1\input texinfo @c -*- Texinfo -*- 2@setfilename binutils.info 3@settitle @sc{gnu} Binary Utilities 4@finalout 5@synindex ky cp 6 7@c man begin INCLUDE 8@include bfdver.texi 9@c man end 10 11@copying 12@c man begin COPYRIGHT 13Copyright @copyright{} 1991-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 14 15Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document 16under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 17or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; 18with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no 19Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the 20section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. 21 22@c man end 23@end copying 24 25@dircategory Software development 26@direntry 27* Binutils: (binutils). The GNU binary utilities. 28@end direntry 29 30@dircategory Individual utilities 31@direntry 32* addr2line: (binutils)addr2line. Convert addresses to file and line. 33* ar: (binutils)ar. Create, modify, and extract from archives. 34* c++filt: (binutils)c++filt. Filter to demangle encoded C++ symbols. 35* cxxfilt: (binutils)c++filt. MS-DOS name for c++filt. 36* dlltool: (binutils)dlltool. Create files needed to build and use DLLs. 37* nm: (binutils)nm. List symbols from object files. 38* objcopy: (binutils)objcopy. Copy and translate object files. 39* objdump: (binutils)objdump. Display information from object files. 40* ranlib: (binutils)ranlib. Generate index to archive contents. 41* readelf: (binutils)readelf. Display the contents of ELF format files. 42* size: (binutils)size. List section sizes and total size. 43* strings: (binutils)strings. List printable strings from files. 44* strip: (binutils)strip. Discard symbols. 45* elfedit: (binutils)elfedit. Update ELF header and property of ELF files. 46* windmc: (binutils)windmc. Generator for Windows message resources. 47* windres: (binutils)windres. Manipulate Windows resources. 48@end direntry 49 50@titlepage 51@title The @sc{gnu} Binary Utilities 52@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE 53@subtitle @value{VERSION_PACKAGE} 54@end ifset 55@subtitle Version @value{VERSION} 56@sp 1 57@subtitle @value{UPDATED} 58@author Roland H. Pesch 59@author Jeffrey M. Osier 60@author Cygnus Support 61@page 62 63@tex 64{\parskip=0pt \hfill Cygnus Support\par \hfill 65Texinfo \texinfoversion\par } 66@end tex 67 68@vskip 0pt plus 1filll 69@insertcopying 70@end titlepage 71@contents 72 73@node Top 74@top Introduction 75 76@cindex version 77This brief manual contains documentation for the @sc{gnu} binary 78utilities 79@ifset VERSION_PACKAGE 80@value{VERSION_PACKAGE} 81@end ifset 82version @value{VERSION}: 83 84@iftex 85@table @code 86@item ar 87Create, modify, and extract from archives 88 89@item nm 90List symbols from object files 91 92@item objcopy 93Copy and translate object files 94 95@item objdump 96Display information from object files 97 98@item ranlib 99Generate index to archive contents 100 101@item readelf 102Display the contents of ELF format files. 103 104@item size 105List file section sizes and total size 106 107@item strings 108List printable strings from files 109 110@item strip 111Discard symbols 112 113@item elfedit 114Update the ELF header and program property of ELF files. 115 116@item c++filt 117Demangle encoded C++ symbols (on MS-DOS, this program is named 118@code{cxxfilt}) 119 120@item addr2line 121Convert addresses or symbol+offset into file names and line numbers 122 123@item windres 124Manipulate Windows resources 125 126@item windmc 127Generator for Windows message resources 128 129@item dlltool 130Create the files needed to build and use Dynamic Link Libraries 131@end table 132@end iftex 133 134This document is distributed under the terms of the GNU Free 135Documentation License version 1.3. A copy of the license is included 136in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. 137 138@menu 139* ar:: Create, modify, and extract from archives 140* nm:: List symbols from object files 141* objcopy:: Copy and translate object files 142* objdump:: Display information from object files 143* ranlib:: Generate index to archive contents 144* size:: List section sizes and total size 145* strings:: List printable strings from files 146* strip:: Discard symbols 147* c++filt:: Filter to demangle encoded C++ symbols 148* cxxfilt: c++filt. MS-DOS name for c++filt 149* addr2line:: Convert addresses or symbol+offset to file and line 150* windmc:: Generator for Windows message resources 151* windres:: Manipulate Windows resources 152* dlltool:: Create files needed to build and use DLLs 153* readelf:: Display the contents of ELF format files 154* elfedit:: Update ELF header and property of ELF files 155* Common Options:: Command-line options for all utilities 156* Selecting the Target System:: How these utilities determine the target 157* debuginfod:: Using binutils with debuginfod 158* Reporting Bugs:: Reporting Bugs 159* GNU Free Documentation License:: GNU Free Documentation License 160* Binutils Index:: Binutils Index 161@end menu 162 163@node ar 164@chapter ar 165 166@kindex ar 167@cindex archives 168@cindex collections of files 169 170@c man title ar create, modify, and extract from archives 171 172@smallexample 173ar [-]@var{p}[@var{mod}] [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [@option{--target} @var{bfdname}] [@option{--output} @var{dirname}] [@option{--record-libdeps} @var{libdeps}] [@var{relpos}] [@var{count}] @var{archive} [@var{member}@dots{}] 174ar -M [ <mri-script ] 175@end smallexample 176 177@c man begin DESCRIPTION ar 178 179The @sc{gnu} @command{ar} program creates, modifies, and extracts from 180archives. An @dfn{archive} is a single file holding a collection of 181other files in a structure that makes it possible to retrieve 182the original individual files (called @dfn{members} of the archive). 183 184The original files' contents, mode (permissions), timestamp, owner, and 185group are preserved in the archive, and can be restored on 186extraction. 187 188@cindex name length 189@sc{gnu} @command{ar} can maintain archives whose members have names of any 190length; however, depending on how @command{ar} is configured on your 191system, a limit on member-name length may be imposed for compatibility 192with archive formats maintained with other tools. If it exists, the 193limit is often 15 characters (typical of formats related to a.out) or 16 194characters (typical of formats related to coff). 195 196@cindex libraries 197@command{ar} is considered a binary utility because archives of this sort 198are most often used as @dfn{libraries} holding commonly needed 199subroutines. Since libraries often will depend on other libraries, 200@command{ar} can also record the dependencies of a library when the 201@option{--record-libdeps} option is specified. 202 203@cindex symbol index 204@command{ar} creates an index to the symbols defined in relocatable 205object modules in the archive when you specify the modifier @samp{s}. 206Once created, this index is updated in the archive whenever @command{ar} 207makes a change to its contents (save for the @samp{q} update operation). 208An archive with such an index speeds up linking to the library, and 209allows routines in the library to call each other without regard to 210their placement in the archive. 211 212You may use @samp{nm -s} or @samp{nm --print-armap} to list this index 213table. If an archive lacks the table, another form of @command{ar} called 214@command{ranlib} can be used to add just the table. 215 216@cindex thin archives 217@sc{gnu} @command{ar} can optionally create a @emph{thin} archive, 218which contains a symbol index and references to the original copies 219of the member files of the archive. This is useful for building 220libraries for use within a local build tree, where the relocatable 221objects are expected to remain available, and copying the contents of 222each object would only waste time and space. 223 224An archive can either be @emph{thin} or it can be normal. It cannot 225be both at the same time. Once an archive is created its format 226cannot be changed without first deleting it and then creating a new 227archive in its place. 228 229Thin archives are also @emph{flattened}, so that adding one thin 230archive to another thin archive does not nest it, as would happen with 231a normal archive. Instead the elements of the first archive are added 232individually to the second archive. 233 234The paths to the elements of the archive are stored relative to the 235archive itself. 236 237@cindex compatibility, @command{ar} 238@cindex @command{ar} compatibility 239@sc{gnu} @command{ar} is designed to be compatible with two different 240facilities. You can control its activity using command-line options, 241like the different varieties of @command{ar} on Unix systems; or, if you 242specify the single command-line option @option{-M}, you can control it 243with a script supplied via standard input, like the MRI ``librarian'' 244program. 245 246@c man end 247 248@menu 249* ar cmdline:: Controlling @command{ar} on the command line 250* ar scripts:: Controlling @command{ar} with a script 251@end menu 252 253@page 254@node ar cmdline 255@section Controlling @command{ar} on the Command Line 256 257@smallexample 258@c man begin SYNOPSIS ar 259ar [@option{-X32_64}] [@option{-}]@var{p}[@var{mod}] [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [@option{--target} @var{bfdname}] [@option{--output} @var{dirname}] [@option{--record-libdeps} @var{libdeps}] [@option{--thin}] [@var{relpos}] [@var{count}] @var{archive} [@var{member}@dots{}] 260@c man end 261@end smallexample 262 263@cindex Unix compatibility, @command{ar} 264When you use @command{ar} in the Unix style, @command{ar} insists on at least two 265arguments to execute: one keyletter specifying the @emph{operation} 266(optionally accompanied by other keyletters specifying 267@emph{modifiers}), and the archive name to act on. 268 269Most operations can also accept further @var{member} arguments, 270specifying particular files to operate on. 271 272@c man begin OPTIONS ar 273 274@sc{gnu} @command{ar} allows you to mix the operation code @var{p} and modifier 275flags @var{mod} in any order, within the first command-line argument. 276 277If you wish, you may begin the first command-line argument with a 278dash. 279 280@cindex operations on archive 281The @var{p} keyletter specifies what operation to execute; it may be 282any of the following, but you must specify only one of them: 283 284@table @samp 285@item d 286@cindex deleting from archive 287@emph{Delete} modules from the archive. Specify the names of modules to 288be deleted as @var{member}@dots{}; the archive is untouched if you 289specify no files to delete. 290 291If you specify the @samp{v} modifier, @command{ar} lists each module 292as it is deleted. 293 294@item m 295@cindex moving in archive 296Use this operation to @emph{move} members in an archive. 297 298The ordering of members in an archive can make a difference in how 299programs are linked using the library, if a symbol is defined in more 300than one member. 301 302If no modifiers are used with @code{m}, any members you name in the 303@var{member} arguments are moved to the @emph{end} of the archive; 304you can use the @samp{a}, @samp{b}, or @samp{i} modifiers to move them to a 305specified place instead. 306 307@item p 308@cindex printing from archive 309@emph{Print} the specified members of the archive, to the standard 310output file. If the @samp{v} modifier is specified, show the member 311name before copying its contents to standard output. 312 313If you specify no @var{member} arguments, all the files in the archive are 314printed. 315 316@item q 317@cindex quick append to archive 318@emph{Quick append}; Historically, add the files @var{member}@dots{} to the end of 319@var{archive}, without checking for replacement. 320 321The modifiers @samp{a}, @samp{b}, and @samp{i} do @emph{not} affect this 322operation; new members are always placed at the end of the archive. 323 324The modifier @samp{v} makes @command{ar} list each file as it is appended. 325 326Since the point of this operation is speed, implementations of 327@command{ar} have the option of not updating the archive's symbol 328table if one exists. Too many different systems however assume that 329symbol tables are always up-to-date, so @sc{gnu} @command{ar} will 330rebuild the table even with a quick append. 331 332Note - @sc{gnu} @command{ar} treats the command @samp{qs} as a 333synonym for @samp{r} - replacing already existing files in the 334archive and appending new ones at the end. 335 336@item r 337@cindex replacement in archive 338Insert the files @var{member}@dots{} into @var{archive} (with 339@emph{replacement}). This operation differs from @samp{q} in that any 340previously existing members are deleted if their names match those being 341added. 342 343If one of the files named in @var{member}@dots{} does not exist, @command{ar} 344displays an error message, and leaves undisturbed any existing members 345of the archive matching that name. 346 347By default, new members are added at the end of the file; but you may 348use one of the modifiers @samp{a}, @samp{b}, or @samp{i} to request 349placement relative to some existing member. 350 351The modifier @samp{v} used with this operation elicits a line of 352output for each file inserted, along with one of the letters @samp{a} or 353@samp{r} to indicate whether the file was appended (no old member 354deleted) or replaced. 355 356@item s 357@cindex ranlib 358Add an index to the archive, or update it if it already exists. Note 359this command is an exception to the rule that there can only be one 360command letter, as it is possible to use it as either a command or a 361modifier. In either case it does the same thing. 362 363@item t 364@cindex contents of archive 365Display a @emph{table} listing the contents of @var{archive}, or those 366of the files listed in @var{member}@dots{} that are present in the 367archive. Normally only the member name is shown, but if the modifier 368@samp{O} is specified, then the corresponding offset of the member is also 369displayed. Finally, in order to see the modes (permissions), timestamp, 370owner, group, and size the @samp{v} modifier should be included. 371 372If you do not specify a @var{member}, all files in the archive 373are listed. 374 375@cindex repeated names in archive 376@cindex name duplication in archive 377If there is more than one file with the same name (say, @samp{fie}) in 378an archive (say @samp{b.a}), @samp{ar t b.a fie} lists only the 379first instance; to see them all, you must ask for a complete 380listing---in our example, @samp{ar t b.a}. 381@c WRS only; per Gumby, this is implementation-dependent, and in a more 382@c recent case in fact works the other way. 383 384@item x 385@cindex extract from archive 386@emph{Extract} members (named @var{member}) from the archive. You can 387use the @samp{v} modifier with this operation, to request that 388@command{ar} list each name as it extracts it. 389 390If you do not specify a @var{member}, all files in the archive 391are extracted. 392 393Files cannot be extracted from a thin archive, and there are 394restrictions on extracting from archives created with @option{P}: The 395paths must not be absolute, may not contain @code{..}, and any 396subdirectories in the paths must exist. If it is desired to avoid 397these restrictions then used the @option{--output} option to specify 398an output directory. 399@end table 400 401A number of modifiers (@var{mod}) may immediately follow the @var{p} 402keyletter, to specify variations on an operation's behavior: 403 404@table @samp 405@item a 406@cindex relative placement in archive 407Add new files @emph{after} an existing member of the 408archive. If you use the modifier @samp{a}, the name of an existing archive 409member must be present as the @var{relpos} argument, before the 410@var{archive} specification. 411 412@item b 413Add new files @emph{before} an existing member of the 414archive. If you use the modifier @samp{b}, the name of an existing archive 415member must be present as the @var{relpos} argument, before the 416@var{archive} specification. (same as @samp{i}). 417 418@item c 419@cindex creating archives 420@emph{Create} the archive. The specified @var{archive} is always 421created if it did not exist, when you request an update. But a warning is 422issued unless you specify in advance that you expect to create it, by 423using this modifier. 424 425@item D 426@cindex deterministic archives 427@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 428Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. When adding files and the archive 429index use zero for UIDs, GIDs, timestamps, and use consistent file modes 430for all files. When this option is used, if @command{ar} is used with 431identical options and identical input files, multiple runs will create 432identical output files regardless of the input files' owners, groups, 433file modes, or modification times. 434 435If @file{binutils} was configured with 436@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by default. 437It can be disabled with the @samp{U} modifier, below. 438 439@item f 440Truncate names in the archive. @sc{gnu} @command{ar} will normally permit file 441names of any length. This will cause it to create archives which are 442not compatible with the native @command{ar} program on some systems. If 443this is a concern, the @samp{f} modifier may be used to truncate file 444names when putting them in the archive. 445 446@item i 447Insert new files @emph{before} an existing member of the 448archive. If you use the modifier @samp{i}, the name of an existing archive 449member must be present as the @var{relpos} argument, before the 450@var{archive} specification. (same as @samp{b}). 451 452@item l 453@c This modifier was accepted but not used. 454@c whaffor ar l modifier??? presumably compat; with 455@c what???---doc@@cygnus.com, 25jan91 456Specify dependencies of this library. The dependencies must immediately 457follow this option character, must use the same syntax as the linker 458command line, and must be specified within a single argument. I.e., if 459multiple items are needed, they must be quoted to form a single command 460line argument. For example @samp{L "-L/usr/local/lib -lmydep1 -lmydep2"} 461 462@item N 463Uses the @var{count} parameter. This is used if there are multiple 464entries in the archive with the same name. Extract or delete instance 465@var{count} of the given name from the archive. 466 467@item o 468@cindex dates in archive 469Preserve the @emph{original} dates of members when extracting them. If 470you do not specify this modifier, files extracted from the archive 471are stamped with the time of extraction. 472 473@item O 474@cindex offsets of files 475Display member offsets inside the archive. Use together with the @samp{t} 476option. 477 478@item P 479Use the full path name when matching or storing names in the archive. 480Archives created with full path names are not POSIX compliant, and 481thus may not work with tools other than up to date @sc{gnu} tools. 482Modifying such archives with @sc{gnu} @command{ar} without using 483@option{P} will remove the full path names unless the archive is a 484thin archive. Note that @option{P} may be useful when adding files to 485a thin archive since @option{r} without @option{P} ignores the path 486when choosing which element to replace. Thus 487@smallexample 488ar rcST archive.a subdir/file1 subdir/file2 file1 489@end smallexample 490will result in the first @code{subdir/file1} being replaced with 491@code{file1} from the current directory. Adding @option{P} will 492prevent this replacement. 493 494@item s 495@cindex writing archive index 496Write an object-file index into the archive, or update an existing one, 497even if no other change is made to the archive. You may use this modifier 498flag either with any operation, or alone. Running @samp{ar s} on an 499archive is equivalent to running @samp{ranlib} on it. 500 501@item S 502@cindex not writing archive index 503Do not generate an archive symbol table. This can speed up building a 504large library in several steps. The resulting archive can not be used 505with the linker. In order to build a symbol table, you must omit the 506@samp{S} modifier on the last execution of @samp{ar}, or you must run 507@samp{ranlib} on the archive. 508 509@item T 510Deprecated alias for @option{--thin}. @option{T} is not recommended because in 511many ar implementations @option{T} has a different meaning, as specified by 512X/Open System Interface. 513 514@item u 515@cindex updating an archive 516Normally, @samp{ar r}@dots{} inserts all files 517listed into the archive. If you would like to insert @emph{only} those 518of the files you list that are newer than existing members of the same 519names, use this modifier. The @samp{u} modifier is allowed only for the 520operation @samp{r} (replace). In particular, the combination @samp{qu} is 521not allowed, since checking the timestamps would lose any speed 522advantage from the operation @samp{q}. 523 524@item U 525@cindex deterministic archives 526@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 527Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the inverse 528of the @samp{D} modifier, above: added files and the archive index will 529get their actual UID, GID, timestamp, and file mode values. 530 531This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with 532@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}. 533 534@item v 535This modifier requests the @emph{verbose} version of an operation. Many 536operations display additional information, such as filenames processed, 537when the modifier @samp{v} is appended. 538 539@item V 540This modifier shows the version number of @command{ar}. 541@end table 542 543The @command{ar} program also supports some command-line options which 544are neither modifiers nor actions, but which do change its behaviour 545in specific ways: 546 547@table @samp 548@item --help 549Displays the list of command-line options supported by @command{ar} 550and then exits. 551 552@item --version 553Displays the version information of @command{ar} and then exits. 554 555@item -X32_64 556@command{ar} ignores an initial option spelled @samp{-X32_64}, for 557compatibility with AIX. The behaviour produced by this option is the 558default for @sc{gnu} @command{ar}. @command{ar} does not support any 559of the other @samp{-X} options; in particular, it does not support 560@option{-X32} which is the default for AIX @command{ar}. 561 562@item --plugin @var{name} 563@cindex plugins 564The optional command-line switch @option{--plugin @var{name}} causes 565@command{ar} to load the plugin called @var{name} which adds support 566for more file formats, including object files with link-time 567optimization information. 568 569This option is only available if the toolchain has been built with 570plugin support enabled. 571 572If @option{--plugin} is not provided, but plugin support has been 573enabled then @command{ar} iterates over the files in 574@file{$@{libdir@}/bfd-plugins} in alphabetic order and the first 575plugin that claims the object in question is used. 576 577Please note that this plugin search directory is @emph{not} the one 578used by @command{ld}'s @option{-plugin} option. In order to make 579@command{ar} use the linker plugin it must be copied into the 580@file{$@{libdir@}/bfd-plugins} directory. For GCC based compilations 581the linker plugin is called @file{liblto_plugin.so.0.0.0}. For Clang 582based compilations it is called @file{LLVMgold.so}. The GCC plugin 583is always backwards compatible with earlier versions, so it is 584sufficient to just copy the newest one. 585 586@item --target @var{target} 587The optional command-line switch @option{--target @var{bfdname}} 588specifies that the archive members are in an object code format 589different from your system's default format. See 590@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 591 592@item --output @var{dirname} 593The @option{--output} option can be used to specify a path to a 594directory into which archive members should be extracted. If this 595option is not specified then the current directory will be used. 596 597Note - although the presence of this option does imply a @option{x} 598extraction operation that option must still be included on the command 599line. 600 601@item --record-libdeps @var{libdeps} 602The @option{--record-libdeps} option is identical to the @option{l} modifier, 603just handled in long form. 604 605@item --thin 606@cindex creating thin archive 607Make the specified @var{archive} a @emph{thin} archive. If it already 608exists and is a regular archive, the existing members must be present 609in the same directory as @var{archive}. 610 611@end table 612@c man end 613 614@ignore 615@c man begin SEEALSO ar 616nm(1), ranlib(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 617@c man end 618@end ignore 619 620@node ar scripts 621@section Controlling @command{ar} with a Script 622 623@smallexample 624ar -M [ <@var{script} ] 625@end smallexample 626 627@cindex MRI compatibility, @command{ar} 628@cindex scripts, @command{ar} 629If you use the single command-line option @samp{-M} with @command{ar}, you 630can control its operation with a rudimentary command language. This 631form of @command{ar} operates interactively if standard input is coming 632directly from a terminal. During interactive use, @command{ar} prompts for 633input (the prompt is @samp{AR >}), and continues executing even after 634errors. If you redirect standard input to a script file, no prompts are 635issued, and @command{ar} abandons execution (with a nonzero exit code) 636on any error. 637 638The @command{ar} command language is @emph{not} designed to be equivalent 639to the command-line options; in fact, it provides somewhat less control 640over archives. The only purpose of the command language is to ease the 641transition to @sc{gnu} @command{ar} for developers who already have scripts 642written for the MRI ``librarian'' program. 643 644The syntax for the @command{ar} command language is straightforward: 645@itemize @bullet 646@item 647commands are recognized in upper or lower case; for example, @code{LIST} 648is the same as @code{list}. In the following descriptions, commands are 649shown in upper case for clarity. 650 651@item 652a single command may appear on each line; it is the first word on the 653line. 654 655@item 656empty lines are allowed, and have no effect. 657 658@item 659comments are allowed; text after either of the characters @samp{*} 660or @samp{;} is ignored. 661 662@item 663Whenever you use a list of names as part of the argument to an @command{ar} 664command, you can separate the individual names with either commas or 665blanks. Commas are shown in the explanations below, for clarity. 666 667@item 668@samp{+} is used as a line continuation character; if @samp{+} appears 669at the end of a line, the text on the following line is considered part 670of the current command. 671@end itemize 672 673Here are the commands you can use in @command{ar} scripts, or when using 674@command{ar} interactively. Three of them have special significance: 675 676@code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE} specify a @dfn{current archive}, which is 677a temporary file required for most of the other commands. 678 679@code{SAVE} commits the changes so far specified by the script. Prior 680to @code{SAVE}, commands affect only the temporary copy of the current 681archive. 682 683@table @code 684@item ADDLIB @var{archive} 685@itemx ADDLIB @var{archive} (@var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}) 686Add all the contents of @var{archive} (or, if specified, each named 687@var{module} from @var{archive}) to the current archive. 688 689Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 690 691@item ADDMOD @var{member}, @var{member}, @dots{} @var{member} 692@c FIXME! w/Replacement?? If so, like "ar r @var{archive} @var{names}" 693@c else like "ar q..." 694Add each named @var{member} as a module in the current archive. 695 696Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 697 698@item CLEAR 699Discard the contents of the current archive, canceling the effect of 700any operations since the last @code{SAVE}. May be executed (with no 701effect) even if no current archive is specified. 702 703@item CREATE @var{archive} 704Creates an archive, and makes it the current archive (required for many 705other commands). The new archive is created with a temporary name; it 706is not actually saved as @var{archive} until you use @code{SAVE}. 707You can overwrite existing archives; similarly, the contents of any 708existing file named @var{archive} will not be destroyed until @code{SAVE}. 709 710@item DELETE @var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module} 711Delete each listed @var{module} from the current archive; equivalent to 712@samp{ar -d @var{archive} @var{module} @dots{} @var{module}}. 713 714Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 715 716@item DIRECTORY @var{archive} (@var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}) 717@itemx DIRECTORY @var{archive} (@var{module}, @dots{} @var{module}) @var{outputfile} 718List each named @var{module} present in @var{archive}. The separate 719command @code{VERBOSE} specifies the form of the output: when verbose 720output is off, output is like that of @samp{ar -t @var{archive} 721@var{module}@dots{}}. When verbose output is on, the listing is like 722@samp{ar -tv @var{archive} @var{module}@dots{}}. 723 724Output normally goes to the standard output stream; however, if you 725specify @var{outputfile} as a final argument, @command{ar} directs the 726output to that file. 727 728@item END 729Exit from @command{ar}, with a @code{0} exit code to indicate successful 730completion. This command does not save the output file; if you have 731changed the current archive since the last @code{SAVE} command, those 732changes are lost. 733 734@item EXTRACT @var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module} 735Extract each named @var{module} from the current archive, writing them 736into the current directory as separate files. Equivalent to @samp{ar -x 737@var{archive} @var{module}@dots{}}. 738 739Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 740 741@ignore 742@c FIXME Tokens but no commands??? 743@item FULLDIR 744 745@item HELP 746@end ignore 747 748@item LIST 749Display full contents of the current archive, in ``verbose'' style 750regardless of the state of @code{VERBOSE}. The effect is like @samp{ar 751tv @var{archive}}. (This single command is a @sc{gnu} @command{ar} 752enhancement, rather than present for MRI compatibility.) 753 754Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 755 756@item OPEN @var{archive} 757Opens an existing archive for use as the current archive (required for 758many other commands). Any changes as the result of subsequent commands 759will not actually affect @var{archive} until you next use @code{SAVE}. 760 761@item REPLACE @var{module}, @var{module}, @dots{} @var{module} 762In the current archive, replace each existing @var{module} (named in 763the @code{REPLACE} arguments) from files in the current working directory. 764To execute this command without errors, both the file, and the module in 765the current archive, must exist. 766 767Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 768 769@item VERBOSE 770Toggle an internal flag governing the output from @code{DIRECTORY}. 771When the flag is on, @code{DIRECTORY} output matches output from 772@samp{ar -tv }@dots{}. 773 774@item SAVE 775Commit your changes to the current archive, and actually save it as a 776file with the name specified in the last @code{CREATE} or @code{OPEN} 777command. 778 779Requires prior use of @code{OPEN} or @code{CREATE}. 780 781@end table 782 783@iftex 784@node ld 785@chapter ld 786@cindex linker 787@kindex ld 788The @sc{gnu} linker @command{ld} is now described in a separate manual. 789@xref{Top,, Overview,, Using LD: the @sc{gnu} linker}. 790@end iftex 791 792@node nm 793@chapter nm 794@cindex symbols 795@kindex nm 796 797@c man title nm list symbols from object files 798 799@smallexample 800@c man begin SYNOPSIS nm 801nm [@option{-A}|@option{-o}|@option{--print-file-name}] 802 [@option{-a}|@option{--debug-syms}] 803 [@option{-B}|@option{--format=bsd}] 804 [@option{-C}|@option{--demangle}[=@var{style}]] 805 [@option{-D}|@option{--dynamic}] 806 [@option{-f}@var{format}|@option{--format=}@var{format}] 807 [@option{-g}|@option{--extern-only}] 808 [@option{-h}|@option{--help}] 809 [@option{--ifunc-chars=@var{CHARS}}] 810 [@option{-j}|@option{--format=just-symbols}] 811 [@option{-l}|@option{--line-numbers}] [@option{--inlines}] 812 [@option{-n}|@option{-v}|@option{--numeric-sort}] 813 [@option{-P}|@option{--portability}] 814 [@option{-p}|@option{--no-sort}] 815 [@option{-r}|@option{--reverse-sort}] 816 [@option{-S}|@option{--print-size}] 817 [@option{-s}|@option{--print-armap}] 818 [@option{-t} @var{radix}|@option{--radix=}@var{radix}] 819 [@option{-u}|@option{--undefined-only}] 820 [@option{-U}|@option{--defined-only}] 821 [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 822 [@option{-W}|@option{--no-weak}] 823 [@option{-X 32_64}] 824 [@option{--no-demangle}] 825 [@option{--no-recurse-limit}|@option{--recurse-limit}]] 826 [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] 827 [@option{--size-sort}] 828 [@option{--special-syms}] 829 [@option{--synthetic}] 830 [@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] 831 [@option{--unicode=}@var{method}] 832 [@option{--with-symbol-versions}] 833 [@option{--without-symbol-versions}] 834 [@var{objfile}@dots{}] 835@c man end 836@end smallexample 837 838@c man begin DESCRIPTION nm 839@sc{gnu} @command{nm} lists the symbols from object files @var{objfile}@dots{}. 840If no object files are listed as arguments, @command{nm} assumes the file 841@file{a.out}. 842 843For each symbol, @command{nm} shows: 844 845@itemize @bullet 846@item 847The symbol value, in the radix selected by options (see below), or 848hexadecimal by default. 849 850@item 851The symbol type. At least the following types are used; others are, as 852well, depending on the object file format. If lowercase, the symbol is 853usually local; if uppercase, the symbol is global (external). There 854are however a few lowercase symbols that are shown for special global 855symbols (@code{u}, @code{v} and @code{w}). 856 857@c Some more detail on exactly what these symbol types are used for 858@c would be nice. 859@table @code 860@item A 861The symbol's value is absolute, and will not be changed by further 862linking. 863 864@item B 865@itemx b 866The symbol is in the BSS data section. This section typically 867contains zero-initialized or uninitialized data, although the exact 868behavior is system dependent. 869 870@item C 871@itemx c 872The symbol is common. Common symbols are uninitialized data. When 873linking, multiple common symbols may appear with the same name. If the 874symbol is defined anywhere, the common symbols are treated as undefined 875references. 876@ifclear man 877For more details on common symbols, see the discussion of 878--warn-common in @ref{Options,,Linker options,ld.info,The GNU linker}. 879@end ifclear 880The lower case @var{c} character is used when the symbol is in a 881special section for small commons. 882 883@item D 884@itemx d 885The symbol is in the initialized data section. 886 887@item G 888@itemx g 889The symbol is in an initialized data section for small objects. Some 890object file formats permit more efficient access to small data objects, 891such as a global int variable as opposed to a large global array. 892 893@item i 894For PE format files this indicates that the symbol is in a section 895specific to the implementation of DLLs. 896 897For ELF format files this indicates that the symbol is an indirect 898function. This is a GNU extension to the standard set of ELF symbol 899types. It indicates a symbol which if referenced by a relocation does 900not evaluate to its address, but instead must be invoked at runtime. 901The runtime execution will then return the value to be used in the 902relocation. 903 904Note - the actual symbols display for GNU indirect symbols is 905controlled by the @option{--ifunc-chars} command line option. If this 906option has been provided then the first character in the string will 907be used for global indirect function symbols. If the string contains 908a second character then that will be used for local indirect function 909symbols. 910 911@item I 912The symbol is an indirect reference to another symbol. 913 914@item N 915The symbol is a debugging symbol. 916 917@item n 918The symbol is in the read-only data section. 919 920@item p 921The symbol is in a stack unwind section. 922 923@item R 924@itemx r 925The symbol is in a read only data section. 926 927@item S 928@itemx s 929The symbol is in an uninitialized or zero-initialized data section 930for small objects. 931 932@item T 933@itemx t 934The symbol is in the text (code) section. 935 936@item U 937The symbol is undefined. 938 939@item u 940The symbol is a unique global symbol. This is a GNU extension to the 941standard set of ELF symbol bindings. For such a symbol the dynamic linker 942will make sure that in the entire process there is just one symbol with 943this name and type in use. 944 945@item V 946@itemx v 947The symbol is a weak object. When a weak defined symbol is linked with 948a normal defined symbol, the normal defined symbol is used with no error. 949When a weak undefined symbol is linked and the symbol is not defined, 950the value of the weak symbol becomes zero with no error. On some 951systems, uppercase indicates that a default value has been specified. 952 953@item W 954@itemx w 955The symbol is a weak symbol that has not been specifically tagged as a 956weak object symbol. When a weak defined symbol is linked with a normal 957defined symbol, the normal defined symbol is used with no error. 958When a weak undefined symbol is linked and the symbol is not defined, 959the value of the symbol is determined in a system-specific manner without 960error. On some systems, uppercase indicates that a default value has been 961specified. 962 963@item - 964The symbol is a stabs symbol in an a.out object file. In this case, the 965next values printed are the stabs other field, the stabs desc field, and 966the stab type. Stabs symbols are used to hold debugging information. 967 968@item ? 969The symbol type is unknown, or object file format specific. 970@end table 971 972@item 973The symbol name. If a symbol has version information associated with it, 974then the version information is displayed as well. If the versioned 975symbol is undefined or hidden from linker, the version string is displayed 976as a suffix to the symbol name, preceded by an @@ character. For example 977@samp{foo@@VER_1}. If the version is the default version to be used when 978resolving unversioned references to the symbol, then it is displayed as a 979suffix preceded by two @@ characters. For example @samp{foo@@@@VER_2}. 980@end itemize 981 982@c man end 983 984@c man begin OPTIONS nm 985The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are 986equivalent. 987 988@table @env 989@item -A 990@itemx -o 991@itemx --print-file-name 992@cindex input file name 993@cindex file name 994@cindex source file name 995Precede each symbol by the name of the input file (or archive member) 996in which it was found, rather than identifying the input file once only, 997before all of its symbols. 998 999@item -a 1000@itemx --debug-syms 1001@cindex debugging symbols 1002Display all symbols, even debugger-only symbols; normally these are not 1003listed. 1004 1005@item -B 1006@cindex @command{nm} format 1007@cindex @command{nm} compatibility 1008The same as @option{--format=bsd} (for compatibility with the MIPS @command{nm}). 1009 1010@item -C 1011@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}] 1012@cindex demangling in nm 1013Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names. 1014Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this 1015makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different 1016mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to 1017choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. @xref{c++filt}, 1018for more information on demangling. 1019 1020@item --no-demangle 1021Do not demangle low-level symbol names. This is the default. 1022 1023@item --recurse-limit 1024@itemx --no-recurse-limit 1025@itemx --recursion-limit 1026@itemx --no-recursion-limit 1027Enables or disables a limit on the amount of recursion performed 1028whilst demangling strings. Since the name mangling formats allow for 1029an infinite level of recursion it is possible to create strings whose 1030decoding will exhaust the amount of stack space available on the host 1031machine, triggering a memory fault. The limit tries to prevent this 1032from happening by restricting recursion to 2048 levels of nesting. 1033 1034The default is for this limit to be enabled, but disabling it may be 1035necessary in order to demangle truly complicated names. Note however 1036that if the recursion limit is disabled then stack exhaustion is 1037possible and any bug reports about such an event will be rejected. 1038 1039@item -D 1040@itemx --dynamic 1041@cindex dynamic symbols 1042Display the dynamic symbols rather than the normal symbols. This is 1043only meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared 1044libraries. 1045 1046@item -f @var{format} 1047@itemx --format=@var{format} 1048@cindex @command{nm} format 1049@cindex @command{nm} compatibility 1050Use the output format @var{format}, which can be @code{bsd}, 1051@code{sysv}, @code{posix} or @code{just-symbols}. The default is @code{bsd}. 1052Only the first character of @var{format} is significant; it can be 1053either upper or lower case. 1054 1055@item -g 1056@itemx --extern-only 1057@cindex external symbols 1058Display only external symbols. 1059 1060@item -h 1061@itemx --help 1062Show a summary of the options to @command{nm} and exit. 1063 1064@item --ifunc-chars=@var{CHARS} 1065When display GNU indirect function symbols @command{nm} will default 1066to using the @code{i} character for both local indirect functions and 1067global indirect functions. The @option{--ifunc-chars} option allows 1068the user to specify a string containing one or two characters. The 1069first character will be used for global indirect function symbols and 1070the second character, if present, will be used for local indirect 1071function symbols. 1072 1073@item j 1074The same as @option{--format=just-symbols}. 1075 1076@item -l 1077@itemx --line-numbers 1078@cindex symbol line numbers 1079For each symbol, use debugging information to try to find a filename and 1080line number. For a defined symbol, look for the line number of the 1081address of the symbol. For an undefined symbol, look for the line 1082number of a relocation entry which refers to the symbol. If line number 1083information can be found, print it after the other symbol information. 1084 1085@item --inlines 1086@cindex objdump inlines 1087When option @option{-l} is active, if the address belongs to a 1088function that was inlined, then this option causes the source 1089information for all enclosing scopes back to the first non-inlined 1090function to be printed as well. For example, if @code{main} inlines 1091@code{callee1} which inlines @code{callee2}, and address is from 1092@code{callee2}, the source information for @code{callee1} and @code{main} 1093will also be printed. 1094 1095@item -n 1096@itemx -v 1097@itemx --numeric-sort 1098Sort symbols numerically by their addresses, rather than alphabetically 1099by their names. 1100 1101@item -p 1102@itemx --no-sort 1103@cindex sorting symbols 1104Do not bother to sort the symbols in any order; print them in the order 1105encountered. 1106 1107@item -P 1108@itemx --portability 1109Use the POSIX.2 standard output format instead of the default format. 1110Equivalent to @samp{-f posix}. 1111 1112@item -r 1113@itemx --reverse-sort 1114Reverse the order of the sort (whether numeric or alphabetic); let the 1115last come first. 1116 1117@item -S 1118@itemx --print-size 1119Print both value and size of defined symbols for the @code{bsd} output style. 1120This option has no effect for object formats that do not record symbol 1121sizes, unless @samp{--size-sort} is also used in which case a 1122calculated size is displayed. 1123 1124@item -s 1125@itemx --print-armap 1126@cindex symbol index, listing 1127When listing symbols from archive members, include the index: a mapping 1128(stored in the archive by @command{ar} or @command{ranlib}) of which modules 1129contain definitions for which names. 1130 1131@item -t @var{radix} 1132@itemx --radix=@var{radix} 1133Use @var{radix} as the radix for printing the symbol values. It must be 1134@samp{d} for decimal, @samp{o} for octal, or @samp{x} for hexadecimal. 1135 1136@item -u 1137@itemx --undefined-only 1138@cindex external symbols 1139@cindex undefined symbols 1140Display only undefined symbols (those external to each object file). 1141By default both defined and undefined symbols are displayed. 1142 1143@item -U 1144@itemx --defined-only 1145@cindex external symbols 1146@cindex undefined symbols 1147Display only defined symbols for each object file. 1148By default both defined and undefined symbols are displayed. 1149 1150@item -V 1151@itemx --version 1152Show the version number of @command{nm} and exit. 1153 1154@item -X 1155This option is ignored for compatibility with the AIX version of 1156@command{nm}. It takes one parameter which must be the string 1157@option{32_64}. The default mode of AIX @command{nm} corresponds 1158to @option{-X 32}, which is not supported by @sc{gnu} @command{nm}. 1159 1160@item --plugin @var{name} 1161@cindex plugins 1162Load the plugin called @var{name} to add support for extra target 1163types. This option is only available if the toolchain has been built 1164with plugin support enabled. 1165 1166If @option{--plugin} is not provided, but plugin support has been 1167enabled then @command{nm} iterates over the files in 1168@file{$@{libdir@}/bfd-plugins} in alphabetic order and the first 1169plugin that claims the object in question is used. 1170 1171Please note that this plugin search directory is @emph{not} the one 1172used by @command{ld}'s @option{-plugin} option. In order to make 1173@command{nm} use the linker plugin it must be copied into the 1174@file{$@{libdir@}/bfd-plugins} directory. For GCC based compilations 1175the linker plugin is called @file{liblto_plugin.so.0.0.0}. For Clang 1176based compilations it is called @file{LLVMgold.so}. The GCC plugin 1177is always backwards compatible with earlier versions, so it is 1178sufficient to just copy the newest one. 1179 1180@item --size-sort 1181Sort symbols by size. For ELF objects symbol sizes are read from the 1182ELF, for other object types the symbol sizes are computed as the 1183difference between the value of the symbol and the value of the symbol 1184with the next higher value. If the @code{bsd} output format is used 1185the size of the symbol is printed, rather than the value, and 1186@samp{-S} must be used in order both size and value to be printed. 1187 1188Note - this option does not work if @option{--undefined-only} has been 1189enabled as undefined symbols have no size. 1190 1191@item --special-syms 1192Display symbols which have a target-specific special meaning. These 1193symbols are usually used by the target for some special processing and 1194are not normally helpful when included in the normal symbol lists. 1195For example for ARM targets this option would skip the mapping symbols 1196used to mark transitions between ARM code, THUMB code and data. 1197 1198@item --synthetic 1199Include synthetic symbols in the output. These are special symbols 1200created by the linker for various purposes. They are not shown by 1201default since they are not part of the binary's original source code. 1202 1203@item --unicode=@var{[default|invalid|locale|escape|hex|highlight]} 1204Controls the display of UTF-8 encoded multibyte characters in strings. 1205The default (@option{--unicode=default}) is to give them no special 1206treatment. The @option{--unicode=locale} option displays the sequence 1207in the current locale, which may or may not support them. The options 1208@option{--unicode=hex} and @option{--unicode=invalid} display them as 1209hex byte sequences enclosed by either angle brackets or curly braces. 1210 1211The @option{--unicode=escape} option displays them as escape sequences 1212(@var{\uxxxx}) and the @option{--unicode=highlight} option displays 1213them as escape sequences highlighted in red (if supported by the 1214output device). The colouring is intended to draw attention to the 1215presence of unicode sequences where they might not be expected. 1216 1217@item -W 1218@itemx --no-weak 1219Do not display weak symbols. 1220 1221@item --with-symbol-versions 1222@item --without-symbol-versions 1223Enables or disables the display of symbol version information. The 1224version string is displayed as a suffix to the symbol name, preceded 1225by an @@ character. For example @samp{foo@@VER_1}. If the version is 1226the default version to be used when resolving unversioned references 1227to the symbol then it is displayed as a suffix preceded by two @@ 1228characters. For example @samp{foo@@@@VER_2}. By default, symbol 1229version information is displayed. 1230 1231@item --target=@var{bfdname} 1232@cindex object code format 1233Specify an object code format other than your system's default format. 1234@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 1235 1236@end table 1237 1238@c man end 1239 1240@ignore 1241@c man begin SEEALSO nm 1242ar(1), objdump(1), ranlib(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 1243@c man end 1244@end ignore 1245 1246@node objcopy 1247@chapter objcopy 1248 1249@c man title objcopy copy and translate object files 1250 1251@smallexample 1252@c man begin SYNOPSIS objcopy 1253objcopy [@option{-F} @var{bfdname}|@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] 1254 [@option{-I} @var{bfdname}|@option{--input-target=}@var{bfdname}] 1255 [@option{-O} @var{bfdname}|@option{--output-target=}@var{bfdname}] 1256 [@option{-B} @var{bfdarch}|@option{--binary-architecture=}@var{bfdarch}] 1257 [@option{-S}|@option{--strip-all}] 1258 [@option{-g}|@option{--strip-debug}] 1259 [@option{--strip-unneeded}] 1260 [@option{-K} @var{symbolname}|@option{--keep-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1261 [@option{--keep-file-symbols}] 1262 [@option{--keep-section-symbols}] 1263 [@option{-N} @var{symbolname}|@option{--strip-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1264 [@option{--strip-unneeded-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1265 [@option{-G} @var{symbolname}|@option{--keep-global-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1266 [@option{--localize-hidden}] 1267 [@option{-L} @var{symbolname}|@option{--localize-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1268 [@option{--globalize-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1269 [@option{--globalize-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1270 [@option{-W} @var{symbolname}|@option{--weaken-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 1271 [@option{-w}|@option{--wildcard}] 1272 [@option{-x}|@option{--discard-all}] 1273 [@option{-X}|@option{--discard-locals}] 1274 [@option{-b} @var{byte}|@option{--byte=}@var{byte}] 1275 [@option{-i} [@var{breadth}]|@option{--interleave}[=@var{breadth}]] 1276 [@option{--interleave-width=}@var{width}] 1277 [@option{-j} @var{sectionpattern}|@option{--only-section=}@var{sectionpattern}] 1278 [@option{-R} @var{sectionpattern}|@option{--remove-section=}@var{sectionpattern}] 1279 [@option{--keep-section=}@var{sectionpattern}] 1280 [@option{--remove-relocations=}@var{sectionpattern}] 1281 [@option{-p}|@option{--preserve-dates}] 1282 [@option{-D}|@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}] 1283 [@option{-U}|@option{--disable-deterministic-archives}] 1284 [@option{--debugging}] 1285 [@option{--gap-fill=}@var{val}] 1286 [@option{--pad-to=}@var{address}] 1287 [@option{--set-start=}@var{val}] 1288 [@option{--adjust-start=}@var{incr}] 1289 [@option{--change-addresses=}@var{incr}] 1290 [@option{--change-section-address} @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}] 1291 [@option{--change-section-lma} @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}] 1292 [@option{--change-section-vma} @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val}] 1293 [@option{--change-warnings}] [@option{--no-change-warnings}] 1294 [@option{--set-section-flags} @var{sectionpattern}=@var{flags}] 1295 [@option{--set-section-alignment} @var{sectionpattern}=@var{align}] 1296 [@option{--add-section} @var{sectionname}=@var{filename}] 1297 [@option{--dump-section} @var{sectionname}=@var{filename}] 1298 [@option{--update-section} @var{sectionname}=@var{filename}] 1299 [@option{--rename-section} @var{oldname}=@var{newname}[,@var{flags}]] 1300 [@option{--long-section-names} @{enable,disable,keep@}] 1301 [@option{--change-leading-char}] [@option{--remove-leading-char}] 1302 [@option{--reverse-bytes=}@var{num}] 1303 [@option{--srec-len=}@var{ival}] [@option{--srec-forceS3}] 1304 [@option{--redefine-sym} @var{old}=@var{new}] 1305 [@option{--redefine-syms=}@var{filename}] 1306 [@option{--weaken}] 1307 [@option{--keep-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1308 [@option{--strip-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1309 [@option{--strip-unneeded-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1310 [@option{--keep-global-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1311 [@option{--localize-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1312 [@option{--weaken-symbols=}@var{filename}] 1313 [@option{--add-symbol} @var{name}=[@var{section}:]@var{value}[,@var{flags}]] 1314 [@option{--alt-machine-code=}@var{index}] 1315 [@option{--prefix-symbols=}@var{string}] 1316 [@option{--prefix-sections=}@var{string}] 1317 [@option{--prefix-alloc-sections=}@var{string}] 1318 [@option{--add-gnu-debuglink=}@var{path-to-file}] 1319 [@option{--only-keep-debug}] 1320 [@option{--strip-dwo}] 1321 [@option{--extract-dwo}] 1322 [@option{--extract-symbol}] 1323 [@option{--writable-text}] 1324 [@option{--readonly-text}] 1325 [@option{--pure}] 1326 [@option{--impure}] 1327 [@option{--file-alignment=}@var{num}] 1328 [@option{--heap=}@var{size}] 1329 [@option{--image-base=}@var{address}] 1330 [@option{--section-alignment=}@var{num}] 1331 [@option{--stack=}@var{size}] 1332 [@option{--subsystem=}@var{which}:@var{major}.@var{minor}] 1333 [@option{--compress-debug-sections}] 1334 [@option{--decompress-debug-sections}] 1335 [@option{--elf-stt-common=@var{val}}] 1336 [@option{--merge-notes}] 1337 [@option{--no-merge-notes}] 1338 [@option{--verilog-data-width=@var{val}}] 1339 [@option{-v}|@option{--verbose}] 1340 [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 1341 [@option{--help}] [@option{--info}] 1342 @var{infile} [@var{outfile}] 1343@c man end 1344@end smallexample 1345 1346@c man begin DESCRIPTION objcopy 1347The @sc{gnu} @command{objcopy} utility copies the contents of an object 1348file to another. @command{objcopy} uses the @sc{gnu} @sc{bfd} Library to 1349read and write the object files. It can write the destination object 1350file in a format different from that of the source object file. The 1351exact behavior of @command{objcopy} is controlled by command-line options. 1352Note that @command{objcopy} should be able to copy a fully linked file 1353between any two formats. However, copying a relocatable object file 1354between any two formats may not work as expected. 1355 1356@command{objcopy} creates temporary files to do its translations and 1357deletes them afterward. @command{objcopy} uses @sc{bfd} to do all its 1358translation work; it has access to all the formats described in @sc{bfd} 1359and thus is able to recognize most formats without being told 1360explicitly. @xref{BFD,,BFD,ld.info,Using LD}. 1361 1362@command{objcopy} can be used to generate S-records by using an output 1363target of @samp{srec} (e.g., use @samp{-O srec}). 1364 1365@command{objcopy} can be used to generate a raw binary file by using an 1366output target of @samp{binary} (e.g., use @option{-O binary}). When 1367@command{objcopy} generates a raw binary file, it will essentially produce 1368a memory dump of the contents of the input object file. All symbols and 1369relocation information will be discarded. The memory dump will start at 1370the load address of the lowest section copied into the output file. 1371 1372When generating an S-record or a raw binary file, it may be helpful to 1373use @option{-S} to remove sections containing debugging information. In 1374some cases @option{-R} will be useful to remove sections which contain 1375information that is not needed by the binary file. 1376 1377Note---@command{objcopy} is not able to change the endianness of its input 1378files. If the input format has an endianness (some formats do not), 1379@command{objcopy} can only copy the inputs into file formats that have the 1380same endianness or which have no endianness (e.g., @samp{srec}). 1381(However, see the @option{--reverse-bytes} option.) 1382 1383@c man end 1384 1385@c man begin OPTIONS objcopy 1386 1387@table @env 1388@item @var{infile} 1389@itemx @var{outfile} 1390The input and output files, respectively. 1391If you do not specify @var{outfile}, @command{objcopy} creates a 1392temporary file and destructively renames the result with 1393the name of @var{infile}. 1394 1395@item -I @var{bfdname} 1396@itemx --input-target=@var{bfdname} 1397Consider the source file's object format to be @var{bfdname}, rather than 1398attempting to deduce it. @xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 1399 1400@item -O @var{bfdname} 1401@itemx --output-target=@var{bfdname} 1402Write the output file using the object format @var{bfdname}. 1403@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 1404 1405@item -F @var{bfdname} 1406@itemx --target=@var{bfdname} 1407Use @var{bfdname} as the object format for both the input and the output 1408file; i.e., simply transfer data from source to destination with no 1409translation. @xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 1410 1411@item -B @var{bfdarch} 1412@itemx --binary-architecture=@var{bfdarch} 1413Useful when transforming a architecture-less input file into an object file. 1414In this case the output architecture can be set to @var{bfdarch}. This 1415option will be ignored if the input file has a known @var{bfdarch}. You 1416can access this binary data inside a program by referencing the special 1417symbols that are created by the conversion process. These symbols are 1418called _binary_@var{objfile}_start, _binary_@var{objfile}_end and 1419_binary_@var{objfile}_size. e.g. you can transform a picture file into 1420an object file and then access it in your code using these symbols. 1421 1422@item -j @var{sectionpattern} 1423@itemx --only-section=@var{sectionpattern} 1424Copy only the indicated sections from the input file to the output file. 1425This option may be given more than once. Note that using this option 1426inappropriately may make the output file unusable. Wildcard 1427characters are accepted in @var{sectionpattern}. 1428 1429If the first character of @var{sectionpattern} is the exclamation 1430point (!) then matching sections will not be copied, even if earlier 1431use of @option{--only-section} on the same command line would 1432otherwise copy it. For example: 1433 1434@smallexample 1435 --only-section=.text.* --only-section=!.text.foo 1436@end smallexample 1437 1438will copy all sectinos matching '.text.*' but not the section 1439'.text.foo'. 1440 1441@item -R @var{sectionpattern} 1442@itemx --remove-section=@var{sectionpattern} 1443Remove any section matching @var{sectionpattern} from the output file. 1444This option may be given more than once. Note that using this option 1445inappropriately may make the output file unusable. Wildcard 1446characters are accepted in @var{sectionpattern}. Using both the 1447@option{-j} and @option{-R} options together results in undefined 1448behaviour. 1449 1450If the first character of @var{sectionpattern} is the exclamation 1451point (!) then matching sections will not be removed even if an 1452earlier use of @option{--remove-section} on the same command line 1453would otherwise remove it. For example: 1454 1455@smallexample 1456 --remove-section=.text.* --remove-section=!.text.foo 1457@end smallexample 1458 1459will remove all sections matching the pattern '.text.*', but will not 1460remove the section '.text.foo'. 1461 1462@item --keep-section=@var{sectionpattern} 1463When removing sections from the output file, keep sections that match 1464@var{sectionpattern}. 1465 1466@item --remove-relocations=@var{sectionpattern} 1467Remove non-dynamic relocations from the output file for any section 1468matching @var{sectionpattern}. This option may be given more than 1469once. Note that using this option inappropriately may make the output 1470file unusable, and attempting to remove a dynamic relocation section 1471such as @samp{.rela.plt} from an executable or shared library with 1472@option{--remove-relocations=.plt} will not work. Wildcard characters 1473are accepted in @var{sectionpattern}. 1474For example: 1475 1476@smallexample 1477 --remove-relocations=.text.* 1478@end smallexample 1479 1480will remove the relocations for all sections matching the pattern 1481'.text.*'. 1482 1483If the first character of @var{sectionpattern} is the exclamation 1484point (!) then matching sections will not have their relocation 1485removed even if an earlier use of @option{--remove-relocations} on the 1486same command line would otherwise cause the relocations to be removed. 1487For example: 1488 1489@smallexample 1490 --remove-relocations=.text.* --remove-relocations=!.text.foo 1491@end smallexample 1492 1493will remove all relocations for sections matching the pattern 1494'.text.*', but will not remove relocations for the section 1495'.text.foo'. 1496 1497@item -S 1498@itemx --strip-all 1499Do not copy relocation and symbol information from the source file. 1500Also deletes debug sections. 1501 1502@item -g 1503@itemx --strip-debug 1504Do not copy debugging symbols or sections from the source file. 1505 1506@item --strip-unneeded 1507Remove all symbols that are not needed for relocation processing in 1508addition to debugging symbols and sections stripped by 1509@option{--strip-debug}. 1510 1511@item -K @var{symbolname} 1512@itemx --keep-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1513When stripping symbols, keep symbol @var{symbolname} even if it would 1514normally be stripped. This option may be given more than once. 1515 1516@item -N @var{symbolname} 1517@itemx --strip-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1518Do not copy symbol @var{symbolname} from the source file. This option 1519may be given more than once. 1520 1521@item --strip-unneeded-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1522Do not copy symbol @var{symbolname} from the source file unless it is needed 1523by a relocation. This option may be given more than once. 1524 1525@item -G @var{symbolname} 1526@itemx --keep-global-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1527Keep only symbol @var{symbolname} global. Make all other symbols local 1528to the file, so that they are not visible externally. This option may 1529be given more than once. Note: this option cannot be used in 1530conjunction with the @option{--globalize-symbol} or 1531@option{--globalize-symbols} options. 1532 1533@item --localize-hidden 1534In an ELF object, mark all symbols that have hidden or internal visibility 1535as local. This option applies on top of symbol-specific localization options 1536such as @option{-L}. 1537 1538@item -L @var{symbolname} 1539@itemx --localize-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1540Convert a global or weak symbol called @var{symbolname} into a local 1541symbol, so that it is not visible externally. This option may be 1542given more than once. Note - unique symbols are not converted. 1543 1544@item -W @var{symbolname} 1545@itemx --weaken-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1546Make symbol @var{symbolname} weak. This option may be given more than once. 1547 1548@item --globalize-symbol=@var{symbolname} 1549Give symbol @var{symbolname} global scoping so that it is visible 1550outside of the file in which it is defined. This option may be given 1551more than once. Note: this option cannot be used in conjunction with 1552the @option{-G} or @option{--keep-global-symbol} options. 1553 1554@item -w 1555@itemx --wildcard 1556Permit regular expressions in @var{symbolname}s used in other command 1557line options. The question mark (?), asterisk (*), backslash (\) and 1558square brackets ([]) operators can be used anywhere in the symbol 1559name. If the first character of the symbol name is the exclamation 1560point (!) then the sense of the switch is reversed for that symbol. 1561For example: 1562 1563@smallexample 1564 -w -W !foo -W fo* 1565@end smallexample 1566 1567would cause objcopy to weaken all symbols that start with ``fo'' 1568except for the symbol ``foo''. 1569 1570@item -x 1571@itemx --discard-all 1572Do not copy non-global symbols from the source file. 1573@c FIXME any reason to prefer "non-global" to "local" here? 1574 1575@item -X 1576@itemx --discard-locals 1577Do not copy compiler-generated local symbols. 1578(These usually start with @samp{L} or @samp{.}.) 1579 1580@item -b @var{byte} 1581@itemx --byte=@var{byte} 1582If interleaving has been enabled via the @option{--interleave} option 1583then start the range of bytes to keep at the @var{byte}th byte. 1584@var{byte} can be in the range from 0 to @var{breadth}-1, where 1585@var{breadth} is the value given by the @option{--interleave} option. 1586 1587@item -i [@var{breadth}] 1588@itemx --interleave[=@var{breadth}] 1589Only copy a range out of every @var{breadth} bytes. (Header data is 1590not affected). Select which byte in the range begins the copy with 1591the @option{--byte} option. Select the width of the range with the 1592@option{--interleave-width} option. 1593 1594This option is useful for creating files to program @sc{rom}. It is 1595typically used with an @code{srec} output target. Note that 1596@command{objcopy} will complain if you do not specify the 1597@option{--byte} option as well. 1598 1599The default interleave breadth is 4, so with @option{--byte} set to 0, 1600@command{objcopy} would copy the first byte out of every four bytes 1601from the input to the output. 1602 1603@item --interleave-width=@var{width} 1604When used with the @option{--interleave} option, copy @var{width} 1605bytes at a time. The start of the range of bytes to be copied is set 1606by the @option{--byte} option, and the extent of the range is set with 1607the @option{--interleave} option. 1608 1609The default value for this option is 1. The value of @var{width} plus 1610the @var{byte} value set by the @option{--byte} option must not exceed 1611the interleave breadth set by the @option{--interleave} option. 1612 1613This option can be used to create images for two 16-bit flashes interleaved 1614in a 32-bit bus by passing @option{-b 0 -i 4 --interleave-width=2} 1615and @option{-b 2 -i 4 --interleave-width=2} to two @command{objcopy} 1616commands. If the input was '12345678' then the outputs would be 1617'1256' and '3478' respectively. 1618 1619@item -p 1620@itemx --preserve-dates 1621Set the access and modification dates of the output file to be the same 1622as those of the input file. 1623 1624@item -D 1625@itemx --enable-deterministic-archives 1626@cindex deterministic archives 1627@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 1628Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. When copying archive members 1629and writing the archive index, use zero for UIDs, GIDs, timestamps, 1630and use consistent file modes for all files. 1631 1632If @file{binutils} was configured with 1633@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by default. 1634It can be disabled with the @samp{-U} option, below. 1635 1636@item -U 1637@itemx --disable-deterministic-archives 1638@cindex deterministic archives 1639@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 1640Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the 1641inverse of the @option{-D} option, above: when copying archive members 1642and writing the archive index, use their actual UID, GID, timestamp, 1643and file mode values. 1644 1645This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with 1646@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}. 1647 1648@item --debugging 1649Convert debugging information, if possible. This is not the default 1650because only certain debugging formats are supported, and the 1651conversion process can be time consuming. 1652 1653@item --gap-fill @var{val} 1654Fill gaps between sections with @var{val}. This operation applies to 1655the @emph{load address} (LMA) of the sections. It is done by increasing 1656the size of the section with the lower address, and filling in the extra 1657space created with @var{val}. 1658 1659@item --pad-to @var{address} 1660Pad the output file up to the load address @var{address}. This is 1661done by increasing the size of the last section. The extra space is 1662filled in with the value specified by @option{--gap-fill} (default zero). 1663 1664@item --set-start @var{val} 1665Set the start address (also known as the entry address) of the new 1666file to @var{val}. Not all object file formats support setting the 1667start address. 1668 1669@item --change-start @var{incr} 1670@itemx --adjust-start @var{incr} 1671@cindex changing start address 1672Change the start address (also known as the entry address) by adding 1673@var{incr}. Not all object file formats support setting the start 1674address. 1675 1676@item --change-addresses @var{incr} 1677@itemx --adjust-vma @var{incr} 1678@cindex changing object addresses 1679Change the VMA and LMA addresses of all sections, as well as the start 1680address, by adding @var{incr}. Some object file formats do not permit 1681section addresses to be changed arbitrarily. Note that this does not 1682relocate the sections; if the program expects sections to be loaded at a 1683certain address, and this option is used to change the sections such 1684that they are loaded at a different address, the program may fail. 1685 1686@item --change-section-address @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val} 1687@itemx --adjust-section-vma @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val} 1688@cindex changing section address 1689Set or change both the VMA address and the LMA address of any section 1690matching @var{sectionpattern}. If @samp{=} is used, the section 1691address is set to @var{val}. Otherwise, @var{val} is added to or 1692subtracted from the section address. See the comments under 1693@option{--change-addresses}, above. If @var{sectionpattern} does not 1694match any sections in the input file, a warning will be issued, unless 1695@option{--no-change-warnings} is used. 1696 1697@item --change-section-lma @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val} 1698@cindex changing section LMA 1699Set or change the LMA address of any sections matching 1700@var{sectionpattern}. The LMA address is the address where the 1701section will be loaded into memory at program load time. Normally 1702this is the same as the VMA address, which is the address of the 1703section at program run time, but on some systems, especially those 1704where a program is held in ROM, the two can be different. If @samp{=} 1705is used, the section address is set to @var{val}. Otherwise, 1706@var{val} is added to or subtracted from the section address. See the 1707comments under @option{--change-addresses}, above. If 1708@var{sectionpattern} does not match any sections in the input file, a 1709warning will be issued, unless @option{--no-change-warnings} is used. 1710 1711@item --change-section-vma @var{sectionpattern}@{=,+,-@}@var{val} 1712@cindex changing section VMA 1713Set or change the VMA address of any section matching 1714@var{sectionpattern}. The VMA address is the address where the 1715section will be located once the program has started executing. 1716Normally this is the same as the LMA address, which is the address 1717where the section will be loaded into memory, but on some systems, 1718especially those where a program is held in ROM, the two can be 1719different. If @samp{=} is used, the section address is set to 1720@var{val}. Otherwise, @var{val} is added to or subtracted from the 1721section address. See the comments under @option{--change-addresses}, 1722above. If @var{sectionpattern} does not match any sections in the 1723input file, a warning will be issued, unless 1724@option{--no-change-warnings} is used. 1725 1726@item --change-warnings 1727@itemx --adjust-warnings 1728If @option{--change-section-address} or @option{--change-section-lma} or 1729@option{--change-section-vma} is used, and the section pattern does not 1730match any sections, issue a warning. This is the default. 1731 1732@item --no-change-warnings 1733@itemx --no-adjust-warnings 1734Do not issue a warning if @option{--change-section-address} or 1735@option{--adjust-section-lma} or @option{--adjust-section-vma} is used, even 1736if the section pattern does not match any sections. 1737 1738@item --set-section-flags @var{sectionpattern}=@var{flags} 1739Set the flags for any sections matching @var{sectionpattern}. The 1740@var{flags} argument is a comma separated string of flag names. The 1741recognized names are @samp{alloc}, @samp{contents}, @samp{load}, 1742@samp{noload}, @samp{readonly}, @samp{code}, @samp{data}, @samp{rom}, 1743@samp{exclude}, @samp{share}, and @samp{debug}. You can set the 1744@samp{contents} flag for a section which does not have contents, but it 1745is not meaningful to clear the @samp{contents} flag of a section which 1746does have contents--just remove the section instead. Not all flags are 1747meaningful for all object file formats. In particular the 1748@samp{share} flag is only meaningful for COFF format files and not for 1749ELF format files. 1750 1751@item --set-section-alignment @var{sectionpattern}=@var{align} 1752Set the alignment for any sections matching @var{sectionpattern}. 1753@var{align} specifies the alignment in bytes and must be a power of 1754two, i.e. 1, 2, 4, 8@dots{}. 1755 1756@item --add-section @var{sectionname}=@var{filename} 1757Add a new section named @var{sectionname} while copying the file. The 1758contents of the new section are taken from the file @var{filename}. The 1759size of the section will be the size of the file. This option only 1760works on file formats which can support sections with arbitrary names. 1761Note - it may be necessary to use the @option{--set-section-flags} 1762option to set the attributes of the newly created section. 1763 1764@item --dump-section @var{sectionname}=@var{filename} 1765Place the contents of section named @var{sectionname} into the file 1766@var{filename}, overwriting any contents that may have been there 1767previously. This option is the inverse of @option{--add-section}. 1768This option is similar to the @option{--only-section} option except 1769that it does not create a formatted file, it just dumps the contents 1770as raw binary data, without applying any relocations. The option can 1771be specified more than once. 1772 1773@item --update-section @var{sectionname}=@var{filename} 1774Replace the existing contents of a section named @var{sectionname} 1775with the contents of file @var{filename}. The size of the section 1776will be adjusted to the size of the file. The section flags for 1777@var{sectionname} will be unchanged. For ELF format files the section 1778to segment mapping will also remain unchanged, something which is not 1779possible using @option{--remove-section} followed by 1780@option{--add-section}. The option can be specified more than once. 1781 1782Note - it is possible to use @option{--rename-section} and 1783@option{--update-section} to both update and rename a section from one 1784command line. In this case, pass the original section name to 1785@option{--update-section}, and the original and new section names to 1786@option{--rename-section}. 1787 1788@item --add-symbol @var{name}=[@var{section}:]@var{value}[,@var{flags}] 1789Add a new symbol named @var{name} while copying the file. This option may be 1790specified multiple times. If the @var{section} is given, the symbol will be 1791associated with and relative to that section, otherwise it will be an ABS 1792symbol. Specifying an undefined section will result in a fatal error. There 1793is no check for the value, it will be taken as specified. Symbol flags can 1794be specified and not all flags will be meaningful for all object file 1795formats. By default, the symbol will be global. The special flag 1796'before=@var{othersym}' will insert the new symbol in front of the specified 1797@var{othersym}, otherwise the symbol(s) will be added at the end of the 1798symbol table in the order they appear. 1799 1800@item --rename-section @var{oldname}=@var{newname}[,@var{flags}] 1801Rename a section from @var{oldname} to @var{newname}, optionally 1802changing the section's flags to @var{flags} in the process. This has 1803the advantage over using a linker script to perform the rename in that 1804the output stays as an object file and does not become a linked 1805executable. This option accepts the same set of flags as the 1806@option{--sect-section-flags} option. 1807 1808This option is particularly helpful when the input format is binary, 1809since this will always create a section called .data. If for example, 1810you wanted instead to create a section called .rodata containing binary 1811data you could use the following command line to achieve it: 1812 1813@smallexample 1814 objcopy -I binary -O <output_format> -B <architecture> \ 1815 --rename-section .data=.rodata,alloc,load,readonly,data,contents \ 1816 <input_binary_file> <output_object_file> 1817@end smallexample 1818 1819@item --long-section-names @{enable,disable,keep@} 1820Controls the handling of long section names when processing @code{COFF} 1821and @code{PE-COFF} object formats. The default behaviour, @samp{keep}, 1822is to preserve long section names if any are present in the input file. 1823The @samp{enable} and @samp{disable} options forcibly enable or disable 1824the use of long section names in the output object; when @samp{disable} 1825is in effect, any long section names in the input object will be truncated. 1826The @samp{enable} option will only emit long section names if any are 1827present in the inputs; this is mostly the same as @samp{keep}, but it 1828is left undefined whether the @samp{enable} option might force the 1829creation of an empty string table in the output file. 1830 1831@item --change-leading-char 1832Some object file formats use special characters at the start of 1833symbols. The most common such character is underscore, which compilers 1834often add before every symbol. This option tells @command{objcopy} to 1835change the leading character of every symbol when it converts between 1836object file formats. If the object file formats use the same leading 1837character, this option has no effect. Otherwise, it will add a 1838character, or remove a character, or change a character, as 1839appropriate. 1840 1841@item --remove-leading-char 1842If the first character of a global symbol is a special symbol leading 1843character used by the object file format, remove the character. The 1844most common symbol leading character is underscore. This option will 1845remove a leading underscore from all global symbols. This can be useful 1846if you want to link together objects of different file formats with 1847different conventions for symbol names. This is different from 1848@option{--change-leading-char} because it always changes the symbol name 1849when appropriate, regardless of the object file format of the output 1850file. 1851 1852@item --reverse-bytes=@var{num} 1853Reverse the bytes in a section with output contents. A section length must 1854be evenly divisible by the value given in order for the swap to be able to 1855take place. Reversing takes place before the interleaving is performed. 1856 1857This option is used typically in generating ROM images for problematic 1858target systems. For example, on some target boards, the 32-bit words 1859fetched from 8-bit ROMs are re-assembled in little-endian byte order 1860regardless of the CPU byte order. Depending on the programming model, the 1861endianness of the ROM may need to be modified. 1862 1863Consider a simple file with a section containing the following eight 1864bytes: @code{12345678}. 1865 1866Using @samp{--reverse-bytes=2} for the above example, the bytes in the 1867output file would be ordered @code{21436587}. 1868 1869Using @samp{--reverse-bytes=4} for the above example, the bytes in the 1870output file would be ordered @code{43218765}. 1871 1872By using @samp{--reverse-bytes=2} for the above example, followed by 1873@samp{--reverse-bytes=4} on the output file, the bytes in the second 1874output file would be ordered @code{34127856}. 1875 1876@item --srec-len=@var{ival} 1877Meaningful only for srec output. Set the maximum length of the Srecords 1878being produced to @var{ival}. This length covers both address, data and 1879crc fields. 1880 1881@item --srec-forceS3 1882Meaningful only for srec output. Avoid generation of S1/S2 records, 1883creating S3-only record format. 1884 1885@item --redefine-sym @var{old}=@var{new} 1886Change the name of a symbol @var{old}, to @var{new}. This can be useful 1887when one is trying link two things together for which you have no 1888source, and there are name collisions. 1889 1890@item --redefine-syms=@var{filename} 1891Apply @option{--redefine-sym} to each symbol pair "@var{old} @var{new}" 1892listed in the file @var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, 1893with one symbol pair per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash 1894character. This option may be given more than once. 1895 1896@item --weaken 1897Change all global symbols in the file to be weak. This can be useful 1898when building an object which will be linked against other objects using 1899the @option{-R} option to the linker. This option is only effective when 1900using an object file format which supports weak symbols. 1901 1902@item --keep-symbols=@var{filename} 1903Apply @option{--keep-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file 1904@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol 1905name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character. 1906This option may be given more than once. 1907 1908@item --strip-symbols=@var{filename} 1909Apply @option{--strip-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file 1910@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol 1911name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character. 1912This option may be given more than once. 1913 1914@item --strip-unneeded-symbols=@var{filename} 1915Apply @option{--strip-unneeded-symbol} option to each symbol listed in 1916the file @var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one 1917symbol name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash 1918character. This option may be given more than once. 1919 1920@item --keep-global-symbols=@var{filename} 1921Apply @option{--keep-global-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the 1922file @var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one 1923symbol name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash 1924character. This option may be given more than once. 1925 1926@item --localize-symbols=@var{filename} 1927Apply @option{--localize-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file 1928@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol 1929name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character. 1930This option may be given more than once. 1931 1932@item --globalize-symbols=@var{filename} 1933Apply @option{--globalize-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file 1934@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol 1935name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character. 1936This option may be given more than once. Note: this option cannot be 1937used in conjunction with the @option{-G} or @option{--keep-global-symbol} 1938options. 1939 1940@item --weaken-symbols=@var{filename} 1941Apply @option{--weaken-symbol} option to each symbol listed in the file 1942@var{filename}. @var{filename} is simply a flat file, with one symbol 1943name per line. Line comments may be introduced by the hash character. 1944This option may be given more than once. 1945 1946@item --alt-machine-code=@var{index} 1947If the output architecture has alternate machine codes, use the 1948@var{index}th code instead of the default one. This is useful in case 1949a machine is assigned an official code and the tool-chain adopts the 1950new code, but other applications still depend on the original code 1951being used. For ELF based architectures if the @var{index} 1952alternative does not exist then the value is treated as an absolute 1953number to be stored in the e_machine field of the ELF header. 1954 1955@item --writable-text 1956Mark the output text as writable. This option isn't meaningful for all 1957object file formats. 1958 1959@item --readonly-text 1960Make the output text write protected. This option isn't meaningful for all 1961object file formats. 1962 1963@item --pure 1964Mark the output file as demand paged. This option isn't meaningful for all 1965object file formats. 1966 1967@item --impure 1968Mark the output file as impure. This option isn't meaningful for all 1969object file formats. 1970 1971@item --prefix-symbols=@var{string} 1972Prefix all symbols in the output file with @var{string}. 1973 1974@item --prefix-sections=@var{string} 1975Prefix all section names in the output file with @var{string}. 1976 1977@item --prefix-alloc-sections=@var{string} 1978Prefix all the names of all allocated sections in the output file with 1979@var{string}. 1980 1981@item --add-gnu-debuglink=@var{path-to-file} 1982Creates a .gnu_debuglink section which contains a reference to 1983@var{path-to-file} and adds it to the output file. Note: the file at 1984@var{path-to-file} must exist. Part of the process of adding the 1985.gnu_debuglink section involves embedding a checksum of the contents 1986of the debug info file into the section. 1987 1988If the debug info file is built in one location but it is going to be 1989installed at a later time into a different location then do not use 1990the path to the installed location. The @option{--add-gnu-debuglink} 1991option will fail because the installed file does not exist yet. 1992Instead put the debug info file in the current directory and use the 1993@option{--add-gnu-debuglink} option without any directory components, 1994like this: 1995 1996@smallexample 1997 objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.debug 1998@end smallexample 1999 2000At debug time the debugger will attempt to look for the separate debug 2001info file in a set of known locations. The exact set of these 2002locations varies depending upon the distribution being used, but it 2003typically includes: 2004 2005@table @code 2006 2007@item * The same directory as the executable. 2008 2009@item * A sub-directory of the directory containing the executable 2010called .debug 2011 2012@item * A global debug directory such as /usr/lib/debug. 2013@end table 2014 2015As long as the debug info file has been installed into one of these 2016locations before the debugger is run everything should work 2017correctly. 2018 2019@item --keep-section-symbils 2020When stripping a file, perhaps with @option{--strip-debug} or 2021@option{--strip-unneeded}, retain any symbols specifying section names, 2022which would otherwise get stripped. 2023 2024@item --keep-file-symbols 2025When stripping a file, perhaps with @option{--strip-debug} or 2026@option{--strip-unneeded}, retain any symbols specifying source file names, 2027which would otherwise get stripped. 2028 2029@item --only-keep-debug 2030Strip a file, removing contents of any sections that would not be 2031stripped by @option{--strip-debug} and leaving the debugging sections 2032intact. In ELF files, this preserves all note sections in the output. 2033 2034Note - the section headers of the stripped sections are preserved, 2035including their sizes, but the contents of the section are discarded. 2036The section headers are preserved so that other tools can match up the 2037debuginfo file with the real executable, even if that executable has 2038been relocated to a different address space. 2039 2040The intention is that this option will be used in conjunction with 2041@option{--add-gnu-debuglink} to create a two part executable. One a 2042stripped binary which will occupy less space in RAM and in a 2043distribution and the second a debugging information file which is only 2044needed if debugging abilities are required. The suggested procedure 2045to create these files is as follows: 2046 2047@enumerate 2048@item Link the executable as normal. Assuming that it is called 2049@code{foo} then... 2050@item Run @code{objcopy --only-keep-debug foo foo.dbg} to 2051create a file containing the debugging info. 2052@item Run @code{objcopy --strip-debug foo} to create a 2053stripped executable. 2054@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.dbg foo} 2055to add a link to the debugging info into the stripped executable. 2056@end enumerate 2057 2058Note---the choice of @code{.dbg} as an extension for the debug info 2059file is arbitrary. Also the @code{--only-keep-debug} step is 2060optional. You could instead do this: 2061 2062@enumerate 2063@item Link the executable as normal. 2064@item Copy @code{foo} to @code{foo.full} 2065@item Run @code{objcopy --strip-debug foo} 2066@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.full foo} 2067@end enumerate 2068 2069i.e., the file pointed to by the @option{--add-gnu-debuglink} can be the 2070full executable. It does not have to be a file created by the 2071@option{--only-keep-debug} switch. 2072 2073Note---this switch is only intended for use on fully linked files. It 2074does not make sense to use it on object files where the debugging 2075information may be incomplete. Besides the gnu_debuglink feature 2076currently only supports the presence of one filename containing 2077debugging information, not multiple filenames on a one-per-object-file 2078basis. 2079 2080@item --strip-dwo 2081Remove the contents of all DWARF .dwo sections, leaving the 2082remaining debugging sections and all symbols intact. 2083This option is intended for use by the compiler as part of 2084the @option{-gsplit-dwarf} option, which splits debug information 2085between the .o file and a separate .dwo file. The compiler 2086generates all debug information in the same file, then uses 2087the @option{--extract-dwo} option to copy the .dwo sections to 2088the .dwo file, then the @option{--strip-dwo} option to remove 2089those sections from the original .o file. 2090 2091@item --extract-dwo 2092Extract the contents of all DWARF .dwo sections. See the 2093@option{--strip-dwo} option for more information. 2094 2095@item --file-alignment @var{num} 2096Specify the file alignment. Sections in the file will always begin at 2097file offsets which are multiples of this number. This defaults to 2098512. 2099[This option is specific to PE targets.] 2100 2101@item --heap @var{reserve} 2102@itemx --heap @var{reserve},@var{commit} 2103Specify the number of bytes of memory to reserve (and optionally commit) 2104to be used as heap for this program. 2105[This option is specific to PE targets.] 2106 2107@item --image-base @var{value} 2108Use @var{value} as the base address of your program or dll. This is 2109the lowest memory location that will be used when your program or dll 2110is loaded. To reduce the need to relocate and improve performance of 2111your dlls, each should have a unique base address and not overlap any 2112other dlls. The default is 0x400000 for executables, and 0x10000000 2113for dlls. 2114[This option is specific to PE targets.] 2115 2116@item --section-alignment @var{num} 2117Sets the section alignment field in the PE header. Sections in memory 2118will always begin at addresses which are a multiple of this number. 2119Defaults to 0x1000. 2120[This option is specific to PE targets.] 2121 2122@item --stack @var{reserve} 2123@itemx --stack @var{reserve},@var{commit} 2124Specify the number of bytes of memory to reserve (and optionally commit) 2125to be used as stack for this program. 2126[This option is specific to PE targets.] 2127 2128@item --subsystem @var{which} 2129@itemx --subsystem @var{which}:@var{major} 2130@itemx --subsystem @var{which}:@var{major}.@var{minor} 2131Specifies the subsystem under which your program will execute. The 2132legal values for @var{which} are @code{native}, @code{windows}, 2133@code{console}, @code{posix}, @code{efi-app}, @code{efi-bsd}, 2134@code{efi-rtd}, @code{sal-rtd}, and @code{xbox}. You may optionally set 2135the subsystem version also. Numeric values are also accepted for 2136@var{which}. 2137[This option is specific to PE targets.] 2138 2139@item --extract-symbol 2140Keep the file's section flags and symbols but remove all section data. 2141Specifically, the option: 2142 2143@itemize 2144@item removes the contents of all sections; 2145@item sets the size of every section to zero; and 2146@item sets the file's start address to zero. 2147@end itemize 2148 2149This option is used to build a @file{.sym} file for a VxWorks kernel. 2150It can also be a useful way of reducing the size of a @option{--just-symbols} 2151linker input file. 2152 2153@item --compress-debug-sections 2154Compress DWARF debug sections using zlib with SHF_COMPRESSED from the 2155ELF ABI. Note - if compression would actually make a section 2156@emph{larger}, then it is not compressed. 2157 2158@item --compress-debug-sections=none 2159@itemx --compress-debug-sections=zlib 2160@itemx --compress-debug-sections=zlib-gnu 2161@itemx --compress-debug-sections=zlib-gabi 2162For ELF files, these options control how DWARF debug sections are 2163compressed. @option{--compress-debug-sections=none} is equivalent 2164to @option{--decompress-debug-sections}. 2165@option{--compress-debug-sections=zlib} and 2166@option{--compress-debug-sections=zlib-gabi} are equivalent to 2167@option{--compress-debug-sections}. 2168@option{--compress-debug-sections=zlib-gnu} compresses DWARF debug 2169sections using zlib. The debug sections are renamed to begin with 2170@samp{.zdebug} instead of @samp{.debug}. Note - if compression would 2171actually make a section @emph{larger}, then it is not compressed nor 2172renamed. 2173 2174@item --decompress-debug-sections 2175Decompress DWARF debug sections using zlib. The original section 2176names of the compressed sections are restored. 2177 2178@item --elf-stt-common=yes 2179@itemx --elf-stt-common=no 2180For ELF files, these options control whether common symbols should be 2181converted to the @code{STT_COMMON} or @code{STT_OBJECT} type. 2182@option{--elf-stt-common=yes} converts common symbol type to 2183@code{STT_COMMON}. @option{--elf-stt-common=no} converts common symbol 2184type to @code{STT_OBJECT}. 2185 2186@item --merge-notes 2187@itemx --no-merge-notes 2188For ELF files, attempt (or do not attempt) to reduce the size of any 2189SHT_NOTE type sections by removing duplicate notes. 2190 2191@item -V 2192@itemx --version 2193Show the version number of @command{objcopy}. 2194 2195@item --verilog-data-width=@var{bytes} 2196For Verilog output, this options controls the number of bytes 2197converted for each output data element. The input target controls the 2198endianness of the conversion. 2199 2200@item -v 2201@itemx --verbose 2202Verbose output: list all object files modified. In the case of 2203archives, @samp{objcopy -V} lists all members of the archive. 2204 2205@item --help 2206Show a summary of the options to @command{objcopy}. 2207 2208@item --info 2209Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available. 2210@end table 2211 2212@c man end 2213 2214@ignore 2215@c man begin SEEALSO objcopy 2216ld(1), objdump(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 2217@c man end 2218@end ignore 2219 2220@node objdump 2221@chapter objdump 2222 2223@cindex object file information 2224@kindex objdump 2225 2226@c man title objdump display information from object files 2227 2228@smallexample 2229@c man begin SYNOPSIS objdump 2230objdump [@option{-a}|@option{--archive-headers}] 2231 [@option{-b} @var{bfdname}|@option{--target=@var{bfdname}}] 2232 [@option{-C}|@option{--demangle}[=@var{style}] ] 2233 [@option{-d}|@option{--disassemble}[=@var{symbol}]] 2234 [@option{-D}|@option{--disassemble-all}] 2235 [@option{-z}|@option{--disassemble-zeroes}] 2236 [@option{-EB}|@option{-EL}|@option{--endian=}@{big | little @}] 2237 [@option{-f}|@option{--file-headers}] 2238 [@option{-F}|@option{--file-offsets}] 2239 [@option{--file-start-context}] 2240 [@option{-g}|@option{--debugging}] 2241 [@option{-e}|@option{--debugging-tags}] 2242 [@option{-h}|@option{--section-headers}|@option{--headers}] 2243 [@option{-i}|@option{--info}] 2244 [@option{-j} @var{section}|@option{--section=}@var{section}] 2245 [@option{-l}|@option{--line-numbers}] 2246 [@option{-S}|@option{--source}] 2247 [@option{--source-comment}[=@var{text}]] 2248 [@option{-m} @var{machine}|@option{--architecture=}@var{machine}] 2249 [@option{-M} @var{options}|@option{--disassembler-options=}@var{options}] 2250 [@option{-p}|@option{--private-headers}] 2251 [@option{-P} @var{options}|@option{--private=}@var{options}] 2252 [@option{-r}|@option{--reloc}] 2253 [@option{-R}|@option{--dynamic-reloc}] 2254 [@option{-s}|@option{--full-contents}] 2255 [@option{-W[lLiaprmfFsoORtUuTgAck]}| 2256 @option{--dwarf}[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=str-offsets,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index,=addr,=cu_index,=links]] 2257 [@option{-WK}|@option{--dwarf=follow-links}] 2258 [@option{-WN}|@option{--dwarf=no-follow-links}] 2259 [@option{-wD}|@option{--dwarf=use-debuginfod}] 2260 [@option{-wE}|@option{--dwarf=do-not-use-debuginfod}] 2261 [@option{-L}|@option{--process-links}] 2262 [@option{--ctf=}@var{section}] 2263 [@option{-G}|@option{--stabs}] 2264 [@option{-t}|@option{--syms}] 2265 [@option{-T}|@option{--dynamic-syms}] 2266 [@option{-x}|@option{--all-headers}] 2267 [@option{-w}|@option{--wide}] 2268 [@option{--start-address=}@var{address}] 2269 [@option{--stop-address=}@var{address}] 2270 [@option{--no-addresses}] 2271 [@option{--prefix-addresses}] 2272 [@option{--[no-]show-raw-insn}] 2273 [@option{--adjust-vma=}@var{offset}] 2274 [@option{--dwarf-depth=@var{n}}] 2275 [@option{--dwarf-start=@var{n}}] 2276 [@option{--ctf-parent=}@var{section}] 2277 [@option{--no-recurse-limit}|@option{--recurse-limit}] 2278 [@option{--special-syms}] 2279 [@option{--prefix=}@var{prefix}] 2280 [@option{--prefix-strip=}@var{level}] 2281 [@option{--insn-width=}@var{width}] 2282 [@option{--visualize-jumps[=color|=extended-color|=off]} 2283 [@option{--disassembler-color=[color|extended-color|off]} 2284 [@option{-U} @var{method}] [@option{--unicode=}@var{method}] 2285 [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 2286 [@option{-H}|@option{--help}] 2287 @var{objfile}@dots{} 2288@c man end 2289@end smallexample 2290 2291@c man begin DESCRIPTION objdump 2292 2293@command{objdump} displays information about one or more object files. 2294The options control what particular information to display. This 2295information is mostly useful to programmers who are working on the 2296compilation tools, as opposed to programmers who just want their 2297program to compile and work. 2298 2299@var{objfile}@dots{} are the object files to be examined. When you 2300specify archives, @command{objdump} shows information on each of the member 2301object files. 2302 2303@c man end 2304 2305@c man begin OPTIONS objdump 2306 2307The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are 2308equivalent. At least one option from the list 2309@option{-a,-d,-D,-e,-f,-g,-G,-h,-H,-p,-P,-r,-R,-s,-S,-t,-T,-V,-x} must be given. 2310 2311@table @env 2312@item -a 2313@itemx --archive-header 2314@cindex archive headers 2315If any of the @var{objfile} files are archives, display the archive 2316header information (in a format similar to @samp{ls -l}). Besides the 2317information you could list with @samp{ar tv}, @samp{objdump -a} shows 2318the object file format of each archive member. 2319 2320@item --adjust-vma=@var{offset} 2321@cindex section addresses in objdump 2322@cindex VMA in objdump 2323When dumping information, first add @var{offset} to all the section 2324addresses. This is useful if the section addresses do not correspond to 2325the symbol table, which can happen when putting sections at particular 2326addresses when using a format which can not represent section addresses, 2327such as a.out. 2328 2329@item -b @var{bfdname} 2330@itemx --target=@var{bfdname} 2331@cindex object code format 2332Specify that the object-code format for the object files is 2333@var{bfdname}. This option may not be necessary; @var{objdump} can 2334automatically recognize many formats. 2335 2336For example, 2337@example 2338objdump -b oasys -m vax -h fu.o 2339@end example 2340@noindent 2341displays summary information from the section headers (@option{-h}) of 2342@file{fu.o}, which is explicitly identified (@option{-m}) as a VAX object 2343file in the format produced by Oasys compilers. You can list the 2344formats available with the @option{-i} option. 2345@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 2346 2347@item -C 2348@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}] 2349@cindex demangling in objdump 2350Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names. 2351Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this 2352makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different 2353mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to 2354choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. @xref{c++filt}, 2355for more information on demangling. 2356 2357@item --recurse-limit 2358@itemx --no-recurse-limit 2359@itemx --recursion-limit 2360@itemx --no-recursion-limit 2361Enables or disables a limit on the amount of recursion performed 2362whilst demangling strings. Since the name mangling formats allow for 2363an infinite level of recursion it is possible to create strings whose 2364decoding will exhaust the amount of stack space available on the host 2365machine, triggering a memory fault. The limit tries to prevent this 2366from happening by restricting recursion to 2048 levels of nesting. 2367 2368The default is for this limit to be enabled, but disabling it may be 2369necessary in order to demangle truly complicated names. Note however 2370that if the recursion limit is disabled then stack exhaustion is 2371possible and any bug reports about such an event will be rejected. 2372 2373@item -g 2374@itemx --debugging 2375Display debugging information. This attempts to parse STABS 2376debugging format information stored in the file and print it out using 2377a C like syntax. If no STABS debugging was found this option 2378falls back on the @option{-W} option to print any DWARF information in 2379the file. 2380 2381@item -e 2382@itemx --debugging-tags 2383Like @option{-g}, but the information is generated in a format compatible 2384with ctags tool. 2385 2386@item -d 2387@itemx --disassemble 2388@itemx --disassemble=@var{symbol} 2389@cindex disassembling object code 2390@cindex machine instructions 2391Display the assembler mnemonics for the machine instructions from the 2392input file. This option only disassembles those sections which are 2393expected to contain instructions. If the optional @var{symbol} 2394argument is given, then display the assembler mnemonics starting at 2395@var{symbol}. If @var{symbol} is a function name then disassembly 2396will stop at the end of the function, otherwise it will stop when the 2397next symbol is encountered. If there are no matches for @var{symbol} 2398then nothing will be displayed. 2399 2400Note if the @option{--dwarf=follow-links} option is enabled 2401then any symbol tables in linked debug info files will be read in and 2402used when disassembling. 2403 2404@item -D 2405@itemx --disassemble-all 2406Like @option{-d}, but disassemble the contents of all sections, not just 2407those expected to contain instructions. 2408 2409This option also has a subtle effect on the disassembly of 2410instructions in code sections. When option @option{-d} is in effect 2411objdump will assume that any symbols present in a code section occur 2412on the boundary between instructions and it will refuse to disassemble 2413across such a boundary. When option @option{-D} is in effect however 2414this assumption is supressed. This means that it is possible for the 2415output of @option{-d} and @option{-D} to differ if, for example, data 2416is stored in code sections. 2417 2418If the target is an ARM architecture this switch also has the effect 2419of forcing the disassembler to decode pieces of data found in code 2420sections as if they were instructions. 2421 2422Note if the @option{--dwarf=follow-links} option is enabled 2423then any symbol tables in linked debug info files will be read in and 2424used when disassembling. 2425 2426@item --no-addresses 2427When disassembling, don't print addresses on each line or for symbols 2428and relocation offsets. In combination with @option{--no-show-raw-insn} 2429this may be useful for comparing compiler output. 2430 2431@item --prefix-addresses 2432When disassembling, print the complete address on each line. This is 2433the older disassembly format. 2434 2435@item -EB 2436@itemx -EL 2437@itemx --endian=@{big|little@} 2438@cindex endianness 2439@cindex disassembly endianness 2440Specify the endianness of the object files. This only affects 2441disassembly. This can be useful when disassembling a file format which 2442does not describe endianness information, such as S-records. 2443 2444@item -f 2445@itemx --file-headers 2446@cindex object file header 2447Display summary information from the overall header of 2448each of the @var{objfile} files. 2449 2450@item -F 2451@itemx --file-offsets 2452@cindex object file offsets 2453When disassembling sections, whenever a symbol is displayed, also 2454display the file offset of the region of data that is about to be 2455dumped. If zeroes are being skipped, then when disassembly resumes, 2456tell the user how many zeroes were skipped and the file offset of the 2457location from where the disassembly resumes. When dumping sections, 2458display the file offset of the location from where the dump starts. 2459 2460@item --file-start-context 2461@cindex source code context 2462Specify that when displaying interlisted source code/disassembly 2463(assumes @option{-S}) from a file that has not yet been displayed, extend the 2464context to the start of the file. 2465 2466@item -h 2467@itemx --section-headers 2468@itemx --headers 2469@cindex section headers 2470Display summary information from the section headers of the 2471object file. 2472 2473File segments may be relocated to nonstandard addresses, for example by 2474using the @option{-Ttext}, @option{-Tdata}, or @option{-Tbss} options to 2475@command{ld}. However, some object file formats, such as a.out, do not 2476store the starting address of the file segments. In those situations, 2477although @command{ld} relocates the sections correctly, using @samp{objdump 2478-h} to list the file section headers cannot show the correct addresses. 2479Instead, it shows the usual addresses, which are implicit for the 2480target. 2481 2482Note, in some cases it is possible for a section to have both the 2483READONLY and the NOREAD attributes set. In such cases the NOREAD 2484attribute takes precedence, but @command{objdump} will report both 2485since the exact setting of the flag bits might be important. 2486 2487@item -H 2488@itemx --help 2489Print a summary of the options to @command{objdump} and exit. 2490 2491@item -i 2492@itemx --info 2493@cindex architectures available 2494@cindex object formats available 2495Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available 2496for specification with @option{-b} or @option{-m}. 2497 2498@item -j @var{name} 2499@itemx --section=@var{name} 2500@cindex section information 2501Display information only for section @var{name}. 2502 2503@item -L 2504@itemx --process-links 2505Display the contents of non-debug sections found in separate debuginfo 2506files that are linked to the main file. This option automatically 2507implies the @option{-WK} option, and only sections requested by other 2508command line options will be displayed. 2509 2510@item -l 2511@itemx --line-numbers 2512@cindex source filenames for object files 2513Label the display (using debugging information) with the filename and 2514source line numbers corresponding to the object code or relocs shown. 2515Only useful with @option{-d}, @option{-D}, or @option{-r}. 2516 2517@item -m @var{machine} 2518@itemx --architecture=@var{machine} 2519@cindex architecture 2520@cindex disassembly architecture 2521Specify the architecture to use when disassembling object files. This 2522can be useful when disassembling object files which do not describe 2523architecture information, such as S-records. You can list the available 2524architectures with the @option{-i} option. 2525 2526If the target is an ARM architecture then this switch has an 2527additional effect. It restricts the disassembly to only those 2528instructions supported by the architecture specified by @var{machine}. 2529If it is necessary to use this switch because the input file does not 2530contain any architecture information, but it is also desired to 2531disassemble all the instructions use @option{-marm}. 2532 2533@item -M @var{options} 2534@itemx --disassembler-options=@var{options} 2535Pass target specific information to the disassembler. Only supported on 2536some targets. If it is necessary to specify more than one 2537disassembler option then multiple @option{-M} options can be used or 2538can be placed together into a comma separated list. 2539 2540For ARC, @option{dsp} controls the printing of DSP instructions, 2541@option{spfp} selects the printing of FPX single precision FP 2542instructions, @option{dpfp} selects the printing of FPX double 2543precision FP instructions, @option{quarkse_em} selects the printing of 2544special QuarkSE-EM instructions, @option{fpuda} selects the printing 2545of double precision assist instructions, @option{fpus} selects the 2546printing of FPU single precision FP instructions, while @option{fpud} 2547selects the printing of FPU double precision FP instructions. 2548Additionally, one can choose to have all the immediates printed in 2549hexadecimal using @option{hex}. By default, the short immediates are 2550printed using the decimal representation, while the long immediate 2551values are printed as hexadecimal. 2552 2553@option{cpu=...} allows one to enforce a particular ISA when disassembling 2554instructions, overriding the @option{-m} value or whatever is in the ELF file. 2555This might be useful to select ARC EM or HS ISA, because architecture is same 2556for those and disassembler relies on private ELF header data to decide if code 2557is for EM or HS. This option might be specified multiple times - only the 2558latest value will be used. Valid values are same as for the assembler 2559@option{-mcpu=...} option. 2560 2561If the target is an ARM architecture then this switch can be used to 2562select which register name set is used during disassembler. Specifying 2563@option{-M reg-names-std} (the default) will select the register names as 2564used in ARM's instruction set documentation, but with register 13 called 2565'sp', register 14 called 'lr' and register 15 called 'pc'. Specifying 2566@option{-M reg-names-apcs} will select the name set used by the ARM 2567Procedure Call Standard, whilst specifying @option{-M reg-names-raw} will 2568just use @samp{r} followed by the register number. 2569 2570There are also two variants on the APCS register naming scheme enabled 2571by @option{-M reg-names-atpcs} and @option{-M reg-names-special-atpcs} which 2572use the ARM/Thumb Procedure Call Standard naming conventions. (Either 2573with the normal register names or the special register names). 2574 2575This option can also be used for ARM architectures to force the 2576disassembler to interpret all instructions as Thumb instructions by 2577using the switch @option{--disassembler-options=force-thumb}. This can be 2578useful when attempting to disassemble thumb code produced by other 2579compilers. 2580 2581For AArch64 targets this switch can be used to set whether instructions are 2582disassembled as the most general instruction using the @option{-M no-aliases} 2583option or whether instruction notes should be generated as comments in the 2584disasssembly using @option{-M notes}. 2585 2586For the x86, some of the options duplicate functions of the @option{-m} 2587switch, but allow finer grained control. 2588@table @code 2589@item x86-64 2590@itemx i386 2591@itemx i8086 2592Select disassembly for the given architecture. 2593 2594@item intel 2595@itemx att 2596Select between intel syntax mode and AT&T syntax mode. 2597 2598@item amd64 2599@itemx intel64 2600Select between AMD64 ISA and Intel64 ISA. 2601 2602@item intel-mnemonic 2603@itemx att-mnemonic 2604Select between intel mnemonic mode and AT&T mnemonic mode. 2605Note: @code{intel-mnemonic} implies @code{intel} and 2606@code{att-mnemonic} implies @code{att}. 2607 2608@item addr64 2609@itemx addr32 2610@itemx addr16 2611@itemx data32 2612@itemx data16 2613Specify the default address size and operand size. These five options 2614will be overridden if @code{x86-64}, @code{i386} or @code{i8086} 2615appear later in the option string. 2616 2617@item suffix 2618When in AT&T mode and also for a limited set of instructions when in Intel 2619mode, instructs the disassembler to print a mnemonic suffix even when the 2620suffix could be inferred by the operands or, for certain instructions, the 2621execution mode's defaults. 2622@end table 2623 2624For PowerPC, the @option{-M} argument @option{raw} selects 2625disasssembly of hardware insns rather than aliases. For example, you 2626will see @code{rlwinm} rather than @code{clrlwi}, and @code{addi} 2627rather than @code{li}. All of the @option{-m} arguments for 2628@command{gas} that select a CPU are supported. These are: 2629@option{403}, @option{405}, @option{440}, @option{464}, @option{476}, 2630@option{601}, @option{603}, @option{604}, @option{620}, @option{7400}, 2631@option{7410}, @option{7450}, @option{7455}, @option{750cl}, 2632@option{821}, @option{850}, @option{860}, @option{a2}, @option{booke}, 2633@option{booke32}, @option{cell}, @option{com}, @option{e200z4}, 2634@option{e300}, @option{e500}, @option{e500mc}, @option{e500mc64}, 2635@option{e500x2}, @option{e5500}, @option{e6500}, @option{efs}, 2636@option{power4}, @option{power5}, @option{power6}, @option{power7}, 2637@option{power8}, @option{power9}, @option{power10}, @option{ppc}, 2638@option{ppc32}, @option{ppc64}, @option{ppc64bridge}, @option{ppcps}, 2639@option{pwr}, @option{pwr2}, @option{pwr4}, @option{pwr5}, @option{pwr5x}, 2640@option{pwr6}, @option{pwr7}, @option{pwr8}, @option{pwr9}, @option{pwr10}, 2641@option{pwrx}, @option{titan}, and @option{vle}. 2642@option{32} and @option{64} modify the default or a prior CPU 2643selection, disabling and enabling 64-bit insns respectively. In 2644addition, @option{altivec}, @option{any}, @option{htm}, @option{vsx}, 2645and @option{spe} add capabilities to a previous @emph{or later} CPU 2646selection. @option{any} will disassemble any opcode known to 2647binutils, but in cases where an opcode has two different meanings or 2648different arguments, you may not see the disassembly you expect. 2649If you disassemble without giving a CPU selection, a default will be 2650chosen from information gleaned by BFD from the object files headers, 2651but the result again may not be as you expect. 2652 2653For MIPS, this option controls the printing of instruction mnemonic 2654names and register names in disassembled instructions. Multiple 2655selections from the following may be specified as a comma separated 2656string, and invalid options are ignored: 2657 2658@table @code 2659@item no-aliases 2660Print the 'raw' instruction mnemonic instead of some pseudo 2661instruction mnemonic. I.e., print 'daddu' or 'or' instead of 'move', 2662'sll' instead of 'nop', etc. 2663 2664@item msa 2665Disassemble MSA instructions. 2666 2667@item virt 2668Disassemble the virtualization ASE instructions. 2669 2670@item xpa 2671Disassemble the eXtended Physical Address (XPA) ASE instructions. 2672 2673@item gpr-names=@var{ABI} 2674Print GPR (general-purpose register) names as appropriate 2675for the specified ABI. By default, GPR names are selected according to 2676the ABI of the binary being disassembled. 2677 2678@item fpr-names=@var{ABI} 2679Print FPR (floating-point register) names as 2680appropriate for the specified ABI. By default, FPR numbers are printed 2681rather than names. 2682 2683@item cp0-names=@var{ARCH} 2684Print CP0 (system control coprocessor; coprocessor 0) register names 2685as appropriate for the CPU or architecture specified by 2686@var{ARCH}. By default, CP0 register names are selected according to 2687the architecture and CPU of the binary being disassembled. 2688 2689@item hwr-names=@var{ARCH} 2690Print HWR (hardware register, used by the @code{rdhwr} instruction) names 2691as appropriate for the CPU or architecture specified by 2692@var{ARCH}. By default, HWR names are selected according to 2693the architecture and CPU of the binary being disassembled. 2694 2695@item reg-names=@var{ABI} 2696Print GPR and FPR names as appropriate for the selected ABI. 2697 2698@item reg-names=@var{ARCH} 2699Print CPU-specific register names (CP0 register and HWR names) 2700as appropriate for the selected CPU or architecture. 2701@end table 2702 2703For any of the options listed above, @var{ABI} or 2704@var{ARCH} may be specified as @samp{numeric} to have numbers printed 2705rather than names, for the selected types of registers. 2706You can list the available values of @var{ABI} and @var{ARCH} using 2707the @option{--help} option. 2708 2709For VAX, you can specify function entry addresses with @option{-M 2710entry:0xf00ba}. You can use this multiple times to properly 2711disassemble VAX binary files that don't contain symbol tables (like 2712ROM dumps). In these cases, the function entry mask would otherwise 2713be decoded as VAX instructions, which would probably lead the rest 2714of the function being wrongly disassembled. 2715 2716@item -p 2717@itemx --private-headers 2718Print information that is specific to the object file format. The exact 2719information printed depends upon the object file format. For some 2720object file formats, no additional information is printed. 2721 2722@item -P @var{options} 2723@itemx --private=@var{options} 2724Print information that is specific to the object file format. The 2725argument @var{options} is a comma separated list that depends on the 2726format (the lists of options is displayed with the help). 2727 2728For XCOFF, the available options are: 2729@table @code 2730@item header 2731@item aout 2732@item sections 2733@item syms 2734@item relocs 2735@item lineno, 2736@item loader 2737@item except 2738@item typchk 2739@item traceback 2740@item toc 2741@item ldinfo 2742@end table 2743 2744Not all object formats support this option. In particular the ELF 2745format does not use it. 2746 2747@item -r 2748@itemx --reloc 2749@cindex relocation entries, in object file 2750Print the relocation entries of the file. If used with @option{-d} or 2751@option{-D}, the relocations are printed interspersed with the 2752disassembly. 2753 2754@item -R 2755@itemx --dynamic-reloc 2756@cindex dynamic relocation entries, in object file 2757Print the dynamic relocation entries of the file. This is only 2758meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared 2759libraries. As for @option{-r}, if used with @option{-d} or 2760@option{-D}, the relocations are printed interspersed with the 2761disassembly. 2762 2763@item -s 2764@itemx --full-contents 2765@cindex sections, full contents 2766@cindex object file sections 2767Display the full contents of any sections requested. By default all 2768non-empty sections are displayed. 2769 2770@item -S 2771@itemx --source 2772@cindex source disassembly 2773@cindex disassembly, with source 2774Display source code intermixed with disassembly, if possible. Implies 2775@option{-d}. 2776 2777@item --source-comment[=@var{txt}] 2778@cindex source disassembly 2779@cindex disassembly, with source 2780Like the @option{-S} option, but all source code lines are displayed 2781with a prefix of @var{txt}. Typically @var{txt} will be a comment 2782string which can be used to distinguish the assembler code from the 2783source code. If @var{txt} is not provided then a default string of 2784@var{``# ``} (hash followed by a space), will be used. 2785 2786@item --prefix=@var{prefix} 2787@cindex Add prefix to absolute paths 2788Specify @var{prefix} to add to the absolute paths when used with 2789@option{-S}. 2790 2791@item --prefix-strip=@var{level} 2792@cindex Strip absolute paths 2793Indicate how many initial directory names to strip off the hardwired 2794absolute paths. It has no effect without @option{--prefix=}@var{prefix}. 2795 2796@item --show-raw-insn 2797When disassembling instructions, print the instruction in hex as well as 2798in symbolic form. This is the default except when 2799@option{--prefix-addresses} is used. 2800 2801@item --no-show-raw-insn 2802When disassembling instructions, do not print the instruction bytes. 2803This is the default when @option{--prefix-addresses} is used. 2804 2805@item --insn-width=@var{width} 2806@cindex Instruction width 2807Display @var{width} bytes on a single line when disassembling 2808instructions. 2809 2810@item --visualize-jumps[=color|=extended-color|=off] 2811Visualize jumps that stay inside a function by drawing ASCII art between 2812the start and target addresses. The optional @option{=color} argument 2813adds color to the output using simple terminal colors. Alternatively 2814the @option{=extended-color} argument will add color using 8bit 2815colors, but these might not work on all terminals. 2816 2817If it is necessary to disable the @option{visualize-jumps} option 2818after it has previously been enabled then use 2819@option{visualize-jumps=off}. 2820 2821@item --disassembler-color=[color|extended-color|off] 2822Apply syntax highlighting to the disassembler output. The 2823@option{color} argument adds color using simple terminal colors. 2824Alternatively the @option{extended-color} argument will use 8bit 2825colors, but these might not work on all terminals. 2826 2827If it is necessary to disable the @option{--disassembler-color} option 2828after it has previously been enabled then use 2829@option{--disassembler-color=off}. 2830 2831@item -W[lLiaprmfFsoORtUuTgAckK] 2832@itemx --dwarf[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=str-offsets,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index,=addr,=cu_index,=links,=follow-links] 2833@include debug.options.texi 2834 2835@item --dwarf-check 2836Enable additional checks for consistency of Dwarf information. 2837 2838@include ctf.options.texi 2839 2840@item -G 2841@itemx --stabs 2842@cindex stab 2843@cindex .stab 2844@cindex debug symbols 2845@cindex ELF object file format 2846Display the full contents of any sections requested. Display the 2847contents of the .stab and .stab.index and .stab.excl sections from an 2848ELF file. This is only useful on systems (such as Solaris 2.0) in which 2849@code{.stab} debugging symbol-table entries are carried in an ELF 2850section. In most other file formats, debugging symbol-table entries are 2851interleaved with linkage symbols, and are visible in the @option{--syms} 2852output. 2853 2854@item --start-address=@var{address} 2855@cindex start-address 2856Start displaying data at the specified address. This affects the output 2857of the @option{-d}, @option{-r} and @option{-s} options. 2858 2859@item --stop-address=@var{address} 2860@cindex stop-address 2861Stop displaying data at the specified address. This affects the output 2862of the @option{-d}, @option{-r} and @option{-s} options. 2863 2864@item -t 2865@itemx --syms 2866@cindex symbol table entries, printing 2867Print the symbol table entries of the file. 2868This is similar to the information provided by the @samp{nm} program, 2869although the display format is different. The format of the output 2870depends upon the format of the file being dumped, but there are two main 2871types. One looks like this: 2872 2873@smallexample 2874[ 4](sec 3)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 3) (nx 1) 0x00000000 .bss 2875[ 6](sec 1)(fl 0x00)(ty 0)(scl 2) (nx 0) 0x00000000 fred 2876@end smallexample 2877 2878where the number inside the square brackets is the number of the entry 2879in the symbol table, the @var{sec} number is the section number, the 2880@var{fl} value are the symbol's flag bits, the @var{ty} number is the 2881symbol's type, the @var{scl} number is the symbol's storage class and 2882the @var{nx} value is the number of auxiliary entries associated with 2883the symbol. The last two fields are the symbol's value and its name. 2884 2885The other common output format, usually seen with ELF based files, 2886looks like this: 2887 2888@smallexample 288900000000 l d .bss 00000000 .bss 289000000000 g .text 00000000 fred 2891@end smallexample 2892 2893Here the first number is the symbol's value (sometimes referred to as 2894its address). The next field is actually a set of characters and 2895spaces indicating the flag bits that are set on the symbol. These 2896characters are described below. Next is the section with which the 2897symbol is associated or @emph{*ABS*} if the section is absolute (ie 2898not connected with any section), or @emph{*UND*} if the section is 2899referenced in the file being dumped, but not defined there. 2900 2901After the section name comes another field, a number, which for common 2902symbols is the alignment and for other symbol is the size. Finally 2903the symbol's name is displayed. 2904 2905The flag characters are divided into 7 groups as follows: 2906@table @code 2907@item l 2908@itemx g 2909@itemx u 2910@itemx ! 2911The symbol is a local (l), global (g), unique global (u), neither 2912global nor local (a space) or both global and local (!). A 2913symbol can be neither local or global for a variety of reasons, e.g., 2914because it is used for debugging, but it is probably an indication of 2915a bug if it is ever both local and global. Unique global symbols are 2916a GNU extension to the standard set of ELF symbol bindings. For such 2917a symbol the dynamic linker will make sure that in the entire process 2918there is just one symbol with this name and type in use. 2919 2920@item w 2921The symbol is weak (w) or strong (a space). 2922 2923@item C 2924The symbol denotes a constructor (C) or an ordinary symbol (a space). 2925 2926@item W 2927The symbol is a warning (W) or a normal symbol (a space). A warning 2928symbol's name is a message to be displayed if the symbol following the 2929warning symbol is ever referenced. 2930 2931@item I 2932@item i 2933The symbol is an indirect reference to another symbol (I), a function 2934to be evaluated during reloc processing (i) or a normal symbol (a 2935space). 2936 2937@item d 2938@itemx D 2939The symbol is a debugging symbol (d) or a dynamic symbol (D) or a 2940normal symbol (a space). 2941 2942@item F 2943@item f 2944@item O 2945The symbol is the name of a function (F) or a file (f) or an object 2946(O) or just a normal symbol (a space). 2947@end table 2948 2949@item -T 2950@itemx --dynamic-syms 2951@cindex dynamic symbol table entries, printing 2952Print the dynamic symbol table entries of the file. This is only 2953meaningful for dynamic objects, such as certain types of shared 2954libraries. This is similar to the information provided by the @samp{nm} 2955program when given the @option{-D} (@option{--dynamic}) option. 2956 2957The output format is similar to that produced by the @option{--syms} 2958option, except that an extra field is inserted before the symbol's 2959name, giving the version information associated with the symbol. 2960If the version is the default version to be used when resolving 2961unversioned references to the symbol then it's displayed as is, 2962otherwise it's put into parentheses. 2963 2964@item --special-syms 2965When displaying symbols include those which the target considers to be 2966special in some way and which would not normally be of interest to the 2967user. 2968 2969@item -U @var{[d|i|l|e|x|h]} 2970@itemx --unicode=@var{[default|invalid|locale|escape|hex|highlight]} 2971Controls the display of UTF-8 encoded multibyte characters in strings. 2972The default (@option{--unicode=default}) is to give them no special 2973treatment. The @option{--unicode=locale} option displays the sequence 2974in the current locale, which may or may not support them. The options 2975@option{--unicode=hex} and @option{--unicode=invalid} display them as 2976hex byte sequences enclosed by either angle brackets or curly braces. 2977 2978The @option{--unicode=escape} option displays them as escape sequences 2979(@var{\uxxxx}) and the @option{--unicode=highlight} option displays 2980them as escape sequences highlighted in red (if supported by the 2981output device). The colouring is intended to draw attention to the 2982presence of unicode sequences where they might not be expected. 2983 2984@item -V 2985@itemx --version 2986Print the version number of @command{objdump} and exit. 2987 2988@item -x 2989@itemx --all-headers 2990@cindex all header information, object file 2991@cindex header information, all 2992Display all available header information, including the symbol table and 2993relocation entries. Using @option{-x} is equivalent to specifying all of 2994@option{-a -f -h -p -r -t}. 2995 2996@item -w 2997@itemx --wide 2998@cindex wide output, printing 2999Format some lines for output devices that have more than 80 columns. 3000Also do not truncate symbol names when they are displayed. 3001 3002@item -z 3003@itemx --disassemble-zeroes 3004Normally the disassembly output will skip blocks of zeroes. This 3005option directs the disassembler to disassemble those blocks, just like 3006any other data. 3007@end table 3008 3009@c man end 3010 3011@ignore 3012@c man begin SEEALSO objdump 3013nm(1), readelf(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 3014@c man end 3015@end ignore 3016 3017@node ranlib 3018@chapter ranlib 3019 3020@kindex ranlib 3021@cindex archive contents 3022@cindex symbol index 3023 3024@c man title ranlib generate an index to an archive 3025 3026@smallexample 3027@c man begin SYNOPSIS ranlib 3028ranlib [@option{--plugin} @var{name}] [@option{-DhHvVt}] @var{archive} 3029@c man end 3030@end smallexample 3031 3032@c man begin DESCRIPTION ranlib 3033 3034@command{ranlib} generates an index to the contents of an archive and 3035stores it in the archive. The index lists each symbol defined by a 3036member of an archive that is a relocatable object file. 3037 3038You may use @samp{nm -s} or @samp{nm --print-armap} to list this index. 3039 3040An archive with such an index speeds up linking to the library and 3041allows routines in the library to call each other without regard to 3042their placement in the archive. 3043 3044The @sc{gnu} @command{ranlib} program is another form of @sc{gnu} @command{ar}; running 3045@command{ranlib} is completely equivalent to executing @samp{ar -s}. 3046@xref{ar}. 3047 3048@c man end 3049 3050@c man begin OPTIONS ranlib 3051 3052@table @env 3053@item -h 3054@itemx -H 3055@itemx --help 3056Show usage information for @command{ranlib}. 3057 3058@item -v 3059@itemx -V 3060@itemx --version 3061Show the version number of @command{ranlib}. 3062 3063@item -D 3064@cindex deterministic archives 3065@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 3066Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. The symbol map archive member's 3067header will show zero for the UID, GID, and timestamp. When this 3068option is used, multiple runs will produce identical output files. 3069 3070If @file{binutils} was configured with 3071@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by 3072default. It can be disabled with the @samp{-U} option, described 3073below. 3074 3075@item -t 3076Update the timestamp of the symbol map of an archive. 3077 3078@item -U 3079@cindex deterministic archives 3080@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 3081Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the 3082inverse of the @samp{-D} option, above: the archive index will get 3083actual UID, GID, timestamp, and file mode values. 3084 3085If @file{binutils} was configured @emph{without} 3086@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by 3087default. 3088 3089@end table 3090 3091@c man end 3092 3093@ignore 3094@c man begin SEEALSO ranlib 3095ar(1), nm(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 3096@c man end 3097@end ignore 3098 3099@node size 3100@chapter size 3101 3102@kindex size 3103@cindex section sizes 3104 3105@c man title size list section sizes and total size of binary files 3106 3107@smallexample 3108@c man begin SYNOPSIS size 3109size [@option{-A}|@option{-B}|@option{-G}|@option{--format=}@var{compatibility}] 3110 [@option{--help}] 3111 [@option{-d}|@option{-o}|@option{-x}|@option{--radix=}@var{number}] 3112 [@option{--common}] 3113 [@option{-t}|@option{--totals}] 3114 [@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 3115 [@var{objfile}@dots{}] 3116@c man end 3117@end smallexample 3118 3119@c man begin DESCRIPTION size 3120 3121The @sc{gnu} @command{size} utility lists the section sizes and the total 3122size for each of the binary files @var{objfile} on its argument list. 3123By default, one line of output is generated for each file or each 3124module if the file is an archive. 3125 3126@var{objfile}@dots{} are the files to be examined. If none are 3127specified, the file @code{a.out} will be used instead. 3128 3129@c man end 3130 3131@c man begin OPTIONS size 3132 3133The command-line options have the following meanings: 3134 3135@table @env 3136@item -A 3137@itemx -B 3138@itemx -G 3139@itemx --format=@var{compatibility} 3140@cindex @command{size} display format 3141Using one of these options, you can choose whether the output from @sc{gnu} 3142@command{size} resembles output from System V @command{size} (using @option{-A}, 3143or @option{--format=sysv}), or Berkeley @command{size} (using @option{-B}, or 3144@option{--format=berkeley}). The default is the one-line format similar to 3145Berkeley's. Alternatively, you can choose the GNU format output 3146(using @option{-G}, or @option{--format=gnu}), this is similar to 3147Berkeley's output format, but sizes are counted differently. 3148@c Bonus for doc-source readers: you can also say --format=strange (or 3149@c anything else that starts with 's') for sysv, and --format=boring (or 3150@c anything else that starts with 'b') for Berkeley. 3151 3152Here is an example of the Berkeley (default) format of output from 3153@command{size}: 3154@smallexample 3155$ size --format=Berkeley ranlib size 3156 text data bss dec hex filename 3157 294880 81920 11592 388392 5ed28 ranlib 3158 294880 81920 11888 388688 5ee50 size 3159@end smallexample 3160 3161The Berkeley style output counts read only data in the @code{text} 3162column, not in the @code{data} column, the @code{dec} and @code{hex} 3163columns both display the sum of the @code{text}, @code{data}, and 3164@code{bss} columns in decimal and hexadecimal respectively. 3165 3166The GNU format counts read only data in the @code{data} column, not 3167the @code{text} column, and only displays the sum of the @code{text}, 3168@code{data}, and @code{bss} columns once, in the @code{total} column. 3169The @option{--radix} option can be used to change the number base for 3170all columns. Here is the same data displayed with GNU conventions: 3171 3172@smallexample 3173$ size --format=GNU ranlib size 3174 text data bss total filename 3175 279880 96920 11592 388392 ranlib 3176 279880 96920 11888 388688 size 3177@end smallexample 3178 3179@noindent 3180This is the same data, but displayed closer to System V conventions: 3181 3182@smallexample 3183$ size --format=SysV ranlib size 3184ranlib : 3185section size addr 3186.text 294880 8192 3187.data 81920 303104 3188.bss 11592 385024 3189Total 388392 3190 3191 3192size : 3193section size addr 3194.text 294880 8192 3195.data 81920 303104 3196.bss 11888 385024 3197Total 388688 3198@end smallexample 3199 3200@item --help 3201Show a summary of acceptable arguments and options. 3202 3203@item -d 3204@itemx -o 3205@itemx -x 3206@itemx --radix=@var{number} 3207@cindex @command{size} number format 3208@cindex radix for section sizes 3209Using one of these options, you can control whether the size of each 3210section is given in decimal (@option{-d}, or @option{--radix=10}); octal 3211(@option{-o}, or @option{--radix=8}); or hexadecimal (@option{-x}, or 3212@option{--radix=16}). In @option{--radix=@var{number}}, only the three 3213values (8, 10, 16) are supported. The total size is always given in two 3214radices; decimal and hexadecimal for @option{-d} or @option{-x} output, or 3215octal and hexadecimal if you're using @option{-o}. 3216 3217@item --common 3218Print total size of common symbols in each file. When using Berkeley 3219or GNU format these are included in the bss size. 3220 3221@item -t 3222@itemx --totals 3223Show totals of all objects listed (Berkeley or GNU format mode only). 3224 3225@item --target=@var{bfdname} 3226@cindex object code format 3227Specify that the object-code format for @var{objfile} is 3228@var{bfdname}. This option may not be necessary; @command{size} can 3229automatically recognize many formats. 3230@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 3231 3232@item -V 3233@itemx --version 3234Display the version number of @command{size}. 3235@end table 3236 3237@c man end 3238 3239@ignore 3240@c man begin SEEALSO size 3241ar(1), objdump(1), readelf(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 3242@c man end 3243@end ignore 3244 3245@node strings 3246@chapter strings 3247@kindex strings 3248@cindex listings strings 3249@cindex printing strings 3250@cindex strings, printing 3251 3252@c man title strings print the sequences of printable characters in files 3253 3254@smallexample 3255@c man begin SYNOPSIS strings 3256strings [@option{-afovV}] [@option{-}@var{min-len}] 3257 [@option{-n} @var{min-len}] [@option{--bytes=}@var{min-len}] 3258 [@option{-t} @var{radix}] [@option{--radix=}@var{radix}] 3259 [@option{-e} @var{encoding}] [@option{--encoding=}@var{encoding}] 3260 [@option{-U} @var{method}] [@option{--unicode=}@var{method}] 3261 [@option{-}] [@option{--all}] [@option{--print-file-name}] 3262 [@option{-T} @var{bfdname}] [@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] 3263 [@option{-w}] [@option{--include-all-whitespace}] 3264 [@option{-s}] [@option{--output-separator} @var{sep_string}] 3265 [@option{--help}] [@option{--version}] @var{file}@dots{} 3266@c man end 3267@end smallexample 3268 3269@c man begin DESCRIPTION strings 3270 3271For each @var{file} given, @sc{gnu} @command{strings} prints the 3272printable character sequences that are at least 4 characters long (or 3273the number given with the options below) and are followed by an 3274unprintable character. 3275 3276Depending upon how the strings program was configured it will default 3277to either displaying all the printable sequences that it can find in 3278each file, or only those sequences that are in loadable, initialized 3279data sections. If the file type is unrecognizable, or if strings is 3280reading from stdin then it will always display all of the printable 3281sequences that it can find. 3282 3283For backwards compatibility any file that occurs after a command-line 3284option of just @option{-} will also be scanned in full, regardless of 3285the presence of any @option{-d} option. 3286 3287@command{strings} is mainly useful for determining the contents of 3288non-text files. 3289 3290@c man end 3291 3292@c man begin OPTIONS strings 3293 3294@table @env 3295@item -a 3296@itemx --all 3297@itemx - 3298Scan the whole file, regardless of what sections it contains or 3299whether those sections are loaded or initialized. Normally this is 3300the default behaviour, but strings can be configured so that the 3301@option{-d} is the default instead. 3302 3303The @option{-} option is position dependent and forces strings to 3304perform full scans of any file that is mentioned after the @option{-} 3305on the command line, even if the @option{-d} option has been 3306specified. 3307 3308@item -d 3309@itemx --data 3310Only print strings from initialized, loaded data sections in the 3311file. This may reduce the amount of garbage in the output, but it 3312also exposes the strings program to any security flaws that may be 3313present in the BFD library used to scan and load sections. Strings 3314can be configured so that this option is the default behaviour. In 3315such cases the @option{-a} option can be used to avoid using the BFD 3316library and instead just print all of the strings found in the file. 3317 3318@item -f 3319@itemx --print-file-name 3320Print the name of the file before each string. 3321 3322@item --help 3323Print a summary of the program usage on the standard output and exit. 3324 3325@item -@var{min-len} 3326@itemx -n @var{min-len} 3327@itemx --bytes=@var{min-len} 3328Print sequences of displayable characters that are at least 3329@var{min-len} characters long. If not specified a default minimum 3330length of 4 is used. The distinction between displayable and 3331non-displayable characters depends upon the setting of the 3332@option{-e} and @option{-U} options. Sequences are always terminated 3333at control characters such as new-line and carriage-return, but not 3334the tab character. 3335 3336@item -o 3337Like @samp{-t o}. Some other versions of @command{strings} have @option{-o} 3338act like @samp{-t d} instead. Since we can not be compatible with both 3339ways, we simply chose one. 3340 3341@item -t @var{radix} 3342@itemx --radix=@var{radix} 3343Print the offset within the file before each string. The single 3344character argument specifies the radix of the offset---@samp{o} for 3345octal, @samp{x} for hexadecimal, or @samp{d} for decimal. 3346 3347@item -e @var{encoding} 3348@itemx --encoding=@var{encoding} 3349Select the character encoding of the strings that are to be found. 3350Possible values for @var{encoding} are: @samp{s} = single-7-bit-byte 3351characters (ASCII, ISO 8859, etc., default), @samp{S} = 3352single-8-bit-byte characters, @samp{b} = 16-bit bigendian, @samp{l} = 335316-bit littleendian, @samp{B} = 32-bit bigendian, @samp{L} = 32-bit 3354littleendian. Useful for finding wide character strings. (@samp{l} 3355and @samp{b} apply to, for example, Unicode UTF-16/UCS-2 encodings). 3356 3357@item -U @var{[d|i|l|e|x|h]} 3358@itemx --unicode=@var{[default|invalid|locale|escape|hex|highlight]} 3359Controls the display of UTF-8 encoded multibyte characters in strings. 3360The default (@option{--unicode=default}) is to give them no special 3361treatment, and instead rely upon the setting of the 3362@option{--encoding} option. The other values for this option 3363automatically enable @option{--encoding=S}. 3364 3365The @option{--unicode=invalid} option treats them as non-graphic 3366characters and hence not part of a valid string. All the remaining 3367options treat them as valid string characters. 3368 3369The @option{--unicode=locale} option displays them in the current 3370locale, which may or may not support UTF-8 encoding. The 3371@option{--unicode=hex} option displays them as hex byte sequences 3372enclosed between @var{<>} characters. The @option{--unicode=escape} 3373option displays them as escape sequences (@var{\uxxxx}) and the 3374@option{--unicode=highlight} option displays them as escape sequences 3375highlighted in red (if supported by the output device). The colouring 3376is intended to draw attention to the presence of unicode sequences 3377where they might not be expected. 3378 3379@item -T @var{bfdname} 3380@itemx --target=@var{bfdname} 3381@cindex object code format 3382Specify an object code format other than your system's default format. 3383@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 3384 3385@item -v 3386@itemx -V 3387@itemx --version 3388Print the program version number on the standard output and exit. 3389 3390@item -w 3391@itemx --include-all-whitespace 3392By default tab and space characters are included in the strings that 3393are displayed, but other whitespace characters, such a newlines and 3394carriage returns, are not. The @option{-w} option changes this so 3395that all whitespace characters are considered to be part of a string. 3396 3397@item -s 3398@itemx --output-separator 3399By default, output strings are delimited by a new-line. This option 3400allows you to supply any string to be used as the output record 3401separator. Useful with --include-all-whitespace where strings 3402may contain new-lines internally. 3403@end table 3404 3405@c man end 3406 3407@ignore 3408@c man begin SEEALSO strings 3409ar(1), nm(1), objdump(1), ranlib(1), readelf(1) 3410and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 3411@c man end 3412@end ignore 3413 3414@node strip 3415@chapter strip 3416 3417@kindex strip 3418@cindex removing symbols 3419@cindex discarding symbols 3420@cindex symbols, discarding 3421 3422@c man title strip discard symbols and other data from object files 3423 3424@smallexample 3425@c man begin SYNOPSIS strip 3426strip [@option{-F} @var{bfdname} |@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] 3427 [@option{-I} @var{bfdname} |@option{--input-target=}@var{bfdname}] 3428 [@option{-O} @var{bfdname} |@option{--output-target=}@var{bfdname}] 3429 [@option{-s}|@option{--strip-all}] 3430 [@option{-S}|@option{-g}|@option{-d}|@option{--strip-debug}] 3431 [@option{--strip-dwo}] 3432 [@option{-K} @var{symbolname}|@option{--keep-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 3433 [@option{-M}|@option{--merge-notes}][@option{--no-merge-notes}] 3434 [@option{-N} @var{symbolname} |@option{--strip-symbol=}@var{symbolname}] 3435 [@option{-w}|@option{--wildcard}] 3436 [@option{-x}|@option{--discard-all}] [@option{-X} |@option{--discard-locals}] 3437 [@option{-R} @var{sectionname} |@option{--remove-section=}@var{sectionname}] 3438 [@option{--keep-section=}@var{sectionpattern}] 3439 [@option{--remove-relocations=}@var{sectionpattern}] 3440 [@option{-o} @var{file}] [@option{-p}|@option{--preserve-dates}] 3441 [@option{-D}|@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}] 3442 [@option{-U}|@option{--disable-deterministic-archives}] 3443 [@option{--keep-section-symbols}] 3444 [@option{--keep-file-symbols}] 3445 [@option{--only-keep-debug}] 3446 [@option{-v} |@option{--verbose}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 3447 [@option{--help}] [@option{--info}] 3448 @var{objfile}@dots{} 3449@c man end 3450@end smallexample 3451 3452@c man begin DESCRIPTION strip 3453 3454@sc{gnu} @command{strip} discards all symbols from object files 3455@var{objfile}. The list of object files may include archives. 3456At least one object file must be given. 3457 3458@command{strip} modifies the files named in its argument, 3459rather than writing modified copies under different names. 3460 3461@c man end 3462 3463@c man begin OPTIONS strip 3464 3465@table @env 3466@item -F @var{bfdname} 3467@itemx --target=@var{bfdname} 3468Treat the original @var{objfile} as a file with the object 3469code format @var{bfdname}, and rewrite it in the same format. 3470@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 3471 3472@item --help 3473Show a summary of the options to @command{strip} and exit. 3474 3475@item --info 3476Display a list showing all architectures and object formats available. 3477 3478@item -I @var{bfdname} 3479@itemx --input-target=@var{bfdname} 3480Treat the original @var{objfile} as a file with the object 3481code format @var{bfdname}. 3482@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 3483 3484@item -O @var{bfdname} 3485@itemx --output-target=@var{bfdname} 3486Replace @var{objfile} with a file in the output format @var{bfdname}. 3487@xref{Target Selection}, for more information. 3488 3489@item -R @var{sectionname} 3490@itemx --remove-section=@var{sectionname} 3491Remove any section named @var{sectionname} from the output file, in 3492addition to whatever sections would otherwise be removed. This 3493option may be given more than once. Note that using this option 3494inappropriately may make the output file unusable. The wildcard 3495character @samp{*} may be given at the end of @var{sectionname}. If 3496so, then any section starting with @var{sectionname} will be removed. 3497 3498If the first character of @var{sectionpattern} is the exclamation 3499point (!) then matching sections will not be removed even if an 3500earlier use of @option{--remove-section} on the same command line 3501would otherwise remove it. For example: 3502 3503@smallexample 3504 --remove-section=.text.* --remove-section=!.text.foo 3505@end smallexample 3506 3507will remove all sections matching the pattern '.text.*', but will not 3508remove the section '.text.foo'. 3509 3510@item --keep-section=@var{sectionpattern} 3511When removing sections from the output file, keep sections that match 3512@var{sectionpattern}. 3513 3514@item --remove-relocations=@var{sectionpattern} 3515Remove relocations from the output file for any section matching 3516@var{sectionpattern}. This option may be given more than once. Note 3517that using this option inappropriately may make the output file 3518unusable. Wildcard characters are accepted in @var{sectionpattern}. 3519For example: 3520 3521@smallexample 3522 --remove-relocations=.text.* 3523@end smallexample 3524 3525will remove the relocations for all sections matching the patter 3526'.text.*'. 3527 3528If the first character of @var{sectionpattern} is the exclamation 3529point (!) then matching sections will not have their relocation 3530removed even if an earlier use of @option{--remove-relocations} on the 3531same command line would otherwise cause the relocations to be removed. 3532For example: 3533 3534@smallexample 3535 --remove-relocations=.text.* --remove-relocations=!.text.foo 3536@end smallexample 3537 3538will remove all relocations for sections matching the pattern 3539'.text.*', but will not remove relocations for the section 3540'.text.foo'. 3541 3542@item -s 3543@itemx --strip-all 3544Remove all symbols. 3545 3546@item -g 3547@itemx -S 3548@itemx -d 3549@itemx --strip-debug 3550Remove debugging symbols only. 3551 3552@item --strip-dwo 3553Remove the contents of all DWARF .dwo sections, leaving the 3554remaining debugging sections and all symbols intact. 3555See the description of this option in the @command{objcopy} section 3556for more information. 3557 3558@item --strip-unneeded 3559Remove all symbols that are not needed for relocation processing in 3560addition to debugging symbols and sections stripped by 3561@option{--strip-debug}. 3562 3563@item -K @var{symbolname} 3564@itemx --keep-symbol=@var{symbolname} 3565When stripping symbols, keep symbol @var{symbolname} even if it would 3566normally be stripped. This option may be given more than once. 3567 3568@item -M 3569@itemx --merge-notes 3570@itemx --no-merge-notes 3571For ELF files, attempt (or do not attempt) to reduce the size of any 3572SHT_NOTE type sections by removing duplicate notes. The default is to 3573attempt this reduction unless stripping debug or DWO information. 3574 3575@item -N @var{symbolname} 3576@itemx --strip-symbol=@var{symbolname} 3577Remove symbol @var{symbolname} from the source file. This option may be 3578given more than once, and may be combined with strip options other than 3579@option{-K}. 3580 3581@item -o @var{file} 3582Put the stripped output in @var{file}, rather than replacing the 3583existing file. When this argument is used, only one @var{objfile} 3584argument may be specified. 3585 3586@item -p 3587@itemx --preserve-dates 3588Preserve the access and modification dates of the file. 3589 3590@item -D 3591@itemx --enable-deterministic-archives 3592@cindex deterministic archives 3593@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 3594Operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. When copying archive members 3595and writing the archive index, use zero for UIDs, GIDs, timestamps, 3596and use consistent file modes for all files. 3597 3598If @file{binutils} was configured with 3599@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}, then this mode is on by default. 3600It can be disabled with the @samp{-U} option, below. 3601 3602@item -U 3603@itemx --disable-deterministic-archives 3604@cindex deterministic archives 3605@kindex --enable-deterministic-archives 3606Do @emph{not} operate in @emph{deterministic} mode. This is the 3607inverse of the @option{-D} option, above: when copying archive members 3608and writing the archive index, use their actual UID, GID, timestamp, 3609and file mode values. 3610 3611This is the default unless @file{binutils} was configured with 3612@option{--enable-deterministic-archives}. 3613 3614@item -w 3615@itemx --wildcard 3616Permit regular expressions in @var{symbolname}s used in other command 3617line options. The question mark (?), asterisk (*), backslash (\) and 3618square brackets ([]) operators can be used anywhere in the symbol 3619name. If the first character of the symbol name is the exclamation 3620point (!) then the sense of the switch is reversed for that symbol. 3621For example: 3622 3623@smallexample 3624 -w -K !foo -K fo* 3625@end smallexample 3626 3627would cause strip to only keep symbols that start with the letters 3628``fo'', but to discard the symbol ``foo''. 3629 3630@item -x 3631@itemx --discard-all 3632Remove non-global symbols. 3633 3634@item -X 3635@itemx --discard-locals 3636Remove compiler-generated local symbols. 3637(These usually start with @samp{L} or @samp{.}.) 3638 3639@item --keep-section-symbols 3640When stripping a file, perhaps with @option{--strip-debug} or 3641@option{--strip-unneeded}, retain any symbols specifying section names, 3642which would otherwise get stripped. 3643 3644@item --keep-file-symbols 3645When stripping a file, perhaps with @option{--strip-debug} or 3646@option{--strip-unneeded}, retain any symbols specifying source file names, 3647which would otherwise get stripped. 3648 3649@item --only-keep-debug 3650Strip a file, emptying the contents of any sections that would not be 3651stripped by @option{--strip-debug} and leaving the debugging sections 3652intact. In ELF files, this preserves all the note sections in the 3653output as well. 3654 3655Note - the section headers of the stripped sections are preserved, 3656including their sizes, but the contents of the section are discarded. 3657The section headers are preserved so that other tools can match up the 3658debuginfo file with the real executable, even if that executable has 3659been relocated to a different address space. 3660 3661The intention is that this option will be used in conjunction with 3662@option{--add-gnu-debuglink} to create a two part executable. One a 3663stripped binary which will occupy less space in RAM and in a 3664distribution and the second a debugging information file which is only 3665needed if debugging abilities are required. The suggested procedure 3666to create these files is as follows: 3667 3668@enumerate 3669@item Link the executable as normal. Assuming that it is called 3670@code{foo} then... 3671@item Run @code{objcopy --only-keep-debug foo foo.dbg} to 3672create a file containing the debugging info. 3673@item Run @code{objcopy --strip-debug foo} to create a 3674stripped executable. 3675@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.dbg foo} 3676to add a link to the debugging info into the stripped executable. 3677@end enumerate 3678 3679Note---the choice of @code{.dbg} as an extension for the debug info 3680file is arbitrary. Also the @code{--only-keep-debug} step is 3681optional. You could instead do this: 3682 3683@enumerate 3684@item Link the executable as normal. 3685@item Copy @code{foo} to @code{foo.full} 3686@item Run @code{strip --strip-debug foo} 3687@item Run @code{objcopy --add-gnu-debuglink=foo.full foo} 3688@end enumerate 3689 3690i.e., the file pointed to by the @option{--add-gnu-debuglink} can be the 3691full executable. It does not have to be a file created by the 3692@option{--only-keep-debug} switch. 3693 3694Note---this switch is only intended for use on fully linked files. It 3695does not make sense to use it on object files where the debugging 3696information may be incomplete. Besides the gnu_debuglink feature 3697currently only supports the presence of one filename containing 3698debugging information, not multiple filenames on a one-per-object-file 3699basis. 3700 3701@item -V 3702@itemx --version 3703Show the version number for @command{strip}. 3704 3705@item -v 3706@itemx --verbose 3707Verbose output: list all object files modified. In the case of 3708archives, @samp{strip -v} lists all members of the archive. 3709@end table 3710 3711@c man end 3712 3713@ignore 3714@c man begin SEEALSO strip 3715the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 3716@c man end 3717@end ignore 3718 3719@node c++filt, addr2line, strip, Top 3720@chapter c++filt 3721 3722@kindex c++filt 3723@cindex demangling C++ symbols 3724 3725@c man title cxxfilt demangle C++ and Java symbols 3726 3727@smallexample 3728@c man begin SYNOPSIS cxxfilt 3729c++filt [@option{-_}|@option{--strip-underscore}] 3730 [@option{-n}|@option{--no-strip-underscore}] 3731 [@option{-p}|@option{--no-params}] 3732 [@option{-t}|@option{--types}] 3733 [@option{-i}|@option{--no-verbose}] 3734 [@option{-r}|@option{--no-recurse-limit}] 3735 [@option{-R}|@option{--recurse-limit}] 3736 [@option{-s} @var{format}|@option{--format=}@var{format}] 3737 [@option{--help}] [@option{--version}] [@var{symbol}@dots{}] 3738@c man end 3739@end smallexample 3740 3741@c man begin DESCRIPTION cxxfilt 3742 3743@kindex cxxfilt 3744The C++ and Java languages provide function overloading, which means 3745that you can write many functions with the same name, providing that 3746each function takes parameters of different types. In order to be 3747able to distinguish these similarly named functions C++ and Java 3748encode them into a low-level assembler name which uniquely identifies 3749each different version. This process is known as @dfn{mangling}. The 3750@command{c++filt} 3751@footnote{MS-DOS does not allow @kbd{+} characters in file names, so on 3752MS-DOS this program is named @command{CXXFILT}.} 3753program does the inverse mapping: it decodes (@dfn{demangles}) low-level 3754names into user-level names so that they can be read. 3755 3756Every alphanumeric word (consisting of letters, digits, underscores, 3757dollars, or periods) seen in the input is a potential mangled name. 3758If the name decodes into a C++ name, the C++ name replaces the 3759low-level name in the output, otherwise the original word is output. 3760In this way you can pass an entire assembler source file, containing 3761mangled names, through @command{c++filt} and see the same source file 3762containing demangled names. 3763 3764You can also use @command{c++filt} to decipher individual symbols by 3765passing them on the command line: 3766 3767@example 3768c++filt @var{symbol} 3769@end example 3770 3771If no @var{symbol} arguments are given, @command{c++filt} reads symbol 3772names from the standard input instead. All the results are printed on 3773the standard output. The difference between reading names from the 3774command line versus reading names from the standard input is that 3775command-line arguments are expected to be just mangled names and no 3776checking is performed to separate them from surrounding text. Thus 3777for example: 3778 3779@smallexample 3780c++filt -n _Z1fv 3781@end smallexample 3782 3783will work and demangle the name to ``f()'' whereas: 3784 3785@smallexample 3786c++filt -n _Z1fv, 3787@end smallexample 3788 3789will not work. (Note the extra comma at the end of the mangled 3790name which makes it invalid). This command however will work: 3791 3792@smallexample 3793echo _Z1fv, | c++filt -n 3794@end smallexample 3795 3796and will display ``f(),'', i.e., the demangled name followed by a 3797trailing comma. This behaviour is because when the names are read 3798from the standard input it is expected that they might be part of an 3799assembler source file where there might be extra, extraneous 3800characters trailing after a mangled name. For example: 3801 3802@smallexample 3803 .type _Z1fv, @@function 3804@end smallexample 3805 3806@c man end 3807 3808@c man begin OPTIONS cxxfilt 3809 3810@table @env 3811@item -_ 3812@itemx --strip-underscore 3813On some systems, both the C and C++ compilers put an underscore in front 3814of every name. For example, the C name @code{foo} gets the low-level 3815name @code{_foo}. This option removes the initial underscore. Whether 3816@command{c++filt} removes the underscore by default is target dependent. 3817 3818@item -n 3819@itemx --no-strip-underscore 3820Do not remove the initial underscore. 3821 3822@item -p 3823@itemx --no-params 3824When demangling the name of a function, do not display the types of 3825the function's parameters. 3826 3827@item -t 3828@itemx --types 3829Attempt to demangle types as well as function names. This is disabled 3830by default since mangled types are normally only used internally in 3831the compiler, and they can be confused with non-mangled names. For example, 3832a function called ``a'' treated as a mangled type name would be 3833demangled to ``signed char''. 3834 3835@item -i 3836@itemx --no-verbose 3837Do not include implementation details (if any) in the demangled 3838output. 3839 3840@item -r 3841@itemx -R 3842@itemx --recurse-limit 3843@itemx --no-recurse-limit 3844@itemx --recursion-limit 3845@itemx --no-recursion-limit 3846Enables or disables a limit on the amount of recursion performed 3847whilst demangling strings. Since the name mangling formats allow for 3848an infinite level of recursion it is possible to create strings whose 3849decoding will exhaust the amount of stack space available on the host 3850machine, triggering a memory fault. The limit tries to prevent this 3851from happening by restricting recursion to 2048 levels of nesting. 3852 3853The default is for this limit to be enabled, but disabling it may be 3854necessary in order to demangle truly complicated names. Note however 3855that if the recursion limit is disabled then stack exhaustion is 3856possible and any bug reports about such an event will be rejected. 3857 3858The @option{-r} option is a synonym for the 3859@option{--no-recurse-limit} option. The @option{-R} option is a 3860synonym for the @option{--recurse-limit} option. 3861 3862@item -s @var{format} 3863@itemx --format=@var{format} 3864@command{c++filt} can decode various methods of mangling, used by 3865different compilers. The argument to this option selects which 3866method it uses: 3867 3868@table @code 3869@item auto 3870Automatic selection based on executable (the default method) 3871@item gnu 3872the one used by the @sc{gnu} C++ compiler (g++) 3873@item lucid 3874the one used by the Lucid compiler (lcc) 3875@item arm 3876the one specified by the C++ Annotated Reference Manual 3877@item hp 3878the one used by the HP compiler (aCC) 3879@item edg 3880the one used by the EDG compiler 3881@item gnu-v3 3882the one used by the @sc{gnu} C++ compiler (g++) with the V3 ABI. 3883@item java 3884the one used by the @sc{gnu} Java compiler (gcj) 3885@item gnat 3886the one used by the @sc{gnu} Ada compiler (GNAT). 3887@end table 3888 3889@item --help 3890Print a summary of the options to @command{c++filt} and exit. 3891 3892@item --version 3893Print the version number of @command{c++filt} and exit. 3894@end table 3895 3896@c man end 3897 3898@ignore 3899@c man begin SEEALSO cxxfilt 3900the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 3901@c man end 3902@end ignore 3903 3904@quotation 3905@emph{Warning:} @command{c++filt} is a new utility, and the details of its 3906user interface are subject to change in future releases. In particular, 3907a command-line option may be required in the future to decode a name 3908passed as an argument on the command line; in other words, 3909 3910@example 3911c++filt @var{symbol} 3912@end example 3913 3914@noindent 3915may in a future release become 3916 3917@example 3918c++filt @var{option} @var{symbol} 3919@end example 3920@end quotation 3921 3922@node addr2line 3923@chapter addr2line 3924 3925@kindex addr2line 3926@cindex address to file name and line number 3927 3928@c man title addr2line convert addresses or symbol+offset into file names and line numbers 3929 3930@smallexample 3931@c man begin SYNOPSIS addr2line 3932addr2line [@option{-a}|@option{--addresses}] 3933 [@option{-b} @var{bfdname}|@option{--target=}@var{bfdname}] 3934 [@option{-C}|@option{--demangle}[=@var{style}]] 3935 [@option{-r}|@option{--no-recurse-limit}] 3936 [@option{-R}|@option{--recurse-limit}] 3937 [@option{-e} @var{filename}|@option{--exe=}@var{filename}] 3938 [@option{-f}|@option{--functions}] [@option{-s}|@option{--basename}] 3939 [@option{-i}|@option{--inlines}] 3940 [@option{-p}|@option{--pretty-print}] 3941 [@option{-j}|@option{--section=}@var{name}] 3942 [@option{-H}|@option{--help}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 3943 [addr addr @dots{}] 3944@c man end 3945@end smallexample 3946 3947@c man begin DESCRIPTION addr2line 3948 3949@command{addr2line} translates addresses or symbol+offset into file names and line numbers. 3950Given an address or symbol+offset in an executable or an offset in a section of a relocatable 3951object, it uses the debugging information to figure out which file name and 3952line number are associated with it. 3953 3954The executable or relocatable object to use is specified with the @option{-e} 3955option. The default is the file @file{a.out}. The section in the relocatable 3956object to use is specified with the @option{-j} option. 3957 3958@command{addr2line} has two modes of operation. 3959 3960In the first, hexadecimal addresses or symbol+offset are specified on the command line, 3961and @command{addr2line} displays the file name and line number for each 3962address. 3963 3964In the second, @command{addr2line} reads hexadecimal addresses or symbol+offset from 3965standard input, and prints the file name and line number for each 3966address on standard output. In this mode, @command{addr2line} may be used 3967in a pipe to convert dynamically chosen addresses. 3968 3969The format of the output is @samp{FILENAME:LINENO}. By default 3970each input address generates one line of output. 3971 3972Two options can generate additional lines before each 3973@samp{FILENAME:LINENO} line (in that order). 3974 3975If the @option{-a} option is used then a line with the input address 3976is displayed. 3977 3978If the @option{-f} option is used, then a line with the 3979@samp{FUNCTIONNAME} is displayed. This is the name of the function 3980containing the address. 3981 3982One option can generate additional lines after the 3983@samp{FILENAME:LINENO} line. 3984 3985If the @option{-i} option is used and the code at the given address is 3986present there because of inlining by the compiler then additional 3987lines are displayed afterwards. One or two extra lines (if the 3988@option{-f} option is used) are displayed for each inlined function. 3989 3990Alternatively if the @option{-p} option is used then each input 3991address generates a single, long, output line containing the address, 3992the function name, the file name and the line number. If the 3993@option{-i} option has also been used then any inlined functions will 3994be displayed in the same manner, but on separate lines, and prefixed 3995by the text @samp{(inlined by)}. 3996 3997If the file name or function name can not be determined, 3998@command{addr2line} will print two question marks in their place. If the 3999line number can not be determined, @command{addr2line} will print 0. 4000 4001When symbol+offset is used, +offset is optional, except when the symbol 4002is ambigious with a hex number. The resolved symbols can be mangled 4003or unmangled, except unmangled symbols with + are not allowed. 4004 4005@c man end 4006 4007@c man begin OPTIONS addr2line 4008 4009The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are 4010equivalent. 4011 4012@table @env 4013@item -a 4014@itemx --addresses 4015Display the address before the function name, file and line number 4016information. The address is printed with a @samp{0x} prefix to easily 4017identify it. 4018 4019@item -b @var{bfdname} 4020@itemx --target=@var{bfdname} 4021@cindex object code format 4022Specify that the object-code format for the object files is 4023@var{bfdname}. 4024 4025@item -C 4026@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}] 4027@cindex demangling in objdump 4028Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names. 4029Besides removing any initial underscore prepended by the system, this 4030makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have different 4031mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can be used to 4032choose an appropriate demangling style for your compiler. @xref{c++filt}, 4033for more information on demangling. 4034 4035@item -e @var{filename} 4036@itemx --exe=@var{filename} 4037Specify the name of the executable for which addresses should be 4038translated. The default file is @file{a.out}. 4039 4040@item -f 4041@itemx --functions 4042Display function names as well as file and line number information. 4043 4044@item -s 4045@itemx --basenames 4046Display only the base of each file name. 4047 4048@item -i 4049@itemx --inlines 4050If the address belongs to a function that was inlined, the source 4051information for all enclosing scopes back to the first non-inlined 4052function will also be printed. For example, if @code{main} inlines 4053@code{callee1} which inlines @code{callee2}, and address is from 4054@code{callee2}, the source information for @code{callee1} and @code{main} 4055will also be printed. 4056 4057@item -j 4058@itemx --section 4059Read offsets relative to the specified section instead of absolute addresses. 4060 4061@item -p 4062@itemx --pretty-print 4063Make the output more human friendly: each location are printed on one line. 4064If option @option{-i} is specified, lines for all enclosing scopes are 4065prefixed with @samp{(inlined by)}. 4066 4067@item -r 4068@itemx -R 4069@itemx --recurse-limit 4070@itemx --no-recurse-limit 4071@itemx --recursion-limit 4072@itemx --no-recursion-limit 4073Enables or disables a limit on the amount of recursion performed 4074whilst demangling strings. Since the name mangling formats allow for 4075an infinite level of recursion it is possible to create strings whose 4076decoding will exhaust the amount of stack space available on the host 4077machine, triggering a memory fault. The limit tries to prevent this 4078from happening by restricting recursion to 2048 levels of nesting. 4079 4080The default is for this limit to be enabled, but disabling it may be 4081necessary in order to demangle truly complicated names. Note however 4082that if the recursion limit is disabled then stack exhaustion is 4083possible and any bug reports about such an event will be rejected. 4084 4085The @option{-r} option is a synonym for the 4086@option{--no-recurse-limit} option. The @option{-R} option is a 4087synonym for the @option{--recurse-limit} option. 4088 4089Note this option is only effective if the @option{-C} or 4090@option{--demangle} option has been enabled. 4091 4092@end table 4093 4094@c man end 4095 4096@ignore 4097@c man begin SEEALSO addr2line 4098Info entries for @file{binutils}. 4099@c man end 4100@end ignore 4101 4102@node windmc 4103@chapter windmc 4104 4105@command{windmc} may be used to generator Windows message resources. 4106 4107@quotation 4108@emph{Warning:} @command{windmc} is not always built as part of the binary 4109utilities, since it is only useful for Windows targets. 4110@end quotation 4111 4112@c man title windmc generates Windows message resources 4113 4114@smallexample 4115@c man begin SYNOPSIS windmc 4116windmc [options] input-file 4117@c man end 4118@end smallexample 4119 4120@c man begin DESCRIPTION windmc 4121 4122@command{windmc} reads message definitions from an input file (.mc) and 4123translate them into a set of output files. The output files may be of 4124four kinds: 4125 4126@table @code 4127@item h 4128A C header file containing the message definitions. 4129 4130@item rc 4131A resource file compilable by the @command{windres} tool. 4132 4133@item bin 4134One or more binary files containing the resource data for a specific 4135message language. 4136 4137@item dbg 4138A C include file that maps message id's to their symbolic name. 4139@end table 4140 4141The exact description of these different formats is available in 4142documentation from Microsoft. 4143 4144When @command{windmc} converts from the @code{mc} format to the @code{bin} 4145format, @code{rc}, @code{h}, and optional @code{dbg} it is acting like the 4146Windows Message Compiler. 4147 4148@c man end 4149 4150@c man begin OPTIONS windmc 4151 4152@table @env 4153@item -a 4154@itemx --ascii_in 4155Specifies that the input file specified is ASCII. This is the default 4156behaviour. 4157 4158@item -A 4159@itemx --ascii_out 4160Specifies that messages in the output @code{bin} files should be in ASCII 4161format. 4162 4163@item -b 4164@itemx --binprefix 4165Specifies that @code{bin} filenames should have to be prefixed by the 4166basename of the source file. 4167 4168@item -c 4169@itemx --customflag 4170Sets the customer bit in all message id's. 4171 4172@item -C @var{codepage} 4173@itemx --codepage_in @var{codepage} 4174Sets the default codepage to be used to convert input file to UTF16. The 4175default is ocdepage 1252. 4176 4177@item -d 4178@itemx --decimal_values 4179Outputs the constants in the header file in decimal. Default is using 4180hexadecimal output. 4181 4182@item -e @var{ext} 4183@itemx --extension @var{ext} 4184The extension for the header file. The default is .h extension. 4185 4186@item -F @var{target} 4187@itemx --target @var{target} 4188Specify the BFD format to use for a bin file as output. This 4189is a BFD target name; you can use the @option{--help} option to see a list 4190of supported targets. Normally @command{windmc} will use the default 4191format, which is the first one listed by the @option{--help} option. 4192@ifclear man 4193@ref{Target Selection}. 4194@end ifclear 4195 4196@item -h @var{path} 4197@itemx --headerdir @var{path} 4198The target directory of the generated header file. The default is the 4199current directory. 4200 4201@item -H 4202@itemx --help 4203Displays a list of command-line options and then exits. 4204 4205@item -m @var{characters} 4206@itemx --maxlength @var{characters} 4207Instructs @command{windmc} to generate a warning if the length 4208of any message exceeds the number specified. 4209 4210@item -n 4211@itemx --nullterminate 4212Terminate message text in @code{bin} files by zero. By default they are 4213terminated by CR/LF. 4214 4215@item -o 4216@itemx --hresult_use 4217Not yet implemented. Instructs @code{windmc} to generate an OLE2 header 4218file, using HRESULT definitions. Status codes are used if the flag is not 4219specified. 4220 4221@item -O @var{codepage} 4222@itemx --codepage_out @var{codepage} 4223Sets the default codepage to be used to output text files. The default 4224is ocdepage 1252. 4225 4226@item -r @var{path} 4227@itemx --rcdir @var{path} 4228The target directory for the generated @code{rc} script and the generated 4229@code{bin} files that the resource compiler script includes. The default 4230is the current directory. 4231 4232@item -u 4233@itemx --unicode_in 4234Specifies that the input file is UTF16. 4235 4236@item -U 4237@itemx --unicode_out 4238Specifies that messages in the output @code{bin} file should be in UTF16 4239format. This is the default behaviour. 4240 4241@item -v 4242@item --verbose 4243Enable verbose mode. 4244 4245@item -V 4246@item --version 4247Prints the version number for @command{windmc}. 4248 4249@item -x @var{path} 4250@itemx --xdgb @var{path} 4251The path of the @code{dbg} C include file that maps message id's to the 4252symbolic name. No such file is generated without specifying the switch. 4253@end table 4254 4255@c man end 4256 4257@ignore 4258@c man begin SEEALSO windmc 4259the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 4260@c man end 4261@end ignore 4262 4263@node windres 4264@chapter windres 4265 4266@command{windres} may be used to manipulate Windows resources. 4267 4268@quotation 4269@emph{Warning:} @command{windres} is not always built as part of the binary 4270utilities, since it is only useful for Windows targets. 4271@end quotation 4272 4273@c man title windres manipulate Windows resources 4274 4275@smallexample 4276@c man begin SYNOPSIS windres 4277windres [options] [input-file] [output-file] 4278@c man end 4279@end smallexample 4280 4281@c man begin DESCRIPTION windres 4282 4283@command{windres} reads resources from an input file and copies them into 4284an output file. Either file may be in one of three formats: 4285 4286@table @code 4287@item rc 4288A text format read by the Resource Compiler. 4289 4290@item res 4291A binary format generated by the Resource Compiler. 4292 4293@item coff 4294A COFF object or executable. 4295@end table 4296 4297The exact description of these different formats is available in 4298documentation from Microsoft. 4299 4300When @command{windres} converts from the @code{rc} format to the @code{res} 4301format, it is acting like the Windows Resource Compiler. When 4302@command{windres} converts from the @code{res} format to the @code{coff} 4303format, it is acting like the Windows @code{CVTRES} program. 4304 4305When @command{windres} generates an @code{rc} file, the output is similar 4306but not identical to the format expected for the input. When an input 4307@code{rc} file refers to an external filename, an output @code{rc} file 4308will instead include the file contents. 4309 4310If the input or output format is not specified, @command{windres} will 4311guess based on the file name, or, for the input file, the file contents. 4312A file with an extension of @file{.rc} will be treated as an @code{rc} 4313file, a file with an extension of @file{.res} will be treated as a 4314@code{res} file, and a file with an extension of @file{.o} or 4315@file{.exe} will be treated as a @code{coff} file. 4316 4317If no output file is specified, @command{windres} will print the resources 4318in @code{rc} format to standard output. 4319 4320The normal use is for you to write an @code{rc} file, use @command{windres} 4321to convert it to a COFF object file, and then link the COFF file into 4322your application. This will make the resources described in the 4323@code{rc} file available to Windows. 4324 4325@c man end 4326 4327@c man begin OPTIONS windres 4328 4329@table @env 4330@item -i @var{filename} 4331@itemx --input @var{filename} 4332The name of the input file. If this option is not used, then 4333@command{windres} will use the first non-option argument as the input file 4334name. If there are no non-option arguments, then @command{windres} will 4335read from standard input. @command{windres} can not read a COFF file from 4336standard input. 4337 4338@item -o @var{filename} 4339@itemx --output @var{filename} 4340The name of the output file. If this option is not used, then 4341@command{windres} will use the first non-option argument, after any used 4342for the input file name, as the output file name. If there is no 4343non-option argument, then @command{windres} will write to standard output. 4344@command{windres} can not write a COFF file to standard output. Note, 4345for compatibility with @command{rc} the option @option{-fo} is also 4346accepted, but its use is not recommended. 4347 4348@item -J @var{format} 4349@itemx --input-format @var{format} 4350The input format to read. @var{format} may be @samp{res}, @samp{rc}, or 4351@samp{coff}. If no input format is specified, @command{windres} will 4352guess, as described above. 4353 4354@item -O @var{format} 4355@itemx --output-format @var{format} 4356The output format to generate. @var{format} may be @samp{res}, 4357@samp{rc}, or @samp{coff}. If no output format is specified, 4358@command{windres} will guess, as described above. 4359 4360@item -F @var{target} 4361@itemx --target @var{target} 4362Specify the BFD format to use for a COFF file as input or output. This 4363is a BFD target name; you can use the @option{--help} option to see a list 4364of supported targets. Normally @command{windres} will use the default 4365format, which is the first one listed by the @option{--help} option. 4366@ifclear man 4367@ref{Target Selection}. 4368@end ifclear 4369 4370@item --preprocessor @var{program} 4371When @command{windres} reads an @code{rc} file, it runs it through the C 4372preprocessor first. This option may be used to specify the preprocessor 4373to use. The default preprocessor is @code{gcc}. 4374 4375@item --preprocessor-arg @var{option} 4376When @command{windres} reads an @code{rc} file, it runs it through 4377the C preprocessor first. This option may be used to specify additional 4378text to be passed to preprocessor on its command line. 4379This option can be used multiple times to add multiple options to the 4380preprocessor command line. 4381If the @option{--preprocessor} option has not been specified then a 4382default set of preprocessor arguments will be used, with any 4383@option{--preprocessor-arg} options being placed after them on the 4384command line. These default arguments are @code{-E}, 4385@code{-xc-header} and @code{-DRC_INVOKED}. 4386 4387@item -I @var{directory} 4388@itemx --include-dir @var{directory} 4389Specify an include directory to use when reading an @code{rc} file. 4390@command{windres} will pass this to the preprocessor as an @option{-I} 4391option. @command{windres} will also search this directory when looking for 4392files named in the @code{rc} file. If the argument passed to this command 4393matches any of the supported @var{formats} (as described in the @option{-J} 4394option), it will issue a deprecation warning, and behave just like the 4395@option{-J} option. New programs should not use this behaviour. If a 4396directory happens to match a @var{format}, simple prefix it with @samp{./} 4397to disable the backward compatibility. 4398 4399@item -D @var{target} 4400@itemx --define @var{sym}[=@var{val}] 4401Specify a @option{-D} option to pass to the preprocessor when reading an 4402@code{rc} file. 4403 4404@item -U @var{target} 4405@itemx --undefine @var{sym} 4406Specify a @option{-U} option to pass to the preprocessor when reading an 4407@code{rc} file. 4408 4409@item -r 4410Ignored for compatibility with rc. 4411 4412@item -v 4413Enable verbose mode. This tells you what the preprocessor is if you 4414didn't specify one. 4415 4416@item -c @var{val} 4417@item --codepage @var{val} 4418Specify the default codepage to use when reading an @code{rc} file. 4419@var{val} should be a hexadecimal prefixed by @samp{0x} or decimal 4420codepage code. The valid range is from zero up to 0xffff, but the 4421validity of the codepage is host and configuration dependent. 4422 4423@item -l @var{val} 4424@item --language @var{val} 4425Specify the default language to use when reading an @code{rc} file. 4426@var{val} should be a hexadecimal language code. The low eight bits are 4427the language, and the high eight bits are the sublanguage. 4428 4429@item --use-temp-file 4430Use a temporary file to instead of using popen to read the output of 4431the preprocessor. Use this option if the popen implementation is buggy 4432on the host (eg., certain non-English language versions of Windows 95 and 4433Windows 98 are known to have buggy popen where the output will instead 4434go the console). 4435 4436@item --no-use-temp-file 4437Use popen, not a temporary file, to read the output of the preprocessor. 4438This is the default behaviour. 4439 4440@item -h 4441@item --help 4442Prints a usage summary. 4443 4444@item -V 4445@item --version 4446Prints the version number for @command{windres}. 4447 4448@item --yydebug 4449If @command{windres} is compiled with @code{YYDEBUG} defined as @code{1}, 4450this will turn on parser debugging. 4451@end table 4452 4453@c man end 4454 4455@ignore 4456@c man begin SEEALSO windres 4457the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 4458@c man end 4459@end ignore 4460 4461@node dlltool 4462@chapter dlltool 4463@cindex DLL 4464@kindex dlltool 4465 4466@command{dlltool} is used to create the files needed to create dynamic 4467link libraries (DLLs) on systems which understand PE format image 4468files such as Windows. A DLL contains an export table which contains 4469information that the runtime loader needs to resolve references from a 4470referencing program. 4471 4472The export table is generated by this program by reading in a 4473@file{.def} file or scanning the @file{.a} and @file{.o} files which 4474will be in the DLL. A @file{.o} file can contain information in 4475special @samp{.drectve} sections with export information. 4476 4477@quotation 4478@emph{Note:} @command{dlltool} is not always built as part of the 4479binary utilities, since it is only useful for those targets which 4480support DLLs. 4481@end quotation 4482 4483@c man title dlltool create files needed to build and use DLLs 4484 4485@smallexample 4486@c man begin SYNOPSIS dlltool 4487dlltool [@option{-d}|@option{--input-def} @var{def-file-name}] 4488 [@option{-b}|@option{--base-file} @var{base-file-name}] 4489 [@option{-e}|@option{--output-exp} @var{exports-file-name}] 4490 [@option{-z}|@option{--output-def} @var{def-file-name}] 4491 [@option{-l}|@option{--output-lib} @var{library-file-name}] 4492 [@option{-y}|@option{--output-delaylib} @var{library-file-name}] 4493 [@option{--export-all-symbols}] [@option{--no-export-all-symbols}] 4494 [@option{--exclude-symbols} @var{list}] 4495 [@option{--no-default-excludes}] 4496 [@option{-S}|@option{--as} @var{path-to-assembler}] [@option{-f}|@option{--as-flags} @var{options}] 4497 [@option{-D}|@option{--dllname} @var{name}] [@option{-m}|@option{--machine} @var{machine}] 4498 [@option{-a}|@option{--add-indirect}] 4499 [@option{-U}|@option{--add-underscore}] [@option{--add-stdcall-underscore}] 4500 [@option{-k}|@option{--kill-at}] [@option{-A}|@option{--add-stdcall-alias}] 4501 [@option{-p}|@option{--ext-prefix-alias} @var{prefix}] 4502 [@option{-x}|@option{--no-idata4}] [@option{-c}|@option{--no-idata5}] 4503 [@option{--use-nul-prefixed-import-tables}] 4504 [@option{-I}|@option{--identify} @var{library-file-name}] [@option{--identify-strict}] 4505 [@option{-i}|@option{--interwork}] 4506 [@option{-n}|@option{--nodelete}] [@option{-t}|@option{--temp-prefix} @var{prefix}] 4507 [@option{-v}|@option{--verbose}] 4508 [@option{-h}|@option{--help}] [@option{-V}|@option{--version}] 4509 [@option{--no-leading-underscore}] [@option{--leading-underscore}] 4510 [object-file @dots{}] 4511@c man end 4512@end smallexample 4513 4514@c man begin DESCRIPTION dlltool 4515 4516@command{dlltool} reads its inputs, which can come from the @option{-d} and 4517@option{-b} options as well as object files specified on the command 4518line. It then processes these inputs and if the @option{-e} option has 4519been specified it creates a exports file. If the @option{-l} option 4520has been specified it creates a library file and if the @option{-z} option 4521has been specified it creates a def file. Any or all of the @option{-e}, 4522@option{-l} and @option{-z} options can be present in one invocation of 4523dlltool. 4524 4525When creating a DLL, along with the source for the DLL, it is necessary 4526to have three other files. @command{dlltool} can help with the creation of 4527these files. 4528 4529The first file is a @file{.def} file which specifies which functions are 4530exported from the DLL, which functions the DLL imports, and so on. This 4531is a text file and can be created by hand, or @command{dlltool} can be used 4532to create it using the @option{-z} option. In this case @command{dlltool} 4533will scan the object files specified on its command line looking for 4534those functions which have been specially marked as being exported and 4535put entries for them in the @file{.def} file it creates. 4536 4537In order to mark a function as being exported from a DLL, it needs to 4538have an @option{-export:<name_of_function>} entry in the @samp{.drectve} 4539section of the object file. This can be done in C by using the 4540asm() operator: 4541 4542@smallexample 4543 asm (".section .drectve"); 4544 asm (".ascii \"-export:my_func\""); 4545 4546 int my_func (void) @{ @dots{} @} 4547@end smallexample 4548 4549The second file needed for DLL creation is an exports file. This file 4550is linked with the object files that make up the body of the DLL and it 4551handles the interface between the DLL and the outside world. This is a 4552binary file and it can be created by giving the @option{-e} option to 4553@command{dlltool} when it is creating or reading in a @file{.def} file. 4554 4555The third file needed for DLL creation is the library file that programs 4556will link with in order to access the functions in the DLL (an `import 4557library'). This file can be created by giving the @option{-l} option to 4558dlltool when it is creating or reading in a @file{.def} file. 4559 4560If the @option{-y} option is specified, dlltool generates a delay-import 4561library that can be used instead of the normal import library to allow 4562a program to link to the dll only as soon as an imported function is 4563called for the first time. The resulting executable will need to be 4564linked to the static delayimp library containing __delayLoadHelper2(), 4565which in turn will import LoadLibraryA and GetProcAddress from kernel32. 4566 4567@command{dlltool} builds the library file by hand, but it builds the 4568exports file by creating temporary files containing assembler statements 4569and then assembling these. The @option{-S} command-line option can be 4570used to specify the path to the assembler that dlltool will use, 4571and the @option{-f} option can be used to pass specific flags to that 4572assembler. The @option{-n} can be used to prevent dlltool from deleting 4573these temporary assembler files when it is done, and if @option{-n} is 4574specified twice then this will prevent dlltool from deleting the 4575temporary object files it used to build the library. 4576 4577Here is an example of creating a DLL from a source file @samp{dll.c} and 4578also creating a program (from an object file called @samp{program.o}) 4579that uses that DLL: 4580 4581@smallexample 4582 gcc -c dll.c 4583 dlltool -e exports.o -l dll.lib dll.o 4584 gcc dll.o exports.o -o dll.dll 4585 gcc program.o dll.lib -o program 4586@end smallexample 4587 4588 4589@command{dlltool} may also be used to query an existing import library 4590to determine the name of the DLL to which it is associated. See the 4591description of the @option{-I} or @option{--identify} option. 4592 4593@c man end 4594 4595@c man begin OPTIONS dlltool 4596 4597The command-line options have the following meanings: 4598 4599@table @env 4600 4601@item -d @var{filename} 4602@itemx --input-def @var{filename} 4603@cindex input .def file 4604Specifies the name of a @file{.def} file to be read in and processed. 4605 4606@item -b @var{filename} 4607@itemx --base-file @var{filename} 4608@cindex base files 4609Specifies the name of a base file to be read in and processed. The 4610contents of this file will be added to the relocation section in the 4611exports file generated by dlltool. 4612 4613@item -e @var{filename} 4614@itemx --output-exp @var{filename} 4615Specifies the name of the export file to be created by dlltool. 4616 4617@item -z @var{filename} 4618@itemx --output-def @var{filename} 4619Specifies the name of the @file{.def} file to be created by dlltool. 4620 4621@item -l @var{filename} 4622@itemx --output-lib @var{filename} 4623Specifies the name of the library file to be created by dlltool. 4624 4625@item -y @var{filename} 4626@itemx --output-delaylib @var{filename} 4627Specifies the name of the delay-import library file to be created by dlltool. 4628 4629@item --export-all-symbols 4630Treat all global and weak defined symbols found in the input object 4631files as symbols to be exported. There is a small list of symbols which 4632are not exported by default; see the @option{--no-default-excludes} 4633option. You may add to the list of symbols to not export by using the 4634@option{--exclude-symbols} option. 4635 4636@item --no-export-all-symbols 4637Only export symbols explicitly listed in an input @file{.def} file or in 4638@samp{.drectve} sections in the input object files. This is the default 4639behaviour. The @samp{.drectve} sections are created by @samp{dllexport} 4640attributes in the source code. 4641 4642@item --exclude-symbols @var{list} 4643Do not export the symbols in @var{list}. This is a list of symbol names 4644separated by comma or colon characters. The symbol names should not 4645contain a leading underscore. This is only meaningful when 4646@option{--export-all-symbols} is used. 4647 4648@item --no-default-excludes 4649When @option{--export-all-symbols} is used, it will by default avoid 4650exporting certain special symbols. The current list of symbols to avoid 4651exporting is @samp{DllMain@@12}, @samp{DllEntryPoint@@0}, 4652@samp{impure_ptr}. You may use the @option{--no-default-excludes} option 4653to go ahead and export these special symbols. This is only meaningful 4654when @option{--export-all-symbols} is used. 4655 4656@item -S @var{path} 4657@itemx --as @var{path} 4658Specifies the path, including the filename, of the assembler to be used 4659to create the exports file. 4660 4661@item -f @var{options} 4662@itemx --as-flags @var{options} 4663Specifies any specific command-line options to be passed to the 4664assembler when building the exports file. This option will work even if 4665the @option{-S} option is not used. This option only takes one argument, 4666and if it occurs more than once on the command line, then later 4667occurrences will override earlier occurrences. So if it is necessary to 4668pass multiple options to the assembler they should be enclosed in 4669double quotes. 4670 4671@item -D @var{name} 4672@itemx --dll-name @var{name} 4673Specifies the name to be stored in the @file{.def} file as the name of 4674the DLL when the @option{-e} option is used. If this option is not 4675present, then the filename given to the @option{-e} option will be 4676used as the name of the DLL. 4677 4678@item -m @var{machine} 4679@itemx -machine @var{machine} 4680Specifies the type of machine for which the library file should be 4681built. @command{dlltool} has a built in default type, depending upon how 4682it was created, but this option can be used to override that. This is 4683normally only useful when creating DLLs for an ARM processor, when the 4684contents of the DLL are actually encode using Thumb instructions. 4685 4686@item -a 4687@itemx --add-indirect 4688Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it 4689should add a section which allows the exported functions to be 4690referenced without using the import library. Whatever the hell that 4691means! 4692 4693@item -U 4694@itemx --add-underscore 4695Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it 4696should prepend an underscore to the names of @emph{all} exported symbols. 4697 4698@item --no-leading-underscore 4699@item --leading-underscore 4700Specifies whether standard symbol should be forced to be prefixed, or 4701not. 4702 4703@item --add-stdcall-underscore 4704Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it 4705should prepend an underscore to the names of exported @emph{stdcall} 4706functions. Variable names and non-stdcall function names are not modified. 4707This option is useful when creating GNU-compatible import libs for third 4708party DLLs that were built with MS-Windows tools. 4709 4710@item -k 4711@itemx --kill-at 4712Specifies that @samp{@@<number>} suffixes should be omitted from the names 4713of stdcall functions that will be imported from the DLL. This is 4714useful when creating an import library for a DLL which exports stdcall 4715functions but without the usual @samp{@@<number>} symbol name suffix. 4716 4717This does not change the naming of symbols provided by the import library 4718to programs linked against it, but only the entries in the import table 4719(ie the .idata section). 4720 4721@item -A 4722@itemx --add-stdcall-alias 4723Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports file it 4724should add aliases for stdcall symbols without @samp{@@ <number>} 4725in addition to the symbols with @samp{@@ <number>}. 4726 4727@item -p 4728@itemx --ext-prefix-alias @var{prefix} 4729Causes @command{dlltool} to create external aliases for all DLL 4730imports with the specified prefix. The aliases are created for both 4731external and import symbols with no leading underscore. 4732 4733@item -x 4734@itemx --no-idata4 4735Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports and library 4736files it should omit the @code{.idata4} section. This is for compatibility 4737with certain operating systems. 4738 4739@item --use-nul-prefixed-import-tables 4740Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports and library 4741files it should prefix the @code{.idata4} and @code{.idata5} by zero an 4742element. This emulates old gnu import library generation of 4743@code{dlltool}. By default this option is turned off. 4744 4745@item -c 4746@itemx --no-idata5 4747Specifies that when @command{dlltool} is creating the exports and library 4748files it should omit the @code{.idata5} section. This is for compatibility 4749with certain operating systems. 4750 4751@item -I @var{filename} 4752@itemx --identify @var{filename} 4753Specifies that @command{dlltool} should inspect the import library 4754indicated by @var{filename} and report, on @code{stdout}, the name(s) 4755of the associated DLL(s). This can be performed in addition to any 4756other operations indicated by the other options and arguments. 4757@command{dlltool} fails if the import library does not exist or is not 4758actually an import library. See also @option{--identify-strict}. 4759 4760@item --identify-strict 4761Modifies the behavior of the @option{--identify} option, such 4762that an error is reported if @var{filename} is associated with 4763more than one DLL. 4764 4765@item -i 4766@itemx --interwork 4767Specifies that @command{dlltool} should mark the objects in the library 4768file and exports file that it produces as supporting interworking 4769between ARM and Thumb code. 4770 4771@item -n 4772@itemx --nodelete 4773Makes @command{dlltool} preserve the temporary assembler files it used to 4774create the exports file. If this option is repeated then dlltool will 4775also preserve the temporary object files it uses to create the library 4776file. 4777 4778@item -t @var{prefix} 4779@itemx --temp-prefix @var{prefix} 4780Makes @command{dlltool} use @var{prefix} when constructing the names of 4781temporary assembler and object files. By default, the temp file prefix 4782is generated from the pid. 4783 4784@item -v 4785@itemx --verbose 4786Make dlltool describe what it is doing. 4787 4788@item -h 4789@itemx --help 4790Displays a list of command-line options and then exits. 4791 4792@item -V 4793@itemx --version 4794Displays dlltool's version number and then exits. 4795 4796@end table 4797 4798@c man end 4799 4800@menu 4801* def file format:: The format of the dlltool @file{.def} file 4802@end menu 4803 4804@node def file format 4805@section The format of the @command{dlltool} @file{.def} file 4806 4807A @file{.def} file contains any number of the following commands: 4808 4809@table @asis 4810 4811@item @code{NAME} @var{name} @code{[ ,} @var{base} @code{]} 4812The result is going to be named @var{name}@code{.exe}. 4813 4814@item @code{LIBRARY} @var{name} @code{[ ,} @var{base} @code{]} 4815The result is going to be named @var{name}@code{.dll}. 4816Note: If you want to use LIBRARY as name then you need to quote. Otherwise 4817this will fail due a necessary hack for libtool (see PR binutils/13710 for more 4818details). 4819 4820@item @code{EXPORTS ( ( (} @var{name1} @code{[ = } @var{name2} @code{] ) | ( } @var{name1} @code{=} @var{module-name} @code{.} @var{external-name} @code{) ) [ == } @var{its_name} @code{]} 4821@item @code{[} @var{integer} @code{] [ NONAME ] [ CONSTANT ] [ DATA ] [ PRIVATE ] ) *} 4822Declares @var{name1} as an exported symbol from the DLL, with optional 4823ordinal number @var{integer}, or declares @var{name1} as an alias 4824(forward) of the function @var{external-name} in the DLL. 4825If @var{its_name} is specified, this name is used as string in export table. 4826@var{module-name}. 4827Note: The @code{EXPORTS} has to be the last command in .def file, as keywords 4828are treated - beside @code{LIBRARY} - as simple name-identifiers. 4829If you want to use LIBRARY as name then you need to quote it. 4830 4831@item @code{IMPORTS ( (} @var{internal-name} @code{=} @var{module-name} @code{.} @var{integer} @code{) | [} @var{internal-name} @code{= ]} @var{module-name} @code{.} @var{external-name} @code{) [ == ) @var{its_name} @code{]} *} 4832Declares that @var{external-name} or the exported function whose 4833ordinal number is @var{integer} is to be imported from the file 4834@var{module-name}. If @var{internal-name} is specified then this is 4835the name that the imported function will be referred to in the body of 4836the DLL. 4837If @var{its_name} is specified, this name is used as string in import table. 4838Note: The @code{IMPORTS} has to be the last command in .def file, as keywords 4839are treated - beside @code{LIBRARY} - as simple name-identifiers. 4840If you want to use LIBRARY as name then you need to quote it. 4841 4842@item @code{DESCRIPTION} @var{string} 4843Puts @var{string} into the output @file{.exp} file in the 4844@code{.rdata} section. 4845 4846@item @code{STACKSIZE} @var{number-reserve} @code{[, } @var{number-commit} @code{]} 4847@item @code{HEAPSIZE} @var{number-reserve} @code{[, } @var{number-commit} @code{]} 4848Generates @code{--stack} or @code{--heap} 4849@var{number-reserve},@var{number-commit} in the output @code{.drectve} 4850section. The linker will see this and act upon it. 4851 4852@item @code{CODE} @var{attr} @code{+} 4853@item @code{DATA} @var{attr} @code{+} 4854@item @code{SECTIONS (} @var{section-name} @var{attr}@code{ + ) *} 4855Generates @code{--attr} @var{section-name} @var{attr} in the output 4856@code{.drectve} section, where @var{attr} is one of @code{READ}, 4857@code{WRITE}, @code{EXECUTE} or @code{SHARED}. The linker will see 4858this and act upon it. 4859 4860@end table 4861 4862@ignore 4863@c man begin SEEALSO dlltool 4864The Info pages for @file{binutils}. 4865@c man end 4866@end ignore 4867 4868@node readelf 4869@chapter readelf 4870 4871@cindex ELF file information 4872@kindex readelf 4873 4874@c man title readelf display information about ELF files 4875 4876@smallexample 4877@c man begin SYNOPSIS readelf 4878readelf [@option{-a}|@option{--all}] 4879 [@option{-h}|@option{--file-header}] 4880 [@option{-l}|@option{--program-headers}|@option{--segments}] 4881 [@option{-S}|@option{--section-headers}|@option{--sections}] 4882 [@option{-g}|@option{--section-groups}] 4883 [@option{-t}|@option{--section-details}] 4884 [@option{-e}|@option{--headers}] 4885 [@option{-s}|@option{--syms}|@option{--symbols}] 4886 [@option{--dyn-syms}|@option{--lto-syms}] 4887 [@option{--sym-base=[0|8|10|16]}] 4888 [@option{--demangle@var{=style}}|@option{--no-demangle}] 4889 [@option{--quiet}] 4890 [@option{--recurse-limit}|@option{--no-recurse-limit}] 4891 [@option{-U} @var{method}|@option{--unicode=}@var{method}] 4892 [@option{-n}|@option{--notes}] 4893 [@option{-r}|@option{--relocs}] 4894 [@option{-u}|@option{--unwind}] 4895 [@option{-d}|@option{--dynamic}] 4896 [@option{-V}|@option{--version-info}] 4897 [@option{-A}|@option{--arch-specific}] 4898 [@option{-D}|@option{--use-dynamic}] 4899 [@option{-L}|@option{--lint}|@option{--enable-checks}] 4900 [@option{-x} <number or name>|@option{--hex-dump=}<number or name>] 4901 [@option{-p} <number or name>|@option{--string-dump=}<number or name>] 4902 [@option{-R} <number or name>|@option{--relocated-dump=}<number or name>] 4903 [@option{-z}|@option{--decompress}] 4904 [@option{-c}|@option{--archive-index}] 4905 [@option{-w[lLiaprmfFsoORtUuTgAck]}| 4906 @option{--debug-dump}[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=str-offsets,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index,=addr,=cu_index,=links]] 4907 [@option{-wK}|@option{--debug-dump=follow-links}] 4908 [@option{-wN}|@option{--debug-dump=no-follow-links}] 4909 [@option{-wD}|@option{--debug-dump=use-debuginfod}] 4910 [@option{-wE}|@option{--debug-dump=do-not-use-debuginfod}] 4911 [@option{-P}|@option{--process-links}] 4912 [@option{--dwarf-depth=@var{n}}] 4913 [@option{--dwarf-start=@var{n}}] 4914 [@option{--ctf=}@var{section}] 4915 [@option{--ctf-parent=}@var{section}] 4916 [@option{--ctf-symbols=}@var{section}] 4917 [@option{--ctf-strings=}@var{section}] 4918 [@option{-I}|@option{--histogram}] 4919 [@option{-v}|@option{--version}] 4920 [@option{-W}|@option{--wide}] 4921 [@option{-T}|@option{--silent-truncation}] 4922 [@option{-H}|@option{--help}] 4923 @var{elffile}@dots{} 4924@c man end 4925@end smallexample 4926 4927@c man begin DESCRIPTION readelf 4928 4929@command{readelf} displays information about one or more ELF format object 4930files. The options control what particular information to display. 4931 4932@var{elffile}@dots{} are the object files to be examined. 32-bit and 493364-bit ELF files are supported, as are archives containing ELF files. 4934 4935This program performs a similar function to @command{objdump} but it 4936goes into more detail and it exists independently of the @sc{bfd} 4937library, so if there is a bug in @sc{bfd} then readelf will not be 4938affected. 4939 4940@c man end 4941 4942@c man begin OPTIONS readelf 4943 4944The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are 4945equivalent. At least one option besides @samp{-v} or @samp{-H} must be 4946given. 4947 4948@table @env 4949@item -a 4950@itemx --all 4951Equivalent to specifying @option{--file-header}, 4952@option{--program-headers}, @option{--sections}, @option{--symbols}, 4953@option{--relocs}, @option{--dynamic}, @option{--notes}, 4954@option{--version-info}, @option{--arch-specific}, @option{--unwind}, 4955@option{--section-groups} and @option{--histogram}. 4956 4957Note - this option does not enable @option{--use-dynamic} itself, so 4958if that option is not present on the command line then dynamic symbols 4959and dynamic relocs will not be displayed. 4960 4961@item -h 4962@itemx --file-header 4963@cindex ELF file header information 4964Displays the information contained in the ELF header at the start of the 4965file. 4966 4967@item -l 4968@itemx --program-headers 4969@itemx --segments 4970@cindex ELF program header information 4971@cindex ELF segment information 4972Displays the information contained in the file's segment headers, if it 4973has any. 4974 4975@item --quiet 4976@cindex quiet 4977Suppress "no symbols" diagnostic. 4978 4979@item -S 4980@itemx --sections 4981@itemx --section-headers 4982@cindex ELF section information 4983Displays the information contained in the file's section headers, if it 4984has any. 4985 4986@item -g 4987@itemx --section-groups 4988@cindex ELF section group information 4989Displays the information contained in the file's section groups, if it 4990has any. 4991 4992@item -t 4993@itemx --section-details 4994@cindex ELF section information 4995Displays the detailed section information. Implies @option{-S}. 4996 4997@item -s 4998@itemx --symbols 4999@itemx --syms 5000@cindex ELF symbol table information 5001Displays the entries in symbol table section of the file, if it has one. 5002If a symbol has version information associated with it then this is 5003displayed as well. The version string is displayed as a suffix to the 5004symbol name, preceded by an @@ character. For example 5005@samp{foo@@VER_1}. If the version is the default version to be used 5006when resolving unversioned references to the symbol then it is 5007displayed as a suffix preceded by two @@ characters. For example 5008@samp{foo@@@@VER_2}. 5009 5010@item --dyn-syms 5011@cindex ELF dynamic symbol table information 5012Displays the entries in dynamic symbol table section of the file, if it 5013has one. The output format is the same as the format used by the 5014@option{--syms} option. 5015 5016@item --lto-syms 5017@cindex LTO symbol table 5018Displays the contents of any LTO symbol tables in the file. 5019 5020@item --sym-base=[0|8|10|16] 5021@cindex symbol table size base 5022Forces the size field of the symbol table to use the given base. Any 5023unrecognized options will be treated as @samp{0}. @option{--sym-base=0} 5024represents the default and legacy behaviour. This will output sizes as decimal 5025for numbers less than 100000. For sizes 100000 and greater hexadecimal notation 5026will be used with a 0x prefix. 5027@option{--sym-base=8} will give the symbol sizes in octal. 5028@option{--sym-base=10} will always give the symbol sizes in decimal. 5029@option{--sym-base=16} will always give the symbol sizes in hexadecimal with a 50300x prefix. 5031 5032@item -C 5033@itemx --demangle[=@var{style}] 5034@cindex demangling in nm 5035Decode (@dfn{demangle}) low-level symbol names into user-level names. 5036This makes C++ function names readable. Different compilers have 5037different mangling styles. The optional demangling style argument can 5038be used to choose an appropriate demangling style for your 5039compiler. @xref{c++filt}, for more information on demangling. 5040 5041@item --no-demangle 5042Do not demangle low-level symbol names. This is the default. 5043 5044@item --recurse-limit 5045@itemx --no-recurse-limit 5046@itemx --recursion-limit 5047@itemx --no-recursion-limit 5048Enables or disables a limit on the amount of recursion performed 5049whilst demangling strings. Since the name mangling formats allow for 5050an infinite level of recursion it is possible to create strings whose 5051decoding will exhaust the amount of stack space available on the host 5052machine, triggering a memory fault. The limit tries to prevent this 5053from happening by restricting recursion to 2048 levels of nesting. 5054 5055The default is for this limit to be enabled, but disabling it may be 5056necessary in order to demangle truly complicated names. Note however 5057that if the recursion limit is disabled then stack exhaustion is 5058possible and any bug reports about such an event will be rejected. 5059 5060@item -U @var{[d|i|l|e|x|h]} 5061@itemx --unicode=[default|invalid|locale|escape|hex|highlight] 5062Controls the display of non-ASCII characters in identifier names. 5063The default (@option{--unicode=locale} or @option{--unicode=default}) is 5064to treat them as multibyte characters and display them in the current 5065locale. All other versions of this option treat the bytes as UTF-8 5066encoded values and attempt to interpret them. If they cannot be 5067interpreted or if the @option{--unicode=invalid} option is used then 5068they are displayed as a sequence of hex bytes, encloses in curly 5069parethesis characters. 5070 5071Using the @option{--unicode=escape} option will display the characters 5072as as unicode escape sequences (@var{\uxxxx}). Using the 5073@option{--unicode=hex} will display the characters as hex byte 5074sequences enclosed between angle brackets. 5075 5076Using the @option{--unicode=highlight} will display the characters as 5077unicode escape sequences but it will also highlighted them in red, 5078assuming that colouring is supported by the output device. The 5079colouring is intended to draw attention to the presence of unicode 5080sequences when they might not be expected. 5081 5082@item -e 5083@itemx --headers 5084Display all the headers in the file. Equivalent to @option{-h -l -S}. 5085 5086@item -n 5087@itemx --notes 5088@cindex ELF notes 5089Displays the contents of the NOTE segments and/or sections, if any. 5090 5091@item -r 5092@itemx --relocs 5093@cindex ELF reloc information 5094Displays the contents of the file's relocation section, if it has one. 5095 5096@item -u 5097@itemx --unwind 5098@cindex unwind information 5099Displays the contents of the file's unwind section, if it has one. Only 5100the unwind sections for IA64 ELF files, as well as ARM unwind tables 5101(@code{.ARM.exidx} / @code{.ARM.extab}) are currently supported. If 5102support is not yet implemented for your architecture you could try 5103dumping the contents of the @var{.eh_frames} section using the 5104@option{--debug-dump=frames} or @option{--debug-dump=frames-interp} 5105options. 5106 5107@item -d 5108@itemx --dynamic 5109@cindex ELF dynamic section information 5110Displays the contents of the file's dynamic section, if it has one. 5111 5112@item -V 5113@itemx --version-info 5114@cindex ELF version sections information 5115Displays the contents of the version sections in the file, it they 5116exist. 5117 5118@item -A 5119@itemx --arch-specific 5120Displays architecture-specific information in the file, if there 5121is any. 5122 5123@item -D 5124@itemx --use-dynamic 5125When displaying symbols, this option makes @command{readelf} use the 5126symbol hash tables in the file's dynamic section, rather than the 5127symbol table sections. 5128 5129When displaying relocations, this option makes @command{readelf} 5130display the dynamic relocations rather than the static relocations. 5131 5132@item -L 5133@itemx --lint 5134@itemx --enable-checks 5135Displays warning messages about possible problems with the file(s) 5136being examined. If used on its own then all of the contents of the 5137file(s) will be examined. If used with one of the dumping options 5138then the warning messages will only be produced for the things being 5139displayed. 5140 5141@item -x <number or name> 5142@itemx --hex-dump=<number or name> 5143Displays the contents of the indicated section as a hexadecimal bytes. 5144A number identifies a particular section by index in the section table; 5145any other string identifies all sections with that name in the object file. 5146 5147@item -R <number or name> 5148@itemx --relocated-dump=<number or name> 5149Displays the contents of the indicated section as a hexadecimal 5150bytes. A number identifies a particular section by index in the 5151section table; any other string identifies all sections with that name 5152in the object file. The contents of the section will be relocated 5153before they are displayed. 5154 5155@item -p <number or name> 5156@itemx --string-dump=<number or name> 5157Displays the contents of the indicated section as printable strings. 5158A number identifies a particular section by index in the section table; 5159any other string identifies all sections with that name in the object file. 5160 5161@item -z 5162@itemx --decompress 5163Requests that the section(s) being dumped by @option{x}, @option{R} or 5164@option{p} options are decompressed before being displayed. If the 5165section(s) are not compressed then they are displayed as is. 5166 5167@item -c 5168@itemx --archive-index 5169@cindex Archive file symbol index information 5170Displays the file symbol index information contained in the header part 5171of binary archives. Performs the same function as the @option{t} 5172command to @command{ar}, but without using the BFD library. @xref{ar}. 5173 5174@item -w[lLiaprmfFsOoRtUuTgAckK] 5175@itemx --debug-dump[=rawline,=decodedline,=info,=abbrev,=pubnames,=aranges,=macro,=frames,=frames-interp,=str,=str-offsets,=loc,=Ranges,=pubtypes,=trace_info,=trace_abbrev,=trace_aranges,=gdb_index,=addr,=cu_index,=links,=follow-links] 5176@include debug.options.texi 5177 5178@item -P 5179@itemx --process-links 5180Display the contents of non-debug sections found in separate debuginfo 5181files that are linked to the main file. This option automatically 5182implies the @option{-wK} option, and only sections requested by other 5183command line options will be displayed. 5184 5185@include ctf.options.texi 5186@item --ctf-symbols=@var{section} 5187@item --ctf-strings=@var{section} 5188Specify the name of another section from which the CTF file can inherit 5189strings and symbols. By default, the @code{.symtab} and its linked 5190string table are used. 5191 5192If either of @option{--ctf-symbols} or @option{--ctf-strings} is specified, the 5193other must be specified as well. 5194 5195@item -I 5196@itemx --histogram 5197Display a histogram of bucket list lengths when displaying the contents 5198of the symbol tables. 5199 5200@item -v 5201@itemx --version 5202Display the version number of readelf. 5203 5204@item -W 5205@itemx --wide 5206Don't break output lines to fit into 80 columns. By default 5207@command{readelf} breaks section header and segment listing lines for 520864-bit ELF files, so that they fit into 80 columns. This option causes 5209@command{readelf} to print each section header resp. each segment one a 5210single line, which is far more readable on terminals wider than 80 columns. 5211 5212@item -T 5213@itemx --silent-truncation 5214Normally when readelf is displaying a symbol name, and it has to 5215truncate the name to fit into an 80 column display, it will add a 5216suffix of @code{[...]} to the name. This command line option 5217disables this behaviour, allowing 5 more characters of the name to be 5218displayed and restoring the old behaviour of readelf (prior to release 52192.35). 5220 5221@item -H 5222@itemx --help 5223Display the command-line options understood by @command{readelf}. 5224 5225@end table 5226 5227@c man end 5228 5229@ignore 5230@c man begin SEEALSO readelf 5231objdump(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 5232@c man end 5233@end ignore 5234 5235@node elfedit 5236@chapter elfedit 5237 5238@cindex Update ELF header 5239@kindex elfedit 5240 5241@c man title elfedit update ELF header and program property of ELF files 5242 5243@smallexample 5244@c man begin SYNOPSIS elfedit 5245elfedit [@option{--input-mach=}@var{machine}] 5246 [@option{--input-type=}@var{type}] 5247 [@option{--input-osabi=}@var{osabi}] 5248 [@option{--input-abiversion=}@var{version}] 5249 @option{--output-mach=}@var{machine} 5250 @option{--output-type=}@var{type} 5251 @option{--output-osabi=}@var{osabi} 5252 @option{--output-abiversion=}@var{version} 5253 @option{--enable-x86-feature=}@var{feature} 5254 @option{--disable-x86-feature=}@var{feature} 5255 [@option{-v}|@option{--version}] 5256 [@option{-h}|@option{--help}] 5257 @var{elffile}@dots{} 5258@c man end 5259@end smallexample 5260 5261@c man begin DESCRIPTION elfedit 5262 5263@command{elfedit} updates the ELF header and program property of ELF 5264files which have the matching ELF machine and file types. The options 5265control how and which fields in the ELF header and program property 5266should be updated. 5267 5268@var{elffile}@dots{} are the ELF files to be updated. 32-bit and 526964-bit ELF files are supported, as are archives containing ELF files. 5270@c man end 5271 5272@c man begin OPTIONS elfedit 5273 5274The long and short forms of options, shown here as alternatives, are 5275equivalent. At least one of the @option{--output-mach}, 5276@option{--output-type}, @option{--output-osabi}, 5277@option{--output-abiversion}, 5278@option{--enable-x86-feature} and @option{--disable-x86-feature} 5279options must be given. 5280 5281@table @env 5282 5283@item --input-mach=@var{machine} 5284Set the matching input ELF machine type to @var{machine}. If 5285@option{--input-mach} isn't specified, it will match any ELF 5286machine types. 5287 5288The supported ELF machine types are, @var{i386}, @var{IAMCU}, @var{L1OM}, 5289@var{K1OM} and @var{x86-64}. 5290 5291@item --output-mach=@var{machine} 5292Change the ELF machine type in the ELF header to @var{machine}. The 5293supported ELF machine types are the same as @option{--input-mach}. 5294 5295@item --input-type=@var{type} 5296Set the matching input ELF file type to @var{type}. If 5297@option{--input-type} isn't specified, it will match any ELF file types. 5298 5299The supported ELF file types are, @var{rel}, @var{exec} and @var{dyn}. 5300 5301@item --output-type=@var{type} 5302Change the ELF file type in the ELF header to @var{type}. The 5303supported ELF types are the same as @option{--input-type}. 5304 5305@item --input-osabi=@var{osabi} 5306Set the matching input ELF file OSABI to @var{osabi}. If 5307@option{--input-osabi} isn't specified, it will match any ELF OSABIs. 5308 5309The supported ELF OSABIs are, @var{none}, @var{HPUX}, @var{NetBSD}, 5310@var{GNU}, @var{Linux} (alias for @var{GNU}), 5311@var{Solaris}, @var{AIX}, @var{Irix}, 5312@var{FreeBSD}, @var{TRU64}, @var{Modesto}, @var{OpenBSD}, @var{OpenVMS}, 5313@var{NSK}, @var{AROS} and @var{FenixOS}. 5314 5315@item --output-osabi=@var{osabi} 5316Change the ELF OSABI in the ELF header to @var{osabi}. The 5317supported ELF OSABI are the same as @option{--input-osabi}. 5318 5319@item --input-abiversion=@var{version} 5320Set the matching input ELF file ABIVERSION to @var{version}. 5321@var{version} must be between 0 and 255. If @option{--input-abiversion} 5322isn't specified, it will match any ELF ABIVERSIONs. 5323 5324@item --output-abiversion=@var{version} 5325Change the ELF ABIVERSION in the ELF header to @var{version}. 5326@var{version} must be between 0 and 255. 5327 5328@item --enable-x86-feature=@var{feature} 5329Set the @var{feature} bit in program property in @var{exec} or @var{dyn} 5330ELF files with machine types of @var{i386} or @var{x86-64}. The 5331supported features are, @var{ibt}, @var{shstk}, @var{lam_u48} and 5332@var{lam_u57}. 5333 5334@item --disable-x86-feature=@var{feature} 5335Clear the @var{feature} bit in program property in @var{exec} or 5336@var{dyn} ELF files with machine types of @var{i386} or @var{x86-64}. 5337The supported features are the same as @option{--enable-x86-feature}. 5338 5339Note: @option{--enable-x86-feature} and @option{--disable-x86-feature} 5340are available only on hosts with @samp{mmap} support. 5341 5342@item -v 5343@itemx --version 5344Display the version number of @command{elfedit}. 5345 5346@item -h 5347@itemx --help 5348Display the command-line options understood by @command{elfedit}. 5349 5350@end table 5351 5352@c man end 5353 5354@ignore 5355@c man begin SEEALSO elfedit 5356readelf(1), and the Info entries for @file{binutils}. 5357@c man end 5358@end ignore 5359 5360@node Common Options 5361@chapter Common Options 5362 5363The following command-line options are supported by all of the 5364programs described in this manual. 5365 5366@c man begin OPTIONS 5367@table @env 5368@include at-file.texi 5369@c man end 5370 5371@item --help 5372Display the command-line options supported by the program. 5373 5374@item --version 5375Display the version number of the program. 5376 5377@c man begin OPTIONS 5378@end table 5379@c man end 5380 5381@node Selecting the Target System 5382@chapter Selecting the Target System 5383 5384You can specify two aspects of the target system to the @sc{gnu} 5385binary file utilities, each in several ways: 5386 5387@itemize @bullet 5388@item 5389the target 5390 5391@item 5392the architecture 5393@end itemize 5394 5395In the following summaries, the lists of ways to specify values are in 5396order of decreasing precedence. The ways listed first override those 5397listed later. 5398 5399The commands to list valid values only list the values for which the 5400programs you are running were configured. If they were configured with 5401@option{--enable-targets=all}, the commands list most of the available 5402values, but a few are left out; not all targets can be configured in at 5403once because some of them can only be configured @dfn{native} (on hosts 5404with the same type as the target system). 5405 5406@menu 5407* Target Selection:: 5408* Architecture Selection:: 5409@end menu 5410 5411@node Target Selection 5412@section Target Selection 5413 5414A @dfn{target} is an object file format. A given target may be 5415supported for multiple architectures (@pxref{Architecture Selection}). 5416A target selection may also have variations for different operating 5417systems or architectures. 5418 5419The command to list valid target values is @samp{objdump -i} 5420(the first column of output contains the relevant information). 5421 5422Some sample values are: @samp{a.out-hp300bsd}, @samp{ecoff-littlemips}, 5423@samp{a.out-sunos-big}. 5424 5425You can also specify a target using a configuration triplet. This is 5426the same sort of name that is passed to @file{configure} to specify a 5427target. When you use a configuration triplet as an argument, it must be 5428fully canonicalized. You can see the canonical version of a triplet by 5429running the shell script @file{config.sub} which is included with the 5430sources. 5431 5432Some sample configuration triplets are: @samp{m68k-hp-bsd}, 5433@samp{mips-dec-ultrix}, @samp{sparc-sun-sunos}. 5434 5435@subheading @command{objdump} Target 5436 5437Ways to specify: 5438 5439@enumerate 5440@item 5441command-line option: @option{-b} or @option{--target} 5442 5443@item 5444environment variable @code{GNUTARGET} 5445 5446@item 5447deduced from the input file 5448@end enumerate 5449 5450@subheading @command{objcopy} and @command{strip} Input Target 5451 5452Ways to specify: 5453 5454@enumerate 5455@item 5456command-line options: @option{-I} or @option{--input-target}, or @option{-F} or @option{--target} 5457 5458@item 5459environment variable @code{GNUTARGET} 5460 5461@item 5462deduced from the input file 5463@end enumerate 5464 5465@subheading @command{objcopy} and @command{strip} Output Target 5466 5467Ways to specify: 5468 5469@enumerate 5470@item 5471command-line options: @option{-O} or @option{--output-target}, or @option{-F} or @option{--target} 5472 5473@item 5474the input target (see ``@command{objcopy} and @command{strip} Input Target'' above) 5475 5476@item 5477environment variable @code{GNUTARGET} 5478 5479@item 5480deduced from the input file 5481@end enumerate 5482 5483@subheading @command{nm}, @command{size}, and @command{strings} Target 5484 5485Ways to specify: 5486 5487@enumerate 5488@item 5489command-line option: @option{--target} 5490 5491@item 5492environment variable @code{GNUTARGET} 5493 5494@item 5495deduced from the input file 5496@end enumerate 5497 5498@node Architecture Selection 5499@section Architecture Selection 5500 5501An @dfn{architecture} is a type of @sc{cpu} on which an object file is 5502to run. Its name may contain a colon, separating the name of the 5503processor family from the name of the particular @sc{cpu}. 5504 5505The command to list valid architecture values is @samp{objdump -i} (the 5506second column contains the relevant information). 5507 5508Sample values: @samp{m68k:68020}, @samp{mips:3000}, @samp{sparc}. 5509 5510@subheading @command{objdump} Architecture 5511 5512Ways to specify: 5513 5514@enumerate 5515@item 5516command-line option: @option{-m} or @option{--architecture} 5517 5518@item 5519deduced from the input file 5520@end enumerate 5521 5522@subheading @command{objcopy}, @command{nm}, @command{size}, @command{strings} Architecture 5523 5524Ways to specify: 5525 5526@enumerate 5527@item 5528deduced from the input file 5529@end enumerate 5530 5531@node debuginfod 5532@chapter debuginfod 5533@cindex separate debug files 5534 5535debuginfod is a web service that indexes ELF/DWARF debugging resources 5536by build-id and serves them over HTTP. For more information see: 5537@emph{https://sourceware.org/elfutils/Debuginfod.html} 5538 5539Binutils can be built with the debuginfod client library 5540@code{libdebuginfod} using the @option{--with-debuginfod} configure option. 5541This option is enabled by default if @code{libdebuginfod} is installed 5542and found at configure time. This allows @command{objdump} and 5543@command{readelf} to automatically query debuginfod servers for 5544separate debug files when the files are otherwise not found. 5545 5546debuginfod is packaged with elfutils, starting with version 0.178. 5547You can get the latest version from `https://sourceware.org/elfutils/'. 5548 5549The DWARF info dumping tools (@command{readelf} and @command{objdump}) 5550have options to control when they should access the debuginfod 5551servers. By default this access is enabled. 5552 5553@node Reporting Bugs 5554@chapter Reporting Bugs 5555@cindex bugs 5556@cindex reporting bugs 5557 5558Your bug reports play an essential role in making the binary utilities 5559reliable. 5560 5561Reporting a bug may help you by bringing a solution to your problem, or 5562it may not. But in any case the principal function of a bug report is 5563to help the entire community by making the next version of the binary 5564utilities work better. Bug reports are your contribution to their 5565maintenance. 5566 5567In order for a bug report to serve its purpose, you must include the 5568information that enables us to fix the bug. 5569 5570@menu 5571* Bug Criteria:: Have you found a bug? 5572* Bug Reporting:: How to report bugs 5573@end menu 5574 5575@node Bug Criteria 5576@section Have You Found a Bug? 5577@cindex bug criteria 5578 5579If you are not sure whether you have found a bug, here are some guidelines: 5580 5581@itemize @bullet 5582@cindex fatal signal 5583@cindex crash 5584@item 5585If a binary utility gets a fatal signal, for any input whatever, that is 5586a bug. Reliable utilities never crash. 5587 5588@cindex error on valid input 5589@item 5590If a binary utility produces an error message for valid input, that is a 5591bug. 5592 5593@item 5594If you are an experienced user of binary utilities, your suggestions for 5595improvement are welcome in any case. 5596@end itemize 5597 5598@node Bug Reporting 5599@section How to Report Bugs 5600@cindex bug reports 5601@cindex bugs, reporting 5602 5603A number of companies and individuals offer support for @sc{gnu} 5604products. If you obtained the binary utilities from a support 5605organization, we recommend you contact that organization first. 5606 5607You can find contact information for many support companies and 5608individuals in the file @file{etc/SERVICE} in the @sc{gnu} Emacs 5609distribution. 5610 5611@ifset BUGURL 5612In any event, we also recommend that you send bug reports for the binary 5613utilities to @value{BUGURL}. 5614@end ifset 5615 5616The fundamental principle of reporting bugs usefully is this: 5617@strong{report all the facts}. If you are not sure whether to state a 5618fact or leave it out, state it! 5619 5620Often people omit facts because they think they know what causes the 5621problem and assume that some details do not matter. Thus, you might 5622assume that the name of a file you use in an example does not matter. 5623Well, probably it does not, but one cannot be sure. Perhaps the bug is 5624a stray memory reference which happens to fetch from the location where 5625that pathname is stored in memory; perhaps, if the pathname were 5626different, the contents of that location would fool the utility into 5627doing the right thing despite the bug. Play it safe and give a 5628specific, complete example. That is the easiest thing for you to do, 5629and the most helpful. 5630 5631Keep in mind that the purpose of a bug report is to enable us to fix the bug if 5632it is new to us. Therefore, always write your bug reports on the assumption 5633that the bug has not been reported previously. 5634 5635Sometimes people give a few sketchy facts and ask, ``Does this ring a 5636bell?'' This cannot help us fix a bug, so it is basically useless. We 5637respond by asking for enough details to enable us to investigate. 5638You might as well expedite matters by sending them to begin with. 5639 5640To enable us to fix the bug, you should include all these things: 5641 5642@itemize @bullet 5643@item 5644The version of the utility. Each utility announces it if you start it 5645with the @option{--version} argument. 5646 5647Without this, we will not know whether there is any point in looking for 5648the bug in the current version of the binary utilities. 5649 5650@item 5651Any patches you may have applied to the source, including any patches 5652made to the @code{BFD} library. 5653 5654@item 5655The type of machine you are using, and the operating system name and 5656version number. 5657 5658@item 5659What compiler (and its version) was used to compile the utilities---e.g. 5660``@code{gcc-2.7}''. 5661 5662@item 5663The command arguments you gave the utility to observe the bug. To 5664guarantee you will not omit something important, list them all. A copy 5665of the Makefile (or the output from make) is sufficient. 5666 5667If we were to try to guess the arguments, we would probably guess wrong 5668and then we might not encounter the bug. 5669 5670@item 5671A complete input file, or set of input files, that will reproduce the 5672bug. If the utility is reading an object file or files, then it is 5673generally most helpful to send the actual object files. 5674 5675If the source files were produced exclusively using @sc{gnu} programs 5676(e.g., @command{gcc}, @command{gas}, and/or the @sc{gnu} @command{ld}), then it 5677may be OK to send the source files rather than the object files. In 5678this case, be sure to say exactly what version of @command{gcc}, or 5679whatever, was used to produce the object files. Also say how 5680@command{gcc}, or whatever, was configured. 5681 5682@item 5683A description of what behavior you observe that you believe is 5684incorrect. For example, ``It gets a fatal signal.'' 5685 5686Of course, if the bug is that the utility gets a fatal signal, then we 5687will certainly notice it. But if the bug is incorrect output, we might 5688not notice unless it is glaringly wrong. You might as well not give us 5689a chance to make a mistake. 5690 5691Even if the problem you experience is a fatal signal, you should still 5692say so explicitly. Suppose something strange is going on, such as your 5693copy of the utility is out of sync, or you have encountered a bug in 5694the C library on your system. (This has happened!) Your copy might 5695crash and ours would not. If you told us to expect a crash, then when 5696ours fails to crash, we would know that the bug was not happening for 5697us. If you had not told us to expect a crash, then we would not be able 5698to draw any conclusion from our observations. 5699 5700@item 5701If you wish to suggest changes to the source, send us context diffs, as 5702generated by @command{diff} with the @option{-u}, @option{-c}, or @option{-p} 5703option. Always send diffs from the old file to the new file. If you 5704wish to discuss something in the @command{ld} source, refer to it by 5705context, not by line number. 5706 5707The line numbers in our development sources will not match those in your 5708sources. Your line numbers would convey no useful information to us. 5709@end itemize 5710 5711Here are some things that are not necessary: 5712 5713@itemize @bullet 5714@item 5715A description of the envelope of the bug. 5716 5717Often people who encounter a bug spend a lot of time investigating 5718which changes to the input file will make the bug go away and which 5719changes will not affect it. 5720 5721This is often time consuming and not very useful, because the way we 5722will find the bug is by running a single example under the debugger 5723with breakpoints, not by pure deduction from a series of examples. 5724We recommend that you save your time for something else. 5725 5726Of course, if you can find a simpler example to report @emph{instead} 5727of the original one, that is a convenience for us. Errors in the 5728output will be easier to spot, running under the debugger will take 5729less time, and so on. 5730 5731However, simplification is not vital; if you do not want to do this, 5732report the bug anyway and send us the entire test case you used. 5733 5734@item 5735A patch for the bug. 5736 5737A patch for the bug does help us if it is a good one. But do not omit 5738the necessary information, such as the test case, on the assumption that 5739a patch is all we need. We might see problems with your patch and decide 5740to fix the problem another way, or we might not understand it at all. 5741 5742Sometimes with programs as complicated as the binary utilities it is 5743very hard to construct an example that will make the program follow a 5744certain path through the code. If you do not send us the example, we 5745will not be able to construct one, so we will not be able to verify that 5746the bug is fixed. 5747 5748And if we cannot understand what bug you are trying to fix, or why your 5749patch should be an improvement, we will not install it. A test case will 5750help us to understand. 5751 5752@item 5753A guess about what the bug is or what it depends on. 5754 5755Such guesses are usually wrong. Even we cannot guess right about such 5756things without first using the debugger to find the facts. 5757@end itemize 5758 5759@node GNU Free Documentation License 5760@appendix GNU Free Documentation License 5761 5762@include fdl.texi 5763 5764@node Binutils Index 5765@unnumbered Binutils Index 5766 5767@printindex cp 5768 5769@bye 5770