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252b5132 1/* BFD support for handling relocation entries.
7898deda 2 Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
a75473eb 3 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
252b5132
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4 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 Written by Cygnus Support.
6
ec4530b5 7 This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library.
252b5132 8
ec4530b5
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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 2 of the License, or
12 (at your option) any later version.
252b5132 13
ec4530b5
NC
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.
252b5132 18
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19 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
21 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
252b5132
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22
23/*
24SECTION
25 Relocations
26
27 BFD maintains relocations in much the same way it maintains
28 symbols: they are left alone until required, then read in
3f9b03b5 29 en-masse and translated into an internal form. A common
252b5132
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30 routine <<bfd_perform_relocation>> acts upon the
31 canonical form to do the fixup.
32
33 Relocations are maintained on a per section basis,
34 while symbols are maintained on a per BFD basis.
35
36 All that a back end has to do to fit the BFD interface is to create
37 a <<struct reloc_cache_entry>> for each relocation
38 in a particular section, and fill in the right bits of the structures.
39
40@menu
41@* typedef arelent::
42@* howto manager::
43@end menu
44
45*/
46
47/* DO compile in the reloc_code name table from libbfd.h. */
48#define _BFD_MAKE_TABLE_bfd_reloc_code_real
49
50#include "bfd.h"
51#include "sysdep.h"
52#include "bfdlink.h"
53#include "libbfd.h"
54/*
55DOCDD
56INODE
57 typedef arelent, howto manager, Relocations, Relocations
58
59SUBSECTION
60 typedef arelent
61
62 This is the structure of a relocation entry:
63
64CODE_FRAGMENT
65.
66.typedef enum bfd_reloc_status
67.{
b5f79c76 68. {* No errors detected. *}
252b5132
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69. bfd_reloc_ok,
70.
b5f79c76 71. {* The relocation was performed, but there was an overflow. *}
252b5132
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72. bfd_reloc_overflow,
73.
b5f79c76 74. {* The address to relocate was not within the section supplied. *}
252b5132
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75. bfd_reloc_outofrange,
76.
b5f79c76 77. {* Used by special functions. *}
252b5132
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78. bfd_reloc_continue,
79.
b5f79c76 80. {* Unsupported relocation size requested. *}
252b5132
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81. bfd_reloc_notsupported,
82.
b5f79c76 83. {* Unused. *}
252b5132
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84. bfd_reloc_other,
85.
b5f79c76 86. {* The symbol to relocate against was undefined. *}
252b5132
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87. bfd_reloc_undefined,
88.
dc810e39
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89. {* The relocation was performed, but may not be ok - presently
90. generated only when linking i960 coff files with i960 b.out
91. symbols. If this type is returned, the error_message argument
92. to bfd_perform_relocation will be set. *}
252b5132
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93. bfd_reloc_dangerous
94. }
95. bfd_reloc_status_type;
96.
97.
98.typedef struct reloc_cache_entry
99.{
b5f79c76 100. {* A pointer into the canonical table of pointers. *}
252b5132
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101. struct symbol_cache_entry **sym_ptr_ptr;
102.
b5f79c76 103. {* offset in section. *}
252b5132
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104. bfd_size_type address;
105.
b5f79c76 106. {* addend for relocation value. *}
252b5132
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107. bfd_vma addend;
108.
b5f79c76 109. {* Pointer to how to perform the required relocation. *}
252b5132
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110. reloc_howto_type *howto;
111.
b5f79c76
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112.}
113.arelent;
114.
252b5132
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115*/
116
117/*
118DESCRIPTION
119
120 Here is a description of each of the fields within an <<arelent>>:
121
122 o <<sym_ptr_ptr>>
123
124 The symbol table pointer points to a pointer to the symbol
125 associated with the relocation request. It is
126 the pointer into the table returned by the back end's
127 <<get_symtab>> action. @xref{Symbols}. The symbol is referenced
128 through a pointer to a pointer so that tools like the linker
129 can fix up all the symbols of the same name by modifying only
130 one pointer. The relocation routine looks in the symbol and
131 uses the base of the section the symbol is attached to and the
132 value of the symbol as the initial relocation offset. If the
133 symbol pointer is zero, then the section provided is looked up.
134
135 o <<address>>
136
137 The <<address>> field gives the offset in bytes from the base of
138 the section data which owns the relocation record to the first
139 byte of relocatable information. The actual data relocated
140 will be relative to this point; for example, a relocation
141 type which modifies the bottom two bytes of a four byte word
142 would not touch the first byte pointed to in a big endian
143 world.
144
145 o <<addend>>
146
147 The <<addend>> is a value provided by the back end to be added (!)
148 to the relocation offset. Its interpretation is dependent upon
149 the howto. For example, on the 68k the code:
150
252b5132
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151| char foo[];
152| main()
153| {
154| return foo[0x12345678];
155| }
156
157 Could be compiled into:
158
159| linkw fp,#-4
160| moveb @@#12345678,d0
161| extbl d0
162| unlk fp
163| rts
164
252b5132
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165 This could create a reloc pointing to <<foo>>, but leave the
166 offset in the data, something like:
167
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168|RELOCATION RECORDS FOR [.text]:
169|offset type value
170|00000006 32 _foo
171|
172|00000000 4e56 fffc ; linkw fp,#-4
173|00000004 1039 1234 5678 ; moveb @@#12345678,d0
174|0000000a 49c0 ; extbl d0
175|0000000c 4e5e ; unlk fp
176|0000000e 4e75 ; rts
177
252b5132
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178 Using coff and an 88k, some instructions don't have enough
179 space in them to represent the full address range, and
180 pointers have to be loaded in two parts. So you'd get something like:
181
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182| or.u r13,r0,hi16(_foo+0x12345678)
183| ld.b r2,r13,lo16(_foo+0x12345678)
184| jmp r1
185
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186 This should create two relocs, both pointing to <<_foo>>, and with
187 0x12340000 in their addend field. The data would consist of:
188
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189|RELOCATION RECORDS FOR [.text]:
190|offset type value
191|00000002 HVRT16 _foo+0x12340000
192|00000006 LVRT16 _foo+0x12340000
193|
194|00000000 5da05678 ; or.u r13,r0,0x5678
195|00000004 1c4d5678 ; ld.b r2,r13,0x5678
196|00000008 f400c001 ; jmp r1
197
252b5132
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198 The relocation routine digs out the value from the data, adds
199 it to the addend to get the original offset, and then adds the
200 value of <<_foo>>. Note that all 32 bits have to be kept around
201 somewhere, to cope with carry from bit 15 to bit 16.
202
203 One further example is the sparc and the a.out format. The
204 sparc has a similar problem to the 88k, in that some
205 instructions don't have room for an entire offset, but on the
206 sparc the parts are created in odd sized lumps. The designers of
207 the a.out format chose to not use the data within the section
208 for storing part of the offset; all the offset is kept within
209 the reloc. Anything in the data should be ignored.
210
211| save %sp,-112,%sp
212| sethi %hi(_foo+0x12345678),%g2
213| ldsb [%g2+%lo(_foo+0x12345678)],%i0
214| ret
215| restore
216
217 Both relocs contain a pointer to <<foo>>, and the offsets
218 contain junk.
219
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220|RELOCATION RECORDS FOR [.text]:
221|offset type value
222|00000004 HI22 _foo+0x12345678
223|00000008 LO10 _foo+0x12345678
224|
225|00000000 9de3bf90 ; save %sp,-112,%sp
226|00000004 05000000 ; sethi %hi(_foo+0),%g2
227|00000008 f048a000 ; ldsb [%g2+%lo(_foo+0)],%i0
228|0000000c 81c7e008 ; ret
229|00000010 81e80000 ; restore
230
252b5132
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231 o <<howto>>
232
233 The <<howto>> field can be imagined as a
234 relocation instruction. It is a pointer to a structure which
235 contains information on what to do with all of the other
236 information in the reloc record and data section. A back end
237 would normally have a relocation instruction set and turn
238 relocations into pointers to the correct structure on input -
239 but it would be possible to create each howto field on demand.
240
241*/
242
243/*
244SUBSUBSECTION
245 <<enum complain_overflow>>
246
247 Indicates what sort of overflow checking should be done when
248 performing a relocation.
249
250CODE_FRAGMENT
251.
252.enum complain_overflow
253.{
b5f79c76 254. {* Do not complain on overflow. *}
252b5132
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255. complain_overflow_dont,
256.
dc810e39 257. {* Complain if the bitfield overflows, whether it is considered
b5f79c76 258. as signed or unsigned. *}
252b5132
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259. complain_overflow_bitfield,
260.
dc810e39 261. {* Complain if the value overflows when considered as signed
b5f79c76 262. number. *}
252b5132
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263. complain_overflow_signed,
264.
dc810e39 265. {* Complain if the value overflows when considered as an
b5f79c76 266. unsigned number. *}
252b5132
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267. complain_overflow_unsigned
268.};
269
270*/
271
272/*
273SUBSUBSECTION
274 <<reloc_howto_type>>
275
276 The <<reloc_howto_type>> is a structure which contains all the
277 information that libbfd needs to know to tie up a back end's data.
278
279CODE_FRAGMENT
b5f79c76 280.struct symbol_cache_entry; {* Forward declaration. *}
252b5132
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281.
282.struct reloc_howto_struct
283.{
dc810e39
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284. {* The type field has mainly a documentary use - the back end can
285. do what it wants with it, though normally the back end's
286. external idea of what a reloc number is stored
287. in this field. For example, a PC relative word relocation
288. in a coff environment has the type 023 - because that's
289. what the outside world calls a R_PCRWORD reloc. *}
252b5132
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290. unsigned int type;
291.
dc810e39
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292. {* The value the final relocation is shifted right by. This drops
293. unwanted data from the relocation. *}
252b5132
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294. unsigned int rightshift;
295.
dc810e39
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296. {* The size of the item to be relocated. This is *not* a
297. power-of-two measure. To get the number of bytes operated
298. on by a type of relocation, use bfd_get_reloc_size. *}
252b5132
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299. int size;
300.
dc810e39
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301. {* The number of bits in the item to be relocated. This is used
302. when doing overflow checking. *}
252b5132
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303. unsigned int bitsize;
304.
dc810e39
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305. {* Notes that the relocation is relative to the location in the
306. data section of the addend. The relocation function will
307. subtract from the relocation value the address of the location
308. being relocated. *}
b34976b6 309. bfd_boolean pc_relative;
252b5132 310.
dc810e39
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311. {* The bit position of the reloc value in the destination.
312. The relocated value is left shifted by this amount. *}
252b5132
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313. unsigned int bitpos;
314.
dc810e39
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315. {* What type of overflow error should be checked for when
316. relocating. *}
252b5132
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317. enum complain_overflow complain_on_overflow;
318.
dc810e39
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319. {* If this field is non null, then the supplied function is
320. called rather than the normal function. This allows really
321. strange relocation methods to be accomodated (e.g., i960 callj
322. instructions). *}
252b5132 323. bfd_reloc_status_type (*special_function)
dc810e39
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324. PARAMS ((bfd *, arelent *, struct symbol_cache_entry *, PTR, asection *,
325. bfd *, char **));
252b5132 326.
dc810e39 327. {* The textual name of the relocation type. *}
252b5132
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328. char *name;
329.
dc810e39
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330. {* Some formats record a relocation addend in the section contents
331. rather than with the relocation. For ELF formats this is the
332. distinction between USE_REL and USE_RELA (though the code checks
333. for USE_REL == 1/0). The value of this field is TRUE if the
334. addend is recorded with the section contents; when performing a
335. partial link (ld -r) the section contents (the data) will be
336. modified. The value of this field is FALSE if addends are
337. recorded with the relocation (in arelent.addend); when performing
338. a partial link the relocation will be modified.
339. All relocations for all ELF USE_RELA targets should set this field
340. to FALSE (values of TRUE should be looked on with suspicion).
341. However, the converse is not true: not all relocations of all ELF
342. USE_REL targets set this field to TRUE. Why this is so is peculiar
343. to each particular target. For relocs that aren't used in partial
344. links (e.g. GOT stuff) it doesn't matter what this is set to. *}
b34976b6 345. bfd_boolean partial_inplace;
252b5132 346.
7dc77aaa
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347. {* src_mask selects the part of the instruction (or data) to be used
348. in the relocation sum. If the target relocations don't have an
349. addend in the reloc, eg. ELF USE_REL, src_mask will normally equal
350. dst_mask to extract the addend from the section contents. If
351. relocations do have an addend in the reloc, eg. ELF USE_RELA, this
352. field should be zero. Non-zero values for ELF USE_RELA targets are
353. bogus as in those cases the value in the dst_mask part of the
354. section contents should be treated as garbage. *}
252b5132
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355. bfd_vma src_mask;
356.
7dc77aaa
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357. {* dst_mask selects which parts of the instruction (or data) are
358. replaced with a relocated value. *}
252b5132
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359. bfd_vma dst_mask;
360.
dc810e39
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361. {* When some formats create PC relative instructions, they leave
362. the value of the pc of the place being relocated in the offset
363. slot of the instruction, so that a PC relative relocation can
364. be made just by adding in an ordinary offset (e.g., sun3 a.out).
365. Some formats leave the displacement part of an instruction
366. empty (e.g., m88k bcs); this flag signals the fact. *}
b34976b6 367. bfd_boolean pcrel_offset;
252b5132 368.};
b5f79c76 369.
252b5132
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370*/
371
372/*
373FUNCTION
374 The HOWTO Macro
375
376DESCRIPTION
377 The HOWTO define is horrible and will go away.
378
dc810e39
AM
379.#define HOWTO(C, R, S, B, P, BI, O, SF, NAME, INPLACE, MASKSRC, MASKDST, PC) \
380. { (unsigned) C, R, S, B, P, BI, O, SF, NAME, INPLACE, MASKSRC, MASKDST, PC }
252b5132
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381
382DESCRIPTION
383 And will be replaced with the totally magic way. But for the
384 moment, we are compatible, so do it this way.
385
dc810e39
AM
386.#define NEWHOWTO(FUNCTION, NAME, SIZE, REL, IN) \
387. HOWTO (0, 0, SIZE, 0, REL, 0, complain_overflow_dont, FUNCTION, \
b34976b6 388. NAME, FALSE, 0, 0, IN)
252b5132 389.
5f771d47
ILT
390
391DESCRIPTION
392 This is used to fill in an empty howto entry in an array.
393
394.#define EMPTY_HOWTO(C) \
b34976b6
AM
395. HOWTO ((C), 0, 0, 0, FALSE, 0, complain_overflow_dont, NULL, \
396. NULL, FALSE, 0, 0, FALSE)
5f771d47
ILT
397.
398
252b5132
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399DESCRIPTION
400 Helper routine to turn a symbol into a relocation value.
401
dc810e39
AM
402.#define HOWTO_PREPARE(relocation, symbol) \
403. { \
404. if (symbol != (asymbol *) NULL) \
405. { \
406. if (bfd_is_com_section (symbol->section)) \
407. { \
408. relocation = 0; \
409. } \
410. else \
411. { \
412. relocation = symbol->value; \
413. } \
414. } \
415. }
b5f79c76 416.
252b5132
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417*/
418
419/*
420FUNCTION
421 bfd_get_reloc_size
422
423SYNOPSIS
424 unsigned int bfd_get_reloc_size (reloc_howto_type *);
425
426DESCRIPTION
427 For a reloc_howto_type that operates on a fixed number of bytes,
428 this returns the number of bytes operated on.
429 */
430
431unsigned int
432bfd_get_reloc_size (howto)
433 reloc_howto_type *howto;
434{
435 switch (howto->size)
436 {
437 case 0: return 1;
438 case 1: return 2;
439 case 2: return 4;
440 case 3: return 0;
441 case 4: return 8;
442 case 8: return 16;
443 case -2: return 4;
444 default: abort ();
445 }
446}
447
448/*
449TYPEDEF
450 arelent_chain
451
452DESCRIPTION
453
454 How relocs are tied together in an <<asection>>:
455
dc810e39
AM
456.typedef struct relent_chain
457.{
252b5132 458. arelent relent;
dc810e39 459. struct relent_chain *next;
b5f79c76
NC
460.}
461.arelent_chain;
462.
252b5132
RH
463*/
464
465/* N_ONES produces N one bits, without overflowing machine arithmetic. */
466#define N_ONES(n) (((((bfd_vma) 1 << ((n) - 1)) - 1) << 1) | 1)
467
468/*
469FUNCTION
470 bfd_check_overflow
471
472SYNOPSIS
473 bfd_reloc_status_type
474 bfd_check_overflow
475 (enum complain_overflow how,
476 unsigned int bitsize,
477 unsigned int rightshift,
478 unsigned int addrsize,
479 bfd_vma relocation);
480
481DESCRIPTION
482 Perform overflow checking on @var{relocation} which has
483 @var{bitsize} significant bits and will be shifted right by
484 @var{rightshift} bits, on a machine with addresses containing
485 @var{addrsize} significant bits. The result is either of
486 @code{bfd_reloc_ok} or @code{bfd_reloc_overflow}.
487
488*/
489
490bfd_reloc_status_type
491bfd_check_overflow (how, bitsize, rightshift, addrsize, relocation)
492 enum complain_overflow how;
493 unsigned int bitsize;
494 unsigned int rightshift;
495 unsigned int addrsize;
496 bfd_vma relocation;
497{
498 bfd_vma fieldmask, addrmask, signmask, ss, a;
499 bfd_reloc_status_type flag = bfd_reloc_ok;
500
501 a = relocation;
502
503 /* Note: BITSIZE should always be <= ADDRSIZE, but in case it's not,
504 we'll be permissive: extra bits in the field mask will
505 automatically extend the address mask for purposes of the
506 overflow check. */
507 fieldmask = N_ONES (bitsize);
508 addrmask = N_ONES (addrsize) | fieldmask;
509
510 switch (how)
511 {
512 case complain_overflow_dont:
513 break;
514
515 case complain_overflow_signed:
516 /* If any sign bits are set, all sign bits must be set. That
517 is, A must be a valid negative address after shifting. */
518 a = (a & addrmask) >> rightshift;
519 signmask = ~ (fieldmask >> 1);
520 ss = a & signmask;
521 if (ss != 0 && ss != ((addrmask >> rightshift) & signmask))
522 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
523 break;
524
525 case complain_overflow_unsigned:
526 /* We have an overflow if the address does not fit in the field. */
527 a = (a & addrmask) >> rightshift;
528 if ((a & ~ fieldmask) != 0)
529 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
530 break;
531
532 case complain_overflow_bitfield:
533 /* Bitfields are sometimes signed, sometimes unsigned. We
d5afc56e
AM
534 explicitly allow an address wrap too, which means a bitfield
535 of n bits is allowed to store -2**n to 2**n-1. Thus overflow
536 if the value has some, but not all, bits set outside the
537 field. */
252b5132 538 a >>= rightshift;
d5afc56e
AM
539 ss = a & ~ fieldmask;
540 if (ss != 0 && ss != (((bfd_vma) -1 >> rightshift) & ~ fieldmask))
541 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
252b5132
RH
542 break;
543
544 default:
545 abort ();
546 }
547
548 return flag;
549}
550
551/*
552FUNCTION
553 bfd_perform_relocation
554
555SYNOPSIS
556 bfd_reloc_status_type
557 bfd_perform_relocation
558 (bfd *abfd,
559 arelent *reloc_entry,
560 PTR data,
561 asection *input_section,
562 bfd *output_bfd,
563 char **error_message);
564
565DESCRIPTION
566 If @var{output_bfd} is supplied to this function, the
567 generated image will be relocatable; the relocations are
568 copied to the output file after they have been changed to
569 reflect the new state of the world. There are two ways of
570 reflecting the results of partial linkage in an output file:
571 by modifying the output data in place, and by modifying the
572 relocation record. Some native formats (e.g., basic a.out and
573 basic coff) have no way of specifying an addend in the
574 relocation type, so the addend has to go in the output data.
575 This is no big deal since in these formats the output data
576 slot will always be big enough for the addend. Complex reloc
577 types with addends were invented to solve just this problem.
578 The @var{error_message} argument is set to an error message if
579 this return @code{bfd_reloc_dangerous}.
580
581*/
582
252b5132
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583bfd_reloc_status_type
584bfd_perform_relocation (abfd, reloc_entry, data, input_section, output_bfd,
585 error_message)
586 bfd *abfd;
587 arelent *reloc_entry;
588 PTR data;
589 asection *input_section;
590 bfd *output_bfd;
591 char **error_message;
592{
593 bfd_vma relocation;
594 bfd_reloc_status_type flag = bfd_reloc_ok;
9a968f43 595 bfd_size_type octets = reloc_entry->address * bfd_octets_per_byte (abfd);
252b5132
RH
596 bfd_vma output_base = 0;
597 reloc_howto_type *howto = reloc_entry->howto;
598 asection *reloc_target_output_section;
599 asymbol *symbol;
600
601 symbol = *(reloc_entry->sym_ptr_ptr);
602 if (bfd_is_abs_section (symbol->section)
603 && output_bfd != (bfd *) NULL)
604 {
605 reloc_entry->address += input_section->output_offset;
606 return bfd_reloc_ok;
607 }
608
609 /* If we are not producing relocateable output, return an error if
610 the symbol is not defined. An undefined weak symbol is
611 considered to have a value of zero (SVR4 ABI, p. 4-27). */
612 if (bfd_is_und_section (symbol->section)
613 && (symbol->flags & BSF_WEAK) == 0
614 && output_bfd == (bfd *) NULL)
615 flag = bfd_reloc_undefined;
616
617 /* If there is a function supplied to handle this relocation type,
618 call it. It'll return `bfd_reloc_continue' if further processing
619 can be done. */
620 if (howto->special_function)
621 {
622 bfd_reloc_status_type cont;
623 cont = howto->special_function (abfd, reloc_entry, symbol, data,
624 input_section, output_bfd,
625 error_message);
626 if (cont != bfd_reloc_continue)
627 return cont;
628 }
629
630 /* Is the address of the relocation really within the section? */
e207c4fa
AM
631 if (reloc_entry->address > (input_section->_cooked_size
632 / bfd_octets_per_byte (abfd)))
252b5132
RH
633 return bfd_reloc_outofrange;
634
635 /* Work out which section the relocation is targetted at and the
636 initial relocation command value. */
637
638 /* Get symbol value. (Common symbols are special.) */
639 if (bfd_is_com_section (symbol->section))
640 relocation = 0;
641 else
642 relocation = symbol->value;
643
252b5132
RH
644 reloc_target_output_section = symbol->section->output_section;
645
646 /* Convert input-section-relative symbol value to absolute. */
ec4530b5
NC
647 if ((output_bfd && ! howto->partial_inplace)
648 || reloc_target_output_section == NULL)
252b5132
RH
649 output_base = 0;
650 else
651 output_base = reloc_target_output_section->vma;
652
653 relocation += output_base + symbol->section->output_offset;
654
655 /* Add in supplied addend. */
656 relocation += reloc_entry->addend;
657
658 /* Here the variable relocation holds the final address of the
659 symbol we are relocating against, plus any addend. */
660
82e51918 661 if (howto->pc_relative)
252b5132
RH
662 {
663 /* This is a PC relative relocation. We want to set RELOCATION
664 to the distance between the address of the symbol and the
665 location. RELOCATION is already the address of the symbol.
666
667 We start by subtracting the address of the section containing
668 the location.
669
670 If pcrel_offset is set, we must further subtract the position
671 of the location within the section. Some targets arrange for
672 the addend to be the negative of the position of the location
673 within the section; for example, i386-aout does this. For
b34976b6 674 i386-aout, pcrel_offset is FALSE. Some other targets do not
252b5132 675 include the position of the location; for example, m88kbcs,
b34976b6 676 or ELF. For those targets, pcrel_offset is TRUE.
252b5132
RH
677
678 If we are producing relocateable output, then we must ensure
679 that this reloc will be correctly computed when the final
b34976b6 680 relocation is done. If pcrel_offset is FALSE we want to wind
252b5132
RH
681 up with the negative of the location within the section,
682 which means we must adjust the existing addend by the change
b34976b6 683 in the location within the section. If pcrel_offset is TRUE
252b5132
RH
684 we do not want to adjust the existing addend at all.
685
686 FIXME: This seems logical to me, but for the case of
687 producing relocateable output it is not what the code
688 actually does. I don't want to change it, because it seems
689 far too likely that something will break. */
690
691 relocation -=
692 input_section->output_section->vma + input_section->output_offset;
693
82e51918 694 if (howto->pcrel_offset)
252b5132
RH
695 relocation -= reloc_entry->address;
696 }
697
698 if (output_bfd != (bfd *) NULL)
699 {
82e51918 700 if (! howto->partial_inplace)
252b5132
RH
701 {
702 /* This is a partial relocation, and we want to apply the relocation
703 to the reloc entry rather than the raw data. Modify the reloc
704 inplace to reflect what we now know. */
705 reloc_entry->addend = relocation;
706 reloc_entry->address += input_section->output_offset;
707 return flag;
708 }
709 else
710 {
711 /* This is a partial relocation, but inplace, so modify the
712 reloc record a bit.
713
714 If we've relocated with a symbol with a section, change
715 into a ref to the section belonging to the symbol. */
716
717 reloc_entry->address += input_section->output_offset;
718
719 /* WTF?? */
720 if (abfd->xvec->flavour == bfd_target_coff_flavour
252b5132
RH
721 && strcmp (abfd->xvec->name, "coff-Intel-little") != 0
722 && strcmp (abfd->xvec->name, "coff-Intel-big") != 0)
723 {
724#if 1
725 /* For m68k-coff, the addend was being subtracted twice during
726 relocation with -r. Removing the line below this comment
727 fixes that problem; see PR 2953.
728
729However, Ian wrote the following, regarding removing the line below,
730which explains why it is still enabled: --djm
731
732If you put a patch like that into BFD you need to check all the COFF
733linkers. I am fairly certain that patch will break coff-i386 (e.g.,
734SCO); see coff_i386_reloc in coff-i386.c where I worked around the
735problem in a different way. There may very well be a reason that the
736code works as it does.
737
738Hmmm. The first obvious point is that bfd_perform_relocation should
739not have any tests that depend upon the flavour. It's seem like
740entirely the wrong place for such a thing. The second obvious point
741is that the current code ignores the reloc addend when producing
742relocateable output for COFF. That's peculiar. In fact, I really
743have no idea what the point of the line you want to remove is.
744
745A typical COFF reloc subtracts the old value of the symbol and adds in
746the new value to the location in the object file (if it's a pc
747relative reloc it adds the difference between the symbol value and the
748location). When relocating we need to preserve that property.
749
750BFD handles this by setting the addend to the negative of the old
751value of the symbol. Unfortunately it handles common symbols in a
752non-standard way (it doesn't subtract the old value) but that's a
753different story (we can't change it without losing backward
754compatibility with old object files) (coff-i386 does subtract the old
755value, to be compatible with existing coff-i386 targets, like SCO).
756
757So everything works fine when not producing relocateable output. When
758we are producing relocateable output, logically we should do exactly
759what we do when not producing relocateable output. Therefore, your
760patch is correct. In fact, it should probably always just set
761reloc_entry->addend to 0 for all cases, since it is, in fact, going to
762add the value into the object file. This won't hurt the COFF code,
763which doesn't use the addend; I'm not sure what it will do to other
764formats (the thing to check for would be whether any formats both use
765the addend and set partial_inplace).
766
767When I wanted to make coff-i386 produce relocateable output, I ran
768into the problem that you are running into: I wanted to remove that
769line. Rather than risk it, I made the coff-i386 relocs use a special
770function; it's coff_i386_reloc in coff-i386.c. The function
771specifically adds the addend field into the object file, knowing that
772bfd_perform_relocation is not going to. If you remove that line, then
773coff-i386.c will wind up adding the addend field in twice. It's
774trivial to fix; it just needs to be done.
775
776The problem with removing the line is just that it may break some
777working code. With BFD it's hard to be sure of anything. The right
778way to deal with this is simply to build and test at least all the
779supported COFF targets. It should be straightforward if time and disk
780space consuming. For each target:
781 1) build the linker
782 2) generate some executable, and link it using -r (I would
783 probably use paranoia.o and link against newlib/libc.a, which
784 for all the supported targets would be available in
785 /usr/cygnus/progressive/H-host/target/lib/libc.a).
786 3) make the change to reloc.c
787 4) rebuild the linker
788 5) repeat step 2
789 6) if the resulting object files are the same, you have at least
790 made it no worse
791 7) if they are different you have to figure out which version is
792 right
793*/
794 relocation -= reloc_entry->addend;
795#endif
796 reloc_entry->addend = 0;
797 }
798 else
799 {
800 reloc_entry->addend = relocation;
801 }
802 }
803 }
804 else
805 {
806 reloc_entry->addend = 0;
807 }
808
809 /* FIXME: This overflow checking is incomplete, because the value
810 might have overflowed before we get here. For a correct check we
811 need to compute the value in a size larger than bitsize, but we
812 can't reasonably do that for a reloc the same size as a host
813 machine word.
814 FIXME: We should also do overflow checking on the result after
815 adding in the value contained in the object file. */
816 if (howto->complain_on_overflow != complain_overflow_dont
817 && flag == bfd_reloc_ok)
818 flag = bfd_check_overflow (howto->complain_on_overflow,
819 howto->bitsize,
820 howto->rightshift,
821 bfd_arch_bits_per_address (abfd),
822 relocation);
823
b5f79c76
NC
824 /* Either we are relocating all the way, or we don't want to apply
825 the relocation to the reloc entry (probably because there isn't
826 any room in the output format to describe addends to relocs). */
252b5132
RH
827
828 /* The cast to bfd_vma avoids a bug in the Alpha OSF/1 C compiler
829 (OSF version 1.3, compiler version 3.11). It miscompiles the
830 following program:
831
832 struct str
833 {
834 unsigned int i0;
835 } s = { 0 };
836
837 int
838 main ()
839 {
840 unsigned long x;
841
842 x = 0x100000000;
843 x <<= (unsigned long) s.i0;
844 if (x == 0)
845 printf ("failed\n");
846 else
847 printf ("succeeded (%lx)\n", x);
848 }
849 */
850
851 relocation >>= (bfd_vma) howto->rightshift;
852
b5f79c76 853 /* Shift everything up to where it's going to be used. */
252b5132
RH
854 relocation <<= (bfd_vma) howto->bitpos;
855
b5f79c76 856 /* Wait for the day when all have the mask in them. */
252b5132
RH
857
858 /* What we do:
859 i instruction to be left alone
860 o offset within instruction
861 r relocation offset to apply
862 S src mask
863 D dst mask
864 N ~dst mask
865 A part 1
866 B part 2
867 R result
868
869 Do this:
88b6bae0
AM
870 (( i i i i i o o o o o from bfd_get<size>
871 and S S S S S) to get the size offset we want
872 + r r r r r r r r r r) to get the final value to place
252b5132
RH
873 and D D D D D to chop to right size
874 -----------------------
88b6bae0 875 = A A A A A
252b5132 876 And this:
88b6bae0
AM
877 ( i i i i i o o o o o from bfd_get<size>
878 and N N N N N ) get instruction
252b5132 879 -----------------------
88b6bae0 880 = B B B B B
252b5132
RH
881
882 And then:
88b6bae0
AM
883 ( B B B B B
884 or A A A A A)
252b5132 885 -----------------------
88b6bae0 886 = R R R R R R R R R R put into bfd_put<size>
252b5132
RH
887 */
888
889#define DOIT(x) \
890 x = ( (x & ~howto->dst_mask) | (((x & howto->src_mask) + relocation) & howto->dst_mask))
891
892 switch (howto->size)
893 {
894 case 0:
895 {
9a968f43 896 char x = bfd_get_8 (abfd, (char *) data + octets);
252b5132 897 DOIT (x);
9a968f43 898 bfd_put_8 (abfd, x, (unsigned char *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
899 }
900 break;
901
902 case 1:
903 {
9a968f43 904 short x = bfd_get_16 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132 905 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 906 bfd_put_16 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (unsigned char *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
907 }
908 break;
909 case 2:
910 {
9a968f43 911 long x = bfd_get_32 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132 912 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 913 bfd_put_32 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
914 }
915 break;
916 case -2:
917 {
9a968f43 918 long x = bfd_get_32 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
919 relocation = -relocation;
920 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 921 bfd_put_32 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
922 }
923 break;
924
925 case -1:
926 {
9a968f43 927 long x = bfd_get_16 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
928 relocation = -relocation;
929 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 930 bfd_put_16 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
931 }
932 break;
933
934 case 3:
935 /* Do nothing */
936 break;
937
938 case 4:
939#ifdef BFD64
940 {
9a968f43 941 bfd_vma x = bfd_get_64 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132 942 DOIT (x);
9a968f43 943 bfd_put_64 (abfd, x, (bfd_byte *) data + octets);
252b5132
RH
944 }
945#else
946 abort ();
947#endif
948 break;
949 default:
950 return bfd_reloc_other;
951 }
952
953 return flag;
954}
955
956/*
957FUNCTION
958 bfd_install_relocation
959
960SYNOPSIS
961 bfd_reloc_status_type
962 bfd_install_relocation
963 (bfd *abfd,
964 arelent *reloc_entry,
965 PTR data, bfd_vma data_start,
966 asection *input_section,
967 char **error_message);
968
969DESCRIPTION
970 This looks remarkably like <<bfd_perform_relocation>>, except it
971 does not expect that the section contents have been filled in.
972 I.e., it's suitable for use when creating, rather than applying
973 a relocation.
974
975 For now, this function should be considered reserved for the
976 assembler.
252b5132
RH
977*/
978
252b5132
RH
979bfd_reloc_status_type
980bfd_install_relocation (abfd, reloc_entry, data_start, data_start_offset,
981 input_section, error_message)
982 bfd *abfd;
983 arelent *reloc_entry;
984 PTR data_start;
985 bfd_vma data_start_offset;
986 asection *input_section;
987 char **error_message;
988{
989 bfd_vma relocation;
990 bfd_reloc_status_type flag = bfd_reloc_ok;
9a968f43 991 bfd_size_type octets = reloc_entry->address * bfd_octets_per_byte (abfd);
252b5132
RH
992 bfd_vma output_base = 0;
993 reloc_howto_type *howto = reloc_entry->howto;
994 asection *reloc_target_output_section;
995 asymbol *symbol;
996 bfd_byte *data;
997
998 symbol = *(reloc_entry->sym_ptr_ptr);
999 if (bfd_is_abs_section (symbol->section))
1000 {
1001 reloc_entry->address += input_section->output_offset;
1002 return bfd_reloc_ok;
1003 }
1004
1005 /* If there is a function supplied to handle this relocation type,
1006 call it. It'll return `bfd_reloc_continue' if further processing
1007 can be done. */
1008 if (howto->special_function)
1009 {
1010 bfd_reloc_status_type cont;
88b6bae0 1011
252b5132
RH
1012 /* XXX - The special_function calls haven't been fixed up to deal
1013 with creating new relocations and section contents. */
1014 cont = howto->special_function (abfd, reloc_entry, symbol,
1015 /* XXX - Non-portable! */
1016 ((bfd_byte *) data_start
1017 - data_start_offset),
1018 input_section, abfd, error_message);
1019 if (cont != bfd_reloc_continue)
1020 return cont;
1021 }
1022
1023 /* Is the address of the relocation really within the section? */
e207c4fa
AM
1024 if (reloc_entry->address > (input_section->_cooked_size
1025 / bfd_octets_per_byte (abfd)))
252b5132
RH
1026 return bfd_reloc_outofrange;
1027
1028 /* Work out which section the relocation is targetted at and the
1029 initial relocation command value. */
1030
1031 /* Get symbol value. (Common symbols are special.) */
1032 if (bfd_is_com_section (symbol->section))
1033 relocation = 0;
1034 else
1035 relocation = symbol->value;
1036
1037 reloc_target_output_section = symbol->section->output_section;
1038
1039 /* Convert input-section-relative symbol value to absolute. */
82e51918 1040 if (! howto->partial_inplace)
252b5132
RH
1041 output_base = 0;
1042 else
1043 output_base = reloc_target_output_section->vma;
1044
1045 relocation += output_base + symbol->section->output_offset;
1046
1047 /* Add in supplied addend. */
1048 relocation += reloc_entry->addend;
1049
1050 /* Here the variable relocation holds the final address of the
1051 symbol we are relocating against, plus any addend. */
1052
82e51918 1053 if (howto->pc_relative)
252b5132
RH
1054 {
1055 /* This is a PC relative relocation. We want to set RELOCATION
1056 to the distance between the address of the symbol and the
1057 location. RELOCATION is already the address of the symbol.
1058
1059 We start by subtracting the address of the section containing
1060 the location.
1061
1062 If pcrel_offset is set, we must further subtract the position
1063 of the location within the section. Some targets arrange for
1064 the addend to be the negative of the position of the location
1065 within the section; for example, i386-aout does this. For
b34976b6 1066 i386-aout, pcrel_offset is FALSE. Some other targets do not
252b5132 1067 include the position of the location; for example, m88kbcs,
b34976b6 1068 or ELF. For those targets, pcrel_offset is TRUE.
252b5132
RH
1069
1070 If we are producing relocateable output, then we must ensure
1071 that this reloc will be correctly computed when the final
b34976b6 1072 relocation is done. If pcrel_offset is FALSE we want to wind
252b5132
RH
1073 up with the negative of the location within the section,
1074 which means we must adjust the existing addend by the change
b34976b6 1075 in the location within the section. If pcrel_offset is TRUE
252b5132
RH
1076 we do not want to adjust the existing addend at all.
1077
1078 FIXME: This seems logical to me, but for the case of
1079 producing relocateable output it is not what the code
1080 actually does. I don't want to change it, because it seems
1081 far too likely that something will break. */
1082
1083 relocation -=
1084 input_section->output_section->vma + input_section->output_offset;
1085
82e51918 1086 if (howto->pcrel_offset && howto->partial_inplace)
252b5132
RH
1087 relocation -= reloc_entry->address;
1088 }
1089
82e51918 1090 if (! howto->partial_inplace)
252b5132
RH
1091 {
1092 /* This is a partial relocation, and we want to apply the relocation
1093 to the reloc entry rather than the raw data. Modify the reloc
1094 inplace to reflect what we now know. */
1095 reloc_entry->addend = relocation;
1096 reloc_entry->address += input_section->output_offset;
1097 return flag;
1098 }
1099 else
1100 {
1101 /* This is a partial relocation, but inplace, so modify the
1102 reloc record a bit.
1103
1104 If we've relocated with a symbol with a section, change
1105 into a ref to the section belonging to the symbol. */
252b5132
RH
1106 reloc_entry->address += input_section->output_offset;
1107
1108 /* WTF?? */
1109 if (abfd->xvec->flavour == bfd_target_coff_flavour
252b5132
RH
1110 && strcmp (abfd->xvec->name, "coff-Intel-little") != 0
1111 && strcmp (abfd->xvec->name, "coff-Intel-big") != 0)
1112 {
1113#if 1
1114/* For m68k-coff, the addend was being subtracted twice during
1115 relocation with -r. Removing the line below this comment
1116 fixes that problem; see PR 2953.
1117
1118However, Ian wrote the following, regarding removing the line below,
1119which explains why it is still enabled: --djm
1120
1121If you put a patch like that into BFD you need to check all the COFF
1122linkers. I am fairly certain that patch will break coff-i386 (e.g.,
1123SCO); see coff_i386_reloc in coff-i386.c where I worked around the
1124problem in a different way. There may very well be a reason that the
1125code works as it does.
1126
1127Hmmm. The first obvious point is that bfd_install_relocation should
1128not have any tests that depend upon the flavour. It's seem like
1129entirely the wrong place for such a thing. The second obvious point
1130is that the current code ignores the reloc addend when producing
1131relocateable output for COFF. That's peculiar. In fact, I really
1132have no idea what the point of the line you want to remove is.
1133
1134A typical COFF reloc subtracts the old value of the symbol and adds in
1135the new value to the location in the object file (if it's a pc
1136relative reloc it adds the difference between the symbol value and the
1137location). When relocating we need to preserve that property.
1138
1139BFD handles this by setting the addend to the negative of the old
1140value of the symbol. Unfortunately it handles common symbols in a
1141non-standard way (it doesn't subtract the old value) but that's a
1142different story (we can't change it without losing backward
1143compatibility with old object files) (coff-i386 does subtract the old
1144value, to be compatible with existing coff-i386 targets, like SCO).
1145
1146So everything works fine when not producing relocateable output. When
1147we are producing relocateable output, logically we should do exactly
1148what we do when not producing relocateable output. Therefore, your
1149patch is correct. In fact, it should probably always just set
1150reloc_entry->addend to 0 for all cases, since it is, in fact, going to
1151add the value into the object file. This won't hurt the COFF code,
1152which doesn't use the addend; I'm not sure what it will do to other
1153formats (the thing to check for would be whether any formats both use
1154the addend and set partial_inplace).
1155
1156When I wanted to make coff-i386 produce relocateable output, I ran
1157into the problem that you are running into: I wanted to remove that
1158line. Rather than risk it, I made the coff-i386 relocs use a special
1159function; it's coff_i386_reloc in coff-i386.c. The function
1160specifically adds the addend field into the object file, knowing that
1161bfd_install_relocation is not going to. If you remove that line, then
1162coff-i386.c will wind up adding the addend field in twice. It's
1163trivial to fix; it just needs to be done.
1164
1165The problem with removing the line is just that it may break some
1166working code. With BFD it's hard to be sure of anything. The right
1167way to deal with this is simply to build and test at least all the
1168supported COFF targets. It should be straightforward if time and disk
1169space consuming. For each target:
1170 1) build the linker
1171 2) generate some executable, and link it using -r (I would
1172 probably use paranoia.o and link against newlib/libc.a, which
1173 for all the supported targets would be available in
1174 /usr/cygnus/progressive/H-host/target/lib/libc.a).
1175 3) make the change to reloc.c
1176 4) rebuild the linker
1177 5) repeat step 2
1178 6) if the resulting object files are the same, you have at least
1179 made it no worse
1180 7) if they are different you have to figure out which version is
b5f79c76 1181 right. */
252b5132
RH
1182 relocation -= reloc_entry->addend;
1183#endif
1184 reloc_entry->addend = 0;
1185 }
1186 else
1187 {
1188 reloc_entry->addend = relocation;
1189 }
1190 }
1191
1192 /* FIXME: This overflow checking is incomplete, because the value
1193 might have overflowed before we get here. For a correct check we
1194 need to compute the value in a size larger than bitsize, but we
1195 can't reasonably do that for a reloc the same size as a host
1196 machine word.
1197 FIXME: We should also do overflow checking on the result after
1198 adding in the value contained in the object file. */
1199 if (howto->complain_on_overflow != complain_overflow_dont)
1200 flag = bfd_check_overflow (howto->complain_on_overflow,
1201 howto->bitsize,
1202 howto->rightshift,
1203 bfd_arch_bits_per_address (abfd),
1204 relocation);
1205
b5f79c76
NC
1206 /* Either we are relocating all the way, or we don't want to apply
1207 the relocation to the reloc entry (probably because there isn't
1208 any room in the output format to describe addends to relocs). */
252b5132
RH
1209
1210 /* The cast to bfd_vma avoids a bug in the Alpha OSF/1 C compiler
1211 (OSF version 1.3, compiler version 3.11). It miscompiles the
1212 following program:
1213
1214 struct str
1215 {
1216 unsigned int i0;
1217 } s = { 0 };
1218
1219 int
1220 main ()
1221 {
1222 unsigned long x;
1223
1224 x = 0x100000000;
1225 x <<= (unsigned long) s.i0;
1226 if (x == 0)
1227 printf ("failed\n");
1228 else
1229 printf ("succeeded (%lx)\n", x);
1230 }
1231 */
1232
1233 relocation >>= (bfd_vma) howto->rightshift;
1234
b5f79c76 1235 /* Shift everything up to where it's going to be used. */
252b5132
RH
1236 relocation <<= (bfd_vma) howto->bitpos;
1237
b5f79c76 1238 /* Wait for the day when all have the mask in them. */
252b5132
RH
1239
1240 /* What we do:
1241 i instruction to be left alone
1242 o offset within instruction
1243 r relocation offset to apply
1244 S src mask
1245 D dst mask
1246 N ~dst mask
1247 A part 1
1248 B part 2
1249 R result
1250
1251 Do this:
88b6bae0
AM
1252 (( i i i i i o o o o o from bfd_get<size>
1253 and S S S S S) to get the size offset we want
1254 + r r r r r r r r r r) to get the final value to place
252b5132
RH
1255 and D D D D D to chop to right size
1256 -----------------------
88b6bae0 1257 = A A A A A
252b5132 1258 And this:
88b6bae0
AM
1259 ( i i i i i o o o o o from bfd_get<size>
1260 and N N N N N ) get instruction
252b5132 1261 -----------------------
88b6bae0 1262 = B B B B B
252b5132
RH
1263
1264 And then:
88b6bae0
AM
1265 ( B B B B B
1266 or A A A A A)
252b5132 1267 -----------------------
88b6bae0 1268 = R R R R R R R R R R put into bfd_put<size>
252b5132
RH
1269 */
1270
1271#define DOIT(x) \
1272 x = ( (x & ~howto->dst_mask) | (((x & howto->src_mask) + relocation) & howto->dst_mask))
1273
9a968f43 1274 data = (bfd_byte *) data_start + (octets - data_start_offset);
252b5132
RH
1275
1276 switch (howto->size)
1277 {
1278 case 0:
1279 {
1280 char x = bfd_get_8 (abfd, (char *) data);
1281 DOIT (x);
1282 bfd_put_8 (abfd, x, (unsigned char *) data);
1283 }
1284 break;
1285
1286 case 1:
1287 {
1288 short x = bfd_get_16 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data);
1289 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 1290 bfd_put_16 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (unsigned char *) data);
252b5132
RH
1291 }
1292 break;
1293 case 2:
1294 {
1295 long x = bfd_get_32 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data);
1296 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 1297 bfd_put_32 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (bfd_byte *) data);
252b5132
RH
1298 }
1299 break;
1300 case -2:
1301 {
1302 long x = bfd_get_32 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data);
1303 relocation = -relocation;
1304 DOIT (x);
dc810e39 1305 bfd_put_32 (abfd, (bfd_vma) x, (bfd_byte *) data);
252b5132
RH
1306 }
1307 break;
1308
1309 case 3:
1310 /* Do nothing */
1311 break;
1312
1313 case 4:
1314 {
1315 bfd_vma x = bfd_get_64 (abfd, (bfd_byte *) data);
1316 DOIT (x);
1317 bfd_put_64 (abfd, x, (bfd_byte *) data);
1318 }
1319 break;
1320 default:
1321 return bfd_reloc_other;
1322 }
1323
1324 return flag;
1325}
1326
1327/* This relocation routine is used by some of the backend linkers.
1328 They do not construct asymbol or arelent structures, so there is no
1329 reason for them to use bfd_perform_relocation. Also,
1330 bfd_perform_relocation is so hacked up it is easier to write a new
1331 function than to try to deal with it.
1332
1333 This routine does a final relocation. Whether it is useful for a
1334 relocateable link depends upon how the object format defines
1335 relocations.
1336
1337 FIXME: This routine ignores any special_function in the HOWTO,
1338 since the existing special_function values have been written for
1339 bfd_perform_relocation.
1340
1341 HOWTO is the reloc howto information.
1342 INPUT_BFD is the BFD which the reloc applies to.
1343 INPUT_SECTION is the section which the reloc applies to.
1344 CONTENTS is the contents of the section.
1345 ADDRESS is the address of the reloc within INPUT_SECTION.
1346 VALUE is the value of the symbol the reloc refers to.
1347 ADDEND is the addend of the reloc. */
1348
1349bfd_reloc_status_type
1350_bfd_final_link_relocate (howto, input_bfd, input_section, contents, address,
1351 value, addend)
1352 reloc_howto_type *howto;
1353 bfd *input_bfd;
1354 asection *input_section;
1355 bfd_byte *contents;
1356 bfd_vma address;
1357 bfd_vma value;
1358 bfd_vma addend;
1359{
1360 bfd_vma relocation;
1361
1362 /* Sanity check the address. */
1363 if (address > input_section->_raw_size)
1364 return bfd_reloc_outofrange;
1365
1366 /* This function assumes that we are dealing with a basic relocation
1367 against a symbol. We want to compute the value of the symbol to
1368 relocate to. This is just VALUE, the value of the symbol, plus
1369 ADDEND, any addend associated with the reloc. */
1370 relocation = value + addend;
1371
1372 /* If the relocation is PC relative, we want to set RELOCATION to
1373 the distance between the symbol (currently in RELOCATION) and the
1374 location we are relocating. Some targets (e.g., i386-aout)
1375 arrange for the contents of the section to be the negative of the
1376 offset of the location within the section; for such targets
b34976b6 1377 pcrel_offset is FALSE. Other targets (e.g., m88kbcs or ELF)
252b5132 1378 simply leave the contents of the section as zero; for such
b34976b6 1379 targets pcrel_offset is TRUE. If pcrel_offset is FALSE we do not
252b5132
RH
1380 need to subtract out the offset of the location within the
1381 section (which is just ADDRESS). */
1382 if (howto->pc_relative)
1383 {
1384 relocation -= (input_section->output_section->vma
1385 + input_section->output_offset);
1386 if (howto->pcrel_offset)
1387 relocation -= address;
1388 }
1389
1390 return _bfd_relocate_contents (howto, input_bfd, relocation,
1391 contents + address);
1392}
1393
1394/* Relocate a given location using a given value and howto. */
1395
1396bfd_reloc_status_type
1397_bfd_relocate_contents (howto, input_bfd, relocation, location)
1398 reloc_howto_type *howto;
1399 bfd *input_bfd;
1400 bfd_vma relocation;
1401 bfd_byte *location;
1402{
1403 int size;
7442e600 1404 bfd_vma x = 0;
d5afc56e 1405 bfd_reloc_status_type flag;
252b5132
RH
1406 unsigned int rightshift = howto->rightshift;
1407 unsigned int bitpos = howto->bitpos;
1408
1409 /* If the size is negative, negate RELOCATION. This isn't very
1410 general. */
1411 if (howto->size < 0)
1412 relocation = -relocation;
1413
1414 /* Get the value we are going to relocate. */
1415 size = bfd_get_reloc_size (howto);
1416 switch (size)
1417 {
1418 default:
1419 case 0:
1420 abort ();
1421 case 1:
1422 x = bfd_get_8 (input_bfd, location);
1423 break;
1424 case 2:
1425 x = bfd_get_16 (input_bfd, location);
1426 break;
1427 case 4:
1428 x = bfd_get_32 (input_bfd, location);
1429 break;
1430 case 8:
1431#ifdef BFD64
1432 x = bfd_get_64 (input_bfd, location);
1433#else
1434 abort ();
1435#endif
1436 break;
1437 }
1438
1439 /* Check for overflow. FIXME: We may drop bits during the addition
1440 which we don't check for. We must either check at every single
1441 operation, which would be tedious, or we must do the computations
1442 in a type larger than bfd_vma, which would be inefficient. */
d5afc56e 1443 flag = bfd_reloc_ok;
252b5132
RH
1444 if (howto->complain_on_overflow != complain_overflow_dont)
1445 {
1446 bfd_vma addrmask, fieldmask, signmask, ss;
1447 bfd_vma a, b, sum;
1448
1449 /* Get the values to be added together. For signed and unsigned
1450 relocations, we assume that all values should be truncated to
1451 the size of an address. For bitfields, all the bits matter.
1452 See also bfd_check_overflow. */
1453 fieldmask = N_ONES (howto->bitsize);
1454 addrmask = N_ONES (bfd_arch_bits_per_address (input_bfd)) | fieldmask;
1455 a = relocation;
1456 b = x & howto->src_mask;
1457
1458 switch (howto->complain_on_overflow)
1459 {
1460 case complain_overflow_signed:
1461 a = (a & addrmask) >> rightshift;
1462
1463 /* If any sign bits are set, all sign bits must be set.
1464 That is, A must be a valid negative address after
1465 shifting. */
1466 signmask = ~ (fieldmask >> 1);
1467 ss = a & signmask;
1468 if (ss != 0 && ss != ((addrmask >> rightshift) & signmask))
d5afc56e 1469 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
252b5132
RH
1470
1471 /* We only need this next bit of code if the sign bit of B
1472 is below the sign bit of A. This would only happen if
1473 SRC_MASK had fewer bits than BITSIZE. Note that if
1474 SRC_MASK has more bits than BITSIZE, we can get into
1475 trouble; we would need to verify that B is in range, as
1476 we do for A above. */
1477 signmask = ((~ howto->src_mask) >> 1) & howto->src_mask;
8a4ac871
AM
1478
1479 /* Set all the bits above the sign bit. */
1480 b = (b ^ signmask) - signmask;
252b5132
RH
1481
1482 b = (b & addrmask) >> bitpos;
1483
1484 /* Now we can do the addition. */
1485 sum = a + b;
1486
1487 /* See if the result has the correct sign. Bits above the
1488 sign bit are junk now; ignore them. If the sum is
1489 positive, make sure we did not have all negative inputs;
1490 if the sum is negative, make sure we did not have all
1491 positive inputs. The test below looks only at the sign
1492 bits, and it really just
1493 SIGN (A) == SIGN (B) && SIGN (A) != SIGN (SUM)
1494 */
1495 signmask = (fieldmask >> 1) + 1;
1496 if (((~ (a ^ b)) & (a ^ sum)) & signmask)
d5afc56e 1497 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
252b5132
RH
1498
1499 break;
1500
1501 case complain_overflow_unsigned:
1502 /* Checking for an unsigned overflow is relatively easy:
1503 trim the addresses and add, and trim the result as well.
1504 Overflow is normally indicated when the result does not
1505 fit in the field. However, we also need to consider the
1506 case when, e.g., fieldmask is 0x7fffffff or smaller, an
1507 input is 0x80000000, and bfd_vma is only 32 bits; then we
1508 will get sum == 0, but there is an overflow, since the
1509 inputs did not fit in the field. Instead of doing a
1510 separate test, we can check for this by or-ing in the
1511 operands when testing for the sum overflowing its final
1512 field. */
1513 a = (a & addrmask) >> rightshift;
1514 b = (b & addrmask) >> bitpos;
1515 sum = (a + b) & addrmask;
1516 if ((a | b | sum) & ~ fieldmask)
d5afc56e 1517 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
252b5132
RH
1518
1519 break;
1520
1521 case complain_overflow_bitfield:
d5afc56e 1522 /* Much like the signed check, but for a field one bit
8a4ac871 1523 wider, and no trimming inputs with addrmask. We allow a
d5afc56e
AM
1524 bitfield to represent numbers in the range -2**n to
1525 2**n-1, where n is the number of bits in the field.
1526 Note that when bfd_vma is 32 bits, a 32-bit reloc can't
1527 overflow, which is exactly what we want. */
252b5132 1528 a >>= rightshift;
252b5132 1529
d5afc56e
AM
1530 signmask = ~ fieldmask;
1531 ss = a & signmask;
1532 if (ss != 0 && ss != (((bfd_vma) -1 >> rightshift) & signmask))
1533 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
252b5132 1534
d5afc56e 1535 signmask = ((~ howto->src_mask) >> 1) & howto->src_mask;
8a4ac871 1536 b = (b ^ signmask) - signmask;
252b5132 1537
d5afc56e 1538 b >>= bitpos;
44257b8b 1539
252b5132 1540 sum = a + b;
d5afc56e 1541
8a4ac871
AM
1542 /* We mask with addrmask here to explicitly allow an address
1543 wrap-around. The Linux kernel relies on it, and it is
1544 the only way to write assembler code which can run when
1545 loaded at a location 0x80000000 away from the location at
1546 which it is linked. */
d5afc56e 1547 signmask = fieldmask + 1;
8a4ac871 1548 if (((~ (a ^ b)) & (a ^ sum)) & signmask & addrmask)
d5afc56e 1549 flag = bfd_reloc_overflow;
252b5132
RH
1550
1551 break;
1552
1553 default:
1554 abort ();
1555 }
1556 }
1557
1558 /* Put RELOCATION in the right bits. */
1559 relocation >>= (bfd_vma) rightshift;
1560 relocation <<= (bfd_vma) bitpos;
1561
1562 /* Add RELOCATION to the right bits of X. */
1563 x = ((x & ~howto->dst_mask)
1564 | (((x & howto->src_mask) + relocation) & howto->dst_mask));
1565
1566 /* Put the relocated value back in the object file. */
1567 switch (size)
1568 {
1569 default:
1570 case 0:
1571 abort ();
1572 case 1:
1573 bfd_put_8 (input_bfd, x, location);
1574 break;
1575 case 2:
1576 bfd_put_16 (input_bfd, x, location);
1577 break;
1578 case 4:
1579 bfd_put_32 (input_bfd, x, location);
1580 break;
1581 case 8:
1582#ifdef BFD64
1583 bfd_put_64 (input_bfd, x, location);
1584#else
1585 abort ();
1586#endif
1587 break;
1588 }
1589
d5afc56e 1590 return flag;
252b5132
RH
1591}
1592
1593/*
1594DOCDD
1595INODE
1596 howto manager, , typedef arelent, Relocations
1597
1598SECTION
1599 The howto manager
1600
1601 When an application wants to create a relocation, but doesn't
1602 know what the target machine might call it, it can find out by
1603 using this bit of code.
1604
1605*/
1606
1607/*
1608TYPEDEF
1609 bfd_reloc_code_type
1610
1611DESCRIPTION
1612 The insides of a reloc code. The idea is that, eventually, there
1613 will be one enumerator for every type of relocation we ever do.
1614 Pass one of these values to <<bfd_reloc_type_lookup>>, and it'll
1615 return a howto pointer.
1616
1617 This does mean that the application must determine the correct
1618 enumerator value; you can't get a howto pointer from a random set
1619 of attributes.
1620
1621SENUM
1622 bfd_reloc_code_real
1623
1624ENUM
1625 BFD_RELOC_64
1626ENUMX
1627 BFD_RELOC_32
1628ENUMX
1629 BFD_RELOC_26
1630ENUMX
1631 BFD_RELOC_24
1632ENUMX
1633 BFD_RELOC_16
1634ENUMX
1635 BFD_RELOC_14
1636ENUMX
1637 BFD_RELOC_8
1638ENUMDOC
1639 Basic absolute relocations of N bits.
1640
1641ENUM
1642 BFD_RELOC_64_PCREL
1643ENUMX
1644 BFD_RELOC_32_PCREL
1645ENUMX
1646 BFD_RELOC_24_PCREL
1647ENUMX
1648 BFD_RELOC_16_PCREL
1649ENUMX
1650 BFD_RELOC_12_PCREL
1651ENUMX
1652 BFD_RELOC_8_PCREL
1653ENUMDOC
1654 PC-relative relocations. Sometimes these are relative to the address
1655of the relocation itself; sometimes they are relative to the start of
1656the section containing the relocation. It depends on the specific target.
1657
1658The 24-bit relocation is used in some Intel 960 configurations.
1659
1660ENUM
1661 BFD_RELOC_32_GOT_PCREL
1662ENUMX
1663 BFD_RELOC_16_GOT_PCREL
1664ENUMX
1665 BFD_RELOC_8_GOT_PCREL
1666ENUMX
1667 BFD_RELOC_32_GOTOFF
1668ENUMX
1669 BFD_RELOC_16_GOTOFF
1670ENUMX
1671 BFD_RELOC_LO16_GOTOFF
1672ENUMX
1673 BFD_RELOC_HI16_GOTOFF
1674ENUMX
1675 BFD_RELOC_HI16_S_GOTOFF
1676ENUMX
1677 BFD_RELOC_8_GOTOFF
5bd4f169
AM
1678ENUMX
1679 BFD_RELOC_64_PLT_PCREL
252b5132
RH
1680ENUMX
1681 BFD_RELOC_32_PLT_PCREL
1682ENUMX
1683 BFD_RELOC_24_PLT_PCREL
1684ENUMX
1685 BFD_RELOC_16_PLT_PCREL
1686ENUMX
1687 BFD_RELOC_8_PLT_PCREL
5bd4f169
AM
1688ENUMX
1689 BFD_RELOC_64_PLTOFF
252b5132
RH
1690ENUMX
1691 BFD_RELOC_32_PLTOFF
1692ENUMX
1693 BFD_RELOC_16_PLTOFF
1694ENUMX
1695 BFD_RELOC_LO16_PLTOFF
1696ENUMX
1697 BFD_RELOC_HI16_PLTOFF
1698ENUMX
1699 BFD_RELOC_HI16_S_PLTOFF
1700ENUMX
1701 BFD_RELOC_8_PLTOFF
1702ENUMDOC
1703 For ELF.
1704
1705ENUM
1706 BFD_RELOC_68K_GLOB_DAT
1707ENUMX
1708 BFD_RELOC_68K_JMP_SLOT
1709ENUMX
1710 BFD_RELOC_68K_RELATIVE
1711ENUMDOC
1712 Relocations used by 68K ELF.
1713
1714ENUM
1715 BFD_RELOC_32_BASEREL
1716ENUMX
1717 BFD_RELOC_16_BASEREL
1718ENUMX
1719 BFD_RELOC_LO16_BASEREL
1720ENUMX
1721 BFD_RELOC_HI16_BASEREL
1722ENUMX
1723 BFD_RELOC_HI16_S_BASEREL
1724ENUMX
1725 BFD_RELOC_8_BASEREL
1726ENUMX
1727 BFD_RELOC_RVA
1728ENUMDOC
1729 Linkage-table relative.
1730
1731ENUM
1732 BFD_RELOC_8_FFnn
1733ENUMDOC
1734 Absolute 8-bit relocation, but used to form an address like 0xFFnn.
1735
1736ENUM
1737 BFD_RELOC_32_PCREL_S2
1738ENUMX
1739 BFD_RELOC_16_PCREL_S2
1740ENUMX
1741 BFD_RELOC_23_PCREL_S2
1742ENUMDOC
1743 These PC-relative relocations are stored as word displacements --
1744i.e., byte displacements shifted right two bits. The 30-bit word
1745displacement (<<32_PCREL_S2>> -- 32 bits, shifted 2) is used on the
1746SPARC. (SPARC tools generally refer to this as <<WDISP30>>.) The
1747signed 16-bit displacement is used on the MIPS, and the 23-bit
1748displacement is used on the Alpha.
1749
1750ENUM
1751 BFD_RELOC_HI22
1752ENUMX
1753 BFD_RELOC_LO10
1754ENUMDOC
1755 High 22 bits and low 10 bits of 32-bit value, placed into lower bits of
1756the target word. These are used on the SPARC.
1757
1758ENUM
1759 BFD_RELOC_GPREL16
1760ENUMX
1761 BFD_RELOC_GPREL32
1762ENUMDOC
1763 For systems that allocate a Global Pointer register, these are
1764displacements off that register. These relocation types are
1765handled specially, because the value the register will have is
1766decided relatively late.
1767
252b5132
RH
1768ENUM
1769 BFD_RELOC_I960_CALLJ
1770ENUMDOC
1771 Reloc types used for i960/b.out.
1772
1773ENUM
1774 BFD_RELOC_NONE
1775ENUMX
1776 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_WDISP22
1777ENUMX
1778 BFD_RELOC_SPARC22
1779ENUMX
1780 BFD_RELOC_SPARC13
1781ENUMX
1782 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_GOT10
1783ENUMX
1784 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_GOT13
1785ENUMX
1786 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_GOT22
1787ENUMX
1788 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PC10
1789ENUMX
1790 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PC22
1791ENUMX
1792 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_WPLT30
1793ENUMX
1794 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_COPY
1795ENUMX
1796 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_GLOB_DAT
1797ENUMX
1798 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_JMP_SLOT
1799ENUMX
1800 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_RELATIVE
0f2712ed
NC
1801ENUMX
1802 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_UA16
252b5132
RH
1803ENUMX
1804 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_UA32
0f2712ed
NC
1805ENUMX
1806 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_UA64
252b5132
RH
1807ENUMDOC
1808 SPARC ELF relocations. There is probably some overlap with other
1809 relocation types already defined.
1810
1811ENUM
1812 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_BASE13
1813ENUMX
1814 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_BASE22
1815ENUMDOC
1816 I think these are specific to SPARC a.out (e.g., Sun 4).
1817
1818ENUMEQ
1819 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_64
1820 BFD_RELOC_64
1821ENUMX
1822 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_10
1823ENUMX
1824 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_11
1825ENUMX
1826 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_OLO10
1827ENUMX
1828 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_HH22
1829ENUMX
1830 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_HM10
1831ENUMX
1832 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_LM22
1833ENUMX
1834 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PC_HH22
1835ENUMX
1836 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PC_HM10
1837ENUMX
1838 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PC_LM22
1839ENUMX
1840 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_WDISP16
1841ENUMX
1842 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_WDISP19
1843ENUMX
1844 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_7
1845ENUMX
1846 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_6
1847ENUMX
1848 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_5
1849ENUMEQX
1850 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_DISP64
1851 BFD_RELOC_64_PCREL
bd5e6e7e
JJ
1852ENUMX
1853 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PLT32
252b5132
RH
1854ENUMX
1855 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_PLT64
1856ENUMX
1857 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_HIX22
1858ENUMX
1859 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_LOX10
1860ENUMX
1861 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_H44
1862ENUMX
1863 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_M44
1864ENUMX
1865 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_L44
1866ENUMX
1867 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_REGISTER
1868ENUMDOC
1869 SPARC64 relocations
1870
1871ENUM
1872 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_REV32
1873ENUMDOC
1874 SPARC little endian relocation
b9734f35
JJ
1875ENUM
1876 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_GD_HI22
1877ENUMX
1878 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_GD_LO10
1879ENUMX
1880 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_GD_ADD
1881ENUMX
1882 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_GD_CALL
1883ENUMX
1884 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDM_HI22
1885ENUMX
1886 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDM_LO10
1887ENUMX
1888 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDM_ADD
1889ENUMX
1890 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDM_CALL
1891ENUMX
1892 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDO_HIX22
1893ENUMX
1894 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDO_LOX10
1895ENUMX
1896 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LDO_ADD
1897ENUMX
1898 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_IE_HI22
1899ENUMX
1900 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_IE_LO10
1901ENUMX
1902 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_IE_LD
1903ENUMX
1904 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_IE_LDX
1905ENUMX
1906 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_IE_ADD
1907ENUMX
1908 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LE_HIX22
1909ENUMX
1910 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_LE_LOX10
1911ENUMX
1912 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_DTPMOD32
1913ENUMX
1914 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_DTPMOD64
1915ENUMX
1916 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_DTPOFF32
1917ENUMX
1918 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_DTPOFF64
1919ENUMX
1920 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_TPOFF32
1921ENUMX
1922 BFD_RELOC_SPARC_TLS_TPOFF64
1923ENUMDOC
1924 SPARC TLS relocations
252b5132
RH
1925
1926ENUM
1927 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GPDISP_HI16
1928ENUMDOC
1929 Alpha ECOFF and ELF relocations. Some of these treat the symbol or
1930 "addend" in some special way.
1931 For GPDISP_HI16 ("gpdisp") relocations, the symbol is ignored when
1932 writing; when reading, it will be the absolute section symbol. The
1933 addend is the displacement in bytes of the "lda" instruction from
1934 the "ldah" instruction (which is at the address of this reloc).
1935ENUM
1936 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GPDISP_LO16
1937ENUMDOC
1938 For GPDISP_LO16 ("ignore") relocations, the symbol is handled as
1939 with GPDISP_HI16 relocs. The addend is ignored when writing the
1940 relocations out, and is filled in with the file's GP value on
1941 reading, for convenience.
1942
1943ENUM
1944 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GPDISP
1945ENUMDOC
1946 The ELF GPDISP relocation is exactly the same as the GPDISP_HI16
1947 relocation except that there is no accompanying GPDISP_LO16
1948 relocation.
1949
1950ENUM
1951 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_LITERAL
1952ENUMX
1953 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_ELF_LITERAL
1954ENUMX
1955 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_LITUSE
1956ENUMDOC
1957 The Alpha LITERAL/LITUSE relocs are produced by a symbol reference;
1958 the assembler turns it into a LDQ instruction to load the address of
1959 the symbol, and then fills in a register in the real instruction.
1960
1961 The LITERAL reloc, at the LDQ instruction, refers to the .lita
1962 section symbol. The addend is ignored when writing, but is filled
1963 in with the file's GP value on reading, for convenience, as with the
1964 GPDISP_LO16 reloc.
1965
1966 The ELF_LITERAL reloc is somewhere between 16_GOTOFF and GPDISP_LO16.
1967 It should refer to the symbol to be referenced, as with 16_GOTOFF,
1968 but it generates output not based on the position within the .got
1969 section, but relative to the GP value chosen for the file during the
1970 final link stage.
1971
1972 The LITUSE reloc, on the instruction using the loaded address, gives
1973 information to the linker that it might be able to use to optimize
1974 away some literal section references. The symbol is ignored (read
1975 as the absolute section symbol), and the "addend" indicates the type
1976 of instruction using the register:
1977 1 - "memory" fmt insn
1978 2 - byte-manipulation (byte offset reg)
1979 3 - jsr (target of branch)
1980
252b5132
RH
1981ENUM
1982 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_HINT
1983ENUMDOC
1984 The HINT relocation indicates a value that should be filled into the
1985 "hint" field of a jmp/jsr/ret instruction, for possible branch-
1986 prediction logic which may be provided on some processors.
1987
1988ENUM
1989 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_LINKAGE
1990ENUMDOC
1991 The LINKAGE relocation outputs a linkage pair in the object file,
1992 which is filled by the linker.
1993
1994ENUM
1995 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_CODEADDR
1996ENUMDOC
1997 The CODEADDR relocation outputs a STO_CA in the object file,
1998 which is filled by the linker.
1999
dfe57ca0
RH
2000ENUM
2001 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GPREL_HI16
2002ENUMX
2003 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GPREL_LO16
2004ENUMDOC
dc810e39
AM
2005 The GPREL_HI/LO relocations together form a 32-bit offset from the
2006 GP register.
dfe57ca0 2007
7793f4d0
RH
2008ENUM
2009 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_BRSGP
2010ENUMDOC
2011 Like BFD_RELOC_23_PCREL_S2, except that the source and target must
b34976b6 2012 share a common GP, and the target address is adjusted for
7793f4d0
RH
2013 STO_ALPHA_STD_GPLOAD.
2014
3765b1be
RH
2015ENUM
2016 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_TLSGD
2017ENUMX
2018 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_TLSLDM
2019ENUMX
2020 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_DTPMOD64
2021ENUMX
2022 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GOTDTPREL16
2023ENUMX
2024 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_DTPREL64
2025ENUMX
2026 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_DTPREL_HI16
2027ENUMX
2028 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_DTPREL_LO16
2029ENUMX
2030 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_DTPREL16
2031ENUMX
2032 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_GOTTPREL16
2033ENUMX
2034 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_TPREL64
2035ENUMX
2036 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_TPREL_HI16
2037ENUMX
2038 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_TPREL_LO16
2039ENUMX
2040 BFD_RELOC_ALPHA_TPREL16
2041ENUMDOC
2042 Alpha thread-local storage relocations.
2043
252b5132
RH
2044ENUM
2045 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_JMP
2046ENUMDOC
2047 Bits 27..2 of the relocation address shifted right 2 bits;
2048 simple reloc otherwise.
2049
2050ENUM
2051 BFD_RELOC_MIPS16_JMP
2052ENUMDOC
2053 The MIPS16 jump instruction.
2054
2055ENUM
2056 BFD_RELOC_MIPS16_GPREL
2057ENUMDOC
2058 MIPS16 GP relative reloc.
2059
2060ENUM
2061 BFD_RELOC_HI16
2062ENUMDOC
2063 High 16 bits of 32-bit value; simple reloc.
2064ENUM
2065 BFD_RELOC_HI16_S
2066ENUMDOC
2067 High 16 bits of 32-bit value but the low 16 bits will be sign
2068 extended and added to form the final result. If the low 16
2069 bits form a negative number, we need to add one to the high value
2070 to compensate for the borrow when the low bits are added.
2071ENUM
2072 BFD_RELOC_LO16
2073ENUMDOC
2074 Low 16 bits.
2075ENUM
2076 BFD_RELOC_PCREL_HI16_S
2077ENUMDOC
2078 Like BFD_RELOC_HI16_S, but PC relative.
2079ENUM
2080 BFD_RELOC_PCREL_LO16
2081ENUMDOC
2082 Like BFD_RELOC_LO16, but PC relative.
0b25d3e6 2083
252b5132
RH
2084ENUM
2085 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_LITERAL
2086ENUMDOC
2087 Relocation against a MIPS literal section.
2088
2089ENUM
2090 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_GOT16
2091ENUMX
2092 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_CALL16
252b5132
RH
2093ENUMX
2094 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_GOT_HI16
2095ENUMX
2096 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_GOT_LO16
2097ENUMX
2098 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_CALL_HI16
2099ENUMX
2100 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_CALL_LO16
3f830999
MM
2101ENUMX
2102 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_SUB
2103ENUMX
2104 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_GOT_PAGE
2105ENUMX
2106 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_GOT_OFST
2107ENUMX
2108 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_GOT_DISP
c2feb664
NC
2109ENUMX
2110 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_SHIFT5
2111ENUMX
2112 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_SHIFT6
2113ENUMX
2114 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_INSERT_A
2115ENUMX
2116 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_INSERT_B
2117ENUMX
2118 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_DELETE
2119ENUMX
2120 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_HIGHEST
2121ENUMX
2122 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_HIGHER
2123ENUMX
2124 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_SCN_DISP
2125ENUMX
2126 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_REL16
2127ENUMX
2128 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_RELGOT
2129ENUMX
2130 BFD_RELOC_MIPS_JALR
252b5132 2131COMMENT
4e5ba5b7
DB
2132ENUM
2133 BFD_RELOC_FRV_LABEL16
2134ENUMX
2135 BFD_RELOC_FRV_LABEL24
2136ENUMX
2137 BFD_RELOC_FRV_LO16
2138ENUMX
2139 BFD_RELOC_FRV_HI16
2140ENUMX
2141 BFD_RELOC_FRV_GPREL12
2142ENUMX
2143 BFD_RELOC_FRV_GPRELU12
2144ENUMX
2145 BFD_RELOC_FRV_GPREL32
2146ENUMX
2147 BFD_RELOC_FRV_GPRELHI
2148ENUMX
2149 BFD_RELOC_FRV_GPRELLO
2150ENUMDOC
2151 Fujitsu Frv Relocations.
2152COMMENT
0b25d3e6 2153COMMENT
252b5132
RH
2154ENUMDOC
2155 MIPS ELF relocations.
2156
2157COMMENT
2158
2159ENUM
2160 BFD_RELOC_386_GOT32
2161ENUMX
2162 BFD_RELOC_386_PLT32
2163ENUMX
2164 BFD_RELOC_386_COPY
2165ENUMX
2166 BFD_RELOC_386_GLOB_DAT
2167ENUMX
2168 BFD_RELOC_386_JUMP_SLOT
2169ENUMX
2170 BFD_RELOC_386_RELATIVE
2171ENUMX
2172 BFD_RELOC_386_GOTOFF
2173ENUMX
2174 BFD_RELOC_386_GOTPC
37e55690
JJ
2175ENUMX
2176 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_TPOFF
2177ENUMX
2178 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_IE
2179ENUMX
2180 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_GOTIE
13ae64f3
JJ
2181ENUMX
2182 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_LE
2183ENUMX
2184 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_GD
2185ENUMX
2186 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_LDM
2187ENUMX
2188 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_LDO_32
2189ENUMX
2190 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_IE_32
2191ENUMX
2192 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_LE_32
2193ENUMX
2194 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_DTPMOD32
2195ENUMX
2196 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_DTPOFF32
2197ENUMX
2198 BFD_RELOC_386_TLS_TPOFF32
252b5132
RH
2199ENUMDOC
2200 i386/elf relocations
2201
8d88c4ca
NC
2202ENUM
2203 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_GOT32
2204ENUMX
2205 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_PLT32
2206ENUMX
2207 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_COPY
2208ENUMX
2209 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_GLOB_DAT
2210ENUMX
2211 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_JUMP_SLOT
2212ENUMX
2213 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_RELATIVE
2214ENUMX
2215 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_GOTPCREL
2216ENUMX
2217 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_32S
bffbf940
JJ
2218ENUMX
2219 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_DTPMOD64
2220ENUMX
2221 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_DTPOFF64
2222ENUMX
2223 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_TPOFF64
2224ENUMX
2225 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_TLSGD
2226ENUMX
2227 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_TLSLD
2228ENUMX
2229 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_DTPOFF32
2230ENUMX
2231 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_GOTTPOFF
2232ENUMX
2233 BFD_RELOC_X86_64_TPOFF32
8d88c4ca
NC
2234ENUMDOC
2235 x86-64/elf relocations
2236
252b5132
RH
2237ENUM
2238 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_IMM_8
2239ENUMX
2240 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_IMM_16
2241ENUMX
2242 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_IMM_32
2243ENUMX
2244 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_IMM_8_PCREL
2245ENUMX
2246 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_IMM_16_PCREL
2247ENUMX
2248 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_IMM_32_PCREL
2249ENUMX
2250 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_DISP_8
2251ENUMX
2252 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_DISP_16
2253ENUMX
2254 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_DISP_32
2255ENUMX
2256 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_DISP_8_PCREL
2257ENUMX
2258 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_DISP_16_PCREL
2259ENUMX
2260 BFD_RELOC_NS32K_DISP_32_PCREL
2261ENUMDOC
2262 ns32k relocations
2263
e135f41b
NC
2264ENUM
2265 BFD_RELOC_PDP11_DISP_8_PCREL
2266ENUMX
2267 BFD_RELOC_PDP11_DISP_6_PCREL
2268ENUMDOC
2269 PDP11 relocations
2270
0bcb993b
ILT
2271ENUM
2272 BFD_RELOC_PJ_CODE_HI16
2273ENUMX
2274 BFD_RELOC_PJ_CODE_LO16
2275ENUMX
2276 BFD_RELOC_PJ_CODE_DIR16
2277ENUMX
2278 BFD_RELOC_PJ_CODE_DIR32
2279ENUMX
2280 BFD_RELOC_PJ_CODE_REL16
2281ENUMX
2282 BFD_RELOC_PJ_CODE_REL32
2283ENUMDOC
2284 Picojava relocs. Not all of these appear in object files.
88b6bae0 2285
252b5132
RH
2286ENUM
2287 BFD_RELOC_PPC_B26
2288ENUMX
2289 BFD_RELOC_PPC_BA26
2290ENUMX
2291 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TOC16
2292ENUMX
2293 BFD_RELOC_PPC_B16
2294ENUMX
2295 BFD_RELOC_PPC_B16_BRTAKEN
2296ENUMX
2297 BFD_RELOC_PPC_B16_BRNTAKEN
2298ENUMX
2299 BFD_RELOC_PPC_BA16
2300ENUMX
2301 BFD_RELOC_PPC_BA16_BRTAKEN
2302ENUMX
2303 BFD_RELOC_PPC_BA16_BRNTAKEN
2304ENUMX
2305 BFD_RELOC_PPC_COPY
2306ENUMX
2307 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GLOB_DAT
2308ENUMX
2309 BFD_RELOC_PPC_JMP_SLOT
2310ENUMX
2311 BFD_RELOC_PPC_RELATIVE
2312ENUMX
2313 BFD_RELOC_PPC_LOCAL24PC
2314ENUMX
2315 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_NADDR32
2316ENUMX
2317 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_NADDR16
2318ENUMX
2319 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_NADDR16_LO
2320ENUMX
2321 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_NADDR16_HI
2322ENUMX
2323 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_NADDR16_HA
2324ENUMX
2325 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_SDAI16
2326ENUMX
2327 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_SDA2I16
2328ENUMX
2329 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_SDA2REL
2330ENUMX
2331 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_SDA21
2332ENUMX
2333 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_MRKREF
2334ENUMX
2335 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_RELSEC16
2336ENUMX
2337 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_RELST_LO
2338ENUMX
2339 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_RELST_HI
2340ENUMX
2341 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_RELST_HA
2342ENUMX
2343 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_BIT_FLD
2344ENUMX
2345 BFD_RELOC_PPC_EMB_RELSDA
5bd4f169
AM
2346ENUMX
2347 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_HIGHER
2348ENUMX
2349 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_HIGHER_S
2350ENUMX
2351 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_HIGHEST
2352ENUMX
2353 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_HIGHEST_S
2354ENUMX
2355 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TOC16_LO
2356ENUMX
2357 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TOC16_HI
2358ENUMX
2359 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TOC16_HA
2360ENUMX
2361 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TOC
2362ENUMX
dc810e39 2363 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLTGOT16
5bd4f169
AM
2364ENUMX
2365 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLTGOT16_LO
2366ENUMX
2367 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLTGOT16_HI
2368ENUMX
2369 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLTGOT16_HA
2370ENUMX
2371 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_ADDR16_DS
2372ENUMX
2373 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_ADDR16_LO_DS
2374ENUMX
2375 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_GOT16_DS
2376ENUMX
2377 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_GOT16_LO_DS
2378ENUMX
2379 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLT16_LO_DS
2380ENUMX
2381 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_SECTOFF_DS
2382ENUMX
2383 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_SECTOFF_LO_DS
2384ENUMX
2385 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TOC16_DS
2386ENUMX
2387 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TOC16_LO_DS
2388ENUMX
2389 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLTGOT16_DS
2390ENUMX
2391 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_PLTGOT16_LO_DS
252b5132
RH
2392ENUMDOC
2393 Power(rs6000) and PowerPC relocations.
411e1bfb
AM
2394
2395ENUM
2396 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TLS
2397ENUMX
2398 BFD_RELOC_PPC_DTPMOD
2399ENUMX
2400 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TPREL16
2401ENUMX
2402 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TPREL16_LO
2403ENUMX
2404 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TPREL16_HI
2405ENUMX
2406 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TPREL16_HA
2407ENUMX
2408 BFD_RELOC_PPC_TPREL
2409ENUMX
2410 BFD_RELOC_PPC_DTPREL16
2411ENUMX
2412 BFD_RELOC_PPC_DTPREL16_LO
2413ENUMX
2414 BFD_RELOC_PPC_DTPREL16_HI
2415ENUMX
2416 BFD_RELOC_PPC_DTPREL16_HA
2417ENUMX
2418 BFD_RELOC_PPC_DTPREL
2419ENUMX
2420 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSGD16
2421ENUMX
2422 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSGD16_LO
2423ENUMX
2424 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSGD16_HI
2425ENUMX
2426 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSGD16_HA
2427ENUMX
2428 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSLD16
2429ENUMX
2430 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSLD16_LO
2431ENUMX
2432 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSLD16_HI
2433ENUMX
2434 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TLSLD16_HA
2435ENUMX
2436 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TPREL16
2437ENUMX
2438 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TPREL16_LO
2439ENUMX
2440 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TPREL16_HI
2441ENUMX
2442 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_TPREL16_HA
2443ENUMX
2444 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_DTPREL16
2445ENUMX
2446 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_DTPREL16_LO
2447ENUMX
2448 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_DTPREL16_HI
2449ENUMX
2450 BFD_RELOC_PPC_GOT_DTPREL16_HA
2451ENUMX
2452 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TPREL16_DS
2453ENUMX
2454 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TPREL16_LO_DS
2455ENUMX
2456 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGHER
2457ENUMX
2458 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGHERA
2459ENUMX
2460 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGHEST
2461ENUMX
2462 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_TPREL16_HIGHESTA
2463ENUMX
2464 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_DTPREL16_DS
2465ENUMX
2466 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_DTPREL16_LO_DS
2467ENUMX
2468 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGHER
2469ENUMX
2470 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGHERA
2471ENUMX
2472 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGHEST
2473ENUMX
2474 BFD_RELOC_PPC64_DTPREL16_HIGHESTA
2475ENUMDOC
2476 PowerPC and PowerPC64 thread-local storage relocations.
252b5132 2477
5b93d8bb
AM
2478ENUM
2479 BFD_RELOC_I370_D12
2480ENUMDOC
2481 IBM 370/390 relocations
2482
252b5132
RH
2483ENUM
2484 BFD_RELOC_CTOR
2485ENUMDOC
2486 The type of reloc used to build a contructor table - at the moment
2487 probably a 32 bit wide absolute relocation, but the target can choose.
2488 It generally does map to one of the other relocation types.
2489
2490ENUM
2491 BFD_RELOC_ARM_PCREL_BRANCH
2492ENUMDOC
2493 ARM 26 bit pc-relative branch. The lowest two bits must be zero and are
2494 not stored in the instruction.
dfc5f959
NC
2495ENUM
2496 BFD_RELOC_ARM_PCREL_BLX
2497ENUMDOC
2498 ARM 26 bit pc-relative branch. The lowest bit must be zero and is
2499 not stored in the instruction. The 2nd lowest bit comes from a 1 bit
2500 field in the instruction.
2501ENUM
2502 BFD_RELOC_THUMB_PCREL_BLX
2503ENUMDOC
2504 Thumb 22 bit pc-relative branch. The lowest bit must be zero and is
2505 not stored in the instruction. The 2nd lowest bit comes from a 1 bit
2506 field in the instruction.
252b5132
RH
2507ENUM
2508 BFD_RELOC_ARM_IMMEDIATE
752149a0
NC
2509ENUMX
2510 BFD_RELOC_ARM_ADRL_IMMEDIATE
252b5132
RH
2511ENUMX
2512 BFD_RELOC_ARM_OFFSET_IMM
2513ENUMX
2514 BFD_RELOC_ARM_SHIFT_IMM
2515ENUMX
2516 BFD_RELOC_ARM_SWI
2517ENUMX
2518 BFD_RELOC_ARM_MULTI
2519ENUMX
2520 BFD_RELOC_ARM_CP_OFF_IMM
e16bb312
NC
2521ENUMX
2522 BFD_RELOC_ARM_CP_OFF_IMM_S2
252b5132
RH
2523ENUMX
2524 BFD_RELOC_ARM_ADR_IMM
2525ENUMX
2526 BFD_RELOC_ARM_LDR_IMM
2527ENUMX
2528 BFD_RELOC_ARM_LITERAL
2529ENUMX
2530 BFD_RELOC_ARM_IN_POOL
2531ENUMX
2532 BFD_RELOC_ARM_OFFSET_IMM8
2533ENUMX
2534 BFD_RELOC_ARM_HWLITERAL
2535ENUMX
2536 BFD_RELOC_ARM_THUMB_ADD
2537ENUMX
2538 BFD_RELOC_ARM_THUMB_IMM
2539ENUMX
2540 BFD_RELOC_ARM_THUMB_SHIFT
2541ENUMX
2542 BFD_RELOC_ARM_THUMB_OFFSET
2543ENUMX
2544 BFD_RELOC_ARM_GOT12
2545ENUMX
2546 BFD_RELOC_ARM_GOT32
2547ENUMX
2548 BFD_RELOC_ARM_JUMP_SLOT
2549ENUMX
2550 BFD_RELOC_ARM_COPY
2551ENUMX
2552 BFD_RELOC_ARM_GLOB_DAT
2553ENUMX
2554 BFD_RELOC_ARM_PLT32
2555ENUMX
2556 BFD_RELOC_ARM_RELATIVE
2557ENUMX
2558 BFD_RELOC_ARM_GOTOFF
2559ENUMX
2560 BFD_RELOC_ARM_GOTPC
2561ENUMDOC
2562 These relocs are only used within the ARM assembler. They are not
2563 (at present) written to any object files.
2564
2565ENUM
2566 BFD_RELOC_SH_PCDISP8BY2
2567ENUMX
2568 BFD_RELOC_SH_PCDISP12BY2
2569ENUMX
2570 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM4
2571ENUMX
2572 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM4BY2
2573ENUMX
2574 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM4BY4
2575ENUMX
2576 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM8
2577ENUMX
2578 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM8BY2
2579ENUMX
2580 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM8BY4
2581ENUMX
2582 BFD_RELOC_SH_PCRELIMM8BY2
2583ENUMX
2584 BFD_RELOC_SH_PCRELIMM8BY4
2585ENUMX
2586 BFD_RELOC_SH_SWITCH16
2587ENUMX
2588 BFD_RELOC_SH_SWITCH32
2589ENUMX
2590 BFD_RELOC_SH_USES
2591ENUMX
2592 BFD_RELOC_SH_COUNT
2593ENUMX
2594 BFD_RELOC_SH_ALIGN
2595ENUMX
2596 BFD_RELOC_SH_CODE
2597ENUMX
2598 BFD_RELOC_SH_DATA
2599ENUMX
2600 BFD_RELOC_SH_LABEL
015551fc
JR
2601ENUMX
2602 BFD_RELOC_SH_LOOP_START
2603ENUMX
2604 BFD_RELOC_SH_LOOP_END
3d96075c
L
2605ENUMX
2606 BFD_RELOC_SH_COPY
2607ENUMX
2608 BFD_RELOC_SH_GLOB_DAT
2609ENUMX
2610 BFD_RELOC_SH_JMP_SLOT
2611ENUMX
2612 BFD_RELOC_SH_RELATIVE
2613ENUMX
2614 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPC
eb1e0e80
NC
2615ENUMX
2616 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOT_LOW16
2617ENUMX
2618 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOT_MEDLOW16
2619ENUMX
2620 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOT_MEDHI16
2621ENUMX
2622 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOT_HI16
2623ENUMX
2624 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT_LOW16
2625ENUMX
2626 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT_MEDLOW16
2627ENUMX
2628 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT_MEDHI16
2629ENUMX
2630 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT_HI16
2631ENUMX
2632 BFD_RELOC_SH_PLT_LOW16
2633ENUMX
2634 BFD_RELOC_SH_PLT_MEDLOW16
2635ENUMX
2636 BFD_RELOC_SH_PLT_MEDHI16
2637ENUMX
2638 BFD_RELOC_SH_PLT_HI16
2639ENUMX
2640 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTOFF_LOW16
2641ENUMX
2642 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTOFF_MEDLOW16
2643ENUMX
2644 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTOFF_MEDHI16
2645ENUMX
2646 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTOFF_HI16
2647ENUMX
2648 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPC_LOW16
2649ENUMX
2650 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPC_MEDLOW16
2651ENUMX
2652 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPC_MEDHI16
2653ENUMX
2654 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPC_HI16
2655ENUMX
2656 BFD_RELOC_SH_COPY64
2657ENUMX
2658 BFD_RELOC_SH_GLOB_DAT64
2659ENUMX
2660 BFD_RELOC_SH_JMP_SLOT64
2661ENUMX
2662 BFD_RELOC_SH_RELATIVE64
2663ENUMX
2664 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOT10BY4
2665ENUMX
2666 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOT10BY8
2667ENUMX
2668 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT10BY4
2669ENUMX
2670 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT10BY8
2671ENUMX
2672 BFD_RELOC_SH_GOTPLT32
2673ENUMX
2674 BFD_RELOC_SH_SHMEDIA_CODE
2675ENUMX
2676 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMU5
2677ENUMX
2678 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS6
2679ENUMX
2680 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS6BY32
2681ENUMX
2682 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMU6
2683ENUMX
2684 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS10
2685ENUMX
2686 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS10BY2
2687ENUMX
2688 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS10BY4
2689ENUMX
2690 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS10BY8
2691ENUMX
2692 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMS16
2693ENUMX
2694 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMMU16
2695ENUMX
2696 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_LOW16
2697ENUMX
2698 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_LOW16_PCREL
2699ENUMX
2700 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_MEDLOW16
2701ENUMX
2702 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_MEDLOW16_PCREL
2703ENUMX
2704 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_MEDHI16
2705ENUMX
2706 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_MEDHI16_PCREL
2707ENUMX
2708 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_HI16
2709ENUMX
2710 BFD_RELOC_SH_IMM_HI16_PCREL
2711ENUMX
2712 BFD_RELOC_SH_PT_16
3376eaf5
KK
2713ENUMX
2714 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_GD_32
2715ENUMX
2716 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_LD_32
2717ENUMX
2718 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_LDO_32
2719ENUMX
2720 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_IE_32
2721ENUMX
2722 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_LE_32
2723ENUMX
2724 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_DTPMOD32
2725ENUMX
2726 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_DTPOFF32
2727ENUMX
2728 BFD_RELOC_SH_TLS_TPOFF32
252b5132 2729ENUMDOC
c2dcd04e 2730 Renesas SH relocs. Not all of these appear in object files.
252b5132
RH
2731
2732ENUM
2733 BFD_RELOC_THUMB_PCREL_BRANCH9
2734ENUMX
2735 BFD_RELOC_THUMB_PCREL_BRANCH12
2736ENUMX
2737 BFD_RELOC_THUMB_PCREL_BRANCH23
2738ENUMDOC
2739 Thumb 23-, 12- and 9-bit pc-relative branches. The lowest bit must
2740 be zero and is not stored in the instruction.
2741
2742ENUM
2743 BFD_RELOC_ARC_B22_PCREL
2744ENUMDOC
0d2bcfaf 2745 ARC Cores relocs.
252b5132
RH
2746 ARC 22 bit pc-relative branch. The lowest two bits must be zero and are
2747 not stored in the instruction. The high 20 bits are installed in bits 26
2748 through 7 of the instruction.
2749ENUM
2750 BFD_RELOC_ARC_B26
2751ENUMDOC
2752 ARC 26 bit absolute branch. The lowest two bits must be zero and are not
2753 stored in the instruction. The high 24 bits are installed in bits 23
2754 through 0.
2755
2756ENUM
2757 BFD_RELOC_D10V_10_PCREL_R
2758ENUMDOC
2759 Mitsubishi D10V relocs.
2760 This is a 10-bit reloc with the right 2 bits
2761 assumed to be 0.
2762ENUM
2763 BFD_RELOC_D10V_10_PCREL_L
2764ENUMDOC
2765 Mitsubishi D10V relocs.
2766 This is a 10-bit reloc with the right 2 bits
2767 assumed to be 0. This is the same as the previous reloc
2768 except it is in the left container, i.e.,
2769 shifted left 15 bits.
2770ENUM
2771 BFD_RELOC_D10V_18
2772ENUMDOC
2773 This is an 18-bit reloc with the right 2 bits
2774 assumed to be 0.
2775ENUM
2776 BFD_RELOC_D10V_18_PCREL
2777ENUMDOC
2778 This is an 18-bit reloc with the right 2 bits
2779 assumed to be 0.
2780
2781ENUM
2782 BFD_RELOC_D30V_6
2783ENUMDOC
2784 Mitsubishi D30V relocs.
2785 This is a 6-bit absolute reloc.
2786ENUM
2787 BFD_RELOC_D30V_9_PCREL
2788ENUMDOC
88b6bae0
AM
2789 This is a 6-bit pc-relative reloc with
2790 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0.
252b5132
RH
2791ENUM
2792 BFD_RELOC_D30V_9_PCREL_R
2793ENUMDOC
88b6bae0 2794 This is a 6-bit pc-relative reloc with
252b5132
RH
2795 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0. Same
2796 as the previous reloc but on the right side
88b6bae0 2797 of the container.
252b5132
RH
2798ENUM
2799 BFD_RELOC_D30V_15
2800ENUMDOC
88b6bae0
AM
2801 This is a 12-bit absolute reloc with the
2802 right 3 bitsassumed to be 0.
252b5132
RH
2803ENUM
2804 BFD_RELOC_D30V_15_PCREL
2805ENUMDOC
88b6bae0
AM
2806 This is a 12-bit pc-relative reloc with
2807 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0.
252b5132
RH
2808ENUM
2809 BFD_RELOC_D30V_15_PCREL_R
2810ENUMDOC
88b6bae0 2811 This is a 12-bit pc-relative reloc with
252b5132
RH
2812 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0. Same
2813 as the previous reloc but on the right side
88b6bae0 2814 of the container.
252b5132
RH
2815ENUM
2816 BFD_RELOC_D30V_21
2817ENUMDOC
88b6bae0 2818 This is an 18-bit absolute reloc with
252b5132
RH
2819 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0.
2820ENUM
2821 BFD_RELOC_D30V_21_PCREL
2822ENUMDOC
88b6bae0 2823 This is an 18-bit pc-relative reloc with
252b5132
RH
2824 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0.
2825ENUM
2826 BFD_RELOC_D30V_21_PCREL_R
2827ENUMDOC
88b6bae0 2828 This is an 18-bit pc-relative reloc with
252b5132
RH
2829 the right 3 bits assumed to be 0. Same
2830 as the previous reloc but on the right side
2831 of the container.
2832ENUM
2833 BFD_RELOC_D30V_32
2834ENUMDOC
2835 This is a 32-bit absolute reloc.
2836ENUM
2837 BFD_RELOC_D30V_32_PCREL
2838ENUMDOC
2839 This is a 32-bit pc-relative reloc.
2840
d172d4ba
NC
2841ENUM
2842 BFD_RELOC_DLX_HI16_S
2843ENUMDOC
2844 DLX relocs
2845ENUM
2846 BFD_RELOC_DLX_LO16
2847ENUMDOC
2848 DLX relocs
2849ENUM
2850 BFD_RELOC_DLX_JMP26
2851ENUMDOC
2852 DLX relocs
2853
252b5132
RH
2854ENUM
2855 BFD_RELOC_M32R_24
2856ENUMDOC
26597c86 2857 Renesas M32R (formerly Mitsubishi M32R) relocs.
252b5132
RH
2858 This is a 24 bit absolute address.
2859ENUM
2860 BFD_RELOC_M32R_10_PCREL
2861ENUMDOC
2862 This is a 10-bit pc-relative reloc with the right 2 bits assumed to be 0.
2863ENUM
2864 BFD_RELOC_M32R_18_PCREL
2865ENUMDOC
2866 This is an 18-bit reloc with the right 2 bits assumed to be 0.
2867ENUM
2868 BFD_RELOC_M32R_26_PCREL
2869ENUMDOC
2870 This is a 26-bit reloc with the right 2 bits assumed to be 0.
2871ENUM
2872 BFD_RELOC_M32R_HI16_ULO
2873ENUMDOC
2874 This is a 16-bit reloc containing the high 16 bits of an address
2875 used when the lower 16 bits are treated as unsigned.
2876ENUM
2877 BFD_RELOC_M32R_HI16_SLO
2878ENUMDOC
2879 This is a 16-bit reloc containing the high 16 bits of an address
2880 used when the lower 16 bits are treated as signed.
2881ENUM
2882 BFD_RELOC_M32R_LO16
2883ENUMDOC
2884 This is a 16-bit reloc containing the lower 16 bits of an address.
2885ENUM
2886 BFD_RELOC_M32R_SDA16
2887ENUMDOC
2888 This is a 16-bit reloc containing the small data area offset for use in
2889 add3, load, and store instructions.
2890
2891ENUM
2892 BFD_RELOC_V850_9_PCREL
2893ENUMDOC
2894 This is a 9-bit reloc
2895ENUM
2896 BFD_RELOC_V850_22_PCREL
2897ENUMDOC
2898 This is a 22-bit reloc
2899
2900ENUM
2901 BFD_RELOC_V850_SDA_16_16_OFFSET
2902ENUMDOC
2903 This is a 16 bit offset from the short data area pointer.
2904ENUM
2905 BFD_RELOC_V850_SDA_15_16_OFFSET
2906ENUMDOC
2907 This is a 16 bit offset (of which only 15 bits are used) from the
2908 short data area pointer.
2909ENUM
2910 BFD_RELOC_V850_ZDA_16_16_OFFSET
2911ENUMDOC
2912 This is a 16 bit offset from the zero data area pointer.
2913ENUM
2914 BFD_RELOC_V850_ZDA_15_16_OFFSET
2915ENUMDOC
2916 This is a 16 bit offset (of which only 15 bits are used) from the
2917 zero data area pointer.
2918ENUM
2919 BFD_RELOC_V850_TDA_6_8_OFFSET
2920ENUMDOC
2921 This is an 8 bit offset (of which only 6 bits are used) from the
2922 tiny data area pointer.
2923ENUM
2924 BFD_RELOC_V850_TDA_7_8_OFFSET
2925ENUMDOC
2926 This is an 8bit offset (of which only 7 bits are used) from the tiny
2927 data area pointer.
2928ENUM
2929 BFD_RELOC_V850_TDA_7_7_OFFSET
2930ENUMDOC
2931 This is a 7 bit offset from the tiny data area pointer.
2932ENUM
2933 BFD_RELOC_V850_TDA_16_16_OFFSET
2934ENUMDOC
2935 This is a 16 bit offset from the tiny data area pointer.
2936COMMENT
2937ENUM
2938 BFD_RELOC_V850_TDA_4_5_OFFSET
2939ENUMDOC
2940 This is a 5 bit offset (of which only 4 bits are used) from the tiny
2941 data area pointer.
2942ENUM
2943 BFD_RELOC_V850_TDA_4_4_OFFSET
2944ENUMDOC
2945 This is a 4 bit offset from the tiny data area pointer.
2946ENUM
2947 BFD_RELOC_V850_SDA_16_16_SPLIT_OFFSET
2948ENUMDOC
2949 This is a 16 bit offset from the short data area pointer, with the
2950 bits placed non-contigously in the instruction.
2951ENUM
2952 BFD_RELOC_V850_ZDA_16_16_SPLIT_OFFSET
2953ENUMDOC
2954 This is a 16 bit offset from the zero data area pointer, with the
2955 bits placed non-contigously in the instruction.
2956ENUM
2957 BFD_RELOC_V850_CALLT_6_7_OFFSET
2958ENUMDOC
2959 This is a 6 bit offset from the call table base pointer.
2960ENUM
2961 BFD_RELOC_V850_CALLT_16_16_OFFSET
2962ENUMDOC
2963 This is a 16 bit offset from the call table base pointer.
86aba9db
NC
2964ENUM
2965 BFD_RELOC_V850_LONGCALL
2966ENUMDOC
2967 Used for relaxing indirect function calls.
2968ENUM
2969 BFD_RELOC_V850_LONGJUMP
2970ENUMDOC
2971 Used for relaxing indirect jumps.
2972ENUM
2973 BFD_RELOC_V850_ALIGN
2974ENUMDOC
2975 Used to maintain alignment whilst relaxing.
252b5132
RH
2976ENUM
2977 BFD_RELOC_MN10300_32_PCREL
2978ENUMDOC
2979 This is a 32bit pcrel reloc for the mn10300, offset by two bytes in the
2980 instruction.
2981ENUM
2982 BFD_RELOC_MN10300_16_PCREL
2983ENUMDOC
2984 This is a 16bit pcrel reloc for the mn10300, offset by two bytes in the
2985 instruction.
2986
2987ENUM
2988 BFD_RELOC_TIC30_LDP
2989ENUMDOC
2990 This is a 8bit DP reloc for the tms320c30, where the most
2991 significant 8 bits of a 24 bit word are placed into the least
2992 significant 8 bits of the opcode.
2993
81635ce4
TW
2994ENUM
2995 BFD_RELOC_TIC54X_PARTLS7
2996ENUMDOC
2997 This is a 7bit reloc for the tms320c54x, where the least
2998 significant 7 bits of a 16 bit word are placed into the least
2999 significant 7 bits of the opcode.
3000
3001ENUM
3002 BFD_RELOC_TIC54X_PARTMS9
3003ENUMDOC
3004 This is a 9bit DP reloc for the tms320c54x, where the most
3005 significant 9 bits of a 16 bit word are placed into the least
3006 significant 9 bits of the opcode.
3007
3008ENUM
3009 BFD_RELOC_TIC54X_23
3010ENUMDOC
3011 This is an extended address 23-bit reloc for the tms320c54x.
3012
3013ENUM
3014 BFD_RELOC_TIC54X_16_OF_23
3015ENUMDOC
3d855632
KH
3016 This is a 16-bit reloc for the tms320c54x, where the least
3017 significant 16 bits of a 23-bit extended address are placed into
81635ce4
TW
3018 the opcode.
3019
3020ENUM
3021 BFD_RELOC_TIC54X_MS7_OF_23
3022ENUMDOC
3023 This is a reloc for the tms320c54x, where the most
3d855632 3024 significant 7 bits of a 23-bit extended address are placed into
81635ce4 3025 the opcode.
81635ce4 3026
252b5132
RH
3027ENUM
3028 BFD_RELOC_FR30_48
3029ENUMDOC
3030 This is a 48 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores 32 bits.
3031ENUM
3032 BFD_RELOC_FR30_20
3033ENUMDOC
3034 This is a 32 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores 20 bits split up into
3035 two sections.
3036ENUM
3037 BFD_RELOC_FR30_6_IN_4
3038ENUMDOC
3039 This is a 16 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores a 6 bit word offset in
3040 4 bits.
3041ENUM
3042 BFD_RELOC_FR30_8_IN_8
3043ENUMDOC
3044 This is a 16 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores an 8 bit byte offset
3045 into 8 bits.
3046ENUM
3047 BFD_RELOC_FR30_9_IN_8
3048ENUMDOC
3049 This is a 16 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores a 9 bit short offset
3050 into 8 bits.
3051ENUM
3052 BFD_RELOC_FR30_10_IN_8
3053ENUMDOC
3054 This is a 16 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores a 10 bit word offset
3055 into 8 bits.
3056ENUM
3057 BFD_RELOC_FR30_9_PCREL
3058ENUMDOC
3059 This is a 16 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores a 9 bit pc relative
3060 short offset into 8 bits.
3061ENUM
3062 BFD_RELOC_FR30_12_PCREL
3063ENUMDOC
3064 This is a 16 bit reloc for the FR30 that stores a 12 bit pc relative
3065 short offset into 11 bits.
88b6bae0 3066
252b5132
RH
3067ENUM
3068 BFD_RELOC_MCORE_PCREL_IMM8BY4
3069ENUMX
3070 BFD_RELOC_MCORE_PCREL_IMM11BY2
3071ENUMX
3072 BFD_RELOC_MCORE_PCREL_IMM4BY2
3073ENUMX
3074 BFD_RELOC_MCORE_PCREL_32
3075ENUMX
3076 BFD_RELOC_MCORE_PCREL_JSR_IMM11BY2
36797d47
NC
3077ENUMX
3078 BFD_RELOC_MCORE_RVA
252b5132
RH
3079ENUMDOC
3080 Motorola Mcore relocations.
88b6bae0 3081
3c3bdf30
NC
3082ENUM
3083 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_GETA
3084ENUMX
3085 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_GETA_1
3086ENUMX
3087 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_GETA_2
3088ENUMX
3089 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_GETA_3
3090ENUMDOC
3091 These are relocations for the GETA instruction.
3092ENUM
3093 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_CBRANCH
3094ENUMX
3095 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_CBRANCH_J
3096ENUMX
3097 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_CBRANCH_1
3098ENUMX
3099 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_CBRANCH_2
3100ENUMX
3101 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_CBRANCH_3
3102ENUMDOC
3103 These are relocations for a conditional branch instruction.
3104ENUM
3105 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_PUSHJ
3106ENUMX
3107 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_PUSHJ_1
3108ENUMX
3109 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_PUSHJ_2
3110ENUMX
3111 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_PUSHJ_3
3112ENUMDOC
3113 These are relocations for the PUSHJ instruction.
3114ENUM
3115 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_JMP
3116ENUMX
3117 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_JMP_1
3118ENUMX
3119 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_JMP_2
3120ENUMX
3121 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_JMP_3
3122ENUMDOC
3123 These are relocations for the JMP instruction.
3124ENUM
3125 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_ADDR19
3126ENUMDOC
3127 This is a relocation for a relative address as in a GETA instruction or
3128 a branch.
3129ENUM
3130 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_ADDR27
3131ENUMDOC
3132 This is a relocation for a relative address as in a JMP instruction.
3133ENUM
3134 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_REG_OR_BYTE
3135ENUMDOC
3136 This is a relocation for an instruction field that may be a general
3137 register or a value 0..255.
3138ENUM
3139 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_REG
3140ENUMDOC
3141 This is a relocation for an instruction field that may be a general
3142 register.
3143ENUM
3144 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_BASE_PLUS_OFFSET
3145ENUMDOC
3146 This is a relocation for two instruction fields holding a register and
3147 an offset, the equivalent of the relocation.
3148ENUM
3149 BFD_RELOC_MMIX_LOCAL
3150ENUMDOC
3151 This relocation is an assertion that the expression is not allocated as
3152 a global register. It does not modify contents.
3153
adde6300
AM
3154ENUM
3155 BFD_RELOC_AVR_7_PCREL
3156ENUMDOC
3157 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit pc relative
3158 short offset into 7 bits.
3159ENUM
3160 BFD_RELOC_AVR_13_PCREL
3161ENUMDOC
3162 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 13 bit pc relative
3163 short offset into 12 bits.
3164ENUM
3165 BFD_RELOC_AVR_16_PM
3166ENUMDOC
3167 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 17 bit value (usually
3d855632 3168 program memory address) into 16 bits.
adde6300
AM
3169ENUM
3170 BFD_RELOC_AVR_LO8_LDI
3171ENUMDOC
3172 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit value (usually
3173 data memory address) into 8 bit immediate value of LDI insn.
3174ENUM
3175 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HI8_LDI
3176ENUMDOC
3177 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit value (high 8 bit
3178 of data memory address) into 8 bit immediate value of LDI insn.
3179ENUM
3180 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HH8_LDI
3181ENUMDOC
3182 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit value (most high 8 bit
3183 of program memory address) into 8 bit immediate value of LDI insn.
3184ENUM
3185 BFD_RELOC_AVR_LO8_LDI_NEG
3186ENUMDOC
3187 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores negated 8 bit value
3188 (usually data memory address) into 8 bit immediate value of SUBI insn.
3189ENUM
3190 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HI8_LDI_NEG
3191ENUMDOC
3192 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores negated 8 bit value
3193 (high 8 bit of data memory address) into 8 bit immediate value of
3194 SUBI insn.
3195ENUM
3196 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HH8_LDI_NEG
3197ENUMDOC
3198 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores negated 8 bit value
3199 (most high 8 bit of program memory address) into 8 bit immediate value
3200 of LDI or SUBI insn.
3201ENUM
3202 BFD_RELOC_AVR_LO8_LDI_PM
3203ENUMDOC
3204 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit value (usually
3205 command address) into 8 bit immediate value of LDI insn.
3206ENUM
3207 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HI8_LDI_PM
3208ENUMDOC
3209 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit value (high 8 bit
3210 of command address) into 8 bit immediate value of LDI insn.
3211ENUM
3212 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HH8_LDI_PM
3213ENUMDOC
3214 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 8 bit value (most high 8 bit
3215 of command address) into 8 bit immediate value of LDI insn.
3216ENUM
3217 BFD_RELOC_AVR_LO8_LDI_PM_NEG
3218ENUMDOC
3219 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores negated 8 bit value
3220 (usually command address) into 8 bit immediate value of SUBI insn.
3221ENUM
3222 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HI8_LDI_PM_NEG
3223ENUMDOC
3224 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores negated 8 bit value
3225 (high 8 bit of 16 bit command address) into 8 bit immediate value
3226 of SUBI insn.
3227ENUM
3228 BFD_RELOC_AVR_HH8_LDI_PM_NEG
3229ENUMDOC
3230 This is a 16 bit reloc for the AVR that stores negated 8 bit value
3231 (high 6 bit of 22 bit command address) into 8 bit immediate
3232 value of SUBI insn.
3233ENUM
3234 BFD_RELOC_AVR_CALL
3235ENUMDOC
3236 This is a 32 bit reloc for the AVR that stores 23 bit value
3237 into 22 bits.
3238
a85d7ed0
NC
3239ENUM
3240 BFD_RELOC_390_12
3241ENUMDOC
3242 Direct 12 bit.
3243ENUM
3244 BFD_RELOC_390_GOT12
3245ENUMDOC
3246 12 bit GOT offset.
3247ENUM
3248 BFD_RELOC_390_PLT32
3249ENUMDOC
3250 32 bit PC relative PLT address.
3251ENUM
3252 BFD_RELOC_390_COPY
3253ENUMDOC
3254 Copy symbol at runtime.
3255ENUM
3256 BFD_RELOC_390_GLOB_DAT
3257ENUMDOC
3258 Create GOT entry.
3259ENUM
3260 BFD_RELOC_390_JMP_SLOT
3261ENUMDOC
3262 Create PLT entry.
3263ENUM
3264 BFD_RELOC_390_RELATIVE
3265ENUMDOC
3266 Adjust by program base.
3267ENUM
3268 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPC
3269ENUMDOC
3270 32 bit PC relative offset to GOT.
3271ENUM
3272 BFD_RELOC_390_GOT16
3273ENUMDOC
3274 16 bit GOT offset.
3275ENUM
3276 BFD_RELOC_390_PC16DBL
3277ENUMDOC
3278 PC relative 16 bit shifted by 1.
3279ENUM
3280 BFD_RELOC_390_PLT16DBL
3281ENUMDOC
3282 16 bit PC rel. PLT shifted by 1.
3283ENUM
3284 BFD_RELOC_390_PC32DBL
3285ENUMDOC
3286 PC relative 32 bit shifted by 1.
3287ENUM
3288 BFD_RELOC_390_PLT32DBL
3289ENUMDOC
3290 32 bit PC rel. PLT shifted by 1.
3291ENUM
3292 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPCDBL
3293ENUMDOC
3294 32 bit PC rel. GOT shifted by 1.
3295ENUM
3296 BFD_RELOC_390_GOT64
3297ENUMDOC
3298 64 bit GOT offset.
3299ENUM
3300 BFD_RELOC_390_PLT64
3301ENUMDOC
3302 64 bit PC relative PLT address.
3303ENUM
3304 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTENT
3305ENUMDOC
3306 32 bit rel. offset to GOT entry.
5236c819
MS
3307ENUM
3308 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTOFF64
3309ENUMDOC
3310 64 bit offset to GOT.
3311ENUM
3312 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPLT12
3313ENUMDOC
3314 12-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3315ENUM
3316 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPLT16
3317ENUMDOC
3318 16-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3319ENUM
3320 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPLT32
3321ENUMDOC
3322 32-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3323ENUM
3324 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPLT64
3325ENUMDOC
3326 64-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3327ENUM
3328 BFD_RELOC_390_GOTPLTENT
3329ENUMDOC
3330 32-bit rel. offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3331ENUM
3332 BFD_RELOC_390_PLTOFF16
3333ENUMDOC
3334 16-bit rel. offset from the GOT to a PLT entry.
3335ENUM
3336 BFD_RELOC_390_PLTOFF32
3337ENUMDOC
3338 32-bit rel. offset from the GOT to a PLT entry.
3339ENUM
3340 BFD_RELOC_390_PLTOFF64
3341ENUMDOC
3342 64-bit rel. offset from the GOT to a PLT entry.
dc810e39 3343
69fc87f1
MS
3344ENUM
3345 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LOAD
3346ENUMX
3347 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_GDCALL
3348ENUMX
3349 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LDCALL
3350ENUMX
3351 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_GD32
3352ENUMX
3353 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_GD64
3354ENUMX
3355 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_GOTIE12
3356ENUMX
3357 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_GOTIE32
3358ENUMX
3359 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_GOTIE64
3360ENUMX
3361 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LDM32
3362ENUMX
3363 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LDM64
3364ENUMX
3365 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_IE32
3366ENUMX
3367 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_IE64
3368ENUMX
3369 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_IEENT
3370ENUMX
3371 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LE32
3372ENUMX
3373 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LE64
3374ENUMX
3375 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LDO32
3376ENUMX
3377 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_LDO64
3378ENUMX
3379 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_DTPMOD
3380ENUMX
3381 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_DTPOFF
3382ENUMX
3383 BFD_RELOC_390_TLS_TPOFF
3384ENUMDOC
3385 s390 tls relocations.
3386
cf88bb9f
NC
3387ENUM
3388 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_FR9
3389ENUMDOC
3390 Scenix IP2K - 9-bit register number / data address
3391ENUM
3392 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_BANK
3393ENUMDOC
3394 Scenix IP2K - 4-bit register/data bank number
3395ENUM
3396 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_ADDR16CJP
3397ENUMDOC
3398 Scenix IP2K - low 13 bits of instruction word address
3399ENUM
3400 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_PAGE3
3401ENUMDOC
3402 Scenix IP2K - high 3 bits of instruction word address
3403ENUM
3404 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_LO8DATA
3405ENUMX
3406 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_HI8DATA
3407ENUMX
3408 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_EX8DATA
3409ENUMDOC
3410 Scenix IP2K - ext/low/high 8 bits of data address
3411ENUM
3412 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_LO8INSN
3413ENUMX
3414 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_HI8INSN
3415ENUMDOC
3416 Scenix IP2K - low/high 8 bits of instruction word address
3417ENUM
3418 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_PC_SKIP
3419ENUMDOC
3420 Scenix IP2K - even/odd PC modifier to modify snb pcl.0
3421ENUM
3422 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_TEXT
3423ENUMDOC
3424 Scenix IP2K - 16 bit word address in text section.
3425ENUM
3426 BFD_RELOC_IP2K_FR_OFFSET
3427ENUMDOC
3428 Scenix IP2K - 7-bit sp or dp offset
3429ENUM
3430 BFD_RELOC_VPE4KMATH_DATA
3431ENUMX
3432 BFD_RELOC_VPE4KMATH_INSN
3433ENUMDOC
3434 Scenix VPE4K coprocessor - data/insn-space addressing
3435
252b5132
RH
3436ENUM
3437 BFD_RELOC_VTABLE_INHERIT
3438ENUMX
3439 BFD_RELOC_VTABLE_ENTRY
3440ENUMDOC
88b6bae0 3441 These two relocations are used by the linker to determine which of
252b5132
RH
3442 the entries in a C++ virtual function table are actually used. When
3443 the --gc-sections option is given, the linker will zero out the entries
3444 that are not used, so that the code for those functions need not be
3445 included in the output.
3446
3447 VTABLE_INHERIT is a zero-space relocation used to describe to the
3448 linker the inheritence tree of a C++ virtual function table. The
3449 relocation's symbol should be the parent class' vtable, and the
3450 relocation should be located at the child vtable.
3451
3452 VTABLE_ENTRY is a zero-space relocation that describes the use of a
3453 virtual function table entry. The reloc's symbol should refer to the
3454 table of the class mentioned in the code. Off of that base, an offset
88b6bae0 3455 describes the entry that is being used. For Rela hosts, this offset
252b5132
RH
3456 is stored in the reloc's addend. For Rel hosts, we are forced to put
3457 this offset in the reloc's section offset.
3458
800eeca4
JW
3459ENUM
3460 BFD_RELOC_IA64_IMM14
3461ENUMX
3462 BFD_RELOC_IA64_IMM22
3463ENUMX
3464 BFD_RELOC_IA64_IMM64
3465ENUMX
3466 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DIR32MSB
3467ENUMX
3468 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DIR32LSB
3469ENUMX
3470 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DIR64MSB
3471ENUMX
3472 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DIR64LSB
3473ENUMX
3474 BFD_RELOC_IA64_GPREL22
3475ENUMX
3476 BFD_RELOC_IA64_GPREL64I
3477ENUMX
3478 BFD_RELOC_IA64_GPREL32MSB
3479ENUMX
3480 BFD_RELOC_IA64_GPREL32LSB
3481ENUMX
3482 BFD_RELOC_IA64_GPREL64MSB
3483ENUMX
3484 BFD_RELOC_IA64_GPREL64LSB
3485ENUMX
3486 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF22
3487ENUMX
3488 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF64I
3489ENUMX
3490 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PLTOFF22
3491ENUMX
3492 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PLTOFF64I
3493ENUMX
3494 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PLTOFF64MSB
3495ENUMX
3496 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PLTOFF64LSB
3497ENUMX
3498 BFD_RELOC_IA64_FPTR64I
3499ENUMX
3500 BFD_RELOC_IA64_FPTR32MSB
3501ENUMX
3502 BFD_RELOC_IA64_FPTR32LSB
3503ENUMX
3504 BFD_RELOC_IA64_FPTR64MSB
3505ENUMX
3506 BFD_RELOC_IA64_FPTR64LSB
3507ENUMX
3508 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL21B
748abff6
RH
3509ENUMX
3510 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL21BI
800eeca4
JW
3511ENUMX
3512 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL21M
3513ENUMX
3514 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL21F
748abff6
RH
3515ENUMX
3516 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL22
3517ENUMX
3518 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL60B
3519ENUMX
3520 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL64I
800eeca4
JW
3521ENUMX
3522 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL32MSB
3523ENUMX
3524 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL32LSB
3525ENUMX
3526 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL64MSB
3527ENUMX
3528 BFD_RELOC_IA64_PCREL64LSB
3529ENUMX
3530 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_FPTR22
3531ENUMX
3532 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_FPTR64I
a4bd8390
JW
3533ENUMX
3534 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_FPTR32MSB
3535ENUMX
3536 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_FPTR32LSB
800eeca4
JW
3537ENUMX
3538 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_FPTR64MSB
3539ENUMX
3540 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_FPTR64LSB
800eeca4
JW
3541ENUMX
3542 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SEGREL32MSB
3543ENUMX
3544 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SEGREL32LSB
3545ENUMX
3546 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SEGREL64MSB
3547ENUMX
3548 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SEGREL64LSB
3549ENUMX
3550 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SECREL32MSB
3551ENUMX
3552 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SECREL32LSB
3553ENUMX
3554 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SECREL64MSB
3555ENUMX
3556 BFD_RELOC_IA64_SECREL64LSB
3557ENUMX
3558 BFD_RELOC_IA64_REL32MSB
3559ENUMX
3560 BFD_RELOC_IA64_REL32LSB
3561ENUMX
3562 BFD_RELOC_IA64_REL64MSB
3563ENUMX
3564 BFD_RELOC_IA64_REL64LSB
3565ENUMX
3566 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTV32MSB
3567ENUMX
3568 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTV32LSB
3569ENUMX
3570 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTV64MSB
3571ENUMX
3572 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTV64LSB
3573ENUMX
3574 BFD_RELOC_IA64_IPLTMSB
3575ENUMX
3576 BFD_RELOC_IA64_IPLTLSB
800eeca4
JW
3577ENUMX
3578 BFD_RELOC_IA64_COPY
13ae64f3
JJ
3579ENUMX
3580 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF22X
3581ENUMX
3582 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LDXMOV
3583ENUMX
3584 BFD_RELOC_IA64_TPREL14
800eeca4
JW
3585ENUMX
3586 BFD_RELOC_IA64_TPREL22
13ae64f3
JJ
3587ENUMX
3588 BFD_RELOC_IA64_TPREL64I
800eeca4
JW
3589ENUMX
3590 BFD_RELOC_IA64_TPREL64MSB
3591ENUMX
3592 BFD_RELOC_IA64_TPREL64LSB
3593ENUMX
13ae64f3 3594 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_TPREL22
800eeca4 3595ENUMX
13ae64f3 3596 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPMOD64MSB
800eeca4 3597ENUMX
13ae64f3
JJ
3598 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPMOD64LSB
3599ENUMX
3600 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_DTPMOD22
3601ENUMX
3602 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL14
3603ENUMX
3604 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL22
3605ENUMX
3606 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL64I
3607ENUMX
3608 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL32MSB
3609ENUMX
3610 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL32LSB
3611ENUMX
3612 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL64MSB
3613ENUMX
3614 BFD_RELOC_IA64_DTPREL64LSB
3615ENUMX
3616 BFD_RELOC_IA64_LTOFF_DTPREL22
800eeca4
JW
3617ENUMDOC
3618 Intel IA64 Relocations.
60bcf0fa
NC
3619
3620ENUM
3621 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_HI8
3622ENUMDOC
3623 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3dbfec86 3624 This is the 8 bit high part of an absolute address.
60bcf0fa
NC
3625ENUM
3626 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_LO8
3627ENUMDOC
3628 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3dbfec86 3629 This is the 8 bit low part of an absolute address.
60bcf0fa
NC
3630ENUM
3631 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_3B
3632ENUMDOC
3633 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3dbfec86
SC
3634 This is the 3 bit of a value.
3635ENUM
3636 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_RL_JUMP
3637ENUMDOC
3638 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3639 This reloc marks the beginning of a jump/call instruction.
3640 It is used for linker relaxation to correctly identify beginning
3641 of instruction and change some branchs to use PC-relative
3642 addressing mode.
3643ENUM
3644 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_RL_GROUP
3645ENUMDOC
3646 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3647 This reloc marks a group of several instructions that gcc generates
3648 and for which the linker relaxation pass can modify and/or remove
3649 some of them.
3650ENUM
3651 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_LO16
3652ENUMDOC
3653 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3654 This is the 16-bit lower part of an address. It is used for 'call'
3655 instruction to specify the symbol address without any special
3656 transformation (due to memory bank window).
3657ENUM
3658 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_PAGE
3659ENUMDOC
3660 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3661 This is a 8-bit reloc that specifies the page number of an address.
3662 It is used by 'call' instruction to specify the page number of
3663 the symbol.
3664ENUM
3665 BFD_RELOC_M68HC11_24
3666ENUMDOC
3667 Motorola 68HC11 reloc.
3668 This is a 24-bit reloc that represents the address with a 16-bit
3669 value and a 8-bit page number. The symbol address is transformed
3670 to follow the 16K memory bank of 68HC12 (seen as mapped in the window).
60bcf0fa 3671
06c15ad7
HPN
3672ENUM
3673 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_BDISP8
3674ENUMX
3675 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_UNSIGNED_5
3676ENUMX
3677 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_SIGNED_6
3678ENUMX
3679 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_UNSIGNED_6
3680ENUMX
3681 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_UNSIGNED_4
3682ENUMDOC
3683 These relocs are only used within the CRIS assembler. They are not
3684 (at present) written to any object files.
58d29fc3
HPN
3685ENUM
3686 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_COPY
3687ENUMX
3688 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_GLOB_DAT
3689ENUMX
3690 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_JUMP_SLOT
3691ENUMX
3692 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_RELATIVE
3693ENUMDOC
3694 Relocs used in ELF shared libraries for CRIS.
3695ENUM
3696 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_32_GOT
3697ENUMDOC
3698 32-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT.
3699ENUM
3700 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_16_GOT
3701ENUMDOC
3702 16-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT.
3703ENUM
3704 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_32_GOTPLT
3705ENUMDOC
3706 32-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3707ENUM
3708 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_16_GOTPLT
3709ENUMDOC
3710 16-bit offset to symbol-entry within GOT, with PLT handling.
3711ENUM
3712 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_32_GOTREL
3713ENUMDOC
3714 32-bit offset to symbol, relative to GOT.
3715ENUM
3716 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_32_PLT_GOTREL
3717ENUMDOC
3718 32-bit offset to symbol with PLT entry, relative to GOT.
3719ENUM
3720 BFD_RELOC_CRIS_32_PLT_PCREL
3721ENUMDOC
3722 32-bit offset to symbol with PLT entry, relative to this relocation.
06c15ad7 3723
a87fdb8d
JE
3724ENUM
3725 BFD_RELOC_860_COPY
3726ENUMX
3727 BFD_RELOC_860_GLOB_DAT
3728ENUMX
3729 BFD_RELOC_860_JUMP_SLOT
3730ENUMX
3731 BFD_RELOC_860_RELATIVE
3732ENUMX
3733 BFD_RELOC_860_PC26
3734ENUMX
3735 BFD_RELOC_860_PLT26
3736ENUMX
3737 BFD_RELOC_860_PC16
3738ENUMX
3739 BFD_RELOC_860_LOW0
3740ENUMX
3741 BFD_RELOC_860_SPLIT0
3742ENUMX
3743 BFD_RELOC_860_LOW1
3744ENUMX
3745 BFD_RELOC_860_SPLIT1
3746ENUMX
3747 BFD_RELOC_860_LOW2
3748ENUMX
3749 BFD_RELOC_860_SPLIT2
3750ENUMX
3751 BFD_RELOC_860_LOW3
3752ENUMX
3753 BFD_RELOC_860_LOGOT0
3754ENUMX
3755 BFD_RELOC_860_SPGOT0
3756ENUMX
3757 BFD_RELOC_860_LOGOT1
3758ENUMX
3759 BFD_RELOC_860_SPGOT1
3760ENUMX
3761 BFD_RELOC_860_LOGOTOFF0
3762ENUMX
3763 BFD_RELOC_860_SPGOTOFF0
3764ENUMX
3765 BFD_RELOC_860_LOGOTOFF1
3766ENUMX
3767 BFD_RELOC_860_SPGOTOFF1
3768ENUMX
3769 BFD_RELOC_860_LOGOTOFF2
3770ENUMX
3771 BFD_RELOC_860_LOGOTOFF3
3772ENUMX
3773 BFD_RELOC_860_LOPC
3774ENUMX
3775 BFD_RELOC_860_HIGHADJ
3776ENUMX
3777 BFD_RELOC_860_HAGOT
3778ENUMX
3779 BFD_RELOC_860_HAGOTOFF
3780ENUMX
3781 BFD_RELOC_860_HAPC
3782ENUMX
3783 BFD_RELOC_860_HIGH
3784ENUMX
3785 BFD_RELOC_860_HIGOT
3786ENUMX
3787 BFD_RELOC_860_HIGOTOFF
3788ENUMDOC
3789 Intel i860 Relocations.
3790
b3baf5d0
NC
3791ENUM
3792 BFD_RELOC_OPENRISC_ABS_26
3793ENUMX
3794 BFD_RELOC_OPENRISC_REL_26
3795ENUMDOC
3796 OpenRISC Relocations.
3797
e01b0e69
JR
3798ENUM
3799 BFD_RELOC_H8_DIR16A8
3800ENUMX
3801 BFD_RELOC_H8_DIR16R8
3802ENUMX
3803 BFD_RELOC_H8_DIR24A8
3804ENUMX
3805 BFD_RELOC_H8_DIR24R8
3806ENUMX
3807 BFD_RELOC_H8_DIR32A16
3808ENUMDOC
3809 H8 elf Relocations.
3810
93fbbb04
GK
3811ENUM
3812 BFD_RELOC_XSTORMY16_REL_12
5fd63999
DD
3813ENUMX
3814 BFD_RELOC_XSTORMY16_12
93fbbb04
GK
3815ENUMX
3816 BFD_RELOC_XSTORMY16_24
3817ENUMX
3818 BFD_RELOC_XSTORMY16_FPTR16
3819ENUMDOC
3820 Sony Xstormy16 Relocations.
3821
90ace9e9
JT
3822ENUM
3823 BFD_RELOC_VAX_GLOB_DAT
3824ENUMX
3825 BFD_RELOC_VAX_JMP_SLOT
3826ENUMX
3827 BFD_RELOC_VAX_RELATIVE
3828ENUMDOC
3829 Relocations used by VAX ELF.
2469cfa2
NC
3830
3831ENUM
3832 BFD_RELOC_MSP430_10_PCREL
3833ENUMX
3834 BFD_RELOC_MSP430_16_PCREL
3835ENUMX
3836 BFD_RELOC_MSP430_16
3837ENUMX
3838 BFD_RELOC_MSP430_16_PCREL_BYTE
3839ENUMX
3840 BFD_RELOC_MSP430_16_BYTE
3841ENUMDOC
3842 msp430 specific relocation codes
90ace9e9 3843
a75473eb
SC
3844ENUM
3845 BFD_RELOC_IQ2000_OFFSET_16
3846ENUMX
3847 BFD_RELOC_IQ2000_OFFSET_21
3848ENUMX
3849 BFD_RELOC_IQ2000_UHI16
3850ENUMDOC
3851 IQ2000 Relocations.
3852
e0001a05
NC
3853ENUM
3854 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_RTLD
3855ENUMDOC
3856 Special Xtensa relocation used only by PLT entries in ELF shared
3857 objects to indicate that the runtime linker should set the value
3858 to one of its own internal functions or data structures.
3859ENUM
3860 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_GLOB_DAT
3861ENUMX
3862 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_JMP_SLOT
3863ENUMX
3864 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_RELATIVE
3865ENUMDOC
3866 Xtensa relocations for ELF shared objects.
3867ENUM
3868 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_PLT
3869ENUMDOC
3870 Xtensa relocation used in ELF object files for symbols that may require
3871 PLT entries. Otherwise, this is just a generic 32-bit relocation.
3872ENUM
3873 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_OP0
3874ENUMX
3875 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_OP1
3876ENUMX
3877 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_OP2
3878ENUMDOC
3879 Generic Xtensa relocations. Only the operand number is encoded
3880 in the relocation. The details are determined by extracting the
3881 instruction opcode.
3882ENUM
3883 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_ASM_EXPAND
3884ENUMDOC
3885 Xtensa relocation to mark that the assembler expanded the
3886 instructions from an original target. The expansion size is
3887 encoded in the reloc size.
3888ENUM
3889 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_ASM_SIMPLIFY
3890ENUMDOC
3891 Xtensa relocation to mark that the linker should simplify
3892 assembler-expanded instructions. This is commonly used
3893 internally by the linker after analysis of a
3894 BFD_RELOC_XTENSA_ASM_EXPAND.
3895
252b5132
RH
3896ENDSENUM
3897 BFD_RELOC_UNUSED
3898CODE_FRAGMENT
3899.
3900.typedef enum bfd_reloc_code_real bfd_reloc_code_real_type;
3901*/
3902
252b5132
RH
3903/*
3904FUNCTION
3905 bfd_reloc_type_lookup
3906
3907SYNOPSIS
3908 reloc_howto_type *
3909 bfd_reloc_type_lookup (bfd *abfd, bfd_reloc_code_real_type code);
3910
3911DESCRIPTION
3912 Return a pointer to a howto structure which, when
3913 invoked, will perform the relocation @var{code} on data from the
3914 architecture noted.
3915
3916*/
3917
252b5132
RH
3918reloc_howto_type *
3919bfd_reloc_type_lookup (abfd, code)
3920 bfd *abfd;
3921 bfd_reloc_code_real_type code;
3922{
3923 return BFD_SEND (abfd, reloc_type_lookup, (abfd, code));
3924}
3925
3926static reloc_howto_type bfd_howto_32 =
b34976b6 3927HOWTO (0, 00, 2, 32, FALSE, 0, complain_overflow_bitfield, 0, "VRT32", FALSE, 0xffffffff, 0xffffffff, TRUE);
252b5132 3928
252b5132
RH
3929/*
3930INTERNAL_FUNCTION
3931 bfd_default_reloc_type_lookup
3932
3933SYNOPSIS
3934 reloc_howto_type *bfd_default_reloc_type_lookup
3935 (bfd *abfd, bfd_reloc_code_real_type code);
3936
3937DESCRIPTION
3938 Provides a default relocation lookup routine for any architecture.
3939
252b5132
RH
3940*/
3941
3942reloc_howto_type *
3943bfd_default_reloc_type_lookup (abfd, code)
3944 bfd *abfd;
3945 bfd_reloc_code_real_type code;
3946{
3947 switch (code)
3948 {
3949 case BFD_RELOC_CTOR:
3950 /* The type of reloc used in a ctor, which will be as wide as the
3951 address - so either a 64, 32, or 16 bitter. */
3952 switch (bfd_get_arch_info (abfd)->bits_per_address)
3953 {
3954 case 64:
3955 BFD_FAIL ();
3956 case 32:
3957 return &bfd_howto_32;
3958 case 16:
3959 BFD_FAIL ();
3960 default:
3961 BFD_FAIL ();
3962 }
3963 default:
3964 BFD_FAIL ();
3965 }
3966 return (reloc_howto_type *) NULL;
3967}
3968
3969/*
3970FUNCTION
3971 bfd_get_reloc_code_name
3972
3973SYNOPSIS
3974 const char *bfd_get_reloc_code_name (bfd_reloc_code_real_type code);
3975
3976DESCRIPTION
3977 Provides a printable name for the supplied relocation code.
3978 Useful mainly for printing error messages.
3979*/
3980
3981const char *
3982bfd_get_reloc_code_name (code)
3983 bfd_reloc_code_real_type code;
3984{
d45913a0 3985 if ((int) code > (int) BFD_RELOC_UNUSED)
252b5132
RH
3986 return 0;
3987 return bfd_reloc_code_real_names[(int)code];
3988}
3989
3990/*
3991INTERNAL_FUNCTION
3992 bfd_generic_relax_section
3993
3994SYNOPSIS
b34976b6 3995 bfd_boolean bfd_generic_relax_section
252b5132
RH
3996 (bfd *abfd,
3997 asection *section,
3998 struct bfd_link_info *,
b34976b6 3999 bfd_boolean *);
252b5132
RH
4000
4001DESCRIPTION
4002 Provides default handling for relaxing for back ends which
4003 don't do relaxing -- i.e., does nothing.
4004*/
4005
b34976b6 4006bfd_boolean
252b5132 4007bfd_generic_relax_section (abfd, section, link_info, again)
7442e600
ILT
4008 bfd *abfd ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
4009 asection *section ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
4010 struct bfd_link_info *link_info ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
b34976b6 4011 bfd_boolean *again;
252b5132 4012{
b34976b6
AM
4013 *again = FALSE;
4014 return TRUE;
252b5132
RH
4015}
4016
4017/*
4018INTERNAL_FUNCTION
4019 bfd_generic_gc_sections
4020
4021SYNOPSIS
b34976b6 4022 bfd_boolean bfd_generic_gc_sections
252b5132
RH
4023 (bfd *, struct bfd_link_info *);
4024
4025DESCRIPTION
4026 Provides default handling for relaxing for back ends which
4027 don't do section gc -- i.e., does nothing.
4028*/
4029
b34976b6 4030bfd_boolean
252b5132 4031bfd_generic_gc_sections (abfd, link_info)
7442e600
ILT
4032 bfd *abfd ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
4033 struct bfd_link_info *link_info ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
252b5132 4034{
b34976b6 4035 return TRUE;
252b5132
RH
4036}
4037
8550eb6e
JJ
4038/*
4039INTERNAL_FUNCTION
4040 bfd_generic_merge_sections
4041
4042SYNOPSIS
b34976b6 4043 bfd_boolean bfd_generic_merge_sections
8550eb6e
JJ
4044 (bfd *, struct bfd_link_info *);
4045
4046DESCRIPTION
4047 Provides default handling for SEC_MERGE section merging for back ends
4048 which don't have SEC_MERGE support -- i.e., does nothing.
4049*/
4050
b34976b6 4051bfd_boolean
8550eb6e
JJ
4052bfd_generic_merge_sections (abfd, link_info)
4053 bfd *abfd ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
4054 struct bfd_link_info *link_info ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED;
4055{
b34976b6 4056 return TRUE;
8550eb6e
JJ
4057}
4058
252b5132
RH
4059/*
4060INTERNAL_FUNCTION
4061 bfd_generic_get_relocated_section_contents
4062
4063SYNOPSIS
4064 bfd_byte *
4065 bfd_generic_get_relocated_section_contents (bfd *abfd,
4066 struct bfd_link_info *link_info,
4067 struct bfd_link_order *link_order,
4068 bfd_byte *data,
b34976b6 4069 bfd_boolean relocateable,
252b5132
RH
4070 asymbol **symbols);
4071
4072DESCRIPTION
4073 Provides default handling of relocation effort for back ends
4074 which can't be bothered to do it efficiently.
4075
4076*/
4077
4078bfd_byte *
4079bfd_generic_get_relocated_section_contents (abfd, link_info, link_order, data,
4080 relocateable, symbols)
4081 bfd *abfd;
4082 struct bfd_link_info *link_info;
4083 struct bfd_link_order *link_order;
4084 bfd_byte *data;
b34976b6 4085 bfd_boolean relocateable;
252b5132
RH
4086 asymbol **symbols;
4087{
b5f79c76 4088 /* Get enough memory to hold the stuff. */
252b5132
RH
4089 bfd *input_bfd = link_order->u.indirect.section->owner;
4090 asection *input_section = link_order->u.indirect.section;
4091
4092 long reloc_size = bfd_get_reloc_upper_bound (input_bfd, input_section);
4093 arelent **reloc_vector = NULL;
4094 long reloc_count;
4095
4096 if (reloc_size < 0)
4097 goto error_return;
4098
dc810e39 4099 reloc_vector = (arelent **) bfd_malloc ((bfd_size_type) reloc_size);
252b5132
RH
4100 if (reloc_vector == NULL && reloc_size != 0)
4101 goto error_return;
4102
b5f79c76 4103 /* Read in the section. */
252b5132
RH
4104 if (!bfd_get_section_contents (input_bfd,
4105 input_section,
4106 (PTR) data,
dc810e39 4107 (bfd_vma) 0,
252b5132
RH
4108 input_section->_raw_size))
4109 goto error_return;
4110
b5f79c76 4111 /* We're not relaxing the section, so just copy the size info. */
252b5132 4112 input_section->_cooked_size = input_section->_raw_size;
b34976b6 4113 input_section->reloc_done = TRUE;
252b5132
RH
4114
4115 reloc_count = bfd_canonicalize_reloc (input_bfd,
4116 input_section,
4117 reloc_vector,
4118 symbols);
4119 if (reloc_count < 0)
4120 goto error_return;
4121
4122 if (reloc_count > 0)
4123 {
4124 arelent **parent;
4125 for (parent = reloc_vector; *parent != (arelent *) NULL;
4126 parent++)
4127 {
4128 char *error_message = (char *) NULL;
4129 bfd_reloc_status_type r =
4130 bfd_perform_relocation (input_bfd,
4131 *parent,
4132 (PTR) data,
4133 input_section,
4134 relocateable ? abfd : (bfd *) NULL,
4135 &error_message);
4136
4137 if (relocateable)
4138 {
4139 asection *os = input_section->output_section;
4140
b5f79c76 4141 /* A partial link, so keep the relocs. */
252b5132
RH
4142 os->orelocation[os->reloc_count] = *parent;
4143 os->reloc_count++;
4144 }
4145
4146 if (r != bfd_reloc_ok)
4147 {
4148 switch (r)
4149 {
4150 case bfd_reloc_undefined:
4151 if (!((*link_info->callbacks->undefined_symbol)
4152 (link_info, bfd_asymbol_name (*(*parent)->sym_ptr_ptr),
5cc7c785 4153 input_bfd, input_section, (*parent)->address,
b34976b6 4154 TRUE)))
252b5132
RH
4155 goto error_return;
4156 break;
4157 case bfd_reloc_dangerous:
4158 BFD_ASSERT (error_message != (char *) NULL);
4159 if (!((*link_info->callbacks->reloc_dangerous)
4160 (link_info, error_message, input_bfd, input_section,
4161 (*parent)->address)))
4162 goto error_return;
4163 break;
4164 case bfd_reloc_overflow:
4165 if (!((*link_info->callbacks->reloc_overflow)
4166 (link_info, bfd_asymbol_name (*(*parent)->sym_ptr_ptr),
4167 (*parent)->howto->name, (*parent)->addend,
4168 input_bfd, input_section, (*parent)->address)))
4169 goto error_return;
4170 break;
4171 case bfd_reloc_outofrange:
4172 default:
4173 abort ();
4174 break;
4175 }
4176
4177 }
4178 }
4179 }
4180 if (reloc_vector != NULL)
4181 free (reloc_vector);
4182 return data;
4183
4184error_return:
4185 if (reloc_vector != NULL)
4186 free (reloc_vector);
4187 return NULL;
4188}