nbfd->direction = no_direction;
nbfd->iostream = NULL;
nbfd->where = 0;
- if (!bfd_hash_table_init (&nbfd->section_htab, bfd_section_hash_newfunc))
+ if (!bfd_hash_table_init_n (&nbfd->section_htab,
+ bfd_section_hash_newfunc,
+ 251))
{
free (nbfd);
return NULL;
bfd_openr
SYNOPSIS
- bfd *bfd_openr(const char *filename, const char *target);
+ bfd *bfd_openr(const char *filename, const char *target);
DESCRIPTION
Open the file @var{filename} (using <<fopen>>) with the target
that function.
If <<NULL>> is returned then an error has occured. Possible errors
- are <<bfd_error_no_memory>>, <<bfd_error_invalid_target>> or <<system_call>> error.
+ are <<bfd_error_no_memory>>, <<bfd_error_invalid_target>> or
+ <<system_call>> error.
*/
bfd *
the file descriptor too, even though we didn't open it. */
/*
FUNCTION
- bfd_fdopenr
+ bfd_fdopenr
SYNOPSIS
- bfd *bfd_fdopenr(const char *filename, const char *target, int fd);
+ bfd *bfd_fdopenr(const char *filename, const char *target, int fd);
DESCRIPTION
- <<bfd_fdopenr>> is to <<bfd_fopenr>> much like <<fdopen>> is to <<fopen>>.
- It opens a BFD on a file already described by the @var{fd}
- supplied.
-
- When the file is later <<bfd_close>>d, the file descriptor will be closed.
-
- If the caller desires that this file descriptor be cached by BFD
- (opened as needed, closed as needed to free descriptors for
- other opens), with the supplied @var{fd} used as an initial
- file descriptor (but subject to closure at any time), call
- bfd_set_cacheable(bfd, 1) on the returned BFD. The default is to
- assume no cacheing; the file descriptor will remain open until
- <<bfd_close>>, and will not be affected by BFD operations on other
- files.
-
- Possible errors are <<bfd_error_no_memory>>, <<bfd_error_invalid_target>> and <<bfd_error_system_call>>.
+ <<bfd_fdopenr>> is to <<bfd_fopenr>> much like <<fdopen>> is to
+ <<fopen>>. It opens a BFD on a file already described by the
+ @var{fd} supplied.
+
+ When the file is later <<bfd_close>>d, the file descriptor will
+ be closed. If the caller desires that this file descriptor be
+ cached by BFD (opened as needed, closed as needed to free
+ descriptors for other opens), with the supplied @var{fd} used as
+ an initial file descriptor (but subject to closure at any time),
+ call bfd_set_cacheable(bfd, 1) on the returned BFD. The default
+ is to assume no cacheing; the file descriptor will remain open
+ until <<bfd_close>>, and will not be affected by BFD operations
+ on other files.
+
+ Possible errors are <<bfd_error_no_memory>>,
+ <<bfd_error_invalid_target>> and <<bfd_error_system_call>>.
*/
bfd *
DESCRIPTION
- Close a BFD. If the BFD was open for writing,
- then pending operations are completed and the file written out
- and closed. If the created file is executable, then
- <<chmod>> is called to mark it as such.
+ Close a BFD. If the BFD was open for writing, then pending
+ operations are completed and the file written out and closed.
+ If the created file is executable, then <<chmod>> is called
+ to mark it as such.
All memory attached to the BFD is released.
if (stat (abfd->filename, &buf) == 0)
{
- unsigned int mask = umask (0);
+ unsigned int mask = umask (0);
umask (mask);
chmod (abfd->filename,
boolean bfd_close_all_done(bfd *);
DESCRIPTION
- Close a BFD. Differs from <<bfd_close>>
- since it does not complete any pending operations. This
- routine would be used if the application had just used BFD for
- swapping and didn't want to use any of the writing code.
+ Close a BFD. Differs from <<bfd_close>> since it does not
+ complete any pending operations. This routine would be used
+ if the application had just used BFD for swapping and didn't
+ want to use any of the writing code.
If the created file is executable, then <<chmod>> is called
to mark it as such.
bfd *bfd_create(const char *filename, bfd *templ);
DESCRIPTION
- Create a new BFD in the manner of
- <<bfd_openw>>, but without opening a file. The new BFD
- takes the target from the target used by @var{template}. The
- format is always set to <<bfd_object>>.
+ Create a new BFD in the manner of <<bfd_openw>>, but without
+ opening a file. The new BFD takes the target from the target
+ used by @var{template}. The format is always set to <<bfd_object>>.
*/
bfd *