darling-gdb/bfd/TODO
John Gilmore 6dadbcb63c Some of these things are already done. More are probably done,
but I am not sure.  Check w/Steve.
1991-07-31 08:30:37 +00:00

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Things that still need to be handled: -*- Text -*-
o - change the memory usage to reflect the message which follows the
page break.
o - implement bfd_abort, which should close the bfd but not alter the
filesystem.
o - update the bfd doc; write a how-to-write-a-backend doc.
o - change reloc handling as per Steve's suggestion.
(more details please.....)
Changing the way bfd uses memory. The new convention is simple:
o - bfd will never write into user-supplied memory, nor attempt to
free it.
o - closing a bfd may reclaim all bfd-allocated memory associated
with that bfd.
- - bfd_target_list will be the one exception; you must reclaim the
returned vector yourself.
Interface implications are minor (get_symcount_upper_bound will go
away; bfd_cannicalize_symtab will allocate its own memory, etc).
Certain operations consume a lot of memory; for them manual
reclaimation is available:
o - bfd_canonicalize_symtab will return a pointer to a
null-terminated vector of symbols. Subsequent calls may or may
not return the same pointer.
bfd_canonicalize_relocs will do the same; returning a pointer to
an array of arelocs. Calling this function will read symbols in
too.
o - bfd_reclaim_relocs will free the memory used by these relocs.
the symbols will be untouched.
bfd_reclaim_symtab (ne bfd_reclaim_symbol_table) will free the
memory allocated by canonialize_symtab.
Since relocations point to symbols, any relocations obtained by a
call to bfd_canonicalize_relocs will be reclaimed as well.
o - if you don't call the reclaim_ functions, the memory will be
reclaimed at bfd_close time.