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1 227 jeremybenn
@section coff backends
2
BFD supports a number of different flavours of coff format.
3
The major differences between formats are the sizes and
4
alignments of fields in structures on disk, and the occasional
5
extra field.
6
 
7
Coff in all its varieties is implemented with a few common
8
files and a number of implementation specific files. For
9
example, The 88k bcs coff format is implemented in the file
10
@file{coff-m88k.c}. This file @code{#include}s
11
@file{coff/m88k.h} which defines the external structure of the
12
coff format for the 88k, and @file{coff/internal.h} which
13
defines the internal structure. @file{coff-m88k.c} also
14
defines the relocations used by the 88k format
15
@xref{Relocations}.
16
 
17
The Intel i960 processor version of coff is implemented in
18
@file{coff-i960.c}. This file has the same structure as
19
@file{coff-m88k.c}, except that it includes @file{coff/i960.h}
20
rather than @file{coff-m88k.h}.
21
 
22
@subsection Porting to a new version of coff
23
The recommended method is to select from the existing
24
implementations the version of coff which is most like the one
25
you want to use.  For example, we'll say that i386 coff is
26
the one you select, and that your coff flavour is called foo.
27
Copy @file{i386coff.c} to @file{foocoff.c}, copy
28
@file{../include/coff/i386.h} to @file{../include/coff/foo.h},
29
and add the lines to @file{targets.c} and @file{Makefile.in}
30
so that your new back end is used. Alter the shapes of the
31
structures in @file{../include/coff/foo.h} so that they match
32
what you need. You will probably also have to add
33
@code{#ifdef}s to the code in @file{coff/internal.h} and
34
@file{coffcode.h} if your version of coff is too wild.
35
 
36
You can verify that your new BFD backend works quite simply by
37
building @file{objdump} from the @file{binutils} directory,
38
and making sure that its version of what's going on and your
39
host system's idea (assuming it has the pretty standard coff
40
dump utility, usually called @code{att-dump} or just
41
@code{dump}) are the same.  Then clean up your code, and send
42
what you've done to Cygnus. Then your stuff will be in the
43
next release, and you won't have to keep integrating it.
44
 
45
@subsection How the coff backend works
46
 
47
 
48
@subsubsection File layout
49
The Coff backend is split into generic routines that are
50
applicable to any Coff target and routines that are specific
51
to a particular target.  The target-specific routines are
52
further split into ones which are basically the same for all
53
Coff targets except that they use the external symbol format
54
or use different values for certain constants.
55
 
56
The generic routines are in @file{coffgen.c}.  These routines
57
work for any Coff target.  They use some hooks into the target
58
specific code; the hooks are in a @code{bfd_coff_backend_data}
59
structure, one of which exists for each target.
60
 
61
The essentially similar target-specific routines are in
62
@file{coffcode.h}.  This header file includes executable C code.
63
The various Coff targets first include the appropriate Coff
64
header file, make any special defines that are needed, and
65
then include @file{coffcode.h}.
66
 
67
Some of the Coff targets then also have additional routines in
68
the target source file itself.
69
 
70
For example, @file{coff-i960.c} includes
71
@file{coff/internal.h} and @file{coff/i960.h}.  It then
72
defines a few constants, such as @code{I960}, and includes
73
@file{coffcode.h}.  Since the i960 has complex relocation
74
types, @file{coff-i960.c} also includes some code to
75
manipulate the i960 relocs.  This code is not in
76
@file{coffcode.h} because it would not be used by any other
77
target.
78
 
79
@subsubsection Coff long section names
80
In the standard Coff object format, section names are limited to
81
the eight bytes available in the @code{s_name} field of the
82
@code{SCNHDR} section header structure.  The format requires the
83
field to be NUL-padded, but not necessarily NUL-terminated, so
84
the longest section names permitted are a full eight characters.
85
 
86
The Microsoft PE variants of the Coff object file format add
87
an extension to support the use of long section names.  This
88
extension is defined in section 4 of the Microsoft PE/COFF
89
specification (rev 8.1).  If a section name is too long to fit
90
into the section header's @code{s_name} field, it is instead
91
placed into the string table, and the @code{s_name} field is
92
filled with a slash ("/") followed by the ASCII decimal
93
representation of the offset of the full name relative to the
94
string table base.
95
 
96
Note that this implies that the extension can only be used in object
97
files, as executables do not contain a string table.  The standard
98
specifies that long section names from objects emitted into executable
99
images are to be truncated.
100
 
101
However, as a GNU extension, BFD can generate executable images
102
that contain a string table and long section names.  This
103
would appear to be technically valid, as the standard only says
104
that Coff debugging information is deprecated, not forbidden,
105
and in practice it works, although some tools that parse PE files
106
expecting the MS standard format may become confused; @file{PEview} is
107
one known example.
108
 
109
The functionality is supported in BFD by code implemented under
110
the control of the macro @code{COFF_LONG_SECTION_NAMES}.  If not
111
defined, the format does not support long section names in any way.
112
If defined, it is used to initialise a flag,
113
@code{_bfd_coff_long_section_names}, and a hook function pointer,
114
@code{_bfd_coff_set_long_section_names}, in the Coff backend data
115
structure.  The flag controls the generation of long section names
116
in output BFDs at runtime; if it is false, as it will be by default
117
when generating an executable image, long section names are truncated;
118
if true, the long section names extension is employed.  The hook
119
points to a function that allows the value of the flag to be altered
120
at runtime, on formats that support long section names at all; on
121
other formats it points to a stub that returns an error indication.
122
With input BFDs, the flag is set according to whether any long section
123
names are detected while reading the section headers.  For a completely
124
new BFD, the flag is set to the default for the target format.  This
125
information can be used by a client of the BFD library when deciding
126
what output format to generate, and means that a BFD that is opened
127
for read and subsequently converted to a writeable BFD and modified
128
in-place will retain whatever format it had on input.
129
 
130
If @code{COFF_LONG_SECTION_NAMES} is simply defined (blank), or is
131
defined to the value "1", then long section names are enabled by
132
default; if it is defined to the value zero, they are disabled by
133
default (but still accepted in input BFDs).  The header @file{coffcode.h}
134
defines a macro, @code{COFF_DEFAULT_LONG_SECTION_NAMES}, which is
135
used in the backends to initialise the backend data structure fields
136
appropriately; see the comments for further detail.
137
 
138
@subsubsection Bit twiddling
139
Each flavour of coff supported in BFD has its own header file
140
describing the external layout of the structures. There is also
141
an internal description of the coff layout, in
142
@file{coff/internal.h}. A major function of the
143
coff backend is swapping the bytes and twiddling the bits to
144
translate the external form of the structures into the normal
145
internal form. This is all performed in the
146
@code{bfd_swap}_@i{thing}_@i{direction} routines. Some
147
elements are different sizes between different versions of
148
coff; it is the duty of the coff version specific include file
149
to override the definitions of various packing routines in
150
@file{coffcode.h}. E.g., the size of line number entry in coff is
151
sometimes 16 bits, and sometimes 32 bits. @code{#define}ing
152
@code{PUT_LNSZ_LNNO} and @code{GET_LNSZ_LNNO} will select the
153
correct one. No doubt, some day someone will find a version of
154
coff which has a varying field size not catered to at the
155
moment. To port BFD, that person will have to add more @code{#defines}.
156
Three of the bit twiddling routines are exported to
157
@code{gdb}; @code{coff_swap_aux_in}, @code{coff_swap_sym_in}
158
and @code{coff_swap_lineno_in}. @code{GDB} reads the symbol
159
table on its own, but uses BFD to fix things up.  More of the
160
bit twiddlers are exported for @code{gas};
161
@code{coff_swap_aux_out}, @code{coff_swap_sym_out},
162
@code{coff_swap_lineno_out}, @code{coff_swap_reloc_out},
163
@code{coff_swap_filehdr_out}, @code{coff_swap_aouthdr_out},
164
@code{coff_swap_scnhdr_out}. @code{Gas} currently keeps track
165
of all the symbol table and reloc drudgery itself, thereby
166
saving the internal BFD overhead, but uses BFD to swap things
167
on the way out, making cross ports much safer.  Doing so also
168
allows BFD (and thus the linker) to use the same header files
169
as @code{gas}, which makes one avenue to disaster disappear.
170
 
171
@subsubsection Symbol reading
172
The simple canonical form for symbols used by BFD is not rich
173
enough to keep all the information available in a coff symbol
174
table. The back end gets around this problem by keeping the original
175
symbol table around, "behind the scenes".
176
 
177
When a symbol table is requested (through a call to
178
@code{bfd_canonicalize_symtab}), a request gets through to
179
@code{coff_get_normalized_symtab}. This reads the symbol table from
180
the coff file and swaps all the structures inside into the
181
internal form. It also fixes up all the pointers in the table
182
(represented in the file by offsets from the first symbol in
183
the table) into physical pointers to elements in the new
184
internal table. This involves some work since the meanings of
185
fields change depending upon context: a field that is a
186
pointer to another structure in the symbol table at one moment
187
may be the size in bytes of a structure at the next.  Another
188
pass is made over the table. All symbols which mark file names
189
(@code{C_FILE} symbols) are modified so that the internal
190
string points to the value in the auxent (the real filename)
191
rather than the normal text associated with the symbol
192
(@code{".file"}).
193
 
194
At this time the symbol names are moved around. Coff stores
195
all symbols less than nine characters long physically
196
within the symbol table; longer strings are kept at the end of
197
the file in the string table. This pass moves all strings
198
into memory and replaces them with pointers to the strings.
199
 
200
The symbol table is massaged once again, this time to create
201
the canonical table used by the BFD application. Each symbol
202
is inspected in turn, and a decision made (using the
203
@code{sclass} field) about the various flags to set in the
204
@code{asymbol}.  @xref{Symbols}. The generated canonical table
205
shares strings with the hidden internal symbol table.
206
 
207
Any linenumbers are read from the coff file too, and attached
208
to the symbols which own the functions the linenumbers belong to.
209
 
210
@subsubsection Symbol writing
211
Writing a symbol to a coff file which didn't come from a coff
212
file will lose any debugging information. The @code{asymbol}
213
structure remembers the BFD from which the symbol was taken, and on
214
output the back end makes sure that the same destination target as
215
source target is present.
216
 
217
When the symbols have come from a coff file then all the
218
debugging information is preserved.
219
 
220
Symbol tables are provided for writing to the back end in a
221
vector of pointers to pointers. This allows applications like
222
the linker to accumulate and output large symbol tables
223
without having to do too much byte copying.
224
 
225
This function runs through the provided symbol table and
226
patches each symbol marked as a file place holder
227
(@code{C_FILE}) to point to the next file place holder in the
228
list. It also marks each @code{offset} field in the list with
229
the offset from the first symbol of the current symbol.
230
 
231
Another function of this procedure is to turn the canonical
232
value form of BFD into the form used by coff. Internally, BFD
233
expects symbol values to be offsets from a section base; so a
234
symbol physically at 0x120, but in a section starting at
235
0x100, would have the value 0x20. Coff expects symbols to
236
contain their final value, so symbols have their values
237
changed at this point to reflect their sum with their owning
238
section.  This transformation uses the
239
@code{output_section} field of the @code{asymbol}'s
240
@code{asection} @xref{Sections}.
241
 
242
@itemize @bullet
243
 
244
@item
245
@code{coff_mangle_symbols}
246
@end itemize
247
This routine runs though the provided symbol table and uses
248
the offsets generated by the previous pass and the pointers
249
generated when the symbol table was read in to create the
250
structured hierarchy required by coff. It changes each pointer
251
to a symbol into the index into the symbol table of the asymbol.
252
 
253
@itemize @bullet
254
 
255
@item
256
@code{coff_write_symbols}
257
@end itemize
258
This routine runs through the symbol table and patches up the
259
symbols from their internal form into the coff way, calls the
260
bit twiddlers, and writes out the table to the file.
261
 
262
@findex coff_symbol_type
263
@subsubsection @code{coff_symbol_type}
264
@strong{Description}@*
265
The hidden information for an @code{asymbol} is described in a
266
@code{combined_entry_type}:
267
 
268
 
269
@example
270
 
271
typedef struct coff_ptr_struct
272
@{
273
  /* Remembers the offset from the first symbol in the file for
274
     this symbol. Generated by coff_renumber_symbols. */
275
  unsigned int offset;
276
 
277
  /* Should the value of this symbol be renumbered.  Used for
278
     XCOFF C_BSTAT symbols.  Set by coff_slurp_symbol_table.  */
279
  unsigned int fix_value : 1;
280
 
281
  /* Should the tag field of this symbol be renumbered.
282
     Created by coff_pointerize_aux. */
283
  unsigned int fix_tag : 1;
284
 
285
  /* Should the endidx field of this symbol be renumbered.
286
     Created by coff_pointerize_aux. */
287
  unsigned int fix_end : 1;
288
 
289
  /* Should the x_csect.x_scnlen field be renumbered.
290
     Created by coff_pointerize_aux. */
291
  unsigned int fix_scnlen : 1;
292
 
293
  /* Fix up an XCOFF C_BINCL/C_EINCL symbol.  The value is the
294
     index into the line number entries.  Set by coff_slurp_symbol_table.  */
295
  unsigned int fix_line : 1;
296
 
297
  /* The container for the symbol structure as read and translated
298
     from the file. */
299
  union
300
  @{
301
    union internal_auxent auxent;
302
    struct internal_syment syment;
303
  @} u;
304
@} combined_entry_type;
305
 
306
 
307
/* Each canonical asymbol really looks like this: */
308
 
309
typedef struct coff_symbol_struct
310
@{
311
  /* The actual symbol which the rest of BFD works with */
312
  asymbol symbol;
313
 
314
  /* A pointer to the hidden information for this symbol */
315
  combined_entry_type *native;
316
 
317
  /* A pointer to the linenumber information for this symbol */
318
  struct lineno_cache_entry *lineno;
319
 
320
  /* Have the line numbers been relocated yet ? */
321
  bfd_boolean done_lineno;
322
@} coff_symbol_type;
323
@end example
324
@findex bfd_coff_backend_data
325
@subsubsection @code{bfd_coff_backend_data}
326
 
327
@example
328
/* COFF symbol classifications.  */
329
 
330
enum coff_symbol_classification
331
@{
332
  /* Global symbol.  */
333
  COFF_SYMBOL_GLOBAL,
334
  /* Common symbol.  */
335
  COFF_SYMBOL_COMMON,
336
  /* Undefined symbol.  */
337
  COFF_SYMBOL_UNDEFINED,
338
  /* Local symbol.  */
339
  COFF_SYMBOL_LOCAL,
340
  /* PE section symbol.  */
341
  COFF_SYMBOL_PE_SECTION
342
@};
343
 
344
@end example
345
Special entry points for gdb to swap in coff symbol table parts:
346
@example
347
typedef struct
348
@{
349
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_aux_in)
350
    (bfd *, void *, int, int, int, int, void *);
351
 
352
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_sym_in)
353
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
354
 
355
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_lineno_in)
356
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
357
 
358
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_aux_out)
359
    (bfd *, void *, int, int, int, int, void *);
360
 
361
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_sym_out)
362
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
363
 
364
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_lineno_out)
365
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
366
 
367
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_reloc_out)
368
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
369
 
370
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_filehdr_out)
371
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
372
 
373
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_aouthdr_out)
374
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
375
 
376
  unsigned int (*_bfd_coff_swap_scnhdr_out)
377
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
378
 
379
  unsigned int _bfd_filhsz;
380
  unsigned int _bfd_aoutsz;
381
  unsigned int _bfd_scnhsz;
382
  unsigned int _bfd_symesz;
383
  unsigned int _bfd_auxesz;
384
  unsigned int _bfd_relsz;
385
  unsigned int _bfd_linesz;
386
  unsigned int _bfd_filnmlen;
387
  bfd_boolean _bfd_coff_long_filenames;
388
 
389
  bfd_boolean _bfd_coff_long_section_names;
390
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_set_long_section_names)
391
    (bfd *, int);
392
 
393
  unsigned int _bfd_coff_default_section_alignment_power;
394
  bfd_boolean _bfd_coff_force_symnames_in_strings;
395
  unsigned int _bfd_coff_debug_string_prefix_length;
396
 
397
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_filehdr_in)
398
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
399
 
400
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_aouthdr_in)
401
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
402
 
403
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_scnhdr_in)
404
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
405
 
406
  void (*_bfd_coff_swap_reloc_in)
407
    (bfd *abfd, void *, void *);
408
 
409
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_bad_format_hook)
410
    (bfd *, void *);
411
 
412
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_set_arch_mach_hook)
413
    (bfd *, void *);
414
 
415
  void * (*_bfd_coff_mkobject_hook)
416
    (bfd *, void *, void *);
417
 
418
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_styp_to_sec_flags_hook)
419
    (bfd *, void *, const char *, asection *, flagword *);
420
 
421
  void (*_bfd_set_alignment_hook)
422
    (bfd *, asection *, void *);
423
 
424
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_slurp_symbol_table)
425
    (bfd *);
426
 
427
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_symname_in_debug)
428
    (bfd *, struct internal_syment *);
429
 
430
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_pointerize_aux_hook)
431
    (bfd *, combined_entry_type *, combined_entry_type *,
432
            unsigned int, combined_entry_type *);
433
 
434
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_print_aux)
435
    (bfd *, FILE *, combined_entry_type *, combined_entry_type *,
436
            combined_entry_type *, unsigned int);
437
 
438
  void (*_bfd_coff_reloc16_extra_cases)
439
    (bfd *, struct bfd_link_info *, struct bfd_link_order *, arelent *,
440
           bfd_byte *, unsigned int *, unsigned int *);
441
 
442
  int (*_bfd_coff_reloc16_estimate)
443
    (bfd *, asection *, arelent *, unsigned int,
444
            struct bfd_link_info *);
445
 
446
  enum coff_symbol_classification (*_bfd_coff_classify_symbol)
447
    (bfd *, struct internal_syment *);
448
 
449
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_compute_section_file_positions)
450
    (bfd *);
451
 
452
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_start_final_link)
453
    (bfd *, struct bfd_link_info *);
454
 
455
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_relocate_section)
456
    (bfd *, struct bfd_link_info *, bfd *, asection *, bfd_byte *,
457
            struct internal_reloc *, struct internal_syment *, asection **);
458
 
459
  reloc_howto_type *(*_bfd_coff_rtype_to_howto)
460
    (bfd *, asection *, struct internal_reloc *,
461
            struct coff_link_hash_entry *, struct internal_syment *,
462
            bfd_vma *);
463
 
464
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_adjust_symndx)
465
    (bfd *, struct bfd_link_info *, bfd *, asection *,
466
            struct internal_reloc *, bfd_boolean *);
467
 
468
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_link_add_one_symbol)
469
    (struct bfd_link_info *, bfd *, const char *, flagword,
470
            asection *, bfd_vma, const char *, bfd_boolean, bfd_boolean,
471
            struct bfd_link_hash_entry **);
472
 
473
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_link_output_has_begun)
474
    (bfd *, struct coff_final_link_info *);
475
 
476
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_final_link_postscript)
477
    (bfd *, struct coff_final_link_info *);
478
 
479
  bfd_boolean (*_bfd_coff_print_pdata)
480
    (bfd *, void *);
481
 
482
@} bfd_coff_backend_data;
483
 
484
#define coff_backend_info(abfd) \
485
  ((bfd_coff_backend_data *) (abfd)->xvec->backend_data)
486
 
487
#define bfd_coff_swap_aux_in(a,e,t,c,ind,num,i) \
488
  ((coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_swap_aux_in) (a,e,t,c,ind,num,i))
489
 
490
#define bfd_coff_swap_sym_in(a,e,i) \
491
  ((coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_swap_sym_in) (a,e,i))
492
 
493
#define bfd_coff_swap_lineno_in(a,e,i) \
494
  ((coff_backend_info ( a)->_bfd_coff_swap_lineno_in) (a,e,i))
495
 
496
#define bfd_coff_swap_reloc_out(abfd, i, o) \
497
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_reloc_out) (abfd, i, o))
498
 
499
#define bfd_coff_swap_lineno_out(abfd, i, o) \
500
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_lineno_out) (abfd, i, o))
501
 
502
#define bfd_coff_swap_aux_out(a,i,t,c,ind,num,o) \
503
  ((coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_swap_aux_out) (a,i,t,c,ind,num,o))
504
 
505
#define bfd_coff_swap_sym_out(abfd, i,o) \
506
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_sym_out) (abfd, i, o))
507
 
508
#define bfd_coff_swap_scnhdr_out(abfd, i,o) \
509
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_scnhdr_out) (abfd, i, o))
510
 
511
#define bfd_coff_swap_filehdr_out(abfd, i,o) \
512
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_filehdr_out) (abfd, i, o))
513
 
514
#define bfd_coff_swap_aouthdr_out(abfd, i,o) \
515
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_aouthdr_out) (abfd, i, o))
516
 
517
#define bfd_coff_filhsz(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_filhsz)
518
#define bfd_coff_aoutsz(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_aoutsz)
519
#define bfd_coff_scnhsz(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_scnhsz)
520
#define bfd_coff_symesz(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_symesz)
521
#define bfd_coff_auxesz(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_auxesz)
522
#define bfd_coff_relsz(abfd)  (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_relsz)
523
#define bfd_coff_linesz(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_linesz)
524
#define bfd_coff_filnmlen(abfd) (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_filnmlen)
525
#define bfd_coff_long_filenames(abfd) \
526
  (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_long_filenames)
527
#define bfd_coff_long_section_names(abfd) \
528
  (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_long_section_names)
529
#define bfd_coff_set_long_section_names(abfd, enable) \
530
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_set_long_section_names) (abfd, enable))
531
#define bfd_coff_default_section_alignment_power(abfd) \
532
  (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_default_section_alignment_power)
533
#define bfd_coff_swap_filehdr_in(abfd, i,o) \
534
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_filehdr_in) (abfd, i, o))
535
 
536
#define bfd_coff_swap_aouthdr_in(abfd, i,o) \
537
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_aouthdr_in) (abfd, i, o))
538
 
539
#define bfd_coff_swap_scnhdr_in(abfd, i,o) \
540
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_scnhdr_in) (abfd, i, o))
541
 
542
#define bfd_coff_swap_reloc_in(abfd, i, o) \
543
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_swap_reloc_in) (abfd, i, o))
544
 
545
#define bfd_coff_bad_format_hook(abfd, filehdr) \
546
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_bad_format_hook) (abfd, filehdr))
547
 
548
#define bfd_coff_set_arch_mach_hook(abfd, filehdr)\
549
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_set_arch_mach_hook) (abfd, filehdr))
550
#define bfd_coff_mkobject_hook(abfd, filehdr, aouthdr)\
551
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_mkobject_hook)\
552
   (abfd, filehdr, aouthdr))
553
 
554
#define bfd_coff_styp_to_sec_flags_hook(abfd, scnhdr, name, section, flags_ptr)\
555
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_styp_to_sec_flags_hook)\
556
   (abfd, scnhdr, name, section, flags_ptr))
557
 
558
#define bfd_coff_set_alignment_hook(abfd, sec, scnhdr)\
559
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_set_alignment_hook) (abfd, sec, scnhdr))
560
 
561
#define bfd_coff_slurp_symbol_table(abfd)\
562
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_slurp_symbol_table) (abfd))
563
 
564
#define bfd_coff_symname_in_debug(abfd, sym)\
565
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_symname_in_debug) (abfd, sym))
566
 
567
#define bfd_coff_force_symnames_in_strings(abfd)\
568
  (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_force_symnames_in_strings)
569
 
570
#define bfd_coff_debug_string_prefix_length(abfd)\
571
  (coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_debug_string_prefix_length)
572
 
573
#define bfd_coff_print_aux(abfd, file, base, symbol, aux, indaux)\
574
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_print_aux)\
575
   (abfd, file, base, symbol, aux, indaux))
576
 
577
#define bfd_coff_reloc16_extra_cases(abfd, link_info, link_order,\
578
                                     reloc, data, src_ptr, dst_ptr)\
579
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_reloc16_extra_cases)\
580
   (abfd, link_info, link_order, reloc, data, src_ptr, dst_ptr))
581
 
582
#define bfd_coff_reloc16_estimate(abfd, section, reloc, shrink, link_info)\
583
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_reloc16_estimate)\
584
   (abfd, section, reloc, shrink, link_info))
585
 
586
#define bfd_coff_classify_symbol(abfd, sym)\
587
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_classify_symbol)\
588
   (abfd, sym))
589
 
590
#define bfd_coff_compute_section_file_positions(abfd)\
591
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_compute_section_file_positions)\
592
   (abfd))
593
 
594
#define bfd_coff_start_final_link(obfd, info)\
595
  ((coff_backend_info (obfd)->_bfd_coff_start_final_link)\
596
   (obfd, info))
597
#define bfd_coff_relocate_section(obfd,info,ibfd,o,con,rel,isyms,secs)\
598
  ((coff_backend_info (ibfd)->_bfd_coff_relocate_section)\
599
   (obfd, info, ibfd, o, con, rel, isyms, secs))
600
#define bfd_coff_rtype_to_howto(abfd, sec, rel, h, sym, addendp)\
601
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_rtype_to_howto)\
602
   (abfd, sec, rel, h, sym, addendp))
603
#define bfd_coff_adjust_symndx(obfd, info, ibfd, sec, rel, adjustedp)\
604
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_adjust_symndx)\
605
   (obfd, info, ibfd, sec, rel, adjustedp))
606
#define bfd_coff_link_add_one_symbol(info, abfd, name, flags, section,\
607
                                     value, string, cp, coll, hashp)\
608
  ((coff_backend_info (abfd)->_bfd_coff_link_add_one_symbol)\
609
   (info, abfd, name, flags, section, value, string, cp, coll, hashp))
610
 
611
#define bfd_coff_link_output_has_begun(a,p) \
612
  ((coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_link_output_has_begun) (a, p))
613
#define bfd_coff_final_link_postscript(a,p) \
614
  ((coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_final_link_postscript) (a, p))
615
 
616
#define bfd_coff_have_print_pdata(a) \
617
  (coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_print_pdata)
618
#define bfd_coff_print_pdata(a,p) \
619
  ((coff_backend_info (a)->_bfd_coff_print_pdata) (a, p))
620
 
621
/* Macro: Returns true if the bfd is a PE executable as opposed to a
622
   PE object file.  */
623
#define bfd_pei_p(abfd) \
624
  (CONST_STRNEQ ((abfd)->xvec->name, "pei-"))
625
@end example
626
@subsubsection Writing relocations
627
To write relocations, the back end steps though the
628
canonical relocation table and create an
629
@code{internal_reloc}. The symbol index to use is removed from
630
the @code{offset} field in the symbol table supplied.  The
631
address comes directly from the sum of the section base
632
address and the relocation offset; the type is dug directly
633
from the howto field.  Then the @code{internal_reloc} is
634
swapped into the shape of an @code{external_reloc} and written
635
out to disk.
636
 
637
@subsubsection Reading linenumbers
638
Creating the linenumber table is done by reading in the entire
639
coff linenumber table, and creating another table for internal use.
640
 
641
A coff linenumber table is structured so that each function
642
is marked as having a line number of 0. Each line within the
643
function is an offset from the first line in the function. The
644
base of the line number information for the table is stored in
645
the symbol associated with the function.
646
 
647
Note: The PE format uses line number 0 for a flag indicating a
648
new source file.
649
 
650
The information is copied from the external to the internal
651
table, and each symbol which marks a function is marked by
652
pointing its...
653
 
654
How does this work ?
655
 
656
@subsubsection Reading relocations
657
Coff relocations are easily transformed into the internal BFD form
658
(@code{arelent}).
659
 
660
Reading a coff relocation table is done in the following stages:
661
 
662
@itemize @bullet
663
 
664
@item
665
Read the entire coff relocation table into memory.
666
 
667
@item
668
Process each relocation in turn; first swap it from the
669
external to the internal form.
670
 
671
@item
672
Turn the symbol referenced in the relocation's symbol index
673
into a pointer into the canonical symbol table.
674
This table is the same as the one returned by a call to
675
@code{bfd_canonicalize_symtab}. The back end will call that
676
routine and save the result if a canonicalization hasn't been done.
677
 
678
@item
679
The reloc index is turned into a pointer to a howto
680
structure, in a back end specific way. For instance, the 386
681
and 960 use the @code{r_type} to directly produce an index
682
into a howto table vector; the 88k subtracts a number from the
683
@code{r_type} field and creates an addend field.
684
@end itemize
685
 

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