */
607 unsigned calling_convention;
608 } type_specific;
609 };
610
611 /* A ``struct type'' describes a particular instance of a type, with
612 some particular qualification. */
613 struct type
614 {
615 /* Type that is a pointer to this type.
616 NULL if no such pointer-to type is known yet.
617 The debugger may add the address of such a type
618 if it has to construct one later. */
619
620 struct type *pointer_type;
621
622 /* C++: also need a reference type. */
623
624 struct type *reference_type;
625
626 /* Variant chain. This points to a type that differs from this one only
627 in qualifiers and length. Currently, the possible qualifiers are
628 const, volatile, code-space, data-space, and address class. The
629 length may differ only when one of the address class flags are set.
630 The variants are linked in a circular ring and share MAIN_TYPE. */
631 struct type *chain;
632
633 /* Flags specific to this instance of the type, indicating where
634 on the ring we are. */
635 int instance_flags;
636
637 /* Length of storage for a value of this type. This is what
638 sizeof(type) would return; use it for address arithmetic,
639 memory reads and writes, etc. This size includes padding. For
640 example, an i386 extended-precision floating point value really
641 only occupies ten bytes, but most ABI's declare its size to be
642 12 bytes, to preserve alignment. A `struct type' representing
643 such a floating-point type would have a `length' value of 12,
644 even though the last two bytes are unused.
645
646 There's a bit of a host/target mess here, if you're concerned
647 about machines whose bytes aren't eight bits long, or who don't
648 have byte-addressed memory. Various places pass this to memcpy
649 and such, meaning it must be in units of host bytes. Various
650 other places expect they can calculate addresses by adding it
651 and such, meaning it must be in units of target bytes. For
652 some DSP targets, in which HOST_CHAR_BIT will (presumably) be 8
653 and TARGET_CHAR_BIT will be (say) 32, this is a problem.
654
655 One fix would be to make this field in bits (requiring that it
656 always be a multiple of HOST_CHAR_BIT and TARGET_CHAR_BIT) ---
657 the other choice would be to make it consistently in units of
658 HOST_CHAR_BIT. However, this would still fail to address
659 machines based on a ternary or decimal representation. */
660
661 unsigned length;
662
663 /* Core type, shared by a group of qualified types. */
664 struct main_type *main_type;
665 };
666
667 #define NULL_TYPE ((struct type *) 0)
668
669 /* C++ language-specific information for TYPE_CODE_STRUCT and TYPE_CODE_UNION
670 nodes. */
671
672 struct cplus_struct_type
673 {
674 /* Number of base classes this type derives from. The baseclasses are
675 stored in the first N_BASECLASSES fields (i.e. the `fields' field of
676 the struct type). I think only the `type' field of such a field has
677 any meaning. */
678
679 short n_baseclasses;
680
681 /* Number of methods with unique names. All overloaded methods with
682 the same name count only once. */
683
684 short nfn_fields;
685
686 /* Number of methods described for this type, not including the
687 methods that it derives from. */
688
689 short nfn_fields_total;
690
691 /* One if this struct is a dynamic class, as defined by the
692 Itanium C++ ABI: if it requires a virtual table pointer,
693 because it or any of its base classes have one or more virtual
694 member functions or virtual base classes. Minus one if not
695 dynamic. Zero if not yet computed. */
696 int is_dynamic : 2;
697
698 /* For derived classes, the number of base classes is given by n_baseclasses
699 and virtual_field_bits is a bit vector containing one bit per base class.
700 If the base class is virtual, the corresponding bit will be set.
701 I.E, given:
702
703 class A{};
704 class B{};
705 class C : public B, public virtual A {};
706
707 B is a baseclass of C; A is a virtual baseclass for C.
708 This is a C++ 2.0 language feature. */
709
710 B_TYPE *virtual_field_bits;
711
712 /* For classes with private fields, the number of fields is given by
713 nfields and private_field_bits is a bit vector containing one bit
714 per field.
715 If the field is private, the corresponding bit will be set. */
716
717 B_TYPE *private_field_bits;
718
719 /* For classes with protected fields, the number of fields is given by
720 nfields and protected_field_bits is a bit vector containing one bit
721 per field.
722 If the field is private, the corresponding bit will be set. */
723
724 B_TYPE *protected_field_bits;
725
726 /* for classes with fields to be ignored, either this is optimized out
727 or this field has length 0 */
728
729 B_TYPE *ignore_field_bits;
730
731 /* For classes, structures, and unions, a description of each field,
732 which consists of an overloaded name, followed by the types of
733 arguments that the method expects, and then the name after it
734 has been renamed to make it distinct.
735
736 fn_fieldlists points to an array of nfn_fields of these. */
737
738 struct fn_fieldlist
739 {
740
741 /* The overloaded name. */
742
743 char *name;
744
745 /* The number of methods with this name. */
746
747 int length;
748
749 /* The list of methods. */
750
751 struct fn_field
752 {
753
754 /* If is_stub is clear, this is the mangled name which we can
755 look up to find the address of the method (FIXME: it would
756 be cleaner to have a pointer to the struct symbol here
757 instead). */
758
759 /* If is_stub is set, this is the portion of the mangled
760 name which specifies the arguments. For example, "ii",
761 if there are two int arguments, or "" if there are no
762 arguments. See gdb_mangle_name for the conversion from this
763 format to the one used if is_stub is clear. */
764
765 char *physname;
766
767 /* The function type for the method.
768 (This comment used to say "The return value of the method",
769 but that's wrong. The function type
770 is expected here, i.e. something with TYPE_CODE_FUNC,
771 and *not* the return-value type). */
772
773 struct type *type;
774
775 /* For virtual functions.
776 First baseclass that defines this virtual function. */
777
778 struct type *fcontext;
779
780 /* Attributes. */
781
782 unsigned int is_const:1;
783 unsigned int is_volatile:1;
784 unsigned int is_private:1;
785 unsigned int is_protected:1;
786 unsigned int is_public:1;
787 unsigned int is_abstract:1;
788 unsigned int is_static:1;
789 unsigned int is_final:1;
790 unsigned int is_synchronized:1;
791 unsigned int is_native:1;
792 unsigned int is_artificial:1;
793
794 /* A stub method only has some fields valid (but they are enough
795 to reconstruct the rest of the fields). */
796 unsigned int is_stub:1;
797
798 /* Unused. */
799 unsigned int dummy:4;
800
801 /* Index into that baseclass's virtual function table,
802 minus 2; else if static: VOFFSET_STATIC; else: 0. */
803
804 unsigned int voffset:16;
805
806 #define VOFFSET_STATIC 1
807
808 }
809 *fn_fields;
810
811 }
812 *fn_fieldlists;
813
814 /* Pointer to information about enclosing scope, if this is a
815 * local type. If it is not a local type, this is NULL
816 */
817 struct local_type_info
818 {
819 char *file;
820 int line;
821 }
822 *localtype_ptr;
823
824 /* typedefs defined inside this class. TYPEDEF_FIELD points to an array of
825 TYPEDEF_FIELD_COUNT elements. */
826 struct typedef_field
827 {
828 /* Unqualified name to be prefixed by owning class qualified name. */
829 const char *name;
830
831 /* Type this typedef named NAME represents. */
832 struct type *type;
833 }
834 *typedef_field;
835 unsigned typedef_field_count;
836 };
837
838 /* Struct used in computing virtual base list */
839 struct vbase
840 {
841 struct type *vbasetype; /* pointer to virtual base */
842 struct vbase *next; /* next in chain */
843 };
844
845 /* Struct used for ranking a function for overload resolution */
846 struct badness_vector
847 {
848 int length;
849 int *rank;
850 };
851
852 /* GNAT Ada-specific information for various Ada types. */
853 struct gnat_aux_type
854 {
855 /* Parallel type used to encode information about dynamic types
856 used in Ada (such as variant records, variable-size array,
857 etc). */
858 struct type* descriptive_type;
859 };
860
861 /* The default value of TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(T) points to the
862 this shared static structure. */
863
864 extern const struct cplus_struct_type cplus_struct_default;
865
866 extern void allocate_cplus_struct_type (struct type *);
867
868 #define INIT_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(type) \
869 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) = TYPE_SPECIFIC_CPLUS_STUFF, \
870 TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (type) = (struct cplus_struct_type*) &cplus_struct_default)
871
872 #define ALLOCATE_CPLUS_STRUCT_TYPE(type) allocate_cplus_struct_type (type)
873
874 #define HAVE_CPLUS_STRUCT(type) \
875 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) == TYPE_SPECIFIC_CPLUS_STUFF \
876 && TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (type) != &cplus_struct_default)
877
878 extern const struct gnat_aux_type gnat_aux_default;
879
880 extern void allocate_gnat_aux_type (struct type *);
881
882 #define INIT_GNAT_SPECIFIC(type) \
883 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) = TYPE_SPECIFIC_GNAT_STUFF, \
884 TYPE_GNAT_SPECIFIC (type) = (struct gnat_aux_type *) &gnat_aux_default)
885 #define ALLOCATE_GNAT_AUX_TYPE(type) allocate_gnat_aux_type (type)
886 /* A macro that returns non-zero if the type-specific data should be
887 read as "gnat-stuff". */
888 #define HAVE_GNAT_AUX_INFO(type) \
889 (TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD (type) == TYPE_SPECIFIC_GNAT_STUFF)
890
891 #define TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS(thistype) (thistype)->instance_flags
892 #define TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype) (thistype)->main_type
893 #define TYPE_NAME(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->name
894 #define TYPE_TAG_NAME(type) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(type)->tag_name
895 #define TYPE_TARGET_TYPE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->target_type
896 #define TYPE_POINTER_TYPE(thistype) (thistype)->pointer_type
897 #define TYPE_REFERENCE_TYPE(thistype) (thistype)->reference_type
898 #define TYPE_CHAIN(thistype) (thistype)->chain
899 /* Note that if thistype is a TYPEDEF type, you have to call check_typedef.
900 But check_typedef does set the TYPE_LENGTH of the TYPEDEF type,
901 so you only have to call check_typedef once. Since allocate_value
902 calls check_typedef, TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (X)) is safe. */
903 #define TYPE_LENGTH(thistype) (thistype)->length
904 /* Note that TYPE_CODE can be TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF, so if you want the real
905 type, you need to do TYPE_CODE (check_type (this_type)). */
906 #define TYPE_CODE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->code
907 #define TYPE_NFIELDS(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->nfields
908 #define TYPE_FIELDS(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flds_bnds.fields
909
910 #define TYPE_INDEX_TYPE(type) TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (type, 0)
911 #define TYPE_RANGE_DATA(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flds_bnds.bounds
912 #define TYPE_LOW_BOUND(range_type) TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->low
913 #define TYPE_HIGH_BOUND(range_type) TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->high
914 #define TYPE_LOW_BOUND_UNDEFINED(range_type) \
915 TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->low_undefined
916 #define TYPE_HIGH_BOUND_UNDEFINED(range_type) \
917 TYPE_RANGE_DATA(range_type)->high_undefined
918
919 /* Moto-specific stuff for FORTRAN arrays */
920
921 #define TYPE_ARRAY_UPPER_BOUND_IS_UNDEFINED(arraytype) \
922 TYPE_HIGH_BOUND_UNDEFINED(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE(arraytype))
923 #define TYPE_ARRAY_LOWER_BOUND_IS_UNDEFINED(arraytype) \
924 TYPE_LOW_BOUND_UNDEFINED(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE(arraytype))
925
926 #define TYPE_ARRAY_UPPER_BOUND_VALUE(arraytype) \
927 (TYPE_HIGH_BOUND(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE((arraytype))))
928
929 #define TYPE_ARRAY_LOWER_BOUND_VALUE(arraytype) \
930 (TYPE_LOW_BOUND(TYPE_INDEX_TYPE((arraytype))))
931
932 /* C++ */
933
934 #define TYPE_VPTR_BASETYPE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->vptr_basetype
935 #define TYPE_DOMAIN_TYPE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->vptr_basetype
936 #define TYPE_VPTR_FIELDNO(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->vptr_fieldno
937 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDS(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fields
938 #define TYPE_NFN_FIELDS(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->nfn_fields
939 #define TYPE_NFN_FIELDS_TOTAL(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->nfn_fields_total
940 #define TYPE_SPECIFIC_FIELD(thistype) \
941 TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific_field
942 #define TYPE_TYPE_SPECIFIC(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific
943 /* We need this tap-dance with the TYPE_RAW_SPECIFIC because of the case
944 where we're trying to print an Ada array using the C language.
945 In that case, there is no "cplus_stuff", but the C language assumes
946 that there is. What we do, in that case, is pretend that there is
947 an implicit one which is the default cplus stuff. */
948 #define TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype) \
949 (!HAVE_CPLUS_STRUCT(thistype) \
950 ? (struct cplus_struct_type*)&cplus_struct_default \
951 : TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype))
952 #define TYPE_RAW_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.cplus_stuff
953 #define TYPE_FLOATFORMAT(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.floatformat
954 #define TYPE_GNAT_SPECIFIC(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.gnat_stuff
955 #define TYPE_DESCRIPTIVE_TYPE(thistype) TYPE_GNAT_SPECIFIC(thistype)->descriptive_type
956 #define TYPE_CALLING_CONVENTION(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->type_specific.calling_convention
957 #define TYPE_BASECLASS(thistype,index) TYPE_FIELD_TYPE(thistype, index)
958 #define TYPE_N_BASECLASSES(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->n_baseclasses
959 #define TYPE_BASECLASS_NAME(thistype,index) TYPE_FIELD_NAME(thistype, index)
960 #define TYPE_BASECLASS_BITPOS(thistype,index) TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS(thistype,index)
961 #define BASETYPE_VIA_PUBLIC(thistype, index) \
962 ((!TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE(thistype, index)) && (!TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED(thistype, index)))
963 #define TYPE_CPLUS_DYNAMIC(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->is_dynamic
964
965 #define BASETYPE_VIA_VIRTUAL(thistype, index) \
966 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
967 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits, (index)))
968
969 #define FIELD_TYPE(thisfld) ((thisfld).type)
970 #define FIELD_NAME(thisfld) ((thisfld).name)
971 #define FIELD_LOC_KIND(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc_kind)
972 #define FIELD_BITPOS(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.bitpos)
973 #define FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.physname)
974 #define FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.physaddr)
975 #define FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK(thisfld) ((thisfld).loc.dwarf_block)
976 #define SET_FIELD_BITPOS(thisfld, bitpos) \
977 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_BITPOS, \
978 FIELD_BITPOS (thisfld) = (bitpos))
979 #define SET_FIELD_PHYSNAME(thisfld, name) \
980 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSNAME, \
981 FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME (thisfld) = (name))
982 #define SET_FIELD_PHYSADDR(thisfld, addr) \
983 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_PHYSADDR, \
984 FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR (thisfld) = (addr))
985 #define SET_FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK(thisfld, addr) \
986 (FIELD_LOC_KIND (thisfld) = FIELD_LOC_KIND_DWARF_BLOCK, \
987 FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK (thisfld) = (addr))
988 #define FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(thisfld) ((thisfld).artificial)
989 #define FIELD_BITSIZE(thisfld) ((thisfld).bitsize)
990
991 #define TYPE_FIELD(thistype, n) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flds_bnds.fields[n]
992 #define TYPE_FIELD_TYPE(thistype, n) FIELD_TYPE(TYPE_FIELD(thistype, n))
993 #define TYPE_FIELD_NAME(thistype, n) FIELD_NAME(TYPE_FIELD(thistype, n))
994 #define TYPE_FIELD_LOC_KIND(thistype, n) FIELD_LOC_KIND (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
995 #define TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS(thistype, n) FIELD_BITPOS (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
996 #define TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME(thistype, n) FIELD_STATIC_PHYSNAME (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
997 #define TYPE_FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR(thistype, n) FIELD_STATIC_PHYSADDR (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
998 #define TYPE_FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK(thistype, n) FIELD_DWARF_BLOCK (TYPE_FIELD (thistype, n))
999 #define TYPE_FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(thistype, n) FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(TYPE_FIELD(thistype,n))
1000 #define TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE(thistype, n) FIELD_BITSIZE(TYPE_FIELD(thistype,n))
1001 #define TYPE_FIELD_PACKED(thistype, n) (FIELD_BITSIZE(TYPE_FIELD(thistype,n))!=0)
1002
1003 #define TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE_BITS(thistype) \
1004 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits
1005 #define TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED_BITS(thistype) \
1006 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits
1007 #define TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE_BITS(thistype) \
1008 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits
1009 #define TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL_BITS(thistype) \
1010 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits
1011 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE(thistype, n) \
1012 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits, (n))
1013 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED(thistype, n) \
1014 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits, (n))
1015 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE(thistype, n) \
1016 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits, (n))
1017 #define SET_TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL(thistype, n) \
1018 B_SET (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits, (n))
1019 #define TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE(thistype, n) \
1020 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1021 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->private_field_bits, (n)))
1022 #define TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED(thistype, n) \
1023 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1024 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->protected_field_bits, (n)))
1025 #define TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE(thistype, n) \
1026 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1027 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->ignore_field_bits, (n)))
1028 #define TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL(thistype, n) \
1029 (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits == NULL ? 0 \
1030 : B_TST(TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->virtual_field_bits, (n)))
1031
1032 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLISTS(thistype) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists
1033 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n]
1034 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST1(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n].fn_fields
1035 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST_NAME(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n].name
1036 #define TYPE_FN_FIELDLIST_LENGTH(thistype, n) TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->fn_fieldlists[n].length
1037
1038 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD(thisfn, n) (thisfn)[n]
1039 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PHYSNAME(thisfn, n) (thisfn)[n].physname
1040 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_TYPE(thisfn, n) (thisfn)[n].type
1041 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_ARGS(thisfn, n) TYPE_FIELDS ((thisfn)[n].type)
1042 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_CONST(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_const)
1043 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_VOLATILE(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_volatile)
1044 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PRIVATE(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_private)
1045 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PROTECTED(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_protected)
1046 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_PUBLIC(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_public)
1047 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_STATIC(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_static)
1048 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_FINAL(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_final)
1049 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_SYNCHRONIZED(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_synchronized)
1050 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_NATIVE(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_native)
1051 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_ARTIFICIAL(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_artificial)
1052 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_ABSTRACT(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_abstract)
1053 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_STUB(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].is_stub)
1054 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_FCONTEXT(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].fcontext)
1055 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_VOFFSET(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].voffset-2)
1056 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_VIRTUAL_P(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].voffset > 1)
1057 #define TYPE_FN_FIELD_STATIC_P(thisfn, n) ((thisfn)[n].voffset == VOFFSET_STATIC)
1058
1059 #define TYPE_LOCALTYPE_PTR(thistype) (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->localtype_ptr)
1060 #define TYPE_LOCALTYPE_FILE(thistype) (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->localtype_ptr->file)
1061 #define TYPE_LOCALTYPE_LINE(thistype) (TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC(thistype)->localtype_ptr->line)
1062
1063 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_ARRAY(thistype) \
1064 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->typedef_field
1065 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD(thistype, n) \
1066 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->typedef_field[n]
1067 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_NAME(thistype, n) \
1068 TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD (thistype, n).name
1069 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_TYPE(thistype, n) \
1070 TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD (thistype, n).type
1071 #define TYPE_TYPEDEF_FIELD_COUNT(thistype) \
1072 TYPE_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (thistype)->typedef_field_count
1073
1074 #define TYPE_IS_OPAQUE(thistype) (((TYPE_CODE (thistype) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT) || \
1075 (TYPE_CODE (thistype) == TYPE_CODE_UNION)) && \
1076 (TYPE_NFIELDS (thistype) == 0) && \
1077 (!HAVE_CPLUS_STRUCT (thistype) \
1078 || TYPE_NFN_FIELDS (thistype) == 0) && \
1079 (TYPE_STUB (thistype) || !TYPE_STUB_SUPPORTED (thistype)))
1080
1081 /* A helper macro that returns the name of an error type. If the type
1082 has a name, it is used; otherwise, a default is used. */
1083 #define TYPE_ERROR_NAME(type) \
1084 (TYPE_NAME (type) ? TYPE_NAME (type) : _("<error type>"))
1085
1086 struct builtin_type
1087 {
1088 /* Integral types. */
1089
1090 /* Implicit size/sign (based on the the architecture's ABI). */
1091 struct type *builtin_void;
1092 struct type *builtin_char;
1093 struct type *builtin_short;
1094 struct type *builtin_int;
1095 struct type *builtin_long;
1096 struct type *builtin_signed_char;
1097 struct type *builtin_unsigned_char;
1098 struct type *builtin_unsigned_short;
1099 struct type *builtin_unsigned_int;
1100 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long;
1101 struct type *builtin_float;
1102 struct type *builtin_double;
1103 struct type *builtin_long_double;
1104 struct type *builtin_complex;
1105 struct type *builtin_double_complex;
1106 struct type *builtin_string;
1107 struct type *builtin_bool;
1108 struct type *builtin_long_long;
1109 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long_long;
1110 struct type *builtin_decfloat;
1111 struct type *builtin_decdouble;
1112 struct type *builtin_declong;
1113
1114 /* "True" character types.
1115 We use these for the '/c' print format, because c_char is just a
1116 one-byte integral type, which languages less laid back than C
1117 will print as ... well, a one-byte integral type. */
1118 struct type *builtin_true_char;
1119 struct type *builtin_true_unsigned_char;
1120
1121 /* Explicit sizes - see C9X <intypes.h> for naming scheme. The "int0"
1122 is for when an architecture needs to describe a register that has
1123 no size. */
1124 struct type *builtin_int0;
1125 struct type *builtin_int8;
1126 struct type *builtin_uint8;
1127 struct type *builtin_int16;
1128 struct type *builtin_uint16;
1129 struct type *builtin_int32;
1130 struct type *builtin_uint32;
1131 struct type *builtin_int64;
1132 struct type *builtin_uint64;
1133 struct type *builtin_int128;
1134 struct type *builtin_uint128;
1135
1136 /* Wide character types. */
1137 struct type *builtin_char16;
1138 struct type *builtin_char32;
1139
1140 /* Pointer types. */
1141
1142 /* `pointer to data' type. Some target platforms use an implicitly
1143 {sign,zero} -extended 32-bit ABI pointer on a 64-bit ISA. */
1144 struct type *builtin_data_ptr;
1145
1146 /* `pointer to function (returning void)' type. Harvard
1147 architectures mean that ABI function and code pointers are not
1148 interconvertible. Similarly, since ANSI, C standards have
1149 explicitly said that pointers to functions and pointers to data
1150 are not interconvertible --- that is, you can't cast a function
1151 pointer to void * and back, and expect to get the same value.
1152 However, all function pointer types are interconvertible, so void
1153 (*) () can server as a generic function pointer. */
1154 struct type *builtin_func_ptr;
1155
1156
1157 /* Special-purpose types. */
1158
1159 /* This type is used to represent a GDB internal function. */
1160 struct type *internal_fn;
1161 };
1162
1163 /* Return the type table for the specified architecture. */
1164 extern const struct builtin_type *builtin_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
1165
1166
1167 /* Per-objfile types used by symbol readers. */
1168
1169 struct objfile_type
1170 {
1171 /* Basic types based on the objfile architecture. */
1172 struct type *builtin_void;
1173 struct type *builtin_char;
1174 struct type *builtin_short;
1175 struct type *builtin_int;
1176 struct type *builtin_long;
1177 struct type *builtin_long_long;
1178 struct type *builtin_signed_char;
1179 struct type *builtin_unsigned_char;
1180 struct type *builtin_unsigned_short;
1181 struct type *builtin_unsigned_int;
1182 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long;
1183 struct type *builtin_unsigned_long_long;
1184 struct type *builtin_float;
1185 struct type *builtin_double;
1186 struct type *builtin_long_double;
1187
1188 /* This type is used to represent symbol addresses. */
1189 struct type *builtin_core_addr;
1190
1191 /* This type represents a type that was unrecognized in symbol read-in. */
1192 struct type *builtin_error;
1193
1194 /* Types used for symbols with no debug information. */
1195 struct type *nodebug_text_symbol;
1196 struct type *nodebug_data_symbol;
1197 struct type *nodebug_unknown_symbol;
1198 struct type *nodebug_tls_symbol;
1199 };
1200
1201 /* Return the type table for the specified objfile. */
1202 extern const struct objfile_type *objfile_type (struct objfile *objfile);
1203
1204
1205 /* Explicit floating-point formats. See "floatformat.h". */
1206 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_single[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1207 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_double[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1208 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ieee_double_littlebyte_bigword[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1209 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_i387_ext[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1210 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_m68881_ext[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1211 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_arm_ext[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1212 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ia64_spill[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1213 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ia64_quad[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1214 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_vax_f[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1215 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_vax_d[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1216 extern const struct floatformat *floatformats_ibm_long_double[BFD_ENDIAN_UNKNOWN];
1217
1218
1219 /* Allocate space for storing data associated with a particular type.
1220 We ensure that the space is allocated using the same mechanism that
1221 was used to allocate the space for the type structure itself. I.E.
1222 if the type is on an objfile's objfile_obstack, then the space for data
1223 associated with that type will also be allocated on the objfile_obstack.
1224 If the type is not associated with any particular objfile (such as
1225 builtin types), then the data space will be allocated with xmalloc,
1226 the same as for the type structure. */
1227
1228 #define TYPE_ALLOC(t,size) \
1229 (TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED (t) \
1230 ? obstack_alloc (&TYPE_OBJFILE (t) -> objfile_obstack, size) \
1231 : xmalloc (size))
1232
1233 #define TYPE_ZALLOC(t,size) \
1234 (TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED (t) \
1235 ? memset (obstack_alloc (&TYPE_OBJFILE (t)->objfile_obstack, size), \
1236 0, size) \
1237 : xzalloc (size))
1238
1239 /* Use alloc_type to allocate a type owned by an objfile.
1240 Use alloc_type_arch to allocate a type owned by an architecture.
1241 Use alloc_type_copy to allocate a type with the same owner as a
1242 pre-existing template type, no matter whether objfile or gdbarch. */
1243 extern struct type *alloc_type (struct objfile *);
1244 extern struct type *alloc_type_arch (struct gdbarch *);
1245 extern struct type *alloc_type_copy (const struct type *);
1246
1247 /* Return the type's architecture. For types owned by an architecture,
1248 that architecture is returned. For types owned by an objfile, that
1249 objfile's architecture is returned. */
1250 extern struct gdbarch *get_type_arch (const struct type *);
1251
1252 /* Helper function to construct objfile-owned types. */
1253 extern struct type *init_type (enum type_code, int, int, char *,
1254 struct objfile *);
1255
1256 /* Helper functions to construct architecture-owned types. */
1257 extern struct type *arch_type (struct gdbarch *, enum type_code, int, char *);
1258 extern struct type *arch_integer_type (struct gdbarch *, int, int, char *);
1259 extern struct type *arch_character_type (struct gdbarch *, int, int, char *);
1260 extern struct type *arch_boolean_type (struct gdbarch *, int, int, char *);
1261 extern struct type *arch_float_type (struct gdbarch *, int, char *,
1262 const struct floatformat **);
1263 extern struct type *arch_complex_type (struct gdbarch *, char *,
1264 struct type *);
1265
1266 /* Helper functions to construct a struct or record type. An
1267 initially empty type is created using arch_composite_type().
1268 Fields are then added using append_composite_type_field*(). A union
1269 type has its size set to the largest field. A struct type has each
1270 field packed against the previous. */
1271
1272 extern struct type *arch_composite_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1273 char *name, enum type_code code);
1274 extern void append_composite_type_field (struct type *t, char *name,
1275 struct type *field);
1276 extern void append_composite_type_field_aligned (struct type *t,
1277 char *name,
1278 struct type *field,
1279 int alignment);
1280 struct field *append_composite_type_field_raw (struct type *t, char *name,
1281 struct type *field);
1282
1283 /* Helper functions to construct a bit flags type. An initially empty
1284 type is created using arch_flag_type(). Flags are then added using
1285 append_flag_type_flag(). */
1286 extern struct type *arch_flags_type (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1287 char *name, int length);
1288 extern void append_flags_type_flag (struct type *type, int bitpos, char *name);
1289
1290 extern void make_vector_type (struct type *array_type);
1291 extern struct type *init_vector_type (struct type *elt_type, int n);
1292
1293 extern struct type *lookup_reference_type (struct type *);
1294
1295 extern struct type *make_reference_type (struct type *, struct type **);
1296
1297 extern struct type *make_cv_type (int, int, struct type *, struct type **);
1298
1299 extern void replace_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1300
1301 extern int address_space_name_to_int (struct gdbarch *, char *);
1302
1303 extern const char *address_space_int_to_name (struct gdbarch *, int);
1304
1305 extern struct type *make_type_with_address_space (struct type *type,
1306 int space_identifier);
1307
1308 extern struct type *lookup_memberptr_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1309
1310 extern struct type *lookup_methodptr_type (struct type *);
1311
1312 extern void smash_to_method_type (struct type *type, struct type *domain,
1313 struct type *to_type, struct field *args,
1314 int nargs, int varargs);
1315
1316 extern void smash_to_memberptr_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1317 struct type *);
1318
1319 extern void smash_to_methodptr_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1320
1321 extern struct type *allocate_stub_method (struct type *);
1322
1323 extern char *type_name_no_tag (const struct type *);
1324
1325 extern struct type *lookup_struct_elt_type (struct type *, char *, int);
1326
1327 extern struct type *make_pointer_type (struct type *, struct type **);
1328
1329 extern struct type *lookup_pointer_type (struct type *);
1330
1331 extern struct type *make_function_type (struct type *, struct type **);
1332
1333 extern struct type *lookup_function_type (struct type *);
1334
1335 extern struct type *create_range_type (struct type *, struct type *, LONGEST,
1336 LONGEST);
1337
1338 extern struct type *create_array_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1339 struct type *);
1340 extern struct type *lookup_array_range_type (struct type *, int, int);
1341
1342 extern struct type *create_string_type (struct type *, struct type *,
1343 struct type *);
1344 extern struct type *lookup_string_range_type (struct type *, int, int);
1345
1346 extern struct type *create_set_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1347
1348 extern struct type *lookup_unsigned_typename (const struct language_defn *,
1349 struct gdbarch *,char *);
1350
1351 extern struct type *lookup_signed_typename (const struct language_defn *,
1352 struct gdbarch *,char *);
1353
1354 extern struct type *check_typedef (struct type *);
1355
1356 #define CHECK_TYPEDEF(TYPE) \
1357 do { \
1358 (TYPE) = check_typedef (TYPE); \
1359 } while (0)
1360
1361 extern void check_stub_method_group (struct type *, int);
1362
1363 extern char *gdb_mangle_name (struct type *, int, int);
1364
1365 extern struct type *lookup_typename (const struct language_defn *,
1366 struct gdbarch *, char *,
1367 struct block *, int);
1368
1369 extern struct type *lookup_template_type (char *, struct type *,
1370 struct block *);
1371
1372 extern int get_vptr_fieldno (struct type *, struct type **);
1373
1374 extern int get_discrete_bounds (struct type *, LONGEST *, LONGEST *);
1375
1376 extern int class_types_same_p (const struct type *, const struct type *);
1377
1378 extern int is_ancestor (struct type *, struct type *);
1379
1380 extern int is_public_ancestor (struct type *, struct type *);
1381
1382 extern int is_unique_ancestor (struct type *, struct value *);
1383
1384 /* Overload resolution */
1385
1386 #define LENGTH_MATCH(bv) ((bv)->rank[0])
1387
1388 /* Badness if parameter list length doesn't match arg list length */
1389 #define LENGTH_MISMATCH_BADNESS 100
1390 /* Dummy badness value for nonexistent parameter positions */
1391 #define TOO_FEW_PARAMS_BADNESS 100
1392 /* Badness if no conversion among types */
1393 #define INCOMPATIBLE_TYPE_BADNESS 100
1394
1395 /* Badness of integral promotion */
1396 #define INTEGER_PROMOTION_BADNESS 1
1397 /* Badness of floating promotion */
1398 #define FLOAT_PROMOTION_BADNESS 1
1399 /* Badness of integral conversion */
1400 #define INTEGER_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1401 /* Badness of floating conversion */
1402 #define FLOAT_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1403 /* Badness of integer<->floating conversions */
1404 #define INT_FLOAT_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1405 /* Badness of converting to a boolean */
1406 #define BOOLEAN_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1407 /* Badness of pointer conversion */
1408 #define POINTER_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1409 /* Badness of conversion of pointer to void pointer */
1410 #define VOID_PTR_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1411 /* Badness of converting derived to base class */
1412 #define BASE_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1413 /* Badness of converting from non-reference to reference */
1414 #define REFERENCE_CONVERSION_BADNESS 2
1415
1416 /* Non-standard conversions allowed by the debugger */
1417 /* Converting a pointer to an int is usually OK */
1418 #define NS_POINTER_CONVERSION_BADNESS 10
1419
1420
1421 extern int compare_badness (struct badness_vector *, struct badness_vector *);
1422
1423 extern struct badness_vector *rank_function (struct type **, int,
1424 struct type **, int);
1425
1426 extern int rank_one_type (struct type *, struct type *);
1427
1428 extern void recursive_dump_type (struct type *, int);
1429
1430 extern int field_is_static (struct field *);
1431
1432 /* printcmd.c */
1433
1434 extern void print_scalar_formatted (const void *, struct type *,
1435 const struct value_print_options *,
1436 int, struct ui_file *);
1437
1438 extern int can_dereference (struct type *);
1439
1440 extern int is_integral_type (struct type *);
1441
1442 extern void maintenance_print_type (char *, int);
1443
1444 extern htab_t create_copied_types_hash (struct objfile *objfile);
1445
1446 extern struct type *copy_type_recursive (struct objfile *objfile,
1447 struct type *type,
1448 htab_t copied_types);
1449
1450 extern struct type *copy_type (const struct type *type);
1451
1452 #endif /* GDBTYPES_H */
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