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1 /* Definitions for symbol file management in GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1992-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #if !defined (OBJFILES_H)
21 #define OBJFILES_H
22
23 #include "hashtab.h"
24 #include "gdb_obstack.h" /* For obstack internals. */
25 #include "objfile-flags.h"
26 #include "symfile.h"
27 #include "progspace.h"
28 #include "registry.h"
29 #include "gdb_bfd.h"
30
31 struct bcache;
32 struct htab;
33 struct objfile_data;
34 struct partial_symbol;
35
36 /* This structure maintains information on a per-objfile basis about the
37 "entry point" of the objfile, and the scope within which the entry point
38 exists. It is possible that gdb will see more than one objfile that is
39 executable, each with its own entry point.
40
41 For example, for dynamically linked executables in SVR4, the dynamic linker
42 code is contained within the shared C library, which is actually executable
43 and is run by the kernel first when an exec is done of a user executable
44 that is dynamically linked. The dynamic linker within the shared C library
45 then maps in the various program segments in the user executable and jumps
46 to the user executable's recorded entry point, as if the call had been made
47 directly by the kernel.
48
49 The traditional gdb method of using this info was to use the
50 recorded entry point to set the entry-file's lowpc and highpc from
51 the debugging information, where these values are the starting
52 address (inclusive) and ending address (exclusive) of the
53 instruction space in the executable which correspond to the
54 "startup file", i.e. crt0.o in most cases. This file is assumed to
55 be a startup file and frames with pc's inside it are treated as
56 nonexistent. Setting these variables is necessary so that
57 backtraces do not fly off the bottom of the stack.
58
59 NOTE: cagney/2003-09-09: It turns out that this "traditional"
60 method doesn't work. Corinna writes: ``It turns out that the call
61 to test for "inside entry file" destroys a meaningful backtrace
62 under some conditions. E.g. the backtrace tests in the asm-source
63 testcase are broken for some targets. In this test the functions
64 are all implemented as part of one file and the testcase is not
65 necessarily linked with a start file (depending on the target).
66 What happens is, that the first frame is printed normaly and
67 following frames are treated as being inside the enttry file then.
68 This way, only the #0 frame is printed in the backtrace output.''
69 Ref "frame.c" "NOTE: vinschen/2003-04-01".
70
71 Gdb also supports an alternate method to avoid running off the bottom
72 of the stack.
73
74 There are two frames that are "special", the frame for the function
75 containing the process entry point, since it has no predecessor frame,
76 and the frame for the function containing the user code entry point
77 (the main() function), since all the predecessor frames are for the
78 process startup code. Since we have no guarantee that the linked
79 in startup modules have any debugging information that gdb can use,
80 we need to avoid following frame pointers back into frames that might
81 have been built in the startup code, as we might get hopelessly
82 confused. However, we almost always have debugging information
83 available for main().
84
85 These variables are used to save the range of PC values which are
86 valid within the main() function and within the function containing
87 the process entry point. If we always consider the frame for
88 main() as the outermost frame when debugging user code, and the
89 frame for the process entry point function as the outermost frame
90 when debugging startup code, then all we have to do is have
91 DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN_VALID return false whenever a frame's
92 current PC is within the range specified by these variables. In
93 essence, we set "ceilings" in the frame chain beyond which we will
94 not proceed when following the frame chain back up the stack.
95
96 A nice side effect is that we can still debug startup code without
97 running off the end of the frame chain, assuming that we have usable
98 debugging information in the startup modules, and if we choose to not
99 use the block at main, or can't find it for some reason, everything
100 still works as before. And if we have no startup code debugging
101 information but we do have usable information for main(), backtraces
102 from user code don't go wandering off into the startup code. */
103
104 struct entry_info
105 {
106 /* The unrelocated value we should use for this objfile entry point. */
107 CORE_ADDR entry_point;
108
109 /* The index of the section in which the entry point appears. */
110 int the_bfd_section_index;
111
112 /* Set to 1 iff ENTRY_POINT contains a valid value. */
113 unsigned entry_point_p : 1;
114
115 /* Set to 1 iff this object was initialized. */
116 unsigned initialized : 1;
117 };
118
119 /* Sections in an objfile. The section offsets are stored in the
120 OBJFILE. */
121
122 struct obj_section
123 {
124 /* BFD section pointer */
125 struct bfd_section *the_bfd_section;
126
127 /* Objfile this section is part of. */
128 struct objfile *objfile;
129
130 /* True if this "overlay section" is mapped into an "overlay region". */
131 int ovly_mapped;
132 };
133
134 /* Relocation offset applied to S. */
135 #define obj_section_offset(s) \
136 (((s)->objfile->section_offsets)->offsets[gdb_bfd_section_index ((s)->objfile->obfd, (s)->the_bfd_section)])
137
138 /* The memory address of section S (vma + offset). */
139 #define obj_section_addr(s) \
140 (bfd_get_section_vma ((s)->objfile->obfd, s->the_bfd_section) \
141 + obj_section_offset (s))
142
143 /* The one-passed-the-end memory address of section S
144 (vma + size + offset). */
145 #define obj_section_endaddr(s) \
146 (bfd_get_section_vma ((s)->objfile->obfd, s->the_bfd_section) \
147 + bfd_get_section_size ((s)->the_bfd_section) \
148 + obj_section_offset (s))
149
150 /* The "objstats" structure provides a place for gdb to record some
151 interesting information about its internal state at runtime, on a
152 per objfile basis, such as information about the number of symbols
153 read, size of string table (if any), etc. */
154
155 struct objstats
156 {
157 /* Number of partial symbols read. */
158 int n_psyms = 0;
159
160 /* Number of full symbols read. */
161 int n_syms = 0;
162
163 /* Number of ".stabs" read (if applicable). */
164 int n_stabs = 0;
165
166 /* Number of types. */
167 int n_types = 0;
168
169 /* Size of stringtable, (if applicable). */
170 int sz_strtab = 0;
171 };
172
173 #define OBJSTAT(objfile, expr) (objfile -> stats.expr)
174 #define OBJSTATS struct objstats stats
175 extern void print_objfile_statistics (void);
176 extern void print_symbol_bcache_statistics (void);
177
178 /* Number of entries in the minimal symbol hash table. */
179 #define MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE 2039
180
181 /* Some objfile data is hung off the BFD. This enables sharing of the
182 data across all objfiles using the BFD. The data is stored in an
183 instance of this structure, and associated with the BFD using the
184 registry system. */
185
186 struct objfile_per_bfd_storage
187 {
188 objfile_per_bfd_storage ()
189 : minsyms_read (false)
190 {}
191
192 /* The storage has an obstack of its own. */
193
194 auto_obstack storage_obstack;
195
196 /* Byte cache for file names. */
197
198 bcache *filename_cache = NULL;
199
200 /* Byte cache for macros. */
201
202 bcache *macro_cache = NULL;
203
204 /* The gdbarch associated with the BFD. Note that this gdbarch is
205 determined solely from BFD information, without looking at target
206 information. The gdbarch determined from a running target may
207 differ from this e.g. with respect to register types and names. */
208
209 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = NULL;
210
211 /* Hash table for mapping symbol names to demangled names. Each
212 entry in the hash table is actually two consecutive strings,
213 both null-terminated; the first one is a mangled or linkage
214 name, and the second is the demangled name or just a zero byte
215 if the name doesn't demangle. */
216
217 htab *demangled_names_hash = NULL;
218
219 /* The per-objfile information about the entry point, the scope (file/func)
220 containing the entry point, and the scope of the user's main() func. */
221
222 entry_info ei {};
223
224 /* The name and language of any "main" found in this objfile. The
225 name can be NULL, which means that the information was not
226 recorded. */
227
228 const char *name_of_main = NULL;
229 enum language language_of_main = language_unknown;
230
231 /* Each file contains a pointer to an array of minimal symbols for all
232 global symbols that are defined within the file. The array is
233 terminated by a "null symbol", one that has a NULL pointer for the
234 name and a zero value for the address. This makes it easy to walk
235 through the array when passed a pointer to somewhere in the middle
236 of it. There is also a count of the number of symbols, which does
237 not include the terminating null symbol. The array itself, as well
238 as all the data that it points to, should be allocated on the
239 objfile_obstack for this file. */
240
241 minimal_symbol *msymbols = NULL;
242 int minimal_symbol_count = 0;
243
244 /* The number of minimal symbols read, before any minimal symbol
245 de-duplication is applied. Note in particular that this has only
246 a passing relationship with the actual size of the table above;
247 use minimal_symbol_count if you need the true size. */
248
249 int n_minsyms = 0;
250
251 /* This is true if minimal symbols have already been read. Symbol
252 readers can use this to bypass minimal symbol reading. Also, the
253 minimal symbol table management code in minsyms.c uses this to
254 suppress new minimal symbols. You might think that MSYMBOLS or
255 MINIMAL_SYMBOL_COUNT could be used for this, but it is possible
256 for multiple readers to install minimal symbols into a given
257 per-BFD. */
258
259 bool minsyms_read : 1;
260
261 /* This is a hash table used to index the minimal symbols by name. */
262
263 minimal_symbol *msymbol_hash[MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE] {};
264
265 /* This hash table is used to index the minimal symbols by their
266 demangled names. */
267
268 minimal_symbol *msymbol_demangled_hash[MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE] {};
269 };
270
271 /* Master structure for keeping track of each file from which
272 gdb reads symbols. There are several ways these get allocated: 1.
273 The main symbol file, symfile_objfile, set by the symbol-file command,
274 2. Additional symbol files added by the add-symbol-file command,
275 3. Shared library objfiles, added by ADD_SOLIB, 4. symbol files
276 for modules that were loaded when GDB attached to a remote system
277 (see remote-vx.c). */
278
279 struct objfile
280 {
281 objfile (bfd *, const char *, objfile_flags);
282 ~objfile ();
283
284 DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (objfile);
285
286 /* All struct objfile's are chained together by their next pointers.
287 The program space field "objfiles" (frequently referenced via
288 the macro "object_files") points to the first link in this chain. */
289
290 struct objfile *next = nullptr;
291
292 /* The object file's original name as specified by the user,
293 made absolute, and tilde-expanded. However, it is not canonicalized
294 (i.e., it has not been passed through gdb_realpath).
295 This pointer is never NULL. This does not have to be freed; it is
296 guaranteed to have a lifetime at least as long as the objfile. */
297
298 char *original_name = nullptr;
299
300 CORE_ADDR addr_low = 0;
301
302 /* Some flag bits for this objfile. */
303
304 objfile_flags flags;
305
306 /* The program space associated with this objfile. */
307
308 struct program_space *pspace;
309
310 /* List of compunits.
311 These are used to do symbol lookups and file/line-number lookups. */
312
313 struct compunit_symtab *compunit_symtabs = nullptr;
314
315 /* Each objfile points to a linked list of partial symtabs derived from
316 this file, one partial symtab structure for each compilation unit
317 (source file). */
318
319 struct partial_symtab *psymtabs = nullptr;
320
321 /* Map addresses to the entries of PSYMTABS. It would be more efficient to
322 have a map per the whole process but ADDRMAP cannot selectively remove
323 its items during FREE_OBJFILE. This mapping is already present even for
324 PARTIAL_SYMTABs which still have no corresponding full SYMTABs read. */
325
326 struct addrmap *psymtabs_addrmap = nullptr;
327
328 /* List of freed partial symtabs, available for re-use. */
329
330 struct partial_symtab *free_psymtabs = nullptr;
331
332 /* The object file's BFD. Can be null if the objfile contains only
333 minimal symbols, e.g. the run time common symbols for SunOS4. */
334
335 bfd *obfd;
336
337 /* The per-BFD data. Note that this is treated specially if OBFD
338 is NULL. */
339
340 struct objfile_per_bfd_storage *per_bfd = nullptr;
341
342 /* The modification timestamp of the object file, as of the last time
343 we read its symbols. */
344
345 long mtime = 0;
346
347 /* Obstack to hold objects that should be freed when we load a new symbol
348 table from this object file. */
349
350 struct obstack objfile_obstack {};
351
352 /* A byte cache where we can stash arbitrary "chunks" of bytes that
353 will not change. */
354
355 struct psymbol_bcache *psymbol_cache;
356
357 /* Vectors of all partial symbols read in from file. The actual data
358 is stored in the objfile_obstack. */
359
360 std::vector<partial_symbol *> global_psymbols;
361 std::vector<partial_symbol *> static_psymbols;
362
363 /* Structure which keeps track of functions that manipulate objfile's
364 of the same type as this objfile. I.e. the function to read partial
365 symbols for example. Note that this structure is in statically
366 allocated memory, and is shared by all objfiles that use the
367 object module reader of this type. */
368
369 const struct sym_fns *sf = nullptr;
370
371 /* Per objfile data-pointers required by other GDB modules. */
372
373 REGISTRY_FIELDS {};
374
375 /* Set of relocation offsets to apply to each section.
376 The table is indexed by the_bfd_section->index, thus it is generally
377 as large as the number of sections in the binary.
378 The table is stored on the objfile_obstack.
379
380 These offsets indicate that all symbols (including partial and
381 minimal symbols) which have been read have been relocated by this
382 much. Symbols which are yet to be read need to be relocated by it. */
383
384 struct section_offsets *section_offsets = nullptr;
385 int num_sections = 0;
386
387 /* Indexes in the section_offsets array. These are initialized by the
388 *_symfile_offsets() family of functions (som_symfile_offsets,
389 xcoff_symfile_offsets, default_symfile_offsets). In theory they
390 should correspond to the section indexes used by bfd for the
391 current objfile. The exception to this for the time being is the
392 SOM version.
393
394 These are initialized to -1 so that we can later detect if they
395 are used w/o being properly assigned to. */
396
397 int sect_index_text = -1;
398 int sect_index_data = -1;
399 int sect_index_bss = -1;
400 int sect_index_rodata = -1;
401
402 /* These pointers are used to locate the section table, which
403 among other things, is used to map pc addresses into sections.
404 SECTIONS points to the first entry in the table, and
405 SECTIONS_END points to the first location past the last entry
406 in the table. The table is stored on the objfile_obstack. The
407 sections are indexed by the BFD section index; but the
408 structure data is only valid for certain sections
409 (e.g. non-empty, SEC_ALLOC). */
410
411 struct obj_section *sections = nullptr;
412 struct obj_section *sections_end = nullptr;
413
414 /* GDB allows to have debug symbols in separate object files. This is
415 used by .gnu_debuglink, ELF build id note and Mach-O OSO.
416 Although this is a tree structure, GDB only support one level
417 (ie a separate debug for a separate debug is not supported). Note that
418 separate debug object are in the main chain and therefore will be
419 visited by ALL_OBJFILES & co iterators. Separate debug objfile always
420 has a non-nul separate_debug_objfile_backlink. */
421
422 /* Link to the first separate debug object, if any. */
423
424 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile = nullptr;
425
426 /* If this is a separate debug object, this is used as a link to the
427 actual executable objfile. */
428
429 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile_backlink = nullptr;
430
431 /* If this is a separate debug object, this is a link to the next one
432 for the same executable objfile. */
433
434 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile_link = nullptr;
435
436 /* Place to stash various statistics about this objfile. */
437
438 OBJSTATS;
439
440 /* A linked list of symbols created when reading template types or
441 function templates. These symbols are not stored in any symbol
442 table, so we have to keep them here to relocate them
443 properly. */
444
445 struct symbol *template_symbols = nullptr;
446
447 /* Associate a static link (struct dynamic_prop *) to all blocks (struct
448 block *) that have one.
449
450 In the context of nested functions (available in Pascal, Ada and GNU C,
451 for instance), a static link (as in DWARF's DW_AT_static_link attribute)
452 for a function is a way to get the frame corresponding to the enclosing
453 function.
454
455 Very few blocks have a static link, so it's more memory efficient to
456 store these here rather than in struct block. Static links must be
457 allocated on the objfile's obstack. */
458 htab_t static_links {};
459 };
460
461 /* Declarations for functions defined in objfiles.c */
462
463 extern struct gdbarch *get_objfile_arch (const struct objfile *);
464
465 extern int entry_point_address_query (CORE_ADDR *entry_p);
466
467 extern CORE_ADDR entry_point_address (void);
468
469 extern void build_objfile_section_table (struct objfile *);
470
471 extern struct objfile *objfile_separate_debug_iterate (const struct objfile *,
472 const struct objfile *);
473
474 extern void put_objfile_before (struct objfile *, struct objfile *);
475
476 extern void add_separate_debug_objfile (struct objfile *, struct objfile *);
477
478 extern void unlink_objfile (struct objfile *);
479
480 extern void free_objfile_separate_debug (struct objfile *);
481
482 extern void free_all_objfiles (void);
483
484 extern void objfile_relocate (struct objfile *, const struct section_offsets *);
485 extern void objfile_rebase (struct objfile *, CORE_ADDR);
486
487 extern int objfile_has_partial_symbols (struct objfile *objfile);
488
489 extern int objfile_has_full_symbols (struct objfile *objfile);
490
491 extern int objfile_has_symbols (struct objfile *objfile);
492
493 extern int have_partial_symbols (void);
494
495 extern int have_full_symbols (void);
496
497 extern void objfile_set_sym_fns (struct objfile *objfile,
498 const struct sym_fns *sf);
499
500 extern void objfiles_changed (void);
501
502 extern int is_addr_in_objfile (CORE_ADDR addr, const struct objfile *objfile);
503
504 /* Return true if ADDRESS maps into one of the sections of a
505 OBJF_SHARED objfile of PSPACE and false otherwise. */
506
507 extern int shared_objfile_contains_address_p (struct program_space *pspace,
508 CORE_ADDR address);
509
510 /* This operation deletes all objfile entries that represent solibs that
511 weren't explicitly loaded by the user, via e.g., the add-symbol-file
512 command. */
513
514 extern void objfile_purge_solibs (void);
515
516 /* Functions for dealing with the minimal symbol table, really a misc
517 address<->symbol mapping for things we don't have debug symbols for. */
518
519 extern int have_minimal_symbols (void);
520
521 extern struct obj_section *find_pc_section (CORE_ADDR pc);
522
523 /* Return non-zero if PC is in a section called NAME. */
524 extern int pc_in_section (CORE_ADDR, const char *);
525
526 /* Return non-zero if PC is in a SVR4-style procedure linkage table
527 section. */
528
529 static inline int
530 in_plt_section (CORE_ADDR pc)
531 {
532 return pc_in_section (pc, ".plt");
533 }
534
535 /* Keep a registry of per-objfile data-pointers required by other GDB
536 modules. */
537 DECLARE_REGISTRY(objfile);
538
539 /* In normal use, the section map will be rebuilt by find_pc_section
540 if objfiles have been added, removed or relocated since it was last
541 called. Calling inhibit_section_map_updates will inhibit this
542 behavior until resume_section_map_updates is called. If you call
543 inhibit_section_map_updates you must ensure that every call to
544 find_pc_section in the inhibited region relates to a section that
545 is already in the section map and has not since been removed or
546 relocated. */
547 extern void inhibit_section_map_updates (struct program_space *pspace);
548
549 /* Resume automatically rebuilding the section map as required. */
550 extern void resume_section_map_updates (struct program_space *pspace);
551
552 /* Version of the above suitable for use as a cleanup. */
553 extern void resume_section_map_updates_cleanup (void *arg);
554
555 extern void default_iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order
556 (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
557 iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order_cb_ftype *cb,
558 void *cb_data, struct objfile *current_objfile);
559 \f
560
561 /* Traverse all object files in the current program space.
562 ALL_OBJFILES_SAFE works even if you delete the objfile during the
563 traversal. */
564
565 /* Traverse all object files in program space SS. */
566
567 #define ALL_PSPACE_OBJFILES(ss, obj) \
568 for ((obj) = ss->objfiles; (obj) != NULL; (obj) = (obj)->next)
569
570 #define ALL_OBJFILES(obj) \
571 for ((obj) = current_program_space->objfiles; \
572 (obj) != NULL; \
573 (obj) = (obj)->next)
574
575 #define ALL_OBJFILES_SAFE(obj,nxt) \
576 for ((obj) = current_program_space->objfiles; \
577 (obj) != NULL? ((nxt)=(obj)->next,1) :0; \
578 (obj) = (nxt))
579
580 /* Traverse all symtabs in one objfile. */
581
582 #define ALL_OBJFILE_FILETABS(objfile, cu, s) \
583 ALL_OBJFILE_COMPUNITS (objfile, cu) \
584 ALL_COMPUNIT_FILETABS (cu, s)
585
586 /* Traverse all compunits in one objfile. */
587
588 #define ALL_OBJFILE_COMPUNITS(objfile, cu) \
589 for ((cu) = (objfile) -> compunit_symtabs; (cu) != NULL; (cu) = (cu) -> next)
590
591 /* Traverse all minimal symbols in one objfile. */
592
593 #define ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS(objfile, m) \
594 for ((m) = (objfile)->per_bfd->msymbols; \
595 MSYMBOL_LINKAGE_NAME (m) != NULL; \
596 (m)++)
597
598 /* Traverse all symtabs in all objfiles in the current symbol
599 space. */
600
601 #define ALL_FILETABS(objfile, ps, s) \
602 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
603 ALL_OBJFILE_FILETABS (objfile, ps, s)
604
605 /* Traverse all compunits in all objfiles in the current program space. */
606
607 #define ALL_COMPUNITS(objfile, cu) \
608 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
609 ALL_OBJFILE_COMPUNITS (objfile, cu)
610
611 /* Traverse all minimal symbols in all objfiles in the current symbol
612 space. */
613
614 #define ALL_MSYMBOLS(objfile, m) \
615 ALL_OBJFILES (objfile) \
616 ALL_OBJFILE_MSYMBOLS (objfile, m)
617
618 #define ALL_OBJFILE_OSECTIONS(objfile, osect) \
619 for (osect = objfile->sections; osect < objfile->sections_end; osect++) \
620 if (osect->the_bfd_section == NULL) \
621 { \
622 /* Nothing. */ \
623 } \
624 else
625
626 /* Traverse all obj_sections in all objfiles in the current program
627 space.
628
629 Note that this detects a "break" in the inner loop, and exits
630 immediately from the outer loop as well, thus, client code doesn't
631 need to know that this is implemented with a double for. The extra
632 hair is to make sure that a "break;" stops the outer loop iterating
633 as well, and both OBJFILE and OSECT are left unmodified:
634
635 - The outer loop learns about the inner loop's end condition, and
636 stops iterating if it detects the inner loop didn't reach its
637 end. In other words, the outer loop keeps going only if the
638 inner loop reached its end cleanly [(osect) ==
639 (objfile)->sections_end].
640
641 - OSECT is initialized in the outer loop initialization
642 expressions, such as if the inner loop has reached its end, so
643 the check mentioned above succeeds the first time.
644
645 - The trick to not clearing OBJFILE on a "break;" is, in the outer
646 loop's loop expression, advance OBJFILE, but iff the inner loop
647 reached its end. If not, there was a "break;", so leave OBJFILE
648 as is; the outer loop's conditional will break immediately as
649 well (as OSECT will be different from OBJFILE->sections_end). */
650
651 #define ALL_OBJSECTIONS(objfile, osect) \
652 for ((objfile) = current_program_space->objfiles, \
653 (objfile) != NULL ? ((osect) = (objfile)->sections_end) : 0; \
654 (objfile) != NULL \
655 && (osect) == (objfile)->sections_end; \
656 ((osect) == (objfile)->sections_end \
657 ? ((objfile) = (objfile)->next, \
658 (objfile) != NULL ? (osect) = (objfile)->sections_end : 0) \
659 : 0)) \
660 ALL_OBJFILE_OSECTIONS (objfile, osect)
661
662 #define SECT_OFF_DATA(objfile) \
663 ((objfile->sect_index_data == -1) \
664 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \
665 _("sect_index_data not initialized")), -1) \
666 : objfile->sect_index_data)
667
668 #define SECT_OFF_RODATA(objfile) \
669 ((objfile->sect_index_rodata == -1) \
670 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \
671 _("sect_index_rodata not initialized")), -1) \
672 : objfile->sect_index_rodata)
673
674 #define SECT_OFF_TEXT(objfile) \
675 ((objfile->sect_index_text == -1) \
676 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \
677 _("sect_index_text not initialized")), -1) \
678 : objfile->sect_index_text)
679
680 /* Sometimes the .bss section is missing from the objfile, so we don't
681 want to die here. Let the users of SECT_OFF_BSS deal with an
682 uninitialized section index. */
683 #define SECT_OFF_BSS(objfile) (objfile)->sect_index_bss
684
685 /* Answer whether there is more than one object file loaded. */
686
687 #define MULTI_OBJFILE_P() (object_files && object_files->next)
688
689 /* Reset the per-BFD storage area on OBJ. */
690
691 void set_objfile_per_bfd (struct objfile *obj);
692
693 /* Return canonical name for OBJFILE.
694 This is the real file name if the file has been opened.
695 Otherwise it is the original name supplied by the user. */
696
697 const char *objfile_name (const struct objfile *objfile);
698
699 /* Return the (real) file name of OBJFILE if the file has been opened,
700 otherwise return NULL. */
701
702 const char *objfile_filename (const struct objfile *objfile);
703
704 /* Return the name to print for OBJFILE in debugging messages. */
705
706 extern const char *objfile_debug_name (const struct objfile *objfile);
707
708 /* Return the name of the file format of OBJFILE if the file has been opened,
709 otherwise return NULL. */
710
711 const char *objfile_flavour_name (struct objfile *objfile);
712
713 /* Set the objfile's notion of the "main" name and language. */
714
715 extern void set_objfile_main_name (struct objfile *objfile,
716 const char *name, enum language lang);
717
718 extern void objfile_register_static_link
719 (struct objfile *objfile,
720 const struct block *block,
721 const struct dynamic_prop *static_link);
722
723 extern const struct dynamic_prop *objfile_lookup_static_link
724 (struct objfile *objfile, const struct block *block);
725
726 #endif /* !defined (OBJFILES_H) */