b8a221d635d6a6ade87caffb19b6729b3f946b01
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / objfiles.h
1 /* Definitions for symbol file management in GDB.
2 Copyright (C) 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4 This file is part of GDB.
5
6 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
9 (at your option) any later version.
10
11 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14 GNU General Public License for more details.
15
16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
18 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
19
20 #if !defined (OBJFILES_H)
21 #define OBJFILES_H
22
23 /* This structure maintains information on a per-objfile basis about the
24 "entry point" of the objfile, and the scope within which the entry point
25 exists. It is possible that gdb will see more than one objfile that is
26 executable, each with it's own entry point.
27
28 For example, for dynamically linked executables in SVR4, the dynamic linker
29 code is contained within the shared C library, which is actually executable
30 and is run by the kernel first when an exec is done of a user executable
31 that is dynamically linked. The dynamic linker within the shared C library
32 then maps in the various program segments in the user executable and jumps
33 to the user executable's recorded entry point, as if the call had been made
34 directly by the kernel.
35
36 The traditional gdb method of using this info is to use the recorded entry
37 point to set the variables entry_file_lowpc and entry_file_highpc from
38 the debugging information, where these values are the starting address
39 (inclusive) and ending address (exclusive) of the instruction space in the
40 executable which correspond to the "startup file", I.E. crt0.o in most
41 cases. This file is assumed to be a startup file and frames with pc's
42 inside it are treated as nonexistent. Setting these variables is necessary
43 so that backtraces do not fly off the bottom of the stack.
44
45 Gdb also supports an alternate method to avoid running off the bottom
46 of the stack.
47
48 There are two frames that are "special", the frame for the function
49 containing the process entry point, since it has no predecessor frame,
50 and the frame for the function containing the user code entry point
51 (the main() function), since all the predecessor frames are for the
52 process startup code. Since we have no guarantee that the linked
53 in startup modules have any debugging information that gdb can use,
54 we need to avoid following frame pointers back into frames that might
55 have been built in the startup code, as we might get hopelessly
56 confused. However, we almost always have debugging information
57 available for main().
58
59 These variables are used to save the range of PC values which are valid
60 within the main() function and within the function containing the process
61 entry point. If we always consider the frame for main() as the outermost
62 frame when debugging user code, and the frame for the process entry
63 point function as the outermost frame when debugging startup code, then
64 all we have to do is have FRAME_CHAIN_VALID return false whenever a
65 frame's current PC is within the range specified by these variables.
66 In essence, we set "ceilings" in the frame chain beyond which we will
67 not proceed when following the frame chain back up the stack.
68
69 A nice side effect is that we can still debug startup code without
70 running off the end of the frame chain, assuming that we have usable
71 debugging information in the startup modules, and if we choose to not
72 use the block at main, or can't find it for some reason, everything
73 still works as before. And if we have no startup code debugging
74 information but we do have usable information for main(), backtraces
75 from user code don't go wandering off into the startup code.
76
77 To use this method, define your FRAME_CHAIN_VALID macro like:
78
79 #define FRAME_CHAIN_VALID(chain, thisframe) \
80 (chain != 0 \
81 && !(inside_main_func ((thisframe)->pc)) \
82 && !(inside_entry_func ((thisframe)->pc)))
83
84 and add initializations of the four scope controlling variables inside
85 the object file / debugging information processing modules. */
86
87 struct entry_info
88 {
89
90 /* The value we should use for this objects entry point.
91 The illegal/unknown value needs to be something other than 0, ~0
92 for instance, which is much less likely than 0. */
93
94 CORE_ADDR entry_point;
95
96 /* Start (inclusive) and end (exclusive) of function containing the
97 entry point. */
98
99 CORE_ADDR entry_func_lowpc;
100 CORE_ADDR entry_func_highpc;
101
102 /* Start (inclusive) and end (exclusive) of object file containing the
103 entry point. */
104
105 CORE_ADDR entry_file_lowpc;
106 CORE_ADDR entry_file_highpc;
107
108 /* Start (inclusive) and end (exclusive) of the user code main() function. */
109
110 CORE_ADDR main_func_lowpc;
111 CORE_ADDR main_func_highpc;
112
113 };
114
115
116 /* Sections in an objfile.
117
118 It is strange that we have both this notion of "sections"
119 and the one used by section_offsets. Section as used
120 here, (currently at least) means a BFD section, and the sections
121 are set up from the BFD sections in allocate_objfile.
122
123 The sections in section_offsets have their meaning determined by
124 the symbol format, and they are set up by the sym_offsets function
125 for that symbol file format.
126
127 I'm not sure this could or should be changed, however. */
128
129 struct obj_section {
130 CORE_ADDR addr; /* lowest address in section */
131 CORE_ADDR endaddr; /* 1+highest address in section */
132
133 /* This field is being used for nefarious purposes by syms_from_objfile.
134 It is said to be redundant with section_offsets; it's not really being
135 used that way, however, it's some sort of hack I don't understand
136 and am not going to try to eliminate (yet, anyway). FIXME.
137
138 It was documented as "offset between (end)addr and actual memory
139 addresses", but that's not true; addr & endaddr are actual memory
140 addresses. */
141 CORE_ADDR offset;
142
143 sec_ptr sec_ptr; /* BFD section pointer */
144
145 /* Objfile this section is part of. Not currently used, but I'm sure
146 that someone will want the bfd that the sec_ptr goes with or something
147 like that before long. */
148 struct objfile *objfile;
149 };
150
151 /* Master structure for keeping track of each file from which
152 gdb reads symbols. There are several ways these get allocated: 1.
153 The main symbol file, symfile_objfile, set by the symbol-file command,
154 2. Additional symbol files added by the add-symbol-file command,
155 3. Shared library objfiles, added by ADD_SOLIB, 4. symbol files
156 for modules that were loaded when GDB attached to a remote system
157 (see remote-vx.c). */
158
159 struct objfile
160 {
161
162 /* All struct objfile's are chained together by their next pointers.
163 The global variable "object_files" points to the first link in this
164 chain.
165
166 FIXME: There is a problem here if the objfile is reusable, and if
167 multiple users are to be supported. The problem is that the objfile
168 list is linked through a member of the objfile struct itself, which
169 is only valid for one gdb process. The list implementation needs to
170 be changed to something like:
171
172 struct list {struct list *next; struct objfile *objfile};
173
174 where the list structure is completely maintained separately within
175 each gdb process. */
176
177 struct objfile *next;
178
179 /* The object file's name. Malloc'd; free it if you free this struct. */
180
181 char *name;
182
183 /* Some flag bits for this objfile. */
184
185 unsigned short flags;
186
187 /* Each objfile points to a linked list of symtabs derived from this file,
188 one symtab structure for each compilation unit (source file). Each link
189 in the symtab list contains a backpointer to this objfile. */
190
191 struct symtab *symtabs;
192
193 /* Each objfile points to a linked list of partial symtabs derived from
194 this file, one partial symtab structure for each compilation unit
195 (source file). */
196
197 struct partial_symtab *psymtabs;
198
199 /* List of freed partial symtabs, available for re-use */
200
201 struct partial_symtab *free_psymtabs;
202
203 /* The object file's BFD. Can be null, in which case bfd_open (name) and
204 put the result here. */
205
206 bfd *obfd;
207
208 /* The modification timestamp of the object file, as of the last time
209 we read its symbols. */
210
211 long mtime;
212
213 /* Obstacks to hold objects that should be freed when we load a new symbol
214 table from this object file. */
215
216 struct obstack psymbol_obstack; /* Partial symbols */
217 struct obstack symbol_obstack; /* Full symbols */
218 struct obstack type_obstack; /* Types */
219
220 /* Vectors of all partial symbols read in from file. The actual data
221 is stored in the psymbol_obstack. */
222
223 struct psymbol_allocation_list global_psymbols;
224 struct psymbol_allocation_list static_psymbols;
225
226 /* Each file contains a pointer to an array of minimal symbols for all
227 global symbols that are defined within the file. The array is terminated
228 by a "null symbol", one that has a NULL pointer for the name and a zero
229 value for the address. This makes it easy to walk through the array
230 when passed a pointer to somewhere in the middle of it. There is also
231 a count of the number of symbols, which does include the terminating
232 null symbol. The array itself, as well as all the data that it points
233 to, should be allocated on the symbol_obstack for this file. */
234
235 struct minimal_symbol *msymbols;
236 int minimal_symbol_count;
237
238 /* For object file formats which don't specify fundamental types, gdb
239 can create such types. For now, it maintains a vector of pointers
240 to these internally created fundamental types on a per objfile basis,
241 however it really should ultimately keep them on a per-compilation-unit
242 basis, to account for linkage-units that consist of a number of
243 compilation units that may have different fundamental types, such as
244 linking C modules with ADA modules, or linking C modules that are
245 compiled with 32-bit ints with C modules that are compiled with 64-bit
246 ints (not inherently evil with a smarter linker). */
247
248 struct type **fundamental_types;
249
250 /* The mmalloc() malloc-descriptor for this objfile if we are using
251 the memory mapped malloc() package to manage storage for this objfile's
252 data. NULL if we are not. */
253
254 PTR md;
255
256 /* The file descriptor that was used to obtain the mmalloc descriptor
257 for this objfile. If we call mmalloc_detach with the malloc descriptor
258 we should then close this file descriptor. */
259
260 int mmfd;
261
262 /* Structure which keeps track of functions that manipulate objfile's
263 of the same type as this objfile. I.E. the function to read partial
264 symbols for example. Note that this structure is in statically
265 allocated memory, and is shared by all objfiles that use the
266 object module reader of this type. */
267
268 struct sym_fns *sf;
269
270 /* The per-objfile information about the entry point, the scope (file/func)
271 containing the entry point, and the scope of the user's main() func. */
272
273 struct entry_info ei;
274
275 /* Information about stabs. Will be filled in with a dbx_symfile_info
276 struct by those readers that need it. */
277
278 PTR sym_stab_info;
279
280 /* Hook for information for use by the symbol reader (currently used
281 for information shared by sym_init and sym_read). It is
282 typically a pointer to malloc'd memory. The symbol reader's finish
283 function is responsible for freeing the memory thusly allocated. */
284
285 PTR sym_private;
286
287 /* Hook for target-architecture-specific information. This must
288 point to memory allocated on one of the obstacks in this objfile,
289 so that it gets freed automatically when reading a new object
290 file. */
291
292 PTR obj_private;
293
294 /* Set of relocation offsets to apply to each section.
295 Currently on the psymbol_obstack (which makes no sense, but I'm
296 not sure it's harming anything).
297
298 These offsets indicate that all symbols (including partial and
299 minimal symbols) which have been read have been relocated by this
300 much. Symbols which are yet to be read need to be relocated by
301 it. */
302
303 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
304 int num_sections;
305
306 /* set of section begin and end addresses used to map pc addresses
307 into sections. Currently on the psymbol_obstack (which makes no
308 sense, but I'm not sure it's harming anything). */
309
310 struct obj_section
311 *sections,
312 *sections_end;
313
314 /* two auxiliary fields, used to hold the fp of separate symbol files */
315 FILE *auxf1, *auxf2;
316 };
317
318 /* Defines for the objfile flag word. */
319
320 /* Gdb can arrange to allocate storage for all objects related to a
321 particular objfile in a designated section of it's address space,
322 managed at a low level by mmap() and using a special version of
323 malloc that handles malloc/free/realloc on top of the mmap() interface.
324 This allows the "internal gdb state" for a particular objfile to be
325 dumped to a gdb state file and subsequently reloaded at a later time. */
326
327 #define OBJF_MAPPED (1 << 0) /* Objfile data is mmap'd */
328
329 /* When using mapped/remapped predigested gdb symbol information, we need
330 a flag that indicates that we have previously done an initial symbol
331 table read from this particular objfile. We can't just look for the
332 absence of any of the three symbol tables (msymbols, psymtab, symtab)
333 because if the file has no symbols for example, none of these will
334 exist. */
335
336 #define OBJF_SYMS (1 << 1) /* Have tried to read symbols */
337
338 /* The object file that the main symbol table was loaded from (e.g. the
339 argument to the "symbol-file" or "file" command). */
340
341 extern struct objfile *symfile_objfile;
342
343 /* When we need to allocate a new type, we need to know which type_obstack
344 to allocate the type on, since there is one for each objfile. The places
345 where types are allocated are deeply buried in function call hierarchies
346 which know nothing about objfiles, so rather than trying to pass a
347 particular objfile down to them, we just do an end run around them and
348 set current_objfile to be whatever objfile we expect to be using at the
349 time types are being allocated. For instance, when we start reading
350 symbols for a particular objfile, we set current_objfile to point to that
351 objfile, and when we are done, we set it back to NULL, to ensure that we
352 never put a type someplace other than where we are expecting to put it.
353 FIXME: Maybe we should review the entire type handling system and
354 see if there is a better way to avoid this problem. */
355
356 extern struct objfile *current_objfile;
357
358 /* All known objfiles are kept in a linked list. This points to the
359 root of this list. */
360
361 extern struct objfile *object_files;
362
363 /* Declarations for functions defined in objfiles.c */
364
365 extern struct objfile *allocate_objfile PARAMS ((bfd *, int));
366
367 int build_objfile_section_table PARAMS ((struct objfile *));
368
369 extern void unlink_objfile PARAMS ((struct objfile *));
370
371 extern void free_objfile PARAMS ((struct objfile *));
372
373 extern void
374 free_all_objfiles PARAMS ((void));
375
376 extern void
377 objfile_relocate PARAMS ((struct objfile *, struct section_offsets *));
378
379 extern int
380 have_partial_symbols PARAMS ((void));
381
382 extern int
383 have_full_symbols PARAMS ((void));
384
385 /* Functions for dealing with the minimal symbol table, really a misc
386 address<->symbol mapping for things we don't have debug symbols for. */
387
388 extern int
389 have_minimal_symbols PARAMS ((void));
390
391 extern struct obj_section *
392 find_pc_section PARAMS((CORE_ADDR pc));
393
394 /* Traverse all object files. ALL_OBJFILES_SAFE works even if you delete
395 the objfile during the traversal. */
396
397 #define ALL_OBJFILES(obj) \
398 for ((obj) = object_files; (obj) != NULL; (obj) = (obj)->next)
399
400 #define ALL_OBJFILES_SAFE(obj,nxt) \
401 for ((obj) = object_files; \
402 (obj) != NULL? ((nxt)=(obj)->next,1) :0; \
403 (obj) = (nxt))
404
405
406 /* Traverse all symtabs in one objfile. */
407
408 #define ALL_OBJFILE_SYMTABS(objfile, s) \
409 for ((s) = (objfile) -> symtabs; (s) != NULL; (s) = (s) -> next)
410
411 /* Traverse all psymtabs in one objfile. */
412
413 #define ALL_OBJFILE_PSYMTABS(objfile, p) \
414 for ((p) = (objfile) -> psymtabs; (p) != NULL; (p) = (p) -> next)
415
416 /* Traverse all minimal symbols in one objfile. */
417
418 #define ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS(objfile, m) \
419 for ((m) = (objfile) -> msymbols; SYMBOL_NAME(m) != NULL; (m)++)
420
421
422 /* Traverse all symtabs in all objfiles. */
423
424 #define ALL_SYMTABS(objfile, s) \
425 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
426 ALL_OBJFILE_SYMTABS (objfile, s)
427
428 /* Traverse all psymtabs in all objfiles. */
429
430 #define ALL_PSYMTABS(objfile, p) \
431 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
432 ALL_OBJFILE_PSYMTABS (objfile, p)
433
434 /* Traverse all minimal symbols in all objfiles. */
435
436 #define ALL_MSYMBOLS(objfile, m) \
437 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
438 if ((objfile)->msymbols) \
439 ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS (objfile, m)
440
441 #endif /* !defined (OBJFILES_H) */
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