binutils-gdb/include/dis-asm.h
Andrew Burgess 60a3da00bd objdump/opcodes: add syntax highlighting to disassembler output
This commit adds the _option_ of having disassembler output syntax
highlighted in objdump.  This option is _off_ by default.  The new
command line options are:

  --disassembler-color=off		# The default.
  --disassembler-color=color
  --disassembler-color=extended-color

I have implemented two colour modes, using the same option names as we
use of --visualize-jumps, a basic 8-color mode ("color"), and an
extended 8bit color mode ("extended-color").

The syntax highlighting requires that each targets disassembler be
updated; each time the disassembler produces some output we now pass
through an additional parameter indicating what style should be
applied to the text.

As updating all target disassemblers is a large task, the old API is
maintained.  And so, a user of the disassembler (i.e. objdump, gdb)
must provide two functions, the current non-styled print function, and
a new, styled print function.

I don't currently have a plan for converting every single target
disassembler, my hope is that interested folk will update the
disassemblers they are interested in.  But it is possible some might
never get updated.

In this initial series I intend to convert the RISC-V disassembler
completely, and also do a partial conversion of the x86 disassembler.
Hopefully having the x86 disassembler at least partial converted will
allow more people to try this out easily and provide feedback.

In this commit I have focused on objdump.  The changes to GDB at this
point are the bare minimum required to get things compiling, GDB makes
no use of the styling information to provide any colors, that will
come later, if this commit is accepted.

This first commit in the series doesn't convert any target
disassemblers at all (the next two commits will update some targets),
so after this commit, the only color you will see in the disassembler
output, is that produced from objdump itself, e.g. from
objdump_print_addr_with_sym, where we print an address and a symbol
name, these are now printed with styling information, and so will have
colors applied (if the option is on).

Finally, my ability to pick "good" colors is ... well, terrible.  I'm
in no way committed to the colors I've picked here, so I encourage
people to suggest new colors, or wait for this commit to land, and
then patch the choice of colors.

I do have an idea about using possibly an environment variable to
allow the objdump colors to be customised, but I haven't done anything
like that in this commit, the color choices are just fixed in the code
for now.

binutils/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention new feature.
	* doc/binutils.texi (objdump): Describe --disassembler-color
	option.
	* objdump.c (disassembler_color): New global.
	(disassembler_extended_color): Likewise.
	(disassembler_in_comment): Likewise.
	(usage): Mention --disassembler-color option.
	(long_options): Add --disassembler-color option.
	(objdump_print_value): Use fprintf_styled_func instead of
	fprintf_func.
	(objdump_print_symname): Likewise.
	(objdump_print_addr_with_sym): Likewise.
	(objdump_color_for_disassembler_style): New function.
	(objdump_styled_sprintf): New function.
	(fprintf_styled): New function.
	(disassemble_jumps): Use disassemble_set_printf, and reset
	disassembler_in_comment.
	(null_styled_print): New function.
	(disassemble_bytes): Use disassemble_set_printf, and reset
	disassembler_in_comment.
	(disassemble_data): Update init_disassemble_info call.
	(main): Handle --disassembler-color option.

include/ChangeLog:

	* dis-asm.h (enum disassembler_style): New enum.
	(struct disassemble_info): Add fprintf_styled_func field, and
	created_styled_output field.
	(disassemble_set_printf): Declare.
	(init_disassemble_info): Add additional parameter.
	(INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO): Add additional parameter.

opcodes/ChangeLog:

	* dis-init.c (init_disassemble_info): Take extra parameter,
	initialize the new fprintf_styled_func and created_styled_output
	fields.
	* disassembler.c (disassemble_set_printf): New function definition.
2022-04-04 13:10:52 +01:00

486 lines
20 KiB
C
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

/* Interface between the opcode library and its callers.
Copyright (C) 1999-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program 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; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor,
Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
Written by Cygnus Support, 1993.
The opcode library (libopcodes.a) provides instruction decoders for
a large variety of instruction sets, callable with an identical
interface, for making instruction-processing programs more independent
of the instruction set being processed. */
#ifndef DIS_ASM_H
#define DIS_ASM_H
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "bfd.h"
enum dis_insn_type
{
dis_noninsn, /* Not a valid instruction. */
dis_nonbranch, /* Not a branch instruction. */
dis_branch, /* Unconditional branch. */
dis_condbranch, /* Conditional branch. */
dis_jsr, /* Jump to subroutine. */
dis_condjsr, /* Conditional jump to subroutine. */
dis_dref, /* Data reference instruction. */
dis_dref2 /* Two data references in instruction. */
};
/* When printing styled disassembler output, this describes what style
should be used. */
enum disassembler_style
{
/* This is the default style, use this for any additional syntax
(e.g. commas between operands, brackets, etc), or just as a default if
no other style seems appropriate. */
dis_style_text,
/* Use this for all instruction mnemonics, or aliases for mnemonics.
These should be things that correspond to real machine
instructions. */
dis_style_mnemonic,
/* For things that aren't real machine instructions, but rather
assembler directives, e.g. .byte, etc. */
dis_style_assembler_directive,
/* Use this for any register names. This may or may-not include any
register prefix, e.g. '$', '%', at the discretion of the target,
though within each target the choice to include prefixes for not
should be kept consistent. If the prefix is not printed with this
style, then dis_style_text should be used. */
dis_style_register,
/* Use this for any constant values used within instructions or
directives, unless the value is an absolute address, or an offset
that will be added to an address (no matter where the address comes
from) before use. This style may, or may-not be used for any
prefix to the immediate value, e.g. '$', at the discretion of the
target, though within each target the choice to include these
prefixes should be kept consistent. */
dis_style_immediate,
/* The style for the numerical representation of an absolute address.
Anything that is an address offset should use the immediate style.
This style may, or may-not be used for any prefix to the immediate
value, e.g. '$', at the discretion of the target, though within
each target the choice to include these prefixes should be kept
consistent. */
dis_style_address,
/* The style for any constant value within an instruction or directive
that represents an offset that will be added to an address before
use. This style may, or may-not be used for any prefix to the
immediate value, e.g. '$', at the discretion of the target, though
within each target the choice to include these prefixes should be
kept consistent. */
dis_style_address_offset,
/* The style for a symbol's name. The numerical address of a symbol
should use the address style above, this style is reserved for the
name. */
dis_style_symbol,
/* The start of a comment that runs to the end of the line. Anything
printed after a comment start might be styled differently,
e.g. everything might be styled as a comment, regardless of the
actual style used. The disassembler itself should not try to adjust
the style emitted for comment content, e.g. an address emitted within
a comment should still be given dis_style_address, in this way it is
up to the user of the disassembler to decide how comments should be
styled. */
dis_style_comment_start
};
typedef int (*fprintf_ftype) (void *, const char*, ...) ATTRIBUTE_FPTR_PRINTF_2;
typedef int (*fprintf_styled_ftype) (void *, enum disassembler_style, const char*, ...) ATTRIBUTE_FPTR_PRINTF_3;
/* This struct is passed into the instruction decoding routine,
and is passed back out into each callback. The various fields are used
for conveying information from your main routine into your callbacks,
for passing information into the instruction decoders (such as the
addresses of the callback functions), or for passing information
back from the instruction decoders to their callers.
It must be initialized before it is first passed; this can be done
by hand, or using one of the initialization macros below. */
typedef struct disassemble_info
{
fprintf_ftype fprintf_func;
fprintf_styled_ftype fprintf_styled_func;
void *stream;
void *application_data;
/* Target description. We could replace this with a pointer to the bfd,
but that would require one. There currently isn't any such requirement
so to avoid introducing one we record these explicitly. */
/* The bfd_flavour. This can be bfd_target_unknown_flavour. */
enum bfd_flavour flavour;
/* The bfd_arch value. */
enum bfd_architecture arch;
/* The bfd_mach value. */
unsigned long mach;
/* Endianness (for bi-endian cpus). Mono-endian cpus can ignore this. */
enum bfd_endian endian;
/* Endianness of code, for mixed-endian situations such as ARM BE8. */
enum bfd_endian endian_code;
/* Some targets need information about the current section to accurately
display insns. If this is NULL, the target disassembler function
will have to make its best guess. */
asection *section;
/* An array of pointers to symbols either at the location being disassembled
or at the start of the function being disassembled. The array is sorted
so that the first symbol is intended to be the one used. The others are
present for any misc. purposes. This is not set reliably, but if it is
not NULL, it is correct. */
asymbol **symbols;
/* Number of symbols in array. */
int num_symbols;
/* Symbol table provided for targets that want to look at it. This is
used on Arm to find mapping symbols and determine Arm/Thumb code. */
asymbol **symtab;
int symtab_pos;
int symtab_size;
/* For use by the disassembler.
The top 16 bits are reserved for public use (and are documented here).
The bottom 16 bits are for the internal use of the disassembler. */
unsigned long flags;
/* Set if the disassembler has determined that there are one or more
relocations associated with the instruction being disassembled. */
#define INSN_HAS_RELOC (1u << 31)
/* Set if the user has requested the disassembly of data as well as code. */
#define DISASSEMBLE_DATA (1u << 30)
/* Set if the user has specifically set the machine type encoded in the
mach field of this structure. */
#define USER_SPECIFIED_MACHINE_TYPE (1u << 29)
/* Set if the user has requested wide output. */
#define WIDE_OUTPUT (1u << 28)
/* Dynamic relocations, if they have been loaded. */
arelent **dynrelbuf;
long dynrelcount;
/* Use internally by the target specific disassembly code. */
void *private_data;
/* Function used to get bytes to disassemble. MEMADDR is the
address of the stuff to be disassembled, MYADDR is the address to
put the bytes in, and LENGTH is the number of bytes to read.
INFO is a pointer to this struct.
Returns an errno value or 0 for success. */
int (*read_memory_func)
(bfd_vma memaddr, bfd_byte *myaddr, unsigned int length,
struct disassemble_info *dinfo);
/* Function which should be called if we get an error that we can't
recover from. STATUS is the errno value from read_memory_func and
MEMADDR is the address that we were trying to read. INFO is a
pointer to this struct. */
void (*memory_error_func)
(int status, bfd_vma memaddr, struct disassemble_info *dinfo);
/* Function called to print ADDR. */
void (*print_address_func)
(bfd_vma addr, struct disassemble_info *dinfo);
/* Function called to determine if there is a symbol at the given ADDR.
If there is, the function returns 1, otherwise it returns 0.
This is used by ports which support an overlay manager where
the overlay number is held in the top part of an address. In
some circumstances we want to include the overlay number in the
address, (normally because there is a symbol associated with
that address), but sometimes we want to mask out the overlay bits. */
asymbol * (*symbol_at_address_func)
(bfd_vma addr, struct disassemble_info *dinfo);
/* Function called to check if a SYMBOL is can be displayed to the user.
This is used by some ports that want to hide special symbols when
displaying debugging outout. */
bool (*symbol_is_valid)
(asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *dinfo);
/* These are for buffer_read_memory. */
bfd_byte *buffer;
bfd_vma buffer_vma;
size_t buffer_length;
/* This variable may be set by the instruction decoder. It suggests
the number of bytes objdump should display on a single line. If
the instruction decoder sets this, it should always set it to
the same value in order to get reasonable looking output. */
int bytes_per_line;
/* The next two variables control the way objdump displays the raw data. */
/* For example, if bytes_per_line is 8 and bytes_per_chunk is 4, the */
/* output will look like this:
00: 00000000 00000000
with the chunks displayed according to "display_endian". */
int bytes_per_chunk;
enum bfd_endian display_endian;
/* Number of octets per incremented target address
Normally one, but some DSPs have byte sizes of 16 or 32 bits. */
unsigned int octets_per_byte;
/* The number of zeroes we want to see at the end of a section before we
start skipping them. */
unsigned int skip_zeroes;
/* The number of zeroes to skip at the end of a section. If the number
of zeroes at the end is between SKIP_ZEROES_AT_END and SKIP_ZEROES,
they will be disassembled. If there are fewer than
SKIP_ZEROES_AT_END, they will be skipped. This is a heuristic
attempt to avoid disassembling zeroes inserted by section
alignment. */
unsigned int skip_zeroes_at_end;
/* Whether the disassembler always needs the relocations. */
bool disassembler_needs_relocs;
/* Results from instruction decoders. Not all decoders yet support
this information. This info is set each time an instruction is
decoded, and is only valid for the last such instruction.
To determine whether this decoder supports this information, set
insn_info_valid to 0, decode an instruction, then check it. */
char insn_info_valid; /* Branch info has been set. */
char branch_delay_insns; /* How many sequential insn's will run before
a branch takes effect. (0 = normal) */
char data_size; /* Size of data reference in insn, in bytes */
enum dis_insn_type insn_type; /* Type of instruction */
bfd_vma target; /* Target address of branch or dref, if known;
zero if unknown. */
bfd_vma target2; /* Second target address for dref2 */
/* Command line options specific to the target disassembler. */
const char *disassembler_options;
/* If non-zero then try not disassemble beyond this address, even if
there are values left in the buffer. This address is the address
of the nearest symbol forwards from the start of the disassembly,
and it is assumed that it lies on the boundary between instructions.
If an instruction spans this address then this is an error in the
file being disassembled. */
bfd_vma stop_vma;
/* The end range of the current range being disassembled. This is required
in order to notify the disassembler when it's currently handling a
different range than it was before. This prevent unsafe optimizations when
disassembling such as the way mapping symbols are found on AArch64. */
bfd_vma stop_offset;
/* Set to true if the disassembler applied styling to the output,
otherwise, set to false. */
bool created_styled_output;
} disassemble_info;
/* This struct is used to pass information about valid disassembler
option arguments from the target to the generic GDB functions
that set and display them. */
typedef struct
{
/* Option argument name to use in descriptions. */
const char *name;
/* Vector of acceptable option argument values, NULL-terminated. */
const char **values;
} disasm_option_arg_t;
/* This struct is used to pass information about valid disassembler
options, their descriptions and arguments from the target to the
generic GDB functions that set and display them. Options are
defined by tuples of vector entries at each index. */
typedef struct
{
/* Vector of option names, NULL-terminated. */
const char **name;
/* Vector of option descriptions or NULL if none to be shown. */
const char **description;
/* Vector of option argument information pointers or NULL if no
option accepts an argument. NULL entries denote individual
options that accept no argument. */
const disasm_option_arg_t **arg;
} disasm_options_t;
/* This struct is used to pass information about valid disassembler
options and arguments from the target to the generic GDB functions
that set and display them. */
typedef struct
{
/* Valid disassembler options. Individual options that support
an argument will refer to entries in the ARGS vector. */
disasm_options_t options;
/* Vector of acceptable option arguments, NULL-terminated. This
collects all possible option argument choices, some of which
may be shared by different options from the OPTIONS member. */
disasm_option_arg_t *args;
} disasm_options_and_args_t;
/* Standard disassemblers. Disassemble one instruction at the given
target address. Return number of octets processed. */
typedef int (*disassembler_ftype) (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
/* Disassemblers used out side of opcodes library. */
extern int print_insn_m32c (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_mep (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_s12z (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_sh (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_sparc (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_rx (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_rl78 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_rl78_g10 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_rl78_g13 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern int print_insn_rl78_g14 (bfd_vma, disassemble_info *);
extern disassembler_ftype arc_get_disassembler (bfd *);
extern disassembler_ftype cris_get_disassembler (bfd *);
extern void print_aarch64_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_i386_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_mips_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_nfp_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_ppc_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_riscv_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_arm_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_arc_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_s390_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_wasm32_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern void print_loongarch_disassembler_options (FILE *);
extern bool aarch64_symbol_is_valid (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *);
extern bool arm_symbol_is_valid (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *);
extern bool csky_symbol_is_valid (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *);
extern bool riscv_symbol_is_valid (asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *);
extern void disassemble_init_powerpc (struct disassemble_info *);
extern void disassemble_init_s390 (struct disassemble_info *);
extern void disassemble_init_wasm32 (struct disassemble_info *);
extern void disassemble_init_nds32 (struct disassemble_info *);
extern const disasm_options_and_args_t *disassembler_options_arc (void);
extern const disasm_options_and_args_t *disassembler_options_arm (void);
extern const disasm_options_and_args_t *disassembler_options_mips (void);
extern const disasm_options_and_args_t *disassembler_options_powerpc (void);
extern const disasm_options_and_args_t *disassembler_options_riscv (void);
extern const disasm_options_and_args_t *disassembler_options_s390 (void);
/* Fetch the disassembler for a given architecture ARC, endianess (big
endian if BIG is true), bfd_mach value MACH, and ABFD, if that support
is available. ABFD may be NULL. */
extern disassembler_ftype disassembler (enum bfd_architecture arc,
bool big, unsigned long mach,
bfd *abfd);
/* Amend the disassemble_info structure as necessary for the target architecture.
Should only be called after initialising the info->arch field. */
extern void disassemble_init_for_target (struct disassemble_info *);
/* Tidy any memory allocated by targets, such as info->private_data. */
extern void disassemble_free_target (struct disassemble_info *);
/* Set the basic disassembler print functions. */
extern void disassemble_set_printf (struct disassemble_info *, void *,
fprintf_ftype, fprintf_styled_ftype);
/* Document any target specific options available from the disassembler. */
extern void disassembler_usage (FILE *);
/* Remove whitespace and consecutive commas. */
extern char *remove_whitespace_and_extra_commas (char *);
/* Like STRCMP, but treat ',' the same as '\0' so that we match
strings like "foobar" against "foobar,xxyyzz,...". */
extern int disassembler_options_cmp (const char *, const char *);
/* A helper function for FOR_EACH_DISASSEMBLER_OPTION. */
static inline const char *
next_disassembler_option (const char *options)
{
const char *opt = strchr (options, ',');
if (opt != NULL)
opt++;
return opt;
}
/* A macro for iterating over each comma separated option in OPTIONS. */
#define FOR_EACH_DISASSEMBLER_OPTION(OPT, OPTIONS) \
for ((OPT) = (OPTIONS); \
(OPT) != NULL; \
(OPT) = next_disassembler_option (OPT))
/* This block of definitions is for particular callers who read instructions
into a buffer before calling the instruction decoder. */
/* Here is a function which callers may wish to use for read_memory_func.
It gets bytes from a buffer. */
extern int buffer_read_memory
(bfd_vma, bfd_byte *, unsigned int, struct disassemble_info *);
/* This function goes with buffer_read_memory.
It prints a message using info->fprintf_func and info->stream. */
extern void perror_memory (int, bfd_vma, struct disassemble_info *);
/* Just print the address in hex. This is included for completeness even
though both GDB and objdump provide their own (to print symbolic
addresses). */
extern void generic_print_address
(bfd_vma, struct disassemble_info *);
/* Always NULL. */
extern asymbol *generic_symbol_at_address
(bfd_vma, struct disassemble_info *);
/* Always true. */
extern bool generic_symbol_is_valid
(asymbol *, struct disassemble_info *);
/* Method to initialize a disassemble_info struct. This should be
called by all applications creating such a struct. */
extern void init_disassemble_info (struct disassemble_info *dinfo, void *stream,
fprintf_ftype fprintf_func,
fprintf_styled_ftype fprintf_styled_func);
/* For compatibility with existing code. */
#define INIT_DISASSEMBLE_INFO(INFO, STREAM, FPRINTF_FUNC, FPRINTF_STYLED_FUNC) \
init_disassemble_info (&(INFO), (STREAM), (fprintf_ftype) (FPRINTF_FUNC), \
(fprintf_styled_ftype) (FPRINTF_STYLED_FUNC))
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
#endif /* ! defined (DIS_ASM_H) */