darling-gdb/include/elf/reloc-macros.h
2011-06-02 13:43:24 +00:00

130 lines
4.0 KiB
C

/* Generic relocation support for BFD.
Copyright 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2010, 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library.
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, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. */
/* These macros are used by the various *.h target specific header
files to either generate an enum containing all the known relocations
for that target, or if RELOC_MACROS_GEN_FUNC is defined, a recognition
function is generated instead. (This is used by binutils/readelf.c)
Given a header file like this:
START_RELOC_NUMBERS (foo)
RELOC_NUMBER (R_foo_NONE, 0)
RELOC_NUMBER (R_foo_32, 1)
EMPTY_RELOC (R_foo_good)
FAKE_RELOC (R_foo_illegal, 9)
END_RELOC_NUMBERS (R_foo_count)
Then the following will be produced by default (ie if
RELOC_MACROS_GEN_FUNC is *not* defined).
enum foo
{
R_foo_NONE = 0,
R_foo_32 = 1,
R_foo_good,
R_foo_illegal = 9,
R_foo_count
};
Note: The value of the symbol defined in the END_RELOC_NUMBERS
macro (R_foo_count in the case of the example above) will be
set to the value of the whichever *_RELOC macro precedes it plus
one. Therefore if you intend to use the symbol as a sentinel for
the highest valid macro value you should make sure that the
preceding *_RELOC macro is the highest valid number. ie a
declaration like this:
START_RELOC_NUMBERS (foo)
RELOC_NUMBER (R_foo_NONE, 0)
RELOC_NUMBER (R_foo_32, 1)
FAKE_RELOC (R_foo_illegal, 9)
FAKE_RELOC (R_foo_synonym, 0)
END_RELOC_NUMBERS (R_foo_count)
will result in R_foo_count having a value of 1 (R_foo_synonym + 1)
rather than 10 or 2 as might be expected.
Alternatively you can assign a value to END_RELOC_NUMBERS symbol
explicitly, like this:
START_RELOC_NUMBERS (foo)
RELOC_NUMBER (R_foo_NONE, 0)
RELOC_NUMBER (R_foo_32, 1)
FAKE_RELOC (R_foo_illegal, 9)
FAKE_RELOC (R_foo_synonym, 0)
END_RELOC_NUMBERS (R_foo_count = 2)
If RELOC_MACROS_GEN_FUNC *is* defined, then instead the
following function will be generated:
static const char *foo (unsigned long rtype);
static const char *
foo (unsigned long rtype)
{
switch (rtype)
{
case 0: return "R_foo_NONE";
case 1: return "R_foo_32";
default: return NULL;
}
}
*/
#ifndef _RELOC_MACROS_H
#define _RELOC_MACROS_H
#ifdef RELOC_MACROS_GEN_FUNC
/* This function takes the relocation number and returns the
string version name of the name of that relocation. If
the relocation is not recognised, NULL is returned. */
#define START_RELOC_NUMBERS(name) \
static const char *name (unsigned long rtype); \
static const char * \
name (unsigned long rtype) \
{ \
switch (rtype) \
{
#define RELOC_NUMBER(name, number) \
case number: return #name;
#define FAKE_RELOC(name, number)
#define EMPTY_RELOC(name)
#define END_RELOC_NUMBERS(name) \
default: return NULL; \
} \
}
#else /* Default to generating enum. */
#define START_RELOC_NUMBERS(name) enum name {
#define RELOC_NUMBER(name, number) name = number,
#define FAKE_RELOC(name, number) name = number,
#define EMPTY_RELOC(name) name,
#define END_RELOC_NUMBERS(name) name };
#endif
#endif /* _RELOC_MACROS_H */