+/* The target vector for core files. */
+
+extern struct target_ops core_ops;
+
+/* The current default bfd target. */
+
+extern char *gnutarget;
+
+extern void set_gnutarget (char *);
+
+/* Structure to keep track of core register reading functions for
+ various core file types. */
+
+struct core_fns
+ {
+
+ /* BFD flavour that a core file handler is prepared to read. This
+ can be used by the handler's core tasting function as a first
+ level filter to reject BFD's that don't have the right
+ flavour. */
+
+ enum bfd_flavour core_flavour;
+
+ /* Core file handler function to call to recognize corefile
+ formats that BFD rejects. Some core file format just don't fit
+ into the BFD model, or may require other resources to identify
+ them, that simply aren't available to BFD (such as symbols from
+ another file). Returns nonzero if the handler recognizes the
+ format, zero otherwise. */
+
+ int (*check_format) (bfd *);
+
+ /* Core file handler function to call to ask if it can handle a
+ given core file format or not. Returns zero if it can't,
+ nonzero otherwise. */
+
+ int (*core_sniffer) (struct core_fns *, bfd *);
+
+ /* Extract the register values out of the core file and store them where
+ `read_register' will find them.
+
+ CORE_REG_SECT points to the register values themselves, read into
+ memory.
+
+ CORE_REG_SIZE is the size of that area.
+
+ WHICH says which set of registers we are handling:
+ 0 --- integer registers
+ 2 --- floating-point registers, on machines where they are
+ discontiguous
+ 3 --- extended floating-point registers, on machines where
+ these are present in yet a third area. (GNU/Linux uses
+ this to get at the SSE registers.)
+
+ REG_ADDR is the offset from u.u_ar0 to the register values relative to
+ core_reg_sect. This is used with old-fashioned core files to locate the
+ registers in a large upage-plus-stack ".reg" section. Original upage
+ address X is at location core_reg_sect+x+reg_addr. */
+
+ void (*core_read_registers) (char *core_reg_sect,
+ unsigned core_reg_size,
+ int which, CORE_ADDR reg_addr);
+
+ /* Finds the next struct core_fns. They are allocated and
+ initialized in whatever module implements the functions pointed
+ to; an initializer calls deprecated_add_core_fns to add them to
+ the global chain. */
+
+ struct core_fns *next;