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[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-src/] [gdb-6.8/] [gdb/] [macroexp.h] - Rev 294
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/* Interface to C preprocessor macro expansion for GDB. Copyright (C) 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Contributed by Red Hat, Inc. This file is part of GDB. 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 of the License, 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, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #ifndef MACROEXP_H #define MACROEXP_H /* A function for looking up preprocessor macro definitions. Return the preprocessor definition of NAME in scope according to BATON, or zero if NAME is not defined as a preprocessor macro. The caller must not free or modify the definition returned. It is probably unwise for the caller to hold pointers to it for very long; it probably lives in some objfile's obstacks. */ typedef struct macro_definition *(macro_lookup_ftype) (const char *name, void *baton); /* Expand any preprocessor macros in SOURCE, and return the expanded text. Use LOOKUP_FUNC and LOOKUP_FUNC_BATON to find identifiers' preprocessor definitions. SOURCE is a null-terminated string. The result is a null-terminated string, allocated using xmalloc; it is the caller's responsibility to free it. */ char *macro_expand (const char *source, macro_lookup_ftype *lookup_func, void *lookup_func_baton); /* Expand all preprocessor macro references that appear explicitly in SOURCE, but do not expand any new macro references introduced by that first level of expansion. Use LOOKUP_FUNC and LOOKUP_FUNC_BATON to find identifiers' preprocessor definitions. SOURCE is a null-terminated string. The result is a null-terminated string, allocated using xmalloc; it is the caller's responsibility to free it. */ char *macro_expand_once (const char *source, macro_lookup_ftype *lookup_func, void *lookup_func_baton); /* If the null-terminated string pointed to by *LEXPTR begins with a macro invocation, return the result of expanding that invocation as a null-terminated string, and set *LEXPTR to the next character after the invocation. The result is completely expanded; it contains no further macro invocations. Otherwise, if *LEXPTR does not start with a macro invocation, return zero, and leave *LEXPTR unchanged. Use LOOKUP_FUNC and LOOKUP_BATON to find macro definitions. If this function returns a string, the caller is responsible for freeing it, using xfree. We need this expand-one-token-at-a-time interface in order to accomodate GDB's C expression parser, which may not consume the entire string. When the user enters a command like (gdb) break *func+20 if x == 5 the parser is expected to consume `func+20', and then stop when it sees the "if". But of course, "if" appearing in a character string or as part of a larger identifier doesn't count. So you pretty much have to do tokenization to find the end of the string that needs to be macro-expanded. Our C/C++ tokenizer isn't really designed to be called by anything but the yacc parser engine. */ char *macro_expand_next (char **lexptr, macro_lookup_ftype *lookup_func, void *lookup_baton); #endif /* MACROEXP_H */
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