gdb:
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / stabsread.c
1 /* Support routines for decoding "stabs" debugging information format.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
4 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007,
5 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6
7 This file is part of GDB.
8
9 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
13
14 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 GNU General Public License for more details.
18
19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
21
22 /* Support routines for reading and decoding debugging information in
23 the "stabs" format. This format is used with many systems that use
24 the a.out object file format, as well as some systems that use
25 COFF or ELF where the stabs data is placed in a special section.
26 Avoid placing any object file format specific code in this file. */
27
28 #include "defs.h"
29 #include "gdb_string.h"
30 #include "bfd.h"
31 #include "gdb_obstack.h"
32 #include "symtab.h"
33 #include "gdbtypes.h"
34 #include "expression.h"
35 #include "symfile.h"
36 #include "objfiles.h"
37 #include "aout/stab_gnu.h" /* We always use GNU stabs, not native */
38 #include "libaout.h"
39 #include "aout/aout64.h"
40 #include "gdb-stabs.h"
41 #include "buildsym.h"
42 #include "complaints.h"
43 #include "demangle.h"
44 #include "language.h"
45 #include "doublest.h"
46 #include "cp-abi.h"
47 #include "cp-support.h"
48 #include "gdb_assert.h"
49
50 #include <ctype.h>
51
52 /* Ask stabsread.h to define the vars it normally declares `extern'. */
53 #define EXTERN
54 /**/
55 #include "stabsread.h" /* Our own declarations */
56 #undef EXTERN
57
58 extern void _initialize_stabsread (void);
59
60 /* The routines that read and process a complete stabs for a C struct or
61 C++ class pass lists of data member fields and lists of member function
62 fields in an instance of a field_info structure, as defined below.
63 This is part of some reorganization of low level C++ support and is
64 expected to eventually go away... (FIXME) */
65
66 struct field_info
67 {
68 struct nextfield
69 {
70 struct nextfield *next;
71
72 /* This is the raw visibility from the stab. It is not checked
73 for being one of the visibilities we recognize, so code which
74 examines this field better be able to deal. */
75 int visibility;
76
77 struct field field;
78 }
79 *list;
80 struct next_fnfieldlist
81 {
82 struct next_fnfieldlist *next;
83 struct fn_fieldlist fn_fieldlist;
84 }
85 *fnlist;
86 };
87
88 static void
89 read_one_struct_field (struct field_info *, char **, char *,
90 struct type *, struct objfile *);
91
92 static struct type *dbx_alloc_type (int[2], struct objfile *);
93
94 static long read_huge_number (char **, int, int *, int);
95
96 static struct type *error_type (char **, struct objfile *);
97
98 static void
99 patch_block_stabs (struct pending *, struct pending_stabs *,
100 struct objfile *);
101
102 static void fix_common_block (struct symbol *, int);
103
104 static int read_type_number (char **, int *);
105
106 static struct type *read_type (char **, struct objfile *);
107
108 static struct type *read_range_type (char **, int[2], int, struct objfile *);
109
110 static struct type *read_sun_builtin_type (char **, int[2], struct objfile *);
111
112 static struct type *read_sun_floating_type (char **, int[2],
113 struct objfile *);
114
115 static struct type *read_enum_type (char **, struct type *, struct objfile *);
116
117 static struct type *rs6000_builtin_type (int);
118
119 static int
120 read_member_functions (struct field_info *, char **, struct type *,
121 struct objfile *);
122
123 static int
124 read_struct_fields (struct field_info *, char **, struct type *,
125 struct objfile *);
126
127 static int
128 read_baseclasses (struct field_info *, char **, struct type *,
129 struct objfile *);
130
131 static int
132 read_tilde_fields (struct field_info *, char **, struct type *,
133 struct objfile *);
134
135 static int attach_fn_fields_to_type (struct field_info *, struct type *);
136
137 static int attach_fields_to_type (struct field_info *, struct type *,
138 struct objfile *);
139
140 static struct type *read_struct_type (char **, struct type *,
141 enum type_code,
142 struct objfile *);
143
144 static struct type *read_array_type (char **, struct type *,
145 struct objfile *);
146
147 static struct field *read_args (char **, int, struct objfile *, int *, int *);
148
149 static void add_undefined_type (struct type *, int[2]);
150
151 static int
152 read_cpp_abbrev (struct field_info *, char **, struct type *,
153 struct objfile *);
154
155 static char *find_name_end (char *name);
156
157 static int process_reference (char **string);
158
159 void stabsread_clear_cache (void);
160
161 static const char vptr_name[] = "_vptr$";
162 static const char vb_name[] = "_vb$";
163
164 static void
165 invalid_cpp_abbrev_complaint (const char *arg1)
166 {
167 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("invalid C++ abbreviation `%s'"), arg1);
168 }
169
170 static void
171 reg_value_complaint (int regnum, int num_regs, const char *sym)
172 {
173 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
174 _("register number %d too large (max %d) in symbol %s"),
175 regnum, num_regs - 1, sym);
176 }
177
178 static void
179 stabs_general_complaint (const char *arg1)
180 {
181 complaint (&symfile_complaints, "%s", arg1);
182 }
183
184 /* Make a list of forward references which haven't been defined. */
185
186 static struct type **undef_types;
187 static int undef_types_allocated;
188 static int undef_types_length;
189 static struct symbol *current_symbol = NULL;
190
191 /* Make a list of nameless types that are undefined.
192 This happens when another type is referenced by its number
193 before this type is actually defined. For instance "t(0,1)=k(0,2)"
194 and type (0,2) is defined only later. */
195
196 struct nat
197 {
198 int typenums[2];
199 struct type *type;
200 };
201 static struct nat *noname_undefs;
202 static int noname_undefs_allocated;
203 static int noname_undefs_length;
204
205 /* Check for and handle cretinous stabs symbol name continuation! */
206 #define STABS_CONTINUE(pp,objfile) \
207 do { \
208 if (**(pp) == '\\' || (**(pp) == '?' && (*(pp))[1] == '\0')) \
209 *(pp) = next_symbol_text (objfile); \
210 } while (0)
211 \f
212
213 /* Look up a dbx type-number pair. Return the address of the slot
214 where the type for that number-pair is stored.
215 The number-pair is in TYPENUMS.
216
217 This can be used for finding the type associated with that pair
218 or for associating a new type with the pair. */
219
220 static struct type **
221 dbx_lookup_type (int typenums[2])
222 {
223 int filenum = typenums[0];
224 int index = typenums[1];
225 unsigned old_len;
226 int real_filenum;
227 struct header_file *f;
228 int f_orig_length;
229
230 if (filenum == -1) /* -1,-1 is for temporary types. */
231 return 0;
232
233 if (filenum < 0 || filenum >= n_this_object_header_files)
234 {
235 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
236 _("Invalid symbol data: type number (%d,%d) out of range at symtab pos %d."),
237 filenum, index, symnum);
238 goto error_return;
239 }
240
241 if (filenum == 0)
242 {
243 if (index < 0)
244 {
245 /* Caller wants address of address of type. We think
246 that negative (rs6k builtin) types will never appear as
247 "lvalues", (nor should they), so we stuff the real type
248 pointer into a temp, and return its address. If referenced,
249 this will do the right thing. */
250 static struct type *temp_type;
251
252 temp_type = rs6000_builtin_type (index);
253 return &temp_type;
254 }
255
256 /* Type is defined outside of header files.
257 Find it in this object file's type vector. */
258 if (index >= type_vector_length)
259 {
260 old_len = type_vector_length;
261 if (old_len == 0)
262 {
263 type_vector_length = INITIAL_TYPE_VECTOR_LENGTH;
264 type_vector = (struct type **)
265 xmalloc (type_vector_length * sizeof (struct type *));
266 }
267 while (index >= type_vector_length)
268 {
269 type_vector_length *= 2;
270 }
271 type_vector = (struct type **)
272 xrealloc ((char *) type_vector,
273 (type_vector_length * sizeof (struct type *)));
274 memset (&type_vector[old_len], 0,
275 (type_vector_length - old_len) * sizeof (struct type *));
276 }
277 return (&type_vector[index]);
278 }
279 else
280 {
281 real_filenum = this_object_header_files[filenum];
282
283 if (real_filenum >= N_HEADER_FILES (current_objfile))
284 {
285 static struct type **temp_type_p;
286
287 warning (_("GDB internal error: bad real_filenum"));
288
289 error_return:
290 temp_type_p = &builtin_type_error;
291 return temp_type_p;
292 }
293
294 f = HEADER_FILES (current_objfile) + real_filenum;
295
296 f_orig_length = f->length;
297 if (index >= f_orig_length)
298 {
299 while (index >= f->length)
300 {
301 f->length *= 2;
302 }
303 f->vector = (struct type **)
304 xrealloc ((char *) f->vector, f->length * sizeof (struct type *));
305 memset (&f->vector[f_orig_length], 0,
306 (f->length - f_orig_length) * sizeof (struct type *));
307 }
308 return (&f->vector[index]);
309 }
310 }
311
312 /* Make sure there is a type allocated for type numbers TYPENUMS
313 and return the type object.
314 This can create an empty (zeroed) type object.
315 TYPENUMS may be (-1, -1) to return a new type object that is not
316 put into the type vector, and so may not be referred to by number. */
317
318 static struct type *
319 dbx_alloc_type (int typenums[2], struct objfile *objfile)
320 {
321 struct type **type_addr;
322
323 if (typenums[0] == -1)
324 {
325 return (alloc_type (objfile));
326 }
327
328 type_addr = dbx_lookup_type (typenums);
329
330 /* If we are referring to a type not known at all yet,
331 allocate an empty type for it.
332 We will fill it in later if we find out how. */
333 if (*type_addr == 0)
334 {
335 *type_addr = alloc_type (objfile);
336 }
337
338 return (*type_addr);
339 }
340
341 /* for all the stabs in a given stab vector, build appropriate types
342 and fix their symbols in given symbol vector. */
343
344 static void
345 patch_block_stabs (struct pending *symbols, struct pending_stabs *stabs,
346 struct objfile *objfile)
347 {
348 int ii;
349 char *name;
350 char *pp;
351 struct symbol *sym;
352
353 if (stabs)
354 {
355
356 /* for all the stab entries, find their corresponding symbols and
357 patch their types! */
358
359 for (ii = 0; ii < stabs->count; ++ii)
360 {
361 name = stabs->stab[ii];
362 pp = (char *) strchr (name, ':');
363 gdb_assert (pp); /* Must find a ':' or game's over. */
364 while (pp[1] == ':')
365 {
366 pp += 2;
367 pp = (char *) strchr (pp, ':');
368 }
369 sym = find_symbol_in_list (symbols, name, pp - name);
370 if (!sym)
371 {
372 /* FIXME-maybe: it would be nice if we noticed whether
373 the variable was defined *anywhere*, not just whether
374 it is defined in this compilation unit. But neither
375 xlc or GCC seem to need such a definition, and until
376 we do psymtabs (so that the minimal symbols from all
377 compilation units are available now), I'm not sure
378 how to get the information. */
379
380 /* On xcoff, if a global is defined and never referenced,
381 ld will remove it from the executable. There is then
382 a N_GSYM stab for it, but no regular (C_EXT) symbol. */
383 sym = (struct symbol *)
384 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
385 sizeof (struct symbol));
386
387 memset (sym, 0, sizeof (struct symbol));
388 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
389 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT;
390 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME
391 (sym, obsavestring (name, pp - name,
392 &objfile->objfile_obstack));
393 pp += 2;
394 if (*(pp - 1) == 'F' || *(pp - 1) == 'f')
395 {
396 /* I don't think the linker does this with functions,
397 so as far as I know this is never executed.
398 But it doesn't hurt to check. */
399 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) =
400 lookup_function_type (read_type (&pp, objfile));
401 }
402 else
403 {
404 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&pp, objfile);
405 }
406 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &global_symbols);
407 }
408 else
409 {
410 pp += 2;
411 if (*(pp - 1) == 'F' || *(pp - 1) == 'f')
412 {
413 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) =
414 lookup_function_type (read_type (&pp, objfile));
415 }
416 else
417 {
418 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&pp, objfile);
419 }
420 }
421 }
422 }
423 }
424 \f
425
426 /* Read a number by which a type is referred to in dbx data,
427 or perhaps read a pair (FILENUM, TYPENUM) in parentheses.
428 Just a single number N is equivalent to (0,N).
429 Return the two numbers by storing them in the vector TYPENUMS.
430 TYPENUMS will then be used as an argument to dbx_lookup_type.
431
432 Returns 0 for success, -1 for error. */
433
434 static int
435 read_type_number (char **pp, int *typenums)
436 {
437 int nbits;
438 if (**pp == '(')
439 {
440 (*pp)++;
441 typenums[0] = read_huge_number (pp, ',', &nbits, 0);
442 if (nbits != 0)
443 return -1;
444 typenums[1] = read_huge_number (pp, ')', &nbits, 0);
445 if (nbits != 0)
446 return -1;
447 }
448 else
449 {
450 typenums[0] = 0;
451 typenums[1] = read_huge_number (pp, 0, &nbits, 0);
452 if (nbits != 0)
453 return -1;
454 }
455 return 0;
456 }
457 \f
458
459 #define VISIBILITY_PRIVATE '0' /* Stabs character for private field */
460 #define VISIBILITY_PROTECTED '1' /* Stabs character for protected fld */
461 #define VISIBILITY_PUBLIC '2' /* Stabs character for public field */
462 #define VISIBILITY_IGNORE '9' /* Optimized out or zero length */
463
464 /* Structure for storing pointers to reference definitions for fast lookup
465 during "process_later". */
466
467 struct ref_map
468 {
469 char *stabs;
470 CORE_ADDR value;
471 struct symbol *sym;
472 };
473
474 #define MAX_CHUNK_REFS 100
475 #define REF_CHUNK_SIZE (MAX_CHUNK_REFS * sizeof (struct ref_map))
476 #define REF_MAP_SIZE(ref_chunk) ((ref_chunk) * REF_CHUNK_SIZE)
477
478 static struct ref_map *ref_map;
479
480 /* Ptr to free cell in chunk's linked list. */
481 static int ref_count = 0;
482
483 /* Number of chunks malloced. */
484 static int ref_chunk = 0;
485
486 /* This file maintains a cache of stabs aliases found in the symbol
487 table. If the symbol table changes, this cache must be cleared
488 or we are left holding onto data in invalid obstacks. */
489 void
490 stabsread_clear_cache (void)
491 {
492 ref_count = 0;
493 ref_chunk = 0;
494 }
495
496 /* Create array of pointers mapping refids to symbols and stab strings.
497 Add pointers to reference definition symbols and/or their values as we
498 find them, using their reference numbers as our index.
499 These will be used later when we resolve references. */
500 void
501 ref_add (int refnum, struct symbol *sym, char *stabs, CORE_ADDR value)
502 {
503 if (ref_count == 0)
504 ref_chunk = 0;
505 if (refnum >= ref_count)
506 ref_count = refnum + 1;
507 if (ref_count > ref_chunk * MAX_CHUNK_REFS)
508 {
509 int new_slots = ref_count - ref_chunk * MAX_CHUNK_REFS;
510 int new_chunks = new_slots / MAX_CHUNK_REFS + 1;
511 ref_map = (struct ref_map *)
512 xrealloc (ref_map, REF_MAP_SIZE (ref_chunk + new_chunks));
513 memset (ref_map + ref_chunk * MAX_CHUNK_REFS, 0, new_chunks * REF_CHUNK_SIZE);
514 ref_chunk += new_chunks;
515 }
516 ref_map[refnum].stabs = stabs;
517 ref_map[refnum].sym = sym;
518 ref_map[refnum].value = value;
519 }
520
521 /* Return defined sym for the reference REFNUM. */
522 struct symbol *
523 ref_search (int refnum)
524 {
525 if (refnum < 0 || refnum > ref_count)
526 return 0;
527 return ref_map[refnum].sym;
528 }
529
530 /* Parse a reference id in STRING and return the resulting
531 reference number. Move STRING beyond the reference id. */
532
533 static int
534 process_reference (char **string)
535 {
536 char *p;
537 int refnum = 0;
538
539 if (**string != '#')
540 return 0;
541
542 /* Advance beyond the initial '#'. */
543 p = *string + 1;
544
545 /* Read number as reference id. */
546 while (*p && isdigit (*p))
547 {
548 refnum = refnum * 10 + *p - '0';
549 p++;
550 }
551 *string = p;
552 return refnum;
553 }
554
555 /* If STRING defines a reference, store away a pointer to the reference
556 definition for later use. Return the reference number. */
557
558 int
559 symbol_reference_defined (char **string)
560 {
561 char *p = *string;
562 int refnum = 0;
563
564 refnum = process_reference (&p);
565
566 /* Defining symbols end in '=' */
567 if (*p == '=')
568 {
569 /* Symbol is being defined here. */
570 *string = p + 1;
571 return refnum;
572 }
573 else
574 {
575 /* Must be a reference. Either the symbol has already been defined,
576 or this is a forward reference to it. */
577 *string = p;
578 return -1;
579 }
580 }
581
582 struct symbol *
583 define_symbol (CORE_ADDR valu, char *string, int desc, int type,
584 struct objfile *objfile)
585 {
586 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
587 struct symbol *sym;
588 char *p = (char *) find_name_end (string);
589 int deftype;
590 int synonym = 0;
591 int i;
592 char *new_name = NULL;
593
594 /* We would like to eliminate nameless symbols, but keep their types.
595 E.g. stab entry ":t10=*2" should produce a type 10, which is a pointer
596 to type 2, but, should not create a symbol to address that type. Since
597 the symbol will be nameless, there is no way any user can refer to it. */
598
599 int nameless;
600
601 /* Ignore syms with empty names. */
602 if (string[0] == 0)
603 return 0;
604
605 /* Ignore old-style symbols from cc -go */
606 if (p == 0)
607 return 0;
608
609 while (p[1] == ':')
610 {
611 p += 2;
612 p = strchr (p, ':');
613 }
614
615 /* If a nameless stab entry, all we need is the type, not the symbol.
616 e.g. ":t10=*2" or a nameless enum like " :T16=ered:0,green:1,blue:2,;" */
617 nameless = (p == string || ((string[0] == ' ') && (string[1] == ':')));
618
619 current_symbol = sym = (struct symbol *)
620 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, sizeof (struct symbol));
621 memset (sym, 0, sizeof (struct symbol));
622
623 switch (type & N_TYPE)
624 {
625 case N_TEXT:
626 SYMBOL_SECTION (sym) = SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile);
627 break;
628 case N_DATA:
629 SYMBOL_SECTION (sym) = SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile);
630 break;
631 case N_BSS:
632 SYMBOL_SECTION (sym) = SECT_OFF_BSS (objfile);
633 break;
634 }
635
636 if (processing_gcc_compilation)
637 {
638 /* GCC 2.x puts the line number in desc. SunOS apparently puts in the
639 number of bytes occupied by a type or object, which we ignore. */
640 SYMBOL_LINE (sym) = desc;
641 }
642 else
643 {
644 SYMBOL_LINE (sym) = 0; /* unknown */
645 }
646
647 if (is_cplus_marker (string[0]))
648 {
649 /* Special GNU C++ names. */
650 switch (string[1])
651 {
652 case 't':
653 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME
654 (sym, obsavestring ("this", strlen ("this"),
655 &objfile->objfile_obstack));
656 break;
657
658 case 'v': /* $vtbl_ptr_type */
659 goto normal;
660
661 case 'e':
662 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME
663 (sym, obsavestring ("eh_throw", strlen ("eh_throw"),
664 &objfile->objfile_obstack));
665 break;
666
667 case '_':
668 /* This was an anonymous type that was never fixed up. */
669 goto normal;
670
671 case 'X':
672 /* SunPRO (3.0 at least) static variable encoding. */
673 if (gdbarch_static_transform_name_p (gdbarch))
674 goto normal;
675 /* ... fall through ... */
676
677 default:
678 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("Unknown C++ symbol name `%s'"),
679 string);
680 goto normal; /* Do *something* with it */
681 }
682 }
683 else
684 {
685 normal:
686 SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym) = current_subfile->language;
687 if (SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym) == language_cplus)
688 {
689 char *name = alloca (p - string + 1);
690 memcpy (name, string, p - string);
691 name[p - string] = '\0';
692 new_name = cp_canonicalize_string (name);
693 cp_scan_for_anonymous_namespaces (sym);
694 }
695 if (new_name != NULL)
696 {
697 SYMBOL_SET_NAMES (sym, new_name, strlen (new_name), objfile);
698 xfree (new_name);
699 }
700 else
701 SYMBOL_SET_NAMES (sym, string, p - string, objfile);
702 }
703 p++;
704
705 /* Determine the type of name being defined. */
706 #if 0
707 /* Getting GDB to correctly skip the symbol on an undefined symbol
708 descriptor and not ever dump core is a very dodgy proposition if
709 we do things this way. I say the acorn RISC machine can just
710 fix their compiler. */
711 /* The Acorn RISC machine's compiler can put out locals that don't
712 start with "234=" or "(3,4)=", so assume anything other than the
713 deftypes we know how to handle is a local. */
714 if (!strchr ("cfFGpPrStTvVXCR", *p))
715 #else
716 if (isdigit (*p) || *p == '(' || *p == '-')
717 #endif
718 deftype = 'l';
719 else
720 deftype = *p++;
721
722 switch (deftype)
723 {
724 case 'c':
725 /* c is a special case, not followed by a type-number.
726 SYMBOL:c=iVALUE for an integer constant symbol.
727 SYMBOL:c=rVALUE for a floating constant symbol.
728 SYMBOL:c=eTYPE,INTVALUE for an enum constant symbol.
729 e.g. "b:c=e6,0" for "const b = blob1"
730 (where type 6 is defined by "blobs:t6=eblob1:0,blob2:1,;"). */
731 if (*p != '=')
732 {
733 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST;
734 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = error_type (&p, objfile);
735 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
736 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
737 return sym;
738 }
739 ++p;
740 switch (*p++)
741 {
742 case 'r':
743 {
744 double d = atof (p);
745 gdb_byte *dbl_valu;
746 struct type *dbl_type;
747
748 /* FIXME-if-picky-about-floating-accuracy: Should be using
749 target arithmetic to get the value. real.c in GCC
750 probably has the necessary code. */
751
752 dbl_type = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_double;
753 dbl_valu =
754 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
755 TYPE_LENGTH (dbl_type));
756 store_typed_floating (dbl_valu, dbl_type, d);
757
758 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = dbl_type;
759 SYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES (sym) = dbl_valu;
760 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST_BYTES;
761 }
762 break;
763 case 'i':
764 {
765 /* Defining integer constants this way is kind of silly,
766 since 'e' constants allows the compiler to give not
767 only the value, but the type as well. C has at least
768 int, long, unsigned int, and long long as constant
769 types; other languages probably should have at least
770 unsigned as well as signed constants. */
771
772 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_long;
773 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = atoi (p);
774 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST;
775 }
776 break;
777 case 'e':
778 /* SYMBOL:c=eTYPE,INTVALUE for a constant symbol whose value
779 can be represented as integral.
780 e.g. "b:c=e6,0" for "const b = blob1"
781 (where type 6 is defined by "blobs:t6=eblob1:0,blob2:1,;"). */
782 {
783 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST;
784 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
785
786 if (*p != ',')
787 {
788 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = error_type (&p, objfile);
789 break;
790 }
791 ++p;
792
793 /* If the value is too big to fit in an int (perhaps because
794 it is unsigned), or something like that, we silently get
795 a bogus value. The type and everything else about it is
796 correct. Ideally, we should be using whatever we have
797 available for parsing unsigned and long long values,
798 however. */
799 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = atoi (p);
800 }
801 break;
802 default:
803 {
804 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST;
805 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = error_type (&p, objfile);
806 }
807 }
808 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
809 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
810 return sym;
811
812 case 'C':
813 /* The name of a caught exception. */
814 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
815 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_LABEL;
816 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
817 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym) = valu;
818 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
819 break;
820
821 case 'f':
822 /* A static function definition. */
823 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
824 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_BLOCK;
825 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
826 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
827 /* fall into process_function_types. */
828
829 process_function_types:
830 /* Function result types are described as the result type in stabs.
831 We need to convert this to the function-returning-type-X type
832 in GDB. E.g. "int" is converted to "function returning int". */
833 if (TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) != TYPE_CODE_FUNC)
834 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = lookup_function_type (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym));
835
836 /* All functions in C++ have prototypes. Stabs does not offer an
837 explicit way to identify prototyped or unprototyped functions,
838 but both GCC and Sun CC emit stabs for the "call-as" type rather
839 than the "declared-as" type for unprototyped functions, so
840 we treat all functions as if they were prototyped. This is used
841 primarily for promotion when calling the function from GDB. */
842 TYPE_PROTOTYPED (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) = 1;
843
844 /* fall into process_prototype_types */
845
846 process_prototype_types:
847 /* Sun acc puts declared types of arguments here. */
848 if (*p == ';')
849 {
850 struct type *ftype = SYMBOL_TYPE (sym);
851 int nsemi = 0;
852 int nparams = 0;
853 char *p1 = p;
854
855 /* Obtain a worst case guess for the number of arguments
856 by counting the semicolons. */
857 while (*p1)
858 {
859 if (*p1++ == ';')
860 nsemi++;
861 }
862
863 /* Allocate parameter information fields and fill them in. */
864 TYPE_FIELDS (ftype) = (struct field *)
865 TYPE_ALLOC (ftype, nsemi * sizeof (struct field));
866 while (*p++ == ';')
867 {
868 struct type *ptype;
869
870 /* A type number of zero indicates the start of varargs.
871 FIXME: GDB currently ignores vararg functions. */
872 if (p[0] == '0' && p[1] == '\0')
873 break;
874 ptype = read_type (&p, objfile);
875
876 /* The Sun compilers mark integer arguments, which should
877 be promoted to the width of the calling conventions, with
878 a type which references itself. This type is turned into
879 a TYPE_CODE_VOID type by read_type, and we have to turn
880 it back into builtin_int here.
881 FIXME: Do we need a new builtin_promoted_int_arg ? */
882 if (TYPE_CODE (ptype) == TYPE_CODE_VOID)
883 ptype = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int;
884 TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (ftype, nparams) = ptype;
885 TYPE_FIELD_ARTIFICIAL (ftype, nparams++) = 0;
886 }
887 TYPE_NFIELDS (ftype) = nparams;
888 TYPE_PROTOTYPED (ftype) = 1;
889 }
890 break;
891
892 case 'F':
893 /* A global function definition. */
894 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
895 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_BLOCK;
896 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
897 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &global_symbols);
898 goto process_function_types;
899
900 case 'G':
901 /* For a class G (global) symbol, it appears that the
902 value is not correct. It is necessary to search for the
903 corresponding linker definition to find the value.
904 These definitions appear at the end of the namelist. */
905 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
906 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_STATIC;
907 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
908 /* Don't add symbol references to global_sym_chain.
909 Symbol references don't have valid names and wont't match up with
910 minimal symbols when the global_sym_chain is relocated.
911 We'll fixup symbol references when we fixup the defining symbol. */
912 if (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym) && SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym)[0] != '#')
913 {
914 i = hashname (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
915 SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (sym) = global_sym_chain[i];
916 global_sym_chain[i] = sym;
917 }
918 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &global_symbols);
919 break;
920
921 /* This case is faked by a conditional above,
922 when there is no code letter in the dbx data.
923 Dbx data never actually contains 'l'. */
924 case 's':
925 case 'l':
926 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
927 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_LOCAL;
928 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = valu;
929 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
930 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
931 break;
932
933 case 'p':
934 if (*p == 'F')
935 /* pF is a two-letter code that means a function parameter in Fortran.
936 The type-number specifies the type of the return value.
937 Translate it into a pointer-to-function type. */
938 {
939 p++;
940 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)
941 = lookup_pointer_type
942 (lookup_function_type (read_type (&p, objfile)));
943 }
944 else
945 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
946
947 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_ARG;
948 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = valu;
949 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
950 SYMBOL_IS_ARGUMENT (sym) = 1;
951 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
952
953 if (gdbarch_byte_order (gdbarch) != BFD_ENDIAN_BIG)
954 {
955 /* On little-endian machines, this crud is never necessary,
956 and, if the extra bytes contain garbage, is harmful. */
957 break;
958 }
959
960 /* If it's gcc-compiled, if it says `short', believe it. */
961 if (processing_gcc_compilation
962 || gdbarch_believe_pcc_promotion (gdbarch))
963 break;
964
965 if (!gdbarch_believe_pcc_promotion (gdbarch))
966 {
967 /* If PCC says a parameter is a short or a char, it is
968 really an int. */
969 if (TYPE_LENGTH (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym))
970 < gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT
971 && TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == TYPE_CODE_INT)
972 {
973 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) =
974 TYPE_UNSIGNED (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym))
975 ? builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_unsigned_int
976 : builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int;
977 }
978 break;
979 }
980
981 case 'P':
982 /* acc seems to use P to declare the prototypes of functions that
983 are referenced by this file. gdb is not prepared to deal
984 with this extra information. FIXME, it ought to. */
985 if (type == N_FUN)
986 {
987 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
988 goto process_prototype_types;
989 }
990 /*FALLTHROUGH */
991
992 case 'R':
993 /* Parameter which is in a register. */
994 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
995 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_REGISTER;
996 SYMBOL_IS_ARGUMENT (sym) = 1;
997 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = gdbarch_stab_reg_to_regnum (current_gdbarch, valu);
998 if (SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) >= gdbarch_num_regs (current_gdbarch)
999 + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (current_gdbarch))
1000 {
1001 reg_value_complaint (SYMBOL_VALUE (sym),
1002 gdbarch_num_regs (current_gdbarch)
1003 + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (current_gdbarch),
1004 SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym));
1005 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = gdbarch_sp_regnum (current_gdbarch);
1006 /* Known safe, though useless */
1007 }
1008 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1009 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
1010 break;
1011
1012 case 'r':
1013 /* Register variable (either global or local). */
1014 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1015 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_REGISTER;
1016 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = gdbarch_stab_reg_to_regnum (current_gdbarch, valu);
1017 if (SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) >= gdbarch_num_regs (current_gdbarch)
1018 + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (current_gdbarch))
1019 {
1020 reg_value_complaint (SYMBOL_VALUE (sym),
1021 gdbarch_num_regs (current_gdbarch)
1022 + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (current_gdbarch),
1023 SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym));
1024 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = gdbarch_sp_regnum (current_gdbarch);
1025 /* Known safe, though useless */
1026 }
1027 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1028 if (within_function)
1029 {
1030 /* Sun cc uses a pair of symbols, one 'p' and one 'r', with
1031 the same name to represent an argument passed in a
1032 register. GCC uses 'P' for the same case. So if we find
1033 such a symbol pair we combine it into one 'P' symbol.
1034 For Sun cc we need to do this regardless of
1035 stabs_argument_has_addr, because the compiler puts out
1036 the 'p' symbol even if it never saves the argument onto
1037 the stack.
1038
1039 On most machines, we want to preserve both symbols, so
1040 that we can still get information about what is going on
1041 with the stack (VAX for computing args_printed, using
1042 stack slots instead of saved registers in backtraces,
1043 etc.).
1044
1045 Note that this code illegally combines
1046 main(argc) struct foo argc; { register struct foo argc; }
1047 but this case is considered pathological and causes a warning
1048 from a decent compiler. */
1049
1050 if (local_symbols
1051 && local_symbols->nsyms > 0
1052 && gdbarch_stabs_argument_has_addr (gdbarch, SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)))
1053 {
1054 struct symbol *prev_sym;
1055 prev_sym = local_symbols->symbol[local_symbols->nsyms - 1];
1056 if ((SYMBOL_CLASS (prev_sym) == LOC_REF_ARG
1057 || SYMBOL_CLASS (prev_sym) == LOC_ARG)
1058 && strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (prev_sym),
1059 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym)) == 0)
1060 {
1061 SYMBOL_CLASS (prev_sym) = LOC_REGISTER;
1062 /* Use the type from the LOC_REGISTER; that is the type
1063 that is actually in that register. */
1064 SYMBOL_TYPE (prev_sym) = SYMBOL_TYPE (sym);
1065 SYMBOL_VALUE (prev_sym) = SYMBOL_VALUE (sym);
1066 sym = prev_sym;
1067 break;
1068 }
1069 }
1070 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
1071 }
1072 else
1073 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
1074 break;
1075
1076 case 'S':
1077 /* Static symbol at top level of file */
1078 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1079 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_STATIC;
1080 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym) = valu;
1081 if (gdbarch_static_transform_name_p (gdbarch)
1082 && gdbarch_static_transform_name (gdbarch,
1083 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym))
1084 != SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym))
1085 {
1086 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
1087 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym), NULL, objfile);
1088 if (msym != NULL)
1089 {
1090 char *new_name = gdbarch_static_transform_name
1091 (gdbarch, SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
1092 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME (sym, new_name);
1093 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym) = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
1094 }
1095 }
1096 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1097 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
1098 break;
1099
1100 case 't':
1101 /* In Ada, there is no distinction between typedef and non-typedef;
1102 any type declaration implicitly has the equivalent of a typedef,
1103 and thus 't' is in fact equivalent to 'Tt'.
1104
1105 Therefore, for Ada units, we check the character immediately
1106 before the 't', and if we do not find a 'T', then make sure to
1107 create the associated symbol in the STRUCT_DOMAIN ('t' definitions
1108 will be stored in the VAR_DOMAIN). If the symbol was indeed
1109 defined as 'Tt' then the STRUCT_DOMAIN symbol will be created
1110 elsewhere, so we don't need to take care of that.
1111
1112 This is important to do, because of forward references:
1113 The cleanup of undefined types stored in undef_types only uses
1114 STRUCT_DOMAIN symbols to perform the replacement. */
1115 synonym = (SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym) == language_ada && p[-2] != 'T');
1116
1117 /* Typedef */
1118 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1119
1120 /* For a nameless type, we don't want a create a symbol, thus we
1121 did not use `sym'. Return without further processing. */
1122 if (nameless)
1123 return NULL;
1124
1125 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_TYPEDEF;
1126 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = valu;
1127 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1128 /* C++ vagaries: we may have a type which is derived from
1129 a base type which did not have its name defined when the
1130 derived class was output. We fill in the derived class's
1131 base part member's name here in that case. */
1132 if (TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) != NULL)
1133 if ((TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == TYPE_CODE_STRUCT
1134 || TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == TYPE_CODE_UNION)
1135 && TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)))
1136 {
1137 int j;
1138 for (j = TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) - 1; j >= 0; j--)
1139 if (TYPE_BASECLASS_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym), j) == 0)
1140 TYPE_BASECLASS_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym), j) =
1141 type_name_no_tag (TYPE_BASECLASS (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym), j));
1142 }
1143
1144 if (TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == NULL)
1145 {
1146 /* gcc-2.6 or later (when using -fvtable-thunks)
1147 emits a unique named type for a vtable entry.
1148 Some gdb code depends on that specific name. */
1149 extern const char vtbl_ptr_name[];
1150
1151 if ((TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == TYPE_CODE_PTR
1152 && strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym), vtbl_ptr_name))
1153 || TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == TYPE_CODE_FUNC)
1154 {
1155 /* If we are giving a name to a type such as "pointer to
1156 foo" or "function returning foo", we better not set
1157 the TYPE_NAME. If the program contains "typedef char
1158 *caddr_t;", we don't want all variables of type char
1159 * to print as caddr_t. This is not just a
1160 consequence of GDB's type management; PCC and GCC (at
1161 least through version 2.4) both output variables of
1162 either type char * or caddr_t with the type number
1163 defined in the 't' symbol for caddr_t. If a future
1164 compiler cleans this up it GDB is not ready for it
1165 yet, but if it becomes ready we somehow need to
1166 disable this check (without breaking the PCC/GCC2.4
1167 case).
1168
1169 Sigh.
1170
1171 Fortunately, this check seems not to be necessary
1172 for anything except pointers or functions. */
1173 /* ezannoni: 2000-10-26. This seems to apply for
1174 versions of gcc older than 2.8. This was the original
1175 problem: with the following code gdb would tell that
1176 the type for name1 is caddr_t, and func is char()
1177 typedef char *caddr_t;
1178 char *name2;
1179 struct x
1180 {
1181 char *name1;
1182 } xx;
1183 char *func()
1184 {
1185 }
1186 main () {}
1187 */
1188
1189 /* Pascal accepts names for pointer types. */
1190 if (current_subfile->language == language_pascal)
1191 {
1192 TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) = SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym);
1193 }
1194 }
1195 else
1196 TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) = SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym);
1197 }
1198
1199 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
1200
1201 if (synonym)
1202 {
1203 /* Create the STRUCT_DOMAIN clone. */
1204 struct symbol *struct_sym = (struct symbol *)
1205 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, sizeof (struct symbol));
1206
1207 *struct_sym = *sym;
1208 SYMBOL_CLASS (struct_sym) = LOC_TYPEDEF;
1209 SYMBOL_VALUE (struct_sym) = valu;
1210 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (struct_sym) = STRUCT_DOMAIN;
1211 if (TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == 0)
1212 TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym))
1213 = obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack, "", "",
1214 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
1215 add_symbol_to_list (struct_sym, &file_symbols);
1216 }
1217
1218 break;
1219
1220 case 'T':
1221 /* Struct, union, or enum tag. For GNU C++, this can be be followed
1222 by 't' which means we are typedef'ing it as well. */
1223 synonym = *p == 't';
1224
1225 if (synonym)
1226 p++;
1227
1228 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1229
1230 /* For a nameless type, we don't want a create a symbol, thus we
1231 did not use `sym'. Return without further processing. */
1232 if (nameless)
1233 return NULL;
1234
1235 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_TYPEDEF;
1236 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = valu;
1237 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = STRUCT_DOMAIN;
1238 if (TYPE_TAG_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == 0)
1239 TYPE_TAG_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym))
1240 = obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack, "", "",
1241 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
1242 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
1243
1244 if (synonym)
1245 {
1246 /* Clone the sym and then modify it. */
1247 struct symbol *typedef_sym = (struct symbol *)
1248 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, sizeof (struct symbol));
1249 *typedef_sym = *sym;
1250 SYMBOL_CLASS (typedef_sym) = LOC_TYPEDEF;
1251 SYMBOL_VALUE (typedef_sym) = valu;
1252 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (typedef_sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1253 if (TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == 0)
1254 TYPE_NAME (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym))
1255 = obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack, "", "",
1256 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
1257 add_symbol_to_list (typedef_sym, &file_symbols);
1258 }
1259 break;
1260
1261 case 'V':
1262 /* Static symbol of local scope */
1263 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1264 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_STATIC;
1265 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym) = valu;
1266 if (gdbarch_static_transform_name_p (gdbarch)
1267 && gdbarch_static_transform_name (gdbarch,
1268 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym))
1269 != SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym))
1270 {
1271 struct minimal_symbol *msym;
1272 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym), NULL, objfile);
1273 if (msym != NULL)
1274 {
1275 char *new_name = gdbarch_static_transform_name
1276 (gdbarch, SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
1277 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME (sym, new_name);
1278 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym) = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
1279 }
1280 }
1281 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1282 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
1283 break;
1284
1285 case 'v':
1286 /* Reference parameter */
1287 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1288 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_REF_ARG;
1289 SYMBOL_IS_ARGUMENT (sym) = 1;
1290 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = valu;
1291 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1292 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
1293 break;
1294
1295 case 'a':
1296 /* Reference parameter which is in a register. */
1297 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1298 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_REGPARM_ADDR;
1299 SYMBOL_IS_ARGUMENT (sym) = 1;
1300 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = gdbarch_stab_reg_to_regnum (current_gdbarch, valu);
1301 if (SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) >= gdbarch_num_regs (current_gdbarch)
1302 + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (current_gdbarch))
1303 {
1304 reg_value_complaint (SYMBOL_VALUE (sym),
1305 gdbarch_num_regs (current_gdbarch)
1306 + gdbarch_num_pseudo_regs (current_gdbarch),
1307 SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (sym));
1308 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = gdbarch_sp_regnum (current_gdbarch);
1309 /* Known safe, though useless */
1310 }
1311 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1312 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
1313 break;
1314
1315 case 'X':
1316 /* This is used by Sun FORTRAN for "function result value".
1317 Sun claims ("dbx and dbxtool interfaces", 2nd ed)
1318 that Pascal uses it too, but when I tried it Pascal used
1319 "x:3" (local symbol) instead. */
1320 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = read_type (&p, objfile);
1321 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_LOCAL;
1322 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = valu;
1323 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1324 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &local_symbols);
1325 break;
1326
1327 default:
1328 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = error_type (&p, objfile);
1329 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST;
1330 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = 0;
1331 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
1332 add_symbol_to_list (sym, &file_symbols);
1333 break;
1334 }
1335
1336 /* Some systems pass variables of certain types by reference instead
1337 of by value, i.e. they will pass the address of a structure (in a
1338 register or on the stack) instead of the structure itself. */
1339
1340 if (gdbarch_stabs_argument_has_addr (gdbarch, SYMBOL_TYPE (sym))
1341 && SYMBOL_IS_ARGUMENT (sym))
1342 {
1343 /* We have to convert LOC_REGISTER to LOC_REGPARM_ADDR (for
1344 variables passed in a register). */
1345 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_REGISTER)
1346 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_REGPARM_ADDR;
1347 /* Likewise for converting LOC_ARG to LOC_REF_ARG (for the 7th
1348 and subsequent arguments on SPARC, for example). */
1349 else if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_ARG)
1350 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_REF_ARG;
1351 }
1352
1353 return sym;
1354 }
1355
1356 /* Skip rest of this symbol and return an error type.
1357
1358 General notes on error recovery: error_type always skips to the
1359 end of the symbol (modulo cretinous dbx symbol name continuation).
1360 Thus code like this:
1361
1362 if (*(*pp)++ != ';')
1363 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1364
1365 is wrong because if *pp starts out pointing at '\0' (typically as the
1366 result of an earlier error), it will be incremented to point to the
1367 start of the next symbol, which might produce strange results, at least
1368 if you run off the end of the string table. Instead use
1369
1370 if (**pp != ';')
1371 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1372 ++*pp;
1373
1374 or
1375
1376 if (**pp != ';')
1377 foo = error_type (pp, objfile);
1378 else
1379 ++*pp;
1380
1381 And in case it isn't obvious, the point of all this hair is so the compiler
1382 can define new types and new syntaxes, and old versions of the
1383 debugger will be able to read the new symbol tables. */
1384
1385 static struct type *
1386 error_type (char **pp, struct objfile *objfile)
1387 {
1388 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("couldn't parse type; debugger out of date?"));
1389 while (1)
1390 {
1391 /* Skip to end of symbol. */
1392 while (**pp != '\0')
1393 {
1394 (*pp)++;
1395 }
1396
1397 /* Check for and handle cretinous dbx symbol name continuation! */
1398 if ((*pp)[-1] == '\\' || (*pp)[-1] == '?')
1399 {
1400 *pp = next_symbol_text (objfile);
1401 }
1402 else
1403 {
1404 break;
1405 }
1406 }
1407 return (builtin_type_error);
1408 }
1409 \f
1410
1411 /* Read type information or a type definition; return the type. Even
1412 though this routine accepts either type information or a type
1413 definition, the distinction is relevant--some parts of stabsread.c
1414 assume that type information starts with a digit, '-', or '(' in
1415 deciding whether to call read_type. */
1416
1417 static struct type *
1418 read_type (char **pp, struct objfile *objfile)
1419 {
1420 struct type *type = 0;
1421 struct type *type1;
1422 int typenums[2];
1423 char type_descriptor;
1424
1425 /* Size in bits of type if specified by a type attribute, or -1 if
1426 there is no size attribute. */
1427 int type_size = -1;
1428
1429 /* Used to distinguish string and bitstring from char-array and set. */
1430 int is_string = 0;
1431
1432 /* Used to distinguish vector from array. */
1433 int is_vector = 0;
1434
1435 /* Read type number if present. The type number may be omitted.
1436 for instance in a two-dimensional array declared with type
1437 "ar1;1;10;ar1;1;10;4". */
1438 if ((**pp >= '0' && **pp <= '9')
1439 || **pp == '('
1440 || **pp == '-')
1441 {
1442 if (read_type_number (pp, typenums) != 0)
1443 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1444
1445 if (**pp != '=')
1446 {
1447 /* Type is not being defined here. Either it already
1448 exists, or this is a forward reference to it.
1449 dbx_alloc_type handles both cases. */
1450 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1451
1452 /* If this is a forward reference, arrange to complain if it
1453 doesn't get patched up by the time we're done
1454 reading. */
1455 if (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_UNDEF)
1456 add_undefined_type (type, typenums);
1457
1458 return type;
1459 }
1460
1461 /* Type is being defined here. */
1462 /* Skip the '='.
1463 Also skip the type descriptor - we get it below with (*pp)[-1]. */
1464 (*pp) += 2;
1465 }
1466 else
1467 {
1468 /* 'typenums=' not present, type is anonymous. Read and return
1469 the definition, but don't put it in the type vector. */
1470 typenums[0] = typenums[1] = -1;
1471 (*pp)++;
1472 }
1473
1474 again:
1475 type_descriptor = (*pp)[-1];
1476 switch (type_descriptor)
1477 {
1478 case 'x':
1479 {
1480 enum type_code code;
1481
1482 /* Used to index through file_symbols. */
1483 struct pending *ppt;
1484 int i;
1485
1486 /* Name including "struct", etc. */
1487 char *type_name;
1488
1489 {
1490 char *from, *to, *p, *q1, *q2;
1491
1492 /* Set the type code according to the following letter. */
1493 switch ((*pp)[0])
1494 {
1495 case 's':
1496 code = TYPE_CODE_STRUCT;
1497 break;
1498 case 'u':
1499 code = TYPE_CODE_UNION;
1500 break;
1501 case 'e':
1502 code = TYPE_CODE_ENUM;
1503 break;
1504 default:
1505 {
1506 /* Complain and keep going, so compilers can invent new
1507 cross-reference types. */
1508 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
1509 _("Unrecognized cross-reference type `%c'"), (*pp)[0]);
1510 code = TYPE_CODE_STRUCT;
1511 break;
1512 }
1513 }
1514
1515 q1 = strchr (*pp, '<');
1516 p = strchr (*pp, ':');
1517 if (p == NULL)
1518 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1519 if (q1 && p > q1 && p[1] == ':')
1520 {
1521 int nesting_level = 0;
1522 for (q2 = q1; *q2; q2++)
1523 {
1524 if (*q2 == '<')
1525 nesting_level++;
1526 else if (*q2 == '>')
1527 nesting_level--;
1528 else if (*q2 == ':' && nesting_level == 0)
1529 break;
1530 }
1531 p = q2;
1532 if (*p != ':')
1533 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1534 }
1535 type_name = NULL;
1536 if (current_subfile->language == language_cplus)
1537 {
1538 char *new_name, *name = alloca (p - *pp + 1);
1539 memcpy (name, *pp, p - *pp);
1540 name[p - *pp] = '\0';
1541 new_name = cp_canonicalize_string (name);
1542 if (new_name != NULL)
1543 {
1544 type_name = obsavestring (new_name, strlen (new_name),
1545 &objfile->objfile_obstack);
1546 xfree (new_name);
1547 }
1548 }
1549 if (type_name == NULL)
1550 {
1551 to = type_name =
1552 (char *) obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, p - *pp + 1);
1553
1554 /* Copy the name. */
1555 from = *pp + 1;
1556 while (from < p)
1557 *to++ = *from++;
1558 *to = '\0';
1559 }
1560
1561 /* Set the pointer ahead of the name which we just read, and
1562 the colon. */
1563 *pp = p + 1;
1564 }
1565
1566 /* If this type has already been declared, then reuse the same
1567 type, rather than allocating a new one. This saves some
1568 memory. */
1569
1570 for (ppt = file_symbols; ppt; ppt = ppt->next)
1571 for (i = 0; i < ppt->nsyms; i++)
1572 {
1573 struct symbol *sym = ppt->symbol[i];
1574
1575 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_TYPEDEF
1576 && SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) == STRUCT_DOMAIN
1577 && (TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) == code)
1578 && strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym), type_name) == 0)
1579 {
1580 obstack_free (&objfile->objfile_obstack, type_name);
1581 type = SYMBOL_TYPE (sym);
1582 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1583 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1584 return type;
1585 }
1586 }
1587
1588 /* Didn't find the type to which this refers, so we must
1589 be dealing with a forward reference. Allocate a type
1590 structure for it, and keep track of it so we can
1591 fill in the rest of the fields when we get the full
1592 type. */
1593 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1594 TYPE_CODE (type) = code;
1595 TYPE_TAG_NAME (type) = type_name;
1596 INIT_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (type);
1597 TYPE_STUB (type) = 1;
1598
1599 add_undefined_type (type, typenums);
1600 return type;
1601 }
1602
1603 case '-': /* RS/6000 built-in type */
1604 case '0':
1605 case '1':
1606 case '2':
1607 case '3':
1608 case '4':
1609 case '5':
1610 case '6':
1611 case '7':
1612 case '8':
1613 case '9':
1614 case '(':
1615 (*pp)--;
1616
1617 /* We deal with something like t(1,2)=(3,4)=... which
1618 the Lucid compiler and recent gcc versions (post 2.7.3) use. */
1619
1620 /* Allocate and enter the typedef type first.
1621 This handles recursive types. */
1622 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1623 TYPE_CODE (type) = TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF;
1624 {
1625 struct type *xtype = read_type (pp, objfile);
1626 if (type == xtype)
1627 {
1628 /* It's being defined as itself. That means it is "void". */
1629 TYPE_CODE (type) = TYPE_CODE_VOID;
1630 TYPE_LENGTH (type) = 1;
1631 }
1632 else if (type_size >= 0 || is_string)
1633 {
1634 /* This is the absolute wrong way to construct types. Every
1635 other debug format has found a way around this problem and
1636 the related problems with unnecessarily stubbed types;
1637 someone motivated should attempt to clean up the issue
1638 here as well. Once a type pointed to has been created it
1639 should not be modified.
1640
1641 Well, it's not *absolutely* wrong. Constructing recursive
1642 types (trees, linked lists) necessarily entails modifying
1643 types after creating them. Constructing any loop structure
1644 entails side effects. The Dwarf 2 reader does handle this
1645 more gracefully (it never constructs more than once
1646 instance of a type object, so it doesn't have to copy type
1647 objects wholesale), but it still mutates type objects after
1648 other folks have references to them.
1649
1650 Keep in mind that this circularity/mutation issue shows up
1651 at the source language level, too: C's "incomplete types",
1652 for example. So the proper cleanup, I think, would be to
1653 limit GDB's type smashing to match exactly those required
1654 by the source language. So GDB could have a
1655 "complete_this_type" function, but never create unnecessary
1656 copies of a type otherwise. */
1657 replace_type (type, xtype);
1658 TYPE_NAME (type) = NULL;
1659 TYPE_TAG_NAME (type) = NULL;
1660 }
1661 else
1662 {
1663 TYPE_TARGET_STUB (type) = 1;
1664 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (type) = xtype;
1665 }
1666 }
1667 break;
1668
1669 /* In the following types, we must be sure to overwrite any existing
1670 type that the typenums refer to, rather than allocating a new one
1671 and making the typenums point to the new one. This is because there
1672 may already be pointers to the existing type (if it had been
1673 forward-referenced), and we must change it to a pointer, function,
1674 reference, or whatever, *in-place*. */
1675
1676 case '*': /* Pointer to another type */
1677 type1 = read_type (pp, objfile);
1678 type = make_pointer_type (type1, dbx_lookup_type (typenums));
1679 break;
1680
1681 case '&': /* Reference to another type */
1682 type1 = read_type (pp, objfile);
1683 type = make_reference_type (type1, dbx_lookup_type (typenums));
1684 break;
1685
1686 case 'f': /* Function returning another type */
1687 type1 = read_type (pp, objfile);
1688 type = make_function_type (type1, dbx_lookup_type (typenums));
1689 break;
1690
1691 case 'g': /* Prototyped function. (Sun) */
1692 {
1693 /* Unresolved questions:
1694
1695 - According to Sun's ``STABS Interface Manual'', for 'f'
1696 and 'F' symbol descriptors, a `0' in the argument type list
1697 indicates a varargs function. But it doesn't say how 'g'
1698 type descriptors represent that info. Someone with access
1699 to Sun's toolchain should try it out.
1700
1701 - According to the comment in define_symbol (search for
1702 `process_prototype_types:'), Sun emits integer arguments as
1703 types which ref themselves --- like `void' types. Do we
1704 have to deal with that here, too? Again, someone with
1705 access to Sun's toolchain should try it out and let us
1706 know. */
1707
1708 const char *type_start = (*pp) - 1;
1709 struct type *return_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
1710 struct type *func_type
1711 = make_function_type (return_type, dbx_lookup_type (typenums));
1712 struct type_list {
1713 struct type *type;
1714 struct type_list *next;
1715 } *arg_types = 0;
1716 int num_args = 0;
1717
1718 while (**pp && **pp != '#')
1719 {
1720 struct type *arg_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
1721 struct type_list *new = alloca (sizeof (*new));
1722 new->type = arg_type;
1723 new->next = arg_types;
1724 arg_types = new;
1725 num_args++;
1726 }
1727 if (**pp == '#')
1728 ++*pp;
1729 else
1730 {
1731 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
1732 _("Prototyped function type didn't end arguments with `#':\n%s"),
1733 type_start);
1734 }
1735
1736 /* If there is just one argument whose type is `void', then
1737 that's just an empty argument list. */
1738 if (arg_types
1739 && ! arg_types->next
1740 && TYPE_CODE (arg_types->type) == TYPE_CODE_VOID)
1741 num_args = 0;
1742
1743 TYPE_FIELDS (func_type)
1744 = (struct field *) TYPE_ALLOC (func_type,
1745 num_args * sizeof (struct field));
1746 memset (TYPE_FIELDS (func_type), 0, num_args * sizeof (struct field));
1747 {
1748 int i;
1749 struct type_list *t;
1750
1751 /* We stuck each argument type onto the front of the list
1752 when we read it, so the list is reversed. Build the
1753 fields array right-to-left. */
1754 for (t = arg_types, i = num_args - 1; t; t = t->next, i--)
1755 TYPE_FIELD_TYPE (func_type, i) = t->type;
1756 }
1757 TYPE_NFIELDS (func_type) = num_args;
1758 TYPE_PROTOTYPED (func_type) = 1;
1759
1760 type = func_type;
1761 break;
1762 }
1763
1764 case 'k': /* Const qualifier on some type (Sun) */
1765 type = read_type (pp, objfile);
1766 type = make_cv_type (1, TYPE_VOLATILE (type), type,
1767 dbx_lookup_type (typenums));
1768 break;
1769
1770 case 'B': /* Volatile qual on some type (Sun) */
1771 type = read_type (pp, objfile);
1772 type = make_cv_type (TYPE_CONST (type), 1, type,
1773 dbx_lookup_type (typenums));
1774 break;
1775
1776 case '@':
1777 if (isdigit (**pp) || **pp == '(' || **pp == '-')
1778 { /* Member (class & variable) type */
1779 /* FIXME -- we should be doing smash_to_XXX types here. */
1780
1781 struct type *domain = read_type (pp, objfile);
1782 struct type *memtype;
1783
1784 if (**pp != ',')
1785 /* Invalid member type data format. */
1786 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1787 ++*pp;
1788
1789 memtype = read_type (pp, objfile);
1790 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1791 smash_to_memberptr_type (type, domain, memtype);
1792 }
1793 else
1794 /* type attribute */
1795 {
1796 char *attr = *pp;
1797 /* Skip to the semicolon. */
1798 while (**pp != ';' && **pp != '\0')
1799 ++(*pp);
1800 if (**pp == '\0')
1801 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1802 else
1803 ++ * pp; /* Skip the semicolon. */
1804
1805 switch (*attr)
1806 {
1807 case 's': /* Size attribute */
1808 type_size = atoi (attr + 1);
1809 if (type_size <= 0)
1810 type_size = -1;
1811 break;
1812
1813 case 'S': /* String attribute */
1814 /* FIXME: check to see if following type is array? */
1815 is_string = 1;
1816 break;
1817
1818 case 'V': /* Vector attribute */
1819 /* FIXME: check to see if following type is array? */
1820 is_vector = 1;
1821 break;
1822
1823 default:
1824 /* Ignore unrecognized type attributes, so future compilers
1825 can invent new ones. */
1826 break;
1827 }
1828 ++*pp;
1829 goto again;
1830 }
1831 break;
1832
1833 case '#': /* Method (class & fn) type */
1834 if ((*pp)[0] == '#')
1835 {
1836 /* We'll get the parameter types from the name. */
1837 struct type *return_type;
1838
1839 (*pp)++;
1840 return_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
1841 if (*(*pp)++ != ';')
1842 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
1843 _("invalid (minimal) member type data format at symtab pos %d."),
1844 symnum);
1845 type = allocate_stub_method (return_type);
1846 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1847 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1848 }
1849 else
1850 {
1851 struct type *domain = read_type (pp, objfile);
1852 struct type *return_type;
1853 struct field *args;
1854 int nargs, varargs;
1855
1856 if (**pp != ',')
1857 /* Invalid member type data format. */
1858 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1859 else
1860 ++(*pp);
1861
1862 return_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
1863 args = read_args (pp, ';', objfile, &nargs, &varargs);
1864 if (args == NULL)
1865 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1866 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1867 smash_to_method_type (type, domain, return_type, args,
1868 nargs, varargs);
1869 }
1870 break;
1871
1872 case 'r': /* Range type */
1873 type = read_range_type (pp, typenums, type_size, objfile);
1874 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1875 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1876 break;
1877
1878 case 'b':
1879 {
1880 /* Sun ACC builtin int type */
1881 type = read_sun_builtin_type (pp, typenums, objfile);
1882 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1883 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1884 }
1885 break;
1886
1887 case 'R': /* Sun ACC builtin float type */
1888 type = read_sun_floating_type (pp, typenums, objfile);
1889 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1890 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1891 break;
1892
1893 case 'e': /* Enumeration type */
1894 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1895 type = read_enum_type (pp, type, objfile);
1896 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1897 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1898 break;
1899
1900 case 's': /* Struct type */
1901 case 'u': /* Union type */
1902 {
1903 enum type_code type_code = TYPE_CODE_UNDEF;
1904 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1905 switch (type_descriptor)
1906 {
1907 case 's':
1908 type_code = TYPE_CODE_STRUCT;
1909 break;
1910 case 'u':
1911 type_code = TYPE_CODE_UNION;
1912 break;
1913 }
1914 type = read_struct_type (pp, type, type_code, objfile);
1915 break;
1916 }
1917
1918 case 'a': /* Array type */
1919 if (**pp != 'r')
1920 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1921 ++*pp;
1922
1923 type = dbx_alloc_type (typenums, objfile);
1924 type = read_array_type (pp, type, objfile);
1925 if (is_string)
1926 TYPE_CODE (type) = TYPE_CODE_STRING;
1927 if (is_vector)
1928 make_vector_type (type);
1929 break;
1930
1931 case 'S': /* Set or bitstring type */
1932 type1 = read_type (pp, objfile);
1933 type = create_set_type ((struct type *) NULL, type1);
1934 if (is_string)
1935 TYPE_CODE (type) = TYPE_CODE_BITSTRING;
1936 if (typenums[0] != -1)
1937 *dbx_lookup_type (typenums) = type;
1938 break;
1939
1940 default:
1941 --*pp; /* Go back to the symbol in error */
1942 /* Particularly important if it was \0! */
1943 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1944 }
1945
1946 if (type == 0)
1947 {
1948 warning (_("GDB internal error, type is NULL in stabsread.c."));
1949 return error_type (pp, objfile);
1950 }
1951
1952 /* Size specified in a type attribute overrides any other size. */
1953 if (type_size != -1)
1954 TYPE_LENGTH (type) = (type_size + TARGET_CHAR_BIT - 1) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT;
1955
1956 return type;
1957 }
1958 \f
1959 /* RS/6000 xlc/dbx combination uses a set of builtin types, starting from -1.
1960 Return the proper type node for a given builtin type number. */
1961
1962 static struct type *
1963 rs6000_builtin_type (int typenum)
1964 {
1965 /* We recognize types numbered from -NUMBER_RECOGNIZED to -1. */
1966 #define NUMBER_RECOGNIZED 34
1967 /* This includes an empty slot for type number -0. */
1968 static struct type *negative_types[NUMBER_RECOGNIZED + 1];
1969 struct type *rettype = NULL;
1970
1971 if (typenum >= 0 || typenum < -NUMBER_RECOGNIZED)
1972 {
1973 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("Unknown builtin type %d"), typenum);
1974 return builtin_type_error;
1975 }
1976 if (negative_types[-typenum] != NULL)
1977 return negative_types[-typenum];
1978
1979 #if TARGET_CHAR_BIT != 8
1980 #error This code wrong for TARGET_CHAR_BIT not 8
1981 /* These definitions all assume that TARGET_CHAR_BIT is 8. I think
1982 that if that ever becomes not true, the correct fix will be to
1983 make the size in the struct type to be in bits, not in units of
1984 TARGET_CHAR_BIT. */
1985 #endif
1986
1987 switch (-typenum)
1988 {
1989 case 1:
1990 /* The size of this and all the other types are fixed, defined
1991 by the debugging format. If there is a type called "int" which
1992 is other than 32 bits, then it should use a new negative type
1993 number (or avoid negative type numbers for that case).
1994 See stabs.texinfo. */
1995 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, 0, "int", NULL);
1996 break;
1997 case 2:
1998 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 1, 0, "char", NULL);
1999 break;
2000 case 3:
2001 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 2, 0, "short", NULL);
2002 break;
2003 case 4:
2004 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, 0, "long", NULL);
2005 break;
2006 case 5:
2007 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 1, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2008 "unsigned char", NULL);
2009 break;
2010 case 6:
2011 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 1, 0, "signed char", NULL);
2012 break;
2013 case 7:
2014 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 2, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2015 "unsigned short", NULL);
2016 break;
2017 case 8:
2018 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2019 "unsigned int", NULL);
2020 break;
2021 case 9:
2022 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2023 "unsigned", NULL);
2024 case 10:
2025 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2026 "unsigned long", NULL);
2027 break;
2028 case 11:
2029 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_VOID, 1, 0, "void", NULL);
2030 break;
2031 case 12:
2032 /* IEEE single precision (32 bit). */
2033 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 4, 0, "float", NULL);
2034 break;
2035 case 13:
2036 /* IEEE double precision (64 bit). */
2037 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 8, 0, "double", NULL);
2038 break;
2039 case 14:
2040 /* This is an IEEE double on the RS/6000, and different machines with
2041 different sizes for "long double" should use different negative
2042 type numbers. See stabs.texinfo. */
2043 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 8, 0, "long double", NULL);
2044 break;
2045 case 15:
2046 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, 0, "integer", NULL);
2047 break;
2048 case 16:
2049 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_BOOL, 4, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2050 "boolean", NULL);
2051 break;
2052 case 17:
2053 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 4, 0, "short real", NULL);
2054 break;
2055 case 18:
2056 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 8, 0, "real", NULL);
2057 break;
2058 case 19:
2059 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_ERROR, 0, 0, "stringptr", NULL);
2060 break;
2061 case 20:
2062 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_CHAR, 1, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2063 "character", NULL);
2064 break;
2065 case 21:
2066 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_BOOL, 1, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2067 "logical*1", NULL);
2068 break;
2069 case 22:
2070 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_BOOL, 2, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2071 "logical*2", NULL);
2072 break;
2073 case 23:
2074 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_BOOL, 4, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2075 "logical*4", NULL);
2076 break;
2077 case 24:
2078 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_BOOL, 4, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2079 "logical", NULL);
2080 break;
2081 case 25:
2082 /* Complex type consisting of two IEEE single precision values. */
2083 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX, 8, 0, "complex", NULL);
2084 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (rettype) = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 4, 0, "float",
2085 NULL);
2086 break;
2087 case 26:
2088 /* Complex type consisting of two IEEE double precision values. */
2089 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX, 16, 0, "double complex", NULL);
2090 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (rettype) = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, 8, 0, "double",
2091 NULL);
2092 break;
2093 case 27:
2094 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 1, 0, "integer*1", NULL);
2095 break;
2096 case 28:
2097 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 2, 0, "integer*2", NULL);
2098 break;
2099 case 29:
2100 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, 0, "integer*4", NULL);
2101 break;
2102 case 30:
2103 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_CHAR, 2, 0, "wchar", NULL);
2104 break;
2105 case 31:
2106 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 8, 0, "long long", NULL);
2107 break;
2108 case 32:
2109 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 8, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2110 "unsigned long long", NULL);
2111 break;
2112 case 33:
2113 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 8, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
2114 "logical*8", NULL);
2115 break;
2116 case 34:
2117 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 8, 0, "integer*8", NULL);
2118 break;
2119 }
2120 negative_types[-typenum] = rettype;
2121 return rettype;
2122 }
2123 \f
2124 /* This page contains subroutines of read_type. */
2125
2126 /* Replace *OLD_NAME with the method name portion of PHYSNAME. */
2127
2128 static void
2129 update_method_name_from_physname (char **old_name, char *physname)
2130 {
2131 char *method_name;
2132
2133 method_name = method_name_from_physname (physname);
2134
2135 if (method_name == NULL)
2136 {
2137 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
2138 _("Method has bad physname %s\n"), physname);
2139 return;
2140 }
2141
2142 if (strcmp (*old_name, method_name) != 0)
2143 {
2144 xfree (*old_name);
2145 *old_name = method_name;
2146 }
2147 else
2148 xfree (method_name);
2149 }
2150
2151 /* Read member function stabs info for C++ classes. The form of each member
2152 function data is:
2153
2154 NAME :: TYPENUM[=type definition] ARGS : PHYSNAME ;
2155
2156 An example with two member functions is:
2157
2158 afunc1::20=##15;:i;2A.;afunc2::20:i;2A.;
2159
2160 For the case of overloaded operators, the format is op$::*.funcs, where
2161 $ is the CPLUS_MARKER (usually '$'), `*' holds the place for an operator
2162 name (such as `+=') and `.' marks the end of the operator name.
2163
2164 Returns 1 for success, 0 for failure. */
2165
2166 static int
2167 read_member_functions (struct field_info *fip, char **pp, struct type *type,
2168 struct objfile *objfile)
2169 {
2170 int nfn_fields = 0;
2171 int length = 0;
2172 /* Total number of member functions defined in this class. If the class
2173 defines two `f' functions, and one `g' function, then this will have
2174 the value 3. */
2175 int total_length = 0;
2176 int i;
2177 struct next_fnfield
2178 {
2179 struct next_fnfield *next;
2180 struct fn_field fn_field;
2181 }
2182 *sublist;
2183 struct type *look_ahead_type;
2184 struct next_fnfieldlist *new_fnlist;
2185 struct next_fnfield *new_sublist;
2186 char *main_fn_name;
2187 char *p;
2188
2189 /* Process each list until we find something that is not a member function
2190 or find the end of the functions. */
2191
2192 while (**pp != ';')
2193 {
2194 /* We should be positioned at the start of the function name.
2195 Scan forward to find the first ':' and if it is not the
2196 first of a "::" delimiter, then this is not a member function. */
2197 p = *pp;
2198 while (*p != ':')
2199 {
2200 p++;
2201 }
2202 if (p[1] != ':')
2203 {
2204 break;
2205 }
2206
2207 sublist = NULL;
2208 look_ahead_type = NULL;
2209 length = 0;
2210
2211 new_fnlist = (struct next_fnfieldlist *)
2212 xmalloc (sizeof (struct next_fnfieldlist));
2213 make_cleanup (xfree, new_fnlist);
2214 memset (new_fnlist, 0, sizeof (struct next_fnfieldlist));
2215
2216 if ((*pp)[0] == 'o' && (*pp)[1] == 'p' && is_cplus_marker ((*pp)[2]))
2217 {
2218 /* This is a completely wierd case. In order to stuff in the
2219 names that might contain colons (the usual name delimiter),
2220 Mike Tiemann defined a different name format which is
2221 signalled if the identifier is "op$". In that case, the
2222 format is "op$::XXXX." where XXXX is the name. This is
2223 used for names like "+" or "=". YUUUUUUUK! FIXME! */
2224 /* This lets the user type "break operator+".
2225 We could just put in "+" as the name, but that wouldn't
2226 work for "*". */
2227 static char opname[32] = "op$";
2228 char *o = opname + 3;
2229
2230 /* Skip past '::'. */
2231 *pp = p + 2;
2232
2233 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2234 p = *pp;
2235 while (*p != '.')
2236 {
2237 *o++ = *p++;
2238 }
2239 main_fn_name = savestring (opname, o - opname);
2240 /* Skip past '.' */
2241 *pp = p + 1;
2242 }
2243 else
2244 {
2245 main_fn_name = savestring (*pp, p - *pp);
2246 /* Skip past '::'. */
2247 *pp = p + 2;
2248 }
2249 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name = main_fn_name;
2250
2251 do
2252 {
2253 new_sublist =
2254 (struct next_fnfield *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct next_fnfield));
2255 make_cleanup (xfree, new_sublist);
2256 memset (new_sublist, 0, sizeof (struct next_fnfield));
2257
2258 /* Check for and handle cretinous dbx symbol name continuation! */
2259 if (look_ahead_type == NULL)
2260 {
2261 /* Normal case. */
2262 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2263
2264 new_sublist->fn_field.type = read_type (pp, objfile);
2265 if (**pp != ':')
2266 {
2267 /* Invalid symtab info for member function. */
2268 return 0;
2269 }
2270 }
2271 else
2272 {
2273 /* g++ version 1 kludge */
2274 new_sublist->fn_field.type = look_ahead_type;
2275 look_ahead_type = NULL;
2276 }
2277
2278 (*pp)++;
2279 p = *pp;
2280 while (*p != ';')
2281 {
2282 p++;
2283 }
2284
2285 /* If this is just a stub, then we don't have the real name here. */
2286
2287 if (TYPE_STUB (new_sublist->fn_field.type))
2288 {
2289 if (!TYPE_DOMAIN_TYPE (new_sublist->fn_field.type))
2290 TYPE_DOMAIN_TYPE (new_sublist->fn_field.type) = type;
2291 new_sublist->fn_field.is_stub = 1;
2292 }
2293 new_sublist->fn_field.physname = savestring (*pp, p - *pp);
2294 *pp = p + 1;
2295
2296 /* Set this member function's visibility fields. */
2297 switch (*(*pp)++)
2298 {
2299 case VISIBILITY_PRIVATE:
2300 new_sublist->fn_field.is_private = 1;
2301 break;
2302 case VISIBILITY_PROTECTED:
2303 new_sublist->fn_field.is_protected = 1;
2304 break;
2305 }
2306
2307 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2308 switch (**pp)
2309 {
2310 case 'A': /* Normal functions. */
2311 new_sublist->fn_field.is_const = 0;
2312 new_sublist->fn_field.is_volatile = 0;
2313 (*pp)++;
2314 break;
2315 case 'B': /* `const' member functions. */
2316 new_sublist->fn_field.is_const = 1;
2317 new_sublist->fn_field.is_volatile = 0;
2318 (*pp)++;
2319 break;
2320 case 'C': /* `volatile' member function. */
2321 new_sublist->fn_field.is_const = 0;
2322 new_sublist->fn_field.is_volatile = 1;
2323 (*pp)++;
2324 break;
2325 case 'D': /* `const volatile' member function. */
2326 new_sublist->fn_field.is_const = 1;
2327 new_sublist->fn_field.is_volatile = 1;
2328 (*pp)++;
2329 break;
2330 case '*': /* File compiled with g++ version 1 -- no info */
2331 case '?':
2332 case '.':
2333 break;
2334 default:
2335 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
2336 _("const/volatile indicator missing, got '%c'"), **pp);
2337 break;
2338 }
2339
2340 switch (*(*pp)++)
2341 {
2342 case '*':
2343 {
2344 int nbits;
2345 /* virtual member function, followed by index.
2346 The sign bit is set to distinguish pointers-to-methods
2347 from virtual function indicies. Since the array is
2348 in words, the quantity must be shifted left by 1
2349 on 16 bit machine, and by 2 on 32 bit machine, forcing
2350 the sign bit out, and usable as a valid index into
2351 the array. Remove the sign bit here. */
2352 new_sublist->fn_field.voffset =
2353 (0x7fffffff & read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0)) + 2;
2354 if (nbits != 0)
2355 return 0;
2356
2357 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2358 if (**pp == ';' || **pp == '\0')
2359 {
2360 /* Must be g++ version 1. */
2361 new_sublist->fn_field.fcontext = 0;
2362 }
2363 else
2364 {
2365 /* Figure out from whence this virtual function came.
2366 It may belong to virtual function table of
2367 one of its baseclasses. */
2368 look_ahead_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
2369 if (**pp == ':')
2370 {
2371 /* g++ version 1 overloaded methods. */
2372 }
2373 else
2374 {
2375 new_sublist->fn_field.fcontext = look_ahead_type;
2376 if (**pp != ';')
2377 {
2378 return 0;
2379 }
2380 else
2381 {
2382 ++*pp;
2383 }
2384 look_ahead_type = NULL;
2385 }
2386 }
2387 break;
2388 }
2389 case '?':
2390 /* static member function. */
2391 {
2392 int slen = strlen (main_fn_name);
2393
2394 new_sublist->fn_field.voffset = VOFFSET_STATIC;
2395
2396 /* For static member functions, we can't tell if they
2397 are stubbed, as they are put out as functions, and not as
2398 methods.
2399 GCC v2 emits the fully mangled name if
2400 dbxout.c:flag_minimal_debug is not set, so we have to
2401 detect a fully mangled physname here and set is_stub
2402 accordingly. Fully mangled physnames in v2 start with
2403 the member function name, followed by two underscores.
2404 GCC v3 currently always emits stubbed member functions,
2405 but with fully mangled physnames, which start with _Z. */
2406 if (!(strncmp (new_sublist->fn_field.physname,
2407 main_fn_name, slen) == 0
2408 && new_sublist->fn_field.physname[slen] == '_'
2409 && new_sublist->fn_field.physname[slen + 1] == '_'))
2410 {
2411 new_sublist->fn_field.is_stub = 1;
2412 }
2413 break;
2414 }
2415
2416 default:
2417 /* error */
2418 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
2419 _("member function type missing, got '%c'"), (*pp)[-1]);
2420 /* Fall through into normal member function. */
2421
2422 case '.':
2423 /* normal member function. */
2424 new_sublist->fn_field.voffset = 0;
2425 new_sublist->fn_field.fcontext = 0;
2426 break;
2427 }
2428
2429 new_sublist->next = sublist;
2430 sublist = new_sublist;
2431 length++;
2432 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2433 }
2434 while (**pp != ';' && **pp != '\0');
2435
2436 (*pp)++;
2437 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2438
2439 /* Skip GCC 3.X member functions which are duplicates of the callable
2440 constructor/destructor. */
2441 if (strcmp_iw (main_fn_name, "__base_ctor ") == 0
2442 || strcmp_iw (main_fn_name, "__base_dtor ") == 0
2443 || strcmp (main_fn_name, "__deleting_dtor") == 0)
2444 {
2445 xfree (main_fn_name);
2446 }
2447 else
2448 {
2449 int has_stub = 0;
2450 int has_destructor = 0, has_other = 0;
2451 int is_v3 = 0;
2452 struct next_fnfield *tmp_sublist;
2453
2454 /* Various versions of GCC emit various mostly-useless
2455 strings in the name field for special member functions.
2456
2457 For stub methods, we need to defer correcting the name
2458 until we are ready to unstub the method, because the current
2459 name string is used by gdb_mangle_name. The only stub methods
2460 of concern here are GNU v2 operators; other methods have their
2461 names correct (see caveat below).
2462
2463 For non-stub methods, in GNU v3, we have a complete physname.
2464 Therefore we can safely correct the name now. This primarily
2465 affects constructors and destructors, whose name will be
2466 __comp_ctor or __comp_dtor instead of Foo or ~Foo. Cast
2467 operators will also have incorrect names; for instance,
2468 "operator int" will be named "operator i" (i.e. the type is
2469 mangled).
2470
2471 For non-stub methods in GNU v2, we have no easy way to
2472 know if we have a complete physname or not. For most
2473 methods the result depends on the platform (if CPLUS_MARKER
2474 can be `$' or `.', it will use minimal debug information, or
2475 otherwise the full physname will be included).
2476
2477 Rather than dealing with this, we take a different approach.
2478 For v3 mangled names, we can use the full physname; for v2,
2479 we use cplus_demangle_opname (which is actually v2 specific),
2480 because the only interesting names are all operators - once again
2481 barring the caveat below. Skip this process if any method in the
2482 group is a stub, to prevent our fouling up the workings of
2483 gdb_mangle_name.
2484
2485 The caveat: GCC 2.95.x (and earlier?) put constructors and
2486 destructors in the same method group. We need to split this
2487 into two groups, because they should have different names.
2488 So for each method group we check whether it contains both
2489 routines whose physname appears to be a destructor (the physnames
2490 for and destructors are always provided, due to quirks in v2
2491 mangling) and routines whose physname does not appear to be a
2492 destructor. If so then we break up the list into two halves.
2493 Even if the constructors and destructors aren't in the same group
2494 the destructor will still lack the leading tilde, so that also
2495 needs to be fixed.
2496
2497 So, to summarize what we expect and handle here:
2498
2499 Given Given Real Real Action
2500 method name physname physname method name
2501
2502 __opi [none] __opi__3Foo operator int opname
2503 [now or later]
2504 Foo _._3Foo _._3Foo ~Foo separate and
2505 rename
2506 operator i _ZN3FoocviEv _ZN3FoocviEv operator int demangle
2507 __comp_ctor _ZN3FooC1ERKS_ _ZN3FooC1ERKS_ Foo demangle
2508 */
2509
2510 tmp_sublist = sublist;
2511 while (tmp_sublist != NULL)
2512 {
2513 if (tmp_sublist->fn_field.is_stub)
2514 has_stub = 1;
2515 if (tmp_sublist->fn_field.physname[0] == '_'
2516 && tmp_sublist->fn_field.physname[1] == 'Z')
2517 is_v3 = 1;
2518
2519 if (is_destructor_name (tmp_sublist->fn_field.physname))
2520 has_destructor++;
2521 else
2522 has_other++;
2523
2524 tmp_sublist = tmp_sublist->next;
2525 }
2526
2527 if (has_destructor && has_other)
2528 {
2529 struct next_fnfieldlist *destr_fnlist;
2530 struct next_fnfield *last_sublist;
2531
2532 /* Create a new fn_fieldlist for the destructors. */
2533
2534 destr_fnlist = (struct next_fnfieldlist *)
2535 xmalloc (sizeof (struct next_fnfieldlist));
2536 make_cleanup (xfree, destr_fnlist);
2537 memset (destr_fnlist, 0, sizeof (struct next_fnfieldlist));
2538 destr_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name
2539 = obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack, "", "~",
2540 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name);
2541
2542 destr_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.fn_fields = (struct fn_field *)
2543 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
2544 sizeof (struct fn_field) * has_destructor);
2545 memset (destr_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.fn_fields, 0,
2546 sizeof (struct fn_field) * has_destructor);
2547 tmp_sublist = sublist;
2548 last_sublist = NULL;
2549 i = 0;
2550 while (tmp_sublist != NULL)
2551 {
2552 if (!is_destructor_name (tmp_sublist->fn_field.physname))
2553 {
2554 tmp_sublist = tmp_sublist->next;
2555 continue;
2556 }
2557
2558 destr_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.fn_fields[i++]
2559 = tmp_sublist->fn_field;
2560 if (last_sublist)
2561 last_sublist->next = tmp_sublist->next;
2562 else
2563 sublist = tmp_sublist->next;
2564 last_sublist = tmp_sublist;
2565 tmp_sublist = tmp_sublist->next;
2566 }
2567
2568 destr_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.length = has_destructor;
2569 destr_fnlist->next = fip->fnlist;
2570 fip->fnlist = destr_fnlist;
2571 nfn_fields++;
2572 total_length += has_destructor;
2573 length -= has_destructor;
2574 }
2575 else if (is_v3)
2576 {
2577 /* v3 mangling prevents the use of abbreviated physnames,
2578 so we can do this here. There are stubbed methods in v3
2579 only:
2580 - in -gstabs instead of -gstabs+
2581 - or for static methods, which are output as a function type
2582 instead of a method type. */
2583
2584 update_method_name_from_physname (&new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name,
2585 sublist->fn_field.physname);
2586 }
2587 else if (has_destructor && new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name[0] != '~')
2588 {
2589 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name =
2590 concat ("~", main_fn_name, (char *)NULL);
2591 xfree (main_fn_name);
2592 }
2593 else if (!has_stub)
2594 {
2595 char dem_opname[256];
2596 int ret;
2597 ret = cplus_demangle_opname (new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name,
2598 dem_opname, DMGL_ANSI);
2599 if (!ret)
2600 ret = cplus_demangle_opname (new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name,
2601 dem_opname, 0);
2602 if (ret)
2603 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.name
2604 = obsavestring (dem_opname, strlen (dem_opname),
2605 &objfile->objfile_obstack);
2606 }
2607
2608 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.fn_fields = (struct fn_field *)
2609 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
2610 sizeof (struct fn_field) * length);
2611 memset (new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.fn_fields, 0,
2612 sizeof (struct fn_field) * length);
2613 for (i = length; (i--, sublist); sublist = sublist->next)
2614 {
2615 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.fn_fields[i] = sublist->fn_field;
2616 }
2617
2618 new_fnlist->fn_fieldlist.length = length;
2619 new_fnlist->next = fip->fnlist;
2620 fip->fnlist = new_fnlist;
2621 nfn_fields++;
2622 total_length += length;
2623 }
2624 }
2625
2626 if (nfn_fields)
2627 {
2628 ALLOCATE_CPLUS_STRUCT_TYPE (type);
2629 TYPE_FN_FIELDLISTS (type) = (struct fn_fieldlist *)
2630 TYPE_ALLOC (type, sizeof (struct fn_fieldlist) * nfn_fields);
2631 memset (TYPE_FN_FIELDLISTS (type), 0,
2632 sizeof (struct fn_fieldlist) * nfn_fields);
2633 TYPE_NFN_FIELDS (type) = nfn_fields;
2634 TYPE_NFN_FIELDS_TOTAL (type) = total_length;
2635 }
2636
2637 return 1;
2638 }
2639
2640 /* Special GNU C++ name.
2641
2642 Returns 1 for success, 0 for failure. "failure" means that we can't
2643 keep parsing and it's time for error_type(). */
2644
2645 static int
2646 read_cpp_abbrev (struct field_info *fip, char **pp, struct type *type,
2647 struct objfile *objfile)
2648 {
2649 char *p;
2650 char *name;
2651 char cpp_abbrev;
2652 struct type *context;
2653
2654 p = *pp;
2655 if (*++p == 'v')
2656 {
2657 name = NULL;
2658 cpp_abbrev = *++p;
2659
2660 *pp = p + 1;
2661
2662 /* At this point, *pp points to something like "22:23=*22...",
2663 where the type number before the ':' is the "context" and
2664 everything after is a regular type definition. Lookup the
2665 type, find it's name, and construct the field name. */
2666
2667 context = read_type (pp, objfile);
2668
2669 switch (cpp_abbrev)
2670 {
2671 case 'f': /* $vf -- a virtual function table pointer */
2672 name = type_name_no_tag (context);
2673 if (name == NULL)
2674 {
2675 name = "";
2676 }
2677 fip->list->field.name =
2678 obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack, vptr_name, name, "");
2679 break;
2680
2681 case 'b': /* $vb -- a virtual bsomethingorother */
2682 name = type_name_no_tag (context);
2683 if (name == NULL)
2684 {
2685 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
2686 _("C++ abbreviated type name unknown at symtab pos %d"),
2687 symnum);
2688 name = "FOO";
2689 }
2690 fip->list->field.name =
2691 obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack, vb_name, name, "");
2692 break;
2693
2694 default:
2695 invalid_cpp_abbrev_complaint (*pp);
2696 fip->list->field.name =
2697 obconcat (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
2698 "INVALID_CPLUSPLUS_ABBREV", "", "");
2699 break;
2700 }
2701
2702 /* At this point, *pp points to the ':'. Skip it and read the
2703 field type. */
2704
2705 p = ++(*pp);
2706 if (p[-1] != ':')
2707 {
2708 invalid_cpp_abbrev_complaint (*pp);
2709 return 0;
2710 }
2711 fip->list->field.type = read_type (pp, objfile);
2712 if (**pp == ',')
2713 (*pp)++; /* Skip the comma. */
2714 else
2715 return 0;
2716
2717 {
2718 int nbits;
2719 FIELD_BITPOS (fip->list->field) = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits,
2720 0);
2721 if (nbits != 0)
2722 return 0;
2723 }
2724 /* This field is unpacked. */
2725 FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field) = 0;
2726 fip->list->visibility = VISIBILITY_PRIVATE;
2727 }
2728 else
2729 {
2730 invalid_cpp_abbrev_complaint (*pp);
2731 /* We have no idea what syntax an unrecognized abbrev would have, so
2732 better return 0. If we returned 1, we would need to at least advance
2733 *pp to avoid an infinite loop. */
2734 return 0;
2735 }
2736 return 1;
2737 }
2738
2739 static void
2740 read_one_struct_field (struct field_info *fip, char **pp, char *p,
2741 struct type *type, struct objfile *objfile)
2742 {
2743 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
2744
2745 fip->list->field.name =
2746 obsavestring (*pp, p - *pp, &objfile->objfile_obstack);
2747 *pp = p + 1;
2748
2749 /* This means we have a visibility for a field coming. */
2750 if (**pp == '/')
2751 {
2752 (*pp)++;
2753 fip->list->visibility = *(*pp)++;
2754 }
2755 else
2756 {
2757 /* normal dbx-style format, no explicit visibility */
2758 fip->list->visibility = VISIBILITY_PUBLIC;
2759 }
2760
2761 fip->list->field.type = read_type (pp, objfile);
2762 if (**pp == ':')
2763 {
2764 p = ++(*pp);
2765 #if 0
2766 /* Possible future hook for nested types. */
2767 if (**pp == '!')
2768 {
2769 fip->list->field.bitpos = (long) -2; /* nested type */
2770 p = ++(*pp);
2771 }
2772 else
2773 ...;
2774 #endif
2775 while (*p != ';')
2776 {
2777 p++;
2778 }
2779 /* Static class member. */
2780 SET_FIELD_PHYSNAME (fip->list->field, savestring (*pp, p - *pp));
2781 *pp = p + 1;
2782 return;
2783 }
2784 else if (**pp != ',')
2785 {
2786 /* Bad structure-type format. */
2787 stabs_general_complaint ("bad structure-type format");
2788 return;
2789 }
2790
2791 (*pp)++; /* Skip the comma. */
2792
2793 {
2794 int nbits;
2795 FIELD_BITPOS (fip->list->field) = read_huge_number (pp, ',', &nbits, 0);
2796 if (nbits != 0)
2797 {
2798 stabs_general_complaint ("bad structure-type format");
2799 return;
2800 }
2801 FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field) = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
2802 if (nbits != 0)
2803 {
2804 stabs_general_complaint ("bad structure-type format");
2805 return;
2806 }
2807 }
2808
2809 if (FIELD_BITPOS (fip->list->field) == 0
2810 && FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field) == 0)
2811 {
2812 /* This can happen in two cases: (1) at least for gcc 2.4.5 or so,
2813 it is a field which has been optimized out. The correct stab for
2814 this case is to use VISIBILITY_IGNORE, but that is a recent
2815 invention. (2) It is a 0-size array. For example
2816 union { int num; char str[0]; } foo. Printing _("<no value>" for
2817 str in "p foo" is OK, since foo.str (and thus foo.str[3])
2818 will continue to work, and a 0-size array as a whole doesn't
2819 have any contents to print.
2820
2821 I suspect this probably could also happen with gcc -gstabs (not
2822 -gstabs+) for static fields, and perhaps other C++ extensions.
2823 Hopefully few people use -gstabs with gdb, since it is intended
2824 for dbx compatibility. */
2825
2826 /* Ignore this field. */
2827 fip->list->visibility = VISIBILITY_IGNORE;
2828 }
2829 else
2830 {
2831 /* Detect an unpacked field and mark it as such.
2832 dbx gives a bit size for all fields.
2833 Note that forward refs cannot be packed,
2834 and treat enums as if they had the width of ints. */
2835
2836 struct type *field_type = check_typedef (FIELD_TYPE (fip->list->field));
2837
2838 if (TYPE_CODE (field_type) != TYPE_CODE_INT
2839 && TYPE_CODE (field_type) != TYPE_CODE_RANGE
2840 && TYPE_CODE (field_type) != TYPE_CODE_BOOL
2841 && TYPE_CODE (field_type) != TYPE_CODE_ENUM)
2842 {
2843 FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field) = 0;
2844 }
2845 if ((FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field)
2846 == TARGET_CHAR_BIT * TYPE_LENGTH (field_type)
2847 || (TYPE_CODE (field_type) == TYPE_CODE_ENUM
2848 && FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field)
2849 == gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch))
2850 )
2851 &&
2852 FIELD_BITPOS (fip->list->field) % 8 == 0)
2853 {
2854 FIELD_BITSIZE (fip->list->field) = 0;
2855 }
2856 }
2857 }
2858
2859
2860 /* Read struct or class data fields. They have the form:
2861
2862 NAME : [VISIBILITY] TYPENUM , BITPOS , BITSIZE ;
2863
2864 At the end, we see a semicolon instead of a field.
2865
2866 In C++, this may wind up being NAME:?TYPENUM:PHYSNAME; for
2867 a static field.
2868
2869 The optional VISIBILITY is one of:
2870
2871 '/0' (VISIBILITY_PRIVATE)
2872 '/1' (VISIBILITY_PROTECTED)
2873 '/2' (VISIBILITY_PUBLIC)
2874 '/9' (VISIBILITY_IGNORE)
2875
2876 or nothing, for C style fields with public visibility.
2877
2878 Returns 1 for success, 0 for failure. */
2879
2880 static int
2881 read_struct_fields (struct field_info *fip, char **pp, struct type *type,
2882 struct objfile *objfile)
2883 {
2884 char *p;
2885 struct nextfield *new;
2886
2887 /* We better set p right now, in case there are no fields at all... */
2888
2889 p = *pp;
2890
2891 /* Read each data member type until we find the terminating ';' at the end of
2892 the data member list, or break for some other reason such as finding the
2893 start of the member function list. */
2894 /* Stab string for structure/union does not end with two ';' in
2895 SUN C compiler 5.3 i.e. F6U2, hence check for end of string. */
2896
2897 while (**pp != ';' && **pp != '\0')
2898 {
2899 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
2900 /* Get space to record the next field's data. */
2901 new = (struct nextfield *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct nextfield));
2902 make_cleanup (xfree, new);
2903 memset (new, 0, sizeof (struct nextfield));
2904 new->next = fip->list;
2905 fip->list = new;
2906
2907 /* Get the field name. */
2908 p = *pp;
2909
2910 /* If is starts with CPLUS_MARKER it is a special abbreviation,
2911 unless the CPLUS_MARKER is followed by an underscore, in
2912 which case it is just the name of an anonymous type, which we
2913 should handle like any other type name. */
2914
2915 if (is_cplus_marker (p[0]) && p[1] != '_')
2916 {
2917 if (!read_cpp_abbrev (fip, pp, type, objfile))
2918 return 0;
2919 continue;
2920 }
2921
2922 /* Look for the ':' that separates the field name from the field
2923 values. Data members are delimited by a single ':', while member
2924 functions are delimited by a pair of ':'s. When we hit the member
2925 functions (if any), terminate scan loop and return. */
2926
2927 while (*p != ':' && *p != '\0')
2928 {
2929 p++;
2930 }
2931 if (*p == '\0')
2932 return 0;
2933
2934 /* Check to see if we have hit the member functions yet. */
2935 if (p[1] == ':')
2936 {
2937 break;
2938 }
2939 read_one_struct_field (fip, pp, p, type, objfile);
2940 }
2941 if (p[0] == ':' && p[1] == ':')
2942 {
2943 /* (the deleted) chill the list of fields: the last entry (at
2944 the head) is a partially constructed entry which we now
2945 scrub. */
2946 fip->list = fip->list->next;
2947 }
2948 return 1;
2949 }
2950 /* *INDENT-OFF* */
2951 /* The stabs for C++ derived classes contain baseclass information which
2952 is marked by a '!' character after the total size. This function is
2953 called when we encounter the baseclass marker, and slurps up all the
2954 baseclass information.
2955
2956 Immediately following the '!' marker is the number of base classes that
2957 the class is derived from, followed by information for each base class.
2958 For each base class, there are two visibility specifiers, a bit offset
2959 to the base class information within the derived class, a reference to
2960 the type for the base class, and a terminating semicolon.
2961
2962 A typical example, with two base classes, would be "!2,020,19;0264,21;".
2963 ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
2964 Baseclass information marker __________________|| | | | | | |
2965 Number of baseclasses __________________________| | | | | | |
2966 Visibility specifiers (2) ________________________| | | | | |
2967 Offset in bits from start of class _________________| | | | |
2968 Type number for base class ___________________________| | | |
2969 Visibility specifiers (2) _______________________________| | |
2970 Offset in bits from start of class ________________________| |
2971 Type number of base class ____________________________________|
2972
2973 Return 1 for success, 0 for (error-type-inducing) failure. */
2974 /* *INDENT-ON* */
2975
2976
2977
2978 static int
2979 read_baseclasses (struct field_info *fip, char **pp, struct type *type,
2980 struct objfile *objfile)
2981 {
2982 int i;
2983 struct nextfield *new;
2984
2985 if (**pp != '!')
2986 {
2987 return 1;
2988 }
2989 else
2990 {
2991 /* Skip the '!' baseclass information marker. */
2992 (*pp)++;
2993 }
2994
2995 ALLOCATE_CPLUS_STRUCT_TYPE (type);
2996 {
2997 int nbits;
2998 TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (type) = read_huge_number (pp, ',', &nbits, 0);
2999 if (nbits != 0)
3000 return 0;
3001 }
3002
3003 #if 0
3004 /* Some stupid compilers have trouble with the following, so break
3005 it up into simpler expressions. */
3006 TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL_BITS (type) = (B_TYPE *)
3007 TYPE_ALLOC (type, B_BYTES (TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (type)));
3008 #else
3009 {
3010 int num_bytes = B_BYTES (TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (type));
3011 char *pointer;
3012
3013 pointer = (char *) TYPE_ALLOC (type, num_bytes);
3014 TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL_BITS (type) = (B_TYPE *) pointer;
3015 }
3016 #endif /* 0 */
3017
3018 B_CLRALL (TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL_BITS (type), TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (type));
3019
3020 for (i = 0; i < TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (type); i++)
3021 {
3022 new = (struct nextfield *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct nextfield));
3023 make_cleanup (xfree, new);
3024 memset (new, 0, sizeof (struct nextfield));
3025 new->next = fip->list;
3026 fip->list = new;
3027 FIELD_BITSIZE (new->field) = 0; /* this should be an unpacked field! */
3028
3029 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
3030 switch (**pp)
3031 {
3032 case '0':
3033 /* Nothing to do. */
3034 break;
3035 case '1':
3036 SET_TYPE_FIELD_VIRTUAL (type, i);
3037 break;
3038 default:
3039 /* Unknown character. Complain and treat it as non-virtual. */
3040 {
3041 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
3042 _("Unknown virtual character `%c' for baseclass"), **pp);
3043 }
3044 }
3045 ++(*pp);
3046
3047 new->visibility = *(*pp)++;
3048 switch (new->visibility)
3049 {
3050 case VISIBILITY_PRIVATE:
3051 case VISIBILITY_PROTECTED:
3052 case VISIBILITY_PUBLIC:
3053 break;
3054 default:
3055 /* Bad visibility format. Complain and treat it as
3056 public. */
3057 {
3058 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
3059 _("Unknown visibility `%c' for baseclass"),
3060 new->visibility);
3061 new->visibility = VISIBILITY_PUBLIC;
3062 }
3063 }
3064
3065 {
3066 int nbits;
3067
3068 /* The remaining value is the bit offset of the portion of the object
3069 corresponding to this baseclass. Always zero in the absence of
3070 multiple inheritance. */
3071
3072 FIELD_BITPOS (new->field) = read_huge_number (pp, ',', &nbits, 0);
3073 if (nbits != 0)
3074 return 0;
3075 }
3076
3077 /* The last piece of baseclass information is the type of the
3078 base class. Read it, and remember it's type name as this
3079 field's name. */
3080
3081 new->field.type = read_type (pp, objfile);
3082 new->field.name = type_name_no_tag (new->field.type);
3083
3084 /* skip trailing ';' and bump count of number of fields seen */
3085 if (**pp == ';')
3086 (*pp)++;
3087 else
3088 return 0;
3089 }
3090 return 1;
3091 }
3092
3093 /* The tail end of stabs for C++ classes that contain a virtual function
3094 pointer contains a tilde, a %, and a type number.
3095 The type number refers to the base class (possibly this class itself) which
3096 contains the vtable pointer for the current class.
3097
3098 This function is called when we have parsed all the method declarations,
3099 so we can look for the vptr base class info. */
3100
3101 static int
3102 read_tilde_fields (struct field_info *fip, char **pp, struct type *type,
3103 struct objfile *objfile)
3104 {
3105 char *p;
3106
3107 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
3108
3109 /* If we are positioned at a ';', then skip it. */
3110 if (**pp == ';')
3111 {
3112 (*pp)++;
3113 }
3114
3115 if (**pp == '~')
3116 {
3117 (*pp)++;
3118
3119 if (**pp == '=' || **pp == '+' || **pp == '-')
3120 {
3121 /* Obsolete flags that used to indicate the presence
3122 of constructors and/or destructors. */
3123 (*pp)++;
3124 }
3125
3126 /* Read either a '%' or the final ';'. */
3127 if (*(*pp)++ == '%')
3128 {
3129 /* The next number is the type number of the base class
3130 (possibly our own class) which supplies the vtable for
3131 this class. Parse it out, and search that class to find
3132 its vtable pointer, and install those into TYPE_VPTR_BASETYPE
3133 and TYPE_VPTR_FIELDNO. */
3134
3135 struct type *t;
3136 int i;
3137
3138 t = read_type (pp, objfile);
3139 p = (*pp)++;
3140 while (*p != '\0' && *p != ';')
3141 {
3142 p++;
3143 }
3144 if (*p == '\0')
3145 {
3146 /* Premature end of symbol. */
3147 return 0;
3148 }
3149
3150 TYPE_VPTR_BASETYPE (type) = t;
3151 if (type == t) /* Our own class provides vtbl ptr */
3152 {
3153 for (i = TYPE_NFIELDS (t) - 1;
3154 i >= TYPE_N_BASECLASSES (t);
3155 --i)
3156 {
3157 char *name = TYPE_FIELD_NAME (t, i);
3158 if (!strncmp (name, vptr_name, sizeof (vptr_name) - 2)
3159 && is_cplus_marker (name[sizeof (vptr_name) - 2]))
3160 {
3161 TYPE_VPTR_FIELDNO (type) = i;
3162 goto gotit;
3163 }
3164 }
3165 /* Virtual function table field not found. */
3166 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
3167 _("virtual function table pointer not found when defining class `%s'"),
3168 TYPE_NAME (type));
3169 return 0;
3170 }
3171 else
3172 {
3173 TYPE_VPTR_FIELDNO (type) = TYPE_VPTR_FIELDNO (t);
3174 }
3175
3176 gotit:
3177 *pp = p + 1;
3178 }
3179 }
3180 return 1;
3181 }
3182
3183 static int
3184 attach_fn_fields_to_type (struct field_info *fip, struct type *type)
3185 {
3186 int n;
3187
3188 for (n = TYPE_NFN_FIELDS (type);
3189 fip->fnlist != NULL;
3190 fip->fnlist = fip->fnlist->next)
3191 {
3192 --n; /* Circumvent Sun3 compiler bug */
3193 TYPE_FN_FIELDLISTS (type)[n] = fip->fnlist->fn_fieldlist;
3194 }
3195 return 1;
3196 }
3197
3198 /* Create the vector of fields, and record how big it is.
3199 We need this info to record proper virtual function table information
3200 for this class's virtual functions. */
3201
3202 static int
3203 attach_fields_to_type (struct field_info *fip, struct type *type,
3204 struct objfile *objfile)
3205 {
3206 int nfields = 0;
3207 int non_public_fields = 0;
3208 struct nextfield *scan;
3209
3210 /* Count up the number of fields that we have, as well as taking note of
3211 whether or not there are any non-public fields, which requires us to
3212 allocate and build the private_field_bits and protected_field_bits
3213 bitfields. */
3214
3215 for (scan = fip->list; scan != NULL; scan = scan->next)
3216 {
3217 nfields++;
3218 if (scan->visibility != VISIBILITY_PUBLIC)
3219 {
3220 non_public_fields++;
3221 }
3222 }
3223
3224 /* Now we know how many fields there are, and whether or not there are any
3225 non-public fields. Record the field count, allocate space for the
3226 array of fields, and create blank visibility bitfields if necessary. */
3227
3228 TYPE_NFIELDS (type) = nfields;
3229 TYPE_FIELDS (type) = (struct field *)
3230 TYPE_ALLOC (type, sizeof (struct field) * nfields);
3231 memset (TYPE_FIELDS (type), 0, sizeof (struct field) * nfields);
3232
3233 if (non_public_fields)
3234 {
3235 ALLOCATE_CPLUS_STRUCT_TYPE (type);
3236
3237 TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE_BITS (type) =
3238 (B_TYPE *) TYPE_ALLOC (type, B_BYTES (nfields));
3239 B_CLRALL (TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE_BITS (type), nfields);
3240
3241 TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED_BITS (type) =
3242 (B_TYPE *) TYPE_ALLOC (type, B_BYTES (nfields));
3243 B_CLRALL (TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED_BITS (type), nfields);
3244
3245 TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE_BITS (type) =
3246 (B_TYPE *) TYPE_ALLOC (type, B_BYTES (nfields));
3247 B_CLRALL (TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE_BITS (type), nfields);
3248 }
3249
3250 /* Copy the saved-up fields into the field vector. Start from the head
3251 of the list, adding to the tail of the field array, so that they end
3252 up in the same order in the array in which they were added to the list. */
3253
3254 while (nfields-- > 0)
3255 {
3256 TYPE_FIELD (type, nfields) = fip->list->field;
3257 switch (fip->list->visibility)
3258 {
3259 case VISIBILITY_PRIVATE:
3260 SET_TYPE_FIELD_PRIVATE (type, nfields);
3261 break;
3262
3263 case VISIBILITY_PROTECTED:
3264 SET_TYPE_FIELD_PROTECTED (type, nfields);
3265 break;
3266
3267 case VISIBILITY_IGNORE:
3268 SET_TYPE_FIELD_IGNORE (type, nfields);
3269 break;
3270
3271 case VISIBILITY_PUBLIC:
3272 break;
3273
3274 default:
3275 /* Unknown visibility. Complain and treat it as public. */
3276 {
3277 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("Unknown visibility `%c' for field"),
3278 fip->list->visibility);
3279 }
3280 break;
3281 }
3282 fip->list = fip->list->next;
3283 }
3284 return 1;
3285 }
3286
3287
3288 /* Complain that the compiler has emitted more than one definition for the
3289 structure type TYPE. */
3290 static void
3291 complain_about_struct_wipeout (struct type *type)
3292 {
3293 char *name = "";
3294 char *kind = "";
3295
3296 if (TYPE_TAG_NAME (type))
3297 {
3298 name = TYPE_TAG_NAME (type);
3299 switch (TYPE_CODE (type))
3300 {
3301 case TYPE_CODE_STRUCT: kind = "struct "; break;
3302 case TYPE_CODE_UNION: kind = "union "; break;
3303 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM: kind = "enum "; break;
3304 default: kind = "";
3305 }
3306 }
3307 else if (TYPE_NAME (type))
3308 {
3309 name = TYPE_NAME (type);
3310 kind = "";
3311 }
3312 else
3313 {
3314 name = "<unknown>";
3315 kind = "";
3316 }
3317
3318 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
3319 _("struct/union type gets multiply defined: %s%s"), kind, name);
3320 }
3321
3322
3323 /* Read the description of a structure (or union type) and return an object
3324 describing the type.
3325
3326 PP points to a character pointer that points to the next unconsumed token
3327 in the the stabs string. For example, given stabs "A:T4=s4a:1,0,32;;",
3328 *PP will point to "4a:1,0,32;;".
3329
3330 TYPE points to an incomplete type that needs to be filled in.
3331
3332 OBJFILE points to the current objfile from which the stabs information is
3333 being read. (Note that it is redundant in that TYPE also contains a pointer
3334 to this same objfile, so it might be a good idea to eliminate it. FIXME).
3335 */
3336
3337 static struct type *
3338 read_struct_type (char **pp, struct type *type, enum type_code type_code,
3339 struct objfile *objfile)
3340 {
3341 struct cleanup *back_to;
3342 struct field_info fi;
3343
3344 fi.list = NULL;
3345 fi.fnlist = NULL;
3346
3347 /* When describing struct/union/class types in stabs, G++ always drops
3348 all qualifications from the name. So if you've got:
3349 struct A { ... struct B { ... }; ... };
3350 then G++ will emit stabs for `struct A::B' that call it simply
3351 `struct B'. Obviously, if you've got a real top-level definition for
3352 `struct B', or other nested definitions, this is going to cause
3353 problems.
3354
3355 Obviously, GDB can't fix this by itself, but it can at least avoid
3356 scribbling on existing structure type objects when new definitions
3357 appear. */
3358 if (! (TYPE_CODE (type) == TYPE_CODE_UNDEF
3359 || TYPE_STUB (type)))
3360 {
3361 complain_about_struct_wipeout (type);
3362
3363 /* It's probably best to return the type unchanged. */
3364 return type;
3365 }
3366
3367 back_to = make_cleanup (null_cleanup, 0);
3368
3369 INIT_CPLUS_SPECIFIC (type);
3370 TYPE_CODE (type) = type_code;
3371 TYPE_STUB (type) = 0;
3372
3373 /* First comes the total size in bytes. */
3374
3375 {
3376 int nbits;
3377 TYPE_LENGTH (type) = read_huge_number (pp, 0, &nbits, 0);
3378 if (nbits != 0)
3379 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3380 }
3381
3382 /* Now read the baseclasses, if any, read the regular C struct or C++
3383 class member fields, attach the fields to the type, read the C++
3384 member functions, attach them to the type, and then read any tilde
3385 field (baseclass specifier for the class holding the main vtable). */
3386
3387 if (!read_baseclasses (&fi, pp, type, objfile)
3388 || !read_struct_fields (&fi, pp, type, objfile)
3389 || !attach_fields_to_type (&fi, type, objfile)
3390 || !read_member_functions (&fi, pp, type, objfile)
3391 || !attach_fn_fields_to_type (&fi, type)
3392 || !read_tilde_fields (&fi, pp, type, objfile))
3393 {
3394 type = error_type (pp, objfile);
3395 }
3396
3397 do_cleanups (back_to);
3398 return (type);
3399 }
3400
3401 /* Read a definition of an array type,
3402 and create and return a suitable type object.
3403 Also creates a range type which represents the bounds of that
3404 array. */
3405
3406 static struct type *
3407 read_array_type (char **pp, struct type *type,
3408 struct objfile *objfile)
3409 {
3410 struct type *index_type, *element_type, *range_type;
3411 int lower, upper;
3412 int adjustable = 0;
3413 int nbits;
3414
3415 /* Format of an array type:
3416 "ar<index type>;lower;upper;<array_contents_type>".
3417 OS9000: "arlower,upper;<array_contents_type>".
3418
3419 Fortran adjustable arrays use Adigits or Tdigits for lower or upper;
3420 for these, produce a type like float[][]. */
3421
3422 {
3423 index_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
3424 if (**pp != ';')
3425 /* Improper format of array type decl. */
3426 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3427 ++*pp;
3428 }
3429
3430 if (!(**pp >= '0' && **pp <= '9') && **pp != '-')
3431 {
3432 (*pp)++;
3433 adjustable = 1;
3434 }
3435 lower = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
3436
3437 if (nbits != 0)
3438 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3439
3440 if (!(**pp >= '0' && **pp <= '9') && **pp != '-')
3441 {
3442 (*pp)++;
3443 adjustable = 1;
3444 }
3445 upper = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
3446 if (nbits != 0)
3447 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3448
3449 element_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
3450
3451 if (adjustable)
3452 {
3453 lower = 0;
3454 upper = -1;
3455 }
3456
3457 range_type =
3458 create_range_type ((struct type *) NULL, index_type, lower, upper);
3459 type = create_array_type (type, element_type, range_type);
3460
3461 return type;
3462 }
3463
3464
3465 /* Read a definition of an enumeration type,
3466 and create and return a suitable type object.
3467 Also defines the symbols that represent the values of the type. */
3468
3469 static struct type *
3470 read_enum_type (char **pp, struct type *type,
3471 struct objfile *objfile)
3472 {
3473 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
3474 char *p;
3475 char *name;
3476 long n;
3477 struct symbol *sym;
3478 int nsyms = 0;
3479 struct pending **symlist;
3480 struct pending *osyms, *syms;
3481 int o_nsyms;
3482 int nbits;
3483 int unsigned_enum = 1;
3484
3485 #if 0
3486 /* FIXME! The stabs produced by Sun CC merrily define things that ought
3487 to be file-scope, between N_FN entries, using N_LSYM. What's a mother
3488 to do? For now, force all enum values to file scope. */
3489 if (within_function)
3490 symlist = &local_symbols;
3491 else
3492 #endif
3493 symlist = &file_symbols;
3494 osyms = *symlist;
3495 o_nsyms = osyms ? osyms->nsyms : 0;
3496
3497 /* The aix4 compiler emits an extra field before the enum members;
3498 my guess is it's a type of some sort. Just ignore it. */
3499 if (**pp == '-')
3500 {
3501 /* Skip over the type. */
3502 while (**pp != ':')
3503 (*pp)++;
3504
3505 /* Skip over the colon. */
3506 (*pp)++;
3507 }
3508
3509 /* Read the value-names and their values.
3510 The input syntax is NAME:VALUE,NAME:VALUE, and so on.
3511 A semicolon or comma instead of a NAME means the end. */
3512 while (**pp && **pp != ';' && **pp != ',')
3513 {
3514 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
3515 p = *pp;
3516 while (*p != ':')
3517 p++;
3518 name = obsavestring (*pp, p - *pp, &objfile->objfile_obstack);
3519 *pp = p + 1;
3520 n = read_huge_number (pp, ',', &nbits, 0);
3521 if (nbits != 0)
3522 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3523
3524 sym = (struct symbol *)
3525 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, sizeof (struct symbol));
3526 memset (sym, 0, sizeof (struct symbol));
3527 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME (sym, name);
3528 SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (sym) = current_subfile->language;
3529 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_CONST;
3530 SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) = VAR_DOMAIN;
3531 SYMBOL_VALUE (sym) = n;
3532 if (n < 0)
3533 unsigned_enum = 0;
3534 add_symbol_to_list (sym, symlist);
3535 nsyms++;
3536 }
3537
3538 if (**pp == ';')
3539 (*pp)++; /* Skip the semicolon. */
3540
3541 /* Now fill in the fields of the type-structure. */
3542
3543 TYPE_LENGTH (type) = gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch) / HOST_CHAR_BIT;
3544 TYPE_CODE (type) = TYPE_CODE_ENUM;
3545 TYPE_STUB (type) = 0;
3546 if (unsigned_enum)
3547 TYPE_UNSIGNED (type) = 1;
3548 TYPE_NFIELDS (type) = nsyms;
3549 TYPE_FIELDS (type) = (struct field *)
3550 TYPE_ALLOC (type, sizeof (struct field) * nsyms);
3551 memset (TYPE_FIELDS (type), 0, sizeof (struct field) * nsyms);
3552
3553 /* Find the symbols for the values and put them into the type.
3554 The symbols can be found in the symlist that we put them on
3555 to cause them to be defined. osyms contains the old value
3556 of that symlist; everything up to there was defined by us. */
3557 /* Note that we preserve the order of the enum constants, so
3558 that in something like "enum {FOO, LAST_THING=FOO}" we print
3559 FOO, not LAST_THING. */
3560
3561 for (syms = *symlist, n = nsyms - 1; syms; syms = syms->next)
3562 {
3563 int last = syms == osyms ? o_nsyms : 0;
3564 int j = syms->nsyms;
3565 for (; --j >= last; --n)
3566 {
3567 struct symbol *xsym = syms->symbol[j];
3568 SYMBOL_TYPE (xsym) = type;
3569 TYPE_FIELD_NAME (type, n) = SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (xsym);
3570 TYPE_FIELD_BITPOS (type, n) = SYMBOL_VALUE (xsym);
3571 TYPE_FIELD_BITSIZE (type, n) = 0;
3572 }
3573 if (syms == osyms)
3574 break;
3575 }
3576
3577 return type;
3578 }
3579
3580 /* Sun's ACC uses a somewhat saner method for specifying the builtin
3581 typedefs in every file (for int, long, etc):
3582
3583 type = b <signed> <width> <format type>; <offset>; <nbits>
3584 signed = u or s.
3585 optional format type = c or b for char or boolean.
3586 offset = offset from high order bit to start bit of type.
3587 width is # bytes in object of this type, nbits is # bits in type.
3588
3589 The width/offset stuff appears to be for small objects stored in
3590 larger ones (e.g. `shorts' in `int' registers). We ignore it for now,
3591 FIXME. */
3592
3593 static struct type *
3594 read_sun_builtin_type (char **pp, int typenums[2], struct objfile *objfile)
3595 {
3596 int type_bits;
3597 int nbits;
3598 int signed_type;
3599 enum type_code code = TYPE_CODE_INT;
3600
3601 switch (**pp)
3602 {
3603 case 's':
3604 signed_type = 1;
3605 break;
3606 case 'u':
3607 signed_type = 0;
3608 break;
3609 default:
3610 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3611 }
3612 (*pp)++;
3613
3614 /* For some odd reason, all forms of char put a c here. This is strange
3615 because no other type has this honor. We can safely ignore this because
3616 we actually determine 'char'acterness by the number of bits specified in
3617 the descriptor.
3618 Boolean forms, e.g Fortran logical*X, put a b here. */
3619
3620 if (**pp == 'c')
3621 (*pp)++;
3622 else if (**pp == 'b')
3623 {
3624 code = TYPE_CODE_BOOL;
3625 (*pp)++;
3626 }
3627
3628 /* The first number appears to be the number of bytes occupied
3629 by this type, except that unsigned short is 4 instead of 2.
3630 Since this information is redundant with the third number,
3631 we will ignore it. */
3632 read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
3633 if (nbits != 0)
3634 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3635
3636 /* The second number is always 0, so ignore it too. */
3637 read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
3638 if (nbits != 0)
3639 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3640
3641 /* The third number is the number of bits for this type. */
3642 type_bits = read_huge_number (pp, 0, &nbits, 0);
3643 if (nbits != 0)
3644 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3645 /* The type *should* end with a semicolon. If it are embedded
3646 in a larger type the semicolon may be the only way to know where
3647 the type ends. If this type is at the end of the stabstring we
3648 can deal with the omitted semicolon (but we don't have to like
3649 it). Don't bother to complain(), Sun's compiler omits the semicolon
3650 for "void". */
3651 if (**pp == ';')
3652 ++(*pp);
3653
3654 if (type_bits == 0)
3655 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_VOID, 1,
3656 signed_type ? 0 : TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED, (char *) NULL,
3657 objfile);
3658 else
3659 return init_type (code,
3660 type_bits / TARGET_CHAR_BIT,
3661 signed_type ? 0 : TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED, (char *) NULL,
3662 objfile);
3663 }
3664
3665 static struct type *
3666 read_sun_floating_type (char **pp, int typenums[2], struct objfile *objfile)
3667 {
3668 int nbits;
3669 int details;
3670 int nbytes;
3671 struct type *rettype;
3672
3673 /* The first number has more details about the type, for example
3674 FN_COMPLEX. */
3675 details = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
3676 if (nbits != 0)
3677 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3678
3679 /* The second number is the number of bytes occupied by this type */
3680 nbytes = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &nbits, 0);
3681 if (nbits != 0)
3682 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3683
3684 if (details == NF_COMPLEX || details == NF_COMPLEX16
3685 || details == NF_COMPLEX32)
3686 {
3687 rettype = init_type (TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX, nbytes, 0, NULL, objfile);
3688 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (rettype)
3689 = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, nbytes / 2, 0, NULL, objfile);
3690 return rettype;
3691 }
3692
3693 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, nbytes, 0, NULL, objfile);
3694 }
3695
3696 /* Read a number from the string pointed to by *PP.
3697 The value of *PP is advanced over the number.
3698 If END is nonzero, the character that ends the
3699 number must match END, or an error happens;
3700 and that character is skipped if it does match.
3701 If END is zero, *PP is left pointing to that character.
3702
3703 If TWOS_COMPLEMENT_BITS is set to a strictly positive value and if
3704 the number is represented in an octal representation, assume that
3705 it is represented in a 2's complement representation with a size of
3706 TWOS_COMPLEMENT_BITS.
3707
3708 If the number fits in a long, set *BITS to 0 and return the value.
3709 If not, set *BITS to be the number of bits in the number and return 0.
3710
3711 If encounter garbage, set *BITS to -1 and return 0. */
3712
3713 static long
3714 read_huge_number (char **pp, int end, int *bits, int twos_complement_bits)
3715 {
3716 char *p = *pp;
3717 int sign = 1;
3718 int sign_bit = 0;
3719 long n = 0;
3720 int radix = 10;
3721 char overflow = 0;
3722 int nbits = 0;
3723 int c;
3724 long upper_limit;
3725 int twos_complement_representation = 0;
3726
3727 if (*p == '-')
3728 {
3729 sign = -1;
3730 p++;
3731 }
3732
3733 /* Leading zero means octal. GCC uses this to output values larger
3734 than an int (because that would be hard in decimal). */
3735 if (*p == '0')
3736 {
3737 radix = 8;
3738 p++;
3739 }
3740
3741 /* Skip extra zeros. */
3742 while (*p == '0')
3743 p++;
3744
3745 if (sign > 0 && radix == 8 && twos_complement_bits > 0)
3746 {
3747 /* Octal, possibly signed. Check if we have enough chars for a
3748 negative number. */
3749
3750 size_t len;
3751 char *p1 = p;
3752 while ((c = *p1) >= '0' && c < '8')
3753 p1++;
3754
3755 len = p1 - p;
3756 if (len > twos_complement_bits / 3
3757 || (twos_complement_bits % 3 == 0 && len == twos_complement_bits / 3))
3758 {
3759 /* Ok, we have enough characters for a signed value, check
3760 for signness by testing if the sign bit is set. */
3761 sign_bit = (twos_complement_bits % 3 + 2) % 3;
3762 c = *p - '0';
3763 if (c & (1 << sign_bit))
3764 {
3765 /* Definitely signed. */
3766 twos_complement_representation = 1;
3767 sign = -1;
3768 }
3769 }
3770 }
3771
3772 upper_limit = LONG_MAX / radix;
3773
3774 while ((c = *p++) >= '0' && c < ('0' + radix))
3775 {
3776 if (n <= upper_limit)
3777 {
3778 if (twos_complement_representation)
3779 {
3780 /* Octal, signed, twos complement representation. In
3781 this case, n is the corresponding absolute value. */
3782 if (n == 0)
3783 {
3784 long sn = c - '0' - ((2 * (c - '0')) | (2 << sign_bit));
3785 n = -sn;
3786 }
3787 else
3788 {
3789 n *= radix;
3790 n -= c - '0';
3791 }
3792 }
3793 else
3794 {
3795 /* unsigned representation */
3796 n *= radix;
3797 n += c - '0'; /* FIXME this overflows anyway */
3798 }
3799 }
3800 else
3801 overflow = 1;
3802
3803 /* This depends on large values being output in octal, which is
3804 what GCC does. */
3805 if (radix == 8)
3806 {
3807 if (nbits == 0)
3808 {
3809 if (c == '0')
3810 /* Ignore leading zeroes. */
3811 ;
3812 else if (c == '1')
3813 nbits = 1;
3814 else if (c == '2' || c == '3')
3815 nbits = 2;
3816 else
3817 nbits = 3;
3818 }
3819 else
3820 nbits += 3;
3821 }
3822 }
3823 if (end)
3824 {
3825 if (c && c != end)
3826 {
3827 if (bits != NULL)
3828 *bits = -1;
3829 return 0;
3830 }
3831 }
3832 else
3833 --p;
3834
3835 if (radix == 8 && twos_complement_bits > 0 && nbits > twos_complement_bits)
3836 {
3837 /* We were supposed to parse a number with maximum
3838 TWOS_COMPLEMENT_BITS bits, but something went wrong. */
3839 if (bits != NULL)
3840 *bits = -1;
3841 return 0;
3842 }
3843
3844 *pp = p;
3845 if (overflow)
3846 {
3847 if (nbits == 0)
3848 {
3849 /* Large decimal constants are an error (because it is hard to
3850 count how many bits are in them). */
3851 if (bits != NULL)
3852 *bits = -1;
3853 return 0;
3854 }
3855
3856 /* -0x7f is the same as 0x80. So deal with it by adding one to
3857 the number of bits. Two's complement represention octals
3858 can't have a '-' in front. */
3859 if (sign == -1 && !twos_complement_representation)
3860 ++nbits;
3861 if (bits)
3862 *bits = nbits;
3863 }
3864 else
3865 {
3866 if (bits)
3867 *bits = 0;
3868 return n * sign;
3869 }
3870 /* It's *BITS which has the interesting information. */
3871 return 0;
3872 }
3873
3874 static struct type *
3875 read_range_type (char **pp, int typenums[2], int type_size,
3876 struct objfile *objfile)
3877 {
3878 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
3879 char *orig_pp = *pp;
3880 int rangenums[2];
3881 long n2, n3;
3882 int n2bits, n3bits;
3883 int self_subrange;
3884 struct type *result_type;
3885 struct type *index_type = NULL;
3886
3887 /* First comes a type we are a subrange of.
3888 In C it is usually 0, 1 or the type being defined. */
3889 if (read_type_number (pp, rangenums) != 0)
3890 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3891 self_subrange = (rangenums[0] == typenums[0] &&
3892 rangenums[1] == typenums[1]);
3893
3894 if (**pp == '=')
3895 {
3896 *pp = orig_pp;
3897 index_type = read_type (pp, objfile);
3898 }
3899
3900 /* A semicolon should now follow; skip it. */
3901 if (**pp == ';')
3902 (*pp)++;
3903
3904 /* The remaining two operands are usually lower and upper bounds
3905 of the range. But in some special cases they mean something else. */
3906 n2 = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &n2bits, type_size);
3907 n3 = read_huge_number (pp, ';', &n3bits, type_size);
3908
3909 if (n2bits == -1 || n3bits == -1)
3910 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3911
3912 if (index_type)
3913 goto handle_true_range;
3914
3915 /* If limits are huge, must be large integral type. */
3916 if (n2bits != 0 || n3bits != 0)
3917 {
3918 char got_signed = 0;
3919 char got_unsigned = 0;
3920 /* Number of bits in the type. */
3921 int nbits = 0;
3922
3923 /* If a type size attribute has been specified, the bounds of
3924 the range should fit in this size. If the lower bounds needs
3925 more bits than the upper bound, then the type is signed. */
3926 if (n2bits <= type_size && n3bits <= type_size)
3927 {
3928 if (n2bits == type_size && n2bits > n3bits)
3929 got_signed = 1;
3930 else
3931 got_unsigned = 1;
3932 nbits = type_size;
3933 }
3934 /* Range from 0 to <large number> is an unsigned large integral type. */
3935 else if ((n2bits == 0 && n2 == 0) && n3bits != 0)
3936 {
3937 got_unsigned = 1;
3938 nbits = n3bits;
3939 }
3940 /* Range from <large number> to <large number>-1 is a large signed
3941 integral type. Take care of the case where <large number> doesn't
3942 fit in a long but <large number>-1 does. */
3943 else if ((n2bits != 0 && n3bits != 0 && n2bits == n3bits + 1)
3944 || (n2bits != 0 && n3bits == 0
3945 && (n2bits == sizeof (long) * HOST_CHAR_BIT)
3946 && n3 == LONG_MAX))
3947 {
3948 got_signed = 1;
3949 nbits = n2bits;
3950 }
3951
3952 if (got_signed || got_unsigned)
3953 {
3954 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, nbits / TARGET_CHAR_BIT,
3955 got_unsigned ? TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED : 0, NULL,
3956 objfile);
3957 }
3958 else
3959 return error_type (pp, objfile);
3960 }
3961
3962 /* A type defined as a subrange of itself, with bounds both 0, is void. */
3963 if (self_subrange && n2 == 0 && n3 == 0)
3964 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_VOID, 1, 0, NULL, objfile);
3965
3966 /* If n3 is zero and n2 is positive, we want a floating type, and n2
3967 is the width in bytes.
3968
3969 Fortran programs appear to use this for complex types also. To
3970 distinguish between floats and complex, g77 (and others?) seem
3971 to use self-subranges for the complexes, and subranges of int for
3972 the floats.
3973
3974 Also note that for complexes, g77 sets n2 to the size of one of
3975 the member floats, not the whole complex beast. My guess is that
3976 this was to work well with pre-COMPLEX versions of gdb. */
3977
3978 if (n3 == 0 && n2 > 0)
3979 {
3980 struct type *float_type
3981 = init_type (TYPE_CODE_FLT, n2, 0, NULL, objfile);
3982
3983 if (self_subrange)
3984 {
3985 struct type *complex_type =
3986 init_type (TYPE_CODE_COMPLEX, 2 * n2, 0, NULL, objfile);
3987 TYPE_TARGET_TYPE (complex_type) = float_type;
3988 return complex_type;
3989 }
3990 else
3991 return float_type;
3992 }
3993
3994 /* If the upper bound is -1, it must really be an unsigned integral. */
3995
3996 else if (n2 == 0 && n3 == -1)
3997 {
3998 int bits = type_size;
3999 if (bits <= 0)
4000 {
4001 /* We don't know its size. It is unsigned int or unsigned
4002 long. GCC 2.3.3 uses this for long long too, but that is
4003 just a GDB 3.5 compatibility hack. */
4004 bits = gdbarch_int_bit (gdbarch);
4005 }
4006
4007 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, bits / TARGET_CHAR_BIT,
4008 TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED, NULL, objfile);
4009 }
4010
4011 /* Special case: char is defined (Who knows why) as a subrange of
4012 itself with range 0-127. */
4013 else if (self_subrange && n2 == 0 && n3 == 127)
4014 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 1, TYPE_FLAG_NOSIGN, NULL, objfile);
4015
4016 /* We used to do this only for subrange of self or subrange of int. */
4017 else if (n2 == 0)
4018 {
4019 /* -1 is used for the upper bound of (4 byte) "unsigned int" and
4020 "unsigned long", and we already checked for that,
4021 so don't need to test for it here. */
4022
4023 if (n3 < 0)
4024 /* n3 actually gives the size. */
4025 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, -n3, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED,
4026 NULL, objfile);
4027
4028 /* Is n3 == 2**(8n)-1 for some integer n? Then it's an
4029 unsigned n-byte integer. But do require n to be a power of
4030 two; we don't want 3- and 5-byte integers flying around. */
4031 {
4032 int bytes;
4033 unsigned long bits;
4034
4035 bits = n3;
4036 for (bytes = 0; (bits & 0xff) == 0xff; bytes++)
4037 bits >>= 8;
4038 if (bits == 0
4039 && ((bytes - 1) & bytes) == 0) /* "bytes is a power of two" */
4040 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, bytes, TYPE_FLAG_UNSIGNED, NULL,
4041 objfile);
4042 }
4043 }
4044 /* I think this is for Convex "long long". Since I don't know whether
4045 Convex sets self_subrange, I also accept that particular size regardless
4046 of self_subrange. */
4047 else if (n3 == 0 && n2 < 0
4048 && (self_subrange
4049 || n2 == -gdbarch_long_long_bit
4050 (gdbarch) / TARGET_CHAR_BIT))
4051 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, -n2, 0, NULL, objfile);
4052 else if (n2 == -n3 - 1)
4053 {
4054 if (n3 == 0x7f)
4055 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 1, 0, NULL, objfile);
4056 if (n3 == 0x7fff)
4057 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 2, 0, NULL, objfile);
4058 if (n3 == 0x7fffffff)
4059 return init_type (TYPE_CODE_INT, 4, 0, NULL, objfile);
4060 }
4061
4062 /* We have a real range type on our hands. Allocate space and
4063 return a real pointer. */
4064 handle_true_range:
4065
4066 if (self_subrange)
4067 index_type = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int;
4068 else
4069 index_type = *dbx_lookup_type (rangenums);
4070 if (index_type == NULL)
4071 {
4072 /* Does this actually ever happen? Is that why we are worrying
4073 about dealing with it rather than just calling error_type? */
4074
4075 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
4076 _("base type %d of range type is not defined"), rangenums[1]);
4077
4078 index_type = builtin_type (gdbarch)->builtin_int;
4079 }
4080
4081 result_type = create_range_type ((struct type *) NULL, index_type, n2, n3);
4082 return (result_type);
4083 }
4084
4085 /* Read in an argument list. This is a list of types, separated by commas
4086 and terminated with END. Return the list of types read in, or NULL
4087 if there is an error. */
4088
4089 static struct field *
4090 read_args (char **pp, int end, struct objfile *objfile, int *nargsp,
4091 int *varargsp)
4092 {
4093 /* FIXME! Remove this arbitrary limit! */
4094 struct type *types[1024]; /* allow for fns of 1023 parameters */
4095 int n = 0, i;
4096 struct field *rval;
4097
4098 while (**pp != end)
4099 {
4100 if (**pp != ',')
4101 /* Invalid argument list: no ','. */
4102 return NULL;
4103 (*pp)++;
4104 STABS_CONTINUE (pp, objfile);
4105 types[n++] = read_type (pp, objfile);
4106 }
4107 (*pp)++; /* get past `end' (the ':' character) */
4108
4109 if (TYPE_CODE (types[n - 1]) != TYPE_CODE_VOID)
4110 *varargsp = 1;
4111 else
4112 {
4113 n--;
4114 *varargsp = 0;
4115 }
4116
4117 rval = (struct field *) xmalloc (n * sizeof (struct field));
4118 memset (rval, 0, n * sizeof (struct field));
4119 for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
4120 rval[i].type = types[i];
4121 *nargsp = n;
4122 return rval;
4123 }
4124 \f
4125 /* Common block handling. */
4126
4127 /* List of symbols declared since the last BCOMM. This list is a tail
4128 of local_symbols. When ECOMM is seen, the symbols on the list
4129 are noted so their proper addresses can be filled in later,
4130 using the common block base address gotten from the assembler
4131 stabs. */
4132
4133 static struct pending *common_block;
4134 static int common_block_i;
4135
4136 /* Name of the current common block. We get it from the BCOMM instead of the
4137 ECOMM to match IBM documentation (even though IBM puts the name both places
4138 like everyone else). */
4139 static char *common_block_name;
4140
4141 /* Process a N_BCOMM symbol. The storage for NAME is not guaranteed
4142 to remain after this function returns. */
4143
4144 void
4145 common_block_start (char *name, struct objfile *objfile)
4146 {
4147 if (common_block_name != NULL)
4148 {
4149 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
4150 _("Invalid symbol data: common block within common block"));
4151 }
4152 common_block = local_symbols;
4153 common_block_i = local_symbols ? local_symbols->nsyms : 0;
4154 common_block_name = obsavestring (name, strlen (name),
4155 &objfile->objfile_obstack);
4156 }
4157
4158 /* Process a N_ECOMM symbol. */
4159
4160 void
4161 common_block_end (struct objfile *objfile)
4162 {
4163 /* Symbols declared since the BCOMM are to have the common block
4164 start address added in when we know it. common_block and
4165 common_block_i point to the first symbol after the BCOMM in
4166 the local_symbols list; copy the list and hang it off the
4167 symbol for the common block name for later fixup. */
4168 int i;
4169 struct symbol *sym;
4170 struct pending *new = 0;
4171 struct pending *next;
4172 int j;
4173
4174 if (common_block_name == NULL)
4175 {
4176 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("ECOMM symbol unmatched by BCOMM"));
4177 return;
4178 }
4179
4180 sym = (struct symbol *)
4181 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, sizeof (struct symbol));
4182 memset (sym, 0, sizeof (struct symbol));
4183 /* Note: common_block_name already saved on objfile_obstack */
4184 SYMBOL_SET_LINKAGE_NAME (sym, common_block_name);
4185 SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) = LOC_BLOCK;
4186
4187 /* Now we copy all the symbols which have been defined since the BCOMM. */
4188
4189 /* Copy all the struct pendings before common_block. */
4190 for (next = local_symbols;
4191 next != NULL && next != common_block;
4192 next = next->next)
4193 {
4194 for (j = 0; j < next->nsyms; j++)
4195 add_symbol_to_list (next->symbol[j], &new);
4196 }
4197
4198 /* Copy however much of COMMON_BLOCK we need. If COMMON_BLOCK is
4199 NULL, it means copy all the local symbols (which we already did
4200 above). */
4201
4202 if (common_block != NULL)
4203 for (j = common_block_i; j < common_block->nsyms; j++)
4204 add_symbol_to_list (common_block->symbol[j], &new);
4205
4206 SYMBOL_TYPE (sym) = (struct type *) new;
4207
4208 /* Should we be putting local_symbols back to what it was?
4209 Does it matter? */
4210
4211 i = hashname (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym));
4212 SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (sym) = global_sym_chain[i];
4213 global_sym_chain[i] = sym;
4214 common_block_name = NULL;
4215 }
4216
4217 /* Add a common block's start address to the offset of each symbol
4218 declared to be in it (by being between a BCOMM/ECOMM pair that uses
4219 the common block name). */
4220
4221 static void
4222 fix_common_block (struct symbol *sym, int valu)
4223 {
4224 struct pending *next = (struct pending *) SYMBOL_TYPE (sym);
4225 for (; next; next = next->next)
4226 {
4227 int j;
4228 for (j = next->nsyms - 1; j >= 0; j--)
4229 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (next->symbol[j]) += valu;
4230 }
4231 }
4232 \f
4233
4234
4235 /* Add {TYPE, TYPENUMS} to the NONAME_UNDEFS vector.
4236 See add_undefined_type for more details. */
4237
4238 static void
4239 add_undefined_type_noname (struct type *type, int typenums[2])
4240 {
4241 struct nat nat;
4242
4243 nat.typenums[0] = typenums [0];
4244 nat.typenums[1] = typenums [1];
4245 nat.type = type;
4246
4247 if (noname_undefs_length == noname_undefs_allocated)
4248 {
4249 noname_undefs_allocated *= 2;
4250 noname_undefs = (struct nat *)
4251 xrealloc ((char *) noname_undefs,
4252 noname_undefs_allocated * sizeof (struct nat));
4253 }
4254 noname_undefs[noname_undefs_length++] = nat;
4255 }
4256
4257 /* Add TYPE to the UNDEF_TYPES vector.
4258 See add_undefined_type for more details. */
4259
4260 static void
4261 add_undefined_type_1 (struct type *type)
4262 {
4263 if (undef_types_length == undef_types_allocated)
4264 {
4265 undef_types_allocated *= 2;
4266 undef_types = (struct type **)
4267 xrealloc ((char *) undef_types,
4268 undef_types_allocated * sizeof (struct type *));
4269 }
4270 undef_types[undef_types_length++] = type;
4271 }
4272
4273 /* What about types defined as forward references inside of a small lexical
4274 scope? */
4275 /* Add a type to the list of undefined types to be checked through
4276 once this file has been read in.
4277
4278 In practice, we actually maintain two such lists: The first list
4279 (UNDEF_TYPES) is used for types whose name has been provided, and
4280 concerns forward references (eg 'xs' or 'xu' forward references);
4281 the second list (NONAME_UNDEFS) is used for types whose name is
4282 unknown at creation time, because they were referenced through
4283 their type number before the actual type was declared.
4284 This function actually adds the given type to the proper list. */
4285
4286 static void
4287 add_undefined_type (struct type *type, int typenums[2])
4288 {
4289 if (TYPE_TAG_NAME (type) == NULL)
4290 add_undefined_type_noname (type, typenums);
4291 else
4292 add_undefined_type_1 (type);
4293 }
4294
4295 /* Try to fix all undefined types pushed on the UNDEF_TYPES vector. */
4296
4297 static void
4298 cleanup_undefined_types_noname (void)
4299 {
4300 int i;
4301
4302 for (i = 0; i < noname_undefs_length; i++)
4303 {
4304 struct nat nat = noname_undefs[i];
4305 struct type **type;
4306
4307 type = dbx_lookup_type (nat.typenums);
4308 if (nat.type != *type && TYPE_CODE (*type) != TYPE_CODE_UNDEF)
4309 {
4310 /* The instance flags of the undefined type are still unset,
4311 and needs to be copied over from the reference type.
4312 Since replace_type expects them to be identical, we need
4313 to set these flags manually before hand. */
4314 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (nat.type) = TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (*type);
4315 replace_type (nat.type, *type);
4316 }
4317 }
4318
4319 noname_undefs_length = 0;
4320 }
4321
4322 /* Go through each undefined type, see if it's still undefined, and fix it
4323 up if possible. We have two kinds of undefined types:
4324
4325 TYPE_CODE_ARRAY: Array whose target type wasn't defined yet.
4326 Fix: update array length using the element bounds
4327 and the target type's length.
4328 TYPE_CODE_STRUCT, TYPE_CODE_UNION: Structure whose fields were not
4329 yet defined at the time a pointer to it was made.
4330 Fix: Do a full lookup on the struct/union tag. */
4331
4332 static void
4333 cleanup_undefined_types_1 (void)
4334 {
4335 struct type **type;
4336
4337 /* Iterate over every undefined type, and look for a symbol whose type
4338 matches our undefined type. The symbol matches if:
4339 1. It is a typedef in the STRUCT domain;
4340 2. It has the same name, and same type code;
4341 3. The instance flags are identical.
4342
4343 It is important to check the instance flags, because we have seen
4344 examples where the debug info contained definitions such as:
4345
4346 "foo_t:t30=B31=xefoo_t:"
4347
4348 In this case, we have created an undefined type named "foo_t" whose
4349 instance flags is null (when processing "xefoo_t"), and then created
4350 another type with the same name, but with different instance flags
4351 ('B' means volatile). I think that the definition above is wrong,
4352 since the same type cannot be volatile and non-volatile at the same
4353 time, but we need to be able to cope with it when it happens. The
4354 approach taken here is to treat these two types as different. */
4355
4356 for (type = undef_types; type < undef_types + undef_types_length; type++)
4357 {
4358 switch (TYPE_CODE (*type))
4359 {
4360
4361 case TYPE_CODE_STRUCT:
4362 case TYPE_CODE_UNION:
4363 case TYPE_CODE_ENUM:
4364 {
4365 /* Check if it has been defined since. Need to do this here
4366 as well as in check_typedef to deal with the (legitimate in
4367 C though not C++) case of several types with the same name
4368 in different source files. */
4369 if (TYPE_STUB (*type))
4370 {
4371 struct pending *ppt;
4372 int i;
4373 /* Name of the type, without "struct" or "union" */
4374 char *typename = TYPE_TAG_NAME (*type);
4375
4376 if (typename == NULL)
4377 {
4378 complaint (&symfile_complaints, _("need a type name"));
4379 break;
4380 }
4381 for (ppt = file_symbols; ppt; ppt = ppt->next)
4382 {
4383 for (i = 0; i < ppt->nsyms; i++)
4384 {
4385 struct symbol *sym = ppt->symbol[i];
4386
4387 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_TYPEDEF
4388 && SYMBOL_DOMAIN (sym) == STRUCT_DOMAIN
4389 && (TYPE_CODE (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)) ==
4390 TYPE_CODE (*type))
4391 && (TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (*type) ==
4392 TYPE_INSTANCE_FLAGS (SYMBOL_TYPE (sym)))
4393 && strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym),
4394 typename) == 0)
4395 replace_type (*type, SYMBOL_TYPE (sym));
4396 }
4397 }
4398 }
4399 }
4400 break;
4401
4402 default:
4403 {
4404 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
4405 _("forward-referenced types left unresolved, "
4406 "type code %d."),
4407 TYPE_CODE (*type));
4408 }
4409 break;
4410 }
4411 }
4412
4413 undef_types_length = 0;
4414 }
4415
4416 /* Try to fix all the undefined types we ecountered while processing
4417 this unit. */
4418
4419 void
4420 cleanup_undefined_types (void)
4421 {
4422 cleanup_undefined_types_1 ();
4423 cleanup_undefined_types_noname ();
4424 }
4425
4426 /* Scan through all of the global symbols defined in the object file,
4427 assigning values to the debugging symbols that need to be assigned
4428 to. Get these symbols from the minimal symbol table. */
4429
4430 void
4431 scan_file_globals (struct objfile *objfile)
4432 {
4433 int hash;
4434 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol;
4435 struct symbol *sym, *prev;
4436 struct objfile *resolve_objfile;
4437
4438 /* SVR4 based linkers copy referenced global symbols from shared
4439 libraries to the main executable.
4440 If we are scanning the symbols for a shared library, try to resolve
4441 them from the minimal symbols of the main executable first. */
4442
4443 if (symfile_objfile && objfile != symfile_objfile)
4444 resolve_objfile = symfile_objfile;
4445 else
4446 resolve_objfile = objfile;
4447
4448 while (1)
4449 {
4450 /* Avoid expensive loop through all minimal symbols if there are
4451 no unresolved symbols. */
4452 for (hash = 0; hash < HASHSIZE; hash++)
4453 {
4454 if (global_sym_chain[hash])
4455 break;
4456 }
4457 if (hash >= HASHSIZE)
4458 return;
4459
4460 ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS (resolve_objfile, msymbol)
4461 {
4462 QUIT;
4463
4464 /* Skip static symbols. */
4465 switch (MSYMBOL_TYPE (msymbol))
4466 {
4467 case mst_file_text:
4468 case mst_file_data:
4469 case mst_file_bss:
4470 continue;
4471 default:
4472 break;
4473 }
4474
4475 prev = NULL;
4476
4477 /* Get the hash index and check all the symbols
4478 under that hash index. */
4479
4480 hash = hashname (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (msymbol));
4481
4482 for (sym = global_sym_chain[hash]; sym;)
4483 {
4484 if (strcmp (SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (msymbol),
4485 SYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (sym)) == 0)
4486 {
4487 /* Splice this symbol out of the hash chain and
4488 assign the value we have to it. */
4489 if (prev)
4490 {
4491 SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (prev) = SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (sym);
4492 }
4493 else
4494 {
4495 global_sym_chain[hash] = SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (sym);
4496 }
4497
4498 /* Check to see whether we need to fix up a common block. */
4499 /* Note: this code might be executed several times for
4500 the same symbol if there are multiple references. */
4501 if (sym)
4502 {
4503 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (sym) == LOC_BLOCK)
4504 {
4505 fix_common_block (sym,
4506 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol));
4507 }
4508 else
4509 {
4510 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (sym)
4511 = SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msymbol);
4512 }
4513 SYMBOL_SECTION (sym) = SYMBOL_SECTION (msymbol);
4514 }
4515
4516 if (prev)
4517 {
4518 sym = SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (prev);
4519 }
4520 else
4521 {
4522 sym = global_sym_chain[hash];
4523 }
4524 }
4525 else
4526 {
4527 prev = sym;
4528 sym = SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (sym);
4529 }
4530 }
4531 }
4532 if (resolve_objfile == objfile)
4533 break;
4534 resolve_objfile = objfile;
4535 }
4536
4537 /* Change the storage class of any remaining unresolved globals to
4538 LOC_UNRESOLVED and remove them from the chain. */
4539 for (hash = 0; hash < HASHSIZE; hash++)
4540 {
4541 sym = global_sym_chain[hash];
4542 while (sym)
4543 {
4544 prev = sym;
4545 sym = SYMBOL_VALUE_CHAIN (sym);
4546
4547 /* Change the symbol address from the misleading chain value
4548 to address zero. */
4549 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (prev) = 0;
4550
4551 /* Complain about unresolved common block symbols. */
4552 if (SYMBOL_CLASS (prev) == LOC_STATIC)
4553 SYMBOL_CLASS (prev) = LOC_UNRESOLVED;
4554 else
4555 complaint (&symfile_complaints,
4556 _("%s: common block `%s' from global_sym_chain unresolved"),
4557 objfile->name, SYMBOL_PRINT_NAME (prev));
4558 }
4559 }
4560 memset (global_sym_chain, 0, sizeof (global_sym_chain));
4561 }
4562
4563 /* Initialize anything that needs initializing when starting to read
4564 a fresh piece of a symbol file, e.g. reading in the stuff corresponding
4565 to a psymtab. */
4566
4567 void
4568 stabsread_init (void)
4569 {
4570 }
4571
4572 /* Initialize anything that needs initializing when a completely new
4573 symbol file is specified (not just adding some symbols from another
4574 file, e.g. a shared library). */
4575
4576 void
4577 stabsread_new_init (void)
4578 {
4579 /* Empty the hash table of global syms looking for values. */
4580 memset (global_sym_chain, 0, sizeof (global_sym_chain));
4581 }
4582
4583 /* Initialize anything that needs initializing at the same time as
4584 start_symtab() is called. */
4585
4586 void
4587 start_stabs (void)
4588 {
4589 global_stabs = NULL; /* AIX COFF */
4590 /* Leave FILENUM of 0 free for builtin types and this file's types. */
4591 n_this_object_header_files = 1;
4592 type_vector_length = 0;
4593 type_vector = (struct type **) 0;
4594
4595 /* FIXME: If common_block_name is not already NULL, we should complain(). */
4596 common_block_name = NULL;
4597 }
4598
4599 /* Call after end_symtab() */
4600
4601 void
4602 end_stabs (void)
4603 {
4604 if (type_vector)
4605 {
4606 xfree (type_vector);
4607 }
4608 type_vector = 0;
4609 type_vector_length = 0;
4610 previous_stab_code = 0;
4611 }
4612
4613 void
4614 finish_global_stabs (struct objfile *objfile)
4615 {
4616 if (global_stabs)
4617 {
4618 patch_block_stabs (global_symbols, global_stabs, objfile);
4619 xfree (global_stabs);
4620 global_stabs = NULL;
4621 }
4622 }
4623
4624 /* Find the end of the name, delimited by a ':', but don't match
4625 ObjC symbols which look like -[Foo bar::]:bla. */
4626 static char *
4627 find_name_end (char *name)
4628 {
4629 char *s = name;
4630 if (s[0] == '-' || *s == '+')
4631 {
4632 /* Must be an ObjC method symbol. */
4633 if (s[1] != '[')
4634 {
4635 error (_("invalid symbol name \"%s\""), name);
4636 }
4637 s = strchr (s, ']');
4638 if (s == NULL)
4639 {
4640 error (_("invalid symbol name \"%s\""), name);
4641 }
4642 return strchr (s, ':');
4643 }
4644 else
4645 {
4646 return strchr (s, ':');
4647 }
4648 }
4649
4650 /* Initializer for this module */
4651
4652 void
4653 _initialize_stabsread (void)
4654 {
4655 undef_types_allocated = 20;
4656 undef_types_length = 0;
4657 undef_types = (struct type **)
4658 xmalloc (undef_types_allocated * sizeof (struct type *));
4659
4660 noname_undefs_allocated = 20;
4661 noname_undefs_length = 0;
4662 noname_undefs = (struct nat *)
4663 xmalloc (noname_undefs_allocated * sizeof (struct nat));
4664 }
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