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1 281 jeremybenn
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2
--                                                                          --
3
--                         GNAT COMPILER COMPONENTS                         --
4
--                                                                          --
5
--                                N A M E T                                 --
6
--                                                                          --
7
--                                 S p e c                                  --
8
--                                                                          --
9
--          Copyright (C) 1992-2009, Free Software Foundation, Inc.         --
10
--                                                                          --
11
-- GNAT is free software;  you can  redistribute it  and/or modify it under --
12
-- terms of the  GNU General Public License as published  by the Free Soft- --
13
-- ware  Foundation;  either version 3,  or (at your option) any later ver- --
14
-- sion.  GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
15
-- OUT ANY WARRANTY;  without even the  implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
16
-- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.                                     --
17
--                                                                          --
18
-- As a special exception under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted --
19
-- additional permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception,   --
20
-- version 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation.               --
21
--                                                                          --
22
-- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and    --
23
-- a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program;     --
24
-- see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively.  If not, see    --
25
-- <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.                                          --
26
--                                                                          --
27
-- GNAT was originally developed  by the GNAT team at  New York University. --
28
-- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc.      --
29
--                                                                          --
30
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
31
 
32
with Alloc;
33
with Table;
34
with Hostparm; use Hostparm;
35
with System;   use System;
36
with Types;    use Types;
37
 
38
package Namet is
39
 
40
--  WARNING: There is a C version of this package. Any changes to this
41
--  source file must be properly reflected in the C header file namet.h
42
--  which is created manually from namet.ads and namet.adb.
43
 
44
--  This package contains routines for handling the names table. The table
45
--  is used to store character strings for identifiers and operator symbols,
46
--  as well as other string values such as unit names and file names.
47
 
48
--  The forms of the entries are as follows:
49
 
50
--    Identifiers Stored with upper case letters folded to lower case. Upper
51
--                       half (16#80# bit set) and wide characters are stored
52
--                       in an encoded form (Uhh for upper half char, Whhhh
53
--                       for wide characters, WWhhhhhhhh as provided by the
54
--                       routine Store_Encoded_Character, where hh are hex
55
--                       digits for the character code using lower case a-f).
56
--                       Normally the use of U or W in other internal names is
57
--                       avoided, but these letters may be used in internal
58
--                       names (without this special meaning), if they appear
59
--                       as the last character of the name, or they are
60
--                       followed by an upper case letter (other than the WW
61
--                       sequence), or an underscore.
62
 
63
--    Operator symbols   Stored with an initial letter O, and the remainder
64
--                       of the name is the lower case characters XXX where
65
--                       the name is Name_Op_XXX, see Snames spec for a full
66
--                       list of the operator names. Normally the use of O
67
--                       in other internal names is avoided, but it may be
68
--                       used in internal names (without this special meaning)
69
--                       if it is the last character of the name, or if it is
70
--                       followed by an upper case letter or an underscore.
71
 
72
--    Character literals Character literals have names that are used only for
73
--                       debugging and error message purposes. The form is a
74
--                       upper case Q followed by a single lower case letter,
75
--                       or by a Uxx/Wxxxx/WWxxxxxxx encoding as described for
76
--                       identifiers. The Set_Character_Literal_Name procedure
77
--                       should be used to construct these encodings. Normally
78
--                       the use of O in other internal names is avoided, but
79
--                       it may be used in internal names (without this special
80
--                       meaning) if it is the last character of the name, or
81
--                       if it is followed by an upper case letter or an
82
--                       underscore.
83
 
84
--    Unit names         Stored with upper case letters folded to lower case,
85
--                       using Uhh/Whhhh/WWhhhhhhhh encoding as described for
86
--                       identifiers, and a %s or %b suffix for specs/bodies.
87
--                       See package Uname for further details.
88
 
89
--    File names         Are stored in the form provided by Osint. Typically
90
--                       they may include wide character escape sequences and
91
--                       upper case characters (in non-encoded form). Casing
92
--                       is also derived from the external environment. Note
93
--                       that file names provided by Osint must generally be
94
--                       consistent with the names from Fname.Get_File_Name.
95
 
96
--    Other strings      The names table is also used as a convenient storage
97
--                       location for other variable length strings such as
98
--                       error messages etc. There are no restrictions on what
99
--                       characters may appear for such entries.
100
 
101
--  Note: the encodings Uhh (upper half characters), Whhhh (wide characters),
102
--  WWhhhhhhhh (wide wide characters) and Qx (character literal names) are
103
--  described in the spec, since they are visible throughout the system (e.g.
104
--  in debugging output). However, no code should depend on these particular
105
--  encodings, so it should be possible to change the encodings by making
106
--  changes only to the Namet specification (to change these comments) and the
107
--  body (which actually implements the encodings).
108
 
109
--  The names are hashed so that a given name appears only once in the table,
110
--  except that names entered with Name_Enter as opposed to Name_Find are
111
--  omitted from the hash table.
112
 
113
--  The first 26 entries in the names table (with Name_Id values in the range
114
--  First_Name_Id .. First_Name_Id + 25) represent names which are the one
115
--  character lower case letters in the range a-z, and these names are created
116
--  and initialized by the Initialize procedure.
117
 
118
--  Two values, one of type Int and one of type Byte, are stored with each
119
--  names table entry and subprograms are provided for setting and retrieving
120
--  these associated values. The usage of these values is up to the client. In
121
--  the compiler, the Int field is used to point to a chain of potentially
122
--  visible entities (see Sem.Ch8 for details), and the Byte field is used to
123
--  hold the Token_Type value for reserved words (see Sem for details). In the
124
--  binder, the Byte field is unused, and the Int field is used in various
125
--  ways depending on the name involved (see binder documentation).
126
 
127
   Name_Buffer : String (1 .. 4 * Max_Line_Length);
128
   --  This buffer is used to set the name to be stored in the table for the
129
   --  Name_Find call, and to retrieve the name for the Get_Name_String call.
130
   --  The limit here is intended to be an infinite value that ensures that we
131
   --  never overflow the buffer (names this long are too absurd to worry!)
132
 
133
   Name_Len : Natural;
134
   --  Length of name stored in Name_Buffer. Used as an input parameter for
135
   --  Name_Find, and as an output value by Get_Name_String, or Write_Name.
136
 
137
   -----------------------------
138
   -- Types for Namet Package --
139
   -----------------------------
140
 
141
   --  Name_Id values are used to identify entries in the names table. Except
142
   --  for the special values No_Name, and Error_Name, they are subscript
143
   --  values for the Names table defined in package Namet.
144
 
145
   --  Note that with only a few exceptions, which are clearly documented, the
146
   --  type Name_Id should be regarded as a private type. In particular it is
147
   --  never appropriate to perform arithmetic operations using this type.
148
 
149
   type Name_Id is range Names_Low_Bound .. Names_High_Bound;
150
   for Name_Id'Size use 32;
151
   --  Type used to identify entries in the names table
152
 
153
   No_Name : constant Name_Id := Names_Low_Bound;
154
   --  The special Name_Id value No_Name is used in the parser to indicate
155
   --  a situation where no name is present (e.g. on a loop or block).
156
 
157
   Error_Name : constant Name_Id := Names_Low_Bound +  1;
158
   --  The special Name_Id value Error_Name is used in the parser to
159
   --  indicate that some kind of error was encountered in scanning out
160
   --  the relevant name, so it does not have a representable label.
161
 
162
   subtype Error_Name_Or_No_Name is Name_Id range No_Name .. Error_Name;
163
   --  Used to test for either error name or no name
164
 
165
   First_Name_Id : constant Name_Id := Names_Low_Bound + 2;
166
   --  Subscript of first entry in names table
167
 
168
   -----------------
169
   -- Subprograms --
170
   -----------------
171
 
172
   procedure Finalize;
173
   --  Called at the end of a use of the Namet package (before a subsequent
174
   --  call to Initialize). Currently this routine is only used to generate
175
   --  debugging output.
176
 
177
   procedure Get_Name_String (Id : Name_Id);
178
   --  Get_Name_String is used to retrieve the string associated with an entry
179
   --  in the names table. The resulting string is stored in Name_Buffer and
180
   --  Name_Len is set. It is an error to call Get_Name_String with one of the
181
   --  special name Id values (No_Name or Error_Name).
182
 
183
   function Get_Name_String (Id : Name_Id) return String;
184
   --  This functional form returns the result as a string without affecting
185
   --  the contents of either Name_Buffer or Name_Len. The lower bound is 1.
186
 
187
   procedure Get_Unqualified_Name_String (Id : Name_Id);
188
   --  Similar to the above except that qualification (as defined in unit
189
   --  Exp_Dbug) is removed (including both preceding __ delimited names, and
190
   --  also the suffixes used to indicate package body entities and to
191
   --  distinguish between overloaded entities). Note that names are not
192
   --  qualified until just before the call to gigi, so this routine is only
193
   --  needed by processing that occurs after gigi has been called. This
194
   --  includes all ASIS processing, since ASIS works on the tree written
195
   --  after gigi has been called.
196
 
197
   procedure Get_Name_String_And_Append (Id : Name_Id);
198
   --  Like Get_Name_String but the resulting characters are appended to the
199
   --  current contents of the entry stored in Name_Buffer, and Name_Len is
200
   --  incremented to include the added characters.
201
 
202
   procedure Get_Decoded_Name_String (Id : Name_Id);
203
   --  Same calling sequence an interface as Get_Name_String, except that the
204
   --  result is decoded, so that upper half characters and wide characters
205
   --  appear as originally found in the source program text, operators have
206
   --  their source forms (special characters and enclosed in quotes), and
207
   --  character literals appear surrounded by apostrophes.
208
 
209
   procedure Get_Unqualified_Decoded_Name_String (Id : Name_Id);
210
   --  Similar to the above except that qualification (as defined in unit
211
   --  Exp_Dbug) is removed (including both preceding __ delimited names, and
212
   --  also the suffix used to indicate package body entities). Note that
213
   --  names are not qualified until just before the call to gigi, so this
214
   --  routine is only needed by processing that occurs after gigi has been
215
   --  called. This includes all ASIS processing, since ASIS works on the tree
216
   --  written after gigi has been called.
217
 
218
   procedure Get_Decoded_Name_String_With_Brackets (Id : Name_Id);
219
   --  This routine is similar to Decoded_Name, except that the brackets
220
   --  notation (Uhh replaced by ["hh"], Whhhh replaced by ["hhhh"],
221
   --  WWhhhhhhhh replaced by ["hhhhhhhh"]) is used for all non-lower half
222
   --  characters, regardless of how Opt.Wide_Character_Encoding_Method is
223
   --  set, and also in that characters in the range 16#80# .. 16#FF# are
224
   --  converted to brackets notation in all cases. This routine can be used
225
   --  when there is a requirement for a canonical representation not affected
226
   --  by the character set options (e.g. in the binder generation of
227
   --  symbols).
228
 
229
   function Get_Name_Table_Byte (Id : Name_Id) return Byte;
230
   pragma Inline (Get_Name_Table_Byte);
231
   --  Fetches the Byte value associated with the given name
232
 
233
   function Get_Name_Table_Info (Id : Name_Id) return Int;
234
   pragma Inline (Get_Name_Table_Info);
235
   --  Fetches the Int value associated with the given name
236
 
237
   function Is_Operator_Name (Id : Name_Id) return Boolean;
238
   --  Returns True if name given is of the form of an operator (that
239
   --  is, it starts with an upper case O).
240
 
241
   procedure Initialize;
242
   --  Initializes the names table, including initializing the first 26
243
   --  entries in the table (for the 1-character lower case names a-z) Note
244
   --  that Initialize must not be called if Tree_Read is used.
245
 
246
   procedure Lock;
247
   --  Lock name tables before calling back end. We reserve some extra space
248
   --  before locking to avoid unnecessary inefficiencies when we unlock.
249
 
250
   procedure Unlock;
251
   --  Unlocks the name table to allow use of the extra space reserved by the
252
   --  call to Lock. See gnat1drv for details of the need for this.
253
 
254
   function Length_Of_Name (Id : Name_Id) return Nat;
255
   pragma Inline (Length_Of_Name);
256
   --  Returns length of given name in characters. This is the length of the
257
   --  encoded name, as stored in the names table, the result is equivalent to
258
   --  calling Get_Name_String and reading Name_Len, except that a call to
259
   --  Length_Of_Name does not affect the contents of Name_Len and Name_Buffer.
260
 
261
   function Name_Chars_Address return System.Address;
262
   --  Return starting address of name characters table (used in Back_End call
263
   --  to Gigi).
264
 
265
   function Name_Find return Name_Id;
266
   --  Name_Find is called with a string stored in Name_Buffer whose length is
267
   --  in Name_Len (i.e. the characters of the name are in subscript positions
268
   --  1 to Name_Len in Name_Buffer). It searches the names table to see if
269
   --  the string has already been stored. If so the Id of the existing entry
270
   --  is returned. Otherwise a new entry is created with its Name_Table_Info
271
   --  field set to zero. The contents of Name_Buffer and Name_Len are not
272
   --  modified by this call. Note that it is permissible for Name_Len to be
273
   --  set to zero to lookup the null name string.
274
 
275
   function Name_Enter return Name_Id;
276
   --  Name_Enter has the same calling interface as Name_Find. The difference
277
   --  is that it does not search the table for an existing match, and also
278
   --  subsequent Name_Find calls using the same name will not locate the
279
   --  entry created by this call. Thus multiple calls to Name_Enter with the
280
   --  same name will create multiple entries in the name table with different
281
   --  Name_Id values. This is useful in the case of created names, which are
282
   --  never expected to be looked up. Note: Name_Enter should never be used
283
   --  for one character names, since these are efficiently located without
284
   --  hashing by Name_Find in any case.
285
 
286
   function Name_Entries_Address return System.Address;
287
   --  Return starting address of Names table (used in Back_End call to Gigi)
288
 
289
   function Name_Entries_Count return Nat;
290
   --  Return current number of entries in the names table
291
 
292
   function Is_OK_Internal_Letter (C : Character) return Boolean;
293
   pragma Inline (Is_OK_Internal_Letter);
294
   --  Returns true if C is a suitable character for using as a prefix or a
295
   --  suffix of an internally generated name, i.e. it is an upper case letter
296
   --  other than one of the ones used for encoding source names (currently
297
   --  the set of reserved letters is O, Q, U, W) and also returns False for
298
   --  the letter X, which is reserved for debug output (see Exp_Dbug).
299
 
300
   function Is_Internal_Name (Id : Name_Id) return Boolean;
301
   --  Returns True if the name is an internal name (i.e. contains a character
302
   --  for which Is_OK_Internal_Letter is true, or if the name starts or ends
303
   --  with an underscore. This call destroys the value of Name_Len and
304
   --  Name_Buffer (it loads these as for Get_Name_String).
305
   --
306
   --  Note: if the name is qualified (has a double underscore), then only the
307
   --  final entity name is considered, not the qualifying names. Consider for
308
   --  example that the name:
309
   --
310
   --    pkg__B_1__xyz
311
   --
312
   --  is not an internal name, because the B comes from the internal name of
313
   --  a qualifying block, but the xyz means that this was indeed a declared
314
   --  identifier called "xyz" within this block and there is nothing internal
315
   --  about that name.
316
 
317
   function Is_Internal_Name return Boolean;
318
   --  Like the form with an Id argument, except that the name to be tested is
319
   --  passed in Name_Buffer and Name_Len (which are not affected by the call).
320
   --  Name_Buffer (it loads these as for Get_Name_String).
321
 
322
   function Is_Valid_Name (Id : Name_Id) return Boolean;
323
   --  True if Id is a valid name -- points to a valid entry in the
324
   --  Name_Entries table.
325
 
326
   procedure Reset_Name_Table;
327
   --  This procedure is used when there are multiple source files to reset
328
   --  the name table info entries associated with current entries in the
329
   --  names table. There is no harm in keeping the names entries themselves
330
   --  from one compilation to another, but we can't keep the entity info,
331
   --  since this refers to tree nodes, which are destroyed between each main
332
   --  source file.
333
 
334
   procedure Add_Char_To_Name_Buffer (C : Character);
335
   pragma Inline (Add_Char_To_Name_Buffer);
336
   --  Add given character to the end of the string currently stored in the
337
   --  Name_Buffer, incrementing Name_Len.
338
 
339
   procedure Add_Nat_To_Name_Buffer (V : Nat);
340
   --  Add decimal representation of given value to the end of the string
341
   --  currently stored in Name_Buffer, incrementing Name_Len as required.
342
 
343
   procedure Add_Str_To_Name_Buffer (S : String);
344
   --  Add characters of string S to the end of the string currently stored
345
   --  in the Name_Buffer, incrementing Name_Len by the length of the string.
346
 
347
   procedure Set_Character_Literal_Name (C : Char_Code);
348
   --  This procedure sets the proper encoded name for the character literal
349
   --  for the given character code. On return Name_Buffer and Name_Len are
350
   --  set to reflect the stored name.
351
 
352
   procedure Set_Name_Table_Info (Id : Name_Id; Val : Int);
353
   pragma Inline (Set_Name_Table_Info);
354
   --  Sets the Int value associated with the given name
355
 
356
   procedure Set_Name_Table_Byte (Id : Name_Id; Val : Byte);
357
   pragma Inline (Set_Name_Table_Byte);
358
   --  Sets the Byte value associated with the given name
359
 
360
   procedure Store_Encoded_Character (C : Char_Code);
361
   --  Stores given character code at the end of Name_Buffer, updating the
362
   --  value in Name_Len appropriately. Lower case letters and digits are
363
   --  stored unchanged. Other 8-bit characters are stored using the Uhh
364
   --  encoding (hh = hex code), other 16-bit wide character values are stored
365
   --  using the Whhhh (hhhh = hex code) encoding, and other 32-bit wide wide
366
   --  character values are stored using the WWhhhhhhhh (hhhhhhhh = hex code).
367
   --  Note that this procedure does not fold upper case letters (they are
368
   --  stored using the Uhh encoding). If folding is required, it must be done
369
   --  by the caller prior to the call.
370
 
371
   procedure Tree_Read;
372
   --  Initializes internal tables from current tree file using the relevant
373
   --  Table.Tree_Read routines. Note that Initialize should not be called if
374
   --  Tree_Read is used. Tree_Read includes all necessary initialization.
375
 
376
   procedure Tree_Write;
377
   --  Writes out internal tables to current tree file using the relevant
378
   --  Table.Tree_Write routines.
379
 
380
   procedure Get_Last_Two_Chars (N : Name_Id; C1, C2 : out Character);
381
   --  Obtains last two characters of a name. C1 is last but one character
382
   --  and C2 is last character. If name is less than two characters long,
383
   --  then both C1 and C2 are set to ASCII.NUL on return.
384
 
385
   procedure Write_Name (Id : Name_Id);
386
   --  Write_Name writes the characters of the specified name using the
387
   --  standard output procedures in package Output. No end of line is
388
   --  written, just the characters of the name. On return Name_Buffer and
389
   --  Name_Len are set as for a call to Get_Name_String. The name is written
390
   --  in encoded form (i.e. including Uhh, Whhh, Qx, _op as they appear in
391
   --  the name table). If Id is Error_Name, or No_Name, no text is output.
392
 
393
   procedure Write_Name_Decoded (Id : Name_Id);
394
   --  Like Write_Name, except that the name written is the decoded name, as
395
   --  described for Get_Decoded_Name_String, and the resulting value stored
396
   --  in Name_Len and Name_Buffer is the decoded name.
397
 
398
   ------------------------------
399
   -- File and Unit Name Types --
400
   ------------------------------
401
 
402
   --  These are defined here in Namet rather than Fname and Uname to avoid
403
   --  problems with dependencies, and to avoid dragging in Fname and Uname
404
   --  into many more files, but it would be cleaner to move to Fname/Uname.
405
 
406
   type File_Name_Type is new Name_Id;
407
   --  File names are stored in the names table and this type is used to
408
   --  indicate that a Name_Id value is being used to hold a simple file name
409
   --  (which does not include any directory information).
410
 
411
   No_File : constant File_Name_Type := File_Name_Type (No_Name);
412
   --  Constant used to indicate no file is present (this is used for example
413
   --  when a search for a file indicates that no file of the name exists).
414
 
415
   Error_File_Name : constant File_Name_Type := File_Name_Type (Error_Name);
416
   --  The special File_Name_Type value Error_File_Name is used to indicate
417
   --  a unit name where some previous processing has found an error.
418
 
419
   subtype Error_File_Name_Or_No_File is
420
     File_Name_Type range No_File .. Error_File_Name;
421
   --  Used to test for either error file name or no file
422
 
423
   type Path_Name_Type is new Name_Id;
424
   --  Path names are stored in the names table and this type is used to
425
   --  indicate that a Name_Id value is being used to hold a path name (that
426
   --  may contain directory information).
427
 
428
   No_Path : constant Path_Name_Type := Path_Name_Type (No_Name);
429
   --  Constant used to indicate no path name is present
430
 
431
   type Unit_Name_Type is new Name_Id;
432
   --  Unit names are stored in the names table and this type is used to
433
   --  indicate that a Name_Id value is being used to hold a unit name, which
434
   --  terminates in %b for a body or %s for a spec.
435
 
436
   No_Unit_Name : constant Unit_Name_Type := Unit_Name_Type (No_Name);
437
   --  Constant used to indicate no file name present
438
 
439
   Error_Unit_Name : constant Unit_Name_Type := Unit_Name_Type (Error_Name);
440
   --  The special Unit_Name_Type value Error_Unit_Name is used to indicate
441
   --  a unit name where some previous processing has found an error.
442
 
443
   subtype Error_Unit_Name_Or_No_Unit_Name is
444
     Unit_Name_Type range No_Unit_Name .. Error_Unit_Name;
445
 
446
   ------------------------
447
   -- Debugging Routines --
448
   ------------------------
449
 
450
   procedure wn (Id : Name_Id);
451
   pragma Export (Ada, wn);
452
   --  This routine is intended for debugging use only (i.e. it is intended to
453
   --  be called from the debugger). It writes the characters of the specified
454
   --  name using the standard output procedures in package Output, followed by
455
   --  a new line. The name is written in encoded form (i.e. including Uhh,
456
   --  Whhh, Qx, _op as they appear in the name table). If Id is Error_Name,
457
   --  No_Name, or invalid an appropriate string is written (<Error_Name>,
458
   --  <No_Name>, <invalid name>). Unlike Write_Name, this call does not affect
459
   --  the contents of Name_Buffer or Name_Len.
460
 
461
   ---------------------------
462
   -- Table Data Structures --
463
   ---------------------------
464
 
465
   --  The following declarations define the data structures used to store
466
   --  names. The definitions are in the private part of the package spec,
467
   --  rather than the body, since they are referenced directly by gigi.
468
 
469
private
470
 
471
   --  This table stores the actual string names. Although logically there is
472
   --  no need for a terminating character (since the length is stored in the
473
   --  name entry table), we still store a NUL character at the end of every
474
   --  name (for convenience in interfacing to the C world).
475
 
476
   package Name_Chars is new Table.Table (
477
     Table_Component_Type => Character,
478
     Table_Index_Type     => Int,
479
     Table_Low_Bound      => 0,
480
     Table_Initial        => Alloc.Name_Chars_Initial,
481
     Table_Increment      => Alloc.Name_Chars_Increment,
482
     Table_Name           => "Name_Chars");
483
 
484
   type Name_Entry is record
485
      Name_Chars_Index : Int;
486
      --  Starting location of characters in the Name_Chars table minus one
487
      --  (i.e. pointer to character just before first character). The reason
488
      --  for the bias of one is that indexes in Name_Buffer are one's origin,
489
      --  so this avoids unnecessary adds and subtracts of 1.
490
 
491
      Name_Len : Short;
492
      --  Length of this name in characters
493
 
494
      Byte_Info : Byte;
495
      --  Byte value associated with this name
496
 
497
      Name_Has_No_Encodings : Boolean;
498
      --  This flag is set True if the name entry is known not to contain any
499
      --  special character encodings. This is used to speed up repeated calls
500
      --  to Get_Decoded_Name_String. A value of False means that it is not
501
      --  known whether the name contains any such encodings.
502
 
503
      Hash_Link : Name_Id;
504
      --  Link to next entry in names table for same hash code
505
 
506
      Int_Info : Int;
507
      --  Int Value associated with this name
508
   end record;
509
 
510
   for Name_Entry use record
511
      Name_Chars_Index      at  0 range 0 .. 31;
512
      Name_Len              at  4 range 0 .. 15;
513
      Byte_Info             at  6 range 0 .. 7;
514
      Name_Has_No_Encodings at  7 range 0 .. 7;
515
      Hash_Link             at  8 range 0 .. 31;
516
      Int_Info              at 12 range 0 .. 31;
517
   end record;
518
 
519
   for Name_Entry'Size use 16 * 8;
520
   --  This ensures that we did not leave out any fields
521
 
522
   --  This is the table that is referenced by Name_Id entries.
523
   --  It contains one entry for each unique name in the table.
524
 
525
   package Name_Entries is new Table.Table (
526
     Table_Component_Type => Name_Entry,
527
     Table_Index_Type     => Name_Id'Base,
528
     Table_Low_Bound      => First_Name_Id,
529
     Table_Initial        => Alloc.Names_Initial,
530
     Table_Increment      => Alloc.Names_Increment,
531
     Table_Name           => "Name_Entries");
532
 
533
end Namet;

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