1@section Archives 2 3 4@strong{Description}@* 5An archive (or library) is just another BFD. It has a symbol 6table, although there's not much a user program will do with it. 7 8The big difference between an archive BFD and an ordinary BFD 9is that the archive doesn't have sections. Instead it has a 10chain of BFDs that are considered its contents. These BFDs can 11be manipulated like any other. The BFDs contained in an 12archive opened for reading will all be opened for reading. You 13may put either input or output BFDs into an archive opened for 14output; they will be handled correctly when the archive is closed. 15 16Use @code{bfd_openr_next_archived_file} to step through 17the contents of an archive opened for input. You don't 18have to read the entire archive if you don't want 19to! Read it until you find what you want. 20 21Archive contents of output BFDs are chained through the 22@code{next} pointer in a BFD. The first one is findable through 23the @code{archive_head} slot of the archive. Set it with 24@code{bfd_set_archive_head} (q.v.). A given BFD may be in only one 25open output archive at a time. 26 27As expected, the BFD archive code is more general than the 28archive code of any given environment. BFD archives may 29contain files of different formats (e.g., a.out and coff) and 30even different architectures. You may even place archives 31recursively into archives! 32 33This can cause unexpected confusion, since some archive 34formats are more expressive than others. For instance, Intel 35COFF archives can preserve long filenames; SunOS a.out archives 36cannot. If you move a file from the first to the second 37format and back again, the filename may be truncated. 38Likewise, different a.out environments have different 39conventions as to how they truncate filenames, whether they 40preserve directory names in filenames, etc. When 41interoperating with native tools, be sure your files are 42homogeneous. 43 44Beware: most of these formats do not react well to the 45presence of spaces in filenames. We do the best we can, but 46can't always handle this case due to restrictions in the format of 47archives. Many Unix utilities are braindead in regards to 48spaces and such in filenames anyway, so this shouldn't be much 49of a restriction. 50 51Archives are supported in BFD in @code{archive.c}. 52 53@findex bfd_get_next_mapent 54@subsubsection @code{bfd_get_next_mapent} 55@strong{Synopsis} 56@example 57symindex bfd_get_next_mapent 58 (bfd *abfd, symindex previous, carsym **sym); 59@end example 60@strong{Description}@* 61Step through archive @var{abfd}'s symbol table (if it 62has one). Successively update @var{sym} with the next symbol's 63information, returning that symbol's (internal) index into the 64symbol table. 65 66Supply @code{BFD_NO_MORE_SYMBOLS} as the @var{previous} entry to get 67the first one; returns @code{BFD_NO_MORE_SYMBOLS} when you've already 68got the last one. 69 70A @code{carsym} is a canonical archive symbol. The only 71user-visible element is its name, a null-terminated string. 72 73@findex bfd_set_archive_head 74@subsubsection @code{bfd_set_archive_head} 75@strong{Synopsis} 76@example 77bfd_boolean bfd_set_archive_head (bfd *output, bfd *new_head); 78@end example 79@strong{Description}@* 80Set the head of the chain of 81BFDs contained in the archive @var{output} to @var{new_head}. 82 83@findex bfd_openr_next_archived_file 84@subsubsection @code{bfd_openr_next_archived_file} 85@strong{Synopsis} 86@example 87bfd *bfd_openr_next_archived_file (bfd *archive, bfd *previous); 88@end example 89@strong{Description}@* 90Provided a BFD, @var{archive}, containing an archive and NULL, open 91an input BFD on the first contained element and returns that. 92Subsequent calls should pass 93the archive and the previous return value to return a created 94BFD to the next contained element. NULL is returned when there 95are no more. 96 97