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author | David Henkel-Wallace <gumby@cygnus> | 1991-03-21 21:11:25 +0000 |
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committer | David Henkel-Wallace <gumby@cygnus> | 1991-03-21 21:11:25 +0000 |
commit | 4a81b56152631cda9dc351cb4d2f61f395ee4414 (patch) | |
tree | 562bc9b14bcf414b6c301b769d4ce528c51d4703 /bfd/libbfd.c | |
parent | 907621824e31daf6504860009535f03676afee4d (diff) | |
download | gdb-4a81b56152631cda9dc351cb4d2f61f395ee4414.zip gdb-4a81b56152631cda9dc351cb4d2f61f395ee4414.tar.gz gdb-4a81b56152631cda9dc351cb4d2f61f395ee4414.tar.bz2 |
Initial revision
Diffstat (limited to 'bfd/libbfd.c')
-rw-r--r-- | bfd/libbfd.c | 332 |
1 files changed, 332 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/bfd/libbfd.c b/bfd/libbfd.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9998690 --- /dev/null +++ b/bfd/libbfd.c @@ -0,0 +1,332 @@ +/* Copyright (C) 1990, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Diddler. + +BFD is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) +any later version. + +BFD is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +GNU General Public License for more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +along with BFD; see the file COPYING. If not, write to +the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ + +/* $Id$ */ + +/*** libbfd.c -- random bfd support routines used internally only. */ +#include "sysdep.h" +#include "bfd.h" +#include "libbfd.h" + + + +/** Dummies for targets that don't want or need to implement + certain operations */ + +boolean +_bfd_dummy_new_section_hook (ignore, ignore_newsect) + bfd *ignore; + asection *ignore_newsect; +{ + return true; +} + +boolean +bfd_false (ignore) + bfd *ignore; +{ + return false; +} + +boolean +bfd_true (ignore) + bfd *ignore; +{ + return true; +} + +void * +bfd_nullvoidptr(ignore) +bfd *ignore; +{ + return (void *)NULL; +} +int +bfd_0(ignore) +bfd *ignore; +{ + return 0; +} +unsigned int +bfd_0u(ignore) +bfd *ignore; +{ + return 0; +} + +void +bfd_void(ignore) +bfd *ignore; +{ +} + +boolean +_bfd_dummy_core_file_matches_executable_p (ignore_core_bfd, ignore_exec_bfd) + bfd *ignore_core_bfd; +bfd *ignore_exec_bfd; +{ + bfd_error = invalid_operation; + return false; +} + +/* of course you can't initialize a function to be the same as another, grr */ + +char * +_bfd_dummy_core_file_failing_command (ignore_abfd) + bfd *ignore_abfd; +{ + return (char *)NULL; +} + +int +_bfd_dummy_core_file_failing_signal (ignore_abfd) + bfd *ignore_abfd; +{ + return 0; +} + +bfd_target * +_bfd_dummy_target (ignore_abfd) + bfd *ignore_abfd; +{ + return 0; +} + +/** zalloc -- allocate and clear storage */ + + +#ifndef zalloc +char * +zalloc (size) + size_t size; +{ + char *ptr = malloc (size); + + if ((ptr != NULL) && (size != 0)) + bzero (ptr, size); + + return ptr; +} +#endif + +/* Some IO code */ + + +/* Note that archive entries don't have streams; they share their parent's. + This allows someone to play with the iostream behind bfd's back. + + Also, note that the origin pointer points to the beginning of a file's + contents (0 for non-archive elements). For archive entries this is the + first octet in the file, NOT the beginning of the archive header. */ + +size_t +bfd_read (ptr, size, nitems, abfd) + void *ptr; + size_t size; + size_t nitems; + bfd *abfd; +{ + return fread (ptr, 1, size*nitems, bfd_cache_lookup(abfd)); +} + +size_t +bfd_write (ptr, size, nitems, abfd) + void *ptr; + size_t size; + size_t nitems; + bfd *abfd; +{ + return fwrite (ptr, 1, size*nitems, bfd_cache_lookup(abfd)); +} + +int +bfd_seek (abfd, position, direction) +bfd *abfd; +file_ptr position; +int direction; +{ + /* For the time being, a bfd may not seek to it's end. The + problem is that we don't easily have a way to recognize + the end of an element in an archive. */ + + BFD_ASSERT(direction == SEEK_SET + || direction == SEEK_CUR); + + if (direction == SEEK_SET && abfd->my_archive != NULL) + { + /* This is a set within an archive, so we need to + add the base of the object within the archive */ + return(fseek(bfd_cache_lookup(abfd), + position + abfd->origin, + direction)); + } + else + { + return(fseek(bfd_cache_lookup(abfd), position, direction)); + } +} + +long +bfd_tell (abfd) + bfd *abfd; +{ + file_ptr ptr; + + ptr = ftell (bfd_cache_lookup(abfd)); + + if (abfd->my_archive) + ptr -= abfd->origin; + return ptr; +} + +/** Make a string table */ + +/* Add string to table pointed to by table, at location starting with free_ptr. + resizes the table if necessary (if it's NULL, creates it, ignoring + table_length). Updates free_ptr, table, table_length */ + +boolean +bfd_add_to_string_table (table, new_string, table_length, free_ptr) + char **table, **free_ptr; + char *new_string; + unsigned int *table_length; +{ + size_t string_length = strlen (new_string) + 1; /* include null here */ + char *base = *table; + size_t space_length = *table_length; + unsigned int offset = (base ? *free_ptr - base : 0); + + if (base == NULL) { + /* Avoid a useless regrow if we can (but of course we still + take it next time */ + space_length = (string_length < DEFAULT_STRING_SPACE_SIZE ? + DEFAULT_STRING_SPACE_SIZE : string_length+1); + base = zalloc (space_length); + + if (base == NULL) { + bfd_error = no_memory; + return false; + } + } + + if ((size_t)(offset + string_length) >= space_length) { + /* Make sure we will have enough space */ + while ((size_t)(offset + string_length) >= space_length) + space_length += space_length/2; /* grow by 50% */ + + base = (char *) realloc (base, space_length); + if (base == NULL) { + bfd_error = no_memory; + return false; + } + + } + + memcpy (base + offset, new_string, string_length); + *table = base; + *table_length = space_length; + *free_ptr = base + offset + string_length; + + return true; +} + +/** The do-it-yourself (byte) sex-change kit */ + +/* The middle letter e.g. get<b>short indicates Big or Little endian + target machine. It doesn't matter what the byte order of the host + machine is; these routines work for either. */ + +/* FIXME: Should these take a count argument? + Answer (gnu@cygnus.com): No, but perhaps they should be inline + functions in swap.h #ifdef __GNUC__. + Gprof them later and find out. */ + +short +_do_getbshort (addr) + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + return (addr[0] << 8) | addr[1]; +} + +short +_do_getlshort (addr) + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + return (addr[1] << 8) | addr[0]; +} + +void +_do_putbshort (data, addr) + int data; /* Actually short, but ansi C sucks */ + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + addr[0] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8); + addr[1] = (bfd_byte )data; +} + +void +_do_putlshort (data, addr) + int data; /* Actually short, but ansi C sucks */ + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + addr[0] = (bfd_byte )data; + addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8); +} + +long +_do_getblong (addr) + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + return ((((addr[0] << 8) | addr[1]) << 8) | addr[2]) << 8 | addr[3]; +} + +long +_do_getllong (addr) + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + return ((((addr[3] << 8) | addr[2]) << 8) | addr[1]) << 8 | addr[0]; +} + +void +_do_putblong (data, addr) + unsigned long data; + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + addr[0] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 24); + addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 16); + addr[2] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8); + addr[3] = (bfd_byte)data; +} + +void +_do_putllong (data, addr) + unsigned long data; + register bfd_byte *addr; +{ + addr[0] = (bfd_byte)data; + addr[1] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 8); + addr[2] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 16); + addr[3] = (bfd_byte)(data >> 24); +} + + + + + + + |