]>
Commit | Line | Data |
---|---|---|
ec2bcbe7 | 1 | /* Interface to C preprocessor macro tables for GDB. |
28e7fd62 | 2 | Copyright (C) 2002-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
3 | Contributed by Red Hat, Inc. |
4 | ||
5 | This file is part of GDB. | |
6 | ||
7 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
8 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
a9762ec7 | 9 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
10 | (at your option) any later version. |
11 | ||
12 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
13 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
14 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
15 | GNU General Public License for more details. | |
16 | ||
17 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
a9762ec7 | 18 | along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
19 | |
20 | #ifndef MACROTAB_H | |
21 | #define MACROTAB_H | |
22 | ||
aa84d1bb AC |
23 | struct obstack; |
24 | struct bcache; | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
25 | |
26 | /* How do we represent a source location? I mean, how should we | |
27 | represent them within GDB; the user wants to use all sorts of | |
28 | ambiguous abbreviations, like "break 32" and "break foo.c:32" | |
29 | ("foo.c" may have been #included into several compilation units), | |
30 | but what do we disambiguate those things to? | |
31 | ||
32 | - Answer 1: "Filename and line number." (Or column number, if | |
33 | you're picky.) That's not quite good enough. For example, the | |
34 | same source file can be #included into several different | |
35 | compilation units --- which #inclusion do you mean? | |
36 | ||
37 | - Answer 2: "Compilation unit, filename, and line number." This is | |
38 | a pretty good answer; GDB's `struct symtab_and_line' basically | |
39 | embodies this representation. But it's still ambiguous; what if a | |
40 | given compilation unit #includes the same file twice --- how can I | |
41 | set a breakpoint on line 12 of the fifth #inclusion of "foo.c"? | |
42 | ||
43 | - Answer 3: "Compilation unit, chain of #inclusions, and line | |
44 | number." This is analogous to the way GCC reports errors in | |
45 | #include files: | |
46 | ||
47 | $ gcc -c base.c | |
48 | In file included from header2.h:8, | |
49 | from header1.h:3, | |
50 | from base.c:5: | |
51 | header3.h:1: parse error before ')' token | |
52 | $ | |
53 | ||
54 | GCC tells you exactly what path of #inclusions led you to the | |
55 | problem. It gives you complete information, in a way that the | |
56 | following would not: | |
57 | ||
58 | $ gcc -c base.c | |
59 | header3.h:1: parse error before ')' token | |
60 | $ | |
61 | ||
62 | Converting all of GDB to use this is a big task, and I'm not really | |
63 | suggesting it should be a priority. But this module's whole | |
64 | purpose is to maintain structures describing the macro expansion | |
65 | process, so I think it's appropriate for us to take a little care | |
66 | to do that in a complete fashion. | |
67 | ||
68 | In this interface, the first line of a file is numbered 1, not 0. | |
69 | This is the same convention the rest of GDB uses. */ | |
70 | ||
71 | ||
72 | /* A table of all the macro definitions for a given compilation unit. */ | |
73 | struct macro_table; | |
74 | ||
d7d9f01e TT |
75 | /* The definition of a single macro. */ |
76 | struct macro_definition; | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
77 | |
78 | /* A source file that participated in a compilation unit --- either a | |
79 | main file, or an #included file. If a file is #included more than | |
80 | once, the presence of the `included_from' and `included_at_line' | |
81 | members means that we need to make one instance of this structure | |
82 | for each #inclusion. Taken as a group, these structures form a | |
83 | tree mapping the #inclusions that contributed to the compilation | |
84 | unit, with the main source file as its root. | |
85 | ||
f8302a57 JB |
86 | Beware --- not every source file mentioned in a compilation unit's |
87 | symtab structures will appear in the #inclusion tree! As of Oct | |
88 | 2002, GCC does record the effect of #line directives in the source | |
89 | line info, but not in macro info. This means that GDB's symtabs | |
90 | (built from the former, among other things) may mention filenames | |
91 | that the #inclusion tree (built from the latter) doesn't have any | |
92 | record of. See macroscope.c:sal_macro_scope for how to accomodate | |
93 | this. | |
94 | ||
ec2bcbe7 JB |
95 | It's worth noting that libcpp has a simpler way of representing all |
96 | this, which we should consider switching to. It might even be | |
97 | suitable for ordinary non-macro line number info. | |
98 | ||
99 | Suppose you take your main source file, and after each line | |
100 | containing an #include directive you insert the text of the | |
101 | #included file. The result is a big file that pretty much | |
102 | corresponds to the full text the compiler's going to see. There's | |
103 | a one-to-one correspondence between lines in the big file and | |
104 | per-inclusion lines in the source files. (Obviously, #include | |
105 | directives that are #if'd out don't count. And you'll need to | |
106 | append a newline to any file that doesn't end in one, to avoid | |
107 | splicing the last #included line with the next line of the | |
108 | #including file.) | |
109 | ||
110 | Libcpp calls line numbers in this big imaginary file "logical line | |
111 | numbers", and has a data structure called a "line map" that can map | |
112 | logical line numbers onto actual source filenames and line numbers, | |
113 | and also tell you the chain of #inclusions responsible for any | |
114 | particular logical line number. Basically, this means you can pass | |
115 | around a single line number and some kind of "compilation unit" | |
116 | object and you get nice, unambiguous source code locations that | |
117 | distinguish between multiple #inclusions of the same file, etc. | |
118 | ||
119 | Pretty neat, huh? */ | |
120 | ||
121 | struct macro_source_file | |
122 | { | |
123 | ||
124 | /* The macro table for the compilation unit this source location is | |
125 | a part of. */ | |
126 | struct macro_table *table; | |
127 | ||
233d95b5 JK |
128 | /* A source file --- possibly a header file. This filename is relative to |
129 | the compilation directory (table->comp_dir), it exactly matches the | |
130 | symtab->filename content. */ | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
131 | const char *filename; |
132 | ||
133 | /* The location we were #included from, or zero if we are the | |
134 | compilation unit's main source file. */ | |
135 | struct macro_source_file *included_by; | |
136 | ||
137 | /* If `included_from' is non-zero, the line number in that source | |
138 | file at which we were included. */ | |
139 | int included_at_line; | |
140 | ||
141 | /* Head of a linked list of the source files #included by this file; | |
142 | our children in the #inclusion tree. This list is sorted by its | |
143 | elements' `included_at_line' values, which are unique. (The | |
144 | macro splay tree's ordering function needs this property.) */ | |
145 | struct macro_source_file *includes; | |
146 | ||
147 | /* The next file #included by our `included_from' file; our sibling | |
148 | in the #inclusion tree. */ | |
149 | struct macro_source_file *next_included; | |
150 | }; | |
151 | ||
152 | ||
153 | /* Create a new, empty macro table. Allocate it in OBSTACK, or use | |
154 | xmalloc if OBSTACK is zero. Use BCACHE to store all macro names, | |
155 | arguments, definitions, and anything else that might be the same | |
156 | amongst compilation units in an executable file; if BCACHE is zero, | |
233d95b5 JK |
157 | don't cache these things. COMP_DIR optionally contains the compilation |
158 | directory of all files for this macro table. | |
ec2bcbe7 | 159 | |
32623386 JB |
160 | Note that, if either OBSTACK or BCACHE are non-zero, then removing |
161 | information from the table may leak memory. Neither obstacks nor | |
162 | bcaches really allow you to remove information, so although we can | |
163 | update the data structure to record the change, we can't free the | |
164 | old data. At the moment, since we only provide obstacks and | |
165 | bcaches for macro tables for symtabs, this isn't a problem; only | |
166 | odd debugging information makes a definition and then deletes it at | |
167 | the same source location (although 'gcc -DFOO -UFOO -DFOO=2' does | |
168 | do that in GCC 4.1.2.). */ | |
ec2bcbe7 | 169 | struct macro_table *new_macro_table (struct obstack *obstack, |
233d95b5 JK |
170 | struct bcache *bcache, |
171 | const char *comp_dir); | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
172 | |
173 | ||
174 | /* Free TABLE, and any macro definitions, source file structures, | |
175 | etc. it owns. This will raise an internal error if TABLE was | |
176 | allocated on an obstack, or if it uses a bcache. */ | |
177 | void free_macro_table (struct macro_table *table); | |
178 | ||
179 | ||
180 | /* Set FILENAME as the main source file of TABLE. Return a source | |
181 | file structure describing that file; if we record the #definition | |
182 | of macros, or the #inclusion of other files into FILENAME, we'll | |
183 | use that source file structure to indicate the context. | |
184 | ||
185 | The "main source file" is the one that was given to the compiler; | |
186 | all other source files that contributed to the compilation unit are | |
187 | #included, directly or indirectly, from this one. | |
188 | ||
189 | The macro table makes its own copy of FILENAME; the caller is | |
190 | responsible for freeing FILENAME when it is no longer needed. */ | |
191 | struct macro_source_file *macro_set_main (struct macro_table *table, | |
192 | const char *filename); | |
193 | ||
194 | ||
195 | /* Return the main source file of the macro table TABLE. */ | |
196 | struct macro_source_file *macro_main (struct macro_table *table); | |
197 | ||
d7d9f01e TT |
198 | /* Mark the macro table TABLE so that macros defined in this table can |
199 | be redefined without error. Note that it invalid to call this if | |
200 | TABLE is allocated on an obstack. */ | |
201 | void macro_allow_redefinitions (struct macro_table *table); | |
202 | ||
ec2bcbe7 JB |
203 | |
204 | /* Record a #inclusion. | |
205 | Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE, | |
206 | we #included the file INCLUDED. Return a source file structure we | |
207 | can use for symbols #defined or files #included into that. If we've | |
208 | already created a source file structure for this #inclusion, return | |
209 | the same structure we created last time. | |
210 | ||
211 | The first line of the source file has a line number of 1, not 0. | |
212 | ||
213 | The macro table makes its own copy of INCLUDED; the caller is | |
214 | responsible for freeing INCLUDED when it is no longer needed. */ | |
215 | struct macro_source_file *macro_include (struct macro_source_file *source, | |
216 | int line, | |
217 | const char *included); | |
218 | ||
abc9d0dc TT |
219 | /* Define any special macros, like __FILE__ or __LINE__. This should |
220 | be called once, on the main source file. */ | |
221 | ||
222 | void macro_define_special (struct macro_table *table); | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
223 | |
224 | /* Find any source file structure for a file named NAME, either | |
225 | included into SOURCE, or SOURCE itself. Return zero if we have | |
226 | none. NAME is only the final portion of the filename, not the full | |
227 | path. e.g., `stdio.h', not `/usr/include/stdio.h'. If NAME | |
228 | appears more than once in the inclusion tree, return the | |
229 | least-nested inclusion --- the one closest to the main source file. */ | |
230 | struct macro_source_file *(macro_lookup_inclusion | |
231 | (struct macro_source_file *source, | |
232 | const char *name)); | |
233 | ||
234 | ||
235 | /* Record an object-like #definition (i.e., one with no parameter list). | |
236 | Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE, | |
237 | we #defined a preprocessor symbol named NAME, whose replacement | |
238 | string is REPLACEMENT. This function makes copies of NAME and | |
239 | REPLACEMENT; the caller is responsible for freeing them. */ | |
240 | void macro_define_object (struct macro_source_file *source, int line, | |
241 | const char *name, const char *replacement); | |
242 | ||
243 | ||
244 | /* Record an function-like #definition (i.e., one with a parameter list). | |
245 | ||
246 | Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE, | |
247 | we #defined a preprocessor symbol named NAME, with ARGC arguments | |
248 | whose names are given in ARGV, whose replacement string is REPLACEMENT. If | |
249 | the macro takes a variable number of arguments, then ARGC should be | |
250 | one greater than the number of named arguments, and ARGV[ARGC-1] | |
251 | should be the string "...". This function makes its own copies of | |
252 | NAME, ARGV, and REPLACEMENT; the caller is responsible for freeing | |
253 | them. */ | |
254 | void macro_define_function (struct macro_source_file *source, int line, | |
255 | const char *name, int argc, const char **argv, | |
256 | const char *replacement); | |
257 | ||
258 | ||
259 | /* Record an #undefinition. | |
260 | Record in SOURCE's macro table that, at line number LINE in SOURCE, | |
261 | we removed the definition for the preprocessor symbol named NAME. */ | |
262 | void macro_undef (struct macro_source_file *source, int line, | |
263 | const char *name); | |
264 | ||
ec2bcbe7 JB |
265 | /* Different kinds of macro definitions. */ |
266 | enum macro_kind | |
267 | { | |
268 | macro_object_like, | |
269 | macro_function_like | |
270 | }; | |
271 | ||
abc9d0dc TT |
272 | /* Different kinds of special macros. */ |
273 | ||
274 | enum macro_special_kind | |
275 | { | |
276 | /* Ordinary. */ | |
277 | macro_ordinary, | |
278 | /* The special macro __FILE__. */ | |
279 | macro_FILE, | |
280 | /* The special macro __LINE__. */ | |
281 | macro_LINE | |
282 | }; | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
283 | |
284 | /* A preprocessor symbol definition. */ | |
285 | struct macro_definition | |
286 | { | |
287 | /* The table this definition lives in. */ | |
288 | struct macro_table *table; | |
289 | ||
290 | /* What kind of macro it is. */ | |
2e668a5d | 291 | ENUM_BITFIELD (macro_kind) kind : 1; |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
292 | |
293 | /* If `kind' is `macro_function_like', the number of arguments it | |
294 | takes, and their names. The names, and the array of pointers to | |
abc9d0dc TT |
295 | them, are in the table's bcache, if it has one. If `kind' is |
296 | `macro_object_like', then this is actually a `macro_special_kind' | |
297 | describing the macro. */ | |
298 | int argc : 30; | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
299 | const char * const *argv; |
300 | ||
abc9d0dc TT |
301 | /* The replacement string (body) of the macro. For ordinary macros, |
302 | this is in the table's bcache, if it has one. For special macros | |
303 | like __FILE__, this value is only valid until the next use of any | |
304 | special macro definition; that is, it is reset each time any | |
305 | special macro is looked up or iterated over. */ | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
306 | const char *replacement; |
307 | }; | |
308 | ||
309 | ||
310 | /* Return a pointer to the macro definition for NAME in scope at line | |
311 | number LINE of SOURCE. If LINE is -1, return the definition in | |
312 | effect at the end of the file. The macro table owns the structure; | |
313 | the caller need not free it. Return zero if NAME is not #defined | |
314 | at that point. */ | |
315 | struct macro_definition *(macro_lookup_definition | |
316 | (struct macro_source_file *source, | |
317 | int line, const char *name)); | |
318 | ||
319 | ||
320 | /* Return the source location of the definition for NAME in scope at | |
321 | line number LINE of SOURCE. Set *DEFINITION_LINE to the line | |
322 | number of the definition, and return a source file structure for | |
323 | the file. Return zero if NAME has no definition in scope at that | |
324 | point, and leave *DEFINITION_LINE unchanged. */ | |
325 | struct macro_source_file *(macro_definition_location | |
326 | (struct macro_source_file *source, | |
327 | int line, | |
328 | const char *name, | |
329 | int *definition_line)); | |
330 | ||
d7d9f01e | 331 | /* Callback function when walking a macro table. NAME is the name of |
9b158ba0 | 332 | the macro, and DEFINITION is the definition. SOURCE is the file at the |
333 | start of the include path, and LINE is the line number of the SOURCE file | |
334 | where the macro was defined. USER_DATA is an arbitrary pointer which is | |
335 | passed by the caller to macro_for_each or macro_for_each_in_scope. */ | |
d7d9f01e | 336 | typedef void (*macro_callback_fn) (const char *name, |
9a044a89 | 337 | const struct macro_definition *definition, |
9b158ba0 | 338 | struct macro_source_file *source, |
339 | int line, | |
9a044a89 TT |
340 | void *user_data); |
341 | ||
342 | /* Call the function FN for each macro in the macro table TABLE. | |
343 | USER_DATA is passed, untranslated, to FN. */ | |
344 | void macro_for_each (struct macro_table *table, macro_callback_fn fn, | |
345 | void *user_data); | |
346 | ||
347 | /* Call the function FN for each macro that is visible in a given | |
348 | scope. The scope is represented by FILE and LINE. USER_DATA is | |
349 | passed, untranslated, to FN. */ | |
350 | void macro_for_each_in_scope (struct macro_source_file *file, int line, | |
351 | macro_callback_fn fn, | |
352 | void *user_data); | |
d7d9f01e | 353 | |
233d95b5 JK |
354 | /* Return FILE->filename with possibly prepended compilation directory name. |
355 | This is raw concatenation without the "set substitute-path" and gdb_realpath | |
356 | applications done by symtab_to_fullname. Returned string must be freed by | |
357 | xfree. | |
358 | ||
359 | THis function ignores the "set filename-display" setting. Its default | |
360 | setting is "relative" which is backward compatible but the former behavior | |
361 | of macro filenames printing was "absolute". */ | |
362 | extern char *macro_source_fullname (struct macro_source_file *file); | |
ec2bcbe7 JB |
363 | |
364 | #endif /* MACROTAB_H */ |