ODR warnings for "struct insn_info"
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / symtab.h
1 /* Symbol table definitions for GDB.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1986-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4
5 This file is part of GDB.
6
7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
10 (at your option) any later version.
11
12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
15 GNU General Public License for more details.
16
17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19
20 #if !defined (SYMTAB_H)
21 #define SYMTAB_H 1
22
23 #include <array>
24 #include <vector>
25 #include <string>
26 #include <set>
27 #include "gdbsupport/gdb_vecs.h"
28 #include "gdbtypes.h"
29 #include "gdbsupport/gdb_obstack.h"
30 #include "gdbsupport/gdb_regex.h"
31 #include "gdbsupport/enum-flags.h"
32 #include "gdbsupport/function-view.h"
33 #include "gdbsupport/gdb_optional.h"
34 #include "gdbsupport/gdb_string_view.h"
35 #include "gdbsupport/next-iterator.h"
36 #include "gdbsupport/iterator-range.h"
37 #include "completer.h"
38 #include "gdb-demangle.h"
39 #include "split-name.h"
40
41 /* Opaque declarations. */
42 struct ui_file;
43 struct frame_info;
44 struct symbol;
45 struct obstack;
46 struct objfile;
47 struct block;
48 struct blockvector;
49 struct axs_value;
50 struct agent_expr;
51 struct program_space;
52 struct language_defn;
53 struct common_block;
54 struct obj_section;
55 struct cmd_list_element;
56 class probe;
57 struct lookup_name_info;
58 struct code_breakpoint;
59
60 /* How to match a lookup name against a symbol search name. */
61 enum class symbol_name_match_type
62 {
63 /* Wild matching. Matches unqualified symbol names in all
64 namespace/module/packages, etc. */
65 WILD,
66
67 /* Full matching. The lookup name indicates a fully-qualified name,
68 and only matches symbol search names in the specified
69 namespace/module/package. */
70 FULL,
71
72 /* Search name matching. This is like FULL, but the search name did
73 not come from the user; instead it is already a search name
74 retrieved from a search_name () call.
75 For Ada, this avoids re-encoding an already-encoded search name
76 (which would potentially incorrectly lowercase letters in the
77 linkage/search name that should remain uppercase). For C++, it
78 avoids trying to demangle a name we already know is
79 demangled. */
80 SEARCH_NAME,
81
82 /* Expression matching. The same as FULL matching in most
83 languages. The same as WILD matching in Ada. */
84 EXPRESSION,
85 };
86
87 /* Hash the given symbol search name according to LANGUAGE's
88 rules. */
89 extern unsigned int search_name_hash (enum language language,
90 const char *search_name);
91
92 /* Ada-specific bits of a lookup_name_info object. This is lazily
93 constructed on demand. */
94
95 class ada_lookup_name_info final
96 {
97 public:
98 /* Construct. */
99 explicit ada_lookup_name_info (const lookup_name_info &lookup_name);
100
101 /* Compare SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME with our lookup name, using MATCH_TYPE
102 as name match type. Returns true if there's a match, false
103 otherwise. If non-NULL, store the matching results in MATCH. */
104 bool matches (const char *symbol_search_name,
105 symbol_name_match_type match_type,
106 completion_match_result *comp_match_res) const;
107
108 /* The Ada-encoded lookup name. */
109 const std::string &lookup_name () const
110 { return m_encoded_name; }
111
112 /* Return true if we're supposed to be doing a wild match look
113 up. */
114 bool wild_match_p () const
115 { return m_wild_match_p; }
116
117 /* Return true if we're looking up a name inside package
118 Standard. */
119 bool standard_p () const
120 { return m_standard_p; }
121
122 /* Return true if doing a verbatim match. */
123 bool verbatim_p () const
124 { return m_verbatim_p; }
125
126 /* A wrapper for ::split_name that handles some Ada-specific
127 peculiarities. */
128 std::vector<gdb::string_view> split_name () const
129 {
130 if (m_verbatim_p || m_standard_p)
131 {
132 std::vector<gdb::string_view> result;
133 if (m_standard_p)
134 result.emplace_back ("standard");
135 result.emplace_back (m_encoded_name);
136 return result;
137 }
138 return ::split_name (m_encoded_name.c_str (), split_style::UNDERSCORE);
139 }
140
141 private:
142 /* The Ada-encoded lookup name. */
143 std::string m_encoded_name;
144
145 /* Whether the user-provided lookup name was Ada encoded. If so,
146 then return encoded names in the 'matches' method's 'completion
147 match result' output. */
148 bool m_encoded_p : 1;
149
150 /* True if really doing wild matching. Even if the user requests
151 wild matching, some cases require full matching. */
152 bool m_wild_match_p : 1;
153
154 /* True if doing a verbatim match. This is true if the decoded
155 version of the symbol name is wrapped in '<'/'>'. This is an
156 escape hatch users can use to look up symbols the Ada encoding
157 does not understand. */
158 bool m_verbatim_p : 1;
159
160 /* True if the user specified a symbol name that is inside package
161 Standard. Symbol names inside package Standard are handled
162 specially. We always do a non-wild match of the symbol name
163 without the "standard__" prefix, and only search static and
164 global symbols. This was primarily introduced in order to allow
165 the user to specifically access the standard exceptions using,
166 for instance, Standard.Constraint_Error when Constraint_Error is
167 ambiguous (due to the user defining its own Constraint_Error
168 entity inside its program). */
169 bool m_standard_p : 1;
170 };
171
172 /* Language-specific bits of a lookup_name_info object, for languages
173 that do name searching using demangled names (C++/D/Go). This is
174 lazily constructed on demand. */
175
176 struct demangle_for_lookup_info final
177 {
178 public:
179 demangle_for_lookup_info (const lookup_name_info &lookup_name,
180 language lang);
181
182 /* The demangled lookup name. */
183 const std::string &lookup_name () const
184 { return m_demangled_name; }
185
186 private:
187 /* The demangled lookup name. */
188 std::string m_demangled_name;
189 };
190
191 /* Object that aggregates all information related to a symbol lookup
192 name. I.e., the name that is matched against the symbol's search
193 name. Caches per-language information so that it doesn't require
194 recomputing it for every symbol comparison, like for example the
195 Ada encoded name and the symbol's name hash for a given language.
196 The object is conceptually immutable once constructed, and thus has
197 no setters. This is to prevent some code path from tweaking some
198 property of the lookup name for some local reason and accidentally
199 altering the results of any continuing search(es).
200 lookup_name_info objects are generally passed around as a const
201 reference to reinforce that. (They're not passed around by value
202 because they're not small.) */
203 class lookup_name_info final
204 {
205 public:
206 /* We delete this overload so that the callers are required to
207 explicitly handle the lifetime of the name. */
208 lookup_name_info (std::string &&name,
209 symbol_name_match_type match_type,
210 bool completion_mode = false,
211 bool ignore_parameters = false) = delete;
212
213 /* This overload requires that NAME have a lifetime at least as long
214 as the lifetime of this object. */
215 lookup_name_info (const std::string &name,
216 symbol_name_match_type match_type,
217 bool completion_mode = false,
218 bool ignore_parameters = false)
219 : m_match_type (match_type),
220 m_completion_mode (completion_mode),
221 m_ignore_parameters (ignore_parameters),
222 m_name (name)
223 {}
224
225 /* This overload requires that NAME have a lifetime at least as long
226 as the lifetime of this object. */
227 lookup_name_info (const char *name,
228 symbol_name_match_type match_type,
229 bool completion_mode = false,
230 bool ignore_parameters = false)
231 : m_match_type (match_type),
232 m_completion_mode (completion_mode),
233 m_ignore_parameters (ignore_parameters),
234 m_name (name)
235 {}
236
237 /* Getters. See description of each corresponding field. */
238 symbol_name_match_type match_type () const { return m_match_type; }
239 bool completion_mode () const { return m_completion_mode; }
240 gdb::string_view name () const { return m_name; }
241 const bool ignore_parameters () const { return m_ignore_parameters; }
242
243 /* Like the "name" method but guarantees that the returned string is
244 \0-terminated. */
245 const char *c_str () const
246 {
247 /* Actually this is always guaranteed due to how the class is
248 constructed. */
249 return m_name.data ();
250 }
251
252 /* Return a version of this lookup name that is usable with
253 comparisons against symbols have no parameter info, such as
254 psymbols and GDB index symbols. */
255 lookup_name_info make_ignore_params () const
256 {
257 return lookup_name_info (c_str (), m_match_type, m_completion_mode,
258 true /* ignore params */);
259 }
260
261 /* Get the search name hash for searches in language LANG. */
262 unsigned int search_name_hash (language lang) const
263 {
264 /* Only compute each language's hash once. */
265 if (!m_demangled_hashes_p[lang])
266 {
267 m_demangled_hashes[lang]
268 = ::search_name_hash (lang, language_lookup_name (lang));
269 m_demangled_hashes_p[lang] = true;
270 }
271 return m_demangled_hashes[lang];
272 }
273
274 /* Get the search name for searches in language LANG. */
275 const char *language_lookup_name (language lang) const
276 {
277 switch (lang)
278 {
279 case language_ada:
280 return ada ().lookup_name ().c_str ();
281 case language_cplus:
282 return cplus ().lookup_name ().c_str ();
283 case language_d:
284 return d ().lookup_name ().c_str ();
285 case language_go:
286 return go ().lookup_name ().c_str ();
287 default:
288 return m_name.data ();
289 }
290 }
291
292 /* A wrapper for ::split_name (see split-name.h) that splits this
293 name, and that handles any language-specific peculiarities. */
294 std::vector<gdb::string_view> split_name (language lang) const
295 {
296 if (lang == language_ada)
297 return ada ().split_name ();
298 split_style style = split_style::NONE;
299 switch (lang)
300 {
301 case language_cplus:
302 case language_rust:
303 style = split_style::CXX;
304 break;
305 case language_d:
306 case language_go:
307 style = split_style::DOT;
308 break;
309 }
310 return ::split_name (language_lookup_name (lang), style);
311 }
312
313 /* Get the Ada-specific lookup info. */
314 const ada_lookup_name_info &ada () const
315 {
316 maybe_init (m_ada);
317 return *m_ada;
318 }
319
320 /* Get the C++-specific lookup info. */
321 const demangle_for_lookup_info &cplus () const
322 {
323 maybe_init (m_cplus, language_cplus);
324 return *m_cplus;
325 }
326
327 /* Get the D-specific lookup info. */
328 const demangle_for_lookup_info &d () const
329 {
330 maybe_init (m_d, language_d);
331 return *m_d;
332 }
333
334 /* Get the Go-specific lookup info. */
335 const demangle_for_lookup_info &go () const
336 {
337 maybe_init (m_go, language_go);
338 return *m_go;
339 }
340
341 /* Get a reference to a lookup_name_info object that matches any
342 symbol name. */
343 static const lookup_name_info &match_any ();
344
345 private:
346 /* Initialize FIELD, if not initialized yet. */
347 template<typename Field, typename... Args>
348 void maybe_init (Field &field, Args&&... args) const
349 {
350 if (!field)
351 field.emplace (*this, std::forward<Args> (args)...);
352 }
353
354 /* The lookup info as passed to the ctor. */
355 symbol_name_match_type m_match_type;
356 bool m_completion_mode;
357 bool m_ignore_parameters;
358 gdb::string_view m_name;
359
360 /* Language-specific info. These fields are filled lazily the first
361 time a lookup is done in the corresponding language. They're
362 mutable because lookup_name_info objects are typically passed
363 around by const reference (see intro), and they're conceptually
364 "cache" that can always be reconstructed from the non-mutable
365 fields. */
366 mutable gdb::optional<ada_lookup_name_info> m_ada;
367 mutable gdb::optional<demangle_for_lookup_info> m_cplus;
368 mutable gdb::optional<demangle_for_lookup_info> m_d;
369 mutable gdb::optional<demangle_for_lookup_info> m_go;
370
371 /* The demangled hashes. Stored in an array with one entry for each
372 possible language. The second array records whether we've
373 already computed the each language's hash. (These are separate
374 arrays instead of a single array of optional<unsigned> to avoid
375 alignment padding). */
376 mutable std::array<unsigned int, nr_languages> m_demangled_hashes;
377 mutable std::array<bool, nr_languages> m_demangled_hashes_p {};
378 };
379
380 /* Comparison function for completion symbol lookup.
381
382 Returns true if the symbol name matches against LOOKUP_NAME.
383
384 SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME should be a symbol's "search" name.
385
386 On success and if non-NULL, COMP_MATCH_RES->match is set to point
387 to the symbol name as should be presented to the user as a
388 completion match list element. In most languages, this is the same
389 as the symbol's search name, but in some, like Ada, the display
390 name is dynamically computed within the comparison routine.
391
392 Also, on success and if non-NULL, COMP_MATCH_RES->match_for_lcd
393 points the part of SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME that was considered to match
394 LOOKUP_NAME. E.g., in C++, in linespec/wild mode, if the symbol is
395 "foo::function()" and LOOKUP_NAME is "function(", MATCH_FOR_LCD
396 points to "function()" inside SYMBOL_SEARCH_NAME. */
397 typedef bool (symbol_name_matcher_ftype)
398 (const char *symbol_search_name,
399 const lookup_name_info &lookup_name,
400 completion_match_result *comp_match_res);
401
402 /* Some of the structures in this file are space critical.
403 The space-critical structures are:
404
405 struct general_symbol_info
406 struct symbol
407 struct partial_symbol
408
409 These structures are laid out to encourage good packing.
410 They use ENUM_BITFIELD and short int fields, and they order the
411 structure members so that fields less than a word are next
412 to each other so they can be packed together. */
413
414 /* Rearranged: used ENUM_BITFIELD and rearranged field order in
415 all the space critical structures (plus struct minimal_symbol).
416 Memory usage dropped from 99360768 bytes to 90001408 bytes.
417 I measured this with before-and-after tests of
418 "HEAD-old-gdb -readnow HEAD-old-gdb" and
419 "HEAD-new-gdb -readnow HEAD-old-gdb" on native i686-pc-linux-gnu,
420 red hat linux 8, with LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/lib/debug,
421 typing "maint space 1" at the first command prompt.
422
423 Here is another measurement (from andrew c):
424 # no /usr/lib/debug, just plain glibc, like a normal user
425 gdb HEAD-old-gdb
426 (gdb) break internal_error
427 (gdb) run
428 (gdb) maint internal-error
429 (gdb) backtrace
430 (gdb) maint space 1
431
432 gdb gdb_6_0_branch 2003-08-19 space used: 8896512
433 gdb HEAD 2003-08-19 space used: 8904704
434 gdb HEAD 2003-08-21 space used: 8396800 (+symtab.h)
435 gdb HEAD 2003-08-21 space used: 8265728 (+gdbtypes.h)
436
437 The third line shows the savings from the optimizations in symtab.h.
438 The fourth line shows the savings from the optimizations in
439 gdbtypes.h. Both optimizations are in gdb HEAD now.
440
441 --chastain 2003-08-21 */
442
443 /* Define a structure for the information that is common to all symbol types,
444 including minimal symbols, partial symbols, and full symbols. In a
445 multilanguage environment, some language specific information may need to
446 be recorded along with each symbol. */
447
448 /* This structure is space critical. See space comments at the top. */
449
450 struct general_symbol_info
451 {
452 /* Short version as to when to use which name accessor:
453 Use natural_name () to refer to the name of the symbol in the original
454 source code. Use linkage_name () if you want to know what the linker
455 thinks the symbol's name is. Use print_name () for output. Use
456 demangled_name () if you specifically need to know whether natural_name ()
457 and linkage_name () are different. */
458
459 const char *linkage_name () const
460 { return m_name; }
461
462 /* Return SYMBOL's "natural" name, i.e. the name that it was called in
463 the original source code. In languages like C++ where symbols may
464 be mangled for ease of manipulation by the linker, this is the
465 demangled name. */
466 const char *natural_name () const;
467
468 /* Returns a version of the name of a symbol that is
469 suitable for output. In C++ this is the "demangled" form of the
470 name if demangle is on and the "mangled" form of the name if
471 demangle is off. In other languages this is just the symbol name.
472 The result should never be NULL. Don't use this for internal
473 purposes (e.g. storing in a hashtable): it's only suitable for output. */
474 const char *print_name () const
475 { return demangle ? natural_name () : linkage_name (); }
476
477 /* Return the demangled name for a symbol based on the language for
478 that symbol. If no demangled name exists, return NULL. */
479 const char *demangled_name () const;
480
481 /* Returns the name to be used when sorting and searching symbols.
482 In C++, we search for the demangled form of a name,
483 and so sort symbols accordingly. In Ada, however, we search by mangled
484 name. If there is no distinct demangled name, then this
485 returns the same value (same pointer) as linkage_name (). */
486 const char *search_name () const;
487
488 /* Set just the linkage name of a symbol; do not try to demangle
489 it. Used for constructs which do not have a mangled name,
490 e.g. struct tags. Unlike compute_and_set_names, linkage_name must
491 be terminated and either already on the objfile's obstack or
492 permanently allocated. */
493 void set_linkage_name (const char *linkage_name)
494 { m_name = linkage_name; }
495
496 /* Set the demangled name of this symbol to NAME. NAME must be
497 already correctly allocated. If the symbol's language is Ada,
498 then the name is ignored and the obstack is set. */
499 void set_demangled_name (const char *name, struct obstack *obstack);
500
501 enum language language () const
502 { return m_language; }
503
504 /* Initializes the language dependent portion of a symbol
505 depending upon the language for the symbol. */
506 void set_language (enum language language, struct obstack *obstack);
507
508 /* Set the linkage and natural names of a symbol, by demangling
509 the linkage name. If linkage_name may not be nullterminated,
510 copy_name must be set to true. */
511 void compute_and_set_names (gdb::string_view linkage_name, bool copy_name,
512 struct objfile_per_bfd_storage *per_bfd,
513 gdb::optional<hashval_t> hash
514 = gdb::optional<hashval_t> ());
515
516 CORE_ADDR value_address () const
517 {
518 return m_value.address;
519 }
520
521 void set_value_address (CORE_ADDR address)
522 {
523 m_value.address = address;
524 }
525
526 /* Name of the symbol. This is a required field. Storage for the
527 name is allocated on the objfile_obstack for the associated
528 objfile. For languages like C++ that make a distinction between
529 the mangled name and demangled name, this is the mangled
530 name. */
531
532 const char *m_name;
533
534 /* Value of the symbol. Which member of this union to use, and what
535 it means, depends on what kind of symbol this is and its
536 SYMBOL_CLASS. See comments there for more details. All of these
537 are in host byte order (though what they point to might be in
538 target byte order, e.g. LOC_CONST_BYTES). */
539
540 union
541 {
542 LONGEST ivalue;
543
544 const struct block *block;
545
546 const gdb_byte *bytes;
547
548 CORE_ADDR address;
549
550 /* A common block. Used with LOC_COMMON_BLOCK. */
551
552 const struct common_block *common_block;
553
554 /* For opaque typedef struct chain. */
555
556 struct symbol *chain;
557 }
558 m_value;
559
560 /* Since one and only one language can apply, wrap the language specific
561 information inside a union. */
562
563 union
564 {
565 /* A pointer to an obstack that can be used for storage associated
566 with this symbol. This is only used by Ada, and only when the
567 'ada_mangled' field is zero. */
568 struct obstack *obstack;
569
570 /* This is used by languages which wish to store a demangled name.
571 currently used by Ada, C++, and Objective C. */
572 const char *demangled_name;
573 }
574 language_specific;
575
576 /* Record the source code language that applies to this symbol.
577 This is used to select one of the fields from the language specific
578 union above. */
579
580 ENUM_BITFIELD(language) m_language : LANGUAGE_BITS;
581
582 /* This is only used by Ada. If set, then the 'demangled_name' field
583 of language_specific is valid. Otherwise, the 'obstack' field is
584 valid. */
585 unsigned int ada_mangled : 1;
586
587 /* Which section is this symbol in? This is an index into
588 section_offsets for this objfile. Negative means that the symbol
589 does not get relocated relative to a section. */
590
591 short m_section;
592
593 /* Set the index into the obj_section list (within the containing
594 objfile) for the section that contains this symbol. See M_SECTION
595 for more details. */
596
597 void set_section_index (short idx)
598 { m_section = idx; }
599
600 /* Return the index into the obj_section list (within the containing
601 objfile) for the section that contains this symbol. See M_SECTION
602 for more details. */
603
604 short section_index () const
605 { return m_section; }
606
607 /* Return the obj_section from OBJFILE for this symbol. The symbol
608 returned is based on the SECTION member variable, and can be nullptr
609 if SECTION is negative. */
610
611 struct obj_section *obj_section (const struct objfile *objfile) const;
612 };
613
614 extern CORE_ADDR symbol_overlayed_address (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
615
616 /* Return the address of SYM. The MAYBE_COPIED flag must be set on
617 SYM. If SYM appears in the main program's minimal symbols, then
618 that minsym's address is returned; otherwise, SYM's address is
619 returned. This should generally only be used via the
620 SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS macro. */
621
622 extern CORE_ADDR get_symbol_address (const struct symbol *sym);
623
624 /* Try to determine the demangled name for a symbol, based on the
625 language of that symbol. If the language is set to language_auto,
626 it will attempt to find any demangling algorithm that works and
627 then set the language appropriately. The returned name is allocated
628 by the demangler and should be xfree'd. */
629
630 extern gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> symbol_find_demangled_name
631 (struct general_symbol_info *gsymbol, const char *mangled);
632
633 /* Return true if NAME matches the "search" name of GSYMBOL, according
634 to the symbol's language. */
635 extern bool symbol_matches_search_name
636 (const struct general_symbol_info *gsymbol,
637 const lookup_name_info &name);
638
639 /* Compute the hash of the given symbol search name of a symbol of
640 language LANGUAGE. */
641 extern unsigned int search_name_hash (enum language language,
642 const char *search_name);
643
644 /* Classification types for a minimal symbol. These should be taken as
645 "advisory only", since if gdb can't easily figure out a
646 classification it simply selects mst_unknown. It may also have to
647 guess when it can't figure out which is a better match between two
648 types (mst_data versus mst_bss) for example. Since the minimal
649 symbol info is sometimes derived from the BFD library's view of a
650 file, we need to live with what information bfd supplies. */
651
652 enum minimal_symbol_type
653 {
654 mst_unknown = 0, /* Unknown type, the default */
655 mst_text, /* Generally executable instructions */
656
657 /* A GNU ifunc symbol, in the .text section. GDB uses to know
658 whether the user is setting a breakpoint on a GNU ifunc function,
659 and thus GDB needs to actually set the breakpoint on the target
660 function. It is also used to know whether the program stepped
661 into an ifunc resolver -- the resolver may get a separate
662 symbol/alias under a different name, but it'll have the same
663 address as the ifunc symbol. */
664 mst_text_gnu_ifunc, /* Executable code returning address
665 of executable code */
666
667 /* A GNU ifunc function descriptor symbol, in a data section
668 (typically ".opd"). Seen on architectures that use function
669 descriptors, like PPC64/ELFv1. In this case, this symbol's value
670 is the address of the descriptor. There'll be a corresponding
671 mst_text_gnu_ifunc synthetic symbol for the text/entry
672 address. */
673 mst_data_gnu_ifunc, /* Executable code returning address
674 of executable code */
675
676 mst_slot_got_plt, /* GOT entries for .plt sections */
677 mst_data, /* Generally initialized data */
678 mst_bss, /* Generally uninitialized data */
679 mst_abs, /* Generally absolute (nonrelocatable) */
680 /* GDB uses mst_solib_trampoline for the start address of a shared
681 library trampoline entry. Breakpoints for shared library functions
682 are put there if the shared library is not yet loaded.
683 After the shared library is loaded, lookup_minimal_symbol will
684 prefer the minimal symbol from the shared library (usually
685 a mst_text symbol) over the mst_solib_trampoline symbol, and the
686 breakpoints will be moved to their true address in the shared
687 library via breakpoint_re_set. */
688 mst_solib_trampoline, /* Shared library trampoline code */
689 /* For the mst_file* types, the names are only guaranteed to be unique
690 within a given .o file. */
691 mst_file_text, /* Static version of mst_text */
692 mst_file_data, /* Static version of mst_data */
693 mst_file_bss, /* Static version of mst_bss */
694 nr_minsym_types
695 };
696
697 /* The number of enum minimal_symbol_type values, with some padding for
698 reasonable growth. */
699 #define MINSYM_TYPE_BITS 4
700 gdb_static_assert (nr_minsym_types <= (1 << MINSYM_TYPE_BITS));
701
702 /* Return the address of MINSYM, which comes from OBJF. The
703 MAYBE_COPIED flag must be set on MINSYM. If MINSYM appears in the
704 main program's minimal symbols, then that minsym's address is
705 returned; otherwise, MINSYM's address is returned. This should
706 generally only be used via the MSYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS macro. */
707
708 extern CORE_ADDR get_msymbol_address (struct objfile *objf,
709 const struct minimal_symbol *minsym);
710
711 /* Define a simple structure used to hold some very basic information about
712 all defined global symbols (text, data, bss, abs, etc). The only required
713 information is the general_symbol_info.
714
715 In many cases, even if a file was compiled with no special options for
716 debugging at all, as long as was not stripped it will contain sufficient
717 information to build a useful minimal symbol table using this structure.
718 Even when a file contains enough debugging information to build a full
719 symbol table, these minimal symbols are still useful for quickly mapping
720 between names and addresses, and vice versa. They are also sometimes
721 used to figure out what full symbol table entries need to be read in. */
722
723 struct minimal_symbol : public general_symbol_info
724 {
725 LONGEST value_longest () const
726 {
727 return m_value.ivalue;
728 }
729
730 /* The relocated address of the minimal symbol, using the section
731 offsets from OBJFILE. */
732 CORE_ADDR value_address (objfile *objfile) const;
733
734 /* The unrelocated address of the minimal symbol. */
735 CORE_ADDR value_raw_address () const
736 {
737 return m_value.address;
738 }
739
740 /* Return this minimal symbol's type. */
741
742 minimal_symbol_type type () const
743 {
744 return m_type;
745 }
746
747 /* Set this minimal symbol's type. */
748
749 void set_type (minimal_symbol_type type)
750 {
751 m_type = type;
752 }
753
754 /* Return this minimal symbol's size. */
755
756 unsigned long size () const
757 {
758 return m_size;
759 }
760
761 /* Set this minimal symbol's size. */
762
763 void set_size (unsigned long size)
764 {
765 m_size = size;
766 m_has_size = 1;
767 }
768
769 /* Return true if this minimal symbol's size is known. */
770
771 bool has_size () const
772 {
773 return m_has_size;
774 }
775
776 /* Return this minimal symbol's first target-specific flag. */
777
778 bool target_flag_1 () const
779 {
780 return m_target_flag_1;
781 }
782
783 /* Set this minimal symbol's first target-specific flag. */
784
785 void set_target_flag_1 (bool target_flag_1)
786 {
787 m_target_flag_1 = target_flag_1;
788 }
789
790 /* Return this minimal symbol's second target-specific flag. */
791
792 bool target_flag_2 () const
793 {
794 return m_target_flag_2;
795 }
796
797 /* Set this minimal symbol's second target-specific flag. */
798
799 void set_target_flag_2 (bool target_flag_2)
800 {
801 m_target_flag_2 = target_flag_2;
802 }
803
804 /* Size of this symbol. dbx_end_psymtab in dbxread.c uses this
805 information to calculate the end of the partial symtab based on the
806 address of the last symbol plus the size of the last symbol. */
807
808 unsigned long m_size;
809
810 /* Which source file is this symbol in? Only relevant for mst_file_*. */
811 const char *filename;
812
813 /* Classification type for this minimal symbol. */
814
815 ENUM_BITFIELD(minimal_symbol_type) m_type : MINSYM_TYPE_BITS;
816
817 /* Non-zero if this symbol was created by gdb.
818 Such symbols do not appear in the output of "info var|fun". */
819 unsigned int created_by_gdb : 1;
820
821 /* Two flag bits provided for the use of the target. */
822 unsigned int m_target_flag_1 : 1;
823 unsigned int m_target_flag_2 : 1;
824
825 /* Nonzero iff the size of the minimal symbol has been set.
826 Symbol size information can sometimes not be determined, because
827 the object file format may not carry that piece of information. */
828 unsigned int m_has_size : 1;
829
830 /* For data symbols only, if this is set, then the symbol might be
831 subject to copy relocation. In this case, a minimal symbol
832 matching the symbol's linkage name is first looked for in the
833 main objfile. If found, then that address is used; otherwise the
834 address in this symbol is used. */
835
836 unsigned maybe_copied : 1;
837
838 /* Non-zero if this symbol ever had its demangled name set (even if
839 it was set to NULL). */
840 unsigned int name_set : 1;
841
842 /* Minimal symbols with the same hash key are kept on a linked
843 list. This is the link. */
844
845 struct minimal_symbol *hash_next;
846
847 /* Minimal symbols are stored in two different hash tables. This is
848 the `next' pointer for the demangled hash table. */
849
850 struct minimal_symbol *demangled_hash_next;
851
852 /* True if this symbol is of some data type. */
853
854 bool data_p () const;
855
856 /* True if MSYMBOL is of some text type. */
857
858 bool text_p () const;
859 };
860
861 #include "minsyms.h"
862
863 \f
864
865 /* Represent one symbol name; a variable, constant, function or typedef. */
866
867 /* Different name domains for symbols. Looking up a symbol specifies a
868 domain and ignores symbol definitions in other name domains. */
869
870 enum domain_enum
871 {
872 /* UNDEF_DOMAIN is used when a domain has not been discovered or
873 none of the following apply. This usually indicates an error either
874 in the symbol information or in gdb's handling of symbols. */
875
876 UNDEF_DOMAIN,
877
878 /* VAR_DOMAIN is the usual domain. In C, this contains variables,
879 function names, typedef names and enum type values. */
880
881 VAR_DOMAIN,
882
883 /* STRUCT_DOMAIN is used in C to hold struct, union and enum type names.
884 Thus, if `struct foo' is used in a C program, it produces a symbol named
885 `foo' in the STRUCT_DOMAIN. */
886
887 STRUCT_DOMAIN,
888
889 /* MODULE_DOMAIN is used in Fortran to hold module type names. */
890
891 MODULE_DOMAIN,
892
893 /* LABEL_DOMAIN may be used for names of labels (for gotos). */
894
895 LABEL_DOMAIN,
896
897 /* Fortran common blocks. Their naming must be separate from VAR_DOMAIN.
898 They also always use LOC_COMMON_BLOCK. */
899 COMMON_BLOCK_DOMAIN,
900
901 /* This must remain last. */
902 NR_DOMAINS
903 };
904
905 /* The number of bits in a symbol used to represent the domain. */
906
907 #define SYMBOL_DOMAIN_BITS 3
908 gdb_static_assert (NR_DOMAINS <= (1 << SYMBOL_DOMAIN_BITS));
909
910 extern const char *domain_name (domain_enum);
911
912 /* Searching domains, used when searching for symbols. Element numbers are
913 hardcoded in GDB, check all enum uses before changing it. */
914
915 enum search_domain
916 {
917 /* Everything in VAR_DOMAIN minus FUNCTIONS_DOMAIN and
918 TYPES_DOMAIN. */
919 VARIABLES_DOMAIN = 0,
920
921 /* All functions -- for some reason not methods, though. */
922 FUNCTIONS_DOMAIN = 1,
923
924 /* All defined types */
925 TYPES_DOMAIN = 2,
926
927 /* All modules. */
928 MODULES_DOMAIN = 3,
929
930 /* Any type. */
931 ALL_DOMAIN = 4
932 };
933
934 extern const char *search_domain_name (enum search_domain);
935
936 /* An address-class says where to find the value of a symbol. */
937
938 enum address_class
939 {
940 /* Not used; catches errors. */
941
942 LOC_UNDEF,
943
944 /* Value is constant int SYMBOL_VALUE, host byteorder. */
945
946 LOC_CONST,
947
948 /* Value is at fixed address SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS. */
949
950 LOC_STATIC,
951
952 /* Value is in register. SYMBOL_VALUE is the register number
953 in the original debug format. SYMBOL_REGISTER_OPS holds a
954 function that can be called to transform this into the
955 actual register number this represents in a specific target
956 architecture (gdbarch).
957
958 For some symbol formats (stabs, for some compilers at least),
959 the compiler generates two symbols, an argument and a register.
960 In some cases we combine them to a single LOC_REGISTER in symbol
961 reading, but currently not for all cases (e.g. it's passed on the
962 stack and then loaded into a register). */
963
964 LOC_REGISTER,
965
966 /* It's an argument; the value is at SYMBOL_VALUE offset in arglist. */
967
968 LOC_ARG,
969
970 /* Value address is at SYMBOL_VALUE offset in arglist. */
971
972 LOC_REF_ARG,
973
974 /* Value is in specified register. Just like LOC_REGISTER except the
975 register holds the address of the argument instead of the argument
976 itself. This is currently used for the passing of structs and unions
977 on sparc and hppa. It is also used for call by reference where the
978 address is in a register, at least by mipsread.c. */
979
980 LOC_REGPARM_ADDR,
981
982 /* Value is a local variable at SYMBOL_VALUE offset in stack frame. */
983
984 LOC_LOCAL,
985
986 /* Value not used; definition in SYMBOL_TYPE. Symbols in the domain
987 STRUCT_DOMAIN all have this class. */
988
989 LOC_TYPEDEF,
990
991 /* Value is address SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS in the code. */
992
993 LOC_LABEL,
994
995 /* In a symbol table, value is SYMBOL_BLOCK_VALUE of a `struct block'.
996 In a partial symbol table, SYMBOL_VALUE_ADDRESS is the start address
997 of the block. Function names have this class. */
998
999 LOC_BLOCK,
1000
1001 /* Value is a constant byte-sequence pointed to by SYMBOL_VALUE_BYTES, in
1002 target byte order. */
1003
1004 LOC_CONST_BYTES,
1005
1006 /* Value is at fixed address, but the address of the variable has
1007 to be determined from the minimal symbol table whenever the
1008 variable is referenced.
1009 This happens if debugging information for a global symbol is
1010 emitted and the corresponding minimal symbol is defined
1011 in another object file or runtime common storage.
1012 The linker might even remove the minimal symbol if the global
1013 symbol is never referenced, in which case the symbol remains
1014 unresolved.
1015
1016 GDB would normally find the symbol in the minimal symbol table if it will
1017 not find it in the full symbol table. But a reference to an external
1018 symbol in a local block shadowing other definition requires full symbol
1019 without possibly having its address available for LOC_STATIC. Testcase
1020 is provided as `gdb.dwarf2/dw2-unresolved.exp'.
1021
1022 This is also used for thread local storage (TLS) variables. In this case,
1023 the address of the TLS variable must be determined when the variable is
1024 referenced, from the MSYMBOL_VALUE_RAW_ADDRESS, which is the offset
1025 of the TLS variable in the thread local storage of the shared
1026 library/object. */
1027
1028 LOC_UNRESOLVED,
1029
1030 /* The variable does not actually exist in the program.
1031 The value is ignored. */
1032
1033 LOC_OPTIMIZED_OUT,
1034
1035 /* The variable's address is computed by a set of location
1036 functions (see "struct symbol_computed_ops" below). */
1037 LOC_COMPUTED,
1038
1039 /* The variable uses general_symbol_info->value->common_block field.
1040 It also always uses COMMON_BLOCK_DOMAIN. */
1041 LOC_COMMON_BLOCK,
1042
1043 /* Not used, just notes the boundary of the enum. */
1044 LOC_FINAL_VALUE
1045 };
1046
1047 /* The number of bits needed for values in enum address_class, with some
1048 padding for reasonable growth, and room for run-time registered address
1049 classes. See symtab.c:MAX_SYMBOL_IMPLS.
1050 This is a #define so that we can have a assertion elsewhere to
1051 verify that we have reserved enough space for synthetic address
1052 classes. */
1053 #define SYMBOL_ACLASS_BITS 5
1054 gdb_static_assert (LOC_FINAL_VALUE <= (1 << SYMBOL_ACLASS_BITS));
1055
1056 /* The methods needed to implement LOC_COMPUTED. These methods can
1057 use the symbol's .aux_value for additional per-symbol information.
1058
1059 At present this is only used to implement location expressions. */
1060
1061 struct symbol_computed_ops
1062 {
1063
1064 /* Return the value of the variable SYMBOL, relative to the stack
1065 frame FRAME. If the variable has been optimized out, return
1066 zero.
1067
1068 Iff `read_needs_frame (SYMBOL)' is not SYMBOL_NEEDS_FRAME, then
1069 FRAME may be zero. */
1070
1071 struct value *(*read_variable) (struct symbol * symbol,
1072 struct frame_info * frame);
1073
1074 /* Read variable SYMBOL like read_variable at (callee) FRAME's function
1075 entry. SYMBOL should be a function parameter, otherwise
1076 NO_ENTRY_VALUE_ERROR will be thrown. */
1077 struct value *(*read_variable_at_entry) (struct symbol *symbol,
1078 struct frame_info *frame);
1079
1080 /* Find the "symbol_needs_kind" value for the given symbol. This
1081 value determines whether reading the symbol needs memory (e.g., a
1082 global variable), just registers (a thread-local), or a frame (a
1083 local variable). */
1084 enum symbol_needs_kind (*get_symbol_read_needs) (struct symbol * symbol);
1085
1086 /* Write to STREAM a natural-language description of the location of
1087 SYMBOL, in the context of ADDR. */
1088 void (*describe_location) (struct symbol * symbol, CORE_ADDR addr,
1089 struct ui_file * stream);
1090
1091 /* Non-zero if this symbol's address computation is dependent on PC. */
1092 unsigned char location_has_loclist;
1093
1094 /* Tracepoint support. Append bytecodes to the tracepoint agent
1095 expression AX that push the address of the object SYMBOL. Set
1096 VALUE appropriately. Note --- for objects in registers, this
1097 needn't emit any code; as long as it sets VALUE properly, then
1098 the caller will generate the right code in the process of
1099 treating this as an lvalue or rvalue. */
1100
1101 void (*tracepoint_var_ref) (struct symbol *symbol, struct agent_expr *ax,
1102 struct axs_value *value);
1103
1104 /* Generate C code to compute the location of SYMBOL. The C code is
1105 emitted to STREAM. GDBARCH is the current architecture and PC is
1106 the PC at which SYMBOL's location should be evaluated.
1107 REGISTERS_USED is a vector indexed by register number; the
1108 generator function should set an element in this vector if the
1109 corresponding register is needed by the location computation.
1110 The generated C code must assign the location to a local
1111 variable; this variable's name is RESULT_NAME. */
1112
1113 void (*generate_c_location) (struct symbol *symbol, string_file *stream,
1114 struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
1115 std::vector<bool> &registers_used,
1116 CORE_ADDR pc, const char *result_name);
1117
1118 };
1119
1120 /* The methods needed to implement LOC_BLOCK for inferior functions.
1121 These methods can use the symbol's .aux_value for additional
1122 per-symbol information. */
1123
1124 struct symbol_block_ops
1125 {
1126 /* Fill in *START and *LENGTH with DWARF block data of function
1127 FRAMEFUNC valid for inferior context address PC. Set *LENGTH to
1128 zero if such location is not valid for PC; *START is left
1129 uninitialized in such case. */
1130 void (*find_frame_base_location) (struct symbol *framefunc, CORE_ADDR pc,
1131 const gdb_byte **start, size_t *length);
1132
1133 /* Return the frame base address. FRAME is the frame for which we want to
1134 compute the base address while FRAMEFUNC is the symbol for the
1135 corresponding function. Return 0 on failure (FRAMEFUNC may not hold the
1136 information we need).
1137
1138 This method is designed to work with static links (nested functions
1139 handling). Static links are function properties whose evaluation returns
1140 the frame base address for the enclosing frame. However, there are
1141 multiple definitions for "frame base": the content of the frame base
1142 register, the CFA as defined by DWARF unwinding information, ...
1143
1144 So this specific method is supposed to compute the frame base address such
1145 as for nested functions, the static link computes the same address. For
1146 instance, considering DWARF debugging information, the static link is
1147 computed with DW_AT_static_link and this method must be used to compute
1148 the corresponding DW_AT_frame_base attribute. */
1149 CORE_ADDR (*get_frame_base) (struct symbol *framefunc,
1150 struct frame_info *frame);
1151 };
1152
1153 /* Functions used with LOC_REGISTER and LOC_REGPARM_ADDR. */
1154
1155 struct symbol_register_ops
1156 {
1157 int (*register_number) (struct symbol *symbol, struct gdbarch *gdbarch);
1158 };
1159
1160 /* Objects of this type are used to find the address class and the
1161 various computed ops vectors of a symbol. */
1162
1163 struct symbol_impl
1164 {
1165 enum address_class aclass;
1166
1167 /* Used with LOC_COMPUTED. */
1168 const struct symbol_computed_ops *ops_computed;
1169
1170 /* Used with LOC_BLOCK. */
1171 const struct symbol_block_ops *ops_block;
1172
1173 /* Used with LOC_REGISTER and LOC_REGPARM_ADDR. */
1174 const struct symbol_register_ops *ops_register;
1175 };
1176
1177 /* struct symbol has some subclasses. This enum is used to
1178 differentiate between them. */
1179
1180 enum symbol_subclass_kind
1181 {
1182 /* Plain struct symbol. */
1183 SYMBOL_NONE,
1184
1185 /* struct template_symbol. */
1186 SYMBOL_TEMPLATE,
1187
1188 /* struct rust_vtable_symbol. */
1189 SYMBOL_RUST_VTABLE
1190 };
1191
1192 extern gdb::array_view<const struct symbol_impl> symbol_impls;
1193
1194 /* This structure is space critical. See space comments at the top. */
1195
1196 struct symbol : public general_symbol_info, public allocate_on_obstack
1197 {
1198 symbol ()
1199 /* Class-initialization of bitfields is only allowed in C++20. */
1200 : m_domain (UNDEF_DOMAIN),
1201 m_aclass_index (0),
1202 m_is_objfile_owned (1),
1203 m_is_argument (0),
1204 m_is_inlined (0),
1205 maybe_copied (0),
1206 subclass (SYMBOL_NONE),
1207 m_artificial (false)
1208 {
1209 /* We can't use an initializer list for members of a base class, and
1210 general_symbol_info needs to stay a POD type. */
1211 m_name = nullptr;
1212 m_value.ivalue = 0;
1213 language_specific.obstack = nullptr;
1214 m_language = language_unknown;
1215 ada_mangled = 0;
1216 m_section = -1;
1217 /* GCC 4.8.5 (on CentOS 7) does not correctly compile class-
1218 initialization of unions, so we initialize it manually here. */
1219 owner.symtab = nullptr;
1220 }
1221
1222 symbol (const symbol &) = default;
1223 symbol &operator= (const symbol &) = default;
1224
1225 void set_aclass_index (unsigned int aclass_index)
1226 {
1227 m_aclass_index = aclass_index;
1228 }
1229
1230 const symbol_impl &impl () const
1231 {
1232 return symbol_impls[this->m_aclass_index];
1233 }
1234
1235 address_class aclass () const
1236 {
1237 return this->impl ().aclass;
1238 }
1239
1240 domain_enum domain () const
1241 {
1242 return m_domain;
1243 }
1244
1245 void set_domain (domain_enum domain)
1246 {
1247 m_domain = domain;
1248 }
1249
1250 bool is_objfile_owned () const
1251 {
1252 return m_is_objfile_owned;
1253 }
1254
1255 void set_is_objfile_owned (bool is_objfile_owned)
1256 {
1257 m_is_objfile_owned = is_objfile_owned;
1258 }
1259
1260 bool is_argument () const
1261 {
1262 return m_is_argument;
1263 }
1264
1265 void set_is_argument (bool is_argument)
1266 {
1267 m_is_argument = is_argument;
1268 }
1269
1270 bool is_inlined () const
1271 {
1272 return m_is_inlined;
1273 }
1274
1275 void set_is_inlined (bool is_inlined)
1276 {
1277 m_is_inlined = is_inlined;
1278 }
1279
1280 bool is_cplus_template_function () const
1281 {
1282 return this->subclass == SYMBOL_TEMPLATE;
1283 }
1284
1285 struct type *type () const
1286 {
1287 return m_type;
1288 }
1289
1290 void set_type (struct type *type)
1291 {
1292 m_type = type;
1293 }
1294
1295 unsigned short line () const
1296 {
1297 return m_line;
1298 }
1299
1300 void set_line (unsigned short line)
1301 {
1302 m_line = line;
1303 }
1304
1305 LONGEST value_longest () const
1306 {
1307 return m_value.ivalue;
1308 }
1309
1310 void set_value_longest (LONGEST value)
1311 {
1312 m_value.ivalue = value;
1313 }
1314
1315 CORE_ADDR value_address () const
1316 {
1317 if (this->maybe_copied)
1318 return get_symbol_address (this);
1319 else
1320 return m_value.address;
1321 }
1322
1323 void set_value_address (CORE_ADDR address)
1324 {
1325 m_value.address = address;
1326 }
1327
1328 const gdb_byte *value_bytes () const
1329 {
1330 return m_value.bytes;
1331 }
1332
1333 void set_value_bytes (const gdb_byte *bytes)
1334 {
1335 m_value.bytes = bytes;
1336 }
1337
1338 const common_block *value_common_block () const
1339 {
1340 return m_value.common_block;
1341 }
1342
1343 void set_value_common_block (const common_block *common_block)
1344 {
1345 m_value.common_block = common_block;
1346 }
1347
1348 const block *value_block () const
1349 {
1350 return m_value.block;
1351 }
1352
1353 void set_value_block (const block *block)
1354 {
1355 m_value.block = block;
1356 }
1357
1358 symbol *value_chain () const
1359 {
1360 return m_value.chain;
1361 }
1362
1363 void set_value_chain (symbol *sym)
1364 {
1365 m_value.chain = sym;
1366 }
1367
1368 /* Return true if this symbol was marked as artificial. */
1369 bool is_artificial () const
1370 {
1371 return m_artificial;
1372 }
1373
1374 /* Set the 'artificial' flag on this symbol. */
1375 void set_is_artificial (bool artificial)
1376 {
1377 m_artificial = artificial;
1378 }
1379
1380 /* Return the OBJFILE of this symbol. It is an error to call this
1381 if is_objfile_owned is false, which only happens for
1382 architecture-provided types. */
1383
1384 struct objfile *objfile () const;
1385
1386 /* Return the ARCH of this symbol. */
1387
1388 struct gdbarch *arch () const;
1389
1390 /* Return the symtab of this symbol. It is an error to call this if
1391 is_objfile_owned is false, which only happens for
1392 architecture-provided types. */
1393
1394 struct symtab *symtab () const;
1395
1396 /* Set the symtab of this symbol to SYMTAB. It is an error to call
1397 this if is_objfile_owned is false, which only happens for
1398 architecture-provided types. */
1399
1400 void set_symtab (struct symtab *symtab);
1401
1402 /* Data type of value */
1403
1404 struct type *m_type = nullptr;
1405
1406 /* The owner of this symbol.
1407 Which one to use is defined by symbol.is_objfile_owned. */
1408
1409 union
1410 {
1411 /* The symbol table containing this symbol. This is the file associated
1412 with LINE. It can be NULL during symbols read-in but it is never NULL
1413 during normal operation. */
1414 struct symtab *symtab;
1415
1416 /* For types defined by the architecture. */
1417 struct gdbarch *arch;
1418 } owner;
1419
1420 /* Domain code. */
1421
1422 ENUM_BITFIELD(domain_enum) m_domain : SYMBOL_DOMAIN_BITS;
1423
1424 /* Address class. This holds an index into the 'symbol_impls'
1425 table. The actual enum address_class value is stored there,
1426 alongside any per-class ops vectors. */
1427
1428 unsigned int m_aclass_index : SYMBOL_ACLASS_BITS;
1429
1430 /* If non-zero then symbol is objfile-owned, use owner.symtab.
1431 Otherwise symbol is arch-owned, use owner.arch. */
1432
1433 unsigned int m_is_objfile_owned : 1;
1434
1435 /* Whether this is an argument. */
1436
1437 unsigned m_is_argument : 1;
1438
1439 /* Whether this is an inlined function (class LOC_BLOCK only). */
1440 unsigned m_is_inlined : 1;
1441
1442 /* For LOC_STATIC only, if this is set, then the symbol might be
1443 subject to copy relocation. In this case, a minimal symbol
1444 matching the symbol's linkage name is first looked for in the
1445 main objfile. If found, then that address is used; otherwise the
1446 address in this symbol is used. */
1447
1448 unsigned maybe_copied : 1;
1449
1450 /* The concrete type of this symbol. */
1451
1452 ENUM_BITFIELD (symbol_subclass_kind) subclass : 2;
1453
1454 /* Whether this symbol is artificial. */
1455
1456 bool m_artificial : 1;
1457
1458 /* Line number of this symbol's definition, except for inlined
1459 functions. For an inlined function (class LOC_BLOCK and
1460 SYMBOL_INLINED set) this is the line number of the function's call
1461 site. Inlined function symbols are not definitions, and they are
1462 never found by symbol table lookup.
1463 If this symbol is arch-owned, LINE shall be zero.
1464
1465 FIXME: Should we really make the assumption that nobody will try
1466 to debug files longer than 64K lines? What about machine
1467 generated programs? */
1468
1469 unsigned short m_line = 0;
1470
1471 /* An arbitrary data pointer, allowing symbol readers to record
1472 additional information on a per-symbol basis. Note that this data
1473 must be allocated using the same obstack as the symbol itself. */
1474 /* So far it is only used by:
1475 LOC_COMPUTED: to find the location information
1476 LOC_BLOCK (DWARF2 function): information used internally by the
1477 DWARF 2 code --- specifically, the location expression for the frame
1478 base for this function. */
1479 /* FIXME drow/2003-02-21: For the LOC_BLOCK case, it might be better
1480 to add a magic symbol to the block containing this information,
1481 or to have a generic debug info annotation slot for symbols. */
1482
1483 void *aux_value = nullptr;
1484
1485 struct symbol *hash_next = nullptr;
1486 };
1487
1488 /* Several lookup functions return both a symbol and the block in which the
1489 symbol is found. This structure is used in these cases. */
1490
1491 struct block_symbol
1492 {
1493 /* The symbol that was found, or NULL if no symbol was found. */
1494 struct symbol *symbol;
1495
1496 /* If SYMBOL is not NULL, then this is the block in which the symbol is
1497 defined. */
1498 const struct block *block;
1499 };
1500
1501 /* Note: There is no accessor macro for symbol.owner because it is
1502 "private". */
1503
1504 #define SYMBOL_COMPUTED_OPS(symbol) ((symbol)->impl ().ops_computed)
1505 #define SYMBOL_BLOCK_OPS(symbol) ((symbol)->impl ().ops_block)
1506 #define SYMBOL_REGISTER_OPS(symbol) ((symbol)->impl ().ops_register)
1507 #define SYMBOL_LOCATION_BATON(symbol) (symbol)->aux_value
1508
1509 extern int register_symbol_computed_impl (enum address_class,
1510 const struct symbol_computed_ops *);
1511
1512 extern int register_symbol_block_impl (enum address_class aclass,
1513 const struct symbol_block_ops *ops);
1514
1515 extern int register_symbol_register_impl (enum address_class,
1516 const struct symbol_register_ops *);
1517
1518 /* An instance of this type is used to represent a C++ template
1519 function. A symbol is really of this type iff
1520 symbol::is_cplus_template_function is true. */
1521
1522 struct template_symbol : public symbol
1523 {
1524 /* The number of template arguments. */
1525 int n_template_arguments = 0;
1526
1527 /* The template arguments. This is an array with
1528 N_TEMPLATE_ARGUMENTS elements. */
1529 struct symbol **template_arguments = nullptr;
1530 };
1531
1532 /* A symbol that represents a Rust virtual table object. */
1533
1534 struct rust_vtable_symbol : public symbol
1535 {
1536 /* The concrete type for which this vtable was created; that is, in
1537 "impl Trait for Type", this is "Type". */
1538 struct type *concrete_type = nullptr;
1539 };
1540
1541 \f
1542 /* Each item represents a line-->pc (or the reverse) mapping. This is
1543 somewhat more wasteful of space than one might wish, but since only
1544 the files which are actually debugged are read in to core, we don't
1545 waste much space. */
1546
1547 struct linetable_entry
1548 {
1549 /* The line number for this entry. */
1550 int line;
1551
1552 /* True if this PC is a good location to place a breakpoint for LINE. */
1553 unsigned is_stmt : 1;
1554
1555 /* True if this location is a good location to place a breakpoint after a
1556 function prologue. */
1557 bool prologue_end : 1;
1558
1559 /* The address for this entry. */
1560 CORE_ADDR pc;
1561 };
1562
1563 /* The order of entries in the linetable is significant. They should
1564 be sorted by increasing values of the pc field. If there is more than
1565 one entry for a given pc, then I'm not sure what should happen (and
1566 I not sure whether we currently handle it the best way).
1567
1568 Example: a C for statement generally looks like this
1569
1570 10 0x100 - for the init/test part of a for stmt.
1571 20 0x200
1572 30 0x300
1573 10 0x400 - for the increment part of a for stmt.
1574
1575 If an entry has a line number of zero, it marks the start of a PC
1576 range for which no line number information is available. It is
1577 acceptable, though wasteful of table space, for such a range to be
1578 zero length. */
1579
1580 struct linetable
1581 {
1582 int nitems;
1583
1584 /* Actually NITEMS elements. If you don't like this use of the
1585 `struct hack', you can shove it up your ANSI (seriously, if the
1586 committee tells us how to do it, we can probably go along). */
1587 struct linetable_entry item[1];
1588 };
1589
1590 /* How to relocate the symbols from each section in a symbol file.
1591 The ordering and meaning of the offsets is file-type-dependent;
1592 typically it is indexed by section numbers or symbol types or
1593 something like that. */
1594
1595 typedef std::vector<CORE_ADDR> section_offsets;
1596
1597 /* Each source file or header is represented by a struct symtab.
1598 The name "symtab" is historical, another name for it is "filetab".
1599 These objects are chained through the `next' field. */
1600
1601 struct symtab
1602 {
1603 struct compunit_symtab *compunit () const
1604 {
1605 return m_compunit;
1606 }
1607
1608 void set_compunit (struct compunit_symtab *compunit)
1609 {
1610 m_compunit = compunit;
1611 }
1612
1613 struct linetable *linetable () const
1614 {
1615 return m_linetable;
1616 }
1617
1618 void set_linetable (struct linetable *linetable)
1619 {
1620 m_linetable = linetable;
1621 }
1622
1623 enum language language () const
1624 {
1625 return m_language;
1626 }
1627
1628 void set_language (enum language language)
1629 {
1630 m_language = language;
1631 }
1632
1633 /* Unordered chain of all filetabs in the compunit, with the exception
1634 that the "main" source file is the first entry in the list. */
1635
1636 struct symtab *next;
1637
1638 /* Backlink to containing compunit symtab. */
1639
1640 struct compunit_symtab *m_compunit;
1641
1642 /* Table mapping core addresses to line numbers for this file.
1643 Can be NULL if none. Never shared between different symtabs. */
1644
1645 struct linetable *m_linetable;
1646
1647 /* Name of this source file. This pointer is never NULL. */
1648
1649 const char *filename;
1650
1651 /* Language of this source file. */
1652
1653 enum language m_language;
1654
1655 /* Full name of file as found by searching the source path.
1656 NULL if not yet known. */
1657
1658 char *fullname;
1659 };
1660
1661 /* A range adapter to allowing iterating over all the file tables in a list. */
1662
1663 using symtab_range = next_range<symtab>;
1664
1665 /* Compunit symtabs contain the actual "symbol table", aka blockvector, as well
1666 as the list of all source files (what gdb has historically associated with
1667 the term "symtab").
1668 Additional information is recorded here that is common to all symtabs in a
1669 compilation unit (DWARF or otherwise).
1670
1671 Example:
1672 For the case of a program built out of these files:
1673
1674 foo.c
1675 foo1.h
1676 foo2.h
1677 bar.c
1678 foo1.h
1679 bar.h
1680
1681 This is recorded as:
1682
1683 objfile -> foo.c(cu) -> bar.c(cu) -> NULL
1684 | |
1685 v v
1686 foo.c bar.c
1687 | |
1688 v v
1689 foo1.h foo1.h
1690 | |
1691 v v
1692 foo2.h bar.h
1693 | |
1694 v v
1695 NULL NULL
1696
1697 where "foo.c(cu)" and "bar.c(cu)" are struct compunit_symtab objects,
1698 and the files foo.c, etc. are struct symtab objects. */
1699
1700 struct compunit_symtab
1701 {
1702 struct objfile *objfile () const
1703 {
1704 return m_objfile;
1705 }
1706
1707 void set_objfile (struct objfile *objfile)
1708 {
1709 m_objfile = objfile;
1710 }
1711
1712 symtab_range filetabs () const
1713 {
1714 return symtab_range (m_filetabs);
1715 }
1716
1717 void add_filetab (symtab *filetab)
1718 {
1719 if (m_filetabs == nullptr)
1720 {
1721 m_filetabs = filetab;
1722 m_last_filetab = filetab;
1723 }
1724 else
1725 {
1726 m_last_filetab->next = filetab;
1727 m_last_filetab = filetab;
1728 }
1729 }
1730
1731 const char *debugformat () const
1732 {
1733 return m_debugformat;
1734 }
1735
1736 void set_debugformat (const char *debugformat)
1737 {
1738 m_debugformat = debugformat;
1739 }
1740
1741 const char *producer () const
1742 {
1743 return m_producer;
1744 }
1745
1746 void set_producer (const char *producer)
1747 {
1748 m_producer = producer;
1749 }
1750
1751 const char *dirname () const
1752 {
1753 return m_dirname;
1754 }
1755
1756 void set_dirname (const char *dirname)
1757 {
1758 m_dirname = dirname;
1759 }
1760
1761 struct blockvector *blockvector ()
1762 {
1763 return m_blockvector;
1764 }
1765
1766 const struct blockvector *blockvector () const
1767 {
1768 return m_blockvector;
1769 }
1770
1771 void set_blockvector (struct blockvector *blockvector)
1772 {
1773 m_blockvector = blockvector;
1774 }
1775
1776 int block_line_section () const
1777 {
1778 return m_block_line_section;
1779 }
1780
1781 void set_block_line_section (int block_line_section)
1782 {
1783 m_block_line_section = block_line_section;
1784 }
1785
1786 bool locations_valid () const
1787 {
1788 return m_locations_valid;
1789 }
1790
1791 void set_locations_valid (bool locations_valid)
1792 {
1793 m_locations_valid = locations_valid;
1794 }
1795
1796 bool epilogue_unwind_valid () const
1797 {
1798 return m_epilogue_unwind_valid;
1799 }
1800
1801 void set_epilogue_unwind_valid (bool epilogue_unwind_valid)
1802 {
1803 m_epilogue_unwind_valid = epilogue_unwind_valid;
1804 }
1805
1806 struct macro_table *macro_table () const
1807 {
1808 return m_macro_table;
1809 }
1810
1811 void set_macro_table (struct macro_table *macro_table)
1812 {
1813 m_macro_table = macro_table;
1814 }
1815
1816 /* Make PRIMARY_FILETAB the primary filetab of this compunit symtab.
1817
1818 PRIMARY_FILETAB must already be a filetab of this compunit symtab. */
1819
1820 void set_primary_filetab (symtab *primary_filetab);
1821
1822 /* Return the primary filetab of the compunit. */
1823 symtab *primary_filetab () const;
1824
1825 /* Set m_call_site_htab. */
1826 void set_call_site_htab (htab_t call_site_htab);
1827
1828 /* Find call_site info for PC. */
1829 call_site *find_call_site (CORE_ADDR pc) const;
1830
1831 /* Unordered chain of all compunit symtabs of this objfile. */
1832 struct compunit_symtab *next;
1833
1834 /* Object file from which this symtab information was read. */
1835 struct objfile *m_objfile;
1836
1837 /* Name of the symtab.
1838 This is *not* intended to be a usable filename, and is
1839 for debugging purposes only. */
1840 const char *name;
1841
1842 /* Unordered list of file symtabs, except that by convention the "main"
1843 source file (e.g., .c, .cc) is guaranteed to be first.
1844 Each symtab is a file, either the "main" source file (e.g., .c, .cc)
1845 or header (e.g., .h). */
1846 symtab *m_filetabs;
1847
1848 /* Last entry in FILETABS list.
1849 Subfiles are added to the end of the list so they accumulate in order,
1850 with the main source subfile living at the front.
1851 The main reason is so that the main source file symtab is at the head
1852 of the list, and the rest appear in order for debugging convenience. */
1853 symtab *m_last_filetab;
1854
1855 /* Non-NULL string that identifies the format of the debugging information,
1856 such as "stabs", "dwarf 1", "dwarf 2", "coff", etc. This is mostly useful
1857 for automated testing of gdb but may also be information that is
1858 useful to the user. */
1859 const char *m_debugformat;
1860
1861 /* String of producer version information, or NULL if we don't know. */
1862 const char *m_producer;
1863
1864 /* Directory in which it was compiled, or NULL if we don't know. */
1865 const char *m_dirname;
1866
1867 /* List of all symbol scope blocks for this symtab. It is shared among
1868 all symtabs in a given compilation unit. */
1869 struct blockvector *m_blockvector;
1870
1871 /* Section in objfile->section_offsets for the blockvector and
1872 the linetable. Probably always SECT_OFF_TEXT. */
1873 int m_block_line_section;
1874
1875 /* Symtab has been compiled with both optimizations and debug info so that
1876 GDB may stop skipping prologues as variables locations are valid already
1877 at function entry points. */
1878 unsigned int m_locations_valid : 1;
1879
1880 /* DWARF unwinder for this CU is valid even for epilogues (PC at the return
1881 instruction). This is supported by GCC since 4.5.0. */
1882 unsigned int m_epilogue_unwind_valid : 1;
1883
1884 /* struct call_site entries for this compilation unit or NULL. */
1885 htab_t m_call_site_htab;
1886
1887 /* The macro table for this symtab. Like the blockvector, this
1888 is shared between different symtabs in a given compilation unit.
1889 It's debatable whether it *should* be shared among all the symtabs in
1890 the given compilation unit, but it currently is. */
1891 struct macro_table *m_macro_table;
1892
1893 /* If non-NULL, then this points to a NULL-terminated vector of
1894 included compunits. When searching the static or global
1895 block of this compunit, the corresponding block of all
1896 included compunits will also be searched. Note that this
1897 list must be flattened -- the symbol reader is responsible for
1898 ensuring that this vector contains the transitive closure of all
1899 included compunits. */
1900 struct compunit_symtab **includes;
1901
1902 /* If this is an included compunit, this points to one includer
1903 of the table. This user is considered the canonical compunit
1904 containing this one. An included compunit may itself be
1905 included by another. */
1906 struct compunit_symtab *user;
1907 };
1908
1909 using compunit_symtab_range = next_range<compunit_symtab>;
1910
1911 /* Return the language of CUST. */
1912
1913 extern enum language compunit_language (const struct compunit_symtab *cust);
1914
1915 /* Return true if this symtab is the "main" symtab of its compunit_symtab. */
1916
1917 static inline bool
1918 is_main_symtab_of_compunit_symtab (struct symtab *symtab)
1919 {
1920 return symtab == symtab->compunit ()->primary_filetab ();
1921 }
1922 \f
1923
1924 /* The virtual function table is now an array of structures which have the
1925 form { int16 offset, delta; void *pfn; }.
1926
1927 In normal virtual function tables, OFFSET is unused.
1928 DELTA is the amount which is added to the apparent object's base
1929 address in order to point to the actual object to which the
1930 virtual function should be applied.
1931 PFN is a pointer to the virtual function.
1932
1933 Note that this macro is g++ specific (FIXME). */
1934
1935 #define VTBL_FNADDR_OFFSET 2
1936
1937 /* External variables and functions for the objects described above. */
1938
1939 /* True if we are nested inside psymtab_to_symtab. */
1940
1941 extern int currently_reading_symtab;
1942
1943 /* symtab.c lookup functions */
1944
1945 extern const char multiple_symbols_ask[];
1946 extern const char multiple_symbols_all[];
1947 extern const char multiple_symbols_cancel[];
1948
1949 const char *multiple_symbols_select_mode (void);
1950
1951 bool symbol_matches_domain (enum language symbol_language,
1952 domain_enum symbol_domain,
1953 domain_enum domain);
1954
1955 /* lookup a symbol table by source file name. */
1956
1957 extern struct symtab *lookup_symtab (const char *);
1958
1959 /* An object of this type is passed as the 'is_a_field_of_this'
1960 argument to lookup_symbol and lookup_symbol_in_language. */
1961
1962 struct field_of_this_result
1963 {
1964 /* The type in which the field was found. If this is NULL then the
1965 symbol was not found in 'this'. If non-NULL, then one of the
1966 other fields will be non-NULL as well. */
1967
1968 struct type *type;
1969
1970 /* If the symbol was found as an ordinary field of 'this', then this
1971 is non-NULL and points to the particular field. */
1972
1973 struct field *field;
1974
1975 /* If the symbol was found as a function field of 'this', then this
1976 is non-NULL and points to the particular field. */
1977
1978 struct fn_fieldlist *fn_field;
1979 };
1980
1981 /* Find the definition for a specified symbol name NAME
1982 in domain DOMAIN in language LANGUAGE, visible from lexical block BLOCK
1983 if non-NULL or from global/static blocks if BLOCK is NULL.
1984 Returns the struct symbol pointer, or NULL if no symbol is found.
1985 C++: if IS_A_FIELD_OF_THIS is non-NULL on entry, check to see if
1986 NAME is a field of the current implied argument `this'. If so fill in the
1987 fields of IS_A_FIELD_OF_THIS, otherwise the fields are set to NULL.
1988 The symbol's section is fixed up if necessary. */
1989
1990 extern struct block_symbol
1991 lookup_symbol_in_language (const char *,
1992 const struct block *,
1993 const domain_enum,
1994 enum language,
1995 struct field_of_this_result *);
1996
1997 /* Same as lookup_symbol_in_language, but using the current language. */
1998
1999 extern struct block_symbol lookup_symbol (const char *,
2000 const struct block *,
2001 const domain_enum,
2002 struct field_of_this_result *);
2003
2004 /* Find the definition for a specified symbol search name in domain
2005 DOMAIN, visible from lexical block BLOCK if non-NULL or from
2006 global/static blocks if BLOCK is NULL. The passed-in search name
2007 should not come from the user; instead it should already be a
2008 search name as retrieved from a search_name () call. See definition of
2009 symbol_name_match_type::SEARCH_NAME. Returns the struct symbol
2010 pointer, or NULL if no symbol is found. The symbol's section is
2011 fixed up if necessary. */
2012
2013 extern struct block_symbol lookup_symbol_search_name (const char *search_name,
2014 const struct block *block,
2015 domain_enum domain);
2016
2017 /* Some helper functions for languages that need to write their own
2018 lookup_symbol_nonlocal functions. */
2019
2020 /* Lookup a symbol in the static block associated to BLOCK, if there
2021 is one; do nothing if BLOCK is NULL or a global block.
2022 Upon success fixes up the symbol's section if necessary. */
2023
2024 extern struct block_symbol
2025 lookup_symbol_in_static_block (const char *name,
2026 const struct block *block,
2027 const domain_enum domain);
2028
2029 /* Search all static file-level symbols for NAME from DOMAIN.
2030 Upon success fixes up the symbol's section if necessary. */
2031
2032 extern struct block_symbol lookup_static_symbol (const char *name,
2033 const domain_enum domain);
2034
2035 /* Lookup a symbol in all files' global blocks.
2036
2037 If BLOCK is non-NULL then it is used for two things:
2038 1) If a target-specific lookup routine for libraries exists, then use the
2039 routine for the objfile of BLOCK, and
2040 2) The objfile of BLOCK is used to assist in determining the search order
2041 if the target requires it.
2042 See gdbarch_iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order.
2043
2044 Upon success fixes up the symbol's section if necessary. */
2045
2046 extern struct block_symbol
2047 lookup_global_symbol (const char *name,
2048 const struct block *block,
2049 const domain_enum domain);
2050
2051 /* Lookup a symbol in block BLOCK.
2052 Upon success fixes up the symbol's section if necessary. */
2053
2054 extern struct symbol *
2055 lookup_symbol_in_block (const char *name,
2056 symbol_name_match_type match_type,
2057 const struct block *block,
2058 const domain_enum domain);
2059
2060 /* Look up the `this' symbol for LANG in BLOCK. Return the symbol if
2061 found, or NULL if not found. */
2062
2063 extern struct block_symbol
2064 lookup_language_this (const struct language_defn *lang,
2065 const struct block *block);
2066
2067 /* Lookup a [struct, union, enum] by name, within a specified block. */
2068
2069 extern struct type *lookup_struct (const char *, const struct block *);
2070
2071 extern struct type *lookup_union (const char *, const struct block *);
2072
2073 extern struct type *lookup_enum (const char *, const struct block *);
2074
2075 /* from blockframe.c: */
2076
2077 /* lookup the function symbol corresponding to the address. The
2078 return value will not be an inlined function; the containing
2079 function will be returned instead. */
2080
2081 extern struct symbol *find_pc_function (CORE_ADDR);
2082
2083 /* lookup the function corresponding to the address and section. The
2084 return value will not be an inlined function; the containing
2085 function will be returned instead. */
2086
2087 extern struct symbol *find_pc_sect_function (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
2088
2089 /* lookup the function symbol corresponding to the address and
2090 section. The return value will be the closest enclosing function,
2091 which might be an inline function. */
2092
2093 extern struct symbol *find_pc_sect_containing_function
2094 (CORE_ADDR pc, struct obj_section *section);
2095
2096 /* Find the symbol at the given address. Returns NULL if no symbol
2097 found. Only exact matches for ADDRESS are considered. */
2098
2099 extern struct symbol *find_symbol_at_address (CORE_ADDR);
2100
2101 /* Finds the "function" (text symbol) that is smaller than PC but
2102 greatest of all of the potential text symbols in SECTION. Sets
2103 *NAME and/or *ADDRESS conditionally if that pointer is non-null.
2104 If ENDADDR is non-null, then set *ENDADDR to be the end of the
2105 function (exclusive). If the optional parameter BLOCK is non-null,
2106 then set *BLOCK to the address of the block corresponding to the
2107 function symbol, if such a symbol could be found during the lookup;
2108 nullptr is used as a return value for *BLOCK if no block is found.
2109 This function either succeeds or fails (not halfway succeeds). If
2110 it succeeds, it sets *NAME, *ADDRESS, and *ENDADDR to real
2111 information and returns true. If it fails, it sets *NAME, *ADDRESS
2112 and *ENDADDR to zero and returns false.
2113
2114 If the function in question occupies non-contiguous ranges,
2115 *ADDRESS and *ENDADDR are (subject to the conditions noted above) set
2116 to the start and end of the range in which PC is found. Thus
2117 *ADDRESS <= PC < *ENDADDR with no intervening gaps (in which ranges
2118 from other functions might be found).
2119
2120 This property allows find_pc_partial_function to be used (as it had
2121 been prior to the introduction of non-contiguous range support) by
2122 various tdep files for finding a start address and limit address
2123 for prologue analysis. This still isn't ideal, however, because we
2124 probably shouldn't be doing prologue analysis (in which
2125 instructions are scanned to determine frame size and stack layout)
2126 for any range that doesn't contain the entry pc. Moreover, a good
2127 argument can be made that prologue analysis ought to be performed
2128 starting from the entry pc even when PC is within some other range.
2129 This might suggest that *ADDRESS and *ENDADDR ought to be set to the
2130 limits of the entry pc range, but that will cause the
2131 *ADDRESS <= PC < *ENDADDR condition to be violated; many of the
2132 callers of find_pc_partial_function expect this condition to hold.
2133
2134 Callers which require the start and/or end addresses for the range
2135 containing the entry pc should instead call
2136 find_function_entry_range_from_pc. */
2137
2138 extern bool find_pc_partial_function (CORE_ADDR pc, const char **name,
2139 CORE_ADDR *address, CORE_ADDR *endaddr,
2140 const struct block **block = nullptr);
2141
2142 /* Like find_pc_partial_function, above, but returns the underlying
2143 general_symbol_info (rather than the name) as an out parameter. */
2144
2145 extern bool find_pc_partial_function_sym
2146 (CORE_ADDR pc, const general_symbol_info **sym,
2147 CORE_ADDR *address, CORE_ADDR *endaddr,
2148 const struct block **block = nullptr);
2149
2150 /* Like find_pc_partial_function, above, but *ADDRESS and *ENDADDR are
2151 set to start and end addresses of the range containing the entry pc.
2152
2153 Note that it is not necessarily the case that (for non-NULL ADDRESS
2154 and ENDADDR arguments) the *ADDRESS <= PC < *ENDADDR condition will
2155 hold.
2156
2157 See comment for find_pc_partial_function, above, for further
2158 explanation. */
2159
2160 extern bool find_function_entry_range_from_pc (CORE_ADDR pc,
2161 const char **name,
2162 CORE_ADDR *address,
2163 CORE_ADDR *endaddr);
2164
2165 /* Return the type of a function with its first instruction exactly at
2166 the PC address. Return NULL otherwise. */
2167
2168 extern struct type *find_function_type (CORE_ADDR pc);
2169
2170 /* See if we can figure out the function's actual type from the type
2171 that the resolver returns. RESOLVER_FUNADDR is the address of the
2172 ifunc resolver. */
2173
2174 extern struct type *find_gnu_ifunc_target_type (CORE_ADDR resolver_funaddr);
2175
2176 /* Find the GNU ifunc minimal symbol that matches SYM. */
2177 extern bound_minimal_symbol find_gnu_ifunc (const symbol *sym);
2178
2179 extern void clear_pc_function_cache (void);
2180
2181 /* Expand symtab containing PC, SECTION if not already expanded. */
2182
2183 extern void expand_symtab_containing_pc (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
2184
2185 /* lookup full symbol table by address. */
2186
2187 extern struct compunit_symtab *find_pc_compunit_symtab (CORE_ADDR);
2188
2189 /* lookup full symbol table by address and section. */
2190
2191 extern struct compunit_symtab *
2192 find_pc_sect_compunit_symtab (CORE_ADDR, struct obj_section *);
2193
2194 extern bool find_pc_line_pc_range (CORE_ADDR, CORE_ADDR *, CORE_ADDR *);
2195
2196 extern void reread_symbols (int from_tty);
2197
2198 /* Look up a type named NAME in STRUCT_DOMAIN in the current language.
2199 The type returned must not be opaque -- i.e., must have at least one field
2200 defined. */
2201
2202 extern struct type *lookup_transparent_type (const char *);
2203
2204 extern struct type *basic_lookup_transparent_type (const char *);
2205
2206 /* Macro for name of symbol to indicate a file compiled with gcc. */
2207 #ifndef GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
2208 #define GCC_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL "gcc_compiled."
2209 #endif
2210
2211 /* Macro for name of symbol to indicate a file compiled with gcc2. */
2212 #ifndef GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL
2213 #define GCC2_COMPILED_FLAG_SYMBOL "gcc2_compiled."
2214 #endif
2215
2216 extern bool in_gnu_ifunc_stub (CORE_ADDR pc);
2217
2218 /* Functions for resolving STT_GNU_IFUNC symbols which are implemented only
2219 for ELF symbol files. */
2220
2221 struct gnu_ifunc_fns
2222 {
2223 /* See elf_gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr for its real implementation. */
2224 CORE_ADDR (*gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr) (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, CORE_ADDR pc);
2225
2226 /* See elf_gnu_ifunc_resolve_name for its real implementation. */
2227 bool (*gnu_ifunc_resolve_name) (const char *function_name,
2228 CORE_ADDR *function_address_p);
2229
2230 /* See elf_gnu_ifunc_resolver_stop for its real implementation. */
2231 void (*gnu_ifunc_resolver_stop) (code_breakpoint *b);
2232
2233 /* See elf_gnu_ifunc_resolver_return_stop for its real implementation. */
2234 void (*gnu_ifunc_resolver_return_stop) (code_breakpoint *b);
2235 };
2236
2237 #define gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr gnu_ifunc_fns_p->gnu_ifunc_resolve_addr
2238 #define gnu_ifunc_resolve_name gnu_ifunc_fns_p->gnu_ifunc_resolve_name
2239 #define gnu_ifunc_resolver_stop gnu_ifunc_fns_p->gnu_ifunc_resolver_stop
2240 #define gnu_ifunc_resolver_return_stop \
2241 gnu_ifunc_fns_p->gnu_ifunc_resolver_return_stop
2242
2243 extern const struct gnu_ifunc_fns *gnu_ifunc_fns_p;
2244
2245 extern CORE_ADDR find_solib_trampoline_target (struct frame_info *, CORE_ADDR);
2246
2247 struct symtab_and_line
2248 {
2249 /* The program space of this sal. */
2250 struct program_space *pspace = NULL;
2251
2252 struct symtab *symtab = NULL;
2253 struct symbol *symbol = NULL;
2254 struct obj_section *section = NULL;
2255 struct minimal_symbol *msymbol = NULL;
2256 /* Line number. Line numbers start at 1 and proceed through symtab->nlines.
2257 0 is never a valid line number; it is used to indicate that line number
2258 information is not available. */
2259 int line = 0;
2260
2261 CORE_ADDR pc = 0;
2262 CORE_ADDR end = 0;
2263 bool explicit_pc = false;
2264 bool explicit_line = false;
2265
2266 /* If the line number information is valid, then this indicates if this
2267 line table entry had the is-stmt flag set or not. */
2268 bool is_stmt = false;
2269
2270 /* The probe associated with this symtab_and_line. */
2271 probe *prob = NULL;
2272 /* If PROBE is not NULL, then this is the objfile in which the probe
2273 originated. */
2274 struct objfile *objfile = NULL;
2275 };
2276
2277 \f
2278
2279 /* Given a pc value, return line number it is in. Second arg nonzero means
2280 if pc is on the boundary use the previous statement's line number. */
2281
2282 extern struct symtab_and_line find_pc_line (CORE_ADDR, int);
2283
2284 /* Same function, but specify a section as well as an address. */
2285
2286 extern struct symtab_and_line find_pc_sect_line (CORE_ADDR,
2287 struct obj_section *, int);
2288
2289 /* Wrapper around find_pc_line to just return the symtab. */
2290
2291 extern struct symtab *find_pc_line_symtab (CORE_ADDR);
2292
2293 /* Given a symtab and line number, return the pc there. */
2294
2295 extern bool find_line_pc (struct symtab *, int, CORE_ADDR *);
2296
2297 extern bool find_line_pc_range (struct symtab_and_line, CORE_ADDR *,
2298 CORE_ADDR *);
2299
2300 extern void resolve_sal_pc (struct symtab_and_line *);
2301
2302 /* solib.c */
2303
2304 extern void clear_solib (void);
2305
2306 /* The reason we're calling into a completion match list collector
2307 function. */
2308 enum class complete_symbol_mode
2309 {
2310 /* Completing an expression. */
2311 EXPRESSION,
2312
2313 /* Completing a linespec. */
2314 LINESPEC,
2315 };
2316
2317 extern void default_collect_symbol_completion_matches_break_on
2318 (completion_tracker &tracker,
2319 complete_symbol_mode mode,
2320 symbol_name_match_type name_match_type,
2321 const char *text, const char *word, const char *break_on,
2322 enum type_code code);
2323 extern void collect_symbol_completion_matches
2324 (completion_tracker &tracker,
2325 complete_symbol_mode mode,
2326 symbol_name_match_type name_match_type,
2327 const char *, const char *);
2328 extern void collect_symbol_completion_matches_type (completion_tracker &tracker,
2329 const char *, const char *,
2330 enum type_code);
2331
2332 extern void collect_file_symbol_completion_matches
2333 (completion_tracker &tracker,
2334 complete_symbol_mode,
2335 symbol_name_match_type name_match_type,
2336 const char *, const char *, const char *);
2337
2338 extern completion_list
2339 make_source_files_completion_list (const char *, const char *);
2340
2341 /* Return whether SYM is a function/method, as opposed to a data symbol. */
2342
2343 extern bool symbol_is_function_or_method (symbol *sym);
2344
2345 /* Return whether MSYMBOL is a function/method, as opposed to a data
2346 symbol */
2347
2348 extern bool symbol_is_function_or_method (minimal_symbol *msymbol);
2349
2350 /* Return whether SYM should be skipped in completion mode MODE. In
2351 linespec mode, we're only interested in functions/methods. */
2352
2353 template<typename Symbol>
2354 static bool
2355 completion_skip_symbol (complete_symbol_mode mode, Symbol *sym)
2356 {
2357 return (mode == complete_symbol_mode::LINESPEC
2358 && !symbol_is_function_or_method (sym));
2359 }
2360
2361 /* symtab.c */
2362
2363 bool matching_obj_sections (struct obj_section *, struct obj_section *);
2364
2365 extern struct symtab *find_line_symtab (struct symtab *, int, int *, bool *);
2366
2367 /* Given a function symbol SYM, find the symtab and line for the start
2368 of the function. If FUNFIRSTLINE is true, we want the first line
2369 of real code inside the function. */
2370 extern symtab_and_line find_function_start_sal (symbol *sym, bool
2371 funfirstline);
2372
2373 /* Same, but start with a function address/section instead of a
2374 symbol. */
2375 extern symtab_and_line find_function_start_sal (CORE_ADDR func_addr,
2376 obj_section *section,
2377 bool funfirstline);
2378
2379 extern void skip_prologue_sal (struct symtab_and_line *);
2380
2381 /* symtab.c */
2382
2383 extern CORE_ADDR skip_prologue_using_sal (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
2384 CORE_ADDR func_addr);
2385
2386 extern struct symbol *fixup_symbol_section (struct symbol *,
2387 struct objfile *);
2388
2389 /* If MSYMBOL is an text symbol, look for a function debug symbol with
2390 the same address. Returns NULL if not found. This is necessary in
2391 case a function is an alias to some other function, because debug
2392 information is only emitted for the alias target function's
2393 definition, not for the alias. */
2394 extern symbol *find_function_alias_target (bound_minimal_symbol msymbol);
2395
2396 /* Symbol searching */
2397
2398 /* When using the symbol_searcher struct to search for symbols, a vector of
2399 the following structs is returned. */
2400 struct symbol_search
2401 {
2402 symbol_search (int block_, struct symbol *symbol_)
2403 : block (block_),
2404 symbol (symbol_)
2405 {
2406 msymbol.minsym = nullptr;
2407 msymbol.objfile = nullptr;
2408 }
2409
2410 symbol_search (int block_, struct minimal_symbol *minsym,
2411 struct objfile *objfile)
2412 : block (block_),
2413 symbol (nullptr)
2414 {
2415 msymbol.minsym = minsym;
2416 msymbol.objfile = objfile;
2417 }
2418
2419 bool operator< (const symbol_search &other) const
2420 {
2421 return compare_search_syms (*this, other) < 0;
2422 }
2423
2424 bool operator== (const symbol_search &other) const
2425 {
2426 return compare_search_syms (*this, other) == 0;
2427 }
2428
2429 /* The block in which the match was found. Could be, for example,
2430 STATIC_BLOCK or GLOBAL_BLOCK. */
2431 int block;
2432
2433 /* Information describing what was found.
2434
2435 If symbol is NOT NULL, then information was found for this match. */
2436 struct symbol *symbol;
2437
2438 /* If msymbol is non-null, then a match was made on something for
2439 which only minimal_symbols exist. */
2440 struct bound_minimal_symbol msymbol;
2441
2442 private:
2443
2444 static int compare_search_syms (const symbol_search &sym_a,
2445 const symbol_search &sym_b);
2446 };
2447
2448 /* In order to search for global symbols of a particular kind matching
2449 particular regular expressions, create an instance of this structure and
2450 call the SEARCH member function. */
2451 class global_symbol_searcher
2452 {
2453 public:
2454
2455 /* Constructor. */
2456 global_symbol_searcher (enum search_domain kind,
2457 const char *symbol_name_regexp)
2458 : m_kind (kind),
2459 m_symbol_name_regexp (symbol_name_regexp)
2460 {
2461 /* The symbol searching is designed to only find one kind of thing. */
2462 gdb_assert (m_kind != ALL_DOMAIN);
2463 }
2464
2465 /* Set the optional regexp that matches against the symbol type. */
2466 void set_symbol_type_regexp (const char *regexp)
2467 {
2468 m_symbol_type_regexp = regexp;
2469 }
2470
2471 /* Set the flag to exclude minsyms from the search results. */
2472 void set_exclude_minsyms (bool exclude_minsyms)
2473 {
2474 m_exclude_minsyms = exclude_minsyms;
2475 }
2476
2477 /* Set the maximum number of search results to be returned. */
2478 void set_max_search_results (size_t max_search_results)
2479 {
2480 m_max_search_results = max_search_results;
2481 }
2482
2483 /* Search the symbols from all objfiles in the current program space
2484 looking for matches as defined by the current state of this object.
2485
2486 Within each file the results are sorted locally; each symtab's global
2487 and static blocks are separately alphabetized. Duplicate entries are
2488 removed. */
2489 std::vector<symbol_search> search () const;
2490
2491 /* The set of source files to search in for matching symbols. This is
2492 currently public so that it can be populated after this object has
2493 been constructed. */
2494 std::vector<const char *> filenames;
2495
2496 private:
2497 /* The kind of symbols are we searching for.
2498 VARIABLES_DOMAIN - Search all symbols, excluding functions, type
2499 names, and constants (enums).
2500 FUNCTIONS_DOMAIN - Search all functions..
2501 TYPES_DOMAIN - Search all type names.
2502 MODULES_DOMAIN - Search all Fortran modules.
2503 ALL_DOMAIN - Not valid for this function. */
2504 enum search_domain m_kind;
2505
2506 /* Regular expression to match against the symbol name. */
2507 const char *m_symbol_name_regexp = nullptr;
2508
2509 /* Regular expression to match against the symbol type. */
2510 const char *m_symbol_type_regexp = nullptr;
2511
2512 /* When this flag is false then minsyms that match M_SYMBOL_REGEXP will
2513 be included in the results, otherwise they are excluded. */
2514 bool m_exclude_minsyms = false;
2515
2516 /* Maximum number of search results. We currently impose a hard limit
2517 of SIZE_MAX, there is no "unlimited". */
2518 size_t m_max_search_results = SIZE_MAX;
2519
2520 /* Expand symtabs in OBJFILE that match PREG, are of type M_KIND. Return
2521 true if any msymbols were seen that we should later consider adding to
2522 the results list. */
2523 bool expand_symtabs (objfile *objfile,
2524 const gdb::optional<compiled_regex> &preg) const;
2525
2526 /* Add symbols from symtabs in OBJFILE that match PREG, and TREG, and are
2527 of type M_KIND, to the results set RESULTS_SET. Return false if we
2528 stop adding results early due to having already found too many results
2529 (based on M_MAX_SEARCH_RESULTS limit), otherwise return true.
2530 Returning true does not indicate that any results were added, just
2531 that we didn't _not_ add a result due to reaching MAX_SEARCH_RESULTS. */
2532 bool add_matching_symbols (objfile *objfile,
2533 const gdb::optional<compiled_regex> &preg,
2534 const gdb::optional<compiled_regex> &treg,
2535 std::set<symbol_search> *result_set) const;
2536
2537 /* Add msymbols from OBJFILE that match PREG and M_KIND, to the results
2538 vector RESULTS. Return false if we stop adding results early due to
2539 having already found too many results (based on max search results
2540 limit M_MAX_SEARCH_RESULTS), otherwise return true. Returning true
2541 does not indicate that any results were added, just that we didn't
2542 _not_ add a result due to reaching MAX_SEARCH_RESULTS. */
2543 bool add_matching_msymbols (objfile *objfile,
2544 const gdb::optional<compiled_regex> &preg,
2545 std::vector<symbol_search> *results) const;
2546
2547 /* Return true if MSYMBOL is of type KIND. */
2548 static bool is_suitable_msymbol (const enum search_domain kind,
2549 const minimal_symbol *msymbol);
2550 };
2551
2552 /* When searching for Fortran symbols within modules (functions/variables)
2553 we return a vector of this type. The first item in the pair is the
2554 module symbol, and the second item is the symbol for the function or
2555 variable we found. */
2556 typedef std::pair<symbol_search, symbol_search> module_symbol_search;
2557
2558 /* Searches the symbols to find function and variables symbols (depending
2559 on KIND) within Fortran modules. The MODULE_REGEXP matches against the
2560 name of the module, REGEXP matches against the name of the symbol within
2561 the module, and TYPE_REGEXP matches against the type of the symbol
2562 within the module. */
2563 extern std::vector<module_symbol_search> search_module_symbols
2564 (const char *module_regexp, const char *regexp,
2565 const char *type_regexp, search_domain kind);
2566
2567 /* Convert a global or static symbol SYM (based on BLOCK, which should be
2568 either GLOBAL_BLOCK or STATIC_BLOCK) into a string for use in 'info'
2569 type commands (e.g. 'info variables', 'info functions', etc). KIND is
2570 the type of symbol that was searched for which gave us SYM. */
2571
2572 extern std::string symbol_to_info_string (struct symbol *sym, int block,
2573 enum search_domain kind);
2574
2575 extern bool treg_matches_sym_type_name (const compiled_regex &treg,
2576 const struct symbol *sym);
2577
2578 /* The name of the ``main'' function. */
2579 extern const char *main_name ();
2580 extern enum language main_language (void);
2581
2582 /* Lookup symbol NAME from DOMAIN in MAIN_OBJFILE's global or static blocks,
2583 as specified by BLOCK_INDEX.
2584 This searches MAIN_OBJFILE as well as any associated separate debug info
2585 objfiles of MAIN_OBJFILE.
2586 BLOCK_INDEX can be GLOBAL_BLOCK or STATIC_BLOCK.
2587 Upon success fixes up the symbol's section if necessary. */
2588
2589 extern struct block_symbol
2590 lookup_global_symbol_from_objfile (struct objfile *main_objfile,
2591 enum block_enum block_index,
2592 const char *name,
2593 const domain_enum domain);
2594
2595 /* Return 1 if the supplied producer string matches the ARM RealView
2596 compiler (armcc). */
2597 bool producer_is_realview (const char *producer);
2598
2599 void fixup_section (struct general_symbol_info *ginfo,
2600 CORE_ADDR addr, struct objfile *objfile);
2601
2602 extern unsigned int symtab_create_debug;
2603
2604 extern unsigned int symbol_lookup_debug;
2605
2606 extern bool basenames_may_differ;
2607
2608 bool compare_filenames_for_search (const char *filename,
2609 const char *search_name);
2610
2611 bool compare_glob_filenames_for_search (const char *filename,
2612 const char *search_name);
2613
2614 bool iterate_over_some_symtabs (const char *name,
2615 const char *real_path,
2616 struct compunit_symtab *first,
2617 struct compunit_symtab *after_last,
2618 gdb::function_view<bool (symtab *)> callback);
2619
2620 void iterate_over_symtabs (const char *name,
2621 gdb::function_view<bool (symtab *)> callback);
2622
2623
2624 std::vector<CORE_ADDR> find_pcs_for_symtab_line
2625 (struct symtab *symtab, int line, struct linetable_entry **best_entry);
2626
2627 /* Prototype for callbacks for LA_ITERATE_OVER_SYMBOLS. The callback
2628 is called once per matching symbol SYM. The callback should return
2629 true to indicate that LA_ITERATE_OVER_SYMBOLS should continue
2630 iterating, or false to indicate that the iteration should end. */
2631
2632 typedef bool (symbol_found_callback_ftype) (struct block_symbol *bsym);
2633
2634 /* Iterate over the symbols named NAME, matching DOMAIN, in BLOCK.
2635
2636 For each symbol that matches, CALLBACK is called. The symbol is
2637 passed to the callback.
2638
2639 If CALLBACK returns false, the iteration ends and this function
2640 returns false. Otherwise, the search continues, and the function
2641 eventually returns true. */
2642
2643 bool iterate_over_symbols (const struct block *block,
2644 const lookup_name_info &name,
2645 const domain_enum domain,
2646 gdb::function_view<symbol_found_callback_ftype> callback);
2647
2648 /* Like iterate_over_symbols, but if all calls to CALLBACK return
2649 true, then calls CALLBACK one additional time with a block_symbol
2650 that has a valid block but a NULL symbol. */
2651
2652 bool iterate_over_symbols_terminated
2653 (const struct block *block,
2654 const lookup_name_info &name,
2655 const domain_enum domain,
2656 gdb::function_view<symbol_found_callback_ftype> callback);
2657
2658 /* Storage type used by demangle_for_lookup. demangle_for_lookup
2659 either returns a const char * pointer that points to either of the
2660 fields of this type, or a pointer to the input NAME. This is done
2661 this way to avoid depending on the precise details of the storage
2662 for the string. */
2663 class demangle_result_storage
2664 {
2665 public:
2666
2667 /* Swap the malloc storage to STR, and return a pointer to the
2668 beginning of the new string. */
2669 const char *set_malloc_ptr (gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> &&str)
2670 {
2671 m_malloc = std::move (str);
2672 return m_malloc.get ();
2673 }
2674
2675 /* Set the malloc storage to now point at PTR. Any previous malloc
2676 storage is released. */
2677 const char *set_malloc_ptr (char *ptr)
2678 {
2679 m_malloc.reset (ptr);
2680 return ptr;
2681 }
2682
2683 private:
2684
2685 /* The storage. */
2686 gdb::unique_xmalloc_ptr<char> m_malloc;
2687 };
2688
2689 const char *
2690 demangle_for_lookup (const char *name, enum language lang,
2691 demangle_result_storage &storage);
2692
2693 /* Test to see if the symbol of language SYMBOL_LANGUAGE specified by
2694 SYMNAME (which is already demangled for C++ symbols) matches
2695 SYM_TEXT in the first SYM_TEXT_LEN characters. If so, add it to
2696 the current completion list and return true. Otherwise, return
2697 false. */
2698 bool completion_list_add_name (completion_tracker &tracker,
2699 language symbol_language,
2700 const char *symname,
2701 const lookup_name_info &lookup_name,
2702 const char *text, const char *word);
2703
2704 /* A simple symbol searching class. */
2705
2706 class symbol_searcher
2707 {
2708 public:
2709 /* Returns the symbols found for the search. */
2710 const std::vector<block_symbol> &
2711 matching_symbols () const
2712 {
2713 return m_symbols;
2714 }
2715
2716 /* Returns the minimal symbols found for the search. */
2717 const std::vector<bound_minimal_symbol> &
2718 matching_msymbols () const
2719 {
2720 return m_minimal_symbols;
2721 }
2722
2723 /* Search for all symbols named NAME in LANGUAGE with DOMAIN, restricting
2724 search to FILE_SYMTABS and SEARCH_PSPACE, both of which may be NULL
2725 to search all symtabs and program spaces. */
2726 void find_all_symbols (const std::string &name,
2727 const struct language_defn *language,
2728 enum search_domain search_domain,
2729 std::vector<symtab *> *search_symtabs,
2730 struct program_space *search_pspace);
2731
2732 /* Reset this object to perform another search. */
2733 void reset ()
2734 {
2735 m_symbols.clear ();
2736 m_minimal_symbols.clear ();
2737 }
2738
2739 private:
2740 /* Matching debug symbols. */
2741 std::vector<block_symbol> m_symbols;
2742
2743 /* Matching non-debug symbols. */
2744 std::vector<bound_minimal_symbol> m_minimal_symbols;
2745 };
2746
2747 /* Class used to encapsulate the filename filtering for the "info sources"
2748 command. */
2749
2750 struct info_sources_filter
2751 {
2752 /* If filename filtering is being used (see M_C_REGEXP) then which part
2753 of the filename is being filtered against? */
2754 enum class match_on
2755 {
2756 /* Match against the full filename. */
2757 FULLNAME,
2758
2759 /* Match only against the directory part of the full filename. */
2760 DIRNAME,
2761
2762 /* Match only against the basename part of the full filename. */
2763 BASENAME
2764 };
2765
2766 /* Create a filter of MATCH_TYPE using regular expression REGEXP. If
2767 REGEXP is nullptr then all files will match the filter and MATCH_TYPE
2768 is ignored.
2769
2770 The string pointed too by REGEXP must remain live and unchanged for
2771 this lifetime of this object as the object only retains a copy of the
2772 pointer. */
2773 info_sources_filter (match_on match_type, const char *regexp);
2774
2775 DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (info_sources_filter);
2776
2777 /* Does FULLNAME match the filter defined by this object, return true if
2778 it does, otherwise, return false. If there is no filtering defined
2779 then this function will always return true. */
2780 bool matches (const char *fullname) const;
2781
2782 private:
2783
2784 /* The type of filtering in place. */
2785 match_on m_match_type;
2786
2787 /* Points to the original regexp used to create this filter. */
2788 const char *m_regexp;
2789
2790 /* A compiled version of M_REGEXP. This object is only given a value if
2791 M_REGEXP is not nullptr and is not the empty string. */
2792 gdb::optional<compiled_regex> m_c_regexp;
2793 };
2794
2795 /* Perform the core of the 'info sources' command.
2796
2797 FILTER is used to perform regular expression based filtering on the
2798 source files that will be displayed.
2799
2800 Output is written to UIOUT in CLI or MI style as appropriate. */
2801
2802 extern void info_sources_worker (struct ui_out *uiout,
2803 bool group_by_objfile,
2804 const info_sources_filter &filter);
2805
2806 #endif /* !defined(SYMTAB_H) */