Move processing_acc_compilation to dbxread.c
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / dbxread.c
1 /* Read dbx symbol tables and convert to internal format, for GDB.
2 Copyright (C) 1986-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4 This file is part of GDB.
5
6 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
9 (at your option) any later version.
10
11 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
14 GNU General Public License for more details.
15
16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
18
19 /* This module provides three functions: dbx_symfile_init,
20 which initializes to read a symbol file; dbx_new_init, which
21 discards existing cached information when all symbols are being
22 discarded; and dbx_symfile_read, which reads a symbol table
23 from a file.
24
25 dbx_symfile_read only does the minimum work necessary for letting the
26 user "name" things symbolically; it does not read the entire symtab.
27 Instead, it reads the external and static symbols and puts them in partial
28 symbol tables. When more extensive information is requested of a
29 file, the corresponding partial symbol table is mutated into a full
30 fledged symbol table by going back and reading the symbols
31 for real. dbx_psymtab_to_symtab() is the function that does this */
32
33 #include "defs.h"
34 #if defined(__CYGNUSCLIB__)
35 #include <sys/types.h>
36 #include <fcntl.h>
37 #endif
38
39 #include "gdb_obstack.h"
40 #include <sys/stat.h>
41 #include "symtab.h"
42 #include "breakpoint.h"
43 #include "target.h"
44 #include "gdbcore.h" /* for bfd stuff */
45 #include "libaout.h" /* FIXME Secret internal BFD stuff for a.out */
46 #include "filenames.h"
47 #include "objfiles.h"
48 #include "buildsym.h"
49 #include "stabsread.h"
50 #include "gdb-stabs.h"
51 #include "demangle.h"
52 #include "complaints.h"
53 #include "cp-abi.h"
54 #include "cp-support.h"
55 #include "psympriv.h"
56 #include "block.h"
57 #include "aout/aout64.h"
58 #include "aout/stab_gnu.h" /* We always use GNU stabs, not
59 native, now. */
60 \f
61
62 /* Key for dbx-associated data. */
63
64 const struct objfile_data *dbx_objfile_data_key;
65
66 /* We put a pointer to this structure in the read_symtab_private field
67 of the psymtab. */
68
69 struct symloc
70 {
71 /* Offset within the file symbol table of first local symbol for this
72 file. */
73
74 int ldsymoff;
75
76 /* Length (in bytes) of the section of the symbol table devoted to
77 this file's symbols (actually, the section bracketed may contain
78 more than just this file's symbols). If ldsymlen is 0, the only
79 reason for this thing's existence is the dependency list. Nothing
80 else will happen when it is read in. */
81
82 int ldsymlen;
83
84 /* The size of each symbol in the symbol file (in external form). */
85
86 int symbol_size;
87
88 /* Further information needed to locate the symbols if they are in
89 an ELF file. */
90
91 int symbol_offset;
92 int string_offset;
93 int file_string_offset;
94 enum language pst_language;
95 };
96
97 #define LDSYMOFF(p) (((struct symloc *)((p)->read_symtab_private))->ldsymoff)
98 #define LDSYMLEN(p) (((struct symloc *)((p)->read_symtab_private))->ldsymlen)
99 #define SYMLOC(p) ((struct symloc *)((p)->read_symtab_private))
100 #define SYMBOL_SIZE(p) (SYMLOC(p)->symbol_size)
101 #define SYMBOL_OFFSET(p) (SYMLOC(p)->symbol_offset)
102 #define STRING_OFFSET(p) (SYMLOC(p)->string_offset)
103 #define FILE_STRING_OFFSET(p) (SYMLOC(p)->file_string_offset)
104 #define PST_LANGUAGE(p) (SYMLOC(p)->pst_language)
105 \f
106
107 /* The objfile we are currently reading. */
108
109 static struct objfile *dbxread_objfile;
110
111 /* Remember what we deduced to be the source language of this psymtab. */
112
113 static enum language psymtab_language = language_unknown;
114
115 /* The BFD for this file -- implicit parameter to next_symbol_text. */
116
117 static bfd *symfile_bfd;
118
119 /* The size of each symbol in the symbol file (in external form).
120 This is set by dbx_symfile_read when building psymtabs, and by
121 dbx_psymtab_to_symtab when building symtabs. */
122
123 static unsigned symbol_size;
124
125 /* This is the offset of the symbol table in the executable file. */
126
127 static unsigned symbol_table_offset;
128
129 /* This is the offset of the string table in the executable file. */
130
131 static unsigned string_table_offset;
132
133 /* For elf+stab executables, the n_strx field is not a simple index
134 into the string table. Instead, each .o file has a base offset in
135 the string table, and the associated symbols contain offsets from
136 this base. The following two variables contain the base offset for
137 the current and next .o files. */
138
139 static unsigned int file_string_table_offset;
140 static unsigned int next_file_string_table_offset;
141
142 /* .o and NLM files contain unrelocated addresses which are based at
143 0. When non-zero, this flag disables some of the special cases for
144 Solaris elf+stab text addresses at location 0. */
145
146 static int symfile_relocatable = 0;
147
148 /* When set, we are processing a .o file compiled by sun acc. This is
149 misnamed; it refers to all stabs-in-elf implementations which use
150 N_UNDF the way Sun does, including Solaris gcc. Hopefully all
151 stabs-in-elf implementations ever invented will choose to be
152 compatible. */
153
154 static unsigned char processing_acc_compilation;
155
156 \f
157 /* The lowest text address we have yet encountered. This is needed
158 because in an a.out file, there is no header field which tells us
159 what address the program is actually going to be loaded at, so we
160 need to make guesses based on the symbols (which *are* relocated to
161 reflect the address it will be loaded at). */
162
163 static CORE_ADDR lowest_text_address;
164
165 /* Non-zero if there is any line number info in the objfile. Prevents
166 dbx_end_psymtab from discarding an otherwise empty psymtab. */
167
168 static int has_line_numbers;
169
170 /* Complaints about the symbols we have encountered. */
171
172 static void
173 unknown_symtype_complaint (const char *arg1)
174 {
175 complaint (_("unknown symbol type %s"), arg1);
176 }
177
178 static void
179 lbrac_mismatch_complaint (int arg1)
180 {
181 complaint (_("N_LBRAC/N_RBRAC symbol mismatch at symtab pos %d"), arg1);
182 }
183
184 static void
185 repeated_header_complaint (const char *arg1, int arg2)
186 {
187 complaint (_("\"repeated\" header file %s not "
188 "previously seen, at symtab pos %d"),
189 arg1, arg2);
190 }
191
192 /* find_text_range --- find start and end of loadable code sections
193
194 The find_text_range function finds the shortest address range that
195 encloses all sections containing executable code, and stores it in
196 objfile's text_addr and text_size members.
197
198 dbx_symfile_read will use this to finish off the partial symbol
199 table, in some cases. */
200
201 static void
202 find_text_range (bfd * sym_bfd, struct objfile *objfile)
203 {
204 asection *sec;
205 int found_any = 0;
206 CORE_ADDR start = 0;
207 CORE_ADDR end = 0;
208
209 for (sec = sym_bfd->sections; sec; sec = sec->next)
210 if (bfd_get_section_flags (sym_bfd, sec) & SEC_CODE)
211 {
212 CORE_ADDR sec_start = bfd_section_vma (sym_bfd, sec);
213 CORE_ADDR sec_end = sec_start + bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, sec);
214
215 if (found_any)
216 {
217 if (sec_start < start)
218 start = sec_start;
219 if (sec_end > end)
220 end = sec_end;
221 }
222 else
223 {
224 start = sec_start;
225 end = sec_end;
226 }
227
228 found_any = 1;
229 }
230
231 if (!found_any)
232 error (_("Can't find any code sections in symbol file"));
233
234 DBX_TEXT_ADDR (objfile) = start;
235 DBX_TEXT_SIZE (objfile) = end - start;
236 }
237 \f
238
239
240 /* During initial symbol readin, we need to have a structure to keep
241 track of which psymtabs have which bincls in them. This structure
242 is used during readin to setup the list of dependencies within each
243 partial symbol table. */
244
245 struct header_file_location
246 {
247 header_file_location (const char *name_, int instance_,
248 struct partial_symtab *pst_)
249 : name (name_),
250 instance (instance_),
251 pst (pst_)
252 {
253 }
254
255 const char *name; /* Name of header file */
256 int instance; /* See above */
257 struct partial_symtab *pst; /* Partial symtab that has the
258 BINCL/EINCL defs for this file. */
259 };
260
261 /* The list of bincls. */
262 static std::vector<struct header_file_location> *bincl_list;
263
264 /* Local function prototypes. */
265
266 static void read_ofile_symtab (struct objfile *, struct partial_symtab *);
267
268 static void dbx_read_symtab (struct partial_symtab *self,
269 struct objfile *objfile);
270
271 static void dbx_psymtab_to_symtab_1 (struct objfile *, struct partial_symtab *);
272
273 static void read_dbx_symtab (minimal_symbol_reader &, struct objfile *);
274
275 static struct partial_symtab *find_corresponding_bincl_psymtab (const char *,
276 int);
277
278 static const char *dbx_next_symbol_text (struct objfile *);
279
280 static void fill_symbuf (bfd *);
281
282 static void dbx_symfile_init (struct objfile *);
283
284 static void dbx_new_init (struct objfile *);
285
286 static void dbx_symfile_read (struct objfile *, symfile_add_flags);
287
288 static void dbx_symfile_finish (struct objfile *);
289
290 static void record_minimal_symbol (minimal_symbol_reader &,
291 const char *, CORE_ADDR, int,
292 struct objfile *);
293
294 static void add_new_header_file (const char *, int);
295
296 static void add_old_header_file (const char *, int);
297
298 static void add_this_object_header_file (int);
299
300 static struct partial_symtab *start_psymtab (struct objfile *, const char *,
301 CORE_ADDR, int,
302 std::vector<partial_symbol *> &,
303 std::vector<partial_symbol *> &);
304
305 /* Free up old header file tables. */
306
307 void
308 free_header_files (void)
309 {
310 if (this_object_header_files)
311 {
312 xfree (this_object_header_files);
313 this_object_header_files = NULL;
314 }
315 n_allocated_this_object_header_files = 0;
316 }
317
318 /* Allocate new header file tables. */
319
320 void
321 init_header_files (void)
322 {
323 n_allocated_this_object_header_files = 10;
324 this_object_header_files = XNEWVEC (int, 10);
325 }
326
327 /* Add header file number I for this object file
328 at the next successive FILENUM. */
329
330 static void
331 add_this_object_header_file (int i)
332 {
333 if (n_this_object_header_files == n_allocated_this_object_header_files)
334 {
335 n_allocated_this_object_header_files *= 2;
336 this_object_header_files
337 = (int *) xrealloc ((char *) this_object_header_files,
338 n_allocated_this_object_header_files * sizeof (int));
339 }
340
341 this_object_header_files[n_this_object_header_files++] = i;
342 }
343
344 /* Add to this file an "old" header file, one already seen in
345 a previous object file. NAME is the header file's name.
346 INSTANCE is its instance code, to select among multiple
347 symbol tables for the same header file. */
348
349 static void
350 add_old_header_file (const char *name, int instance)
351 {
352 struct header_file *p = HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile);
353 int i;
354
355 for (i = 0; i < N_HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile); i++)
356 if (filename_cmp (p[i].name, name) == 0 && instance == p[i].instance)
357 {
358 add_this_object_header_file (i);
359 return;
360 }
361 repeated_header_complaint (name, symnum);
362 }
363
364 /* Add to this file a "new" header file: definitions for its types follow.
365 NAME is the header file's name.
366 Most often this happens only once for each distinct header file,
367 but not necessarily. If it happens more than once, INSTANCE has
368 a different value each time, and references to the header file
369 use INSTANCE values to select among them.
370
371 dbx output contains "begin" and "end" markers for each new header file,
372 but at this level we just need to know which files there have been;
373 so we record the file when its "begin" is seen and ignore the "end". */
374
375 static void
376 add_new_header_file (const char *name, int instance)
377 {
378 int i;
379 struct header_file *hfile;
380
381 /* Make sure there is room for one more header file. */
382
383 i = N_ALLOCATED_HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile);
384
385 if (N_HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile) == i)
386 {
387 if (i == 0)
388 {
389 N_ALLOCATED_HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile) = 10;
390 HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile) = (struct header_file *)
391 xmalloc (10 * sizeof (struct header_file));
392 }
393 else
394 {
395 i *= 2;
396 N_ALLOCATED_HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile) = i;
397 HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile) = (struct header_file *)
398 xrealloc ((char *) HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile),
399 (i * sizeof (struct header_file)));
400 }
401 }
402
403 /* Create an entry for this header file. */
404
405 i = N_HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile)++;
406 hfile = HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile) + i;
407 hfile->name = xstrdup (name);
408 hfile->instance = instance;
409 hfile->length = 10;
410 hfile->vector = XCNEWVEC (struct type *, 10);
411
412 add_this_object_header_file (i);
413 }
414
415 #if 0
416 static struct type **
417 explicit_lookup_type (int real_filenum, int index)
418 {
419 struct header_file *f = &HEADER_FILES (dbxread_objfile)[real_filenum];
420
421 if (index >= f->length)
422 {
423 f->length *= 2;
424 f->vector = (struct type **)
425 xrealloc (f->vector, f->length * sizeof (struct type *));
426 memset (&f->vector[f->length / 2],
427 '\0', f->length * sizeof (struct type *) / 2);
428 }
429 return &f->vector[index];
430 }
431 #endif
432 \f
433 static void
434 record_minimal_symbol (minimal_symbol_reader &reader,
435 const char *name, CORE_ADDR address, int type,
436 struct objfile *objfile)
437 {
438 enum minimal_symbol_type ms_type;
439 int section;
440
441 switch (type)
442 {
443 case N_TEXT | N_EXT:
444 ms_type = mst_text;
445 section = SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile);
446 break;
447 case N_DATA | N_EXT:
448 ms_type = mst_data;
449 section = SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile);
450 break;
451 case N_BSS | N_EXT:
452 ms_type = mst_bss;
453 section = SECT_OFF_BSS (objfile);
454 break;
455 case N_ABS | N_EXT:
456 ms_type = mst_abs;
457 section = -1;
458 break;
459 #ifdef N_SETV
460 case N_SETV | N_EXT:
461 ms_type = mst_data;
462 section = SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile);
463 break;
464 case N_SETV:
465 /* I don't think this type actually exists; since a N_SETV is the result
466 of going over many .o files, it doesn't make sense to have one
467 file local. */
468 ms_type = mst_file_data;
469 section = SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile);
470 break;
471 #endif
472 case N_TEXT:
473 case N_NBTEXT:
474 case N_FN:
475 case N_FN_SEQ:
476 ms_type = mst_file_text;
477 section = SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile);
478 break;
479 case N_DATA:
480 ms_type = mst_file_data;
481
482 /* Check for __DYNAMIC, which is used by Sun shared libraries.
483 Record it as global even if it's local, not global, so
484 lookup_minimal_symbol can find it. We don't check symbol_leading_char
485 because for SunOS4 it always is '_'. */
486 if (name[8] == 'C' && strcmp ("__DYNAMIC", name) == 0)
487 ms_type = mst_data;
488
489 /* Same with virtual function tables, both global and static. */
490 {
491 const char *tempstring = name;
492
493 if (tempstring[0] == bfd_get_symbol_leading_char (objfile->obfd))
494 ++tempstring;
495 if (is_vtable_name (tempstring))
496 ms_type = mst_data;
497 }
498 section = SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile);
499 break;
500 case N_BSS:
501 ms_type = mst_file_bss;
502 section = SECT_OFF_BSS (objfile);
503 break;
504 default:
505 ms_type = mst_unknown;
506 section = -1;
507 break;
508 }
509
510 if ((ms_type == mst_file_text || ms_type == mst_text)
511 && address < lowest_text_address)
512 lowest_text_address = address;
513
514 reader.record_with_info (name, address, ms_type, section);
515 }
516 \f
517 /* Scan and build partial symbols for a symbol file.
518 We have been initialized by a call to dbx_symfile_init, which
519 put all the relevant info into a "struct dbx_symfile_info",
520 hung off the objfile structure. */
521
522 static void
523 dbx_symfile_read (struct objfile *objfile, symfile_add_flags symfile_flags)
524 {
525 bfd *sym_bfd;
526 int val;
527
528 sym_bfd = objfile->obfd;
529
530 /* .o and .nlm files are relocatables with text, data and bss segs based at
531 0. This flag disables special (Solaris stabs-in-elf only) fixups for
532 symbols with a value of 0. */
533
534 symfile_relocatable = bfd_get_file_flags (sym_bfd) & HAS_RELOC;
535
536 val = bfd_seek (sym_bfd, DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile), SEEK_SET);
537 if (val < 0)
538 perror_with_name (objfile_name (objfile));
539
540 /* Size the symbol table. */
541 if (objfile->global_psymbols.capacity () == 0
542 && objfile->static_psymbols.capacity () == 0)
543 init_psymbol_list (objfile, DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile));
544
545 symbol_size = DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile);
546 symbol_table_offset = DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile);
547
548 free_pending_blocks ();
549 scoped_free_pendings free_pending;
550
551 minimal_symbol_reader reader (objfile);
552
553 /* Read stabs data from executable file and define symbols. */
554
555 read_dbx_symtab (reader, objfile);
556
557 /* Install any minimal symbols that have been collected as the current
558 minimal symbols for this objfile. */
559
560 reader.install ();
561 }
562
563 /* Initialize anything that needs initializing when a completely new
564 symbol file is specified (not just adding some symbols from another
565 file, e.g. a shared library). */
566
567 static void
568 dbx_new_init (struct objfile *ignore)
569 {
570 stabsread_new_init ();
571 buildsym_new_init ();
572 init_header_files ();
573 }
574
575
576 /* dbx_symfile_init ()
577 is the dbx-specific initialization routine for reading symbols.
578 It is passed a struct objfile which contains, among other things,
579 the BFD for the file whose symbols are being read, and a slot for a pointer
580 to "private data" which we fill with goodies.
581
582 We read the string table into malloc'd space and stash a pointer to it.
583
584 Since BFD doesn't know how to read debug symbols in a format-independent
585 way (and may never do so...), we have to do it ourselves. We will never
586 be called unless this is an a.out (or very similar) file.
587 FIXME, there should be a cleaner peephole into the BFD environment here. */
588
589 #define DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE_SIZE sizeof(long) /* FIXME */
590
591 static void
592 dbx_symfile_init (struct objfile *objfile)
593 {
594 int val;
595 bfd *sym_bfd = objfile->obfd;
596 char *name = bfd_get_filename (sym_bfd);
597 asection *text_sect;
598 unsigned char size_temp[DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE_SIZE];
599 struct dbx_symfile_info *dbx;
600
601 /* Allocate struct to keep track of the symfile. */
602 dbx = XCNEW (struct dbx_symfile_info);
603 set_objfile_data (objfile, dbx_objfile_data_key, dbx);
604
605 DBX_TEXT_SECTION (objfile) = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, ".text");
606 DBX_DATA_SECTION (objfile) = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, ".data");
607 DBX_BSS_SECTION (objfile) = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, ".bss");
608
609 /* FIXME POKING INSIDE BFD DATA STRUCTURES. */
610 #define STRING_TABLE_OFFSET (sym_bfd->origin + obj_str_filepos (sym_bfd))
611 #define SYMBOL_TABLE_OFFSET (sym_bfd->origin + obj_sym_filepos (sym_bfd))
612
613 /* FIXME POKING INSIDE BFD DATA STRUCTURES. */
614
615 text_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, ".text");
616 if (!text_sect)
617 error (_("Can't find .text section in symbol file"));
618 DBX_TEXT_ADDR (objfile) = bfd_section_vma (sym_bfd, text_sect);
619 DBX_TEXT_SIZE (objfile) = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, text_sect);
620
621 DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile) = obj_symbol_entry_size (sym_bfd);
622 DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile) = bfd_get_symcount (sym_bfd);
623 DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile) = SYMBOL_TABLE_OFFSET;
624
625 /* Read the string table and stash it away in the objfile_obstack.
626 When we blow away the objfile the string table goes away as well.
627 Note that gdb used to use the results of attempting to malloc the
628 string table, based on the size it read, as a form of sanity check
629 for botched byte swapping, on the theory that a byte swapped string
630 table size would be so totally bogus that the malloc would fail. Now
631 that we put in on the objfile_obstack, we can't do this since gdb gets
632 a fatal error (out of virtual memory) if the size is bogus. We can
633 however at least check to see if the size is less than the size of
634 the size field itself, or larger than the size of the entire file.
635 Note that all valid string tables have a size greater than zero, since
636 the bytes used to hold the size are included in the count. */
637
638 if (STRING_TABLE_OFFSET == 0)
639 {
640 /* It appears that with the existing bfd code, STRING_TABLE_OFFSET
641 will never be zero, even when there is no string table. This
642 would appear to be a bug in bfd. */
643 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) = 0;
644 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile) = NULL;
645 }
646 else
647 {
648 val = bfd_seek (sym_bfd, STRING_TABLE_OFFSET, SEEK_SET);
649 if (val < 0)
650 perror_with_name (name);
651
652 memset (size_temp, 0, sizeof (size_temp));
653 val = bfd_bread (size_temp, sizeof (size_temp), sym_bfd);
654 if (val < 0)
655 {
656 perror_with_name (name);
657 }
658 else if (val == 0)
659 {
660 /* With the existing bfd code, STRING_TABLE_OFFSET will be set to
661 EOF if there is no string table, and attempting to read the size
662 from EOF will read zero bytes. */
663 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) = 0;
664 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile) = NULL;
665 }
666 else
667 {
668 /* Read some data that would appear to be the string table size.
669 If there really is a string table, then it is probably the right
670 size. Byteswap if necessary and validate the size. Note that
671 the minimum is DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE_SIZE. If we just read some
672 random data that happened to be at STRING_TABLE_OFFSET, because
673 bfd can't tell us there is no string table, the sanity checks may
674 or may not catch this. */
675 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) = bfd_h_get_32 (sym_bfd, size_temp);
676
677 if (DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) < sizeof (size_temp)
678 || DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) > bfd_get_size (sym_bfd))
679 error (_("ridiculous string table size (%d bytes)."),
680 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile));
681
682 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile) =
683 (char *) obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
684 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile));
685 OBJSTAT (objfile, sz_strtab += DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile));
686
687 /* Now read in the string table in one big gulp. */
688
689 val = bfd_seek (sym_bfd, STRING_TABLE_OFFSET, SEEK_SET);
690 if (val < 0)
691 perror_with_name (name);
692 val = bfd_bread (DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile),
693 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile),
694 sym_bfd);
695 if (val != DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile))
696 perror_with_name (name);
697 }
698 }
699 }
700
701 /* Perform any local cleanups required when we are done with a particular
702 objfile. I.E, we are in the process of discarding all symbol information
703 for an objfile, freeing up all memory held for it, and unlinking the
704 objfile struct from the global list of known objfiles. */
705
706 static void
707 dbx_symfile_finish (struct objfile *objfile)
708 {
709 free_header_files ();
710 }
711
712 static void
713 dbx_free_symfile_info (struct objfile *objfile, void *arg)
714 {
715 struct dbx_symfile_info *dbx = (struct dbx_symfile_info *) arg;
716
717 if (dbx->header_files != NULL)
718 {
719 int i = dbx->n_header_files;
720 struct header_file *hfiles = dbx->header_files;
721
722 while (--i >= 0)
723 {
724 xfree (hfiles[i].name);
725 xfree (hfiles[i].vector);
726 }
727 xfree (hfiles);
728 }
729
730 xfree (dbx);
731 }
732
733 \f
734
735 /* Buffer for reading the symbol table entries. */
736 static struct external_nlist symbuf[4096];
737 static int symbuf_idx;
738 static int symbuf_end;
739
740 /* Name of last function encountered. Used in Solaris to approximate
741 object file boundaries. */
742 static const char *last_function_name;
743
744 /* The address in memory of the string table of the object file we are
745 reading (which might not be the "main" object file, but might be a
746 shared library or some other dynamically loaded thing). This is
747 set by read_dbx_symtab when building psymtabs, and by
748 read_ofile_symtab when building symtabs, and is used only by
749 next_symbol_text. FIXME: If that is true, we don't need it when
750 building psymtabs, right? */
751 static char *stringtab_global;
752
753 /* These variables are used to control fill_symbuf when the stabs
754 symbols are not contiguous (as may be the case when a COFF file is
755 linked using --split-by-reloc). */
756 static struct stab_section_list *symbuf_sections;
757 static unsigned int symbuf_left;
758 static unsigned int symbuf_read;
759
760 /* This variable stores a global stabs buffer, if we read stabs into
761 memory in one chunk in order to process relocations. */
762 static bfd_byte *stabs_data;
763
764 /* Refill the symbol table input buffer
765 and set the variables that control fetching entries from it.
766 Reports an error if no data available.
767 This function can read past the end of the symbol table
768 (into the string table) but this does no harm. */
769
770 static void
771 fill_symbuf (bfd *sym_bfd)
772 {
773 unsigned int count;
774 int nbytes;
775
776 if (stabs_data)
777 {
778 nbytes = sizeof (symbuf);
779 if (nbytes > symbuf_left)
780 nbytes = symbuf_left;
781 memcpy (symbuf, stabs_data + symbuf_read, nbytes);
782 }
783 else if (symbuf_sections == NULL)
784 {
785 count = sizeof (symbuf);
786 nbytes = bfd_bread (symbuf, count, sym_bfd);
787 }
788 else
789 {
790 if (symbuf_left <= 0)
791 {
792 file_ptr filepos = symbuf_sections->section->filepos;
793
794 if (bfd_seek (sym_bfd, filepos, SEEK_SET) != 0)
795 perror_with_name (bfd_get_filename (sym_bfd));
796 symbuf_left = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, symbuf_sections->section);
797 symbol_table_offset = filepos - symbuf_read;
798 symbuf_sections = symbuf_sections->next;
799 }
800
801 count = symbuf_left;
802 if (count > sizeof (symbuf))
803 count = sizeof (symbuf);
804 nbytes = bfd_bread (symbuf, count, sym_bfd);
805 }
806
807 if (nbytes < 0)
808 perror_with_name (bfd_get_filename (sym_bfd));
809 else if (nbytes == 0)
810 error (_("Premature end of file reading symbol table"));
811 symbuf_end = nbytes / symbol_size;
812 symbuf_idx = 0;
813 symbuf_left -= nbytes;
814 symbuf_read += nbytes;
815 }
816
817 static void
818 stabs_seek (int sym_offset)
819 {
820 if (stabs_data)
821 {
822 symbuf_read += sym_offset;
823 symbuf_left -= sym_offset;
824 }
825 else
826 bfd_seek (symfile_bfd, sym_offset, SEEK_CUR);
827 }
828
829 #define INTERNALIZE_SYMBOL(intern, extern, abfd) \
830 { \
831 (intern).n_strx = bfd_h_get_32 (abfd, (extern)->e_strx); \
832 (intern).n_type = bfd_h_get_8 (abfd, (extern)->e_type); \
833 (intern).n_other = 0; \
834 (intern).n_desc = bfd_h_get_16 (abfd, (extern)->e_desc); \
835 if (bfd_get_sign_extend_vma (abfd)) \
836 (intern).n_value = bfd_h_get_signed_32 (abfd, (extern)->e_value); \
837 else \
838 (intern).n_value = bfd_h_get_32 (abfd, (extern)->e_value); \
839 }
840
841 /* Invariant: The symbol pointed to by symbuf_idx is the first one
842 that hasn't been swapped. Swap the symbol at the same time
843 that symbuf_idx is incremented. */
844
845 /* dbx allows the text of a symbol name to be continued into the
846 next symbol name! When such a continuation is encountered
847 (a \ at the end of the text of a name)
848 call this function to get the continuation. */
849
850 static const char *
851 dbx_next_symbol_text (struct objfile *objfile)
852 {
853 struct internal_nlist nlist;
854
855 if (symbuf_idx == symbuf_end)
856 fill_symbuf (symfile_bfd);
857
858 symnum++;
859 INTERNALIZE_SYMBOL (nlist, &symbuf[symbuf_idx], symfile_bfd);
860 OBJSTAT (objfile, n_stabs++);
861
862 symbuf_idx++;
863
864 return nlist.n_strx + stringtab_global + file_string_table_offset;
865 }
866 \f
867
868 /* Given a name, value pair, find the corresponding
869 bincl in the list. Return the partial symtab associated
870 with that header_file_location. */
871
872 static struct partial_symtab *
873 find_corresponding_bincl_psymtab (const char *name, int instance)
874 {
875 for (const header_file_location &bincl : *bincl_list)
876 if (bincl.instance == instance
877 && strcmp (name, bincl.name) == 0)
878 return bincl.pst;
879
880 repeated_header_complaint (name, symnum);
881 return (struct partial_symtab *) 0;
882 }
883
884 /* Set namestring based on nlist. If the string table index is invalid,
885 give a fake name, and print a single error message per symbol file read,
886 rather than abort the symbol reading or flood the user with messages. */
887
888 static const char *
889 set_namestring (struct objfile *objfile, const struct internal_nlist *nlist)
890 {
891 const char *namestring;
892
893 if (nlist->n_strx + file_string_table_offset
894 >= DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile)
895 || nlist->n_strx + file_string_table_offset < nlist->n_strx)
896 {
897 complaint (_("bad string table offset in symbol %d"),
898 symnum);
899 namestring = "<bad string table offset>";
900 }
901 else
902 namestring = (nlist->n_strx + file_string_table_offset
903 + DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile));
904 return namestring;
905 }
906
907 static CORE_ADDR
908 find_stab_function_addr (const char *namestring, const char *filename,
909 struct objfile *objfile)
910 {
911 struct bound_minimal_symbol msym;
912 int n;
913
914 const char *colon = strchr (namestring, ':');
915 if (colon == NULL)
916 n = 0;
917 else
918 n = colon - namestring;
919
920 char *p = (char *) alloca (n + 2);
921 strncpy (p, namestring, n);
922 p[n] = 0;
923
924 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (p, filename, objfile);
925 if (msym.minsym == NULL)
926 {
927 /* Sun Fortran appends an underscore to the minimal symbol name,
928 try again with an appended underscore if the minimal symbol
929 was not found. */
930 p[n] = '_';
931 p[n + 1] = 0;
932 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (p, filename, objfile);
933 }
934
935 if (msym.minsym == NULL && filename != NULL)
936 {
937 /* Try again without the filename. */
938 p[n] = 0;
939 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (p, NULL, objfile);
940 }
941 if (msym.minsym == NULL && filename != NULL)
942 {
943 /* And try again for Sun Fortran, but without the filename. */
944 p[n] = '_';
945 p[n + 1] = 0;
946 msym = lookup_minimal_symbol (p, NULL, objfile);
947 }
948
949 return msym.minsym == NULL ? 0 : BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (msym);
950 }
951
952 static void
953 function_outside_compilation_unit_complaint (const char *arg1)
954 {
955 complaint (_("function `%s' appears to be defined "
956 "outside of all compilation units"),
957 arg1);
958 }
959
960 /* Setup partial_symtab's describing each source file for which
961 debugging information is available. */
962
963 static void
964 read_dbx_symtab (minimal_symbol_reader &reader, struct objfile *objfile)
965 {
966 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
967 struct external_nlist *bufp = 0; /* =0 avoids gcc -Wall glitch. */
968 struct internal_nlist nlist;
969 CORE_ADDR text_addr;
970 int text_size;
971 const char *sym_name;
972 int sym_len;
973
974 const char *namestring;
975 int nsl;
976 int past_first_source_file = 0;
977 CORE_ADDR last_function_start = 0;
978 bfd *abfd;
979 int textlow_not_set;
980 int data_sect_index;
981
982 /* Current partial symtab. */
983 struct partial_symtab *pst;
984
985 /* List of current psymtab's include files. */
986 const char **psymtab_include_list;
987 int includes_allocated;
988 int includes_used;
989
990 /* Index within current psymtab dependency list. */
991 struct partial_symtab **dependency_list;
992 int dependencies_used, dependencies_allocated;
993
994 text_addr = DBX_TEXT_ADDR (objfile);
995 text_size = DBX_TEXT_SIZE (objfile);
996
997 /* FIXME. We probably want to change stringtab_global rather than add this
998 while processing every symbol entry. FIXME. */
999 file_string_table_offset = 0;
1000 next_file_string_table_offset = 0;
1001
1002 stringtab_global = DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile);
1003
1004 pst = (struct partial_symtab *) 0;
1005
1006 includes_allocated = 30;
1007 includes_used = 0;
1008 psymtab_include_list = (const char **) alloca (includes_allocated *
1009 sizeof (const char *));
1010
1011 dependencies_allocated = 30;
1012 dependencies_used = 0;
1013 dependency_list =
1014 (struct partial_symtab **) alloca (dependencies_allocated *
1015 sizeof (struct partial_symtab *));
1016
1017 /* Init bincl list */
1018 std::vector<struct header_file_location> bincl_storage;
1019 scoped_restore restore_bincl_global
1020 = make_scoped_restore (&bincl_list, &bincl_storage);
1021
1022 set_last_source_file (NULL);
1023
1024 lowest_text_address = (CORE_ADDR) -1;
1025
1026 symfile_bfd = objfile->obfd; /* For next_text_symbol. */
1027 abfd = objfile->obfd;
1028 symbuf_end = symbuf_idx = 0;
1029 next_symbol_text_func = dbx_next_symbol_text;
1030 textlow_not_set = 1;
1031 has_line_numbers = 0;
1032
1033 /* FIXME: jimb/2003-09-12: We don't apply the right section's offset
1034 to global and static variables. The stab for a global or static
1035 variable doesn't give us any indication of which section it's in,
1036 so we can't tell immediately which offset in
1037 objfile->section_offsets we should apply to the variable's
1038 address.
1039
1040 We could certainly find out which section contains the variable
1041 by looking up the variable's unrelocated address with
1042 find_pc_section, but that would be expensive; this is the
1043 function that constructs the partial symbol tables by examining
1044 every symbol in the entire executable, and it's
1045 performance-critical. So that expense would not be welcome. I'm
1046 not sure what to do about this at the moment.
1047
1048 What we have done for years is to simply assume that the .data
1049 section's offset is appropriate for all global and static
1050 variables. Recently, this was expanded to fall back to the .bss
1051 section's offset if there is no .data section, and then to the
1052 .rodata section's offset. */
1053 data_sect_index = objfile->sect_index_data;
1054 if (data_sect_index == -1)
1055 data_sect_index = SECT_OFF_BSS (objfile);
1056 if (data_sect_index == -1)
1057 data_sect_index = SECT_OFF_RODATA (objfile);
1058
1059 /* If data_sect_index is still -1, that's okay. It's perfectly fine
1060 for the file to have no .data, no .bss, and no .text at all, if
1061 it also has no global or static variables. If it does, we will
1062 get an internal error from an ANOFFSET macro below when we try to
1063 use data_sect_index. */
1064
1065 for (symnum = 0; symnum < DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile); symnum++)
1066 {
1067 /* Get the symbol for this run and pull out some info. */
1068 QUIT; /* Allow this to be interruptable. */
1069 if (symbuf_idx == symbuf_end)
1070 fill_symbuf (abfd);
1071 bufp = &symbuf[symbuf_idx++];
1072
1073 /*
1074 * Special case to speed up readin.
1075 */
1076 if (bfd_h_get_8 (abfd, bufp->e_type) == N_SLINE)
1077 {
1078 has_line_numbers = 1;
1079 continue;
1080 }
1081
1082 INTERNALIZE_SYMBOL (nlist, bufp, abfd);
1083 OBJSTAT (objfile, n_stabs++);
1084
1085 /* Ok. There is a lot of code duplicated in the rest of this
1086 switch statement (for efficiency reasons). Since I don't
1087 like duplicating code, I will do my penance here, and
1088 describe the code which is duplicated:
1089
1090 *) The assignment to namestring.
1091 *) The call to strchr.
1092 *) The addition of a partial symbol the two partial
1093 symbol lists. This last is a large section of code, so
1094 I've imbedded it in the following macro. */
1095
1096 switch (nlist.n_type)
1097 {
1098 /*
1099 * Standard, external, non-debugger, symbols
1100 */
1101
1102 case N_TEXT | N_EXT:
1103 case N_NBTEXT | N_EXT:
1104 goto record_it;
1105
1106 case N_DATA | N_EXT:
1107 case N_NBDATA | N_EXT:
1108 goto record_it;
1109
1110 case N_BSS:
1111 case N_BSS | N_EXT:
1112 case N_NBBSS | N_EXT:
1113 case N_SETV | N_EXT: /* FIXME, is this in BSS? */
1114 goto record_it;
1115
1116 case N_ABS | N_EXT:
1117 record_it:
1118 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1119
1120 record_minimal_symbol (reader, namestring, nlist.n_value,
1121 nlist.n_type, objfile); /* Always */
1122 continue;
1123
1124 /* Standard, local, non-debugger, symbols. */
1125
1126 case N_NBTEXT:
1127
1128 /* We need to be able to deal with both N_FN or N_TEXT,
1129 because we have no way of knowing whether the sys-supplied ld
1130 or GNU ld was used to make the executable. Sequents throw
1131 in another wrinkle -- they renumbered N_FN. */
1132
1133 case N_FN:
1134 case N_FN_SEQ:
1135 case N_TEXT:
1136 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1137
1138 if ((namestring[0] == '-' && namestring[1] == 'l')
1139 || (namestring[(nsl = strlen (namestring)) - 1] == 'o'
1140 && namestring[nsl - 2] == '.'))
1141 {
1142 nlist.n_value += ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1143 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
1144
1145 if (past_first_source_file && pst
1146 /* The gould NP1 uses low values for .o and -l symbols
1147 which are not the address. */
1148 && nlist.n_value >= pst->textlow)
1149 {
1150 dbx_end_psymtab (objfile, pst, psymtab_include_list,
1151 includes_used, symnum * symbol_size,
1152 nlist.n_value > pst->texthigh
1153 ? nlist.n_value : pst->texthigh,
1154 dependency_list, dependencies_used,
1155 textlow_not_set);
1156 pst = (struct partial_symtab *) 0;
1157 includes_used = 0;
1158 dependencies_used = 0;
1159 has_line_numbers = 0;
1160 }
1161 else
1162 past_first_source_file = 1;
1163 }
1164 else
1165 goto record_it;
1166 continue;
1167
1168 case N_DATA:
1169 goto record_it;
1170
1171 case N_UNDF | N_EXT:
1172 /* The case (nlist.n_value != 0) is a "Fortran COMMON" symbol.
1173 We used to rely on the target to tell us whether it knows
1174 where the symbol has been relocated to, but none of the
1175 target implementations actually provided that operation.
1176 So we just ignore the symbol, the same way we would do if
1177 we had a target-side symbol lookup which returned no match.
1178
1179 All other symbols (with nlist.n_value == 0), are really
1180 undefined, and so we ignore them too. */
1181 continue;
1182
1183 case N_UNDF:
1184 if (processing_acc_compilation && nlist.n_strx == 1)
1185 {
1186 /* Deal with relative offsets in the string table
1187 used in ELF+STAB under Solaris. If we want to use the
1188 n_strx field, which contains the name of the file,
1189 we must adjust file_string_table_offset *before* calling
1190 set_namestring(). */
1191 past_first_source_file = 1;
1192 file_string_table_offset = next_file_string_table_offset;
1193 next_file_string_table_offset =
1194 file_string_table_offset + nlist.n_value;
1195 if (next_file_string_table_offset < file_string_table_offset)
1196 error (_("string table offset backs up at %d"), symnum);
1197 /* FIXME -- replace error() with complaint. */
1198 continue;
1199 }
1200 continue;
1201
1202 /* Lots of symbol types we can just ignore. */
1203
1204 case N_ABS:
1205 case N_NBDATA:
1206 case N_NBBSS:
1207 continue;
1208
1209 /* Keep going . . . */
1210
1211 /*
1212 * Special symbol types for GNU
1213 */
1214 case N_INDR:
1215 case N_INDR | N_EXT:
1216 case N_SETA:
1217 case N_SETA | N_EXT:
1218 case N_SETT:
1219 case N_SETT | N_EXT:
1220 case N_SETD:
1221 case N_SETD | N_EXT:
1222 case N_SETB:
1223 case N_SETB | N_EXT:
1224 case N_SETV:
1225 continue;
1226
1227 /*
1228 * Debugger symbols
1229 */
1230
1231 case N_SO:
1232 {
1233 CORE_ADDR valu;
1234 static int prev_so_symnum = -10;
1235 static int first_so_symnum;
1236 const char *p;
1237 static const char *dirname_nso;
1238 int prev_textlow_not_set;
1239
1240 valu = nlist.n_value + ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1241 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
1242
1243 prev_textlow_not_set = textlow_not_set;
1244
1245 /* A zero value is probably an indication for the SunPRO 3.0
1246 compiler. dbx_end_psymtab explicitly tests for zero, so
1247 don't relocate it. */
1248
1249 if (nlist.n_value == 0
1250 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
1251 {
1252 textlow_not_set = 1;
1253 valu = 0;
1254 }
1255 else
1256 textlow_not_set = 0;
1257
1258 past_first_source_file = 1;
1259
1260 if (prev_so_symnum != symnum - 1)
1261 { /* Here if prev stab wasn't N_SO. */
1262 first_so_symnum = symnum;
1263
1264 if (pst)
1265 {
1266 dbx_end_psymtab (objfile, pst, psymtab_include_list,
1267 includes_used, symnum * symbol_size,
1268 valu > pst->texthigh
1269 ? valu : pst->texthigh,
1270 dependency_list, dependencies_used,
1271 prev_textlow_not_set);
1272 pst = (struct partial_symtab *) 0;
1273 includes_used = 0;
1274 dependencies_used = 0;
1275 has_line_numbers = 0;
1276 }
1277 }
1278
1279 prev_so_symnum = symnum;
1280
1281 /* End the current partial symtab and start a new one. */
1282
1283 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1284
1285 /* Null name means end of .o file. Don't start a new one. */
1286 if (*namestring == '\000')
1287 continue;
1288
1289 /* Some compilers (including gcc) emit a pair of initial N_SOs.
1290 The first one is a directory name; the second the file name.
1291 If pst exists, is empty, and has a filename ending in '/',
1292 we assume the previous N_SO was a directory name. */
1293
1294 p = lbasename (namestring);
1295 if (p != namestring && *p == '\000')
1296 {
1297 /* Save the directory name SOs locally, then save it into
1298 the psymtab when it's created below. */
1299 dirname_nso = namestring;
1300 continue;
1301 }
1302
1303 /* Some other compilers (C++ ones in particular) emit useless
1304 SOs for non-existant .c files. We ignore all subsequent SOs
1305 that immediately follow the first. */
1306
1307 if (!pst)
1308 {
1309 pst = start_psymtab (objfile,
1310 namestring, valu,
1311 first_so_symnum * symbol_size,
1312 objfile->global_psymbols,
1313 objfile->static_psymbols);
1314 pst->dirname = dirname_nso;
1315 dirname_nso = NULL;
1316 }
1317 continue;
1318 }
1319
1320 case N_BINCL:
1321 {
1322 enum language tmp_language;
1323
1324 /* Add this bincl to the bincl_list for future EXCLs. No
1325 need to save the string; it'll be around until
1326 read_dbx_symtab function returns. */
1327
1328 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1329 tmp_language = deduce_language_from_filename (namestring);
1330
1331 /* Only change the psymtab's language if we've learned
1332 something useful (eg. tmp_language is not language_unknown).
1333 In addition, to match what start_subfile does, never change
1334 from C++ to C. */
1335 if (tmp_language != language_unknown
1336 && (tmp_language != language_c
1337 || psymtab_language != language_cplus))
1338 psymtab_language = tmp_language;
1339
1340 if (pst == NULL)
1341 {
1342 /* FIXME: we should not get here without a PST to work on.
1343 Attempt to recover. */
1344 complaint (_("N_BINCL %s not in entries for "
1345 "any file, at symtab pos %d"),
1346 namestring, symnum);
1347 continue;
1348 }
1349 bincl_list->emplace_back (namestring, nlist.n_value, pst);
1350
1351 /* Mark down an include file in the current psymtab. */
1352
1353 goto record_include_file;
1354 }
1355
1356 case N_SOL:
1357 {
1358 enum language tmp_language;
1359
1360 /* Mark down an include file in the current psymtab. */
1361 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1362 tmp_language = deduce_language_from_filename (namestring);
1363
1364 /* Only change the psymtab's language if we've learned
1365 something useful (eg. tmp_language is not language_unknown).
1366 In addition, to match what start_subfile does, never change
1367 from C++ to C. */
1368 if (tmp_language != language_unknown
1369 && (tmp_language != language_c
1370 || psymtab_language != language_cplus))
1371 psymtab_language = tmp_language;
1372
1373 /* In C++, one may expect the same filename to come round many
1374 times, when code is coming alternately from the main file
1375 and from inline functions in other files. So I check to see
1376 if this is a file we've seen before -- either the main
1377 source file, or a previously included file.
1378
1379 This seems to be a lot of time to be spending on N_SOL, but
1380 things like "break c-exp.y:435" need to work (I
1381 suppose the psymtab_include_list could be hashed or put
1382 in a binary tree, if profiling shows this is a major hog). */
1383 if (pst && filename_cmp (namestring, pst->filename) == 0)
1384 continue;
1385 {
1386 int i;
1387
1388 for (i = 0; i < includes_used; i++)
1389 if (filename_cmp (namestring, psymtab_include_list[i]) == 0)
1390 {
1391 i = -1;
1392 break;
1393 }
1394 if (i == -1)
1395 continue;
1396 }
1397
1398 record_include_file:
1399
1400 psymtab_include_list[includes_used++] = namestring;
1401 if (includes_used >= includes_allocated)
1402 {
1403 const char **orig = psymtab_include_list;
1404
1405 psymtab_include_list = (const char **)
1406 alloca ((includes_allocated *= 2) * sizeof (const char *));
1407 memcpy (psymtab_include_list, orig,
1408 includes_used * sizeof (const char *));
1409 }
1410 continue;
1411 }
1412 case N_LSYM: /* Typedef or automatic variable. */
1413 case N_STSYM: /* Data seg var -- static. */
1414 case N_LCSYM: /* BSS " */
1415 case N_ROSYM: /* Read-only data seg var -- static. */
1416 case N_NBSTS: /* Gould nobase. */
1417 case N_NBLCS: /* symbols. */
1418 case N_FUN:
1419 case N_GSYM: /* Global (extern) variable; can be
1420 data or bss (sigh FIXME). */
1421
1422 /* Following may probably be ignored; I'll leave them here
1423 for now (until I do Pascal and Modula 2 extensions). */
1424
1425 case N_PC: /* I may or may not need this; I
1426 suspect not. */
1427 case N_M2C: /* I suspect that I can ignore this here. */
1428 case N_SCOPE: /* Same. */
1429 {
1430 const char *p;
1431
1432 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1433
1434 /* See if this is an end of function stab. */
1435 if (pst && nlist.n_type == N_FUN && *namestring == '\000')
1436 {
1437 CORE_ADDR valu;
1438
1439 /* It's value is the size (in bytes) of the function for
1440 function relative stabs, or the address of the function's
1441 end for old style stabs. */
1442 valu = nlist.n_value + last_function_start;
1443 if (pst->texthigh == 0 || valu > pst->texthigh)
1444 pst->texthigh = valu;
1445 break;
1446 }
1447
1448 p = (char *) strchr (namestring, ':');
1449 if (!p)
1450 continue; /* Not a debugging symbol. */
1451
1452 sym_len = 0;
1453 sym_name = NULL; /* pacify "gcc -Werror" */
1454 if (psymtab_language == language_cplus)
1455 {
1456 std::string name (namestring, p - namestring);
1457 std::string new_name = cp_canonicalize_string (name.c_str ());
1458 if (!new_name.empty ())
1459 {
1460 sym_len = new_name.length ();
1461 sym_name = (char *) obstack_copy0 (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
1462 new_name.c_str (),
1463 sym_len);
1464 }
1465 }
1466
1467 if (sym_len == 0)
1468 {
1469 sym_name = namestring;
1470 sym_len = p - namestring;
1471 }
1472
1473 /* Main processing section for debugging symbols which
1474 the initial read through the symbol tables needs to worry
1475 about. If we reach this point, the symbol which we are
1476 considering is definitely one we are interested in.
1477 p must also contain the (valid) index into the namestring
1478 which indicates the debugging type symbol. */
1479
1480 switch (p[1])
1481 {
1482 case 'S':
1483 nlist.n_value += ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1484 data_sect_index);
1485
1486 if (gdbarch_static_transform_name_p (gdbarch))
1487 gdbarch_static_transform_name (gdbarch, namestring);
1488
1489 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1490 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_STATIC,
1491 &objfile->static_psymbols,
1492 nlist.n_value, psymtab_language, objfile);
1493 continue;
1494
1495 case 'G':
1496 nlist.n_value += ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1497 data_sect_index);
1498 /* The addresses in these entries are reported to be
1499 wrong. See the code that reads 'G's for symtabs. */
1500 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1501 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_STATIC,
1502 &objfile->global_psymbols,
1503 nlist.n_value, psymtab_language, objfile);
1504 continue;
1505
1506 case 'T':
1507 /* When a 'T' entry is defining an anonymous enum, it
1508 may have a name which is the empty string, or a
1509 single space. Since they're not really defining a
1510 symbol, those shouldn't go in the partial symbol
1511 table. We do pick up the elements of such enums at
1512 'check_enum:', below. */
1513 if (p >= namestring + 2
1514 || (p == namestring + 1
1515 && namestring[0] != ' '))
1516 {
1517 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1518 STRUCT_DOMAIN, LOC_TYPEDEF,
1519 &objfile->static_psymbols,
1520 0, psymtab_language, objfile);
1521 if (p[2] == 't')
1522 {
1523 /* Also a typedef with the same name. */
1524 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1525 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_TYPEDEF,
1526 &objfile->static_psymbols,
1527 0, psymtab_language, objfile);
1528 p += 1;
1529 }
1530 }
1531 goto check_enum;
1532
1533 case 't':
1534 if (p != namestring) /* a name is there, not just :T... */
1535 {
1536 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1537 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_TYPEDEF,
1538 &objfile->static_psymbols,
1539 0, psymtab_language, objfile);
1540 }
1541 check_enum:
1542 /* If this is an enumerated type, we need to
1543 add all the enum constants to the partial symbol
1544 table. This does not cover enums without names, e.g.
1545 "enum {a, b} c;" in C, but fortunately those are
1546 rare. There is no way for GDB to find those from the
1547 enum type without spending too much time on it. Thus
1548 to solve this problem, the compiler needs to put out the
1549 enum in a nameless type. GCC2 does this. */
1550
1551 /* We are looking for something of the form
1552 <name> ":" ("t" | "T") [<number> "="] "e"
1553 {<constant> ":" <value> ","} ";". */
1554
1555 /* Skip over the colon and the 't' or 'T'. */
1556 p += 2;
1557 /* This type may be given a number. Also, numbers can come
1558 in pairs like (0,26). Skip over it. */
1559 while ((*p >= '0' && *p <= '9')
1560 || *p == '(' || *p == ',' || *p == ')'
1561 || *p == '=')
1562 p++;
1563
1564 if (*p++ == 'e')
1565 {
1566 /* The aix4 compiler emits extra crud before the members. */
1567 if (*p == '-')
1568 {
1569 /* Skip over the type (?). */
1570 while (*p != ':')
1571 p++;
1572
1573 /* Skip over the colon. */
1574 p++;
1575 }
1576
1577 /* We have found an enumerated type. */
1578 /* According to comments in read_enum_type
1579 a comma could end it instead of a semicolon.
1580 I don't know where that happens.
1581 Accept either. */
1582 while (*p && *p != ';' && *p != ',')
1583 {
1584 const char *q;
1585
1586 /* Check for and handle cretinous dbx symbol name
1587 continuation! */
1588 if (*p == '\\' || (*p == '?' && p[1] == '\0'))
1589 p = next_symbol_text (objfile);
1590
1591 /* Point to the character after the name
1592 of the enum constant. */
1593 for (q = p; *q && *q != ':'; q++)
1594 ;
1595 /* Note that the value doesn't matter for
1596 enum constants in psymtabs, just in symtabs. */
1597 add_psymbol_to_list (p, q - p, 1,
1598 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_CONST,
1599 &objfile->static_psymbols, 0,
1600 psymtab_language, objfile);
1601 /* Point past the name. */
1602 p = q;
1603 /* Skip over the value. */
1604 while (*p && *p != ',')
1605 p++;
1606 /* Advance past the comma. */
1607 if (*p)
1608 p++;
1609 }
1610 }
1611 continue;
1612
1613 case 'c':
1614 /* Constant, e.g. from "const" in Pascal. */
1615 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1616 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_CONST,
1617 &objfile->static_psymbols, 0,
1618 psymtab_language, objfile);
1619 continue;
1620
1621 case 'f':
1622 if (! pst)
1623 {
1624 int name_len = p - namestring;
1625 char *name = (char *) xmalloc (name_len + 1);
1626
1627 memcpy (name, namestring, name_len);
1628 name[name_len] = '\0';
1629 function_outside_compilation_unit_complaint (name);
1630 xfree (name);
1631 }
1632 nlist.n_value += ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1633 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
1634 /* Kludges for ELF/STABS with Sun ACC. */
1635 last_function_name = namestring;
1636 /* Do not fix textlow==0 for .o or NLM files, as 0 is a legit
1637 value for the bottom of the text seg in those cases. */
1638 if (nlist.n_value == ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1639 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile))
1640 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
1641 {
1642 CORE_ADDR minsym_valu =
1643 find_stab_function_addr (namestring,
1644 pst ? pst->filename : NULL,
1645 objfile);
1646
1647 /* find_stab_function_addr will return 0 if the minimal
1648 symbol wasn't found. (Unfortunately, this might also
1649 be a valid address.) Anyway, if it *does* return 0,
1650 it is likely that the value was set correctly to begin
1651 with... */
1652 if (minsym_valu != 0)
1653 nlist.n_value = minsym_valu;
1654 }
1655 if (pst && textlow_not_set
1656 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
1657 {
1658 pst->textlow = nlist.n_value;
1659 textlow_not_set = 0;
1660 }
1661 /* End kludge. */
1662
1663 /* Keep track of the start of the last function so we
1664 can handle end of function symbols. */
1665 last_function_start = nlist.n_value;
1666
1667 /* In reordered executables this function may lie outside
1668 the bounds created by N_SO symbols. If that's the case
1669 use the address of this function as the low bound for
1670 the partial symbol table. */
1671 if (pst
1672 && (textlow_not_set
1673 || (nlist.n_value < pst->textlow
1674 && (nlist.n_value
1675 != ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1676 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile))))))
1677 {
1678 pst->textlow = nlist.n_value;
1679 textlow_not_set = 0;
1680 }
1681 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1682 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_BLOCK,
1683 &objfile->static_psymbols,
1684 nlist.n_value, psymtab_language, objfile);
1685 continue;
1686
1687 /* Global functions were ignored here, but now they
1688 are put into the global psymtab like one would expect.
1689 They're also in the minimal symbol table. */
1690 case 'F':
1691 if (! pst)
1692 {
1693 int name_len = p - namestring;
1694 char *name = (char *) xmalloc (name_len + 1);
1695
1696 memcpy (name, namestring, name_len);
1697 name[name_len] = '\0';
1698 function_outside_compilation_unit_complaint (name);
1699 xfree (name);
1700 }
1701 nlist.n_value += ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1702 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
1703 /* Kludges for ELF/STABS with Sun ACC. */
1704 last_function_name = namestring;
1705 /* Do not fix textlow==0 for .o or NLM files, as 0 is a legit
1706 value for the bottom of the text seg in those cases. */
1707 if (nlist.n_value == ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1708 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile))
1709 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
1710 {
1711 CORE_ADDR minsym_valu =
1712 find_stab_function_addr (namestring,
1713 pst ? pst->filename : NULL,
1714 objfile);
1715
1716 /* find_stab_function_addr will return 0 if the minimal
1717 symbol wasn't found. (Unfortunately, this might also
1718 be a valid address.) Anyway, if it *does* return 0,
1719 it is likely that the value was set correctly to begin
1720 with... */
1721 if (minsym_valu != 0)
1722 nlist.n_value = minsym_valu;
1723 }
1724 if (pst && textlow_not_set
1725 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
1726 {
1727 pst->textlow = nlist.n_value;
1728 textlow_not_set = 0;
1729 }
1730 /* End kludge. */
1731
1732 /* Keep track of the start of the last function so we
1733 can handle end of function symbols. */
1734 last_function_start = nlist.n_value;
1735
1736 /* In reordered executables this function may lie outside
1737 the bounds created by N_SO symbols. If that's the case
1738 use the address of this function as the low bound for
1739 the partial symbol table. */
1740 if (pst
1741 && (textlow_not_set
1742 || (nlist.n_value < pst->textlow
1743 && (nlist.n_value
1744 != ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1745 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile))))))
1746 {
1747 pst->textlow = nlist.n_value;
1748 textlow_not_set = 0;
1749 }
1750 add_psymbol_to_list (sym_name, sym_len, 1,
1751 VAR_DOMAIN, LOC_BLOCK,
1752 &objfile->global_psymbols,
1753 nlist.n_value, psymtab_language, objfile);
1754 continue;
1755
1756 /* Two things show up here (hopefully); static symbols of
1757 local scope (static used inside braces) or extensions
1758 of structure symbols. We can ignore both. */
1759 case 'V':
1760 case '(':
1761 case '0':
1762 case '1':
1763 case '2':
1764 case '3':
1765 case '4':
1766 case '5':
1767 case '6':
1768 case '7':
1769 case '8':
1770 case '9':
1771 case '-':
1772 case '#': /* For symbol identification (used in live ranges). */
1773 continue;
1774
1775 case ':':
1776 /* It is a C++ nested symbol. We don't need to record it
1777 (I don't think); if we try to look up foo::bar::baz,
1778 then symbols for the symtab containing foo should get
1779 read in, I think. */
1780 /* Someone says sun cc puts out symbols like
1781 /foo/baz/maclib::/usr/local/bin/maclib,
1782 which would get here with a symbol type of ':'. */
1783 continue;
1784
1785 default:
1786 /* Unexpected symbol descriptor. The second and subsequent stabs
1787 of a continued stab can show up here. The question is
1788 whether they ever can mimic a normal stab--it would be
1789 nice if not, since we certainly don't want to spend the
1790 time searching to the end of every string looking for
1791 a backslash. */
1792
1793 complaint (_("unknown symbol descriptor `%c'"),
1794 p[1]);
1795
1796 /* Ignore it; perhaps it is an extension that we don't
1797 know about. */
1798 continue;
1799 }
1800 }
1801
1802 case N_EXCL:
1803
1804 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
1805
1806 /* Find the corresponding bincl and mark that psymtab on the
1807 psymtab dependency list. */
1808 {
1809 struct partial_symtab *needed_pst =
1810 find_corresponding_bincl_psymtab (namestring, nlist.n_value);
1811
1812 /* If this include file was defined earlier in this file,
1813 leave it alone. */
1814 if (needed_pst == pst)
1815 continue;
1816
1817 if (needed_pst)
1818 {
1819 int i;
1820 int found = 0;
1821
1822 for (i = 0; i < dependencies_used; i++)
1823 if (dependency_list[i] == needed_pst)
1824 {
1825 found = 1;
1826 break;
1827 }
1828
1829 /* If it's already in the list, skip the rest. */
1830 if (found)
1831 continue;
1832
1833 dependency_list[dependencies_used++] = needed_pst;
1834 if (dependencies_used >= dependencies_allocated)
1835 {
1836 struct partial_symtab **orig = dependency_list;
1837
1838 dependency_list =
1839 (struct partial_symtab **)
1840 alloca ((dependencies_allocated *= 2)
1841 * sizeof (struct partial_symtab *));
1842 memcpy (dependency_list, orig,
1843 (dependencies_used
1844 * sizeof (struct partial_symtab *)));
1845 #ifdef DEBUG_INFO
1846 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
1847 "Had to reallocate "
1848 "dependency list.\n");
1849 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr,
1850 "New dependencies allocated: %d\n",
1851 dependencies_allocated);
1852 #endif
1853 }
1854 }
1855 }
1856 continue;
1857
1858 case N_ENDM:
1859 /* Solaris 2 end of module, finish current partial symbol table.
1860 dbx_end_psymtab will set pst->texthigh to the proper value, which
1861 is necessary if a module compiled without debugging info
1862 follows this module. */
1863 if (pst && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
1864 {
1865 dbx_end_psymtab (objfile, pst,
1866 psymtab_include_list, includes_used,
1867 symnum * symbol_size,
1868 (CORE_ADDR) 0, dependency_list,
1869 dependencies_used, textlow_not_set);
1870 pst = (struct partial_symtab *) 0;
1871 includes_used = 0;
1872 dependencies_used = 0;
1873 has_line_numbers = 0;
1874 }
1875 continue;
1876
1877 case N_RBRAC:
1878 #ifdef HANDLE_RBRAC
1879 HANDLE_RBRAC (nlist.n_value);
1880 continue;
1881 #endif
1882 case N_EINCL:
1883 case N_DSLINE:
1884 case N_BSLINE:
1885 case N_SSYM: /* Claim: Structure or union element.
1886 Hopefully, I can ignore this. */
1887 case N_ENTRY: /* Alternate entry point; can ignore. */
1888 case N_MAIN: /* Can definitely ignore this. */
1889 case N_CATCH: /* These are GNU C++ extensions */
1890 case N_EHDECL: /* that can safely be ignored here. */
1891 case N_LENG:
1892 case N_BCOMM:
1893 case N_ECOMM:
1894 case N_ECOML:
1895 case N_FNAME:
1896 case N_SLINE:
1897 case N_RSYM:
1898 case N_PSYM:
1899 case N_BNSYM:
1900 case N_ENSYM:
1901 case N_LBRAC:
1902 case N_NSYMS: /* Ultrix 4.0: symbol count */
1903 case N_DEFD: /* GNU Modula-2 */
1904 case N_ALIAS: /* SunPro F77: alias name, ignore for now. */
1905
1906 case N_OBJ: /* Useless types from Solaris. */
1907 case N_OPT:
1908 case N_PATCH:
1909 /* These symbols aren't interesting; don't worry about them. */
1910 continue;
1911
1912 default:
1913 /* If we haven't found it yet, ignore it. It's probably some
1914 new type we don't know about yet. */
1915 unknown_symtype_complaint (hex_string (nlist.n_type));
1916 continue;
1917 }
1918 }
1919
1920 /* If there's stuff to be cleaned up, clean it up. */
1921 if (pst)
1922 {
1923 /* Don't set pst->texthigh lower than it already is. */
1924 CORE_ADDR text_end =
1925 (lowest_text_address == (CORE_ADDR) -1
1926 ? (text_addr + ANOFFSET (objfile->section_offsets,
1927 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile)))
1928 : lowest_text_address)
1929 + text_size;
1930
1931 dbx_end_psymtab (objfile, pst, psymtab_include_list, includes_used,
1932 symnum * symbol_size,
1933 text_end > pst->texthigh ? text_end : pst->texthigh,
1934 dependency_list, dependencies_used, textlow_not_set);
1935 }
1936 }
1937
1938 /* Allocate and partially fill a partial symtab. It will be
1939 completely filled at the end of the symbol list.
1940
1941 SYMFILE_NAME is the name of the symbol-file we are reading from, and ADDR
1942 is the address relative to which its symbols are (incremental) or 0
1943 (normal). */
1944
1945 static struct partial_symtab *
1946 start_psymtab (struct objfile *objfile, const char *filename, CORE_ADDR textlow,
1947 int ldsymoff, std::vector<partial_symbol *> &global_psymbols,
1948 std::vector<partial_symbol *> &static_psymbols)
1949 {
1950 struct partial_symtab *result =
1951 start_psymtab_common (objfile, filename, textlow,
1952 global_psymbols, static_psymbols);
1953
1954 result->read_symtab_private =
1955 XOBNEW (&objfile->objfile_obstack, struct symloc);
1956 LDSYMOFF (result) = ldsymoff;
1957 result->read_symtab = dbx_read_symtab;
1958 SYMBOL_SIZE (result) = symbol_size;
1959 SYMBOL_OFFSET (result) = symbol_table_offset;
1960 STRING_OFFSET (result) = string_table_offset;
1961 FILE_STRING_OFFSET (result) = file_string_table_offset;
1962
1963 /* Deduce the source language from the filename for this psymtab. */
1964 psymtab_language = deduce_language_from_filename (filename);
1965 PST_LANGUAGE (result) = psymtab_language;
1966
1967 return result;
1968 }
1969
1970 /* Close off the current usage of PST.
1971 Returns PST or NULL if the partial symtab was empty and thrown away.
1972
1973 FIXME: List variables and peculiarities of same. */
1974
1975 struct partial_symtab *
1976 dbx_end_psymtab (struct objfile *objfile, struct partial_symtab *pst,
1977 const char **include_list, int num_includes,
1978 int capping_symbol_offset, CORE_ADDR capping_text,
1979 struct partial_symtab **dependency_list,
1980 int number_dependencies,
1981 int textlow_not_set)
1982 {
1983 int i;
1984 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
1985
1986 if (capping_symbol_offset != -1)
1987 LDSYMLEN (pst) = capping_symbol_offset - LDSYMOFF (pst);
1988 pst->texthigh = capping_text;
1989
1990 /* Under Solaris, the N_SO symbols always have a value of 0,
1991 instead of the usual address of the .o file. Therefore,
1992 we have to do some tricks to fill in texthigh and textlow.
1993 The first trick is: if we see a static
1994 or global function, and the textlow for the current pst
1995 is not set (ie: textlow_not_set), then we use that function's
1996 address for the textlow of the pst. */
1997
1998 /* Now, to fill in texthigh, we remember the last function seen
1999 in the .o file. Also, there's a hack in
2000 bfd/elf.c and gdb/elfread.c to pass the ELF st_size field
2001 to here via the misc_info field. Therefore, we can fill in
2002 a reliable texthigh by taking the address plus size of the
2003 last function in the file. */
2004
2005 if (pst->texthigh == 0 && last_function_name
2006 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
2007 {
2008 int n;
2009 struct bound_minimal_symbol minsym;
2010
2011 const char *colon = strchr (last_function_name, ':');
2012 if (colon == NULL)
2013 n = 0;
2014 else
2015 n = colon - last_function_name;
2016 char *p = (char *) alloca (n + 2);
2017 strncpy (p, last_function_name, n);
2018 p[n] = 0;
2019
2020 minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol (p, pst->filename, objfile);
2021 if (minsym.minsym == NULL)
2022 {
2023 /* Sun Fortran appends an underscore to the minimal symbol name,
2024 try again with an appended underscore if the minimal symbol
2025 was not found. */
2026 p[n] = '_';
2027 p[n + 1] = 0;
2028 minsym = lookup_minimal_symbol (p, pst->filename, objfile);
2029 }
2030
2031 if (minsym.minsym)
2032 pst->texthigh = (BMSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS (minsym)
2033 + MSYMBOL_SIZE (minsym.minsym));
2034
2035 last_function_name = NULL;
2036 }
2037
2038 if (!gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
2039 ;
2040 /* This test will be true if the last .o file is only data. */
2041 else if (textlow_not_set)
2042 pst->textlow = pst->texthigh;
2043 else
2044 {
2045 struct partial_symtab *p1;
2046
2047 /* If we know our own starting text address, then walk through all other
2048 psymtabs for this objfile, and if any didn't know their ending text
2049 address, set it to our starting address. Take care to not set our
2050 own ending address to our starting address, nor to set addresses on
2051 `dependency' files that have both textlow and texthigh zero. */
2052
2053 ALL_OBJFILE_PSYMTABS (objfile, p1)
2054 {
2055 if (p1->texthigh == 0 && p1->textlow != 0 && p1 != pst)
2056 {
2057 p1->texthigh = pst->textlow;
2058 /* If this file has only data, then make textlow match
2059 texthigh. */
2060 if (p1->textlow == 0)
2061 p1->textlow = p1->texthigh;
2062 }
2063 }
2064 }
2065
2066 /* End of kludge for patching Solaris textlow and texthigh. */
2067
2068 end_psymtab_common (objfile, pst);
2069
2070 pst->number_of_dependencies = number_dependencies;
2071 if (number_dependencies)
2072 {
2073 pst->dependencies = XOBNEWVEC (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
2074 struct partial_symtab *,
2075 number_dependencies);
2076 memcpy (pst->dependencies, dependency_list,
2077 number_dependencies * sizeof (struct partial_symtab *));
2078 }
2079 else
2080 pst->dependencies = 0;
2081
2082 for (i = 0; i < num_includes; i++)
2083 {
2084 struct partial_symtab *subpst =
2085 allocate_psymtab (include_list[i], objfile);
2086
2087 subpst->read_symtab_private =
2088 XOBNEW (&objfile->objfile_obstack, struct symloc);
2089 LDSYMOFF (subpst) =
2090 LDSYMLEN (subpst) =
2091 subpst->textlow =
2092 subpst->texthigh = 0;
2093
2094 /* We could save slight bits of space by only making one of these,
2095 shared by the entire set of include files. FIXME-someday. */
2096 subpst->dependencies =
2097 XOBNEW (&objfile->objfile_obstack, struct partial_symtab *);
2098 subpst->dependencies[0] = pst;
2099 subpst->number_of_dependencies = 1;
2100
2101 subpst->globals_offset =
2102 subpst->n_global_syms =
2103 subpst->statics_offset =
2104 subpst->n_static_syms = 0;
2105
2106 subpst->readin = 0;
2107 subpst->compunit_symtab = 0;
2108 subpst->read_symtab = pst->read_symtab;
2109 }
2110
2111 if (num_includes == 0
2112 && number_dependencies == 0
2113 && pst->n_global_syms == 0
2114 && pst->n_static_syms == 0
2115 && has_line_numbers == 0)
2116 {
2117 /* Throw away this psymtab, it's empty. We can't deallocate it, since
2118 it is on the obstack, but we can forget to chain it on the list. */
2119 /* Empty psymtabs happen as a result of header files which don't have
2120 any symbols in them. There can be a lot of them. But this check
2121 is wrong, in that a psymtab with N_SLINE entries but nothing else
2122 is not empty, but we don't realize that. Fixing that without slowing
2123 things down might be tricky. */
2124
2125 discard_psymtab (objfile, pst);
2126
2127 /* Indicate that psymtab was thrown away. */
2128 pst = NULL;
2129 }
2130 return pst;
2131 }
2132 \f
2133 static void
2134 dbx_psymtab_to_symtab_1 (struct objfile *objfile, struct partial_symtab *pst)
2135 {
2136 int i;
2137
2138 if (pst->readin)
2139 {
2140 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Psymtab for %s already read in. "
2141 "Shouldn't happen.\n",
2142 pst->filename);
2143 return;
2144 }
2145
2146 /* Read in all partial symtabs on which this one is dependent. */
2147 for (i = 0; i < pst->number_of_dependencies; i++)
2148 if (!pst->dependencies[i]->readin)
2149 {
2150 /* Inform about additional files that need to be read in. */
2151 if (info_verbose)
2152 {
2153 fputs_filtered (" ", gdb_stdout);
2154 wrap_here ("");
2155 fputs_filtered ("and ", gdb_stdout);
2156 wrap_here ("");
2157 printf_filtered ("%s...", pst->dependencies[i]->filename);
2158 wrap_here (""); /* Flush output. */
2159 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
2160 }
2161 dbx_psymtab_to_symtab_1 (objfile, pst->dependencies[i]);
2162 }
2163
2164 if (LDSYMLEN (pst)) /* Otherwise it's a dummy. */
2165 {
2166 /* Init stuff necessary for reading in symbols */
2167 stabsread_init ();
2168 buildsym_init ();
2169 scoped_free_pendings free_pending;
2170 file_string_table_offset = FILE_STRING_OFFSET (pst);
2171 symbol_size = SYMBOL_SIZE (pst);
2172
2173 /* Read in this file's symbols. */
2174 bfd_seek (objfile->obfd, SYMBOL_OFFSET (pst), SEEK_SET);
2175 read_ofile_symtab (objfile, pst);
2176 }
2177
2178 pst->readin = 1;
2179 }
2180
2181 /* Read in all of the symbols for a given psymtab for real.
2182 Be verbose about it if the user wants that. SELF is not NULL. */
2183
2184 static void
2185 dbx_read_symtab (struct partial_symtab *self, struct objfile *objfile)
2186 {
2187 if (self->readin)
2188 {
2189 fprintf_unfiltered (gdb_stderr, "Psymtab for %s already read in. "
2190 "Shouldn't happen.\n",
2191 self->filename);
2192 return;
2193 }
2194
2195 if (LDSYMLEN (self) || self->number_of_dependencies)
2196 {
2197 /* Print the message now, before reading the string table,
2198 to avoid disconcerting pauses. */
2199 if (info_verbose)
2200 {
2201 printf_filtered ("Reading in symbols for %s...", self->filename);
2202 gdb_flush (gdb_stdout);
2203 }
2204
2205 next_symbol_text_func = dbx_next_symbol_text;
2206
2207 {
2208 scoped_restore restore_stabs_data = make_scoped_restore (&stabs_data);
2209 gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<gdb_byte> data_holder;
2210 if (DBX_STAB_SECTION (objfile))
2211 {
2212 stabs_data
2213 = symfile_relocate_debug_section (objfile,
2214 DBX_STAB_SECTION (objfile),
2215 NULL);
2216 data_holder.reset (stabs_data);
2217 }
2218
2219 dbx_psymtab_to_symtab_1 (objfile, self);
2220 }
2221
2222 /* Match with global symbols. This only needs to be done once,
2223 after all of the symtabs and dependencies have been read in. */
2224 scan_file_globals (objfile);
2225
2226 /* Finish up the debug error message. */
2227 if (info_verbose)
2228 printf_filtered ("done.\n");
2229 }
2230 }
2231
2232 /* Read in a defined section of a specific object file's symbols. */
2233
2234 static void
2235 read_ofile_symtab (struct objfile *objfile, struct partial_symtab *pst)
2236 {
2237 const char *namestring;
2238 struct external_nlist *bufp;
2239 struct internal_nlist nlist;
2240 unsigned char type;
2241 unsigned max_symnum;
2242 bfd *abfd;
2243 int sym_offset; /* Offset to start of symbols to read */
2244 int sym_size; /* Size of symbols to read */
2245 CORE_ADDR text_offset; /* Start of text segment for symbols */
2246 int text_size; /* Size of text segment for symbols */
2247 struct section_offsets *section_offsets;
2248
2249 sym_offset = LDSYMOFF (pst);
2250 sym_size = LDSYMLEN (pst);
2251 text_offset = pst->textlow;
2252 text_size = pst->texthigh - pst->textlow;
2253 section_offsets = objfile->section_offsets;
2254
2255 dbxread_objfile = objfile;
2256
2257 stringtab_global = DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile);
2258 set_last_source_file (NULL);
2259
2260 abfd = objfile->obfd;
2261 symfile_bfd = objfile->obfd; /* Implicit param to next_text_symbol. */
2262 symbuf_end = symbuf_idx = 0;
2263 symbuf_read = 0;
2264 symbuf_left = sym_offset + sym_size;
2265
2266 /* It is necessary to actually read one symbol *before* the start
2267 of this symtab's symbols, because the GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
2268 occurs before the N_SO symbol.
2269
2270 Detecting this in read_dbx_symtab
2271 would slow down initial readin, so we look for it here instead. */
2272 if (!processing_acc_compilation && sym_offset >= (int) symbol_size)
2273 {
2274 stabs_seek (sym_offset - symbol_size);
2275 fill_symbuf (abfd);
2276 bufp = &symbuf[symbuf_idx++];
2277 INTERNALIZE_SYMBOL (nlist, bufp, abfd);
2278 OBJSTAT (objfile, n_stabs++);
2279
2280 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
2281
2282 processing_gcc_compilation = 0;
2283 if (nlist.n_type == N_TEXT)
2284 {
2285 const char *tempstring = namestring;
2286
2287 if (strcmp (namestring, GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0)
2288 processing_gcc_compilation = 1;
2289 else if (strcmp (namestring, GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0)
2290 processing_gcc_compilation = 2;
2291 if (tempstring[0] == bfd_get_symbol_leading_char (symfile_bfd))
2292 ++tempstring;
2293 if (startswith (tempstring, "__gnu_compiled"))
2294 processing_gcc_compilation = 2;
2295 }
2296 }
2297 else
2298 {
2299 /* The N_SO starting this symtab is the first symbol, so we
2300 better not check the symbol before it. I'm not this can
2301 happen, but it doesn't hurt to check for it. */
2302 stabs_seek (sym_offset);
2303 processing_gcc_compilation = 0;
2304 }
2305
2306 if (symbuf_idx == symbuf_end)
2307 fill_symbuf (abfd);
2308 bufp = &symbuf[symbuf_idx];
2309 if (bfd_h_get_8 (abfd, bufp->e_type) != N_SO)
2310 error (_("First symbol in segment of executable not a source symbol"));
2311
2312 max_symnum = sym_size / symbol_size;
2313
2314 for (symnum = 0;
2315 symnum < max_symnum;
2316 symnum++)
2317 {
2318 QUIT; /* Allow this to be interruptable. */
2319 if (symbuf_idx == symbuf_end)
2320 fill_symbuf (abfd);
2321 bufp = &symbuf[symbuf_idx++];
2322 INTERNALIZE_SYMBOL (nlist, bufp, abfd);
2323 OBJSTAT (objfile, n_stabs++);
2324
2325 type = bfd_h_get_8 (abfd, bufp->e_type);
2326
2327 namestring = set_namestring (objfile, &nlist);
2328
2329 if (type & N_STAB)
2330 {
2331 if (sizeof (nlist.n_value) > 4
2332 /* We are a 64-bit debugger debugging a 32-bit program. */
2333 && (type == N_LSYM || type == N_PSYM))
2334 /* We have to be careful with the n_value in the case of N_LSYM
2335 and N_PSYM entries, because they are signed offsets from frame
2336 pointer, but we actually read them as unsigned 32-bit values.
2337 This is not a problem for 32-bit debuggers, for which negative
2338 values end up being interpreted correctly (as negative
2339 offsets) due to integer overflow.
2340 But we need to sign-extend the value for 64-bit debuggers,
2341 or we'll end up interpreting negative values as very large
2342 positive offsets. */
2343 nlist.n_value = (nlist.n_value ^ 0x80000000) - 0x80000000;
2344 process_one_symbol (type, nlist.n_desc, nlist.n_value,
2345 namestring, section_offsets, objfile,
2346 PST_LANGUAGE (pst));
2347 }
2348 /* We skip checking for a new .o or -l file; that should never
2349 happen in this routine. */
2350 else if (type == N_TEXT)
2351 {
2352 /* I don't think this code will ever be executed, because
2353 the GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL usually is right before
2354 the N_SO symbol which starts this source file.
2355 However, there is no reason not to accept
2356 the GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL anywhere. */
2357
2358 if (strcmp (namestring, GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0)
2359 processing_gcc_compilation = 1;
2360 else if (strcmp (namestring, GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0)
2361 processing_gcc_compilation = 2;
2362 }
2363 else if (type & N_EXT || type == (unsigned char) N_TEXT
2364 || type == (unsigned char) N_NBTEXT)
2365 {
2366 /* Global symbol: see if we came across a dbx defintion for
2367 a corresponding symbol. If so, store the value. Remove
2368 syms from the chain when their values are stored, but
2369 search the whole chain, as there may be several syms from
2370 different files with the same name. */
2371 /* This is probably not true. Since the files will be read
2372 in one at a time, each reference to a global symbol will
2373 be satisfied in each file as it appears. So we skip this
2374 section. */
2375 ;
2376 }
2377 }
2378
2379 /* In a Solaris elf file, this variable, which comes from the
2380 value of the N_SO symbol, will still be 0. Luckily, text_offset,
2381 which comes from pst->textlow is correct. */
2382 if (get_last_source_start_addr () == 0)
2383 set_last_source_start_addr (text_offset);
2384
2385 /* In reordered executables last_source_start_addr may not be the
2386 lower bound for this symtab, instead use text_offset which comes
2387 from pst->textlow which is correct. */
2388 if (get_last_source_start_addr () > text_offset)
2389 set_last_source_start_addr (text_offset);
2390
2391 pst->compunit_symtab = end_symtab (text_offset + text_size,
2392 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2393
2394 end_stabs ();
2395
2396 dbxread_objfile = NULL;
2397 }
2398 \f
2399
2400 /* Record the namespace that the function defined by SYMBOL was
2401 defined in, if necessary. BLOCK is the associated block; use
2402 OBSTACK for allocation. */
2403
2404 static void
2405 cp_set_block_scope (const struct symbol *symbol,
2406 struct block *block,
2407 struct obstack *obstack)
2408 {
2409 if (SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME (symbol) != NULL)
2410 {
2411 /* Try to figure out the appropriate namespace from the
2412 demangled name. */
2413
2414 /* FIXME: carlton/2003-04-15: If the function in question is
2415 a method of a class, the name will actually include the
2416 name of the class as well. This should be harmless, but
2417 is a little unfortunate. */
2418
2419 const char *name = SYMBOL_DEMANGLED_NAME (symbol);
2420 unsigned int prefix_len = cp_entire_prefix_len (name);
2421
2422 block_set_scope (block,
2423 (const char *) obstack_copy0 (obstack, name, prefix_len),
2424 obstack);
2425 }
2426 }
2427
2428 /* This handles a single symbol from the symbol-file, building symbols
2429 into a GDB symtab. It takes these arguments and an implicit argument.
2430
2431 TYPE is the type field of the ".stab" symbol entry.
2432 DESC is the desc field of the ".stab" entry.
2433 VALU is the value field of the ".stab" entry.
2434 NAME is the symbol name, in our address space.
2435 SECTION_OFFSETS is a set of amounts by which the sections of this
2436 object file were relocated when it was loaded into memory. Note
2437 that these section_offsets are not the objfile->section_offsets but
2438 the pst->section_offsets. All symbols that refer to memory
2439 locations need to be offset by these amounts.
2440 OBJFILE is the object file from which we are reading symbols. It
2441 is used in end_symtab.
2442 LANGUAGE is the language of the symtab.
2443 */
2444
2445 void
2446 process_one_symbol (int type, int desc, CORE_ADDR valu, const char *name,
2447 const struct section_offsets *section_offsets,
2448 struct objfile *objfile, enum language language)
2449 {
2450 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = get_objfile_arch (objfile);
2451 struct context_stack *newobj;
2452 /* This remembers the address of the start of a function. It is
2453 used because in Solaris 2, N_LBRAC, N_RBRAC, and N_SLINE entries
2454 are relative to the current function's start address. On systems
2455 other than Solaris 2, this just holds the SECT_OFF_TEXT value,
2456 and is used to relocate these symbol types rather than
2457 SECTION_OFFSETS. */
2458 static CORE_ADDR function_start_offset;
2459
2460 /* This holds the address of the start of a function, without the
2461 system peculiarities of function_start_offset. */
2462 static CORE_ADDR last_function_start;
2463
2464 /* If this is nonzero, we've seen an N_SLINE since the start of the
2465 current function. We use this to tell us to move the first sline
2466 to the beginning of the function regardless of what its given
2467 value is. */
2468 static int sline_found_in_function = 1;
2469
2470 /* If this is nonzero, we've seen a non-gcc N_OPT symbol for this
2471 source file. Used to detect the SunPRO solaris compiler. */
2472 static int n_opt_found;
2473
2474 /* Something is wrong if we see real data before seeing a source
2475 file name. */
2476
2477 if (get_last_source_file () == NULL && type != (unsigned char) N_SO)
2478 {
2479 /* Ignore any symbols which appear before an N_SO symbol.
2480 Currently no one puts symbols there, but we should deal
2481 gracefully with the case. A complain()t might be in order,
2482 but this should not be an error (). */
2483 return;
2484 }
2485
2486 switch (type)
2487 {
2488 case N_FUN:
2489 case N_FNAME:
2490
2491 if (*name == '\000')
2492 {
2493 /* This N_FUN marks the end of a function. This closes off
2494 the current block. */
2495 struct block *block;
2496
2497 if (context_stack_depth <= 0)
2498 {
2499 lbrac_mismatch_complaint (symnum);
2500 break;
2501 }
2502
2503 /* The following check is added before recording line 0 at
2504 end of function so as to handle hand-generated stabs
2505 which may have an N_FUN stabs at the end of the function,
2506 but no N_SLINE stabs. */
2507 if (sline_found_in_function)
2508 {
2509 CORE_ADDR addr = last_function_start + valu;
2510
2511 record_line (current_subfile, 0,
2512 gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (gdbarch, addr));
2513 }
2514
2515 within_function = 0;
2516 newobj = pop_context ();
2517
2518 /* Make a block for the local symbols within. */
2519 block = finish_block (newobj->name, &local_symbols,
2520 newobj->old_blocks, NULL,
2521 newobj->start_addr, newobj->start_addr + valu);
2522
2523 /* For C++, set the block's scope. */
2524 if (SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (newobj->name) == language_cplus)
2525 cp_set_block_scope (newobj->name, block, &objfile->objfile_obstack);
2526
2527 /* May be switching to an assembler file which may not be using
2528 block relative stabs, so reset the offset. */
2529 function_start_offset = 0;
2530
2531 break;
2532 }
2533
2534 sline_found_in_function = 0;
2535
2536 /* Relocate for dynamic loading. */
2537 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2538 valu = gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (gdbarch, valu);
2539 last_function_start = valu;
2540
2541 goto define_a_symbol;
2542
2543 case N_LBRAC:
2544 /* This "symbol" just indicates the start of an inner lexical
2545 context within a function. */
2546
2547 /* Ignore extra outermost context from SunPRO cc and acc. */
2548 if (n_opt_found && desc == 1)
2549 break;
2550
2551 valu += function_start_offset;
2552
2553 push_context (desc, valu);
2554 break;
2555
2556 case N_RBRAC:
2557 /* This "symbol" just indicates the end of an inner lexical
2558 context that was started with N_LBRAC. */
2559
2560 /* Ignore extra outermost context from SunPRO cc and acc. */
2561 if (n_opt_found && desc == 1)
2562 break;
2563
2564 valu += function_start_offset;
2565
2566 if (context_stack_depth <= 0)
2567 {
2568 lbrac_mismatch_complaint (symnum);
2569 break;
2570 }
2571
2572 newobj = pop_context ();
2573 if (desc != newobj->depth)
2574 lbrac_mismatch_complaint (symnum);
2575
2576 if (local_symbols != NULL)
2577 {
2578 /* GCC development snapshots from March to December of
2579 2000 would output N_LSYM entries after N_LBRAC
2580 entries. As a consequence, these symbols are simply
2581 discarded. Complain if this is the case. */
2582 complaint (_("misplaced N_LBRAC entry; discarding local "
2583 "symbols which have no enclosing block"));
2584 }
2585 local_symbols = newobj->locals;
2586
2587 if (context_stack_depth > 1)
2588 {
2589 /* This is not the outermost LBRAC...RBRAC pair in the
2590 function, its local symbols preceded it, and are the ones
2591 just recovered from the context stack. Define the block
2592 for them (but don't bother if the block contains no
2593 symbols. Should we complain on blocks without symbols?
2594 I can't think of any useful purpose for them). */
2595 if (local_symbols != NULL)
2596 {
2597 /* Muzzle a compiler bug that makes end < start.
2598
2599 ??? Which compilers? Is this ever harmful?. */
2600 if (newobj->start_addr > valu)
2601 {
2602 complaint (_("block start larger than block end"));
2603 newobj->start_addr = valu;
2604 }
2605 /* Make a block for the local symbols within. */
2606 finish_block (0, &local_symbols, newobj->old_blocks, NULL,
2607 newobj->start_addr, valu);
2608 }
2609 }
2610 else
2611 {
2612 /* This is the outermost LBRAC...RBRAC pair. There is no
2613 need to do anything; leave the symbols that preceded it
2614 to be attached to the function's own block. We need to
2615 indicate that we just moved outside of the function. */
2616 within_function = 0;
2617 }
2618
2619 break;
2620
2621 case N_FN:
2622 case N_FN_SEQ:
2623 /* This kind of symbol indicates the start of an object file.
2624 Relocate for dynamic loading. */
2625 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2626 break;
2627
2628 case N_SO:
2629 /* This type of symbol indicates the start of data for one
2630 source file. Finish the symbol table of the previous source
2631 file (if any) and start accumulating a new symbol table.
2632 Relocate for dynamic loading. */
2633 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2634
2635 n_opt_found = 0;
2636
2637 if (get_last_source_file ())
2638 {
2639 /* Check if previous symbol was also an N_SO (with some
2640 sanity checks). If so, that one was actually the
2641 directory name, and the current one is the real file
2642 name. Patch things up. */
2643 if (previous_stab_code == (unsigned char) N_SO)
2644 {
2645 patch_subfile_names (current_subfile, name);
2646 break; /* Ignore repeated SOs. */
2647 }
2648 end_symtab (valu, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2649 end_stabs ();
2650 }
2651
2652 /* Null name means this just marks the end of text for this .o
2653 file. Don't start a new symtab in this case. */
2654 if (*name == '\000')
2655 break;
2656
2657 function_start_offset = 0;
2658
2659 start_stabs ();
2660 start_symtab (objfile, name, NULL, valu, language);
2661 record_debugformat ("stabs");
2662 break;
2663
2664 case N_SOL:
2665 /* This type of symbol indicates the start of data for a
2666 sub-source-file, one whose contents were copied or included
2667 in the compilation of the main source file (whose name was
2668 given in the N_SO symbol). Relocate for dynamic loading. */
2669 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2670 start_subfile (name);
2671 break;
2672
2673 case N_BINCL:
2674 push_subfile ();
2675 add_new_header_file (name, valu);
2676 start_subfile (name);
2677 break;
2678
2679 case N_EINCL:
2680 start_subfile (pop_subfile ());
2681 break;
2682
2683 case N_EXCL:
2684 add_old_header_file (name, valu);
2685 break;
2686
2687 case N_SLINE:
2688 /* This type of "symbol" really just records one line-number --
2689 core-address correspondence. Enter it in the line list for
2690 this symbol table. */
2691
2692 /* Relocate for dynamic loading and for ELF acc
2693 function-relative symbols. */
2694 valu += function_start_offset;
2695
2696 /* GCC 2.95.3 emits the first N_SLINE stab somwehere in the
2697 middle of the prologue instead of right at the start of the
2698 function. To deal with this we record the address for the
2699 first N_SLINE stab to be the start of the function instead of
2700 the listed location. We really shouldn't to this. When
2701 compiling with optimization, this first N_SLINE stab might be
2702 optimized away. Other (non-GCC) compilers don't emit this
2703 stab at all. There is no real harm in having an extra
2704 numbered line, although it can be a bit annoying for the
2705 user. However, it totally screws up our testsuite.
2706
2707 So for now, keep adjusting the address of the first N_SLINE
2708 stab, but only for code compiled with GCC. */
2709
2710 if (within_function && sline_found_in_function == 0)
2711 {
2712 CORE_ADDR addr = processing_gcc_compilation == 2 ?
2713 last_function_start : valu;
2714
2715 record_line (current_subfile, desc,
2716 gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (gdbarch, addr));
2717 sline_found_in_function = 1;
2718 }
2719 else
2720 record_line (current_subfile, desc,
2721 gdbarch_addr_bits_remove (gdbarch, valu));
2722 break;
2723
2724 case N_BCOMM:
2725 common_block_start (name, objfile);
2726 break;
2727
2728 case N_ECOMM:
2729 common_block_end (objfile);
2730 break;
2731
2732 /* The following symbol types need to have the appropriate
2733 offset added to their value; then we process symbol
2734 definitions in the name. */
2735
2736 case N_STSYM: /* Static symbol in data segment. */
2737 case N_LCSYM: /* Static symbol in BSS segment. */
2738 case N_ROSYM: /* Static symbol in read-only data segment. */
2739 /* HORRID HACK DEPT. However, it's Sun's furgin' fault.
2740 Solaris 2's stabs-in-elf makes *most* symbols relative but
2741 leaves a few absolute (at least for Solaris 2.1 and version
2742 2.0.1 of the SunPRO compiler). N_STSYM and friends sit on
2743 the fence. .stab "foo:S...",N_STSYM is absolute (ld
2744 relocates it) .stab "foo:V...",N_STSYM is relative (section
2745 base subtracted). This leaves us no choice but to search for
2746 the 'S' or 'V'... (or pass the whole section_offsets stuff
2747 down ONE MORE function call level, which we really don't want
2748 to do). */
2749 {
2750 const char *p;
2751
2752 /* Normal object file and NLMs have non-zero text seg offsets,
2753 but don't need their static syms offset in this fashion.
2754 XXX - This is really a crock that should be fixed in the
2755 solib handling code so that I don't have to work around it
2756 here. */
2757
2758 if (!symfile_relocatable)
2759 {
2760 p = strchr (name, ':');
2761 if (p != 0 && p[1] == 'S')
2762 {
2763 /* The linker relocated it. We don't want to add a
2764 Sun-stabs Tfoo.foo-like offset, but we *do*
2765 want to add whatever solib.c passed to
2766 symbol_file_add as addr (this is known to affect
2767 SunOS 4, and I suspect ELF too). Since there is no
2768 Ttext.text symbol, we can get addr from the text offset. */
2769 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2770 goto define_a_symbol;
2771 }
2772 }
2773 /* Since it's not the kludge case, re-dispatch to the right
2774 handler. */
2775 switch (type)
2776 {
2777 case N_STSYM:
2778 goto case_N_STSYM;
2779 case N_LCSYM:
2780 goto case_N_LCSYM;
2781 case N_ROSYM:
2782 goto case_N_ROSYM;
2783 default:
2784 internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__,
2785 _("failed internal consistency check"));
2786 }
2787 }
2788
2789 case_N_STSYM: /* Static symbol in data segment. */
2790 case N_DSLINE: /* Source line number, data segment. */
2791 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_DATA (objfile));
2792 goto define_a_symbol;
2793
2794 case_N_LCSYM: /* Static symbol in BSS segment. */
2795 case N_BSLINE: /* Source line number, BSS segment. */
2796 /* N_BROWS: overlaps with N_BSLINE. */
2797 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_BSS (objfile));
2798 goto define_a_symbol;
2799
2800 case_N_ROSYM: /* Static symbol in read-only data segment. */
2801 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_RODATA (objfile));
2802 goto define_a_symbol;
2803
2804 case N_ENTRY: /* Alternate entry point. */
2805 /* Relocate for dynamic loading. */
2806 valu += ANOFFSET (section_offsets, SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile));
2807 goto define_a_symbol;
2808
2809 /* The following symbol types we don't know how to process.
2810 Handle them in a "default" way, but complain to people who
2811 care. */
2812 default:
2813 case N_CATCH: /* Exception handler catcher. */
2814 case N_EHDECL: /* Exception handler name. */
2815 case N_PC: /* Global symbol in Pascal. */
2816 case N_M2C: /* Modula-2 compilation unit. */
2817 /* N_MOD2: overlaps with N_EHDECL. */
2818 case N_SCOPE: /* Modula-2 scope information. */
2819 case N_ECOML: /* End common (local name). */
2820 case N_NBTEXT: /* Gould Non-Base-Register symbols??? */
2821 case N_NBDATA:
2822 case N_NBBSS:
2823 case N_NBSTS:
2824 case N_NBLCS:
2825 unknown_symtype_complaint (hex_string (type));
2826 /* FALLTHROUGH */
2827
2828 define_a_symbol:
2829 /* These symbol types don't need the address field relocated,
2830 since it is either unused, or is absolute. */
2831 case N_GSYM: /* Global variable. */
2832 case N_NSYMS: /* Number of symbols (Ultrix). */
2833 case N_NOMAP: /* No map? (Ultrix). */
2834 case N_RSYM: /* Register variable. */
2835 case N_DEFD: /* Modula-2 GNU module dependency. */
2836 case N_SSYM: /* Struct or union element. */
2837 case N_LSYM: /* Local symbol in stack. */
2838 case N_PSYM: /* Parameter variable. */
2839 case N_LENG: /* Length of preceding symbol type. */
2840 if (name)
2841 {
2842 int deftype;
2843 const char *colon_pos = strchr (name, ':');
2844
2845 if (colon_pos == NULL)
2846 deftype = '\0';
2847 else
2848 deftype = colon_pos[1];
2849
2850 switch (deftype)
2851 {
2852 case 'f':
2853 case 'F':
2854 /* Deal with the SunPRO 3.0 compiler which omits the
2855 address from N_FUN symbols. */
2856 if (type == N_FUN
2857 && valu == ANOFFSET (section_offsets,
2858 SECT_OFF_TEXT (objfile))
2859 && gdbarch_sofun_address_maybe_missing (gdbarch))
2860 {
2861 CORE_ADDR minsym_valu =
2862 find_stab_function_addr (name, get_last_source_file (),
2863 objfile);
2864
2865 /* The function find_stab_function_addr will return
2866 0 if the minimal symbol wasn't found.
2867 (Unfortunately, this might also be a valid
2868 address.) Anyway, if it *does* return 0, it is
2869 likely that the value was set correctly to begin
2870 with... */
2871 if (minsym_valu != 0)
2872 valu = minsym_valu;
2873 }
2874
2875 /* These addresses are absolute. */
2876 function_start_offset = valu;
2877
2878 within_function = 1;
2879
2880 if (context_stack_depth > 1)
2881 {
2882 complaint (_("unmatched N_LBRAC before symtab pos %d"),
2883 symnum);
2884 break;
2885 }
2886
2887 if (context_stack_depth > 0)
2888 {
2889 struct block *block;
2890
2891 newobj = pop_context ();
2892 /* Make a block for the local symbols within. */
2893 block = finish_block (newobj->name, &local_symbols,
2894 newobj->old_blocks, NULL,
2895 newobj->start_addr, valu);
2896
2897 /* For C++, set the block's scope. */
2898 if (SYMBOL_LANGUAGE (newobj->name) == language_cplus)
2899 cp_set_block_scope (newobj->name, block,
2900 &objfile->objfile_obstack);
2901 }
2902
2903 newobj = push_context (0, valu);
2904 newobj->name = define_symbol (valu, name, desc, type, objfile);
2905 break;
2906
2907 default:
2908 define_symbol (valu, name, desc, type, objfile);
2909 break;
2910 }
2911 }
2912 break;
2913
2914 /* We use N_OPT to carry the gcc2_compiled flag. Sun uses it
2915 for a bunch of other flags, too. Someday we may parse their
2916 flags; for now we ignore theirs and hope they'll ignore ours. */
2917 case N_OPT: /* Solaris 2: Compiler options. */
2918 if (name)
2919 {
2920 if (strcmp (name, GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL) == 0)
2921 {
2922 processing_gcc_compilation = 2;
2923 }
2924 else
2925 n_opt_found = 1;
2926 }
2927 break;
2928
2929 case N_MAIN: /* Name of main routine. */
2930 /* FIXME: If one has a symbol file with N_MAIN and then replaces
2931 it with a symbol file with "main" and without N_MAIN. I'm
2932 not sure exactly what rule to follow but probably something
2933 like: N_MAIN takes precedence over "main" no matter what
2934 objfile it is in; If there is more than one N_MAIN, choose
2935 the one in the symfile_objfile; If there is more than one
2936 N_MAIN within a given objfile, complain() and choose
2937 arbitrarily. (kingdon) */
2938 if (name != NULL)
2939 set_objfile_main_name (objfile, name, language_unknown);
2940 break;
2941
2942 /* The following symbol types can be ignored. */
2943 case N_OBJ: /* Solaris 2: Object file dir and name. */
2944 case N_PATCH: /* Solaris 2: Patch Run Time Checker. */
2945 /* N_UNDF: Solaris 2: File separator mark. */
2946 /* N_UNDF: -- we will never encounter it, since we only process
2947 one file's symbols at once. */
2948 case N_ENDM: /* Solaris 2: End of module. */
2949 case N_ALIAS: /* SunPro F77: alias name, ignore for now. */
2950 break;
2951 }
2952
2953 /* '#' is a GNU C extension to allow one symbol to refer to another
2954 related symbol.
2955
2956 Generally this is used so that an alias can refer to its main
2957 symbol. */
2958 gdb_assert (name);
2959 if (name[0] == '#')
2960 {
2961 /* Initialize symbol reference names and determine if this is a
2962 definition. If a symbol reference is being defined, go ahead
2963 and add it. Otherwise, just return. */
2964
2965 const char *s = name;
2966 int refnum;
2967
2968 /* If this stab defines a new reference ID that is not on the
2969 reference list, then put it on the reference list.
2970
2971 We go ahead and advance NAME past the reference, even though
2972 it is not strictly necessary at this time. */
2973 refnum = symbol_reference_defined (&s);
2974 if (refnum >= 0)
2975 if (!ref_search (refnum))
2976 ref_add (refnum, 0, name, valu);
2977 name = s;
2978 }
2979
2980 previous_stab_code = type;
2981 }
2982 \f
2983 /* FIXME: The only difference between this and elfstab_build_psymtabs
2984 is the call to install_minimal_symbols for elf, and the support for
2985 split sections. If the differences are really that small, the code
2986 should be shared. */
2987
2988 /* Scan and build partial symbols for an coff symbol file.
2989 The coff file has already been processed to get its minimal symbols.
2990
2991 This routine is the equivalent of dbx_symfile_init and dbx_symfile_read
2992 rolled into one.
2993
2994 OBJFILE is the object file we are reading symbols from.
2995 ADDR is the address relative to which the symbols are (e.g.
2996 the base address of the text segment).
2997 TEXTADDR is the address of the text section.
2998 TEXTSIZE is the size of the text section.
2999 STABSECTS is the list of .stab sections in OBJFILE.
3000 STABSTROFFSET and STABSTRSIZE define the location in OBJFILE where the
3001 .stabstr section exists.
3002
3003 This routine is mostly copied from dbx_symfile_init and dbx_symfile_read,
3004 adjusted for coff details. */
3005
3006 void
3007 coffstab_build_psymtabs (struct objfile *objfile,
3008 CORE_ADDR textaddr, unsigned int textsize,
3009 struct stab_section_list *stabsects,
3010 file_ptr stabstroffset, unsigned int stabstrsize)
3011 {
3012 int val;
3013 bfd *sym_bfd = objfile->obfd;
3014 char *name = bfd_get_filename (sym_bfd);
3015 unsigned int stabsize;
3016
3017 DBX_TEXT_ADDR (objfile) = textaddr;
3018 DBX_TEXT_SIZE (objfile) = textsize;
3019
3020 #define COFF_STABS_SYMBOL_SIZE 12 /* XXX FIXME XXX */
3021 DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile) = COFF_STABS_SYMBOL_SIZE;
3022 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) = stabstrsize;
3023
3024 if (stabstrsize > bfd_get_size (sym_bfd))
3025 error (_("ridiculous string table size: %d bytes"), stabstrsize);
3026 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile) = (char *)
3027 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, stabstrsize + 1);
3028 OBJSTAT (objfile, sz_strtab += stabstrsize + 1);
3029
3030 /* Now read in the string table in one big gulp. */
3031
3032 val = bfd_seek (sym_bfd, stabstroffset, SEEK_SET);
3033 if (val < 0)
3034 perror_with_name (name);
3035 val = bfd_bread (DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile), stabstrsize, sym_bfd);
3036 if (val != stabstrsize)
3037 perror_with_name (name);
3038
3039 stabsread_new_init ();
3040 buildsym_new_init ();
3041 free_header_files ();
3042 init_header_files ();
3043
3044 processing_acc_compilation = 1;
3045
3046 /* In a coff file, we've already installed the minimal symbols that came
3047 from the coff (non-stab) symbol table, so always act like an
3048 incremental load here. */
3049 if (stabsects->next == NULL)
3050 {
3051 stabsize = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, stabsects->section);
3052 DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile) = stabsize / DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile);
3053 DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile) = stabsects->section->filepos;
3054 }
3055 else
3056 {
3057 struct stab_section_list *stabsect;
3058
3059 DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile) = 0;
3060 for (stabsect = stabsects; stabsect != NULL; stabsect = stabsect->next)
3061 {
3062 stabsize = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, stabsect->section);
3063 DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile) += stabsize / DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile);
3064 }
3065
3066 DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile) = stabsects->section->filepos;
3067
3068 symbuf_sections = stabsects->next;
3069 symbuf_left = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, stabsects->section);
3070 symbuf_read = 0;
3071 }
3072
3073 dbx_symfile_read (objfile, 0);
3074 }
3075 \f
3076 /* Scan and build partial symbols for an ELF symbol file.
3077 This ELF file has already been processed to get its minimal symbols.
3078
3079 This routine is the equivalent of dbx_symfile_init and dbx_symfile_read
3080 rolled into one.
3081
3082 OBJFILE is the object file we are reading symbols from.
3083 ADDR is the address relative to which the symbols are (e.g.
3084 the base address of the text segment).
3085 STABSECT is the BFD section information for the .stab section.
3086 STABSTROFFSET and STABSTRSIZE define the location in OBJFILE where the
3087 .stabstr section exists.
3088
3089 This routine is mostly copied from dbx_symfile_init and dbx_symfile_read,
3090 adjusted for elf details. */
3091
3092 void
3093 elfstab_build_psymtabs (struct objfile *objfile, asection *stabsect,
3094 file_ptr stabstroffset, unsigned int stabstrsize)
3095 {
3096 int val;
3097 bfd *sym_bfd = objfile->obfd;
3098 char *name = bfd_get_filename (sym_bfd);
3099
3100 /* Find the first and last text address. dbx_symfile_read seems to
3101 want this. */
3102 find_text_range (sym_bfd, objfile);
3103
3104 #define ELF_STABS_SYMBOL_SIZE 12 /* XXX FIXME XXX */
3105 DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile) = ELF_STABS_SYMBOL_SIZE;
3106 DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile)
3107 = bfd_section_size (objfile->obfd, stabsect) / DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile);
3108 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) = stabstrsize;
3109 DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile) = stabsect->filepos;
3110 DBX_STAB_SECTION (objfile) = stabsect;
3111
3112 if (stabstrsize > bfd_get_size (sym_bfd))
3113 error (_("ridiculous string table size: %d bytes"), stabstrsize);
3114 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile) = (char *)
3115 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack, stabstrsize + 1);
3116 OBJSTAT (objfile, sz_strtab += stabstrsize + 1);
3117
3118 /* Now read in the string table in one big gulp. */
3119
3120 val = bfd_seek (sym_bfd, stabstroffset, SEEK_SET);
3121 if (val < 0)
3122 perror_with_name (name);
3123 val = bfd_bread (DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile), stabstrsize, sym_bfd);
3124 if (val != stabstrsize)
3125 perror_with_name (name);
3126
3127 stabsread_new_init ();
3128 buildsym_new_init ();
3129 free_header_files ();
3130 init_header_files ();
3131
3132 processing_acc_compilation = 1;
3133
3134 symbuf_read = 0;
3135 symbuf_left = bfd_section_size (objfile->obfd, stabsect);
3136
3137 scoped_restore restore_stabs_data = make_scoped_restore (&stabs_data);
3138 gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<gdb_byte> data_holder;
3139
3140 stabs_data = symfile_relocate_debug_section (objfile, stabsect, NULL);
3141 if (stabs_data)
3142 data_holder.reset (stabs_data);
3143
3144 /* In an elf file, we've already installed the minimal symbols that came
3145 from the elf (non-stab) symbol table, so always act like an
3146 incremental load here. dbx_symfile_read should not generate any new
3147 minimal symbols, since we will have already read the ELF dynamic symbol
3148 table and normal symbol entries won't be in the ".stab" section; but in
3149 case it does, it will install them itself. */
3150 dbx_symfile_read (objfile, 0);
3151 }
3152 \f
3153 /* Scan and build partial symbols for a file with special sections for stabs
3154 and stabstrings. The file has already been processed to get its minimal
3155 symbols, and any other symbols that might be necessary to resolve GSYMs.
3156
3157 This routine is the equivalent of dbx_symfile_init and dbx_symfile_read
3158 rolled into one.
3159
3160 OBJFILE is the object file we are reading symbols from.
3161 ADDR is the address relative to which the symbols are (e.g. the base address
3162 of the text segment).
3163 STAB_NAME is the name of the section that contains the stabs.
3164 STABSTR_NAME is the name of the section that contains the stab strings.
3165
3166 This routine is mostly copied from dbx_symfile_init and
3167 dbx_symfile_read. */
3168
3169 void
3170 stabsect_build_psymtabs (struct objfile *objfile, char *stab_name,
3171 char *stabstr_name, char *text_name)
3172 {
3173 int val;
3174 bfd *sym_bfd = objfile->obfd;
3175 char *name = bfd_get_filename (sym_bfd);
3176 asection *stabsect;
3177 asection *stabstrsect;
3178 asection *text_sect;
3179 struct dbx_symfile_info *dbx;
3180
3181 stabsect = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, stab_name);
3182 stabstrsect = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, stabstr_name);
3183
3184 if (!stabsect)
3185 return;
3186
3187 if (!stabstrsect)
3188 error (_("stabsect_build_psymtabs: Found stabs (%s), "
3189 "but not string section (%s)"),
3190 stab_name, stabstr_name);
3191
3192 dbx = XCNEW (struct dbx_symfile_info);
3193 set_objfile_data (objfile, dbx_objfile_data_key, dbx);
3194
3195 text_sect = bfd_get_section_by_name (sym_bfd, text_name);
3196 if (!text_sect)
3197 error (_("Can't find %s section in symbol file"), text_name);
3198 DBX_TEXT_ADDR (objfile) = bfd_section_vma (sym_bfd, text_sect);
3199 DBX_TEXT_SIZE (objfile) = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, text_sect);
3200
3201 DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile) = sizeof (struct external_nlist);
3202 DBX_SYMCOUNT (objfile) = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, stabsect)
3203 / DBX_SYMBOL_SIZE (objfile);
3204 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) = bfd_section_size (sym_bfd, stabstrsect);
3205 DBX_SYMTAB_OFFSET (objfile) = stabsect->filepos; /* XXX - FIXME: POKING
3206 INSIDE BFD DATA
3207 STRUCTURES */
3208
3209 if (DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) > bfd_get_size (sym_bfd))
3210 error (_("ridiculous string table size: %d bytes"),
3211 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile));
3212 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile) = (char *)
3213 obstack_alloc (&objfile->objfile_obstack,
3214 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) + 1);
3215 OBJSTAT (objfile, sz_strtab += DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile) + 1);
3216
3217 /* Now read in the string table in one big gulp. */
3218
3219 val = bfd_get_section_contents (sym_bfd, /* bfd */
3220 stabstrsect, /* bfd section */
3221 DBX_STRINGTAB (objfile), /* input buffer */
3222 0, /* offset into section */
3223 DBX_STRINGTAB_SIZE (objfile)); /* amount to
3224 read */
3225
3226 if (!val)
3227 perror_with_name (name);
3228
3229 stabsread_new_init ();
3230 buildsym_new_init ();
3231 free_header_files ();
3232 init_header_files ();
3233
3234 /* Now, do an incremental load. */
3235
3236 processing_acc_compilation = 1;
3237 dbx_symfile_read (objfile, 0);
3238 }
3239 \f
3240 static const struct sym_fns aout_sym_fns =
3241 {
3242 dbx_new_init, /* init anything gbl to entire symtab */
3243 dbx_symfile_init, /* read initial info, setup for sym_read() */
3244 dbx_symfile_read, /* read a symbol file into symtab */
3245 NULL, /* sym_read_psymbols */
3246 dbx_symfile_finish, /* finished with file, cleanup */
3247 default_symfile_offsets, /* parse user's offsets to internal form */
3248 default_symfile_segments, /* Get segment information from a file. */
3249 NULL,
3250 default_symfile_relocate, /* Relocate a debug section. */
3251 NULL, /* sym_probe_fns */
3252 &psym_functions
3253 };
3254
3255 void
3256 _initialize_dbxread (void)
3257 {
3258 add_symtab_fns (bfd_target_aout_flavour, &aout_sym_fns);
3259
3260 dbx_objfile_data_key
3261 = register_objfile_data_with_cleanup (NULL, dbx_free_symfile_info);
3262 }