[444] | 1 | /* `a.out' object-file definitions, including extensions to 64-bit fields |
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| 2 | |
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| 3 | Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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| 4 | |
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| 5 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
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| 6 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
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| 7 | the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or |
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| 8 | (at your option) any later version. |
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| 9 | |
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| 10 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
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| 11 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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| 12 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
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| 13 | GNU General Public License for more details. |
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| 14 | |
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| 15 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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| 16 | along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software |
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| 17 | Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, |
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| 18 | MA 02110-1301, USA. */ |
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| 19 | |
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| 20 | #ifndef __A_OUT_64_H__ |
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| 21 | #define __A_OUT_64_H__ |
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| 22 | |
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| 23 | #ifndef BYTES_IN_WORD |
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| 24 | #define BYTES_IN_WORD 4 |
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| 25 | #endif |
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| 26 | |
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| 27 | /* This is the layout on disk of the 32-bit or 64-bit exec header. */ |
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| 28 | |
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| 29 | #ifndef external_exec |
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| 30 | struct external_exec |
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| 31 | { |
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| 32 | bfd_byte e_info[4]; /* Magic number and stuff. */ |
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| 33 | bfd_byte e_text[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of text section in bytes. */ |
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| 34 | bfd_byte e_data[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of data section in bytes. */ |
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| 35 | bfd_byte e_bss[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of bss area in bytes. */ |
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| 36 | bfd_byte e_syms[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of symbol table in bytes. */ |
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| 37 | bfd_byte e_entry[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Start address. */ |
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| 38 | bfd_byte e_trsize[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of text relocation info. */ |
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| 39 | bfd_byte e_drsize[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of data relocation info. */ |
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| 40 | }; |
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| 41 | |
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| 42 | #define EXEC_BYTES_SIZE (4 + BYTES_IN_WORD * 7) |
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| 43 | |
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| 44 | /* Magic numbers for a.out files. */ |
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| 45 | |
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| 46 | #if ARCH_SIZE==64 |
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| 47 | #define OMAGIC 0x1001 /* Code indicating object file. */ |
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| 48 | #define ZMAGIC 0x1002 /* Code indicating demand-paged executable. */ |
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| 49 | #define NMAGIC 0x1003 /* Code indicating pure executable. */ |
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| 50 | |
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| 51 | /* There is no 64-bit QMAGIC as far as I know. */ |
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| 52 | |
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| 53 | #define N_BADMAG(x) (N_MAGIC(x) != OMAGIC \ |
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| 54 | && N_MAGIC(x) != NMAGIC \ |
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| 55 | && N_MAGIC(x) != ZMAGIC) |
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| 56 | #else |
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| 57 | #define OMAGIC 0407 /* Object file or impure executable. */ |
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| 58 | #define NMAGIC 0410 /* Code indicating pure executable. */ |
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| 59 | #define ZMAGIC 0413 /* Code indicating demand-paged executable. */ |
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| 60 | #define BMAGIC 0415 /* Used by a b.out object. */ |
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| 61 | |
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| 62 | /* This indicates a demand-paged executable with the header in the text. |
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| 63 | It is used by 386BSD (and variants) and Linux, at least. */ |
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| 64 | #ifndef QMAGIC |
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| 65 | #define QMAGIC 0314 |
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| 66 | #endif |
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| 67 | # ifndef N_BADMAG |
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| 68 | # define N_BADMAG(x) (N_MAGIC(x) != OMAGIC \ |
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| 69 | && N_MAGIC(x) != NMAGIC \ |
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| 70 | && N_MAGIC(x) != ZMAGIC \ |
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| 71 | && N_MAGIC(x) != QMAGIC) |
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| 72 | # endif /* N_BADMAG */ |
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| 73 | #endif |
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| 74 | |
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| 75 | #endif |
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| 76 | |
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| 77 | #ifdef QMAGIC |
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| 78 | #define N_IS_QMAGIC(x) (N_MAGIC (x) == QMAGIC) |
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| 79 | #else |
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| 80 | #define N_IS_QMAGIC(x) (0) |
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| 81 | #endif |
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| 82 | |
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| 83 | /* The difference between TARGET_PAGE_SIZE and N_SEGSIZE is that TARGET_PAGE_SIZE is |
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| 84 | the finest granularity at which you can page something, thus it |
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| 85 | controls the padding (if any) before the text segment of a ZMAGIC |
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| 86 | file. N_SEGSIZE is the resolution at which things can be marked as |
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| 87 | read-only versus read/write, so it controls the padding between the |
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| 88 | text segment and the data segment (in memory; on disk the padding |
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| 89 | between them is TARGET_PAGE_SIZE). TARGET_PAGE_SIZE and N_SEGSIZE are the same |
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| 90 | for most machines, but different for sun3. */ |
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| 91 | |
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| 92 | /* By default, segment size is constant. But some machines override this |
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| 93 | to be a function of the a.out header (e.g. machine type). */ |
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| 94 | |
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| 95 | #ifndef N_SEGSIZE |
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| 96 | #define N_SEGSIZE(x) SEGMENT_SIZE |
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| 97 | #endif |
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| 98 | |
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| 99 | /* Virtual memory address of the text section. |
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| 100 | This is getting very complicated. A good reason to discard a.out format |
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| 101 | for something that specifies these fields explicitly. But til then... |
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| 102 | |
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| 103 | * OMAGIC and NMAGIC files: |
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| 104 | (object files: text for "relocatable addr 0" right after the header) |
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| 105 | start at 0, offset is EXEC_BYTES_SIZE, size as stated. |
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| 106 | * The text address, offset, and size of ZMAGIC files depend |
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| 107 | on the entry point of the file: |
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| 108 | * entry point below TEXT_START_ADDR: |
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| 109 | (hack for SunOS shared libraries) |
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| 110 | start at 0, offset is 0, size as stated. |
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| 111 | * If N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) is true (which defaults to being the |
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| 112 | case when the entry point is EXEC_BYTES_SIZE or further into a page): |
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| 113 | no padding is needed; text can start after exec header. Sun |
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| 114 | considers the text segment of such files to include the exec header; |
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| 115 | for BFD's purposes, we don't, which makes more work for us. |
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| 116 | start at TEXT_START_ADDR + EXEC_BYTES_SIZE, offset is EXEC_BYTES_SIZE, |
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| 117 | size as stated minus EXEC_BYTES_SIZE. |
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| 118 | * If N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) is false (which defaults to being the case when |
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| 119 | the entry point is less than EXEC_BYTES_SIZE into a page (e.g. page |
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| 120 | aligned)): (padding is needed so that text can start at a page boundary) |
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| 121 | start at TEXT_START_ADDR, offset TARGET_PAGE_SIZE, size as stated. |
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| 122 | |
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| 123 | Specific configurations may want to hardwire N_HEADER_IN_TEXT, |
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| 124 | for efficiency or to allow people to play games with the entry point. |
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| 125 | In that case, you would #define N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) as 1 for sunos, |
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| 126 | and as 0 for most other hosts (Sony News, Vax Ultrix, etc). |
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| 127 | (Do this in the appropriate bfd target file.) |
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| 128 | (The default is a heuristic that will break if people try changing |
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| 129 | the entry point, perhaps with the ld -e flag.) |
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| 130 | |
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| 131 | * QMAGIC is always like a ZMAGIC for which N_HEADER_IN_TEXT is true, |
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| 132 | and for which the starting address is TARGET_PAGE_SIZE (or should this be |
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| 133 | SEGMENT_SIZE?) (TEXT_START_ADDR only applies to ZMAGIC, not to QMAGIC). */ |
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| 134 | |
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| 135 | /* This macro is only relevant for ZMAGIC files; QMAGIC always has the header |
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| 136 | in the text. */ |
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| 137 | #ifndef N_HEADER_IN_TEXT |
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| 138 | #define N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) \ |
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| 139 | (((x).a_entry & (TARGET_PAGE_SIZE-1)) >= EXEC_BYTES_SIZE) |
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| 140 | #endif |
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| 141 | |
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| 142 | /* Sun shared libraries, not linux. This macro is only relevant for ZMAGIC |
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| 143 | files. */ |
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| 144 | #ifndef N_SHARED_LIB |
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| 145 | #define N_SHARED_LIB(x) (0) |
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| 146 | #endif |
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| 147 | |
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| 148 | /* Returning 0 not TEXT_START_ADDR for OMAGIC and NMAGIC is based on |
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| 149 | the assumption that we are dealing with a .o file, not an |
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| 150 | executable. This is necessary for OMAGIC (but means we don't work |
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| 151 | right on the output from ld -N); more questionable for NMAGIC. */ |
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| 152 | |
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| 153 | #ifndef N_TXTADDR |
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| 154 | #define N_TXTADDR(x) \ |
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| 155 | (/* The address of a QMAGIC file is always one page in, \ |
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| 156 | with the header in the text. */ \ |
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| 157 | N_IS_QMAGIC (x) \ |
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| 158 | ? (bfd_vma) TARGET_PAGE_SIZE + EXEC_BYTES_SIZE \ |
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| 159 | : (N_MAGIC (x) != ZMAGIC \ |
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| 160 | ? (bfd_vma) 0 /* Object file or NMAGIC. */ \ |
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| 161 | : (N_SHARED_LIB (x) \ |
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| 162 | ? (bfd_vma) 0 \ |
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| 163 | : (N_HEADER_IN_TEXT (x) \ |
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| 164 | ? (bfd_vma) TEXT_START_ADDR + EXEC_BYTES_SIZE \ |
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| 165 | : (bfd_vma) TEXT_START_ADDR)))) |
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| 166 | #endif |
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| 167 | |
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| 168 | /* If N_HEADER_IN_TEXT is not true for ZMAGIC, there is some padding |
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| 169 | to make the text segment start at a certain boundary. For most |
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| 170 | systems, this boundary is TARGET_PAGE_SIZE. But for Linux, in the |
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| 171 | time-honored tradition of crazy ZMAGIC hacks, it is 1024 which is |
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| 172 | not what TARGET_PAGE_SIZE needs to be for QMAGIC. */ |
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| 173 | |
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| 174 | #ifndef ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE |
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| 175 | #define ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE TARGET_PAGE_SIZE |
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| 176 | #endif |
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| 177 | |
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| 178 | #define N_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE(x) \ |
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| 179 | (N_MAGIC(x) == ZMAGIC ? ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE : TARGET_PAGE_SIZE) |
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| 180 | |
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| 181 | /* Offset in an a.out of the start of the text section. */ |
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| 182 | #ifndef N_TXTOFF |
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| 183 | #define N_TXTOFF(x) \ |
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| 184 | (/* For {O,N,Q}MAGIC, no padding. */ \ |
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| 185 | N_MAGIC (x) != ZMAGIC \ |
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| 186 | ? EXEC_BYTES_SIZE \ |
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| 187 | : (N_SHARED_LIB (x) \ |
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| 188 | ? 0 \ |
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| 189 | : (N_HEADER_IN_TEXT (x) \ |
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| 190 | ? EXEC_BYTES_SIZE /* No padding. */ \ |
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| 191 | : ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE /* A page of padding. */))) |
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| 192 | #endif |
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| 193 | /* Size of the text section. It's always as stated, except that we |
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| 194 | offset it to `undo' the adjustment to N_TXTADDR and N_TXTOFF |
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| 195 | for ZMAGIC files that nominally include the exec header |
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| 196 | as part of the first page of text. (BFD doesn't consider the |
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| 197 | exec header to be part of the text segment.) */ |
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| 198 | #ifndef N_TXTSIZE |
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| 199 | #define N_TXTSIZE(x) \ |
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| 200 | (/* For QMAGIC, we don't consider the header part of the text section. */\ |
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| 201 | N_IS_QMAGIC (x) \ |
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| 202 | ? (x).a_text - EXEC_BYTES_SIZE \ |
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| 203 | : ((N_MAGIC (x) != ZMAGIC || N_SHARED_LIB (x)) \ |
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| 204 | ? (x).a_text \ |
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| 205 | : (N_HEADER_IN_TEXT (x) \ |
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| 206 | ? (x).a_text - EXEC_BYTES_SIZE /* No padding. */ \ |
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| 207 | : (x).a_text /* A page of padding. */ ))) |
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| 208 | #endif |
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| 209 | /* The address of the data segment in virtual memory. |
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| 210 | It is the text segment address, plus text segment size, rounded |
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| 211 | up to a N_SEGSIZE boundary for pure or pageable files. */ |
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| 212 | #ifndef N_DATADDR |
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| 213 | #define N_DATADDR(x) \ |
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| 214 | (N_MAGIC (x) == OMAGIC \ |
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| 215 | ? (N_TXTADDR (x) + N_TXTSIZE (x)) \ |
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| 216 | : (N_SEGSIZE (x) + ((N_TXTADDR (x) + N_TXTSIZE (x) - 1) \ |
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| 217 | & ~ (bfd_vma) (N_SEGSIZE (x) - 1)))) |
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| 218 | #endif |
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| 219 | /* The address of the BSS segment -- immediately after the data segment. */ |
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| 220 | |
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| 221 | #define N_BSSADDR(x) (N_DATADDR (x) + (x).a_data) |
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| 222 | |
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| 223 | /* Offsets of the various portions of the file after the text segment. */ |
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| 224 | |
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| 225 | /* For {Q,Z}MAGIC, there is padding to make the data segment start on |
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| 226 | a page boundary. Most of the time the a_text field (and thus |
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| 227 | N_TXTSIZE) already contains this padding. It is possible that for |
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| 228 | BSDI and/or 386BSD it sometimes doesn't contain the padding, and |
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| 229 | perhaps we should be adding it here. But this seems kind of |
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| 230 | questionable and probably should be BSDI/386BSD-specific if we do |
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| 231 | do it. |
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| 232 | |
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| 233 | For NMAGIC (at least for hp300 BSD, probably others), there is |
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| 234 | padding in memory only, not on disk, so we must *not* ever pad here |
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| 235 | for NMAGIC. */ |
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| 236 | |
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| 237 | #ifndef N_DATOFF |
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| 238 | #define N_DATOFF(x) (N_TXTOFF (x) + N_TXTSIZE (x)) |
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| 239 | #endif |
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| 240 | #ifndef N_TRELOFF |
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| 241 | #define N_TRELOFF(x) (N_DATOFF (x) + (x).a_data) |
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| 242 | #endif |
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| 243 | #ifndef N_DRELOFF |
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| 244 | #define N_DRELOFF(x) (N_TRELOFF (x) + (x).a_trsize) |
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| 245 | #endif |
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| 246 | #ifndef N_SYMOFF |
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| 247 | #define N_SYMOFF(x) (N_DRELOFF (x) + (x).a_drsize) |
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| 248 | #endif |
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| 249 | #ifndef N_STROFF |
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| 250 | #define N_STROFF(x) (N_SYMOFF (x) + (x).a_syms) |
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| 251 | #endif |
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| 252 | |
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| 253 | /* Symbols */ |
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| 254 | #ifndef external_nlist |
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| 255 | struct external_nlist |
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| 256 | { |
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| 257 | bfd_byte e_strx[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Index into string table of name. */ |
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| 258 | bfd_byte e_type[1]; /* Type of symbol. */ |
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| 259 | bfd_byte e_other[1]; /* Misc info (usually empty). */ |
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| 260 | bfd_byte e_desc[2]; /* Description field. */ |
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| 261 | bfd_byte e_value[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Value of symbol. */ |
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| 262 | }; |
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| 263 | #define EXTERNAL_NLIST_SIZE (BYTES_IN_WORD+4+BYTES_IN_WORD) |
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| 264 | #endif |
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| 265 | |
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| 266 | struct internal_nlist |
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| 267 | { |
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| 268 | unsigned long n_strx; /* Index into string table of name. */ |
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| 269 | unsigned char n_type; /* Type of symbol. */ |
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| 270 | unsigned char n_other; /* Misc info (usually empty). */ |
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| 271 | unsigned short n_desc; /* Description field. */ |
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| 272 | bfd_vma n_value; /* Value of symbol. */ |
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| 273 | }; |
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| 274 | |
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| 275 | /* The n_type field is the symbol type, containing: */ |
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| 276 | |
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| 277 | #define N_UNDF 0 /* Undefined symbol. */ |
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| 278 | #define N_ABS 2 /* Absolute symbol -- defined at particular addr. */ |
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| 279 | #define N_TEXT 4 /* Text sym -- defined at offset in text seg. */ |
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| 280 | #define N_DATA 6 /* Data sym -- defined at offset in data seg. */ |
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| 281 | #define N_BSS 8 /* BSS sym -- defined at offset in zero'd seg. */ |
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| 282 | #define N_COMM 0x12 /* Common symbol (visible after shared lib dynlink). */ |
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| 283 | #define N_FN 0x1f /* File name of .o file. */ |
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| 284 | #define N_FN_SEQ 0x0C /* N_FN from Sequent compilers (sigh). */ |
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| 285 | /* Note: N_EXT can only be usefully OR-ed with N_UNDF, N_ABS, N_TEXT, |
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| 286 | N_DATA, or N_BSS. When the low-order bit of other types is set, |
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| 287 | (e.g. N_WARNING versus N_FN), they are two different types. */ |
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| 288 | #define N_EXT 1 /* External symbol (as opposed to local-to-this-file). */ |
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| 289 | #define N_TYPE 0x1e |
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| 290 | #define N_STAB 0xe0 /* If any of these bits are on, it's a debug symbol. */ |
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| 291 | |
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| 292 | #define N_INDR 0x0a |
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| 293 | |
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| 294 | /* The following symbols refer to set elements. |
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| 295 | All the N_SET[ATDB] symbols with the same name form one set. |
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| 296 | Space is allocated for the set in the text section, and each set |
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| 297 | elements value is stored into one word of the space. |
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| 298 | The first word of the space is the length of the set (number of elements). |
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| 299 | |
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| 300 | The address of the set is made into an N_SETV symbol |
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| 301 | whose name is the same as the name of the set. |
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| 302 | This symbol acts like a N_DATA global symbol |
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| 303 | in that it can satisfy undefined external references. */ |
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| 304 | |
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| 305 | /* These appear as input to LD, in a .o file. */ |
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| 306 | #define N_SETA 0x14 /* Absolute set element symbol. */ |
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| 307 | #define N_SETT 0x16 /* Text set element symbol. */ |
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| 308 | #define N_SETD 0x18 /* Data set element symbol. */ |
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| 309 | #define N_SETB 0x1A /* Bss set element symbol. */ |
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| 310 | |
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| 311 | /* This is output from LD. */ |
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| 312 | #define N_SETV 0x1C /* Pointer to set vector in data area. */ |
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| 313 | |
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| 314 | /* Warning symbol. The text gives a warning message, the next symbol |
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| 315 | in the table will be undefined. When the symbol is referenced, the |
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| 316 | message is printed. */ |
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| 317 | |
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| 318 | #define N_WARNING 0x1e |
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| 319 | |
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| 320 | /* Weak symbols. These are a GNU extension to the a.out format. The |
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| 321 | semantics are those of ELF weak symbols. Weak symbols are always |
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| 322 | externally visible. The N_WEAK? values are squeezed into the |
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| 323 | available slots. The value of a N_WEAKU symbol is 0. The values |
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| 324 | of the other types are the definitions. */ |
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| 325 | #define N_WEAKU 0x0d /* Weak undefined symbol. */ |
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| 326 | #define N_WEAKA 0x0e /* Weak absolute symbol. */ |
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| 327 | #define N_WEAKT 0x0f /* Weak text symbol. */ |
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| 328 | #define N_WEAKD 0x10 /* Weak data symbol. */ |
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| 329 | #define N_WEAKB 0x11 /* Weak bss symbol. */ |
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| 330 | |
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| 331 | /* Relocations |
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| 332 | |
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| 333 | There are two types of relocation flavours for a.out systems, |
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| 334 | standard and extended. The standard form is used on systems where the |
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| 335 | instruction has room for all the bits of an offset to the operand, whilst |
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| 336 | the extended form is used when an address operand has to be split over n |
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| 337 | instructions. Eg, on the 68k, each move instruction can reference |
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| 338 | the target with a displacement of 16 or 32 bits. On the sparc, move |
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| 339 | instructions use an offset of 14 bits, so the offset is stored in |
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| 340 | the reloc field, and the data in the section is ignored. */ |
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| 341 | |
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| 342 | /* This structure describes a single relocation to be performed. |
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| 343 | The text-relocation section of the file is a vector of these structures, |
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| 344 | all of which apply to the text section. |
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| 345 | Likewise, the data-relocation section applies to the data section. */ |
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| 346 | |
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| 347 | struct reloc_std_external |
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| 348 | { |
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| 349 | bfd_byte r_address[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Offset of of data to relocate. */ |
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| 350 | bfd_byte r_index[3]; /* Symbol table index of symbol. */ |
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| 351 | bfd_byte r_type[1]; /* Relocation type. */ |
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| 352 | }; |
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| 353 | |
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| 354 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_PCREL_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x80) |
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| 355 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_PCREL_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x01) |
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| 356 | |
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| 357 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x60) |
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| 358 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_SH_BIG 5 |
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| 359 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x06) |
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| 360 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_SH_LITTLE 1 |
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| 361 | |
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| 362 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_EXTERN_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x10) |
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| 363 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_EXTERN_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x08) |
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| 364 | |
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| 365 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_BASEREL_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x08) |
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| 366 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_BASEREL_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x10) |
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| 367 | |
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| 368 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_JMPTABLE_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x04) |
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| 369 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_JMPTABLE_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x20) |
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| 370 | |
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| 371 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_RELATIVE_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x02) |
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| 372 | #define RELOC_STD_BITS_RELATIVE_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x40) |
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| 373 | |
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| 374 | #define RELOC_STD_SIZE (BYTES_IN_WORD + 3 + 1) /* Bytes per relocation entry. */ |
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| 375 | |
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| 376 | struct reloc_std_internal |
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| 377 | { |
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| 378 | bfd_vma r_address; /* Address (within segment) to be relocated. */ |
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| 379 | /* The meaning of r_symbolnum depends on r_extern. */ |
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| 380 | unsigned int r_symbolnum:24; |
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| 381 | /* Nonzero means value is a pc-relative offset |
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| 382 | and it should be relocated for changes in its own address |
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| 383 | as well as for changes in the symbol or section specified. */ |
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| 384 | unsigned int r_pcrel:1; |
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| 385 | /* Length (as exponent of 2) of the field to be relocated. |
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| 386 | Thus, a value of 2 indicates 1<<2 bytes. */ |
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| 387 | unsigned int r_length:2; |
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| 388 | /* 1 => relocate with value of symbol. |
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| 389 | r_symbolnum is the index of the symbol |
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| 390 | in files the symbol table. |
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| 391 | 0 => relocate with the address of a segment. |
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| 392 | r_symbolnum is N_TEXT, N_DATA, N_BSS or N_ABS |
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| 393 | (the N_EXT bit may be set also, but signifies nothing). */ |
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| 394 | unsigned int r_extern:1; |
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| 395 | /* The next three bits are for SunOS shared libraries, and seem to |
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| 396 | be undocumented. */ |
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| 397 | unsigned int r_baserel:1; /* Linkage table relative. */ |
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| 398 | unsigned int r_jmptable:1; /* pc-relative to jump table. */ |
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| 399 | unsigned int r_relative:1; /* "relative relocation". */ |
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| 400 | /* unused */ |
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| 401 | unsigned int r_pad:1; /* Padding -- set to zero. */ |
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| 402 | }; |
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| 403 | |
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| 404 | |
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| 405 | /* EXTENDED RELOCS. */ |
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| 406 | |
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| 407 | struct reloc_ext_external |
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| 408 | { |
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| 409 | bfd_byte r_address[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Offset of of data to relocate. */ |
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| 410 | bfd_byte r_index[3]; /* Symbol table index of symbol. */ |
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| 411 | bfd_byte r_type[1]; /* Relocation type. */ |
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| 412 | bfd_byte r_addend[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Datum addend. */ |
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| 413 | }; |
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| 414 | |
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| 415 | #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_BIG |
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| 416 | #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x80) |
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| 417 | #endif |
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| 418 | |
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| 419 | #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_LITTLE |
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| 420 | #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0x01) |
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| 421 | #endif |
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| 422 | |
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| 423 | #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_BIG |
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| 424 | #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_BIG ((unsigned int) 0x1F) |
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| 425 | #endif |
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| 426 | |
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| 427 | #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_BIG |
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| 428 | #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_BIG 0 |
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| 429 | #endif |
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| 430 | |
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| 431 | #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_LITTLE |
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| 432 | #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_LITTLE ((unsigned int) 0xF8) |
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| 433 | #endif |
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| 434 | |
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| 435 | #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_LITTLE |
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| 436 | #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_LITTLE 3 |
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| 437 | #endif |
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| 438 | |
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| 439 | /* Bytes per relocation entry. */ |
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| 440 | #define RELOC_EXT_SIZE (BYTES_IN_WORD + 3 + 1 + BYTES_IN_WORD) |
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| 441 | |
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| 442 | enum reloc_type |
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| 443 | { |
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| 444 | /* Simple relocations. */ |
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| 445 | RELOC_8, /* data[0:7] = addend + sv */ |
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| 446 | RELOC_16, /* data[0:15] = addend + sv */ |
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| 447 | RELOC_32, /* data[0:31] = addend + sv */ |
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| 448 | /* PC-rel displacement. */ |
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| 449 | RELOC_DISP8, /* data[0:7] = addend - pc + sv */ |
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| 450 | RELOC_DISP16, /* data[0:15] = addend - pc + sv */ |
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| 451 | RELOC_DISP32, /* data[0:31] = addend - pc + sv */ |
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| 452 | /* Special. */ |
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| 453 | RELOC_WDISP30, /* data[0:29] = (addend + sv - pc)>>2 */ |
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| 454 | RELOC_WDISP22, /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv - pc)>>2 */ |
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| 455 | RELOC_HI22, /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv)>>10 */ |
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| 456 | RELOC_22, /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv) */ |
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| 457 | RELOC_13, /* data[0:12] = (addend + sv) */ |
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| 458 | RELOC_LO10, /* data[0:9] = (addend + sv) */ |
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| 459 | RELOC_SFA_BASE, |
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| 460 | RELOC_SFA_OFF13, |
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| 461 | /* P.I.C. (base-relative). */ |
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| 462 | RELOC_BASE10, /* Not sure - maybe we can do this the */ |
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| 463 | RELOC_BASE13, /* right way now */ |
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| 464 | RELOC_BASE22, |
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| 465 | /* For some sort of pc-rel P.I.C. (?) */ |
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| 466 | RELOC_PC10, |
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| 467 | RELOC_PC22, |
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| 468 | /* P.I.C. jump table. */ |
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| 469 | RELOC_JMP_TBL, |
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| 470 | /* Reputedly for shared libraries somehow. */ |
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| 471 | RELOC_SEGOFF16, |
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| 472 | RELOC_GLOB_DAT, |
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| 473 | RELOC_JMP_SLOT, |
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| 474 | RELOC_RELATIVE, |
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| 475 | |
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| 476 | RELOC_11, |
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| 477 | RELOC_WDISP2_14, |
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| 478 | RELOC_WDISP19, |
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| 479 | RELOC_HHI22, /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv) >> 42 */ |
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| 480 | RELOC_HLO10, /* data[0:9] = (addend + sv) >> 32 */ |
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| 481 | |
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| 482 | /* 29K relocation types. */ |
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| 483 | RELOC_JUMPTARG, |
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| 484 | RELOC_CONST, |
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| 485 | RELOC_CONSTH, |
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| 486 | |
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| 487 | /* All the new ones I can think of, for sparc v9. */ |
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| 488 | RELOC_64, /* data[0:63] = addend + sv */ |
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| 489 | RELOC_DISP64, /* data[0:63] = addend - pc + sv */ |
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| 490 | RELOC_WDISP21, /* data[0:20] = (addend + sv - pc)>>2 */ |
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| 491 | RELOC_DISP21, /* data[0:20] = addend - pc + sv */ |
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| 492 | RELOC_DISP14, /* data[0:13] = addend - pc + sv */ |
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| 493 | /* Q . |
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| 494 | What are the other ones, |
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| 495 | Since this is a clean slate, can we throw away the ones we dont |
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| 496 | understand ? Should we sort the values ? What about using a |
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| 497 | microcode format like the 68k ? */ |
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| 498 | NO_RELOC |
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| 499 | }; |
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| 500 | |
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| 501 | |
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| 502 | struct reloc_internal |
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| 503 | { |
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| 504 | bfd_vma r_address; /* Offset of of data to relocate. */ |
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| 505 | long r_index; /* Symbol table index of symbol. */ |
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| 506 | enum reloc_type r_type; /* Relocation type. */ |
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| 507 | bfd_vma r_addend; /* Datum addend. */ |
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| 508 | }; |
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| 509 | |
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| 510 | /* Q. |
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| 511 | Should the length of the string table be 4 bytes or 8 bytes ? |
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| 512 | |
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| 513 | Q. |
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| 514 | What about archive indexes ? */ |
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| 515 | |
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| 516 | #endif /* __A_OUT_64_H__ */ |
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