/* Internal type definitions for GDB.
- Copyright 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002
- Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+ Copyright 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000,
+ 2001, 2002, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
Contributed by Cygnus Support, using pieces from other GDB modules.
This file is part of GDB.
#define GDBTYPES_H 1
/* Forward declarations for prototypes. */
+struct field;
struct block;
/* Codes for `fundamental types'. This is a monstrosity based on the
/* Name of this type, or NULL if none.
This is used for printing only, except by poorly designed C++ code.
- For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the VAR_NAMESPACE. */
+ For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the VAR_DOMAIN. */
char *name;
with this feature.
This is used for printing only, except by poorly designed C++ code.
- For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the STRUCT_NAMESPACE.
+ For looking up a name, look for a symbol in the STRUCT_DOMAIN.
One more legitimate use is that if TYPE_FLAG_STUB is set, this is
the name to use to look for definitions in other files. */
char *tag_name;
- /* Length of storage for a value of this type. This is what
- sizeof(type) would return; use it for address arithmetic,
- memory reads and writes, etc. This size includes padding. For
- example, an i386 extended-precision floating point value really
- only occupies ten bytes, but most ABI's declare its size to be
- 12 bytes, to preserve alignment. A `struct type' representing
- such a floating-point type would have a `length' value of 12,
- even though the last two bytes are unused.
-
- There's a bit of a host/target mess here, if you're concerned
- about machines whose bytes aren't eight bits long, or who don't
- have byte-addressed memory. Various places pass this to memcpy
- and such, meaning it must be in units of host bytes. Various
- other places expect they can calculate addresses by adding it
- and such, meaning it must be in units of target bytes. For
- some DSP targets, in which HOST_CHAR_BIT will (presumably) be 8
- and TARGET_CHAR_BIT will be (say) 32, this is a problem.
-
- One fix would be to make this field in bits (requiring that it
- always be a multiple of HOST_CHAR_BIT and TARGET_CHAR_BIT) ---
- the other choice would be to make it consistently in units of
- HOST_CHAR_BIT. However, this would still fail to address
- machines based on a ternary or decimal representation. */
-
- unsigned length;
-
/* FIXME, these should probably be restricted to a Fortran-specific
field in some fashion. */
#define BOUND_CANNOT_BE_DETERMINED 5
struct type *reference_type;
/* Variant chain. This points to a type that differs from this one only
- in qualifiers. Currently, the possible qualifiers are const, volatile,
- code-space, and data-space. The variants are linked in a circular
- ring and share MAIN_TYPE. */
+ in qualifiers and length. Currently, the possible qualifiers are
+ const, volatile, code-space, data-space, and address class. The
+ length may differ only when one of the address class flags are set.
+ The variants are linked in a circular ring and share MAIN_TYPE. */
struct type *chain;
/* Flags specific to this instance of the type, indicating where
on the ring we are. */
int instance_flags;
+ /* Length of storage for a value of this type. This is what
+ sizeof(type) would return; use it for address arithmetic,
+ memory reads and writes, etc. This size includes padding. For
+ example, an i386 extended-precision floating point value really
+ only occupies ten bytes, but most ABI's declare its size to be
+ 12 bytes, to preserve alignment. A `struct type' representing
+ such a floating-point type would have a `length' value of 12,
+ even though the last two bytes are unused.
+
+ There's a bit of a host/target mess here, if you're concerned
+ about machines whose bytes aren't eight bits long, or who don't
+ have byte-addressed memory. Various places pass this to memcpy
+ and such, meaning it must be in units of host bytes. Various
+ other places expect they can calculate addresses by adding it
+ and such, meaning it must be in units of target bytes. For
+ some DSP targets, in which HOST_CHAR_BIT will (presumably) be 8
+ and TARGET_CHAR_BIT will be (say) 32, this is a problem.
+
+ One fix would be to make this field in bits (requiring that it
+ always be a multiple of HOST_CHAR_BIT and TARGET_CHAR_BIT) ---
+ the other choice would be to make it consistently in units of
+ HOST_CHAR_BIT. However, this would still fail to address
+ machines based on a ternary or decimal representation. */
+
+ unsigned length;
+
/* Core type, shared by a group of qualified types. */
struct main_type *main_type;
};
But check_typedef does set the TYPE_LENGTH of the TYPEDEF type,
so you only have to call check_typedef once. Since allocate_value
calls check_typedef, TYPE_LENGTH (VALUE_TYPE (X)) is safe. */
-#define TYPE_LENGTH(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->length
+#define TYPE_LENGTH(thistype) (thistype)->length
#define TYPE_OBJFILE(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->objfile
#define TYPE_FLAGS(thistype) TYPE_MAIN_TYPE(thistype)->flags
/* Note that TYPE_CODE can be TYPE_CODE_TYPEDEF, so if you want the real
struct type *to_type, struct field *args,
int nargs, int varargs);
-extern void
-smash_to_member_type (struct type *, struct type *, struct type *);
+extern void smash_to_member_type (struct type *, struct type *, struct type *);
extern struct type *allocate_stub_method (struct type *);
#define TOO_FEW_PARAMS_BADNESS 100
/* Badness if no conversion among types */
#define INCOMPATIBLE_TYPE_BADNESS 100
-/* Badness of coercing large integer to smaller size */
-#define INTEGER_COERCION_BADNESS 100
-/* Badness of coercing large floating type to smaller size */
-#define FLOAT_COERCION_BADNESS 100
/* Badness of integral promotion */
#define INTEGER_PROMOTION_BADNESS 1
/* printcmd.c */
-extern void print_scalar_formatted (char *, struct type *, int, int,
+extern void print_scalar_formatted (void *, struct type *, int, int,
struct ui_file *);
extern int can_dereference (struct type *);