1 /* Definitions for symbol file management in GDB. 2 3 Copyright (C) 1992-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 4 5 This file is part of GDB. 6 7 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify 8 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by 9 the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or 10 (at your option) any later version. 11 12 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 13 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 14 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 15 GNU General Public License for more details. 16 17 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 18 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ 19 20 #if !defined (OBJFILES_H) 21 #define OBJFILES_H 22 23 #include "hashtab.h" 24 #include "gdb_obstack.h" /* For obstack internals. */ 25 #include "objfile-flags.h" 26 #include "symfile.h" 27 #include "progspace.h" 28 #include "registry.h" 29 #include "gdb_bfd.h" 30 #include "psymtab.h" 31 #include <vector> 32 #include "common/next-iterator.h" 33 #include "common/safe-iterator.h" 34 35 struct bcache; 36 struct htab; 37 struct objfile_data; 38 struct partial_symbol; 39 40 /* This structure maintains information on a per-objfile basis about the 41 "entry point" of the objfile, and the scope within which the entry point 42 exists. It is possible that gdb will see more than one objfile that is 43 executable, each with its own entry point. 44 45 For example, for dynamically linked executables in SVR4, the dynamic linker 46 code is contained within the shared C library, which is actually executable 47 and is run by the kernel first when an exec is done of a user executable 48 that is dynamically linked. The dynamic linker within the shared C library 49 then maps in the various program segments in the user executable and jumps 50 to the user executable's recorded entry point, as if the call had been made 51 directly by the kernel. 52 53 The traditional gdb method of using this info was to use the 54 recorded entry point to set the entry-file's lowpc and highpc from 55 the debugging information, where these values are the starting 56 address (inclusive) and ending address (exclusive) of the 57 instruction space in the executable which correspond to the 58 "startup file", i.e. crt0.o in most cases. This file is assumed to 59 be a startup file and frames with pc's inside it are treated as 60 nonexistent. Setting these variables is necessary so that 61 backtraces do not fly off the bottom of the stack. 62 63 NOTE: cagney/2003-09-09: It turns out that this "traditional" 64 method doesn't work. Corinna writes: ``It turns out that the call 65 to test for "inside entry file" destroys a meaningful backtrace 66 under some conditions. E.g. the backtrace tests in the asm-source 67 testcase are broken for some targets. In this test the functions 68 are all implemented as part of one file and the testcase is not 69 necessarily linked with a start file (depending on the target). 70 What happens is, that the first frame is printed normaly and 71 following frames are treated as being inside the enttry file then. 72 This way, only the #0 frame is printed in the backtrace output.'' 73 Ref "frame.c" "NOTE: vinschen/2003-04-01". 74 75 Gdb also supports an alternate method to avoid running off the bottom 76 of the stack. 77 78 There are two frames that are "special", the frame for the function 79 containing the process entry point, since it has no predecessor frame, 80 and the frame for the function containing the user code entry point 81 (the main() function), since all the predecessor frames are for the 82 process startup code. Since we have no guarantee that the linked 83 in startup modules have any debugging information that gdb can use, 84 we need to avoid following frame pointers back into frames that might 85 have been built in the startup code, as we might get hopelessly 86 confused. However, we almost always have debugging information 87 available for main(). 88 89 These variables are used to save the range of PC values which are 90 valid within the main() function and within the function containing 91 the process entry point. If we always consider the frame for 92 main() as the outermost frame when debugging user code, and the 93 frame for the process entry point function as the outermost frame 94 when debugging startup code, then all we have to do is have 95 DEPRECATED_FRAME_CHAIN_VALID return false whenever a frame's 96 current PC is within the range specified by these variables. In 97 essence, we set "ceilings" in the frame chain beyond which we will 98 not proceed when following the frame chain back up the stack. 99 100 A nice side effect is that we can still debug startup code without 101 running off the end of the frame chain, assuming that we have usable 102 debugging information in the startup modules, and if we choose to not 103 use the block at main, or can't find it for some reason, everything 104 still works as before. And if we have no startup code debugging 105 information but we do have usable information for main(), backtraces 106 from user code don't go wandering off into the startup code. */ 107 108 struct entry_info 109 { 110 /* The unrelocated value we should use for this objfile entry point. */ 111 CORE_ADDR entry_point; 112 113 /* The index of the section in which the entry point appears. */ 114 int the_bfd_section_index; 115 116 /* Set to 1 iff ENTRY_POINT contains a valid value. */ 117 unsigned entry_point_p : 1; 118 119 /* Set to 1 iff this object was initialized. */ 120 unsigned initialized : 1; 121 }; 122 123 /* Sections in an objfile. The section offsets are stored in the 124 OBJFILE. */ 125 126 struct obj_section 127 { 128 /* BFD section pointer */ 129 struct bfd_section *the_bfd_section; 130 131 /* Objfile this section is part of. */ 132 struct objfile *objfile; 133 134 /* True if this "overlay section" is mapped into an "overlay region". */ 135 int ovly_mapped; 136 }; 137 138 /* Relocation offset applied to S. */ 139 #define obj_section_offset(s) \ 140 (((s)->objfile->section_offsets)->offsets[gdb_bfd_section_index ((s)->objfile->obfd, (s)->the_bfd_section)]) 141 142 /* The memory address of section S (vma + offset). */ 143 #define obj_section_addr(s) \ 144 (bfd_get_section_vma ((s)->objfile->obfd, s->the_bfd_section) \ 145 + obj_section_offset (s)) 146 147 /* The one-passed-the-end memory address of section S 148 (vma + size + offset). */ 149 #define obj_section_endaddr(s) \ 150 (bfd_get_section_vma ((s)->objfile->obfd, s->the_bfd_section) \ 151 + bfd_get_section_size ((s)->the_bfd_section) \ 152 + obj_section_offset (s)) 153 154 /* The "objstats" structure provides a place for gdb to record some 155 interesting information about its internal state at runtime, on a 156 per objfile basis, such as information about the number of symbols 157 read, size of string table (if any), etc. */ 158 159 struct objstats 160 { 161 /* Number of partial symbols read. */ 162 int n_psyms = 0; 163 164 /* Number of full symbols read. */ 165 int n_syms = 0; 166 167 /* Number of ".stabs" read (if applicable). */ 168 int n_stabs = 0; 169 170 /* Number of types. */ 171 int n_types = 0; 172 173 /* Size of stringtable, (if applicable). */ 174 int sz_strtab = 0; 175 }; 176 177 #define OBJSTAT(objfile, expr) (objfile -> stats.expr) 178 #define OBJSTATS struct objstats stats 179 extern void print_objfile_statistics (void); 180 extern void print_symbol_bcache_statistics (void); 181 182 /* Number of entries in the minimal symbol hash table. */ 183 #define MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE 2039 184 185 /* An iterator for minimal symbols. */ 186 187 struct minimal_symbol_iterator 188 { 189 typedef minimal_symbol_iterator self_type; 190 typedef struct minimal_symbol *value_type; 191 typedef struct minimal_symbol *&reference; 192 typedef struct minimal_symbol **pointer; 193 typedef std::forward_iterator_tag iterator_category; 194 typedef int difference_type; 195 196 explicit minimal_symbol_iterator (struct minimal_symbol *msym) 197 : m_msym (msym) 198 { 199 } 200 201 value_type operator* () const 202 { 203 return m_msym; 204 } 205 206 bool operator== (const self_type &other) const 207 { 208 return m_msym == other.m_msym; 209 } 210 211 bool operator!= (const self_type &other) const 212 { 213 return m_msym != other.m_msym; 214 } 215 216 self_type &operator++ () 217 { 218 ++m_msym; 219 return *this; 220 } 221 222 private: 223 struct minimal_symbol *m_msym; 224 }; 225 226 /* Some objfile data is hung off the BFD. This enables sharing of the 227 data across all objfiles using the BFD. The data is stored in an 228 instance of this structure, and associated with the BFD using the 229 registry system. */ 230 231 struct objfile_per_bfd_storage 232 { 233 objfile_per_bfd_storage () 234 : minsyms_read (false) 235 {} 236 237 /* The storage has an obstack of its own. */ 238 239 auto_obstack storage_obstack; 240 241 /* Byte cache for file names. */ 242 243 struct bcache *filename_cache = NULL; 244 245 /* Byte cache for macros. */ 246 247 struct bcache *macro_cache = NULL; 248 249 /* The gdbarch associated with the BFD. Note that this gdbarch is 250 determined solely from BFD information, without looking at target 251 information. The gdbarch determined from a running target may 252 differ from this e.g. with respect to register types and names. */ 253 254 struct gdbarch *gdbarch = NULL; 255 256 /* Hash table for mapping symbol names to demangled names. Each 257 entry in the hash table is actually two consecutive strings, 258 both null-terminated; the first one is a mangled or linkage 259 name, and the second is the demangled name or just a zero byte 260 if the name doesn't demangle. */ 261 262 htab *demangled_names_hash = NULL; 263 264 /* The per-objfile information about the entry point, the scope (file/func) 265 containing the entry point, and the scope of the user's main() func. */ 266 267 entry_info ei {}; 268 269 /* The name and language of any "main" found in this objfile. The 270 name can be NULL, which means that the information was not 271 recorded. */ 272 273 const char *name_of_main = NULL; 274 enum language language_of_main = language_unknown; 275 276 /* Each file contains a pointer to an array of minimal symbols for all 277 global symbols that are defined within the file. The array is 278 terminated by a "null symbol", one that has a NULL pointer for the 279 name and a zero value for the address. This makes it easy to walk 280 through the array when passed a pointer to somewhere in the middle 281 of it. There is also a count of the number of symbols, which does 282 not include the terminating null symbol. The array itself, as well 283 as all the data that it points to, should be allocated on the 284 objfile_obstack for this file. */ 285 286 minimal_symbol *msymbols = NULL; 287 int minimal_symbol_count = 0; 288 289 /* The number of minimal symbols read, before any minimal symbol 290 de-duplication is applied. Note in particular that this has only 291 a passing relationship with the actual size of the table above; 292 use minimal_symbol_count if you need the true size. */ 293 294 int n_minsyms = 0; 295 296 /* This is true if minimal symbols have already been read. Symbol 297 readers can use this to bypass minimal symbol reading. Also, the 298 minimal symbol table management code in minsyms.c uses this to 299 suppress new minimal symbols. You might think that MSYMBOLS or 300 MINIMAL_SYMBOL_COUNT could be used for this, but it is possible 301 for multiple readers to install minimal symbols into a given 302 per-BFD. */ 303 304 bool minsyms_read : 1; 305 306 /* This is a hash table used to index the minimal symbols by name. */ 307 308 minimal_symbol *msymbol_hash[MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE] {}; 309 310 /* This hash table is used to index the minimal symbols by their 311 demangled names. */ 312 313 minimal_symbol *msymbol_demangled_hash[MINIMAL_SYMBOL_HASH_SIZE] {}; 314 315 /* All the different languages of symbols found in the demangled 316 hash table. A flat/vector-based map is more efficient than a map 317 or hash table here, since this will only usually contain zero or 318 one entries. */ 319 std::vector<enum language> demangled_hash_languages; 320 }; 321 322 /* Master structure for keeping track of each file from which 323 gdb reads symbols. There are several ways these get allocated: 1. 324 The main symbol file, symfile_objfile, set by the symbol-file command, 325 2. Additional symbol files added by the add-symbol-file command, 326 3. Shared library objfiles, added by ADD_SOLIB, 4. symbol files 327 for modules that were loaded when GDB attached to a remote system 328 (see remote-vx.c). */ 329 330 struct objfile 331 { 332 objfile (bfd *, const char *, objfile_flags); 333 ~objfile (); 334 335 DISABLE_COPY_AND_ASSIGN (objfile); 336 337 /* A range adapter that makes it possible to iterate over all 338 psymtabs in one objfile. */ 339 340 psymtab_storage::partial_symtab_range psymtabs () 341 { 342 return partial_symtabs->range (); 343 } 344 345 /* Reset the storage for the partial symbol tables. */ 346 347 void reset_psymtabs () 348 { 349 psymbol_map.clear (); 350 partial_symtabs.reset (new psymtab_storage ()); 351 } 352 353 typedef next_adapter<struct compunit_symtab> compunits_range; 354 355 /* A range adapter that makes it possible to iterate over all 356 compunits in one objfile. */ 357 358 compunits_range compunits () 359 { 360 return compunits_range (compunit_symtabs); 361 } 362 363 /* A range adapter that makes it possible to iterate over all 364 minimal symbols of an objfile. */ 365 366 class msymbols_range 367 { 368 public: 369 370 explicit msymbols_range (struct objfile *objfile) 371 : m_objfile (objfile) 372 { 373 } 374 375 minimal_symbol_iterator begin () const 376 { 377 return minimal_symbol_iterator (m_objfile->per_bfd->msymbols); 378 } 379 380 minimal_symbol_iterator end () const 381 { 382 return minimal_symbol_iterator 383 (m_objfile->per_bfd->msymbols 384 + m_objfile->per_bfd->minimal_symbol_count); 385 } 386 387 private: 388 389 struct objfile *m_objfile; 390 }; 391 392 /* Return a range adapter for iterating over all minimal 393 symbols. */ 394 395 msymbols_range msymbols () 396 { 397 return msymbols_range (this); 398 } 399 400 401 /* All struct objfile's are chained together by their next pointers. 402 The program space field "objfiles" (frequently referenced via 403 the macro "object_files") points to the first link in this chain. */ 404 405 struct objfile *next = nullptr; 406 407 /* The object file's original name as specified by the user, 408 made absolute, and tilde-expanded. However, it is not canonicalized 409 (i.e., it has not been passed through gdb_realpath). 410 This pointer is never NULL. This does not have to be freed; it is 411 guaranteed to have a lifetime at least as long as the objfile. */ 412 413 char *original_name = nullptr; 414 415 CORE_ADDR addr_low = 0; 416 417 /* Some flag bits for this objfile. */ 418 419 objfile_flags flags; 420 421 /* The program space associated with this objfile. */ 422 423 struct program_space *pspace; 424 425 /* List of compunits. 426 These are used to do symbol lookups and file/line-number lookups. */ 427 428 struct compunit_symtab *compunit_symtabs = nullptr; 429 430 /* The partial symbol tables. */ 431 432 std::shared_ptr<psymtab_storage> partial_symtabs; 433 434 /* The object file's BFD. Can be null if the objfile contains only 435 minimal symbols, e.g. the run time common symbols for SunOS4. */ 436 437 bfd *obfd; 438 439 /* The per-BFD data. Note that this is treated specially if OBFD 440 is NULL. */ 441 442 struct objfile_per_bfd_storage *per_bfd = nullptr; 443 444 /* The modification timestamp of the object file, as of the last time 445 we read its symbols. */ 446 447 long mtime = 0; 448 449 /* Obstack to hold objects that should be freed when we load a new symbol 450 table from this object file. */ 451 452 struct obstack objfile_obstack {}; 453 454 /* Map symbol addresses to the partial symtab that defines the 455 object at that address. */ 456 457 std::vector<std::pair<CORE_ADDR, partial_symtab *>> psymbol_map; 458 459 /* Structure which keeps track of functions that manipulate objfile's 460 of the same type as this objfile. I.e. the function to read partial 461 symbols for example. Note that this structure is in statically 462 allocated memory, and is shared by all objfiles that use the 463 object module reader of this type. */ 464 465 const struct sym_fns *sf = nullptr; 466 467 /* Per objfile data-pointers required by other GDB modules. */ 468 469 REGISTRY_FIELDS {}; 470 471 /* Set of relocation offsets to apply to each section. 472 The table is indexed by the_bfd_section->index, thus it is generally 473 as large as the number of sections in the binary. 474 The table is stored on the objfile_obstack. 475 476 These offsets indicate that all symbols (including partial and 477 minimal symbols) which have been read have been relocated by this 478 much. Symbols which are yet to be read need to be relocated by it. */ 479 480 struct section_offsets *section_offsets = nullptr; 481 int num_sections = 0; 482 483 /* Indexes in the section_offsets array. These are initialized by the 484 *_symfile_offsets() family of functions (som_symfile_offsets, 485 xcoff_symfile_offsets, default_symfile_offsets). In theory they 486 should correspond to the section indexes used by bfd for the 487 current objfile. The exception to this for the time being is the 488 SOM version. 489 490 These are initialized to -1 so that we can later detect if they 491 are used w/o being properly assigned to. */ 492 493 int sect_index_text = -1; 494 int sect_index_data = -1; 495 int sect_index_bss = -1; 496 int sect_index_rodata = -1; 497 498 /* These pointers are used to locate the section table, which 499 among other things, is used to map pc addresses into sections. 500 SECTIONS points to the first entry in the table, and 501 SECTIONS_END points to the first location past the last entry 502 in the table. The table is stored on the objfile_obstack. The 503 sections are indexed by the BFD section index; but the 504 structure data is only valid for certain sections 505 (e.g. non-empty, SEC_ALLOC). */ 506 507 struct obj_section *sections = nullptr; 508 struct obj_section *sections_end = nullptr; 509 510 /* GDB allows to have debug symbols in separate object files. This is 511 used by .gnu_debuglink, ELF build id note and Mach-O OSO. 512 Although this is a tree structure, GDB only support one level 513 (ie a separate debug for a separate debug is not supported). Note that 514 separate debug object are in the main chain and therefore will be 515 visited by objfiles & co iterators. Separate debug objfile always 516 has a non-nul separate_debug_objfile_backlink. */ 517 518 /* Link to the first separate debug object, if any. */ 519 520 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile = nullptr; 521 522 /* If this is a separate debug object, this is used as a link to the 523 actual executable objfile. */ 524 525 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile_backlink = nullptr; 526 527 /* If this is a separate debug object, this is a link to the next one 528 for the same executable objfile. */ 529 530 struct objfile *separate_debug_objfile_link = nullptr; 531 532 /* Place to stash various statistics about this objfile. */ 533 534 OBJSTATS; 535 536 /* A linked list of symbols created when reading template types or 537 function templates. These symbols are not stored in any symbol 538 table, so we have to keep them here to relocate them 539 properly. */ 540 541 struct symbol *template_symbols = nullptr; 542 543 /* Associate a static link (struct dynamic_prop *) to all blocks (struct 544 block *) that have one. 545 546 In the context of nested functions (available in Pascal, Ada and GNU C, 547 for instance), a static link (as in DWARF's DW_AT_static_link attribute) 548 for a function is a way to get the frame corresponding to the enclosing 549 function. 550 551 Very few blocks have a static link, so it's more memory efficient to 552 store these here rather than in struct block. Static links must be 553 allocated on the objfile's obstack. */ 554 htab_t static_links {}; 555 }; 556 557 /* Declarations for functions defined in objfiles.c */ 558 559 extern struct gdbarch *get_objfile_arch (const struct objfile *); 560 561 extern int entry_point_address_query (CORE_ADDR *entry_p); 562 563 extern CORE_ADDR entry_point_address (void); 564 565 extern void build_objfile_section_table (struct objfile *); 566 567 extern struct objfile *objfile_separate_debug_iterate (const struct objfile *, 568 const struct objfile *); 569 570 extern void put_objfile_before (struct objfile *, struct objfile *); 571 572 extern void add_separate_debug_objfile (struct objfile *, struct objfile *); 573 574 extern void unlink_objfile (struct objfile *); 575 576 extern void free_objfile_separate_debug (struct objfile *); 577 578 extern void free_all_objfiles (void); 579 580 extern void objfile_relocate (struct objfile *, const struct section_offsets *); 581 extern void objfile_rebase (struct objfile *, CORE_ADDR); 582 583 extern int objfile_has_partial_symbols (struct objfile *objfile); 584 585 extern int objfile_has_full_symbols (struct objfile *objfile); 586 587 extern int objfile_has_symbols (struct objfile *objfile); 588 589 extern int have_partial_symbols (void); 590 591 extern int have_full_symbols (void); 592 593 extern void objfile_set_sym_fns (struct objfile *objfile, 594 const struct sym_fns *sf); 595 596 extern void objfiles_changed (void); 597 598 extern int is_addr_in_objfile (CORE_ADDR addr, const struct objfile *objfile); 599 600 /* Return true if ADDRESS maps into one of the sections of a 601 OBJF_SHARED objfile of PSPACE and false otherwise. */ 602 603 extern int shared_objfile_contains_address_p (struct program_space *pspace, 604 CORE_ADDR address); 605 606 /* This operation deletes all objfile entries that represent solibs that 607 weren't explicitly loaded by the user, via e.g., the add-symbol-file 608 command. */ 609 610 extern void objfile_purge_solibs (void); 611 612 /* Functions for dealing with the minimal symbol table, really a misc 613 address<->symbol mapping for things we don't have debug symbols for. */ 614 615 extern int have_minimal_symbols (void); 616 617 extern struct obj_section *find_pc_section (CORE_ADDR pc); 618 619 /* Return non-zero if PC is in a section called NAME. */ 620 extern int pc_in_section (CORE_ADDR, const char *); 621 622 /* Return non-zero if PC is in a SVR4-style procedure linkage table 623 section. */ 624 625 static inline int 626 in_plt_section (CORE_ADDR pc) 627 { 628 return pc_in_section (pc, ".plt"); 629 } 630 631 /* Keep a registry of per-objfile data-pointers required by other GDB 632 modules. */ 633 DECLARE_REGISTRY(objfile); 634 635 /* In normal use, the section map will be rebuilt by find_pc_section 636 if objfiles have been added, removed or relocated since it was last 637 called. Calling inhibit_section_map_updates will inhibit this 638 behavior until the returned scoped_restore object is destroyed. If 639 you call inhibit_section_map_updates you must ensure that every 640 call to find_pc_section in the inhibited region relates to a 641 section that is already in the section map and has not since been 642 removed or relocated. */ 643 extern scoped_restore_tmpl<int> inhibit_section_map_updates 644 (struct program_space *pspace); 645 646 extern void default_iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order 647 (struct gdbarch *gdbarch, 648 iterate_over_objfiles_in_search_order_cb_ftype *cb, 649 void *cb_data, struct objfile *current_objfile); 650 651 652 #define ALL_OBJFILE_OSECTIONS(objfile, osect) \ 653 for (osect = objfile->sections; osect < objfile->sections_end; osect++) \ 654 if (osect->the_bfd_section == NULL) \ 655 { \ 656 /* Nothing. */ \ 657 } \ 658 else 659 660 #define SECT_OFF_DATA(objfile) \ 661 ((objfile->sect_index_data == -1) \ 662 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \ 663 _("sect_index_data not initialized")), -1) \ 664 : objfile->sect_index_data) 665 666 #define SECT_OFF_RODATA(objfile) \ 667 ((objfile->sect_index_rodata == -1) \ 668 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \ 669 _("sect_index_rodata not initialized")), -1) \ 670 : objfile->sect_index_rodata) 671 672 #define SECT_OFF_TEXT(objfile) \ 673 ((objfile->sect_index_text == -1) \ 674 ? (internal_error (__FILE__, __LINE__, \ 675 _("sect_index_text not initialized")), -1) \ 676 : objfile->sect_index_text) 677 678 /* Sometimes the .bss section is missing from the objfile, so we don't 679 want to die here. Let the users of SECT_OFF_BSS deal with an 680 uninitialized section index. */ 681 #define SECT_OFF_BSS(objfile) (objfile)->sect_index_bss 682 683 /* Answer whether there is more than one object file loaded. */ 684 685 #define MULTI_OBJFILE_P() (object_files && object_files->next) 686 687 /* Reset the per-BFD storage area on OBJ. */ 688 689 void set_objfile_per_bfd (struct objfile *obj); 690 691 /* Return canonical name for OBJFILE. 692 This is the real file name if the file has been opened. 693 Otherwise it is the original name supplied by the user. */ 694 695 const char *objfile_name (const struct objfile *objfile); 696 697 /* Return the (real) file name of OBJFILE if the file has been opened, 698 otherwise return NULL. */ 699 700 const char *objfile_filename (const struct objfile *objfile); 701 702 /* Return the name to print for OBJFILE in debugging messages. */ 703 704 extern const char *objfile_debug_name (const struct objfile *objfile); 705 706 /* Return the name of the file format of OBJFILE if the file has been opened, 707 otherwise return NULL. */ 708 709 const char *objfile_flavour_name (struct objfile *objfile); 710 711 /* Set the objfile's notion of the "main" name and language. */ 712 713 extern void set_objfile_main_name (struct objfile *objfile, 714 const char *name, enum language lang); 715 716 extern void objfile_register_static_link 717 (struct objfile *objfile, 718 const struct block *block, 719 const struct dynamic_prop *static_link); 720 721 extern const struct dynamic_prop *objfile_lookup_static_link 722 (struct objfile *objfile, const struct block *block); 723 724 #endif /* !defined (OBJFILES_H) */ 725