binutils-gdb/libctf/ctf-util.c
Nick Alcock 94585e7f93 libctf: low-level list manipulation and helper utilities
These utilities are a bit of a ragbag of small things needed by more
than one TU: list manipulation, ELF32->64 translators, routines to look
up strings in string tables, dynamically-allocated string appenders, and
routines to set the specialized errno values previously committed in
<ctf-api.h>.

We do still need to dig around in raw ELF symbol tables in places,
because libctf allows the caller to pass in the contents of string and
symbol sections without telling it where they come from, so we cannot
use BFD to get the symbols (BFD reasonably demands the entire file).  So
extract minimal ELF definitions from glibc into a private header named
libctf/elf.h: later, we use those to get symbols.  (The start-of-
copyright range on elf.h reflects this glibc heritage.)

libctf/
	* ctf-util.c: New file.
	* elf.h: Likewise.
	* ctf-impl.h: Include it, and add declarations.
2019-05-28 17:07:19 +01:00

177 lines
4.3 KiB
C

/* Miscellaneous utilities.
Copyright (C) 2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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/>. */
#include <ctf-impl.h>
#include <string.h>
/* Simple doubly-linked list append routine. This implementation assumes that
each list element contains an embedded ctf_list_t as the first member.
An additional ctf_list_t is used to store the head (l_next) and tail
(l_prev) pointers. The current head and tail list elements have their
previous and next pointers set to NULL, respectively. */
void
ctf_list_append (ctf_list_t *lp, void *newp)
{
ctf_list_t *p = lp->l_prev; /* p = tail list element. */
ctf_list_t *q = newp; /* q = new list element. */
lp->l_prev = q;
q->l_prev = p;
q->l_next = NULL;
if (p != NULL)
p->l_next = q;
else
lp->l_next = q;
}
/* Prepend the specified existing element to the given ctf_list_t. The
existing pointer should be pointing at a struct with embedded ctf_list_t. */
void
ctf_list_prepend (ctf_list_t * lp, void *newp)
{
ctf_list_t *p = newp; /* p = new list element. */
ctf_list_t *q = lp->l_next; /* q = head list element. */
lp->l_next = p;
p->l_prev = NULL;
p->l_next = q;
if (q != NULL)
q->l_prev = p;
else
lp->l_prev = p;
}
/* Delete the specified existing element from the given ctf_list_t. The
existing pointer should be pointing at a struct with embedded ctf_list_t. */
void
ctf_list_delete (ctf_list_t *lp, void *existing)
{
ctf_list_t *p = existing;
if (p->l_prev != NULL)
p->l_prev->l_next = p->l_next;
else
lp->l_next = p->l_next;
if (p->l_next != NULL)
p->l_next->l_prev = p->l_prev;
else
lp->l_prev = p->l_prev;
}
/* Convert a 32-bit ELF symbol into Elf64 and return a pointer to it. */
Elf64_Sym *
ctf_sym_to_elf64 (const Elf32_Sym *src, Elf64_Sym *dst)
{
dst->st_name = src->st_name;
dst->st_value = src->st_value;
dst->st_size = src->st_size;
dst->st_info = src->st_info;
dst->st_other = src->st_other;
dst->st_shndx = src->st_shndx;
return dst;
}
/* Convert an encoded CTF string name into a pointer to a C string by looking
up the appropriate string table buffer and then adding the offset. */
const char *
ctf_strraw (ctf_file_t *fp, uint32_t name)
{
ctf_strs_t *ctsp = &fp->ctf_str[CTF_NAME_STID (name)];
if (ctsp->cts_strs != NULL && CTF_NAME_OFFSET (name) < ctsp->cts_len)
return (ctsp->cts_strs + CTF_NAME_OFFSET (name));
/* String table not loaded or corrupt offset. */
return NULL;
}
const char *
ctf_strptr (ctf_file_t *fp, uint32_t name)
{
const char *s = ctf_strraw (fp, name);
return (s != NULL ? s : "(?)");
}
/* Same as strdup(3C), but use ctf_alloc() to do the memory allocation. */
_libctf_malloc_ char *
ctf_strdup (const char *s1)
{
char *s2 = ctf_alloc (strlen (s1) + 1);
if (s2 != NULL)
(void) strcpy (s2, s1);
return s2;
}
/* A string appender working on dynamic strings. */
char *
ctf_str_append (char *s, const char *append)
{
size_t s_len = 0;
if (append == NULL)
return s;
if (s != NULL)
s_len = strlen (s);
size_t append_len = strlen (append);
if ((s = realloc (s, s_len + append_len + 1)) == NULL)
return NULL;
memcpy (s + s_len, append, append_len);
s[s_len + append_len] = '\0';
return s;
}
/* Store the specified error code into errp if it is non-NULL, and then
return NULL for the benefit of the caller. */
void *
ctf_set_open_errno (int *errp, int error)
{
if (errp != NULL)
*errp = error;
return NULL;
}
/* Store the specified error code into the CTF container, and then return
CTF_ERR for the benefit of the caller. */
long
ctf_set_errno (ctf_file_t * fp, int err)
{
fp->ctf_errno = err;
return CTF_ERR;
}