binutils-gdb/libctf/ctf-decl.c

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libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
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/* C declarator syntax glue.
Copyright (C) 2019-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
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This file is part of libctf.
libctf is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later
version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; see the file COPYING. If not see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
/* CTF Declaration Stack
In order to implement ctf_type_name(), we must convert a type graph back
into a C type declaration. Unfortunately, a type graph represents a storage
class ordering of the type whereas a type declaration must obey the C rules
for operator precedence, and the two orderings are frequently in conflict.
For example, consider these CTF type graphs and their C declarations:
CTF_K_POINTER -> CTF_K_FUNCTION -> CTF_K_INTEGER : int (*)()
CTF_K_POINTER -> CTF_K_ARRAY -> CTF_K_INTEGER : int (*)[]
In each case, parentheses are used to raise operator * to higher lexical
precedence, so the string form of the C declaration cannot be constructed by
walking the type graph links and forming the string from left to right.
The functions in this file build a set of stacks from the type graph nodes
corresponding to the C operator precedence levels in the appropriate order.
The code in ctf_type_name() can then iterate over the levels and nodes in
lexical precedence order and construct the final C declaration string. */
#include <ctf-impl.h>
#include <string.h>
void
ctf_decl_init (ctf_decl_t *cd)
{
int i;
memset (cd, 0, sizeof (ctf_decl_t));
for (i = CTF_PREC_BASE; i < CTF_PREC_MAX; i++)
cd->cd_order[i] = CTF_PREC_BASE - 1;
cd->cd_qualp = CTF_PREC_BASE;
cd->cd_ordp = CTF_PREC_BASE;
}
void
ctf_decl_fini (ctf_decl_t *cd)
{
ctf_decl_node_t *cdp, *ndp;
int i;
for (i = CTF_PREC_BASE; i < CTF_PREC_MAX; i++)
{
for (cdp = ctf_list_next (&cd->cd_nodes[i]); cdp != NULL; cdp = ndp)
{
ndp = ctf_list_next (cdp);
libctf: remove ctf_malloc, ctf_free and ctf_strdup These just get in the way of auditing for erroneous usage of strdup and add a huge irregular surface of "ctf_malloc or malloc? ctf_free or free? ctf_strdup or strdup?" ctf_malloc and ctf_free usage has not reliably matched up for many years, if ever, making the whole game pointless. Go back to malloc, free, and strdup like everyone else: while we're at it, fix a bunch of places where we weren't properly checking for OOM. This changes the interface of ctf_cuname_set and ctf_parent_name_set, which could strdup but could not return errors (like ENOMEM). New in v4. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_cuname_set): Can now fail, returning int. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise. libctf/ * ctf-impl.h (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. (ctf_strdup): Likewise. * ctf-subr.c (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. * ctf-util.c (ctf_strdup): Remove. * ctf-create.c (ctf_serialize): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dtd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_dvd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_add_generic): Likewise. (ctf_add_function): Likewise. (ctf_add_enumerator): Likewise. (ctf_add_member_offset): Likewise. (ctf_add_variable): Likewise. (membadd): Likewise. (ctf_compress_write): Likewise. (ctf_write_mem): Likewise. * ctf-decl.c (ctf_decl_push): Likewise. (ctf_decl_fini): Likewise. (ctf_decl_sprintf): Likewise. Check for OOM. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_append): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dump_free): Likewise. (ctf_dump): Likewise. * ctf-open.c (upgrade_types_v1): Likewise. (init_types): Likewise. (ctf_file_close): Likewise. (ctf_bufopen_internal): Likewise. Check for OOM. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise: report the OOM to the caller. (ctf_cuname_set): Likewise. (ctf_import): Likewise. * ctf-string.c (ctf_str_purge_atom_refs): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_str_free_atom): Likewise. (ctf_str_create_atoms): Likewise. (ctf_str_add_ref_internal): Likewise. (ctf_str_remove_ref): Likewise. (ctf_str_write_strtab): Likewise.
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free (cdp);
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
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}
}
free (cd->cd_buf);
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
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}
void
libctf, include, binutils, gdb, ld: rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t The naming of the ctf_file_t type in libctf is a historical curiosity. Back in the Solaris days, CTF dictionaries were originally generated as a separate file and then (sometimes) merged into objects: hence the datatype was named ctf_file_t, and known as a "CTF file". Nowadays, raw CTF is essentially never written to a file on its own, and the datatype changed name to a "CTF dictionary" years ago. So the term "CTF file" refers to something that is never a file! This is at best confusing. The type has also historically been known as a 'CTF container", which is even more confusing now that we have CTF archives which are *also* a sort of container (they contain CTF dictionaries), but which are never referred to as containers in the source code. So fix this by completing the renaming, renaming ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t throughout, and renaming those few functions that refer to CTF files by name (keeping compatibility aliases) to refer to dicts instead. Old users who still refer to ctf_file_t will see (harmless) pointer-compatibility warnings at compile time, but the ABI is unchanged (since C doesn't mangle names, and ctf_file_t was always an opaque type) and things will still compile fine as long as -Werror is not specified. All references to CTF containers and CTF files in the source code are fixed to refer to CTF dicts instead. Further (smaller) renamings of annoyingly-named functions to come, as part of the process of souping up queries across whole archives at once (needed for the function info and data object sections). binutils/ChangeLog 2020-11-20 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * objdump.c (dump_ctf_errs): Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. (dump_ctf_archive_member): Likewise. (dump_ctf): Likewise. Use ctf_dict_close, not ctf_file_close. * readelf.c (dump_ctf_errs): Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. (dump_ctf_archive_member): Likewise. (dump_section_as_ctf): Likewise. Use ctf_dict_close, not ctf_file_close. gdb/ChangeLog 2020-11-20 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * ctfread.c: Change uses of ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. (ctf_fp_info::~ctf_fp_info): Call ctf_dict_close, not ctf_file_close. include/ChangeLog 2020-11-20 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * ctf-api.h (ctf_file_t): Rename to... (ctf_dict_t): ... this. Keep ctf_file_t around for compatibility. (struct ctf_file): Likewise rename to... (struct ctf_dict): ... this. (ctf_file_close): Rename to... (ctf_dict_close): ... this, keeping compatibility function. (ctf_parent_file): Rename to... (ctf_parent_dict): ... this, keeping compatibility function. All callers adjusted. * ctf.h: Rename references to ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. (struct ctf_archive) <ctfa_nfiles>: Rename to... <ctfa_ndicts>: ... this. ld/ChangeLog 2020-11-20 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * ldlang.c (ctf_output): This is a ctf_dict_t now. (lang_ctf_errs_warnings): Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. (ldlang_open_ctf): Adjust comment. (lang_merge_ctf): Use ctf_dict_close, not ctf_file_close. * ldelfgen.h (ldelf_examine_strtab_for_ctf): Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. Change opaque declaration accordingly. * ldelfgen.c (ldelf_examine_strtab_for_ctf): Adjust. * ldemul.h (examine_strtab_for_ctf): Likewise. (ldemul_examine_strtab_for_ctf): Likewise. * ldeuml.c (ldemul_examine_strtab_for_ctf): Likewise. libctf/ChangeLog 2020-11-20 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * ctf-impl.h: Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t: all declarations adjusted. (ctf_fileops): Rename to... (ctf_dictops): ... this. (ctf_dedup_t) <cd_id_to_file_t>: Rename to... <cd_id_to_dict_t>: ... this. (ctf_file_t): Fix outdated comment. <ctf_fileops>: Rename to... <ctf_dictops>: ... this. (struct ctf_archive_internal) <ctfi_file>: Rename to... <ctfi_dict>: ... this. * ctf-archive.c: Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. Rename ctf_archive.ctfa_nfiles to ctfa_ndicts. Rename ctf_file_close to ctf_dict_close. All users adjusted. * ctf-create.c: Likewise. Refer to CTF dicts, not CTF containers. (ctf_bundle_t) <ctb_file>: Rename to... <ctb_dict): ... this. * ctf-decl.c: Rename ctf_file_t to ctf_dict_t. * ctf-dedup.c: Likewise. Rename ctf_file_close to ctf_dict_close. Refer to CTF dicts, not CTF containers. * ctf-dump.c: Likewise. * ctf-error.c: Likewise. * ctf-hash.c: Likewise. * ctf-inlines.h: Likewise. * ctf-labels.c: Likewise. * ctf-link.c: Likewise. * ctf-lookup.c: Likewise. * ctf-open-bfd.c: Likewise. * ctf-string.c: Likewise. * ctf-subr.c: Likewise. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-util.c: Likewise. * ctf-open.c: Likewise. (ctf_file_close): Rename to... (ctf_dict_close): ...this. (ctf_file_close): New trivial wrapper around ctf_dict_close, for compatibility. (ctf_parent_file): Rename to... (ctf_parent_dict): ... this. (ctf_parent_file): New trivial wrapper around ctf_parent_dict, for compatibility. * libctf.ver: Add ctf_dict_close and ctf_parent_dict.
2020-11-20 21:34:04 +08:00
ctf_decl_push (ctf_decl_t *cd, ctf_dict_t *fp, ctf_id_t type)
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
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{
ctf_decl_node_t *cdp;
ctf_decl_prec_t prec;
uint32_t kind, n = 1;
int is_qual = 0;
const ctf_type_t *tp;
ctf_arinfo_t ar;
if ((tp = ctf_lookup_by_id (&fp, type)) == NULL)
{
cd->cd_err = fp->ctf_errno;
return;
}
switch (kind = LCTF_INFO_KIND (fp, tp->ctt_info))
{
case CTF_K_ARRAY:
(void) ctf_array_info (fp, type, &ar);
ctf_decl_push (cd, fp, ar.ctr_contents);
n = ar.ctr_nelems;
prec = CTF_PREC_ARRAY;
break;
case CTF_K_TYPEDEF:
if (ctf_strptr (fp, tp->ctt_name)[0] == '\0')
{
ctf_decl_push (cd, fp, tp->ctt_type);
return;
}
prec = CTF_PREC_BASE;
break;
case CTF_K_FUNCTION:
ctf_decl_push (cd, fp, tp->ctt_type);
prec = CTF_PREC_FUNCTION;
break;
case CTF_K_POINTER:
ctf_decl_push (cd, fp, tp->ctt_type);
prec = CTF_PREC_POINTER;
break;
case CTF_K_SLICE:
libctf, ld: dump enums: generally improve dump formatting This commit adds dumping of enumerands in this general form: 0x3: (kind 8) enum eleven_els (size 0x4) (aligned at 0x4) ELEVEN_ONE: 10 ELEVEN_TWO: 11 ELEVEN_THREE: -256 ELEVEN_FOUR: -255 ELEVEN_FIVE: -254 ... ELEVEN_SEVEN: -252 ELEVEN_EIGHT: -251 ELEVEN_NINE: -250 ELEVEN_TEN: -249 ELEVEN_ELEVEN: -248 The first and last enumerands in the enumerated type are printed so that you can tell if they've been cut off at one end or the other. (For now, there is no way to control how many enumerands are printed.) The dump output in general is improved, from this sort of thing a few days ago: 4c: char [0x0:0x8] (size 0x1) [0x0] (ID 0x4c) (kind 1) char:8 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x3, offset:bits 0x0:0x8) 4d: char * (size 0x8) -> 4c: char [0x0:0x8] (size 0x1) [0x0] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * (aligned at 0x8) [...] 5a: struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) [0x0] (ID 0x5a) (kind 6) struct _IO_FILE (aligned at 0x4) [0x0] (ID 0x3) (kind 1) int _flags:32 (aligned at 0x4, format 0x1, offset:bits 0x0:0x20) [0x40] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_ptr (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_end (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_base (aligned at 0x8) 5b: __FILE (size 0xd8) -> 5a: struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) [0x0] (ID 0x5b) (kind 10) __FILE (aligned at 0x4) [0x0] (ID 0x3) (kind 1) int _flags:32 (aligned at 0x4, format 0x1, offset:bits 0x0:0x20) [0x40] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_ptr (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_end (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_base (aligned at 0x8) [...] 406: struct coff_link_hash_entry (size 0x60) [0x0] (ID 0x406) (kind 6) struct coff_link_hash_entry (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] (ID 0x2b3) (kind 6) struct bfd_link_hash_entry root (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] (ID 0x1d6) (kind 6) struct bfd_hash_entry root (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] (ID 0x1d7) (kind 3) struct bfd_hash_entry * next (aligned at 0x8) [0x40] (ID 0x61) (kind 3) const char * string (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] (ID 0x1) (kind 1) long unsigned int hash:64 (aligned at 0x8, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x0:0x40) [0xc0] (ID 0x397) (kind 8) enum bfd_link_hash_type type:8 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x0:0x8) [0xc8] (ID 0x1c7) (kind 1) unsigned int non_ir_ref_regular:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x8:0x1) [0xc9] (ID 0x1c8) (kind 1) unsigned int non_ir_ref_dynamic:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x9:0x1) [0xca] (ID 0x1c9) (kind 1) unsigned int linker_def:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0xa:0x1) [0xcb] (ID 0x1ca) (kind 1) unsigned int ldscript_def:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0xb:0x1) [0xcc] (ID 0x1cb) (kind 1) unsigned int rel_from_abs:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0xc:0x1) ... to this: 0x4c: (kind 1) char (format 0x3) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) -> 0x4c: (kind 1) char (format 0x3) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) 0x5a: (kind 6) struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) (aligned at 0x4) [0x0] _flags: ID 0x3: (kind 1) int (format 0x1) (size 0x4) (aligned at 0x4) [0x40] _IO_read_ptr: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] _IO_read_end: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] _IO_read_base: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x100] _IO_write_base: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) 0x5b: (kind 10) __FILE (size 0xd8) (aligned at 0x4) -> 0x5a: (kind 6) struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) (aligned at 0x4) [...] 0x406: (kind 6) struct coff_link_hash_entry (size 0x60) (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] root: ID 0x2b3: (kind 6) struct bfd_link_hash_entry (size 0x38) (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] root: ID 0x1d6: (kind 6) struct bfd_hash_entry (size 0x18) (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] next: ID 0x1d7: (kind 3) struct bfd_hash_entry * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x40] string: ID 0x61: (kind 3) const char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] hash: ID 0x1: (kind 1) long unsigned int (format 0x0) (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] type: ID 0x397: (kind 8) enum bfd_link_hash_type (format 0x7f2e) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xc8] non_ir_ref_regular: ID 0x1c7: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0x8:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xc9] non_ir_ref_dynamic: ID 0x1c8: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0x9:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xca] linker_def: ID 0x1c9: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0xa:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xcb] ldscript_def: ID 0x1ca: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0xb:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xcc] rel_from_abs: ID 0x1cb: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0xc:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [...] In particular, indented subsections are only present for actual structs and unions, not forwards to them, and the structure itself doesn't add a spurious level of indentation; structure field names are easier to spot (at the cost of not making them look so much like C field declarations any more, but they weren't always shown in valid decl syntax even before this change) the size, type kind, and alignment are shown for all types for which they are meaningful; bitfield info is only shown for actual bitfields within structures and not ordinary integral fields; and type IDs are never omitted. Type printing is in general much more consistent and there is much less duplicated code in the type dumper. There is one user-visible effect outside the dumper: ctf_type_(a)name was erroneously emitting a trailing space on the name of slice types, even though a slice of an int and an int with the corresponding encoding represent the same type and should have the same print form. This trailing space is now gone. ld/ChangeLog 2021-01-05 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * testsuite/ld-ctf/array.d: Adjust for dumper changes. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.B-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.B-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.parent.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.A-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.A-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.parent.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.C-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.C-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.parent.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-enums.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-typedefs.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-conflicting.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-nonconflicting.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-into-cycle.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-noncyclic.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.A.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.B.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.C.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/data-func-conflicted.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cttname-null.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cuname.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-parlabel.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-wrong-magic-number-mixed.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/forward.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/function.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/slice.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/super-sub-cycles.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/enums.c: New test. * testsuite/ld-ctf/enums.d: New test. libctf/ChangeLog 2021-01-05 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * ctf-decl.c (ctf_decl_push): Exclude slices from the decl stack. * ctf-types.c (ctf_type_aname): No longer deal with slices here. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_membstate_t) <cdm_toplevel_indent>: Constify. (CTF_FT_REFS): New. (CTF_FT_BITFIELD): Likewise. (CTF_FT_ID): Likewise. (ctf_dump_member): Do not do indentation here. Migrate the type-printing parts of this into... (ctf_dump_format_type): ... here, to be shared by all type printers. Get the errno value for non-representable types right. Do not print bitfield info for non-bitfields. Improve the format and indentation of other type output. Shuffle spacing around to make all indentation either 'width of column' or 4 chars. (ctf_dump_label): Pass CTF_FT_REFS to ctf_dump_format_type. (ctf_dump_objts): Likewise. Spacing shuffle. (ctf_dump_var): Likewise. (type_hex_digits): Migrate down in the file, to above its new user. (ctf_dump_type): Indent here instead. Pass CTF_FT_REFS to ctf_dump_format_type. Don't trim off excess linefeeds now we no longer generate them. Dump enumerated types.
2021-01-05 21:25:56 +08:00
/* Slices themselves have no print representation and should not appear in
the decl stack. */
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
ctf_decl_push (cd, fp, ctf_type_reference (fp, type));
libctf, ld: dump enums: generally improve dump formatting This commit adds dumping of enumerands in this general form: 0x3: (kind 8) enum eleven_els (size 0x4) (aligned at 0x4) ELEVEN_ONE: 10 ELEVEN_TWO: 11 ELEVEN_THREE: -256 ELEVEN_FOUR: -255 ELEVEN_FIVE: -254 ... ELEVEN_SEVEN: -252 ELEVEN_EIGHT: -251 ELEVEN_NINE: -250 ELEVEN_TEN: -249 ELEVEN_ELEVEN: -248 The first and last enumerands in the enumerated type are printed so that you can tell if they've been cut off at one end or the other. (For now, there is no way to control how many enumerands are printed.) The dump output in general is improved, from this sort of thing a few days ago: 4c: char [0x0:0x8] (size 0x1) [0x0] (ID 0x4c) (kind 1) char:8 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x3, offset:bits 0x0:0x8) 4d: char * (size 0x8) -> 4c: char [0x0:0x8] (size 0x1) [0x0] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * (aligned at 0x8) [...] 5a: struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) [0x0] (ID 0x5a) (kind 6) struct _IO_FILE (aligned at 0x4) [0x0] (ID 0x3) (kind 1) int _flags:32 (aligned at 0x4, format 0x1, offset:bits 0x0:0x20) [0x40] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_ptr (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_end (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_base (aligned at 0x8) 5b: __FILE (size 0xd8) -> 5a: struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) [0x0] (ID 0x5b) (kind 10) __FILE (aligned at 0x4) [0x0] (ID 0x3) (kind 1) int _flags:32 (aligned at 0x4, format 0x1, offset:bits 0x0:0x20) [0x40] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_ptr (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_end (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] (ID 0x4d) (kind 3) char * _IO_read_base (aligned at 0x8) [...] 406: struct coff_link_hash_entry (size 0x60) [0x0] (ID 0x406) (kind 6) struct coff_link_hash_entry (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] (ID 0x2b3) (kind 6) struct bfd_link_hash_entry root (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] (ID 0x1d6) (kind 6) struct bfd_hash_entry root (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] (ID 0x1d7) (kind 3) struct bfd_hash_entry * next (aligned at 0x8) [0x40] (ID 0x61) (kind 3) const char * string (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] (ID 0x1) (kind 1) long unsigned int hash:64 (aligned at 0x8, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x0:0x40) [0xc0] (ID 0x397) (kind 8) enum bfd_link_hash_type type:8 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x0:0x8) [0xc8] (ID 0x1c7) (kind 1) unsigned int non_ir_ref_regular:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x8:0x1) [0xc9] (ID 0x1c8) (kind 1) unsigned int non_ir_ref_dynamic:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0x9:0x1) [0xca] (ID 0x1c9) (kind 1) unsigned int linker_def:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0xa:0x1) [0xcb] (ID 0x1ca) (kind 1) unsigned int ldscript_def:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0xb:0x1) [0xcc] (ID 0x1cb) (kind 1) unsigned int rel_from_abs:1 (aligned at 0x1, format 0x0, offset:bits 0xc:0x1) ... to this: 0x4c: (kind 1) char (format 0x3) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) -> 0x4c: (kind 1) char (format 0x3) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) 0x5a: (kind 6) struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) (aligned at 0x4) [0x0] _flags: ID 0x3: (kind 1) int (format 0x1) (size 0x4) (aligned at 0x4) [0x40] _IO_read_ptr: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] _IO_read_end: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] _IO_read_base: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x100] _IO_write_base: ID 0x4d: (kind 3) char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) 0x5b: (kind 10) __FILE (size 0xd8) (aligned at 0x4) -> 0x5a: (kind 6) struct _IO_FILE (size 0xd8) (aligned at 0x4) [...] 0x406: (kind 6) struct coff_link_hash_entry (size 0x60) (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] root: ID 0x2b3: (kind 6) struct bfd_link_hash_entry (size 0x38) (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] root: ID 0x1d6: (kind 6) struct bfd_hash_entry (size 0x18) (aligned at 0x8) [0x0] next: ID 0x1d7: (kind 3) struct bfd_hash_entry * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x40] string: ID 0x61: (kind 3) const char * (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0x80] hash: ID 0x1: (kind 1) long unsigned int (format 0x0) (size 0x8) (aligned at 0x8) [0xc0] type: ID 0x397: (kind 8) enum bfd_link_hash_type (format 0x7f2e) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xc8] non_ir_ref_regular: ID 0x1c7: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0x8:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xc9] non_ir_ref_dynamic: ID 0x1c8: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0x9:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xca] linker_def: ID 0x1c9: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0xa:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xcb] ldscript_def: ID 0x1ca: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0xb:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [0xcc] rel_from_abs: ID 0x1cb: (kind 1) unsigned int:1 [slice 0xc:0x1] (format 0x0) (size 0x1) (aligned at 0x1) [...] In particular, indented subsections are only present for actual structs and unions, not forwards to them, and the structure itself doesn't add a spurious level of indentation; structure field names are easier to spot (at the cost of not making them look so much like C field declarations any more, but they weren't always shown in valid decl syntax even before this change) the size, type kind, and alignment are shown for all types for which they are meaningful; bitfield info is only shown for actual bitfields within structures and not ordinary integral fields; and type IDs are never omitted. Type printing is in general much more consistent and there is much less duplicated code in the type dumper. There is one user-visible effect outside the dumper: ctf_type_(a)name was erroneously emitting a trailing space on the name of slice types, even though a slice of an int and an int with the corresponding encoding represent the same type and should have the same print form. This trailing space is now gone. ld/ChangeLog 2021-01-05 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * testsuite/ld-ctf/array.d: Adjust for dumper changes. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.B-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.B-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-1.parent.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.A-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.A-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-2.parent.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.C-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.C-2.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-cycle-3.parent.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-enums.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-typedefs.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-conflicting.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-nonconflicting.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-into-cycle.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-noncyclic.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-1.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.A.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.B.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/cycle-2.C.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/data-func-conflicted.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cttname-null.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-cuname.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-parlabel.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-wrong-magic-number-mixed.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/forward.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/function.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/slice.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/super-sub-cycles.d: Likewise. * testsuite/ld-ctf/enums.c: New test. * testsuite/ld-ctf/enums.d: New test. libctf/ChangeLog 2021-01-05 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com> * ctf-decl.c (ctf_decl_push): Exclude slices from the decl stack. * ctf-types.c (ctf_type_aname): No longer deal with slices here. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_membstate_t) <cdm_toplevel_indent>: Constify. (CTF_FT_REFS): New. (CTF_FT_BITFIELD): Likewise. (CTF_FT_ID): Likewise. (ctf_dump_member): Do not do indentation here. Migrate the type-printing parts of this into... (ctf_dump_format_type): ... here, to be shared by all type printers. Get the errno value for non-representable types right. Do not print bitfield info for non-bitfields. Improve the format and indentation of other type output. Shuffle spacing around to make all indentation either 'width of column' or 4 chars. (ctf_dump_label): Pass CTF_FT_REFS to ctf_dump_format_type. (ctf_dump_objts): Likewise. Spacing shuffle. (ctf_dump_var): Likewise. (type_hex_digits): Migrate down in the file, to above its new user. (ctf_dump_type): Indent here instead. Pass CTF_FT_REFS to ctf_dump_format_type. Don't trim off excess linefeeds now we no longer generate them. Dump enumerated types.
2021-01-05 21:25:56 +08:00
return;
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
case CTF_K_VOLATILE:
case CTF_K_CONST:
case CTF_K_RESTRICT:
ctf_decl_push (cd, fp, tp->ctt_type);
prec = cd->cd_qualp;
is_qual++;
break;
default:
prec = CTF_PREC_BASE;
}
libctf: remove ctf_malloc, ctf_free and ctf_strdup These just get in the way of auditing for erroneous usage of strdup and add a huge irregular surface of "ctf_malloc or malloc? ctf_free or free? ctf_strdup or strdup?" ctf_malloc and ctf_free usage has not reliably matched up for many years, if ever, making the whole game pointless. Go back to malloc, free, and strdup like everyone else: while we're at it, fix a bunch of places where we weren't properly checking for OOM. This changes the interface of ctf_cuname_set and ctf_parent_name_set, which could strdup but could not return errors (like ENOMEM). New in v4. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_cuname_set): Can now fail, returning int. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise. libctf/ * ctf-impl.h (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. (ctf_strdup): Likewise. * ctf-subr.c (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. * ctf-util.c (ctf_strdup): Remove. * ctf-create.c (ctf_serialize): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dtd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_dvd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_add_generic): Likewise. (ctf_add_function): Likewise. (ctf_add_enumerator): Likewise. (ctf_add_member_offset): Likewise. (ctf_add_variable): Likewise. (membadd): Likewise. (ctf_compress_write): Likewise. (ctf_write_mem): Likewise. * ctf-decl.c (ctf_decl_push): Likewise. (ctf_decl_fini): Likewise. (ctf_decl_sprintf): Likewise. Check for OOM. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_append): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dump_free): Likewise. (ctf_dump): Likewise. * ctf-open.c (upgrade_types_v1): Likewise. (init_types): Likewise. (ctf_file_close): Likewise. (ctf_bufopen_internal): Likewise. Check for OOM. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise: report the OOM to the caller. (ctf_cuname_set): Likewise. (ctf_import): Likewise. * ctf-string.c (ctf_str_purge_atom_refs): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_str_free_atom): Likewise. (ctf_str_create_atoms): Likewise. (ctf_str_add_ref_internal): Likewise. (ctf_str_remove_ref): Likewise. (ctf_str_write_strtab): Likewise.
2019-09-17 13:54:23 +08:00
if ((cdp = malloc (sizeof (ctf_decl_node_t))) == NULL)
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
{
cd->cd_err = EAGAIN;
return;
}
cdp->cd_type = type;
cdp->cd_kind = kind;
cdp->cd_n = n;
if (ctf_list_next (&cd->cd_nodes[prec]) == NULL)
cd->cd_order[prec] = cd->cd_ordp++;
/* Reset cd_qualp to the highest precedence level that we've seen so
far that can be qualified (CTF_PREC_BASE or CTF_PREC_POINTER). */
if (prec > cd->cd_qualp && prec < CTF_PREC_ARRAY)
cd->cd_qualp = prec;
/* By convention qualifiers of base types precede the type specifier (e.g.
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
const int vs. int const) even though the two forms are equivalent. */
if (is_qual && prec == CTF_PREC_BASE)
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
ctf_list_prepend (&cd->cd_nodes[prec], cdp);
else
ctf_list_append (&cd->cd_nodes[prec], cdp);
}
_libctf_printflike_ (2, 3)
void ctf_decl_sprintf (ctf_decl_t *cd, const char *format, ...)
{
va_list ap;
char *str;
int n;
if (cd->cd_enomem)
return;
va_start (ap, format);
n = vasprintf (&str, format, ap);
va_end (ap);
if (n > 0)
libctf: remove ctf_malloc, ctf_free and ctf_strdup These just get in the way of auditing for erroneous usage of strdup and add a huge irregular surface of "ctf_malloc or malloc? ctf_free or free? ctf_strdup or strdup?" ctf_malloc and ctf_free usage has not reliably matched up for many years, if ever, making the whole game pointless. Go back to malloc, free, and strdup like everyone else: while we're at it, fix a bunch of places where we weren't properly checking for OOM. This changes the interface of ctf_cuname_set and ctf_parent_name_set, which could strdup but could not return errors (like ENOMEM). New in v4. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_cuname_set): Can now fail, returning int. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise. libctf/ * ctf-impl.h (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. (ctf_strdup): Likewise. * ctf-subr.c (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. * ctf-util.c (ctf_strdup): Remove. * ctf-create.c (ctf_serialize): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dtd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_dvd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_add_generic): Likewise. (ctf_add_function): Likewise. (ctf_add_enumerator): Likewise. (ctf_add_member_offset): Likewise. (ctf_add_variable): Likewise. (membadd): Likewise. (ctf_compress_write): Likewise. (ctf_write_mem): Likewise. * ctf-decl.c (ctf_decl_push): Likewise. (ctf_decl_fini): Likewise. (ctf_decl_sprintf): Likewise. Check for OOM. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_append): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dump_free): Likewise. (ctf_dump): Likewise. * ctf-open.c (upgrade_types_v1): Likewise. (init_types): Likewise. (ctf_file_close): Likewise. (ctf_bufopen_internal): Likewise. Check for OOM. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise: report the OOM to the caller. (ctf_cuname_set): Likewise. (ctf_import): Likewise. * ctf-string.c (ctf_str_purge_atom_refs): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_str_free_atom): Likewise. (ctf_str_create_atoms): Likewise. (ctf_str_add_ref_internal): Likewise. (ctf_str_remove_ref): Likewise. (ctf_str_write_strtab): Likewise.
2019-09-17 13:54:23 +08:00
{
char *newbuf;
if ((newbuf = ctf_str_append (cd->cd_buf, str)) != NULL)
cd->cd_buf = newbuf;
}
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
/* Sticky error condition. */
libctf: remove ctf_malloc, ctf_free and ctf_strdup These just get in the way of auditing for erroneous usage of strdup and add a huge irregular surface of "ctf_malloc or malloc? ctf_free or free? ctf_strdup or strdup?" ctf_malloc and ctf_free usage has not reliably matched up for many years, if ever, making the whole game pointless. Go back to malloc, free, and strdup like everyone else: while we're at it, fix a bunch of places where we weren't properly checking for OOM. This changes the interface of ctf_cuname_set and ctf_parent_name_set, which could strdup but could not return errors (like ENOMEM). New in v4. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_cuname_set): Can now fail, returning int. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise. libctf/ * ctf-impl.h (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. (ctf_strdup): Likewise. * ctf-subr.c (ctf_alloc): Remove. (ctf_free): Likewise. * ctf-util.c (ctf_strdup): Remove. * ctf-create.c (ctf_serialize): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dtd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_dvd_delete): Likewise. (ctf_add_generic): Likewise. (ctf_add_function): Likewise. (ctf_add_enumerator): Likewise. (ctf_add_member_offset): Likewise. (ctf_add_variable): Likewise. (membadd): Likewise. (ctf_compress_write): Likewise. (ctf_write_mem): Likewise. * ctf-decl.c (ctf_decl_push): Likewise. (ctf_decl_fini): Likewise. (ctf_decl_sprintf): Likewise. Check for OOM. * ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_append): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_dump_free): Likewise. (ctf_dump): Likewise. * ctf-open.c (upgrade_types_v1): Likewise. (init_types): Likewise. (ctf_file_close): Likewise. (ctf_bufopen_internal): Likewise. Check for OOM. (ctf_parent_name_set): Likewise: report the OOM to the caller. (ctf_cuname_set): Likewise. (ctf_import): Likewise. * ctf-string.c (ctf_str_purge_atom_refs): Use malloc, not ctf_alloc; free, not ctf_free; strdup, not ctf_strdup. (ctf_str_free_atom): Likewise. (ctf_str_create_atoms): Likewise. (ctf_str_add_ref_internal): Likewise. (ctf_str_remove_ref): Likewise. (ctf_str_write_strtab): Likewise.
2019-09-17 13:54:23 +08:00
if (n < 0 || cd->cd_buf == NULL)
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
{
free (cd->cd_buf);
cd->cd_buf = NULL;
cd->cd_enomem = 1;
}
free (str);
}
char *ctf_decl_buf (ctf_decl_t *cd)
{
char *buf = cd->cd_buf;
cd->cd_buf = NULL;
return buf;
libctf: core type lookup Finally we get to the functions used to actually look up and enumerate properties of types in a container (names, sizes, members, what type a pointer or cv-qual references, determination of whether two types are assignment-compatible, etc). With a very few exceptions these do not work for types newly added via ctf_add_*(): they only work on types in read-only containers, or types added before the most recent call to ctf_update(). This also adds support for lookup of "variables" (string -> type ID mappings) and for generation of C type names corresponding to a type ID. libctf/ * ctf-decl.c: New file. * ctf-types.c: Likewise. * ctf-impl.h: New declarations. include/ * ctf-api.h (ctf_visit_f): New definition. (ctf_member_f): Likewise. (ctf_enum_f): Likewise. (ctf_variable_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_f): Likewise. (ctf_type_isparent): Likewise. (ctf_type_ischild): Likewise. (ctf_type_resolve): Likewise. (ctf_type_aname): Likewise. (ctf_type_lname): Likewise. (ctf_type_name): Likewise. (ctf_type_sizee): Likewise. (ctf_type_align): Likewise. (ctf_type_kind): Likewise. (ctf_type_reference): Likewise. (ctf_type_pointer): Likewise. (ctf_type_encoding): Likewise. (ctf_type_visit): Likewise. (ctf_type_cmp): Likewise. (ctf_type_compat): Likewise. (ctf_member_info): Likewise. (ctf_array_info): Likewise. (ctf_enum_name): Likewise. (ctf_enum_value): Likewise. (ctf_member_iter): Likewise. (ctf_enum_iter): Likewise. (ctf_type_iter): Likewise. (ctf_variable_iter): Likewise.
2019-04-24 18:03:37 +08:00
}