Replace wild_match with faster version and modify its interface.
[deliverable/binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / symfile.h
1 /* Definitions for reading symbol files into GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
4 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
5 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 #if !defined (SYMFILE_H)
23 #define SYMFILE_H
24
25 /* This file requires that you first include "bfd.h". */
26 #include "symtab.h"
27
28 /* Opaque declarations. */
29 struct target_section;
30 struct objfile;
31 struct obj_section;
32 struct obstack;
33 struct block;
34
35 /* Partial symbols are stored in the psymbol_cache and pointers to
36 them are kept in a dynamically grown array that is obtained from
37 malloc and grown as necessary via realloc. Each objfile typically
38 has two of these, one for global symbols and one for static
39 symbols. Although this adds a level of indirection for storing or
40 accessing the partial symbols, it allows us to throw away duplicate
41 psymbols and set all pointers to the single saved instance. */
42
43 struct psymbol_allocation_list
44 {
45
46 /* Pointer to beginning of dynamically allocated array of pointers
47 to partial symbols. The array is dynamically expanded as
48 necessary to accommodate more pointers. */
49
50 struct partial_symbol **list;
51
52 /* Pointer to next available slot in which to store a pointer to a
53 partial symbol. */
54
55 struct partial_symbol **next;
56
57 /* Number of allocated pointer slots in current dynamic array (not
58 the number of bytes of storage). The "next" pointer will always
59 point somewhere between list[0] and list[size], and when at
60 list[size] the array will be expanded on the next attempt to
61 store a pointer. */
62
63 int size;
64 };
65
66 /* Define an array of addresses to accommodate non-contiguous dynamic
67 loading of modules. This is for use when entering commands, so we
68 can keep track of the section names until we read the file and can
69 map them to bfd sections. This structure is also used by solib.c
70 to communicate the section addresses in shared objects to
71 symbol_file_add (). */
72
73 struct section_addr_info
74 {
75 /* The number of sections for which address information is
76 available. */
77 size_t num_sections;
78 /* Sections whose names are file format dependent. */
79 struct other_sections
80 {
81 CORE_ADDR addr;
82 char *name;
83
84 /* SECTINDEX must be valid for associated BFD if ADDR is not zero. */
85 int sectindex;
86 } other[1];
87 };
88
89
90 /* A table listing the load segments in a symfile, and which segment
91 each BFD section belongs to. */
92 struct symfile_segment_data
93 {
94 /* How many segments are present in this file. If there are
95 two, the text segment is the first one and the data segment
96 is the second one. */
97 int num_segments;
98
99 /* If NUM_SEGMENTS is greater than zero, the original base address
100 of each segment. */
101 CORE_ADDR *segment_bases;
102
103 /* If NUM_SEGMENTS is greater than zero, the memory size of each
104 segment. */
105 CORE_ADDR *segment_sizes;
106
107 /* If NUM_SEGMENTS is greater than zero, this is an array of entries
108 recording which segment contains each BFD section.
109 SEGMENT_INFO[I] is S+1 if the I'th BFD section belongs to segment
110 S, or zero if it is not in any segment. */
111 int *segment_info;
112 };
113
114 /* The "quick" symbol functions exist so that symbol readers can
115 avoiding an initial read of all the symbols. For example, symbol
116 readers might choose to use the "partial symbol table" utilities,
117 which is one implementation of the quick symbol functions.
118
119 The quick symbol functions are generally opaque: the underlying
120 representation is hidden from the caller.
121
122 In general, these functions should only look at whatever special
123 index the symbol reader creates -- looking through the symbol
124 tables themselves is handled by generic code. If a function is
125 defined as returning a "symbol table", this means that the function
126 should only return a newly-created symbol table; it should not
127 examine pre-existing ones.
128
129 The exact list of functions here was determined in an ad hoc way
130 based on gdb's history. */
131
132 struct quick_symbol_functions
133 {
134 /* Return true if this objfile has any "partial" symbols
135 available. */
136 int (*has_symbols) (struct objfile *objfile);
137
138 /* Return the symbol table for the "last" file appearing in
139 OBJFILE. */
140 struct symtab *(*find_last_source_symtab) (struct objfile *objfile);
141
142 /* Forget all cached full file names for OBJFILE. */
143 void (*forget_cached_source_info) (struct objfile *objfile);
144
145 /* Look up the symbol table, in OBJFILE, of a source file named
146 NAME. If there is no '/' in the name, a match after a '/' in the
147 symbol table's file name will also work. FULL_PATH is the
148 absolute file name, and REAL_PATH is the same, run through
149 gdb_realpath.
150
151 If no such symbol table can be found, returns 0.
152
153 Otherwise, sets *RESULT to the symbol table and returns 1. This
154 might return 1 and set *RESULT to NULL if the requested file is
155 an include file that does not have a symtab of its own. */
156 int (*lookup_symtab) (struct objfile *objfile,
157 const char *name,
158 const char *full_path,
159 const char *real_path,
160 struct symtab **result);
161
162 /* Check to see if the symbol is defined in a "partial" symbol table
163 of OBJFILE. KIND should be either GLOBAL_BLOCK or STATIC_BLOCK,
164 depending on whether we want to search global symbols or static
165 symbols. NAME is the name of the symbol to look for. DOMAIN
166 indicates what sort of symbol to search for.
167
168 Returns the newly-expanded symbol table in which the symbol is
169 defined, or NULL if no such symbol table exists. */
170 struct symtab *(*lookup_symbol) (struct objfile *objfile,
171 int kind, const char *name,
172 domain_enum domain);
173
174 /* This is called to expand symbol tables before looking up a
175 symbol. A backend can choose to implement this and then have its
176 `lookup_symbol' hook always return NULL, or the reverse. (It
177 doesn't make sense to implement both.) The arguments are as for
178 `lookup_symbol'. */
179 void (*pre_expand_symtabs_matching) (struct objfile *objfile,
180 int kind, const char *name,
181 domain_enum domain);
182
183 /* Print statistics about any indices loaded for OBJFILE. The
184 statistics should be printed to gdb_stdout. This is used for
185 "maint print statistics". */
186 void (*print_stats) (struct objfile *objfile);
187
188 /* Dump any indices loaded for OBJFILE. The dump should go to
189 gdb_stdout. This is used for "maint print objfiles". */
190 void (*dump) (struct objfile *objfile);
191
192 /* This is called by objfile_relocate to relocate any indices loaded
193 for OBJFILE. */
194 void (*relocate) (struct objfile *objfile,
195 struct section_offsets *new_offsets,
196 struct section_offsets *delta);
197
198 /* Find all the symbols in OBJFILE named FUNC_NAME, and ensure that
199 the corresponding symbol tables are loaded. */
200 void (*expand_symtabs_for_function) (struct objfile *objfile,
201 const char *func_name);
202
203 /* Read all symbol tables associated with OBJFILE. */
204 void (*expand_all_symtabs) (struct objfile *objfile);
205
206 /* Read all symbol tables associated with OBJFILE which have the
207 file name FILENAME. */
208 void (*expand_symtabs_with_filename) (struct objfile *objfile,
209 const char *filename);
210
211 /* Return the file name of the file holding the symbol in OBJFILE
212 named NAME. If no such symbol exists in OBJFILE, return NULL. */
213 const char *(*find_symbol_file) (struct objfile *objfile, const char *name);
214
215 /* This method is specific to Ada. It walks the partial symbol
216 tables of OBJFILE looking for a name match. WILD_MATCH and
217 IS_NAME_SUFFIX are predicate functions that the implementation
218 may call to check for a match.
219
220 This function is completely ad hoc and new implementations should
221 refer to the psymtab implementation to see what to do. */
222 void (*map_ada_symtabs) (struct objfile *objfile,
223 int (*wild_match) (const char *, const char *),
224 int (*is_name_suffix) (const char *),
225 void (*callback) (struct objfile *,
226 struct symtab *, void *),
227 const char *name, int global,
228 domain_enum namespace, int wild,
229 void *data);
230
231 /* Expand all symbol tables in OBJFILE matching some criteria.
232
233 FILE_MATCHER is called for each file in OBJFILE. The file name
234 and the DATA argument are passed to it. If it returns zero, this
235 file is skipped.
236
237 Otherwise, if the file is not skipped, then NAME_MATCHER is
238 called for each symbol defined in the file. The symbol's
239 "natural" name and DATA are passed to NAME_MATCHER.
240
241 If NAME_MATCHER returns zero, then this symbol is skipped.
242
243 Otherwise, if this symbol is not skipped, and it matches KIND,
244 then this symbol's symbol table is expanded.
245
246 DATA is user data that is passed unmodified to the callback
247 functions. */
248 void (*expand_symtabs_matching) (struct objfile *objfile,
249 int (*file_matcher) (const char *, void *),
250 int (*name_matcher) (const char *, void *),
251 domain_enum kind,
252 void *data);
253
254 /* Return the symbol table from OBJFILE that contains PC and
255 SECTION. Return NULL if there is no such symbol table. This
256 should return the symbol table that contains a symbol whose
257 address exactly matches PC, or, if there is no exact match, the
258 symbol table that contains a symbol whose address is closest to
259 PC. */
260 struct symtab *(*find_pc_sect_symtab) (struct objfile *objfile,
261 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol,
262 CORE_ADDR pc,
263 struct obj_section *section,
264 int warn_if_readin);
265
266 /* Call a callback for every symbol defined in OBJFILE. FUN is the
267 callback. It is passed the symbol's natural name, and the DATA
268 passed to this function. */
269 void (*map_symbol_names) (struct objfile *objfile,
270 void (*fun) (const char *, void *),
271 void *data);
272
273 /* Call a callback for every file defined in OBJFILE. FUN is the
274 callback. It is passed the file's name, the file's full name,
275 and the DATA passed to this function. */
276 void (*map_symbol_filenames) (struct objfile *objfile,
277 void (*fun) (const char *, const char *,
278 void *),
279 void *data);
280 };
281
282 /* Structure to keep track of symbol reading functions for various
283 object file types. */
284
285 struct sym_fns
286 {
287
288 /* BFD flavour that we handle, or (as a special kludge, see
289 xcoffread.c, (enum bfd_flavour)-1 for xcoff). */
290
291 enum bfd_flavour sym_flavour;
292
293 /* Initializes anything that is global to the entire symbol table.
294 It is called during symbol_file_add, when we begin debugging an
295 entirely new program. */
296
297 void (*sym_new_init) (struct objfile *);
298
299 /* Reads any initial information from a symbol file, and initializes
300 the struct sym_fns SF in preparation for sym_read(). It is
301 called every time we read a symbol file for any reason. */
302
303 void (*sym_init) (struct objfile *);
304
305 /* sym_read (objfile, symfile_flags) Reads a symbol file into a psymtab
306 (or possibly a symtab). OBJFILE is the objfile struct for the
307 file we are reading. SYMFILE_FLAGS are the flags passed to
308 symbol_file_add & co. */
309
310 void (*sym_read) (struct objfile *, int);
311
312 /* Called when we are finished with an objfile. Should do all
313 cleanup that is specific to the object file format for the
314 particular objfile. */
315
316 void (*sym_finish) (struct objfile *);
317
318 /* This function produces a file-dependent section_offsets
319 structure, allocated in the objfile's storage, and based on the
320 parameter. The parameter is currently a CORE_ADDR (FIXME!) for
321 backward compatibility with the higher levels of GDB. It should
322 probably be changed to a string, where NULL means the default,
323 and others are parsed in a file dependent way. */
324
325 void (*sym_offsets) (struct objfile *, struct section_addr_info *);
326
327 /* This function produces a format-independent description of
328 the segments of ABFD. Each segment is a unit of the file
329 which may be relocated independently. */
330
331 struct symfile_segment_data *(*sym_segments) (bfd *abfd);
332
333 /* This function should read the linetable from the objfile when
334 the line table cannot be read while processing the debugging
335 information. */
336
337 void (*sym_read_linetable) (void);
338
339 /* Relocate the contents of a debug section SECTP. The
340 contents are stored in BUF if it is non-NULL, or returned in a
341 malloc'd buffer otherwise. */
342
343 bfd_byte *(*sym_relocate) (struct objfile *, asection *sectp, bfd_byte *buf);
344
345 /* The "quick" (aka partial) symbol functions for this symbol
346 reader. */
347 const struct quick_symbol_functions *qf;
348 };
349
350 extern struct section_addr_info *
351 build_section_addr_info_from_objfile (const struct objfile *objfile);
352
353 extern void relative_addr_info_to_section_offsets
354 (struct section_offsets *section_offsets, int num_sections,
355 struct section_addr_info *addrs);
356
357 extern void addr_info_make_relative (struct section_addr_info *addrs,
358 bfd *abfd);
359
360 /* The default version of sym_fns.sym_offsets for readers that don't
361 do anything special. */
362
363 extern void default_symfile_offsets (struct objfile *objfile,
364 struct section_addr_info *);
365
366 /* The default version of sym_fns.sym_segments for readers that don't
367 do anything special. */
368
369 extern struct symfile_segment_data *default_symfile_segments (bfd *abfd);
370
371 /* The default version of sym_fns.sym_relocate for readers that don't
372 do anything special. */
373
374 extern bfd_byte *default_symfile_relocate (struct objfile *objfile,
375 asection *sectp, bfd_byte *buf);
376
377 extern struct symtab *allocate_symtab (const char *, struct objfile *);
378
379 extern void add_symtab_fns (const struct sym_fns *);
380
381 /* This enum encodes bit-flags passed as ADD_FLAGS parameter to
382 syms_from_objfile, symbol_file_add, etc. */
383
384 enum symfile_add_flags
385 {
386 /* Be chatty about what you are doing. */
387 SYMFILE_VERBOSE = 1 << 1,
388
389 /* This is the main symbol file (as opposed to symbol file for dynamically
390 loaded code). */
391 SYMFILE_MAINLINE = 1 << 2,
392
393 /* Do not call breakpoint_re_set when adding this symbol file. */
394 SYMFILE_DEFER_BP_RESET = 1 << 3
395 };
396
397 extern void syms_from_objfile (struct objfile *,
398 struct section_addr_info *,
399 struct section_offsets *, int, int);
400
401 extern void new_symfile_objfile (struct objfile *, int);
402
403 extern struct objfile *symbol_file_add (char *, int,
404 struct section_addr_info *, int);
405
406 extern struct objfile *symbol_file_add_from_bfd (bfd *, int,
407 struct section_addr_info *,
408 int);
409
410 extern void symbol_file_add_separate (bfd *, int, struct objfile *);
411
412 extern char *find_separate_debug_file_by_debuglink (struct objfile *);
413
414 /* Create a new section_addr_info, with room for NUM_SECTIONS. */
415
416 extern struct section_addr_info *alloc_section_addr_info (size_t
417 num_sections);
418
419 /* Build (allocate and populate) a section_addr_info struct from an
420 existing section table. */
421
422 extern struct section_addr_info
423 *build_section_addr_info_from_section_table (const struct target_section
424 *start,
425 const struct target_section
426 *end);
427
428 /* Free all memory allocated by
429 build_section_addr_info_from_section_table. */
430
431 extern void free_section_addr_info (struct section_addr_info *);
432
433
434 /* Make a copy of the string at PTR with SIZE characters in the symbol
435 obstack (and add a null character at the end in the copy). Returns
436 the address of the copy. */
437
438 extern char *obsavestring (const char *, int, struct obstack *);
439
440 /* Concatenate NULL terminated variable argument list of `const char *' strings;
441 return the new string. Space is found in the OBSTACKP. Argument list must
442 be terminated by a sentinel expression `(char *) NULL'. */
443
444 extern char *obconcat (struct obstack *obstackp, ...) ATTRIBUTE_SENTINEL;
445
446 /* Variables */
447
448 /* If non-zero, shared library symbols will be added automatically
449 when the inferior is created, new libraries are loaded, or when
450 attaching to the inferior. This is almost always what users will
451 want to have happen; but for very large programs, the startup time
452 will be excessive, and so if this is a problem, the user can clear
453 this flag and then add the shared library symbols as needed. Note
454 that there is a potential for confusion, since if the shared
455 library symbols are not loaded, commands like "info fun" will *not*
456 report all the functions that are actually present. */
457
458 extern int auto_solib_add;
459
460 /* For systems that support it, a threshold size in megabytes. If
461 automatically adding a new library's symbol table to those already
462 known to the debugger would cause the total shared library symbol
463 size to exceed this threshhold, then the shlib's symbols are not
464 added. The threshold is ignored if the user explicitly asks for a
465 shlib to be added, such as when using the "sharedlibrary" command. */
466
467 extern int auto_solib_limit;
468
469 /* From symfile.c */
470
471 extern void set_initial_language (void);
472
473 extern void find_lowest_section (bfd *, asection *, void *);
474
475 extern bfd *symfile_bfd_open (char *);
476
477 extern bfd *bfd_open_maybe_remote (const char *);
478
479 extern int get_section_index (struct objfile *, char *);
480
481 /* Utility functions for overlay sections: */
482 extern enum overlay_debugging_state
483 {
484 ovly_off,
485 ovly_on,
486 ovly_auto
487 } overlay_debugging;
488 extern int overlay_cache_invalid;
489
490 /* Return the "mapped" overlay section containing the PC. */
491 extern struct obj_section *find_pc_mapped_section (CORE_ADDR);
492
493 /* Return any overlay section containing the PC (even in its LMA
494 region). */
495 extern struct obj_section *find_pc_overlay (CORE_ADDR);
496
497 /* Return true if the section is an overlay. */
498 extern int section_is_overlay (struct obj_section *);
499
500 /* Return true if the overlay section is currently "mapped". */
501 extern int section_is_mapped (struct obj_section *);
502
503 /* Return true if pc belongs to section's VMA. */
504 extern CORE_ADDR pc_in_mapped_range (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
505
506 /* Return true if pc belongs to section's LMA. */
507 extern CORE_ADDR pc_in_unmapped_range (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
508
509 /* Map an address from a section's LMA to its VMA. */
510 extern CORE_ADDR overlay_mapped_address (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
511
512 /* Map an address from a section's VMA to its LMA. */
513 extern CORE_ADDR overlay_unmapped_address (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
514
515 /* Convert an address in an overlay section (force into VMA range). */
516 extern CORE_ADDR symbol_overlayed_address (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
517
518 /* Load symbols from a file. */
519 extern void symbol_file_add_main (char *args, int from_tty);
520
521 /* Clear GDB symbol tables. */
522 extern void symbol_file_clear (int from_tty);
523
524 /* Default overlay update function. */
525 extern void simple_overlay_update (struct obj_section *);
526
527 extern bfd_byte *symfile_relocate_debug_section (struct objfile *, asection *,
528 bfd_byte *);
529
530 extern int symfile_map_offsets_to_segments (bfd *,
531 struct symfile_segment_data *,
532 struct section_offsets *,
533 int, const CORE_ADDR *);
534 struct symfile_segment_data *get_symfile_segment_data (bfd *abfd);
535 void free_symfile_segment_data (struct symfile_segment_data *data);
536
537 extern struct cleanup *increment_reading_symtab (void);
538
539 /* From dwarf2read.c */
540
541 extern int dwarf2_has_info (struct objfile *);
542
543 extern int dwarf2_initialize_objfile (struct objfile *);
544 extern void dwarf2_build_psymtabs (struct objfile *);
545 extern void dwarf2_build_frame_info (struct objfile *);
546
547 void dwarf2_free_objfile (struct objfile *);
548
549 /* From mdebugread.c */
550
551 /* Hack to force structures to exist before use in parameter list. */
552 struct ecoff_debug_hack
553 {
554 struct ecoff_debug_swap *a;
555 struct ecoff_debug_info *b;
556 };
557
558 extern void mdebug_build_psymtabs (struct objfile *,
559 const struct ecoff_debug_swap *,
560 struct ecoff_debug_info *);
561
562 extern void elfmdebug_build_psymtabs (struct objfile *,
563 const struct ecoff_debug_swap *,
564 asection *);
565
566 #endif /* !defined(SYMFILE_H) */
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