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Make gdb.base/index-cache.exp work with readnow board (PR 24669)
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ec2bcbe7 1/* Interface to C preprocessor macro tables for GDB.
42a4f53d 2 Copyright (C) 2002-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3 Contributed by Red Hat, 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
a9762ec7 9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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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
a9762ec7 18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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19
20#ifndef MACROTAB_H
21#define MACROTAB_H
22
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23#include "common/function-view.h"
24
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25struct obstack;
26struct bcache;
43f3e411 27struct compunit_symtab;
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28
29/* How do we represent a source location? I mean, how should we
30 represent them within GDB; the user wants to use all sorts of
31 ambiguous abbreviations, like "break 32" and "break foo.c:32"
32 ("foo.c" may have been #included into several compilation units),
33 but what do we disambiguate those things to?
34
35 - Answer 1: "Filename and line number." (Or column number, if
36 you're picky.) That's not quite good enough. For example, the
37 same source file can be #included into several different
38 compilation units --- which #inclusion do you mean?
39
40 - Answer 2: "Compilation unit, filename, and line number." This is
41 a pretty good answer; GDB's `struct symtab_and_line' basically
42 embodies this representation. But it's still ambiguous; what if a
43 given compilation unit #includes the same file twice --- how can I
44 set a breakpoint on line 12 of the fifth #inclusion of "foo.c"?
45
46 - Answer 3: "Compilation unit, chain of #inclusions, and line
47 number." This is analogous to the way GCC reports errors in
48 #include files:
49
50 $ gcc -c base.c
51 In file included from header2.h:8,
52 from header1.h:3,
53 from base.c:5:
54 header3.h:1: parse error before ')' token
55 $
56
57 GCC tells you exactly what path of #inclusions led you to the
58 problem. It gives you complete information, in a way that the
59 following would not:
60
61 $ gcc -c base.c
62 header3.h:1: parse error before ')' token
63 $
64
65 Converting all of GDB to use this is a big task, and I'm not really
66 suggesting it should be a priority. But this module's whole
67 purpose is to maintain structures describing the macro expansion
68 process, so I think it's appropriate for us to take a little care
69 to do that in a complete fashion.
70
71 In this interface, the first line of a file is numbered 1, not 0.
72 This is the same convention the rest of GDB uses. */
73
74
75/* A table of all the macro definitions for a given compilation unit. */
76struct macro_table;
77
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78/* The definition of a single macro. */
79struct macro_definition;
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80
81/* A source file that participated in a compilation unit --- either a
82 main file, or an #included file. If a file is #included more than
83 once, the presence of the `included_from' and `included_at_line'
84 members means that we need to make one instance of this structure
85 for each #inclusion. Taken as a group, these structures form a
86 tree mapping the #inclusions that contributed to the compilation
87 unit, with the main source file as its root.
88
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89 Beware --- not every source file mentioned in a compilation unit's
90 symtab structures will appear in the #inclusion tree! As of Oct
91 2002, GCC does record the effect of #line directives in the source
92 line info, but not in macro info. This means that GDB's symtabs
93 (built from the former, among other things) may mention filenames
94 that the #inclusion tree (built from the latter) doesn't have any
95 record of. See macroscope.c:sal_macro_scope for how to accomodate
96 this.
97
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98 It's worth noting that libcpp has a simpler way of representing all
99 this, which we should consider switching to. It might even be
100 suitable for ordinary non-macro line number info.
101
102 Suppose you take your main source file, and after each line
103 containing an #include directive you insert the text of the
104 #included file. The result is a big file that pretty much
105 corresponds to the full text the compiler's going to see. There's
106 a one-to-one correspondence between lines in the big file and
107 per-inclusion lines in the source files. (Obviously, #include
108 directives that are #if'd out don't count. And you'll need to
109 append a newline to any file that doesn't end in one, to avoid
110 splicing the last #included line with the next line of the
111 #including file.)
112
113 Libcpp calls line numbers in this big imaginary file "logical line
114 numbers", and has a data structure called a "line map" that can map
115 logical line numbers onto actual source filenames and line numbers,
116 and also tell you the chain of #inclusions responsible for any
117 particular logical line number. Basically, this means you can pass
118 around a single line number and some kind of "compilation unit"
119 object and you get nice, unambiguous source code locations that
120 distinguish between multiple #inclusions of the same file, etc.
121
122 Pretty neat, huh? */
123
124struct macro_source_file
125{
126
127 /* The macro table for the compilation unit this source location is
128 a part of. */
129 struct macro_table *table;
130
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131 /* A source file --- possibly a header file. This filename is relative to
132 the compilation directory (table->comp_dir), it exactly matches the
133 symtab->filename content. */
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134 const char *filename;
135
136 /* The location we were #included from, or zero if we are the
137 compilation unit's main source file. */
138 struct macro_source_file *included_by;
139
140 /* If `included_from' is non-zero, the line number in that source
141 file at which we were included. */
142 int included_at_line;
143
144 /* Head of a linked list of the source files #included by this file;
145 our children in the #inclusion tree. This list is sorted by its
146 elements' `included_at_line' values, which are unique. (The
147 macro splay tree's ordering function needs this property.) */
148 struct macro_source_file *includes;
149
150 /* The next file #included by our `included_from' file; our sibling
151 in the #inclusion tree. */
152 struct macro_source_file *next_included;
153};
154
155
156/* Create a new, empty macro table. Allocate it in OBSTACK, or use
157 xmalloc if OBSTACK is zero. Use BCACHE to store all macro names,
158 arguments, definitions, and anything else that might be the same
159 amongst compilation units in an executable file; if BCACHE is zero,
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160 don't cache these things. CUST is a pointer to the containing
161 compilation unit, or NULL if there isn't one.
ec2bcbe7 162
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163 Note that, if either OBSTACK or BCACHE are non-zero, then removing
164 information from the table may leak memory. Neither obstacks nor
165 bcaches really allow you to remove information, so although we can
166 update the data structure to record the change, we can't free the
167 old data. At the moment, since we only provide obstacks and
168 bcaches for macro tables for symtabs, this isn't a problem; only
169 odd debugging information makes a definition and then deletes it at
170 the same source location (although 'gcc -DFOO -UFOO -DFOO=2' does
171 do that in GCC 4.1.2.). */
ec2bcbe7 172struct macro_table *new_macro_table (struct obstack *obstack,
233d95b5 173 struct bcache *bcache,
43f3e411 174 struct compunit_symtab *cust);
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175
176
177/* Free TABLE, and any macro definitions, source file structures,
178 etc. it owns. This will raise an internal error if TABLE was
179 allocated on an obstack, or if it uses a bcache. */
180void free_macro_table (struct macro_table *table);
181
182
183/* Set FILENAME as the main source file of TABLE. Return a source
184 file structure describing that file; if we record the #definition
185 of macros, or the #inclusion of other files into FILENAME, we'll
186 use that source file structure to indicate the context.
187
188 The "main source file" is the one that was given to the compiler;
189 all other source files that contributed to the compilation unit are
190 #included, directly or indirectly, from this one.
191
192 The macro table makes its own copy of FILENAME; the caller is
193 responsible for freeing FILENAME when it is no longer needed. */
194struct macro_source_file *macro_set_main (struct macro_table *table,
195 const char *filename);
196
197
198/* Return the main source file of the macro table TABLE. */
199struct macro_source_file *macro_main (struct macro_table *table);
200
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201/* Mark the macro table TABLE so that macros defined in this table can
202 be redefined without error. Note that it invalid to call this if
203 TABLE is allocated on an obstack. */
204void macro_allow_redefinitions (struct macro_table *table);
205
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206
207/* Record a #inclusion.
208 Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE,
209 we #included the file INCLUDED. Return a source file structure we
210 can use for symbols #defined or files #included into that. If we've
211 already created a source file structure for this #inclusion, return
212 the same structure we created last time.
213
214 The first line of the source file has a line number of 1, not 0.
215
216 The macro table makes its own copy of INCLUDED; the caller is
217 responsible for freeing INCLUDED when it is no longer needed. */
218struct macro_source_file *macro_include (struct macro_source_file *source,
219 int line,
220 const char *included);
221
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222/* Define any special macros, like __FILE__ or __LINE__. This should
223 be called once, on the main source file. */
224
225void macro_define_special (struct macro_table *table);
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226
227/* Find any source file structure for a file named NAME, either
228 included into SOURCE, or SOURCE itself. Return zero if we have
229 none. NAME is only the final portion of the filename, not the full
230 path. e.g., `stdio.h', not `/usr/include/stdio.h'. If NAME
231 appears more than once in the inclusion tree, return the
232 least-nested inclusion --- the one closest to the main source file. */
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233struct macro_source_file *macro_lookup_inclusion
234 (struct macro_source_file *source,
235 const char *name);
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236
237
238/* Record an object-like #definition (i.e., one with no parameter list).
239 Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE,
240 we #defined a preprocessor symbol named NAME, whose replacement
241 string is REPLACEMENT. This function makes copies of NAME and
242 REPLACEMENT; the caller is responsible for freeing them. */
243void macro_define_object (struct macro_source_file *source, int line,
244 const char *name, const char *replacement);
245
246
247/* Record an function-like #definition (i.e., one with a parameter list).
248
249 Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE,
250 we #defined a preprocessor symbol named NAME, with ARGC arguments
251 whose names are given in ARGV, whose replacement string is REPLACEMENT. If
252 the macro takes a variable number of arguments, then ARGC should be
253 one greater than the number of named arguments, and ARGV[ARGC-1]
254 should be the string "...". This function makes its own copies of
255 NAME, ARGV, and REPLACEMENT; the caller is responsible for freeing
256 them. */
257void macro_define_function (struct macro_source_file *source, int line,
258 const char *name, int argc, const char **argv,
259 const char *replacement);
260
261
262/* Record an #undefinition.
263 Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE,
264 we removed the definition for the preprocessor symbol named NAME. */
265void macro_undef (struct macro_source_file *source, int line,
266 const char *name);
267
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268/* Different kinds of macro definitions. */
269enum macro_kind
270{
271 macro_object_like,
272 macro_function_like
273};
274
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275/* Different kinds of special macros. */
276
277enum macro_special_kind
278{
279 /* Ordinary. */
280 macro_ordinary,
281 /* The special macro __FILE__. */
282 macro_FILE,
283 /* The special macro __LINE__. */
284 macro_LINE
285};
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286
287/* A preprocessor symbol definition. */
288struct macro_definition
289{
290 /* The table this definition lives in. */
291 struct macro_table *table;
292
293 /* What kind of macro it is. */
2e668a5d 294 ENUM_BITFIELD (macro_kind) kind : 1;
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295
296 /* If `kind' is `macro_function_like', the number of arguments it
297 takes, and their names. The names, and the array of pointers to
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298 them, are in the table's bcache, if it has one. If `kind' is
299 `macro_object_like', then this is actually a `macro_special_kind'
300 describing the macro. */
301 int argc : 30;
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302 const char * const *argv;
303
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304 /* The replacement string (body) of the macro. For ordinary macros,
305 this is in the table's bcache, if it has one. For special macros
306 like __FILE__, this value is only valid until the next use of any
307 special macro definition; that is, it is reset each time any
308 special macro is looked up or iterated over. */
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309 const char *replacement;
310};
311
312
313/* Return a pointer to the macro definition for NAME in scope at line
314 number LINE of SOURCE. If LINE is -1, return the definition in
315 effect at the end of the file. The macro table owns the structure;
316 the caller need not free it. Return zero if NAME is not #defined
317 at that point. */
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318struct macro_definition *macro_lookup_definition
319 (struct macro_source_file *source,
320 int line, const char *name);
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321
322
323/* Return the source location of the definition for NAME in scope at
324 line number LINE of SOURCE. Set *DEFINITION_LINE to the line
325 number of the definition, and return a source file structure for
326 the file. Return zero if NAME has no definition in scope at that
327 point, and leave *DEFINITION_LINE unchanged. */
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328struct macro_source_file *macro_definition_location
329 (struct macro_source_file *source,
330 int line,
331 const char *name,
332 int *definition_line);
ec2bcbe7 333
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334/* Prototype for a callback callable when walking a macro table. NAME
335 is the name of the macro, and DEFINITION is the definition. SOURCE
336 is the file at the start of the include path, and LINE is the line
337 number of the SOURCE file where the macro was defined. */
338typedef void (macro_callback_fn) (const char *name,
339 const struct macro_definition *definition,
340 struct macro_source_file *source,
341 int line);
342
343/* Call the callable FN for each macro in the macro table TABLE. */
344void macro_for_each (struct macro_table *table,
345 gdb::function_view<macro_callback_fn> fn);
346
347/* Call FN for each macro that is visible in a given scope. The scope
348 is represented by FILE and LINE. */
9a044a89 349void macro_for_each_in_scope (struct macro_source_file *file, int line,
14bc53a8 350 gdb::function_view<macro_callback_fn> fn);
d7d9f01e 351
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352/* Return FILE->filename with possibly prepended compilation directory name.
353 This is raw concatenation without the "set substitute-path" and gdb_realpath
9409233b 354 applications done by symtab_to_fullname.
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355
356 THis function ignores the "set filename-display" setting. Its default
357 setting is "relative" which is backward compatible but the former behavior
358 of macro filenames printing was "absolute". */
9409233b 359extern std::string macro_source_fullname (struct macro_source_file *file);
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360
361#endif /* MACROTAB_H */