* breakpoint.c (watch_command): Use (CORE_ADDR)0, not NULL, for
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / defs.h
1 /* Basic, host-specific, and target-specific definitions for GDB.
2 Copyright (C) 1986, 1989, 1991 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 2 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, write to the Free Software
18 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
19
20 #if !defined (DEFS_H)
21 #define DEFS_H 1
22
23 #include <stdio.h>
24
25 /* First include ansidecl.h so we can use the various macro definitions
26 here and in all subsequent file inclusions. */
27
28 #include "ansidecl.h"
29
30 /* For BFD64 and bfd_vma. */
31 #include "bfd.h"
32
33 /* An address in the program being debugged. Host byte order. Rather
34 than duplicate all the logic in BFD which figures out what type
35 this is (long, long long, etc.) and whether it needs to be 64
36 bits (the host/target interactions are subtle), we just use
37 bfd_vma. */
38
39 typedef bfd_vma CORE_ADDR;
40
41 #define min(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b))
42 #define max(a, b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b))
43
44 /* Gdb does *lots* of string compares. Use macros to speed them up by
45 avoiding function calls if the first characters are not the same. */
46
47 #define STRCMP(a,b) (*(a) == *(b) ? strcmp ((a), (b)) : (int)*(a) - (int)*(b))
48 #define STREQ(a,b) (*(a) == *(b) ? !strcmp ((a), (b)) : 0)
49 #define STREQN(a,b,c) (*(a) == *(b) ? !strncmp ((a), (b), (c)) : 0)
50
51 /* The character GNU C++ uses to build identifiers that must be unique from
52 the program's identifiers (such as $this and $$vptr). */
53 #define CPLUS_MARKER '$' /* May be overridden to '.' for SysV */
54
55 #include <errno.h> /* System call error return status */
56
57 extern int quit_flag;
58 extern int immediate_quit;
59 extern int sevenbit_strings;
60
61 extern void
62 quit PARAMS ((void));
63
64 #define QUIT { if (quit_flag) quit (); }
65
66 /* Command classes are top-level categories into which commands are broken
67 down for "help" purposes.
68 Notes on classes: class_alias is for alias commands which are not
69 abbreviations of the original command. class-pseudo is for commands
70 which are not really commands nor help topics ("stop"). */
71
72 enum command_class
73 {
74 /* Special args to help_list */
75 all_classes = -2, all_commands = -1,
76 /* Classes of commands */
77 no_class = -1, class_run = 0, class_vars, class_stack,
78 class_files, class_support, class_info, class_breakpoint,
79 class_alias, class_obscure, class_user, class_maintenance,
80 class_pseudo
81 };
82
83 /* Languages represented in the symbol table and elsewhere.
84 This should probably be in language.h, but since enum's can't
85 be forward declared to satisfy opaque references before their
86 actual definition, needs to be here. */
87
88 enum language
89 {
90 language_unknown, /* Language not known */
91 language_auto, /* Placeholder for automatic setting */
92 language_c, /* C */
93 language_cplus, /* C++ */
94 language_chill, /* Chill */
95 language_m2 /* Modula-2 */
96 };
97
98 /* the cleanup list records things that have to be undone
99 if an error happens (descriptors to be closed, memory to be freed, etc.)
100 Each link in the chain records a function to call and an
101 argument to give it.
102
103 Use make_cleanup to add an element to the cleanup chain.
104 Use do_cleanups to do all cleanup actions back to a given
105 point in the chain. Use discard_cleanups to remove cleanups
106 from the chain back to a given point, not doing them. */
107
108 struct cleanup
109 {
110 struct cleanup *next;
111 void (*function) PARAMS ((PTR));
112 PTR arg;
113 };
114
115 /* From blockframe.c */
116
117 extern int
118 inside_entry_func PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
119
120 extern int
121 inside_entry_file PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR addr));
122
123 extern int
124 inside_main_func PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR pc));
125
126 /* From ch-lang.c, for the moment. (FIXME) */
127
128 extern char *
129 chill_demangle PARAMS ((const char *));
130
131 /* From libiberty.a */
132
133 extern char *
134 cplus_demangle PARAMS ((const char *, int));
135
136 extern char *
137 cplus_mangle_opname PARAMS ((char *, int));
138
139 /* From libmmalloc.a (memory mapped malloc library) */
140
141 extern PTR
142 mmalloc_attach PARAMS ((int, PTR));
143
144 extern PTR
145 mmalloc_detach PARAMS ((PTR));
146
147 extern PTR
148 mmalloc PARAMS ((PTR, long));
149
150 extern PTR
151 mrealloc PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, long));
152
153 extern void
154 mfree PARAMS ((PTR, PTR));
155
156 extern int
157 mmalloc_setkey PARAMS ((PTR, int, PTR));
158
159 extern PTR
160 mmalloc_getkey PARAMS ((PTR, int));
161
162 /* From utils.c */
163
164 extern int
165 strcmp_iw PARAMS ((const char *, const char *));
166
167 extern char *
168 safe_strerror PARAMS ((int));
169
170 extern char *
171 safe_strsignal PARAMS ((int));
172
173 extern void
174 init_malloc PARAMS ((void *));
175
176 extern void
177 request_quit PARAMS ((int));
178
179 extern void
180 do_cleanups PARAMS ((struct cleanup *));
181
182 extern void
183 discard_cleanups PARAMS ((struct cleanup *));
184
185 /* The bare make_cleanup function is one of those rare beasts that
186 takes almost any type of function as the first arg and anything that
187 will fit in a "void *" as the second arg.
188
189 Should be, once all calls and called-functions are cleaned up:
190 extern struct cleanup *
191 make_cleanup PARAMS ((void (*function) (void *), void *));
192
193 Until then, lint and/or various type-checking compiler options will
194 complain about make_cleanup calls. It'd be wrong to just cast things,
195 since the type actually passed when the function is called would be
196 wrong. */
197
198 extern struct cleanup *
199 make_cleanup ();
200
201 extern struct cleanup *
202 save_cleanups PARAMS ((void));
203
204 extern void
205 restore_cleanups PARAMS ((struct cleanup *));
206
207 extern void
208 free_current_contents PARAMS ((char **));
209
210 extern void
211 null_cleanup PARAMS ((char **));
212
213 extern int
214 myread PARAMS ((int, char *, int));
215
216 extern int
217 query ();
218 \f
219 /* Annotation stuff. */
220
221 extern int annotation_level; /* in stack.c */
222 \f
223 extern void
224 begin_line PARAMS ((void));
225
226 extern void
227 wrap_here PARAMS ((char *));
228
229 extern void
230 reinitialize_more_filter PARAMS ((void));
231
232 typedef FILE GDB_FILE;
233 #define gdb_stdout stdout
234 #define gdb_stderr stderr
235
236 extern int
237 print_insn PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, GDB_FILE *));
238
239 extern void
240 gdb_flush PARAMS ((GDB_FILE *));
241
242 extern GDB_FILE *
243 gdb_fopen PARAMS ((char * name, char * mode));
244
245 extern void
246 fputs_filtered PARAMS ((const char *, GDB_FILE *));
247
248 extern void
249 fputs_unfiltered PARAMS ((const char *, GDB_FILE *));
250
251 extern void
252 fputc_unfiltered PARAMS ((int, GDB_FILE *));
253
254 extern void
255 putc_unfiltered PARAMS ((int));
256
257 #define putchar_unfiltered(C) putc_unfiltered(C)
258
259 extern void
260 puts_filtered PARAMS ((char *));
261
262 extern void
263 puts_unfiltered PARAMS ((char *));
264
265 extern void
266 vprintf_filtered ();
267
268 extern void
269 vfprintf_filtered ();
270
271 extern void
272 fprintf_filtered ();
273
274 extern void
275 fprintfi_filtered ();
276
277 extern void
278 printf_filtered ();
279
280 extern void
281 printfi_filtered ();
282
283 extern void
284 vprintf_unfiltered ();
285
286 extern void
287 vfprintf_unfiltered ();
288
289 extern void
290 fprintf_unfiltered ();
291
292 extern void
293 printf_unfiltered ();
294
295 extern void
296 print_spaces PARAMS ((int, GDB_FILE *));
297
298 extern void
299 print_spaces_filtered PARAMS ((int, GDB_FILE *));
300
301 extern char *
302 n_spaces PARAMS ((int));
303
304 extern void
305 gdb_printchar PARAMS ((int, GDB_FILE *, int));
306
307 /* Print a host address. */
308 extern void gdb_print_address PARAMS ((void *, GDB_FILE *));
309
310 extern void
311 fprintf_symbol_filtered PARAMS ((GDB_FILE *, char *, enum language, int));
312
313 extern void
314 perror_with_name PARAMS ((char *));
315
316 extern void
317 print_sys_errmsg PARAMS ((char *, int));
318
319 /* From regex.c or libc. BSD 4.4 declares this with the argument type as
320 "const char *" in unistd.h, so we can't declare the argument
321 as "char *". */
322
323 extern char *
324 re_comp PARAMS ((const char *));
325
326 /* From symfile.c */
327
328 extern void
329 symbol_file_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
330
331 /* From main.c */
332
333 extern char *
334 skip_quoted PARAMS ((char *));
335
336 extern char *
337 gdb_readline PARAMS ((char *));
338
339 extern char *
340 command_line_input PARAMS ((char *, int));
341
342 extern void
343 print_prompt PARAMS ((void));
344
345 extern int
346 batch_mode PARAMS ((void));
347
348 extern int
349 input_from_terminal_p PARAMS ((void));
350
351 /* From printcmd.c */
352
353 extern void
354 set_next_address PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR));
355
356 extern void
357 print_address_symbolic PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, GDB_FILE *, int, char *));
358
359 extern void
360 print_address_numeric PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, GDB_FILE *));
361
362 extern void
363 print_address PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, GDB_FILE *));
364
365 /* From source.c */
366
367 extern int
368 openp PARAMS ((char *, int, char *, int, int, char **));
369
370 extern void
371 mod_path PARAMS ((char *, char **));
372
373 extern void
374 directory_command PARAMS ((char *, int));
375
376 extern void
377 init_source_path PARAMS ((void));
378
379 /* From findvar.c */
380
381 extern int
382 read_relative_register_raw_bytes PARAMS ((int, char *));
383
384 /* From readline (but not in any readline .h files). */
385
386 extern char *
387 tilde_expand PARAMS ((char *));
388
389 /* Structure for saved commands lines
390 (for breakpoints, defined commands, etc). */
391
392 struct command_line
393 {
394 struct command_line *next;
395 char *line;
396 };
397
398 extern struct command_line *
399 read_command_lines PARAMS ((void));
400
401 extern void
402 free_command_lines PARAMS ((struct command_line **));
403
404 /* String containing the current directory (what getwd would return). */
405
406 extern char *current_directory;
407
408 /* Default radixes for input and output. Only some values supported. */
409 extern unsigned input_radix;
410 extern unsigned output_radix;
411
412 /* Possibilities for prettyprint parameters to routines which print
413 things. Like enum language, this should be in value.h, but needs
414 to be here for the same reason. FIXME: If we can eliminate this
415 as an arg to LA_VAL_PRINT, then we can probably move it back to
416 value.h. */
417
418 enum val_prettyprint
419 {
420 Val_no_prettyprint = 0,
421 Val_prettyprint,
422 /* Use the default setting which the user has specified. */
423 Val_pretty_default
424 };
425
426 \f
427 /* Host machine definition. This will be a symlink to one of the
428 xm-*.h files, built by the `configure' script. */
429
430 #include "xm.h"
431
432 /* Native machine support. This will be a symlink to one of the
433 nm-*.h files, built by the `configure' script. */
434
435 #include "nm.h"
436
437 /* If the xm.h file did not define the mode string used to open the
438 files, assume that binary files are opened the same way as text
439 files */
440 #ifndef FOPEN_RB
441 #include "fopen-same.h"
442 #endif
443
444 /*
445 * Allow things in gdb to be declared "const". If compiling ANSI, it
446 * just works. If compiling with gcc but non-ansi, redefine to __const__.
447 * If non-ansi, non-gcc, then eliminate "const" entirely, making those
448 * objects be read-write rather than read-only.
449 */
450
451 #ifndef const
452 #ifndef __STDC__
453 # ifdef __GNUC__
454 # define const __const__
455 # else
456 # define const /*nothing*/
457 # endif /* GNUC */
458 #endif /* STDC */
459 #endif /* const */
460
461 #ifndef volatile
462 #ifndef __STDC__
463 # ifdef __GNUC__
464 # define volatile __volatile__
465 # else
466 # define volatile /*nothing*/
467 # endif /* GNUC */
468 #endif /* STDC */
469 #endif /* volatile */
470
471 #if 1
472 #define NORETURN /*nothing*/
473 #else /* not 1 */
474 /* FIXME: This is bogus. Having "volatile void" mean a function doesn't
475 return is a gcc extension and should be based on #ifdef __GNUC__.
476 Also, as of Sep 93 I'm told gcc is changing the syntax for ansi
477 reasons (so declaring exit here as "volatile void" and as "void" in
478 a system header loses). Using the new "__attributes__ ((noreturn));"
479 syntax would lose for old versions of gcc; using
480 typedef void exit_fn_type PARAMS ((int));
481 volatile exit_fn_type exit;
482 would win. */
483 /* Some compilers (many AT&T SVR4 compilers for instance), do not accept
484 declarations of functions that never return (exit for instance) as
485 "volatile void". For such compilers "NORETURN" can be defined away
486 to keep them happy */
487
488 #ifndef NORETURN
489 # ifdef __lucid
490 # define NORETURN /*nothing*/
491 # else
492 # define NORETURN volatile
493 # endif
494 #endif
495 #endif /* not 1 */
496
497 /* Defaults for system-wide constants (if not defined by xm.h, we fake it). */
498
499 #if !defined (UINT_MAX)
500 #define UINT_MAX ((unsigned int)(~0)) /* 0xFFFFFFFF for 32-bits */
501 #endif
502
503 #if !defined (INT_MAX)
504 #define INT_MAX ((int)(UINT_MAX >> 1)) /* 0x7FFFFFFF for 32-bits */
505 #endif
506
507 #if !defined (INT_MIN)
508 #define INT_MIN (-INT_MAX - 1) /* 0x80000000 for 32-bits */
509 #endif
510
511 #if !defined (ULONG_MAX)
512 #define ULONG_MAX ((unsigned long)(~0L)) /* 0xFFFFFFFF for 32-bits */
513 #endif
514
515 #if !defined (LONG_MAX)
516 #define LONG_MAX ((long)(ULONG_MAX >> 1)) /* 0x7FFFFFFF for 32-bits */
517 #endif
518
519 #ifdef BFD64
520
521 /* This is to make sure that LONGEST is at least as big as CORE_ADDR. */
522
523 #define LONGEST BFD_HOST_64_BIT
524
525 #else /* No BFD64 */
526
527 /* If all compilers for this host support "long long" and we want to
528 use it for LONGEST (the performance hit is about 10% on a testsuite
529 run based on one DECstation test), then the xm.h file can define
530 CC_HAS_LONG_LONG.
531
532 Using GCC 1.39 on BSDI with long long causes about 700 new
533 testsuite failures. Using long long for LONGEST on the DECstation
534 causes 3 new FAILs in the testsuite and many heuristic fencepost
535 warnings. These are not investigated, but a first guess would be
536 that the BSDI problems are GCC bugs in long long support and the
537 latter are GDB bugs. */
538
539 #ifndef CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
540 # if defined (__GNUC__) && defined (FORCE_LONG_LONG)
541 # define CC_HAS_LONG_LONG 1
542 # endif
543 #endif
544
545 /* LONGEST should not be a typedef, because "unsigned LONGEST" needs to work.
546 CC_HAS_LONG_LONG is defined if the host compiler supports "long long"
547 variables and we wish to make use of that support. */
548
549 #ifndef LONGEST
550 # ifdef CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
551 # define LONGEST long long
552 # else
553 # define LONGEST long
554 # endif
555 #endif
556
557 #endif /* No BFD64 */
558
559 /* Convert a LONGEST to an int. This is used in contexts (e.g. number of
560 arguments to a function, number in a value history, register number, etc.)
561 where the value must not be larger than can fit in an int. */
562
563 extern int longest_to_int PARAMS ((LONGEST));
564
565 /* Assorted functions we can declare, now that const and volatile are
566 defined. */
567
568 extern char *
569 savestring PARAMS ((const char *, int));
570
571 extern char *
572 msavestring PARAMS ((void *, const char *, int));
573
574 extern char *
575 strsave PARAMS ((const char *));
576
577 extern char *
578 mstrsave PARAMS ((void *, const char *));
579
580 extern char *
581 concat PARAMS ((char *, ...));
582
583 extern PTR
584 xmalloc PARAMS ((long));
585
586 extern PTR
587 xrealloc PARAMS ((PTR, long));
588
589 extern PTR
590 xmmalloc PARAMS ((PTR, long));
591
592 extern PTR
593 xmrealloc PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, long));
594
595 extern PTR
596 mmalloc PARAMS ((PTR, long));
597
598 extern PTR
599 mrealloc PARAMS ((PTR, PTR, long));
600
601 extern void
602 mfree PARAMS ((PTR, PTR));
603
604 extern int
605 mmcheck PARAMS ((PTR, void (*) (void)));
606
607 extern int
608 mmtrace PARAMS ((void));
609
610 extern int
611 parse_escape PARAMS ((char **));
612
613 extern const char * const reg_names[];
614
615 /* Message to be printed before the error message, when an error occurs. */
616
617 extern char *error_pre_print;
618
619 /* Message to be printed before the warning message, when a warning occurs. */
620
621 extern char *warning_pre_print;
622
623 extern NORETURN void /* Does not return to the caller. */
624 error ();
625
626 extern NORETURN void /* Does not return to the caller. */
627 fatal ();
628
629 extern NORETURN void /* Not specified as volatile in ... */
630 exit PARAMS ((int)); /* 4.10.4.3 */
631
632 extern NORETURN void /* Does not return to the caller. */
633 nomem PARAMS ((long));
634
635 /* Reasons for calling return_to_top_level. */
636 enum return_reason {
637 /* User interrupt. */
638 RETURN_QUIT,
639
640 /* Any other error. */
641 RETURN_ERROR
642 };
643
644 #define RETURN_MASK_QUIT (1 << (int)RETURN_QUIT)
645 #define RETURN_MASK_ERROR (1 << (int)RETURN_ERROR)
646 #define RETURN_MASK_ALL (RETURN_MASK_QUIT | RETURN_MASK_ERROR)
647 typedef int return_mask;
648
649 extern NORETURN void /* Does not return to the caller. */
650 return_to_top_level PARAMS ((enum return_reason));
651
652 extern int catch_errors PARAMS ((int (*) (char *), void *, char *,
653 return_mask));
654
655 extern void
656 warning_setup PARAMS ((void));
657
658 extern void
659 warning ();
660
661 /* Global functions from other, non-gdb GNU thingies (libiberty for
662 instance) */
663
664 extern char *
665 basename PARAMS ((char *));
666
667 extern char *
668 getenv PARAMS ((const char *));
669
670 extern char **
671 buildargv PARAMS ((char *));
672
673 extern void
674 freeargv PARAMS ((char **));
675
676 extern char *
677 strerrno PARAMS ((int));
678
679 extern char *
680 strsigno PARAMS ((int));
681
682 extern int
683 errno_max PARAMS ((void));
684
685 extern int
686 signo_max PARAMS ((void));
687
688 extern int
689 strtoerrno PARAMS ((char *));
690
691 extern int
692 strtosigno PARAMS ((char *));
693
694 extern char *
695 strsignal PARAMS ((int));
696
697 /* From other system libraries */
698
699 #ifndef PSIGNAL_IN_SIGNAL_H
700 extern void
701 psignal PARAMS ((unsigned, const char *));
702 #endif
703
704 /* For now, we can't include <stdlib.h> because it conflicts with
705 "../include/getopt.h". (FIXME)
706
707 However, if a function is defined in the ANSI C standard and a prototype
708 for that function is defined and visible in any header file in an ANSI
709 conforming environment, then that prototype must match the definition in
710 the ANSI standard. So we can just duplicate them here without conflict,
711 since they must be the same in all conforming ANSI environments. If
712 these cause problems, then the environment is not ANSI conformant. */
713
714 #ifdef __STDC__
715 #include <stddef.h>
716 #endif
717
718 extern int
719 fclose PARAMS ((GDB_FILE *stream)); /* 4.9.5.1 */
720
721 extern void
722 perror PARAMS ((const char *)); /* 4.9.10.4 */
723
724 extern double
725 atof PARAMS ((const char *nptr)); /* 4.10.1.1 */
726
727 extern int
728 atoi PARAMS ((const char *)); /* 4.10.1.2 */
729
730 #ifndef MALLOC_INCOMPATIBLE
731
732 extern PTR
733 malloc PARAMS ((size_t size)); /* 4.10.3.3 */
734
735 extern PTR
736 realloc PARAMS ((void *ptr, size_t size)); /* 4.10.3.4 */
737
738 extern void
739 free PARAMS ((void *)); /* 4.10.3.2 */
740
741 #endif /* MALLOC_INCOMPATIBLE */
742
743 extern void
744 qsort PARAMS ((void *base, size_t nmemb, /* 4.10.5.2 */
745 size_t size,
746 int (*compar)(const void *, const void *)));
747
748 #ifndef MEM_FNS_DECLARED /* Some non-ANSI use void *, not char *. */
749 extern PTR
750 memcpy PARAMS ((void *, const void *, size_t)); /* 4.11.2.1 */
751
752 extern int
753 memcmp PARAMS ((const void *, const void *, size_t)); /* 4.11.4.1 */
754 #endif
755
756 extern char *
757 strchr PARAMS ((const char *, int)); /* 4.11.5.2 */
758
759 extern char *
760 strrchr PARAMS ((const char *, int)); /* 4.11.5.5 */
761
762 extern char *
763 strstr PARAMS ((const char *, const char *)); /* 4.11.5.7 */
764
765 extern char *
766 strtok PARAMS ((char *, const char *)); /* 4.11.5.8 */
767
768 #ifndef MEM_FNS_DECLARED /* Some non-ANSI use void *, not char *. */
769 extern PTR
770 memset PARAMS ((void *, int, size_t)); /* 4.11.6.1 */
771 #endif
772
773 extern char *
774 strerror PARAMS ((int)); /* 4.11.6.2 */
775
776 /* Various possibilities for alloca. */
777 #ifndef alloca
778 # ifdef __GNUC__
779 # define alloca __builtin_alloca
780 # else /* Not GNU C */
781 # ifdef sparc
782 # include <alloca.h> /* NOTE: Doesn't declare alloca() */
783 # endif
784
785 /* We need to be careful not to declare this in a way which conflicts with
786 bison. Bison never declares it as char *, but under various circumstances
787 (like __hpux) we need to use void *. */
788 # if defined (__STDC__) || defined (__hpux)
789 extern void *alloca ();
790 # else /* Don't use void *. */
791 extern char *alloca ();
792 # endif /* Don't use void *. */
793 # endif /* Not GNU C */
794 #endif /* alloca not defined */
795
796 /* TARGET_BYTE_ORDER and HOST_BYTE_ORDER must be defined to one of these. */
797
798 #if !defined (BIG_ENDIAN)
799 #define BIG_ENDIAN 4321
800 #endif
801
802 #if !defined (LITTLE_ENDIAN)
803 #define LITTLE_ENDIAN 1234
804 #endif
805
806 /* Target-system-dependent parameters for GDB. */
807
808 /* Target machine definition. This will be a symlink to one of the
809 tm-*.h files, built by the `configure' script. */
810
811 #include "tm.h"
812
813 /* Number of bits in a char or unsigned char for the target machine.
814 Just like CHAR_BIT in <limits.h> but describes the target machine. */
815 #if !defined (TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
816 #define TARGET_CHAR_BIT 8
817 #endif
818
819 /* Number of bits in a short or unsigned short for the target machine. */
820 #if !defined (TARGET_SHORT_BIT)
821 #define TARGET_SHORT_BIT (2 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
822 #endif
823
824 /* Number of bits in an int or unsigned int for the target machine. */
825 #if !defined (TARGET_INT_BIT)
826 #define TARGET_INT_BIT (4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
827 #endif
828
829 /* Number of bits in a long or unsigned long for the target machine. */
830 #if !defined (TARGET_LONG_BIT)
831 #define TARGET_LONG_BIT (4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
832 #endif
833
834 /* Number of bits in a long long or unsigned long long for the target machine. */
835 #if !defined (TARGET_LONG_LONG_BIT)
836 #define TARGET_LONG_LONG_BIT (2 * TARGET_LONG_BIT)
837 #endif
838
839 /* Number of bits in a float for the target machine. */
840 #if !defined (TARGET_FLOAT_BIT)
841 #define TARGET_FLOAT_BIT (4 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
842 #endif
843
844 /* Number of bits in a double for the target machine. */
845 #if !defined (TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT)
846 #define TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT (8 * TARGET_CHAR_BIT)
847 #endif
848
849 /* Number of bits in a long double for the target machine. */
850 #if !defined (TARGET_LONG_DOUBLE_BIT)
851 #define TARGET_LONG_DOUBLE_BIT (2 * TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT)
852 #endif
853
854 /* Number of bits in a "complex" for the target machine. */
855 #if !defined (TARGET_COMPLEX_BIT)
856 #define TARGET_COMPLEX_BIT (2 * TARGET_FLOAT_BIT)
857 #endif
858
859 /* Number of bits in a "double complex" for the target machine. */
860 #if !defined (TARGET_DOUBLE_COMPLEX_BIT)
861 #define TARGET_DOUBLE_COMPLEX_BIT (2 * TARGET_DOUBLE_BIT)
862 #endif
863
864 /* Number of bits in a pointer for the target machine */
865 #if !defined (TARGET_PTR_BIT)
866 #define TARGET_PTR_BIT TARGET_INT_BIT
867 #endif
868
869 /* If we picked up a copy of CHAR_BIT from a configuration file
870 (which may get it by including <limits.h>) then use it to set
871 the number of bits in a host char. If not, use the same size
872 as the target. */
873
874 #if defined (CHAR_BIT)
875 #define HOST_CHAR_BIT CHAR_BIT
876 #else
877 #define HOST_CHAR_BIT TARGET_CHAR_BIT
878 #endif
879
880 /* The bit byte-order has to do just with numbering of bits in
881 debugging symbols and such. Conceptually, it's quite separate
882 from byte/word byte order. */
883
884 #if !defined (BITS_BIG_ENDIAN)
885 #if TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == BIG_ENDIAN
886 #define BITS_BIG_ENDIAN 1
887 #endif /* Big endian. */
888
889 #if TARGET_BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN
890 #define BITS_BIG_ENDIAN 0
891 #endif /* Little endian. */
892 #endif /* BITS_BIG_ENDIAN not defined. */
893
894 /* In findvar.c. */
895 LONGEST extract_signed_integer PARAMS ((void *, int));
896 unsigned LONGEST extract_unsigned_integer PARAMS ((void *, int));
897 CORE_ADDR extract_address PARAMS ((void *, int));
898
899 void store_signed_integer PARAMS ((void *, int, LONGEST));
900 void store_unsigned_integer PARAMS ((void *, int, unsigned LONGEST));
901 void store_address PARAMS ((void *, int, CORE_ADDR));
902
903 double extract_floating PARAMS ((void *, int));
904 void store_floating PARAMS ((void *, int, double));
905 \f
906 /* On some machines there are bits in addresses which are not really
907 part of the address, but are used by the kernel, the hardware, etc.
908 for special purposes. ADDR_BITS_REMOVE takes out any such bits
909 so we get a "real" address such as one would find in a symbol
910 table. This is used only for addresses of instructions, and even then
911 I'm not sure it's used in all contexts. It exists to deal with there
912 being a few stray bits in the PC which would mislead us, not as some sort
913 of generic thing to handle alignment or segmentation (it's possible it
914 should be in TARGET_READ_PC instead). */
915 #if !defined (ADDR_BITS_REMOVE)
916 #define ADDR_BITS_REMOVE(addr) (addr)
917 #endif /* No ADDR_BITS_REMOVE. */
918
919 /* From valops.c */
920
921 extern CORE_ADDR
922 push_bytes PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, char *, int));
923
924 extern CORE_ADDR
925 push_word PARAMS ((CORE_ADDR, unsigned LONGEST));
926
927 /* Some parts of gdb might be considered optional, in the sense that they
928 are not essential for being able to build a working, usable debugger
929 for a specific environment. For example, the maintenance commands
930 are there for the benefit of gdb maintainers. As another example,
931 some environments really don't need gdb's that are able to read N
932 different object file formats. In order to make it possible (but
933 not necessarily recommended) to build "stripped down" versions of
934 gdb, the following defines control selective compilation of those
935 parts of gdb which can be safely left out when necessary. Note that
936 the default is to include everything. */
937
938 #ifndef MAINTENANCE_CMDS
939 #define MAINTENANCE_CMDS 1
940 #endif
941
942 #endif /* !defined (DEFS_H) */