* i386b-nat.c: Comment changes.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / symfile.c
1 /* Generic symbol file reading for the GNU debugger, GDB.
2 Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 Contributed by Cygnus Support, using pieces from other GDB modules.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
19 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
20
21 #include "defs.h"
22 #include "symtab.h"
23 #include "gdbtypes.h"
24 #include "gdbcore.h"
25 #include "frame.h"
26 #include "target.h"
27 #include "value.h"
28 #include "symfile.h"
29 #include "objfiles.h"
30 #include "gdbcmd.h"
31 #include "breakpoint.h"
32
33 #include <obstack.h>
34 #include <assert.h>
35
36 #include <sys/types.h>
37 #include <fcntl.h>
38 #include <string.h>
39 #include <sys/stat.h>
40 #include <ctype.h>
41
42 /* Global variables owned by this file */
43
44 int readnow_symbol_files; /* Read full symbols immediately */
45
46 /* External variables and functions referenced. */
47
48 extern int info_verbose;
49
50 /* Functions this file defines */
51
52 static void
53 load_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
54
55 static void
56 add_symbol_file_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
57
58 static void
59 cashier_psymtab PARAMS ((struct partial_symtab *));
60
61 static int
62 compare_psymbols PARAMS ((const void *, const void *));
63
64 static int
65 compare_symbols PARAMS ((const void *, const void *));
66
67 static bfd *
68 symfile_bfd_open PARAMS ((char *));
69
70 static void
71 find_sym_fns PARAMS ((struct objfile *));
72
73 void
74 clear_symtab_users_once PARAMS ((void));
75
76 /* List of all available sym_fns. On gdb startup, each object file reader
77 calls add_symtab_fns() to register information on each format it is
78 prepared to read. */
79
80 static struct sym_fns *symtab_fns = NULL;
81
82 /* Structures with which to manage partial symbol allocation. */
83
84 struct psymbol_allocation_list global_psymbols = {0}, static_psymbols = {0};
85
86 /* Flag for whether user will be reloading symbols multiple times.
87 Defaults to ON for VxWorks, otherwise OFF. */
88
89 #ifdef SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT
90 int symbol_reloading = SYMBOL_RELOADING_DEFAULT;
91 #else
92 int symbol_reloading = 0;
93 #endif
94
95 /* Structure to manage complaints about symbol file contents. */
96
97 struct complaint complaint_root[1] = {
98 {(char *) 0, 0, complaint_root},
99 };
100
101 /* Some actual complaints. */
102
103 struct complaint oldsyms_complaint = {
104 "Replacing old symbols for `%s'", 0, 0 };
105
106 struct complaint empty_symtab_complaint = {
107 "Empty symbol table found for `%s'", 0, 0 };
108
109 \f
110 /* In the following sort, we always make sure that
111 register debug symbol declarations always come before regular
112 debug symbol declarations (as might happen when parameters are
113 then put into registers by the compiler).
114
115 Since this function is called from within qsort, in an ANSI environment
116 it must conform to the prototype for qsort, which specifies that the
117 comparison function takes two "void *" pointers. */
118
119 static int
120 compare_symbols (s1p, s2p)
121 const PTR s1p;
122 const PTR s2p;
123 {
124 register struct symbol **s1, **s2;
125 register int namediff;
126
127 s1 = (struct symbol **) s1p;
128 s2 = (struct symbol **) s2p;
129
130 /* Compare the initial characters. */
131 namediff = SYMBOL_NAME (*s1)[0] - SYMBOL_NAME (*s2)[0];
132 if (namediff != 0) return namediff;
133
134 /* If they match, compare the rest of the names. */
135 namediff = strcmp (SYMBOL_NAME (*s1), SYMBOL_NAME (*s2));
136 if (namediff != 0) return namediff;
137
138 /* For symbols of the same name, registers should come first. */
139 return ((SYMBOL_CLASS (*s2) == LOC_REGISTER)
140 - (SYMBOL_CLASS (*s1) == LOC_REGISTER));
141 }
142
143 /*
144
145 LOCAL FUNCTION
146
147 compare_psymbols -- compare two partial symbols by name
148
149 DESCRIPTION
150
151 Given pointer to two partial symbol table entries, compare
152 them by name and return -N, 0, or +N (ala strcmp). Typically
153 used by sorting routines like qsort().
154
155 NOTES
156
157 Does direct compare of first two characters before punting
158 and passing to strcmp for longer compares. Note that the
159 original version had a bug whereby two null strings or two
160 identically named one character strings would return the
161 comparison of memory following the null byte.
162
163 */
164
165 static int
166 compare_psymbols (s1p, s2p)
167 const PTR s1p;
168 const PTR s2p;
169 {
170 register char *st1 = SYMBOL_NAME ((struct partial_symbol *) s1p);
171 register char *st2 = SYMBOL_NAME ((struct partial_symbol *) s2p);
172
173 if ((st1[0] - st2[0]) || !st1[0])
174 {
175 return (st1[0] - st2[0]);
176 }
177 else if ((st1[1] - st2[1]) || !st1[1])
178 {
179 return (st1[1] - st2[1]);
180 }
181 else
182 {
183 return (strcmp (st1 + 2, st2 + 2));
184 }
185 }
186
187 void
188 sort_pst_symbols (pst)
189 struct partial_symtab *pst;
190 {
191 /* Sort the global list; don't sort the static list */
192
193 qsort (pst -> objfile -> global_psymbols.list + pst -> globals_offset,
194 pst -> n_global_syms, sizeof (struct partial_symbol),
195 compare_psymbols);
196 }
197
198 /* Call sort_block_syms to sort alphabetically the symbols of one block. */
199
200 void
201 sort_block_syms (b)
202 register struct block *b;
203 {
204 qsort (&BLOCK_SYM (b, 0), BLOCK_NSYMS (b),
205 sizeof (struct symbol *), compare_symbols);
206 }
207
208 /* Call sort_symtab_syms to sort alphabetically
209 the symbols of each block of one symtab. */
210
211 void
212 sort_symtab_syms (s)
213 register struct symtab *s;
214 {
215 register struct blockvector *bv;
216 int nbl;
217 int i;
218 register struct block *b;
219
220 if (s == 0)
221 return;
222 bv = BLOCKVECTOR (s);
223 nbl = BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bv);
224 for (i = 0; i < nbl; i++)
225 {
226 b = BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bv, i);
227 if (BLOCK_SHOULD_SORT (b))
228 sort_block_syms (b);
229 }
230 }
231
232 void
233 sort_all_symtab_syms ()
234 {
235 register struct symtab *s;
236 register struct objfile *objfile;
237
238 for (objfile = object_files; objfile != NULL; objfile = objfile -> next)
239 {
240 for (s = objfile -> symtabs; s != NULL; s = s -> next)
241 {
242 sort_symtab_syms (s);
243 }
244 }
245 }
246
247 /* Make a copy of the string at PTR with SIZE characters in the symbol obstack
248 (and add a null character at the end in the copy).
249 Returns the address of the copy. */
250
251 char *
252 obsavestring (ptr, size, obstackp)
253 char *ptr;
254 int size;
255 struct obstack *obstackp;
256 {
257 register char *p = (char *) obstack_alloc (obstackp, size + 1);
258 /* Open-coded bcopy--saves function call time.
259 These strings are usually short. */
260 {
261 register char *p1 = ptr;
262 register char *p2 = p;
263 char *end = ptr + size;
264 while (p1 != end)
265 *p2++ = *p1++;
266 }
267 p[size] = 0;
268 return p;
269 }
270
271 /* Concatenate strings S1, S2 and S3; return the new string.
272 Space is found in the symbol_obstack. */
273
274 char *
275 obconcat (obstackp, s1, s2, s3)
276 struct obstack *obstackp;
277 const char *s1, *s2, *s3;
278 {
279 register int len = strlen (s1) + strlen (s2) + strlen (s3) + 1;
280 register char *val = (char *) obstack_alloc (obstackp, len);
281 strcpy (val, s1);
282 strcat (val, s2);
283 strcat (val, s3);
284 return val;
285 }
286
287 /* Get the symbol table that corresponds to a partial_symtab.
288 This is fast after the first time you do it. In fact, there
289 is an even faster macro PSYMTAB_TO_SYMTAB that does the fast
290 case inline. */
291
292 struct symtab *
293 psymtab_to_symtab (pst)
294 register struct partial_symtab *pst;
295 {
296 /* If it's been looked up before, return it. */
297 if (pst->symtab)
298 return pst->symtab;
299
300 /* If it has not yet been read in, read it. */
301 if (!pst->readin)
302 {
303 (*pst->read_symtab) (pst);
304 }
305
306 return pst->symtab;
307 }
308
309 /* Initialize entry point information for this objfile. */
310
311 void
312 init_entry_point_info (objfile)
313 struct objfile *objfile;
314 {
315 /* Save startup file's range of PC addresses to help blockframe.c
316 decide where the bottom of the stack is. */
317
318 if (bfd_get_file_flags (objfile -> obfd) & EXEC_P)
319 {
320 /* Executable file -- record its entry point so we'll recognize
321 the startup file because it contains the entry point. */
322 objfile -> ei.entry_point = bfd_get_start_address (objfile -> obfd);
323 }
324 else
325 {
326 /* Examination of non-executable.o files. Short-circuit this stuff. */
327 /* ~0 will not be in any file, we hope. */
328 objfile -> ei.entry_point = ~0;
329 /* set the startup file to be an empty range. */
330 objfile -> ei.entry_file_lowpc = 0;
331 objfile -> ei.entry_file_highpc = 0;
332 }
333 }
334
335 /* Remember the lowest-addressed loadable section we've seen.
336 This function is called via bfd_map_over_sections. */
337
338 #if 0 /* Not used yet */
339 static void
340 find_lowest_section (abfd, sect, obj)
341 bfd *abfd;
342 asection *sect;
343 PTR obj;
344 {
345 asection **lowest = (asection **)obj;
346
347 if (0 == (bfd_get_section_flags (abfd, sect) & SEC_LOAD))
348 return;
349 if (!*lowest)
350 *lowest = sect; /* First loadable section */
351 else if (bfd_section_vma (abfd, *lowest) >= bfd_section_vma (abfd, sect))
352 *lowest = sect; /* A lower loadable section */
353 }
354 #endif
355
356 /* Process a symbol file, as either the main file or as a dynamically
357 loaded file.
358
359 NAME is the file name (which will be tilde-expanded and made
360 absolute herein) (but we don't free or modify NAME itself).
361 FROM_TTY says how verbose to be. MAINLINE specifies whether this
362 is the main symbol file, or whether it's an extra symbol file such
363 as dynamically loaded code. If !mainline, ADDR is the address
364 where the text segment was loaded. If VERBO, the caller has printed
365 a verbose message about the symbol reading (and complaints can be
366 more terse about it). */
367
368 void
369 syms_from_objfile (objfile, addr, mainline, verbo)
370 struct objfile *objfile;
371 CORE_ADDR addr;
372 int mainline;
373 int verbo;
374 {
375 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
376 asection *lowest_sect;
377
378 /* There is a distinction between having no symbol table
379 (we refuse to read the file, leaving the old set of symbols around)
380 and having no debugging symbols in your symbol table (we read
381 the file and end up with a mostly empty symbol table).
382
383 FIXME: This strategy works correctly when the debugging symbols are
384 intermixed with "normal" symbols. However, when the debugging symbols
385 are separate, such as with ELF/DWARF, it is perfectly plausible for
386 the symbol table to be missing but still have all the DWARF info
387 intact. Thus in general it is wrong to assume that having no symbol
388 table implies no debugging information. */
389
390 if (!(bfd_get_file_flags (objfile -> obfd) & HAS_SYMS))
391 return;
392
393 init_entry_point_info (objfile);
394 find_sym_fns (objfile);
395
396 if (mainline)
397 {
398 /* Since no error yet, throw away the old symbol table. */
399
400 if (symfile_objfile != NULL)
401 {
402 free_objfile (symfile_objfile);
403 symfile_objfile = NULL;
404 }
405
406 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_new_init) (objfile);
407 }
408
409 /* Convert addr into an offset rather than an absolute address.
410 We find the lowest address of a loaded segment in the objfile,
411 and assume that <addr> is where that got loaded. Due to historical
412 precedent, we warn if that doesn't happen to be the ".text"
413 segment. */
414
415 if (mainline)
416 {
417 addr = 0; /* No offset from objfile addresses. */
418 }
419 else
420 {
421 lowest_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (objfile->obfd, ".text");
422 #if 0
423 lowest_sect = 0;
424 bfd_map_over_sections (objfile->obfd, find_lowest_section,
425 (PTR) &lowest_sect);
426 #endif
427
428 if (lowest_sect == 0)
429 warning ("no loadable sections found in added symbol-file %s",
430 objfile->name);
431 else if (0 == bfd_get_section_name (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect)
432 || 0 != strcmp(".text",
433 bfd_get_section_name (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect)))
434 warning ("Lowest section in %s is %s at 0x%x",
435 objfile->name,
436 bfd_section_name (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect),
437 bfd_section_vma (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect));
438
439 if (lowest_sect)
440 addr -= bfd_section_vma (objfile->obfd, lowest_sect);
441 }
442
443 /* Initialize symbol reading routines for this objfile, allow complaints to
444 appear for this new file, and record how verbose to be, then do the
445 initial symbol reading for this file. */
446
447 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_init) (objfile);
448 clear_complaints (1, verbo);
449 section_offsets = (*objfile -> sf -> sym_offsets) (objfile, addr);
450 (*objfile -> sf -> sym_read) (objfile, section_offsets, mainline);
451
452 /* Don't allow char * to have a typename (else would get caddr_t.) */
453 /* Ditto void *. FIXME should do this for all the builtin types. */
454
455 TYPE_NAME (lookup_pointer_type (builtin_type_char)) = 0;
456 TYPE_NAME (lookup_pointer_type (builtin_type_void)) = 0;
457
458 /* Mark the objfile has having had initial symbol read attempted. Note
459 that this does not mean we found any symbols... */
460
461 objfile -> flags |= OBJF_SYMS;
462 }
463
464 /* Perform required actions immediately after either reading in the initial
465 symbols for a new objfile, or mapping in the symbols from a reusable
466 objfile. */
467
468 void
469 new_symfile_objfile (objfile, mainline, verbo)
470 struct objfile *objfile;
471 int mainline;
472 int verbo;
473 {
474 if (mainline)
475 {
476 /* OK, make it the "real" symbol file. */
477 symfile_objfile = objfile;
478 }
479
480 /* If we have wiped out any old symbol tables, clean up. */
481 clear_symtab_users_once ();
482
483 /* We're done reading the symbol file; finish off complaints. */
484 clear_complaints (0, verbo);
485
486 /* Fixup all the breakpoints that may have been redefined by this
487 symbol file. */
488
489 breakpoint_re_set ();
490 }
491
492 /* Process a symbol file, as either the main file or as a dynamically
493 loaded file.
494
495 NAME is the file name (which will be tilde-expanded and made
496 absolute herein) (but we don't free or modify NAME itself).
497 FROM_TTY says how verbose to be. MAINLINE specifies whether this
498 is the main symbol file, or whether it's an extra symbol file such
499 as dynamically loaded code. If !mainline, ADDR is the address
500 where the text segment was loaded.
501
502 Upon success, returns a pointer to the objfile that was added.
503 Upon failure, jumps back to command level (never returns). */
504
505 struct objfile *
506 symbol_file_add (name, from_tty, addr, mainline, mapped, readnow)
507 char *name;
508 int from_tty;
509 CORE_ADDR addr;
510 int mainline;
511 int mapped;
512 int readnow;
513 {
514 struct objfile *objfile;
515 struct partial_symtab *psymtab;
516 bfd *abfd;
517
518 /* Open a bfd for the file and then check to see if the file has a
519 symbol table. There is a distinction between having no symbol table
520 (we refuse to read the file, leaving the old set of symbols around)
521 and having no debugging symbols in the symbol table (we read the file
522 and end up with a mostly empty symbol table, but with lots of stuff in
523 the minimal symbol table). We need to make the decision about whether
524 to continue with the file before allocating and building a objfile.
525
526 FIXME: This strategy works correctly when the debugging symbols are
527 intermixed with "normal" symbols. However, when the debugging symbols
528 are separate, such as with ELF/DWARF, it is perfectly plausible for
529 the symbol table to be missing but still have all the DWARF info
530 intact. Thus in general it is wrong to assume that having no symbol
531 table implies no debugging information. */
532
533 abfd = symfile_bfd_open (name);
534 if (!(bfd_get_file_flags (abfd) & HAS_SYMS))
535 {
536 error ("%s has no symbol-table", name);
537 }
538
539 if ((have_full_symbols () || have_partial_symbols ())
540 && mainline
541 && from_tty
542 && !query ("Load new symbol table from \"%s\"? ", name))
543 error ("Not confirmed.");
544
545 /* Getting new symbols may change our opinion about what is
546 frameless. */
547
548 reinit_frame_cache ();
549
550 objfile = allocate_objfile (abfd, mapped);
551
552 /* If the objfile uses a mapped symbol file, and we have a psymtab for
553 it, then skip reading any symbols at this time. */
554
555 if ((objfile -> flags & OBJF_MAPPED) && (objfile -> flags & OBJF_SYMS))
556 {
557 /* We mapped in an existing symbol table file that already has had
558 initial symbol reading performed, so we can skip that part. Notify
559 the user that instead of reading the symbols, they have been mapped.
560 */
561 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
562 {
563 printf_filtered ("Mapped symbols for %s...", name);
564 wrap_here ("");
565 fflush (stdout);
566 }
567 init_entry_point_info (objfile);
568 find_sym_fns (objfile);
569 }
570 else
571 {
572 /* We either created a new mapped symbol table, mapped an existing
573 symbol table file which has not had initial symbol reading
574 performed, or need to read an unmapped symbol table. */
575 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
576 {
577 printf_filtered ("Reading symbols from %s...", name);
578 wrap_here ("");
579 fflush (stdout);
580 }
581 syms_from_objfile (objfile, addr, mainline, from_tty);
582 }
583
584 new_symfile_objfile (objfile, mainline, from_tty);
585
586 /* We now have at least a partial symbol table. Check to see if the
587 user requested that all symbols be read on initial access via either
588 the gdb startup command line or on a per symbol file basis. Expand
589 all partial symbol tables for this objfile if so. */
590
591 if (readnow || readnow_symbol_files)
592 {
593 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
594 {
595 printf_filtered ("expanding to full symbols...");
596 wrap_here ("");
597 fflush (stdout);
598 }
599
600 for (psymtab = objfile -> psymtabs;
601 psymtab != NULL;
602 psymtab = psymtab -> next)
603 {
604 psymtab_to_symtab (psymtab);
605 }
606 }
607
608 if (from_tty || info_verbose)
609 {
610 printf_filtered ("done.\n");
611 fflush (stdout);
612 }
613
614 return (objfile);
615 }
616
617 /* This is the symbol-file command. Read the file, analyze its symbols,
618 and add a struct symtab to a symtab list. */
619
620 void
621 symbol_file_command (args, from_tty)
622 char *args;
623 int from_tty;
624 {
625 char **argv;
626 char *name = NULL;
627 struct cleanup *cleanups;
628 int mapped = 0;
629 int readnow = 0;
630
631 dont_repeat ();
632
633 if (args == NULL)
634 {
635 if ((have_full_symbols () || have_partial_symbols ())
636 && from_tty
637 && !query ("Discard symbol table from `%s'? ",
638 symfile_objfile -> name))
639 error ("Not confirmed.");
640 free_all_objfiles ();
641 symfile_objfile = NULL;
642 current_source_symtab = NULL;
643 current_source_line = 0;
644 if (from_tty)
645 {
646 printf_filtered ("No symbol file now.\n");
647 }
648 }
649 else
650 {
651 if ((argv = buildargv (args)) == NULL)
652 {
653 nomem (0);
654 }
655 cleanups = make_cleanup (freeargv, (char *) argv);
656 while (*argv != NULL)
657 {
658 if (strcmp (*argv, "-mapped") == 0)
659 {
660 mapped = 1;
661 }
662 else if (strcmp (*argv, "-readnow") == 0)
663 {
664 readnow = 1;
665 }
666 else if (**argv == '-')
667 {
668 error ("unknown option `%s'", *argv);
669 }
670 else
671 {
672 name = *argv;
673 }
674 argv++;
675 }
676
677 if (name == NULL)
678 {
679 error ("no symbol file name was specified");
680 }
681 else
682 {
683 symbol_file_add (name, from_tty, (CORE_ADDR)0, 1, mapped, readnow);
684 }
685 do_cleanups (cleanups);
686 }
687 }
688
689 /* Open file specified by NAME and hand it off to BFD for preliminary
690 analysis. Result is a newly initialized bfd *, which includes a newly
691 malloc'd` copy of NAME (tilde-expanded and made absolute).
692 In case of trouble, error() is called. */
693
694 static bfd *
695 symfile_bfd_open (name)
696 char *name;
697 {
698 bfd *sym_bfd;
699 int desc;
700 char *absolute_name;
701
702 name = tilde_expand (name); /* Returns 1st new malloc'd copy */
703
704 /* Look down path for it, allocate 2nd new malloc'd copy. */
705 desc = openp (getenv ("PATH"), 1, name, O_RDONLY, 0, &absolute_name);
706 if (desc < 0)
707 {
708 make_cleanup (free, name);
709 perror_with_name (name);
710 }
711 free (name); /* Free 1st new malloc'd copy */
712 name = absolute_name; /* Keep 2nd malloc'd copy in bfd */
713 /* It'll be freed in free_objfile(). */
714
715 sym_bfd = bfd_fdopenr (name, NULL, desc);
716 if (!sym_bfd)
717 {
718 close (desc);
719 make_cleanup (free, name);
720 error ("\"%s\": can't open to read symbols: %s.", name,
721 bfd_errmsg (bfd_error));
722 }
723
724 if (!bfd_check_format (sym_bfd, bfd_object))
725 {
726 bfd_close (sym_bfd); /* This also closes desc */
727 make_cleanup (free, name);
728 error ("\"%s\": can't read symbols: %s.", name,
729 bfd_errmsg (bfd_error));
730 }
731
732 return (sym_bfd);
733 }
734
735 /* Link a new symtab_fns into the global symtab_fns list. Called on gdb
736 startup by the _initialize routine in each object file format reader,
737 to register information about each format the the reader is prepared
738 to handle. */
739
740 void
741 add_symtab_fns (sf)
742 struct sym_fns *sf;
743 {
744 sf->next = symtab_fns;
745 symtab_fns = sf;
746 }
747
748
749 /* Initialize to read symbols from the symbol file sym_bfd. It either
750 returns or calls error(). The result is an initialized struct sym_fns
751 in the objfile structure, that contains cached information about the
752 symbol file. */
753
754 static void
755 find_sym_fns (objfile)
756 struct objfile *objfile;
757 {
758 struct sym_fns *sf;
759
760 for (sf = symtab_fns; sf != NULL; sf = sf -> next)
761 {
762 if (strncmp (bfd_get_target (objfile -> obfd),
763 sf -> sym_name, sf -> sym_namelen) == 0)
764 {
765 objfile -> sf = sf;
766 return;
767 }
768 }
769 error ("I'm sorry, Dave, I can't do that. Symbol format `%s' unknown.",
770 bfd_get_target (objfile -> obfd));
771 }
772 \f
773 /* This function runs the load command of our current target. */
774
775 static void
776 load_command (arg, from_tty)
777 char *arg;
778 int from_tty;
779 {
780 target_load (arg, from_tty);
781 }
782
783 /* This function allows the addition of incrementally linked object files.
784 It does not modify any state in the target, only in the debugger. */
785
786 /* ARGSUSED */
787 static void
788 add_symbol_file_command (args, from_tty)
789 char *args;
790 int from_tty;
791 {
792 char *name = NULL;
793 CORE_ADDR text_addr;
794 char *arg;
795 int readnow = 0;
796 int mapped = 0;
797
798 dont_repeat ();
799
800 if (args == NULL)
801 {
802 error ("add-symbol-file takes a file name and an address");
803 }
804
805 /* Make a copy of the string that we can safely write into. */
806
807 args = strdup (args);
808 make_cleanup (free, args);
809
810 /* Pick off any -option args and the file name. */
811
812 while ((*args != '\000') && (name == NULL))
813 {
814 while (isspace (*args)) {args++;}
815 arg = args;
816 while ((*args != '\000') && !isspace (*args)) {args++;}
817 if (*args != '\000')
818 {
819 *args++ = '\000';
820 }
821 if (*arg != '-')
822 {
823 name = arg;
824 }
825 else if (strcmp (arg, "-mapped") == 0)
826 {
827 mapped = 1;
828 }
829 else if (strcmp (arg, "-readnow") == 0)
830 {
831 readnow = 1;
832 }
833 else
834 {
835 error ("unknown option `%s'", arg);
836 }
837 }
838
839 /* After picking off any options and the file name, args should be
840 left pointing at the remainder of the command line, which should
841 be the address expression to evaluate. */
842
843 if ((name == NULL) || (*args == '\000') )
844 {
845 error ("add-symbol-file takes a file name and an address");
846 }
847 name = tilde_expand (name);
848 make_cleanup (free, name);
849
850 text_addr = parse_and_eval_address (args);
851
852 if (!query ("add symbol table from file \"%s\" at text_addr = %s?\n",
853 name, local_hex_string (text_addr)))
854 error ("Not confirmed.");
855
856 symbol_file_add (name, 0, text_addr, 0, mapped, readnow);
857 }
858 \f
859 /* Re-read symbols if a symbol-file has changed. */
860 void
861 reread_symbols ()
862 {
863 struct objfile *objfile;
864 long new_modtime;
865 int reread_one = 0;
866 struct stat new_statbuf;
867 int res;
868
869 /* With the addition of shared libraries, this should be modified,
870 the load time should be saved in the partial symbol tables, since
871 different tables may come from different source files. FIXME.
872 This routine should then walk down each partial symbol table
873 and see if the symbol table that it originates from has been changed */
874
875 the_big_top:
876 for (objfile = object_files; objfile; objfile = objfile->next) {
877 if (objfile->obfd) {
878 #ifdef IBM6000_TARGET
879 /* If this object is from a shared library, then you should
880 stat on the library name, not member name. */
881
882 if (objfile->obfd->my_archive)
883 res = stat (objfile->obfd->my_archive->filename, &new_statbuf);
884 else
885 #endif
886 res = stat (objfile->name, &new_statbuf);
887 if (res != 0) {
888 /* FIXME, should use print_sys_errmsg but it's not filtered. */
889 printf_filtered ("`%s' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.\n",
890 objfile->name);
891 continue;
892 }
893 new_modtime = new_statbuf.st_mtime;
894 if (new_modtime != objfile->mtime) {
895 printf_filtered ("`%s' has changed; re-reading symbols.\n",
896 objfile->name);
897 /* FIXME, this should use a different command...that would only
898 affect this objfile's symbols, and would reset objfile->mtime.
899 (objfile->mtime = new_modtime;)
900 HOWEVER, that command isn't written yet -- so call symbol_file_
901 command, and restart the scan from the top, because it munges
902 the object_files list. */
903 symbol_file_command (objfile->name, 0);
904 reread_one = 1;
905 goto the_big_top; /* Start over. */
906 }
907 }
908 }
909
910 if (reread_one)
911 breakpoint_re_set ();
912 }
913 \f
914 /* Functions to handle complaints during symbol reading. */
915
916 /* How many complaints about a particular thing should be printed before
917 we stop whining about it? Default is no whining at all, since so many
918 systems have ill-constructed symbol files. */
919
920 static unsigned stop_whining = 0;
921
922 /* Should each complaint be self explanatory, or should we assume that
923 a series of complaints is being produced?
924 case 0: self explanatory message.
925 case 1: First message of a series that must start off with explanation.
926 case 2: Subsequent message, when user already knows we are reading
927 symbols and we can just state our piece. */
928
929 static int complaint_series = 0;
930
931 /* Print a complaint about the input symbols, and link the complaint block
932 into a chain for later handling. */
933
934 void
935 complain (complaint, val)
936 struct complaint *complaint;
937 char *val;
938 {
939 complaint->counter++;
940 if (complaint->next == 0) {
941 complaint->next = complaint_root->next;
942 complaint_root->next = complaint;
943 }
944 if (complaint->counter > stop_whining)
945 return;
946 wrap_here ("");
947
948 switch (complaint_series + (info_verbose << 1)) {
949
950 /* Isolated messages, must be self-explanatory. */
951 case 0:
952 puts_filtered ("During symbol reading, ");
953 wrap_here("");
954 printf_filtered (complaint->message, val);
955 puts_filtered (".\n");
956 break;
957
958 /* First of a series, without `set verbose'. */
959 case 1:
960 puts_filtered ("During symbol reading...");
961 printf_filtered (complaint->message, val);
962 puts_filtered ("...");
963 wrap_here("");
964 complaint_series++;
965 break;
966
967 /* Subsequent messages of a series, or messages under `set verbose'.
968 (We'll already have produced a "Reading in symbols for XXX..." message
969 and will clean up at the end with a newline.) */
970 default:
971 printf_filtered (complaint->message, val);
972 puts_filtered ("...");
973 wrap_here("");
974 }
975 }
976
977 /* Clear out all complaint counters that have ever been incremented.
978 If sym_reading is 1, be less verbose about successive complaints,
979 since the messages are appearing all together during a command that
980 reads symbols (rather than scattered around as psymtabs get fleshed
981 out into symtabs at random times). If noisy is 1, we are in a
982 noisy symbol reading command, and our caller will print enough
983 context for the user to figure it out. */
984
985 void
986 clear_complaints (sym_reading, noisy)
987 int sym_reading;
988 int noisy;
989 {
990 struct complaint *p;
991
992 for (p = complaint_root->next; p != complaint_root; p = p->next)
993 p->counter = 0;
994
995 if (!sym_reading && !noisy && complaint_series > 1) {
996 /* Terminate previous series, since caller won't. */
997 puts_filtered ("\n");
998 }
999
1000 complaint_series = sym_reading? 1 + noisy: 0;
1001 }
1002 \f
1003 enum language
1004 deduce_language_from_filename (filename)
1005 char *filename;
1006 {
1007 char *c = strrchr (filename, '.');
1008
1009 if (!c) ; /* Get default. */
1010 else if(!strcmp(c,".mod"))
1011 return language_m2;
1012 else if(!strcmp(c,".c"))
1013 return language_c;
1014 else if(!strcmp(c,".cc") || !strcmp(c,".C"))
1015 return language_cplus;
1016
1017 return language_unknown; /* default */
1018 }
1019 \f
1020 /* allocate_symtab:
1021
1022 Allocate and partly initialize a new symbol table. Return a pointer
1023 to it. error() if no space.
1024
1025 Caller must set these fields:
1026 LINETABLE(symtab)
1027 symtab->blockvector
1028 symtab->dirname
1029 symtab->free_code
1030 symtab->free_ptr
1031 initialize any EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO
1032 possibly free_named_symtabs (symtab->filename);
1033 */
1034
1035 struct symtab *
1036 allocate_symtab (filename, objfile)
1037 char *filename;
1038 struct objfile *objfile;
1039 {
1040 register struct symtab *symtab;
1041
1042 symtab = (struct symtab *)
1043 obstack_alloc (&objfile -> symbol_obstack, sizeof (struct symtab));
1044 memset (symtab, 0, sizeof (*symtab));
1045 symtab -> filename = obsavestring (filename, strlen (filename),
1046 &objfile -> symbol_obstack);
1047 symtab -> fullname = NULL;
1048 symtab -> language = deduce_language_from_filename (filename);
1049
1050 /* Hook it to the objfile it comes from */
1051
1052 symtab -> objfile = objfile;
1053 symtab -> next = objfile -> symtabs;
1054 objfile -> symtabs = symtab;
1055
1056 #ifdef INIT_EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO
1057 INIT_EXTRA_SYMTAB_INFO (symtab);
1058 #endif
1059
1060 return (symtab);
1061 }
1062
1063 struct partial_symtab *
1064 allocate_psymtab (filename, objfile)
1065 char *filename;
1066 struct objfile *objfile;
1067 {
1068 struct partial_symtab *psymtab;
1069
1070 if (objfile -> free_psymtabs)
1071 {
1072 psymtab = objfile -> free_psymtabs;
1073 objfile -> free_psymtabs = psymtab -> next;
1074 }
1075 else
1076 psymtab = (struct partial_symtab *)
1077 obstack_alloc (&objfile -> psymbol_obstack,
1078 sizeof (struct partial_symtab));
1079
1080 memset (psymtab, 0, sizeof (struct partial_symtab));
1081 psymtab -> filename = obsavestring (filename, strlen (filename),
1082 &objfile -> psymbol_obstack);
1083 psymtab -> symtab = NULL;
1084
1085 /* Hook it to the objfile it comes from */
1086
1087 psymtab -> objfile = objfile;
1088 psymtab -> next = objfile -> psymtabs;
1089 objfile -> psymtabs = psymtab;
1090
1091 return (psymtab);
1092 }
1093
1094 \f
1095 /* clear_symtab_users_once:
1096
1097 This function is run after symbol reading, or from a cleanup.
1098 If an old symbol table was obsoleted, the old symbol table
1099 has been blown away, but the other GDB data structures that may
1100 reference it have not yet been cleared or re-directed. (The old
1101 symtab was zapped, and the cleanup queued, in free_named_symtab()
1102 below.)
1103
1104 This function can be queued N times as a cleanup, or called
1105 directly; it will do all the work the first time, and then will be a
1106 no-op until the next time it is queued. This works by bumping a
1107 counter at queueing time. Much later when the cleanup is run, or at
1108 the end of symbol processing (in case the cleanup is discarded), if
1109 the queued count is greater than the "done-count", we do the work
1110 and set the done-count to the queued count. If the queued count is
1111 less than or equal to the done-count, we just ignore the call. This
1112 is needed because reading a single .o file will often replace many
1113 symtabs (one per .h file, for example), and we don't want to reset
1114 the breakpoints N times in the user's face.
1115
1116 The reason we both queue a cleanup, and call it directly after symbol
1117 reading, is because the cleanup protects us in case of errors, but is
1118 discarded if symbol reading is successful. */
1119
1120 static int clear_symtab_users_queued;
1121 static int clear_symtab_users_done;
1122
1123 void
1124 clear_symtab_users_once ()
1125 {
1126 /* Enforce once-per-`do_cleanups'-semantics */
1127 if (clear_symtab_users_queued <= clear_symtab_users_done)
1128 return;
1129 clear_symtab_users_done = clear_symtab_users_queued;
1130
1131 printf_filtered ("Resetting debugger state after updating old symbol tables\n");
1132
1133 /* Someday, we should do better than this, by only blowing away
1134 the things that really need to be blown. */
1135 clear_value_history ();
1136 clear_displays ();
1137 clear_internalvars ();
1138 breakpoint_re_set ();
1139 set_default_breakpoint (0, 0, 0, 0);
1140 current_source_symtab = 0;
1141 }
1142
1143 /* Delete the specified psymtab, and any others that reference it. */
1144
1145 static void
1146 cashier_psymtab (pst)
1147 struct partial_symtab *pst;
1148 {
1149 struct partial_symtab *ps, *pprev;
1150 int i;
1151
1152 /* Find its previous psymtab in the chain */
1153 for (ps = pst->objfile->psymtabs; ps; ps = ps->next) {
1154 if (ps == pst)
1155 break;
1156 pprev = ps;
1157 }
1158
1159 if (ps) {
1160 /* Unhook it from the chain. */
1161 if (ps == pst->objfile->psymtabs)
1162 pst->objfile->psymtabs = ps->next;
1163 else
1164 pprev->next = ps->next;
1165
1166 /* FIXME, we can't conveniently deallocate the entries in the
1167 partial_symbol lists (global_psymbols/static_psymbols) that
1168 this psymtab points to. These just take up space until all
1169 the psymtabs are reclaimed. Ditto the dependencies list and
1170 filename, which are all in the psymbol_obstack. */
1171
1172 /* We need to cashier any psymtab that has this one as a dependency... */
1173 again:
1174 for (ps = pst->objfile->psymtabs; ps; ps = ps->next) {
1175 for (i = 0; i < ps->number_of_dependencies; i++) {
1176 if (ps->dependencies[i] == pst) {
1177 cashier_psymtab (ps);
1178 goto again; /* Must restart, chain has been munged. */
1179 }
1180 }
1181 }
1182 }
1183 }
1184
1185 /* If a symtab or psymtab for filename NAME is found, free it along
1186 with any dependent breakpoints, displays, etc.
1187 Used when loading new versions of object modules with the "add-file"
1188 command. This is only called on the top-level symtab or psymtab's name;
1189 it is not called for subsidiary files such as .h files.
1190
1191 Return value is 1 if we blew away the environment, 0 if not.
1192 FIXME. The return valu appears to never be used.
1193
1194 FIXME. I think this is not the best way to do this. We should
1195 work on being gentler to the environment while still cleaning up
1196 all stray pointers into the freed symtab. */
1197
1198 int
1199 free_named_symtabs (name)
1200 char *name;
1201 {
1202 #if 0
1203 /* FIXME: With the new method of each objfile having it's own
1204 psymtab list, this function needs serious rethinking. In particular,
1205 why was it ever necessary to toss psymtabs with specific compilation
1206 unit filenames, as opposed to all psymtabs from a particular symbol
1207 file? -- fnf
1208 Well, the answer is that some systems permit reloading of particular
1209 compilation units. We want to blow away any old info about these
1210 compilation units, regardless of which objfiles they arrived in. --gnu. */
1211
1212 register struct symtab *s;
1213 register struct symtab *prev;
1214 register struct partial_symtab *ps;
1215 struct blockvector *bv;
1216 int blewit = 0;
1217
1218 /* We only wack things if the symbol-reload switch is set. */
1219 if (!symbol_reloading)
1220 return 0;
1221
1222 /* Some symbol formats have trouble providing file names... */
1223 if (name == 0 || *name == '\0')
1224 return 0;
1225
1226 /* Look for a psymtab with the specified name. */
1227
1228 again2:
1229 for (ps = partial_symtab_list; ps; ps = ps->next) {
1230 if (!strcmp (name, ps->filename)) {
1231 cashier_psymtab (ps); /* Blow it away...and its little dog, too. */
1232 goto again2; /* Must restart, chain has been munged */
1233 }
1234 }
1235
1236 /* Look for a symtab with the specified name. */
1237
1238 for (s = symtab_list; s; s = s->next)
1239 {
1240 if (!strcmp (name, s->filename))
1241 break;
1242 prev = s;
1243 }
1244
1245 if (s)
1246 {
1247 if (s == symtab_list)
1248 symtab_list = s->next;
1249 else
1250 prev->next = s->next;
1251
1252 /* For now, queue a delete for all breakpoints, displays, etc., whether
1253 or not they depend on the symtab being freed. This should be
1254 changed so that only those data structures affected are deleted. */
1255
1256 /* But don't delete anything if the symtab is empty.
1257 This test is necessary due to a bug in "dbxread.c" that
1258 causes empty symtabs to be created for N_SO symbols that
1259 contain the pathname of the object file. (This problem
1260 has been fixed in GDB 3.9x). */
1261
1262 bv = BLOCKVECTOR (s);
1263 if (BLOCKVECTOR_NBLOCKS (bv) > 2
1264 || BLOCK_NSYMS (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bv, GLOBAL_BLOCK))
1265 || BLOCK_NSYMS (BLOCKVECTOR_BLOCK (bv, STATIC_BLOCK)))
1266 {
1267 complain (&oldsyms_complaint, name);
1268
1269 clear_symtab_users_queued++;
1270 make_cleanup (clear_symtab_users_once, 0);
1271 blewit = 1;
1272 } else {
1273 complain (&empty_symtab_complaint, name);
1274 }
1275
1276 free_symtab (s);
1277 }
1278 else
1279 {
1280 /* It is still possible that some breakpoints will be affected
1281 even though no symtab was found, since the file might have
1282 been compiled without debugging, and hence not be associated
1283 with a symtab. In order to handle this correctly, we would need
1284 to keep a list of text address ranges for undebuggable files.
1285 For now, we do nothing, since this is a fairly obscure case. */
1286 ;
1287 }
1288
1289 /* FIXME, what about the minimal symbol table? */
1290 return blewit;
1291 #else
1292 return (0);
1293 #endif
1294 }
1295 \f
1296 /* Allocate and partially fill a partial symtab. It will be
1297 completely filled at the end of the symbol list.
1298
1299 SYMFILE_NAME is the name of the symbol-file we are reading from, and ADDR
1300 is the address relative to which its symbols are (incremental) or 0
1301 (normal). */
1302
1303
1304 struct partial_symtab *
1305 start_psymtab_common (objfile, section_offsets,
1306 filename, textlow, global_syms, static_syms)
1307 struct objfile *objfile;
1308 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
1309 char *filename;
1310 CORE_ADDR textlow;
1311 struct partial_symbol *global_syms;
1312 struct partial_symbol *static_syms;
1313 {
1314 struct partial_symtab *psymtab;
1315
1316 psymtab = allocate_psymtab (filename, objfile);
1317 psymtab -> section_offsets = section_offsets;
1318 psymtab -> textlow = textlow;
1319 psymtab -> texthigh = psymtab -> textlow; /* default */
1320 psymtab -> globals_offset = global_syms - objfile -> global_psymbols.list;
1321 psymtab -> statics_offset = static_syms - objfile -> static_psymbols.list;
1322 return (psymtab);
1323 }
1324 \f
1325 /* Debugging versions of functions that are usually inline macros
1326 (see symfile.h). */
1327
1328 #if 0 /* Don't quite work nowadays... */
1329
1330 /* Add a symbol with a long value to a psymtab.
1331 Since one arg is a struct, we pass in a ptr and deref it (sigh). */
1332
1333 void
1334 add_psymbol_to_list (name, namelength, namespace, class, list, val)
1335 char *name;
1336 int namelength;
1337 enum namespace namespace;
1338 enum address_class class;
1339 struct psymbol_allocation_list *list;
1340 long val;
1341 {
1342 ADD_PSYMBOL_VT_TO_LIST (name, namelength, namespace, class, (*list), val,
1343 SYMBOL_VALUE);
1344 }
1345
1346 /* Add a symbol with a CORE_ADDR value to a psymtab. */
1347
1348 void
1349 add_psymbol_addr_to_list (name, namelength, namespace, class, list, val)
1350 char *name;
1351 int namelength;
1352 enum namespace namespace;
1353 enum address_class class;
1354 struct psymbol_allocation_list *list;
1355 CORE_ADDR val;
1356 {
1357 ADD_PSYMBOL_VT_TO_LIST (name, namelength, namespace, class, (*list), val,
1358 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS);
1359 }
1360
1361 #endif /* 0 */
1362 \f
1363 void
1364 _initialize_symfile ()
1365 {
1366
1367 add_com ("symbol-file", class_files, symbol_file_command,
1368 "Load symbol table from executable file FILE.\n\
1369 The `file' command can also load symbol tables, as well as setting the file\n\
1370 to execute.");
1371
1372 add_com ("add-symbol-file", class_files, add_symbol_file_command,
1373 "Load the symbols from FILE, assuming FILE has been dynamically loaded.\n\
1374 The second argument provides the starting address of the file's text.");
1375
1376 add_com ("load", class_files, load_command,
1377 "Dynamically load FILE into the running program, and record its symbols\n\
1378 for access from GDB.");
1379
1380 add_show_from_set
1381 (add_set_cmd ("complaints", class_support, var_zinteger,
1382 (char *)&stop_whining,
1383 "Set max number of complaints about incorrect symbols.",
1384 &setlist),
1385 &showlist);
1386
1387 add_show_from_set
1388 (add_set_cmd ("symbol-reloading", class_support, var_boolean,
1389 (char *)&symbol_reloading,
1390 "Set dynamic symbol table reloading multiple times in one run.",
1391 &setlist),
1392 &showlist);
1393
1394 }
This page took 0.056707 seconds and 4 git commands to generate.