1\input texinfo 2@c Copyright 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 3@c 2001, 2002, 2003 4@c Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5@setfilename internals.info 6@node Top 7@top Assembler Internals 8@raisesections 9@cindex internals 10 11This chapter describes the internals of the assembler. It is incomplete, but 12it may help a bit. 13 14This chapter is not updated regularly, and it may be out of date. 15 16@menu 17* GAS versions:: GAS versions 18* Data types:: Data types 19* GAS processing:: What GAS does when it runs 20* Porting GAS:: Porting GAS 21* Relaxation:: Relaxation 22* Broken words:: Broken words 23* Internal functions:: Internal functions 24* Test suite:: Test suite 25@end menu 26 27@node GAS versions 28@section GAS versions 29 30GAS has acquired layers of code over time. The original GAS only supported the 31a.out object file format, with three sections. Support for multiple sections 32has been added in two different ways. 33 34The preferred approach is to use the version of GAS created when the symbol 35@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is defined. The other versions of GAS are documented for 36historical purposes, and to help anybody who has to debug code written for 37them. 38 39The type @code{segT} is used to represent a section in code which must work 40with all versions of GAS. 41 42@menu 43* Original GAS:: Original GAS version 44* MANY_SEGMENTS:: MANY_SEGMENTS gas version 45* BFD_ASSEMBLER:: BFD_ASSEMBLER gas version 46@end menu 47 48@node Original GAS 49@subsection Original GAS 50 51The original GAS only supported the a.out object file format with three 52sections: @samp{.text}, @samp{.data}, and @samp{.bss}. This is the version of 53GAS that is compiled if neither @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} nor @code{MANY_SEGMENTS} 54is defined. This version of GAS is still used for the m68k-aout target, and 55perhaps others. 56 57This version of GAS should not be used for any new development. 58 59There is still code that is specific to this version of GAS, notably in 60@file{write.c}. There is no way for this code to loop through all the 61sections; it simply looks at global variables like @code{text_frag_root} and 62@code{data_frag_root}. 63 64The type @code{segT} is an enum. 65 66@node MANY_SEGMENTS 67@subsection MANY_SEGMENTS gas version 68@cindex MANY_SEGMENTS 69 70The @code{MANY_SEGMENTS} version of gas is only used for COFF. It uses the BFD 71library, but it writes out all the data itself using @code{bfd_write}. This 72version of gas supports up to 40 normal sections. The section names are stored 73in the @code{seg_name} array. Other information is stored in the 74@code{segment_info} array. 75 76The type @code{segT} is an enum. Code that wants to examine all the sections 77can use a @code{segT} variable as loop index from @code{SEG_E0} up to but not 78including @code{SEG_UNKNOWN}. 79 80Most of the code specific to this version of GAS is in the file 81@file{config/obj-coff.c}, in the portion of that file that is compiled when 82@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is not defined. 83 84This version of GAS is still used for several COFF targets. 85 86@node BFD_ASSEMBLER 87@subsection BFD_ASSEMBLER gas version 88@cindex BFD_ASSEMBLER 89 90The preferred version of GAS is the @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} version. In this 91version of GAS, the output file is a normal BFD, and the BFD routines are used 92to generate the output. 93 94@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} will automatically be used for certain targets, including 95those that use the ELF, ECOFF, and SOM object file formats, and also all Alpha, 96MIPS, PowerPC, and SPARC targets. You can force the use of 97@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} for other targets with the configure option 98@samp{--enable-bfd-assembler}; however, it has not been tested for many 99targets, and can not be assumed to work. 100 101@node Data types 102@section Data types 103@cindex internals, data types 104 105This section describes some fundamental GAS data types. 106 107@menu 108* Symbols:: The symbolS structure 109* Expressions:: The expressionS structure 110* Fixups:: The fixS structure 111* Frags:: The fragS structure 112@end menu 113 114@node Symbols 115@subsection Symbols 116@cindex internals, symbols 117@cindex symbols, internal 118@cindex symbolS structure 119 120The definition for the symbol structure, @code{symbolS}, is located in 121@file{struc-symbol.h}. 122 123In general, the fields of this structure may not be referred to directly. 124Instead, you must use one of the accessor functions defined in @file{symbol.h}. 125These accessor functions should work for any GAS version. 126 127Symbol structures contain the following fields: 128 129@table @code 130@item sy_value 131This is an @code{expressionS} that describes the value of the symbol. It might 132refer to one or more other symbols; if so, its true value may not be known 133until @code{resolve_symbol_value} is called with @var{finalize_syms} non-zero 134in @code{write_object_file}. 135 136The expression is often simply a constant. Before @code{resolve_symbol_value} 137is called with @var{finalize_syms} set, the value is the offset from the frag 138(@pxref{Frags}). Afterward, the frag address has been added in. 139 140@item sy_resolved 141This field is non-zero if the symbol's value has been completely resolved. It 142is used during the final pass over the symbol table. 143 144@item sy_resolving 145This field is used to detect loops while resolving the symbol's value. 146 147@item sy_used_in_reloc 148This field is non-zero if the symbol is used by a relocation entry. If a local 149symbol is used in a relocation entry, it must be possible to redirect those 150relocations to other symbols, or this symbol cannot be removed from the final 151symbol list. 152 153@item sy_next 154@itemx sy_previous 155These pointers to other @code{symbolS} structures describe a singly or doubly 156linked list. (If @code{SYMBOLS_NEED_BACKPOINTERS} is not defined, the 157@code{sy_previous} field will be omitted; @code{SYMBOLS_NEED_BACKPOINTERS} is 158always defined if @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER}.) These fields should be accessed with 159the @code{symbol_next} and @code{symbol_previous} macros. 160 161@item sy_frag 162This points to the frag (@pxref{Frags}) that this symbol is attached to. 163 164@item sy_used 165Whether the symbol is used as an operand or in an expression. Note: Not all of 166the backends keep this information accurate; backends which use this bit are 167responsible for setting it when a symbol is used in backend routines. 168 169@item sy_mri_common 170Whether the symbol is an MRI common symbol created by the @code{COMMON} 171pseudo-op when assembling in MRI mode. 172 173@item bsym 174If @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is defined, this points to the BFD @code{asymbol} that 175will be used in writing the object file. 176 177@item sy_name_offset 178(Only used if @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is not defined.) This is the position of 179the symbol's name in the string table of the object file. On some formats, 180this will start at position 4, with position 0 reserved for unnamed symbols. 181This field is not used until @code{write_object_file} is called. 182 183@item sy_symbol 184(Only used if @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is not defined.) This is the 185format-specific symbol structure, as it would be written into the object file. 186 187@item sy_number 188(Only used if @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is not defined.) This is a 24-bit symbol 189number, for use in constructing relocation table entries. 190 191@item sy_obj 192This format-specific data is of type @code{OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE}. If no macro by 193that name is defined in @file{obj-format.h}, this field is not defined. 194 195@item sy_tc 196This processor-specific data is of type @code{TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE}. If no macro 197by that name is defined in @file{targ-cpu.h}, this field is not defined. 198 199@end table 200 201Here is a description of the accessor functions. These should be used rather 202than referring to the fields of @code{symbolS} directly. 203 204@table @code 205@item S_SET_VALUE 206@cindex S_SET_VALUE 207Set the symbol's value. 208 209@item S_GET_VALUE 210@cindex S_GET_VALUE 211Get the symbol's value. This will cause @code{resolve_symbol_value} to be 212called if necessary. 213 214@item S_SET_SEGMENT 215@cindex S_SET_SEGMENT 216Set the section of the symbol. 217 218@item S_GET_SEGMENT 219@cindex S_GET_SEGMENT 220Get the symbol's section. 221 222@item S_GET_NAME 223@cindex S_GET_NAME 224Get the name of the symbol. 225 226@item S_SET_NAME 227@cindex S_SET_NAME 228Set the name of the symbol. 229 230@item S_IS_EXTERNAL 231@cindex S_IS_EXTERNAL 232Return non-zero if the symbol is externally visible. 233 234@item S_IS_EXTERN 235@cindex S_IS_EXTERN 236A synonym for @code{S_IS_EXTERNAL}. Don't use it. 237 238@item S_IS_WEAK 239@cindex S_IS_WEAK 240Return non-zero if the symbol is weak. 241 242@item S_IS_COMMON 243@cindex S_IS_COMMON 244Return non-zero if this is a common symbol. Common symbols are sometimes 245represented as undefined symbols with a value, in which case this function will 246not be reliable. 247 248@item S_IS_DEFINED 249@cindex S_IS_DEFINED 250Return non-zero if this symbol is defined. This function is not reliable when 251called on a common symbol. 252 253@item S_IS_DEBUG 254@cindex S_IS_DEBUG 255Return non-zero if this is a debugging symbol. 256 257@item S_IS_LOCAL 258@cindex S_IS_LOCAL 259Return non-zero if this is a local assembler symbol which should not be 260included in the final symbol table. Note that this is not the opposite of 261@code{S_IS_EXTERNAL}. The @samp{-L} assembler option affects the return value 262of this function. 263 264@item S_SET_EXTERNAL 265@cindex S_SET_EXTERNAL 266Mark the symbol as externally visible. 267 268@item S_CLEAR_EXTERNAL 269@cindex S_CLEAR_EXTERNAL 270Mark the symbol as not externally visible. 271 272@item S_SET_WEAK 273@cindex S_SET_WEAK 274Mark the symbol as weak. 275 276@item S_GET_TYPE 277@item S_GET_DESC 278@item S_GET_OTHER 279@cindex S_GET_TYPE 280@cindex S_GET_DESC 281@cindex S_GET_OTHER 282Get the @code{type}, @code{desc}, and @code{other} fields of the symbol. These 283are only defined for object file formats for which they make sense (primarily 284a.out). 285 286@item S_SET_TYPE 287@item S_SET_DESC 288@item S_SET_OTHER 289@cindex S_SET_TYPE 290@cindex S_SET_DESC 291@cindex S_SET_OTHER 292Set the @code{type}, @code{desc}, and @code{other} fields of the symbol. These 293are only defined for object file formats for which they make sense (primarily 294a.out). 295 296@item S_GET_SIZE 297@cindex S_GET_SIZE 298Get the size of a symbol. This is only defined for object file formats for 299which it makes sense (primarily ELF). 300 301@item S_SET_SIZE 302@cindex S_SET_SIZE 303Set the size of a symbol. This is only defined for object file formats for 304which it makes sense (primarily ELF). 305 306@item symbol_get_value_expression 307@cindex symbol_get_value_expression 308Get a pointer to an @code{expressionS} structure which represents the value of 309the symbol as an expression. 310 311@item symbol_set_value_expression 312@cindex symbol_set_value_expression 313Set the value of a symbol to an expression. 314 315@item symbol_set_frag 316@cindex symbol_set_frag 317Set the frag where a symbol is defined. 318 319@item symbol_get_frag 320@cindex symbol_get_frag 321Get the frag where a symbol is defined. 322 323@item symbol_mark_used 324@cindex symbol_mark_used 325Mark a symbol as having been used in an expression. 326 327@item symbol_clear_used 328@cindex symbol_clear_used 329Clear the mark indicating that a symbol was used in an expression. 330 331@item symbol_used_p 332@cindex symbol_used_p 333Return whether a symbol was used in an expression. 334 335@item symbol_mark_used_in_reloc 336@cindex symbol_mark_used_in_reloc 337Mark a symbol as having been used by a relocation. 338 339@item symbol_clear_used_in_reloc 340@cindex symbol_clear_used_in_reloc 341Clear the mark indicating that a symbol was used in a relocation. 342 343@item symbol_used_in_reloc_p 344@cindex symbol_used_in_reloc_p 345Return whether a symbol was used in a relocation. 346 347@item symbol_mark_mri_common 348@cindex symbol_mark_mri_common 349Mark a symbol as an MRI common symbol. 350 351@item symbol_clear_mri_common 352@cindex symbol_clear_mri_common 353Clear the mark indicating that a symbol is an MRI common symbol. 354 355@item symbol_mri_common_p 356@cindex symbol_mri_common_p 357Return whether a symbol is an MRI common symbol. 358 359@item symbol_mark_written 360@cindex symbol_mark_written 361Mark a symbol as having been written. 362 363@item symbol_clear_written 364@cindex symbol_clear_written 365Clear the mark indicating that a symbol was written. 366 367@item symbol_written_p 368@cindex symbol_written_p 369Return whether a symbol was written. 370 371@item symbol_mark_resolved 372@cindex symbol_mark_resolved 373Mark a symbol as having been resolved. 374 375@item symbol_resolved_p 376@cindex symbol_resolved_p 377Return whether a symbol has been resolved. 378 379@item symbol_section_p 380@cindex symbol_section_p 381Return whether a symbol is a section symbol. 382 383@item symbol_equated_p 384@cindex symbol_equated_p 385Return whether a symbol is equated to another symbol. 386 387@item symbol_constant_p 388@cindex symbol_constant_p 389Return whether a symbol has a constant value, including being an offset within 390some frag. 391 392@item symbol_get_bfdsym 393@cindex symbol_get_bfdsym 394Return the BFD symbol associated with a symbol. 395 396@item symbol_set_bfdsym 397@cindex symbol_set_bfdsym 398Set the BFD symbol associated with a symbol. 399 400@item symbol_get_obj 401@cindex symbol_get_obj 402Return a pointer to the @code{OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol. 403 404@item symbol_set_obj 405@cindex symbol_set_obj 406Set the @code{OBJ_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol. 407 408@item symbol_get_tc 409@cindex symbol_get_tc 410Return a pointer to the @code{TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol. 411 412@item symbol_set_tc 413@cindex symbol_set_tc 414Set the @code{TC_SYMFIELD_TYPE} field of a symbol. 415 416@end table 417 418When @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is defined, GAS attempts to store local 419symbols--symbols which will not be written to the output file--using a 420different structure, @code{struct local_symbol}. This structure can only 421represent symbols whose value is an offset within a frag. 422 423Code outside of the symbol handler will always deal with @code{symbolS} 424structures and use the accessor functions. The accessor functions correctly 425deal with local symbols. @code{struct local_symbol} is much smaller than 426@code{symbolS} (which also automatically creates a bfd @code{asymbol} 427structure), so this saves space when assembling large files. 428 429The first field of @code{symbolS} is @code{bsym}, the pointer to the BFD 430symbol. The first field of @code{struct local_symbol} is a pointer which is 431always set to NULL. This is how the symbol accessor functions can distinguish 432local symbols from ordinary symbols. The symbol accessor functions 433automatically convert a local symbol into an ordinary symbol when necessary. 434 435@node Expressions 436@subsection Expressions 437@cindex internals, expressions 438@cindex expressions, internal 439@cindex expressionS structure 440 441Expressions are stored in an @code{expressionS} structure. The structure is 442defined in @file{expr.h}. 443 444@cindex expression 445The macro @code{expression} will create an @code{expressionS} structure based 446on the text found at the global variable @code{input_line_pointer}. 447 448@cindex make_expr_symbol 449@cindex expr_symbol_where 450A single @code{expressionS} structure can represent a single operation. 451Complex expressions are formed by creating @dfn{expression symbols} and 452combining them in @code{expressionS} structures. An expression symbol is 453created by calling @code{make_expr_symbol}. An expression symbol should 454naturally never appear in a symbol table, and the implementation of 455@code{S_IS_LOCAL} (@pxref{Symbols}) reflects that. The function 456@code{expr_symbol_where} returns non-zero if a symbol is an expression symbol, 457and also returns the file and line for the expression which caused it to be 458created. 459 460The @code{expressionS} structure has two symbol fields, a number field, an 461operator field, and a field indicating whether the number is unsigned. 462 463The operator field is of type @code{operatorT}, and describes how to interpret 464the other fields; see the definition in @file{expr.h} for the possibilities. 465 466An @code{operatorT} value of @code{O_big} indicates either a floating point 467number, stored in the global variable @code{generic_floating_point_number}, or 468an integer too large to store in an @code{offsetT} type, stored in the global 469array @code{generic_bignum}. This rather inflexible approach makes it 470impossible to use floating point numbers or large expressions in complex 471expressions. 472 473@node Fixups 474@subsection Fixups 475@cindex internals, fixups 476@cindex fixups 477@cindex fixS structure 478 479A @dfn{fixup} is basically anything which can not be resolved in the first 480pass. Sometimes a fixup can be resolved by the end of the assembly; if not, 481the fixup becomes a relocation entry in the object file. 482 483@cindex fix_new 484@cindex fix_new_exp 485A fixup is created by a call to @code{fix_new} or @code{fix_new_exp}. Both 486take a frag (@pxref{Frags}), a position within the frag, a size, an indication 487of whether the fixup is PC relative, and a type. In a @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} 488GAS, the type is nominally a @code{bfd_reloc_code_real_type}, but several 489targets use other type codes to represent fixups that can not be described as 490relocations. 491 492The @code{fixS} structure has a number of fields, several of which are obsolete 493or are only used by a particular target. The important fields are: 494 495@table @code 496@item fx_frag 497The frag (@pxref{Frags}) this fixup is in. 498 499@item fx_where 500The location within the frag where the fixup occurs. 501 502@item fx_addsy 503The symbol this fixup is against. Typically, the value of this symbol is added 504into the object contents. This may be NULL. 505 506@item fx_subsy 507The value of this symbol is subtracted from the object contents. This is 508normally NULL. 509 510@item fx_offset 511A number which is added into the fixup. 512 513@item fx_addnumber 514Some CPU backends use this field to convey information between 515@code{md_apply_fix3} and @code{tc_gen_reloc}. The machine independent code does 516not use it. 517 518@item fx_next 519The next fixup in the section. 520 521@item fx_r_type 522The type of the fixup. This field is only defined if @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER}, or 523if the target defines @code{NEED_FX_R_TYPE}. 524 525@item fx_size 526The size of the fixup. This is mostly used for error checking. 527 528@item fx_pcrel 529Whether the fixup is PC relative. 530 531@item fx_done 532Non-zero if the fixup has been applied, and no relocation entry needs to be 533generated. 534 535@item fx_file 536@itemx fx_line 537The file and line where the fixup was created. 538 539@item tc_fix_data 540This has the type @code{TC_FIX_TYPE}, and is only defined if the target defines 541that macro. 542@end table 543 544@node Frags 545@subsection Frags 546@cindex internals, frags 547@cindex frags 548@cindex fragS structure. 549 550The @code{fragS} structure is defined in @file{as.h}. Each frag represents a 551portion of the final object file. As GAS reads the source file, it creates 552frags to hold the data that it reads. At the end of the assembly the frags and 553fixups are processed to produce the final contents. 554 555@table @code 556@item fr_address 557The address of the frag. This is not set until the assembler rescans the list 558of all frags after the entire input file is parsed. The function 559@code{relax_segment} fills in this field. 560 561@item fr_next 562Pointer to the next frag in this (sub)section. 563 564@item fr_fix 565Fixed number of characters we know we're going to emit to the output file. May 566be zero. 567 568@item fr_var 569Variable number of characters we may output, after the initial @code{fr_fix} 570characters. May be zero. 571 572@item fr_offset 573The interpretation of this field is controlled by @code{fr_type}. Generally, 574if @code{fr_var} is non-zero, this is a repeat count: the @code{fr_var} 575characters are output @code{fr_offset} times. 576 577@item line 578Holds line number info when an assembler listing was requested. 579 580@item fr_type 581Relaxation state. This field indicates the interpretation of @code{fr_offset}, 582@code{fr_symbol} and the variable-length tail of the frag, as well as the 583treatment it gets in various phases of processing. It does not affect the 584initial @code{fr_fix} characters; they are always supposed to be output 585verbatim (fixups aside). See below for specific values this field can have. 586 587@item fr_subtype 588Relaxation substate. If the macro @code{md_relax_frag} isn't defined, this is 589assumed to be an index into @code{TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE} for the generic 590relaxation code to process (@pxref{Relaxation}). If @code{md_relax_frag} is 591defined, this field is available for any use by the CPU-specific code. 592 593@item fr_symbol 594This normally indicates the symbol to use when relaxing the frag according to 595@code{fr_type}. 596 597@item fr_opcode 598Points to the lowest-addressed byte of the opcode, for use in relaxation. 599 600@item tc_frag_data 601Target specific fragment data of type TC_FRAG_TYPE. 602Only present if @code{TC_FRAG_TYPE} is defined. 603 604@item fr_file 605@itemx fr_line 606The file and line where this frag was last modified. 607 608@item fr_literal 609Declared as a one-character array, this last field grows arbitrarily large to 610hold the actual contents of the frag. 611@end table 612 613These are the possible relaxation states, provided in the enumeration type 614@code{relax_stateT}, and the interpretations they represent for the other 615fields: 616 617@table @code 618@item rs_align 619@itemx rs_align_code 620The start of the following frag should be aligned on some boundary. In this 621frag, @code{fr_offset} is the logarithm (base 2) of the alignment in bytes. 622(For example, if alignment on an 8-byte boundary were desired, @code{fr_offset} 623would have a value of 3.) The variable characters indicate the fill pattern to 624be used. The @code{fr_subtype} field holds the maximum number of bytes to skip 625when doing this alignment. If more bytes are needed, the alignment is not 626done. An @code{fr_subtype} value of 0 means no maximum, which is the normal 627case. Target backends can use @code{rs_align_code} to handle certain types of 628alignment differently. 629 630@item rs_broken_word 631This indicates that ``broken word'' processing should be done (@pxref{Broken 632words}). If broken word processing is not necessary on the target machine, 633this enumerator value will not be defined. 634 635@item rs_cfa 636This state is used to implement exception frame optimizations. The 637@code{fr_symbol} is an expression symbol for the subtraction which may be 638relaxed. The @code{fr_opcode} field holds the frag for the preceding command 639byte. The @code{fr_offset} field holds the offset within that frag. The 640@code{fr_subtype} field is used during relaxation to hold the current size of 641the frag. 642 643@item rs_fill 644The variable characters are to be repeated @code{fr_offset} times. If 645@code{fr_offset} is 0, this frag has a length of @code{fr_fix}. Most frags 646have this type. 647 648@item rs_leb128 649This state is used to implement the DWARF ``little endian base 128'' 650variable length number format. The @code{fr_symbol} is always an expression 651symbol, as constant expressions are emitted directly. The @code{fr_offset} 652field is used during relaxation to hold the previous size of the number so 653that we can determine if the fragment changed size. 654 655@item rs_machine_dependent 656Displacement relaxation is to be done on this frag. The target is indicated by 657@code{fr_symbol} and @code{fr_offset}, and @code{fr_subtype} indicates the 658particular machine-specific addressing mode desired. @xref{Relaxation}. 659 660@item rs_org 661The start of the following frag should be pushed back to some specific offset 662within the section. (Some assemblers use the value as an absolute address; GAS 663does not handle final absolute addresses, but rather requires that the linker 664set them.) The offset is given by @code{fr_symbol} and @code{fr_offset}; one 665character from the variable-length tail is used as the fill character. 666@end table 667 668@cindex frchainS structure 669A chain of frags is built up for each subsection. The data structure 670describing a chain is called a @code{frchainS}, and contains the following 671fields: 672 673@table @code 674@item frch_root 675Points to the first frag in the chain. May be NULL if there are no frags in 676this chain. 677@item frch_last 678Points to the last frag in the chain, or NULL if there are none. 679@item frch_next 680Next in the list of @code{frchainS} structures. 681@item frch_seg 682Indicates the section this frag chain belongs to. 683@item frch_subseg 684Subsection (subsegment) number of this frag chain. 685@item fix_root, fix_tail 686(Defined only if @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} is defined). Point to first and last 687@code{fixS} structures associated with this subsection. 688@item frch_obstack 689Not currently used. Intended to be used for frag allocation for this 690subsection. This should reduce frag generation caused by switching sections. 691@item frch_frag_now 692The current frag for this subsegment. 693@end table 694 695A @code{frchainS} corresponds to a subsection; each section has a list of 696@code{frchainS} records associated with it. In most cases, only one subsection 697of each section is used, so the list will only be one element long, but any 698processing of frag chains should be prepared to deal with multiple chains per 699section. 700 701After the input files have been completely processed, and no more frags are to 702be generated, the frag chains are joined into one per section for further 703processing. After this point, it is safe to operate on one chain per section. 704 705The assembler always has a current frag, named @code{frag_now}. More space is 706allocated for the current frag using the @code{frag_more} function; this 707returns a pointer to the amount of requested space. The function 708@code{frag_room} says by how much the current frag can be extended. 709Relaxing is done using variant frags allocated by @code{frag_var} 710or @code{frag_variant} (@pxref{Relaxation}). 711 712@node GAS processing 713@section What GAS does when it runs 714@cindex internals, overview 715 716This is a quick look at what an assembler run looks like. 717 718@itemize @bullet 719@item 720The assembler initializes itself by calling various init routines. 721 722@item 723For each source file, the @code{read_a_source_file} function reads in the file 724and parses it. The global variable @code{input_line_pointer} points to the 725current text; it is guaranteed to be correct up to the end of the line, but not 726farther. 727 728@item 729For each line, the assembler passes labels to the @code{colon} function, and 730isolates the first word. If it looks like a pseudo-op, the word is looked up 731in the pseudo-op hash table @code{po_hash} and dispatched to a pseudo-op 732routine. Otherwise, the target dependent @code{md_assemble} routine is called 733to parse the instruction. 734 735@item 736When pseudo-ops or instructions output data, they add it to a frag, calling 737@code{frag_more} to get space to store it in. 738 739@item 740Pseudo-ops and instructions can also output fixups created by @code{fix_new} or 741@code{fix_new_exp}. 742 743@item 744For certain targets, instructions can create variant frags which are used to 745store relaxation information (@pxref{Relaxation}). 746 747@item 748When the input file is finished, the @code{write_object_file} routine is 749called. It assigns addresses to all the frags (@code{relax_segment}), resolves 750all the fixups (@code{fixup_segment}), resolves all the symbol values (using 751@code{resolve_symbol_value}), and finally writes out the file (in the 752@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} case, this is done by simply calling @code{bfd_close}). 753@end itemize 754 755@node Porting GAS 756@section Porting GAS 757@cindex porting 758 759Each GAS target specifies two main things: the CPU file and the object format 760file. Two main switches in the @file{configure.in} file handle this. The 761first switches on CPU type to set the shell variable @code{cpu_type}. The 762second switches on the entire target to set the shell variable @code{fmt}. 763 764The configure script uses the value of @code{cpu_type} to select two files in 765the @file{config} directory: @file{tc-@var{CPU}.c} and @file{tc-@var{CPU}.h}. 766The configuration process will create a file named @file{targ-cpu.h} in the 767build directory which includes @file{tc-@var{CPU}.h}. 768 769The configure script also uses the value of @code{fmt} to select two files: 770@file{obj-@var{fmt}.c} and @file{obj-@var{fmt}.h}. The configuration process 771will create a file named @file{obj-format.h} in the build directory which 772includes @file{obj-@var{fmt}.h}. 773 774You can also set the emulation in the configure script by setting the @code{em} 775variable. Normally the default value of @samp{generic} is fine. The 776configuration process will create a file named @file{targ-env.h} in the build 777directory which includes @file{te-@var{em}.h}. 778 779There is a special case for COFF. For historical reason, the GNU COFF 780assembler doesn't follow the documented behavior on certain debug symbols for 781the compatibility with other COFF assemblers. A port can define 782@code{STRICTCOFF} in the configure script to make the GNU COFF assembler 783to follow the documented behavior. 784 785Porting GAS to a new CPU requires writing the @file{tc-@var{CPU}} files. 786Porting GAS to a new object file format requires writing the 787@file{obj-@var{fmt}} files. There is sometimes some interaction between these 788two files, but it is normally minimal. 789 790The best approach is, of course, to copy existing files. The documentation 791below assumes that you are looking at existing files to see usage details. 792 793These interfaces have grown over time, and have never been carefully thought 794out or designed. Nothing about the interfaces described here is cast in stone. 795It is possible that they will change from one version of the assembler to the 796next. Also, new macros are added all the time as they are needed. 797 798@menu 799* CPU backend:: Writing a CPU backend 800* Object format backend:: Writing an object format backend 801* Emulations:: Writing emulation files 802@end menu 803 804@node CPU backend 805@subsection Writing a CPU backend 806@cindex CPU backend 807@cindex @file{tc-@var{CPU}} 808 809The CPU backend files are the heart of the assembler. They are the only parts 810of the assembler which actually know anything about the instruction set of the 811processor. 812 813You must define a reasonably small list of macros and functions in the CPU 814backend files. You may define a large number of additional macros in the CPU 815backend files, not all of which are documented here. You must, of course, 816define macros in the @file{.h} file, which is included by every assembler 817source file. You may define the functions as macros in the @file{.h} file, or 818as functions in the @file{.c} file. 819 820@table @code 821@item TC_@var{CPU} 822@cindex TC_@var{CPU} 823By convention, you should define this macro in the @file{.h} file. For 824example, @file{tc-m68k.h} defines @code{TC_M68K}. You might have to use this 825if it is necessary to add CPU specific code to the object format file. 826 827@item TARGET_FORMAT 828This macro is the BFD target name to use when creating the output file. This 829will normally depend upon the @code{OBJ_@var{FMT}} macro. 830 831@item TARGET_ARCH 832This macro is the BFD architecture to pass to @code{bfd_set_arch_mach}. 833 834@item TARGET_MACH 835This macro is the BFD machine number to pass to @code{bfd_set_arch_mach}. If 836it is not defined, GAS will use 0. 837 838@item TARGET_BYTES_BIG_ENDIAN 839You should define this macro to be non-zero if the target is big endian, and 840zero if the target is little endian. 841 842@item md_shortopts 843@itemx md_longopts 844@itemx md_longopts_size 845@itemx md_parse_option 846@itemx md_show_usage 847@itemx md_after_parse_args 848@cindex md_shortopts 849@cindex md_longopts 850@cindex md_longopts_size 851@cindex md_parse_option 852@cindex md_show_usage 853@cindex md_after_parse_args 854GAS uses these variables and functions during option processing. 855@code{md_shortopts} is a @code{const char *} which GAS adds to the machine 856independent string passed to @code{getopt}. @code{md_longopts} is a 857@code{struct option []} which GAS adds to the machine independent long options 858passed to @code{getopt}; you may use @code{OPTION_MD_BASE}, defined in 859@file{as.h}, as the start of a set of long option indices, if necessary. 860@code{md_longopts_size} is a @code{size_t} holding the size @code{md_longopts}. 861GAS will call @code{md_parse_option} whenever @code{getopt} returns an 862unrecognized code, presumably indicating a special code value which appears in 863@code{md_longopts}. GAS will call @code{md_show_usage} when a usage message is 864printed; it should print a description of the machine specific options. 865@code{md_after_pase_args}, if defined, is called after all options are 866processed, to let the backend override settings done by the generic option 867parsing. 868 869@item md_begin 870@cindex md_begin 871GAS will call this function at the start of the assembly, after the command 872line arguments have been parsed and all the machine independent initializations 873have been completed. 874 875@item md_cleanup 876@cindex md_cleanup 877If you define this macro, GAS will call it at the end of each input file. 878 879@item md_assemble 880@cindex md_assemble 881GAS will call this function for each input line which does not contain a 882pseudo-op. The argument is a null terminated string. The function should 883assemble the string as an instruction with operands. Normally 884@code{md_assemble} will do this by calling @code{frag_more} and writing out 885some bytes (@pxref{Frags}). @code{md_assemble} will call @code{fix_new} to 886create fixups as needed (@pxref{Fixups}). Targets which need to do special 887purpose relaxation will call @code{frag_var}. 888 889@item md_pseudo_table 890@cindex md_pseudo_table 891This is a const array of type @code{pseudo_typeS}. It is a mapping from 892pseudo-op names to functions. You should use this table to implement 893pseudo-ops which are specific to the CPU. 894 895@item tc_conditional_pseudoop 896@cindex tc_conditional_pseudoop 897If this macro is defined, GAS will call it with a @code{pseudo_typeS} argument. 898It should return non-zero if the pseudo-op is a conditional which controls 899whether code is assembled, such as @samp{.if}. GAS knows about the normal 900conditional pseudo-ops, and you should normally not have to define this macro. 901 902@item comment_chars 903@cindex comment_chars 904This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which start a 905comment. 906 907@item tc_comment_chars 908@cindex tc_comment_chars 909If this macro is defined, GAS will use it instead of @code{comment_chars}. 910 911@item tc_symbol_chars 912@cindex tc_symbol_chars 913If this macro is defined, it is a pointer to a null terminated list of 914characters which may appear in an operand. GAS already assumes that all 915alphanumberic characters, and @samp{$}, @samp{.}, and @samp{_} may appear in an 916operand (see @samp{symbol_chars} in @file{app.c}). This macro may be defined 917to treat additional characters as appearing in an operand. This affects the 918way in which GAS removes whitespace before passing the string to 919@samp{md_assemble}. 920 921@item line_comment_chars 922@cindex line_comment_chars 923This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which start a 924comment when they appear at the start of a line. 925 926@item line_separator_chars 927@cindex line_separator_chars 928This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which separate 929lines (null and newline are such characters by default, and need not be 930listed in this array). Note that line_separator_chars do not separate lines 931if found in a comment, such as after a character in line_comment_chars or 932comment_chars. 933 934@item EXP_CHARS 935@cindex EXP_CHARS 936This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which may be 937used as the exponent character in a floating point number. This is normally 938@code{"eE"}. 939 940@item FLT_CHARS 941@cindex FLT_CHARS 942This is a null terminated @code{const char} array of characters which may be 943used to indicate a floating point constant. A zero followed by one of these 944characters is assumed to be followed by a floating point number; thus they 945operate the way that @code{0x} is used to indicate a hexadecimal constant. 946Usually this includes @samp{r} and @samp{f}. 947 948@item LEX_AT 949@cindex LEX_AT 950You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{@@} character. The 951default is zero. 952 953Lexical types are a combination of @code{LEX_NAME} and @code{LEX_BEGIN_NAME}, 954both defined in @file{read.h}. @code{LEX_NAME} indicates that the character 955may appear in a name. @code{LEX_BEGIN_NAME} indicates that the character may 956appear at the beginning of a name. 957 958@item LEX_BR 959@cindex LEX_BR 960You may define this macro to the lexical type of the brace characters @kbd{@{}, 961@kbd{@}}, @kbd{[}, and @kbd{]}. The default value is zero. 962 963@item LEX_PCT 964@cindex LEX_PCT 965You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{%} character. The 966default value is zero. 967 968@item LEX_QM 969@cindex LEX_QM 970You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{?} character. The 971default value it zero. 972 973@item LEX_DOLLAR 974@cindex LEX_DOLLAR 975You may define this macro to the lexical type of the @kbd{$} character. The 976default value is @code{LEX_NAME | LEX_BEGIN_NAME}. 977 978@item NUMBERS_WITH_SUFFIX 979@cindex NUMBERS_WITH_SUFFIX 980When this macro is defined to be non-zero, the parser allows the radix of a 981constant to be indicated with a suffix. Valid suffixes are binary (B), 982octal (Q), and hexadecimal (H). Case is not significant. 983 984@item SINGLE_QUOTE_STRINGS 985@cindex SINGLE_QUOTE_STRINGS 986If you define this macro, GAS will treat single quotes as string delimiters. 987Normally only double quotes are accepted as string delimiters. 988 989@item NO_STRING_ESCAPES 990@cindex NO_STRING_ESCAPES 991If you define this macro, GAS will not permit escape sequences in a string. 992 993@item ONLY_STANDARD_ESCAPES 994@cindex ONLY_STANDARD_ESCAPES 995If you define this macro, GAS will warn about the use of nonstandard escape 996sequences in a string. 997 998@item md_start_line_hook 999@cindex md_start_line_hook 1000If you define this macro, GAS will call it at the start of each line. 1001 1002@item LABELS_WITHOUT_COLONS 1003@cindex LABELS_WITHOUT_COLONS 1004If you define this macro, GAS will assume that any text at the start of a line 1005is a label, even if it does not have a colon. 1006 1007@item TC_START_LABEL 1008@itemx TC_START_LABEL_WITHOUT_COLON 1009@cindex TC_START_LABEL 1010You may define this macro to control what GAS considers to be a label. The 1011default definition is to accept any name followed by a colon character. 1012 1013@item TC_START_LABEL_WITHOUT_COLON 1014@cindex TC_START_LABEL_WITHOUT_COLON 1015Same as TC_START_LABEL, but should be used instead of TC_START_LABEL when 1016LABELS_WITHOUT_COLONS is defined. 1017 1018@item NO_PSEUDO_DOT 1019@cindex NO_PSEUDO_DOT 1020If you define this macro, GAS will not require pseudo-ops to start with a 1021@kbd{.} character. 1022 1023@item TC_EQUAL_IN_INSN 1024@cindex TC_EQUAL_IN_INSN 1025If you define this macro, it should return nonzero if the instruction is 1026permitted to contain an @kbd{=} character. GAS will call it with two 1027arguments, the character before the @kbd{=} character, and the value of 1028@code{input_line_pointer} at that point. GAS uses this macro to decide if a 1029@kbd{=} is an assignment or an instruction. 1030 1031@item TC_EOL_IN_INSN 1032@cindex TC_EOL_IN_INSN 1033If you define this macro, it should return nonzero if the current input line 1034pointer should be treated as the end of a line. 1035 1036@item TC_CASE_SENSITIVE 1037@cindex TC_CASE_SENSITIVE 1038Define this macro if instruction mnemonics and pseudos are case sensitive. 1039The default is to have it undefined giving case insensitive names. 1040 1041@item md_parse_name 1042@cindex md_parse_name 1043If this macro is defined, GAS will call it for any symbol found in an 1044expression. You can define this to handle special symbols in a special way. 1045If a symbol always has a certain value, you should normally enter it in the 1046symbol table, perhaps using @code{reg_section}. 1047 1048@item md_undefined_symbol 1049@cindex md_undefined_symbol 1050GAS will call this function when a symbol table lookup fails, before it 1051creates a new symbol. Typically this would be used to supply symbols whose 1052name or value changes dynamically, possibly in a context sensitive way. 1053Predefined symbols with fixed values, such as register names or condition 1054codes, are typically entered directly into the symbol table when @code{md_begin} 1055is called. One argument is passed, a @code{char *} for the symbol. 1056 1057@item md_operand 1058@cindex md_operand 1059GAS will call this function with one argument, an @code{expressionS} 1060pointer, for any expression that can not be recognized. When the function 1061is called, @code{input_line_pointer} will point to the start of the 1062expression. 1063 1064@item tc_unrecognized_line 1065@cindex tc_unrecognized_line 1066If you define this macro, GAS will call it when it finds a line that it can not 1067parse. 1068 1069@item md_do_align 1070@cindex md_do_align 1071You may define this macro to handle an alignment directive. GAS will call it 1072when the directive is seen in the input file. For example, the i386 backend 1073uses this to generate efficient nop instructions of varying lengths, depending 1074upon the number of bytes that the alignment will skip. 1075 1076@item HANDLE_ALIGN 1077@cindex HANDLE_ALIGN 1078You may define this macro to do special handling for an alignment directive. 1079GAS will call it at the end of the assembly. 1080 1081@item TC_IMPLICIT_LCOMM_ALIGNMENT (@var{size}, @var{p2var}) 1082@cindex TC_IMPLICIT_LCOMM_ALIGNMENT 1083An @code{.lcomm} directive with no explicit alignment parameter will use this 1084macro to set @var{p2var} to the alignment that a request for @var{size} bytes 1085will have. The alignment is expressed as a power of two. If no alignment 1086should take place, the macro definition should do nothing. Some targets define 1087a @code{.bss} directive that is also affected by this macro. The default 1088definition will set @var{p2var} to the truncated power of two of sizes up to 1089eight bytes. 1090 1091@item md_flush_pending_output 1092@cindex md_flush_pending_output 1093If you define this macro, GAS will call it each time it skips any space because of a 1094space filling or alignment or data allocation pseudo-op. 1095 1096@item TC_PARSE_CONS_EXPRESSION 1097@cindex TC_PARSE_CONS_EXPRESSION 1098You may define this macro to parse an expression used in a data allocation 1099pseudo-op such as @code{.word}. You can use this to recognize relocation 1100directives that may appear in such directives. 1101 1102@item BITFIELD_CONS_EXPRESSION 1103@cindex BITFIELD_CONS_EXPRESSION 1104If you define this macro, GAS will recognize bitfield instructions in data 1105allocation pseudo-ops, as used on the i960. 1106 1107@item REPEAT_CONS_EXPRESSION 1108@cindex REPEAT_CONS_EXPRESSION 1109If you define this macro, GAS will recognize repeat counts in data allocation 1110pseudo-ops, as used on the MIPS. 1111 1112@item md_cons_align 1113@cindex md_cons_align 1114You may define this macro to do any special alignment before a data allocation 1115pseudo-op. 1116 1117@item TC_CONS_FIX_NEW 1118@cindex TC_CONS_FIX_NEW 1119You may define this macro to generate a fixup for a data allocation pseudo-op. 1120 1121@item TC_INIT_FIX_DATA (@var{fixp}) 1122@cindex TC_INIT_FIX_DATA 1123A C statement to initialize the target specific fields of fixup @var{fixp}. 1124These fields are defined with the @code{TC_FIX_TYPE} macro. 1125 1126@item TC_FIX_DATA_PRINT (@var{stream}, @var{fixp}) 1127@cindex TC_FIX_DATA_PRINT 1128A C statement to output target specific debugging information for 1129fixup @var{fixp} to @var{stream}. This macro is called by @code{print_fixup}. 1130 1131@item TC_FRAG_INIT (@var{fragp}) 1132@cindex TC_FRAG_INIT 1133A C statement to initialize the target specific fields of frag @var{fragp}. 1134These fields are defined with the @code{TC_FRAG_TYPE} macro. 1135 1136@item md_number_to_chars 1137@cindex md_number_to_chars 1138This should just call either @code{number_to_chars_bigendian} or 1139@code{number_to_chars_littleendian}, whichever is appropriate. On targets like 1140the MIPS which support options to change the endianness, which function to call 1141is a runtime decision. On other targets, @code{md_number_to_chars} can be a 1142simple macro. 1143 1144@item md_atof (@var{type},@var{litP},@var{sizeP}) 1145@cindex md_atof 1146This function is called to convert an ASCII string into a floating point value 1147in format used by the CPU. It takes three arguments. The first is @var{type} 1148which is a byte describing the type of floating point number to be created. 1149Possible values are @var{'f'} or @var{'s'} for single precision, @var{'d'} or 1150@var{'r'} for double precision and @var{'x'} or @var{'p'} for extended 1151precision. Either lower or upper case versions of these letters can be used. 1152 1153The second parameter is @var{litP} which is a pointer to a byte array where the 1154converted value should be stored. The third argument is @var{sizeP}, which is 1155a pointer to a integer that should be filled in with the number of 1156@var{LITTLENUM}s emitted into the byte array. (@var{LITTLENUM} is defined in 1157gas/bignum.h). The function should return NULL upon success or an error string 1158upon failure. 1159 1160@item TC_LARGEST_EXPONENT_IS_NORMAL 1161@cindex TC_LARGEST_EXPONENT_IS_NORMAL (@var{precision}) 1162This macro is used only by @file{atof-ieee.c}. It should evaluate to true 1163if floats of the given precision use the largest exponent for normal numbers 1164instead of NaNs and infinities. @var{precision} is @samp{F_PRECISION} for 1165single precision, @samp{D_PRECISION} for double precision, or 1166@samp{X_PRECISION} for extended double precision. 1167 1168The macro has a default definition which returns 0 for all cases. 1169 1170@item md_reloc_size 1171@cindex md_reloc_size 1172This variable is only used in the original version of gas (not 1173@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} and not @code{MANY_SEGMENTS}). It holds the size of a 1174relocation entry. 1175 1176@item WORKING_DOT_WORD 1177@itemx md_short_jump_size 1178@itemx md_long_jump_size 1179@itemx md_create_short_jump 1180@itemx md_create_long_jump 1181@itemx TC_CHECK_ADJUSTED_BROKEN_DOT_WORD 1182@cindex WORKING_DOT_WORD 1183@cindex md_short_jump_size 1184@cindex md_long_jump_size 1185@cindex md_create_short_jump 1186@cindex md_create_long_jump 1187@cindex TC_CHECK_ADJUSTED_BROKEN_DOT_WORD 1188If @code{WORKING_DOT_WORD} is defined, GAS will not do broken word processing 1189(@pxref{Broken words}). Otherwise, you should set @code{md_short_jump_size} to 1190the size of a short jump (a jump that is just long enough to jump around a 1191number of long jumps) and @code{md_long_jump_size} to the size of a long jump 1192(a jump that can go anywhere in the function). You should define 1193@code{md_create_short_jump} to create a short jump around a number of long 1194jumps, and define @code{md_create_long_jump} to create a long jump. 1195If defined, the macro TC_CHECK_ADJUSTED_BROKEN_DOT_WORD will be called for each 1196adjusted word just before the word is output. The macro takes two arguments, 1197an @code{addressT} with the adjusted word and a pointer to the current 1198@code{struct broken_word}. 1199 1200@item md_estimate_size_before_relax 1201@cindex md_estimate_size_before_relax 1202This function returns an estimate of the size of a @code{rs_machine_dependent} 1203frag before any relaxing is done. It may also create any necessary 1204relocations. 1205 1206@item md_relax_frag 1207@cindex md_relax_frag 1208This macro may be defined to relax a frag. GAS will call this with the 1209segment, the frag, and the change in size of all previous frags; 1210@code{md_relax_frag} should return the change in size of the frag. 1211@xref{Relaxation}. 1212 1213@item TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE 1214@cindex TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE 1215If you do not define @code{md_relax_frag}, you may define 1216@code{TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE} as a table of @code{relax_typeS} structures. The 1217machine independent code knows how to use such a table to relax PC relative 1218references. See @file{tc-m68k.c} for an example. @xref{Relaxation}. 1219 1220@item md_prepare_relax_scan 1221@cindex md_prepare_relax_scan 1222If defined, it is a C statement that is invoked prior to scanning 1223the relax table. 1224 1225@item LINKER_RELAXING_SHRINKS_ONLY 1226@cindex LINKER_RELAXING_SHRINKS_ONLY 1227If you define this macro, and the global variable @samp{linkrelax} is set 1228(because of a command line option, or unconditionally in @code{md_begin}), a 1229@samp{.align} directive will cause extra space to be allocated. The linker can 1230then discard this space when relaxing the section. 1231 1232@item TC_LINKRELAX_FIXUP (@var{segT}) 1233@cindex TC_LINKRELAX_FIXUP 1234If defined, this macro allows control over whether fixups for a 1235given section will be processed when the @var{linkrelax} variable is 1236set. The macro is given the N_TYPE bits for the section in its 1237@var{segT} argument. If the macro evaluates to a non-zero value 1238then the fixups will be converted into relocs, otherwise they will 1239be passed to @var{md_apply_fix3} as normal. 1240 1241@item md_convert_frag 1242@cindex md_convert_frag 1243GAS will call this for each rs_machine_dependent fragment. 1244The instruction is completed using the data from the relaxation pass. 1245It may also create any necessary relocations. 1246@xref{Relaxation}. 1247 1248@item TC_FINALIZE_SYMS_BEFORE_SIZE_SEG 1249@cindex TC_FINALIZE_SYMS_BEFORE_SIZE_SEG 1250Specifies the value to be assigned to @code{finalize_syms} before the function 1251@code{size_segs} is called. Since @code{size_segs} calls @code{cvt_frag_to_fill} 1252which can call @code{md_convert_frag}, this constant governs whether the symbols 1253accessed in @code{md_convert_frag} will be fully resolved. In particular it 1254governs whether local symbols will have been resolved, and had their frag 1255information removed. Depending upon the processing performed by 1256@code{md_convert_frag} the frag information may or may not be necessary, as may 1257the resolved values of the symbols. The default value is 1. 1258 1259@item TC_VALIDATE_FIX (@var{fixP}, @var{seg}, @var{skip}) 1260@cindex TC_VALIDATE_FIX 1261This macro is evaluated for each fixup (when @var{linkrelax} is not set). 1262It may be used to change the fixup in @code{struct fix *@var{fixP}} before 1263the generic code sees it, or to fully process the fixup. In the latter case, 1264a @code{goto @var{skip}} will bypass the generic code. 1265 1266@item md_apply_fix3 (@var{fixP}, @var{valP}, @var{seg}) 1267@cindex md_apply_fix3 1268GAS will call this for each fixup that passes the @code{TC_VALIDATE_FIX} test 1269when @var{linkrelax} is not set. It should store the correct value in the 1270object file. @code{struct fix *@var{fixP}} is the fixup @code{md_apply_fix3} 1271is operating on. @code{valueT *@var{valP}} is the value to store into the 1272object files, or at least is the generic code's best guess. Specifically, 1273*@var{valP} is the value of the fixup symbol, perhaps modified by 1274@code{MD_APPLY_SYM_VALUE}, plus @code{@var{fixP}->fx_offset} (symbol addend), 1275less @code{MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION} for pc-relative fixups. 1276@code{segT @var{seg}} is the section the fix is in. 1277@code{fixup_segment} performs a generic overflow check on *@var{valP} after 1278@code{md_apply_fix3} returns. If the overflow check is relevant for the target 1279machine, then @code{md_apply_fix3} should modify *@var{valP}, typically to the 1280value stored in the object file. 1281 1282@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION (@var{fix}) 1283@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION 1284If this macro returns non-zero, it guarantees that a relocation will be emitted 1285even when the value can be resolved locally, as @code{fixup_segment} tries to 1286reduce the number of relocations emitted. For example, a fixup expression 1287against an absolute symbol will normally not require a reloc. If undefined, 1288a default of @w{@code{(S_FORCE_RELOC ((@var{fix})->fx_addsy))}} is used. 1289 1290@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_ABS (@var{fix}) 1291@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_ABS 1292Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION}, but used only for fixup expressions against an 1293absolute symbol. If undefined, @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION} will be used. 1294 1295@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_LOCAL (@var{fix}) 1296@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_LOCAL 1297Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION}, but used only for fixup expressions against a 1298symbol in the current section. If undefined, fixups that are not 1299@code{fx_pcrel} or @code{fx_plt} or for which @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION} 1300returns non-zero, will emit relocs. 1301 1302@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_SAME (@var{fix}, @var{seg}) 1303@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_SAME 1304This macro controls resolution of fixup expressions involving the 1305difference of two symbols in the same section. If this macro returns zero, 1306the subtrahend will be resolved and @code{fx_subsy} set to @code{NULL} for 1307@code{md_apply_fix3}. If undefined, the default of 1308@w{@code{! SEG_NORMAL (@var{seg}) || TC_FORCE_RELOCATION (@var{fix})}} will 1309be used. 1310 1311@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_ABS (@var{fix}) 1312@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_ABS 1313Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_SAME}, but used when the subtrahend is an 1314absolute symbol. If the macro is undefined a default of @code{0} is used. 1315 1316@item TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_LOCAL (@var{fix}) 1317@cindex TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_LOCAL 1318Like @code{TC_FORCE_RELOCATION_SUB_ABS}, but the subtrahend is a symbol in the 1319same section as the fixup. 1320 1321@item TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB (@var{fix}) 1322@cindex TC_VALIDATE_FIX_SUB 1323This macro is evaluated for any fixup with a @code{fx_subsy} that 1324@code{fixup_segment} cannot reduce to a number. If the macro returns 1325@code{false} an error will be reported. 1326 1327@item MD_APPLY_SYM_VALUE (@var{fix}) 1328@cindex MD_APPLY_SYM_VALUE 1329This macro controls whether the symbol value becomes part of the value passed 1330to @code{md_apply_fix3}. If the macro is undefined, or returns non-zero, the 1331symbol value will be included. For ELF, a suitable definition might simply be 1332@code{0}, because ELF relocations don't include the symbol value in the addend. 1333 1334@item S_FORCE_RELOC (@var{sym}, @var{strict}) 1335@cindex S_FORCE_RELOC 1336This macro (or function, for @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} gas) returns true for symbols 1337that should not be reduced to section symbols or eliminated from expressions, 1338because they may be overridden by the linker. ie. for symbols that are 1339undefined or common, and when @var{strict} is set, weak, or global (for ELF 1340assemblers that support ELF shared library linking semantics). 1341 1342@item EXTERN_FORCE_RELOC 1343@cindex EXTERN_FORCE_RELOC 1344This macro controls whether @code{S_FORCE_RELOC} returns true for global 1345symbols. If undefined, the default is @code{true} for ELF assemblers, and 1346@code{false} for non-ELF. 1347 1348@item tc_gen_reloc 1349@cindex tc_gen_reloc 1350A @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} GAS will call this to generate a reloc. GAS will pass 1351the resulting reloc to @code{bfd_install_relocation}. This currently works 1352poorly, as @code{bfd_install_relocation} often does the wrong thing, and 1353instances of @code{tc_gen_reloc} have been written to work around the problems, 1354which in turns makes it difficult to fix @code{bfd_install_relocation}. 1355 1356@item RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE 1357@cindex RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE 1358If you define this macro, it means that @code{tc_gen_reloc} may return multiple 1359relocation entries for a single fixup. In this case, the return value of 1360@code{tc_gen_reloc} is a pointer to a null terminated array. 1361 1362@item MAX_RELOC_EXPANSION 1363@cindex MAX_RELOC_EXPANSION 1364You must define this if @code{RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE} is defined; it 1365indicates the largest number of relocs which @code{tc_gen_reloc} may return for 1366a single fixup. 1367 1368@item tc_fix_adjustable 1369@cindex tc_fix_adjustable 1370You may define this macro to indicate whether a fixup against a locally defined 1371symbol should be adjusted to be against the section symbol. It should return a 1372non-zero value if the adjustment is acceptable. 1373 1374@item MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION (@var{fixp}, @var{section}) 1375@cindex MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION 1376If you define this macro, it should return the position from which the PC 1377relative adjustment for a PC relative fixup should be made. On many 1378processors, the base of a PC relative instruction is the next instruction, 1379so this macro would return the length of an instruction, plus the address of 1380the PC relative fixup. The latter can be calculated as 1381@var{fixp}->fx_where + @var{fixp}->fx_frag->fr_address . 1382 1383@item md_pcrel_from 1384@cindex md_pcrel_from 1385This is the default value of @code{MD_PCREL_FROM_SECTION}. The difference is 1386that @code{md_pcrel_from} does not take a section argument. 1387 1388@item tc_frob_label 1389@cindex tc_frob_label 1390If you define this macro, GAS will call it each time a label is defined. 1391 1392@item md_section_align 1393@cindex md_section_align 1394GAS will call this function for each section at the end of the assembly, to 1395permit the CPU backend to adjust the alignment of a section. The function 1396must take two arguments, a @code{segT} for the section and a @code{valueT} 1397for the size of the section, and return a @code{valueT} for the rounded 1398size. 1399 1400@item md_macro_start 1401@cindex md_macro_start 1402If defined, GAS will call this macro when it starts to include a macro 1403expansion. @code{macro_nest} indicates the current macro nesting level, which 1404includes the one being expanded. 1405 1406@item md_macro_info 1407@cindex md_macro_info 1408If defined, GAS will call this macro after the macro expansion has been 1409included in the input and after parsing the macro arguments. The single 1410argument is a pointer to the macro processing's internal representation of the 1411macro (macro_entry *), which includes expansion of the formal arguments. 1412 1413@item md_macro_end 1414@cindex md_macro_end 1415Complement to md_macro_start. If defined, it is called when finished 1416processing an inserted macro expansion, just before decrementing macro_nest. 1417 1418@item DOUBLEBAR_PARALLEL 1419@cindex DOUBLEBAR_PARALLEL 1420Affects the preprocessor so that lines containing '||' don't have their 1421whitespace stripped following the double bar. This is useful for targets that 1422implement parallel instructions. 1423 1424@item KEEP_WHITE_AROUND_COLON 1425@cindex KEEP_WHITE_AROUND_COLON 1426Normally, whitespace is compressed and removed when, in the presence of the 1427colon, the adjoining tokens can be distinguished. This option affects the 1428preprocessor so that whitespace around colons is preserved. This is useful 1429when colons might be removed from the input after preprocessing but before 1430assembling, so that adjoining tokens can still be distinguished if there is 1431whitespace, or concatenated if there is not. 1432 1433@item tc_frob_section 1434@cindex tc_frob_section 1435If you define this macro, a @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} GAS will call it for each 1436section at the end of the assembly. 1437 1438@item tc_frob_file_before_adjust 1439@cindex tc_frob_file_before_adjust 1440If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol values are 1441resolved, but before the fixups have been changed from local symbols to section 1442symbols. 1443 1444@item tc_frob_symbol 1445@cindex tc_frob_symbol 1446If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each symbol. You can indicate 1447that the symbol should not be included in the object file by defining this 1448macro to set its second argument to a non-zero value. 1449 1450@item tc_frob_file 1451@cindex tc_frob_file 1452If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol table has been 1453completed, but before the relocations have been generated. 1454 1455@item tc_frob_file_after_relocs 1456If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the relocs have been 1457generated. 1458 1459@item md_post_relax_hook 1460If you define this macro, GAS will call it after relaxing and sizing the 1461segments. 1462 1463@item LISTING_HEADER 1464A string to use on the header line of a listing. The default value is simply 1465@code{"GAS LISTING"}. 1466 1467@item LISTING_WORD_SIZE 1468The number of bytes to put into a word in a listing. This affects the way the 1469bytes are clumped together in the listing. For example, a value of 2 might 1470print @samp{1234 5678} where a value of 1 would print @samp{12 34 56 78}. The 1471default value is 4. 1472 1473@item LISTING_LHS_WIDTH 1474The number of words of data to print on the first line of a listing for a 1475particular source line, where each word is @code{LISTING_WORD_SIZE} bytes. The 1476default value is 1. 1477 1478@item LISTING_LHS_WIDTH_SECOND 1479Like @code{LISTING_LHS_WIDTH}, but applying to the second and subsequent line 1480of the data printed for a particular source line. The default value is 1. 1481 1482@item LISTING_LHS_CONT_LINES 1483The maximum number of continuation lines to print in a listing for a particular 1484source line. The default value is 4. 1485 1486@item LISTING_RHS_WIDTH 1487The maximum number of characters to print from one line of the input file. The 1488default value is 100. 1489 1490@item TC_COFF_SECTION_DEFAULT_ATTRIBUTES 1491@cindex TC_COFF_SECTION_DEFAULT_ATTRIBUTES 1492The COFF @code{.section} directive will use the value of this macro to set 1493a new section's attributes when a directive has no valid flags or when the 1494flag is @code{w}. The default value of the macro is @code{SEC_LOAD | SEC_DATA}. 1495 1496@item DWARF2_FORMAT () 1497@cindex DWARF2_FORMAT 1498If you define this, it should return one of @code{dwarf2_format_32bit}, 1499@code{dwarf2_format_64bit}, or @code{dwarf2_format_64bit_irix} to indicate 1500the size of internal DWARF section offsets and the format of the DWARF initial 1501length fields. When @code{dwarf2_format_32bit} is returned, the initial 1502length field will be 4 bytes long and section offsets are 32 bits in size. 1503For @code{dwarf2_format_64bit} and @code{dwarf2_format_64bit_irix}, section 1504offsets are 64 bits in size, but the initial length field differs. An 8 byte 1505initial length is indicated by @code{dwarf2_format_64bit_irix} and 1506@code{dwarf2_format_64bit} indicates a 12 byte initial length field in 1507which the first four bytes are 0xffffffff and the next 8 bytes are 1508the section's length. 1509 1510If you don't define this, @code{dwarf2_format_32bit} will be used as 1511the default. 1512 1513This define only affects @code{.debug_info} and @code{.debug_line} 1514sections generated by the assembler. DWARF 2 sections generated by 1515other tools will be unaffected by this setting. 1516 1517@item DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE (@var{bfd}) 1518@cindex DWARF2_ADDR_SIZE 1519It should return the size of an address, as it should be represented in 1520debugging info. If you don't define this macro, the default definition uses 1521the number of bits per address, as defined in @var{bfd}, divided by 8. 1522 1523@end table 1524 1525@node Object format backend 1526@subsection Writing an object format backend 1527@cindex object format backend 1528@cindex @file{obj-@var{fmt}} 1529 1530As with the CPU backend, the object format backend must define a few things, 1531and may define some other things. The interface to the object format backend 1532is generally simpler; most of the support for an object file format consists of 1533defining a number of pseudo-ops. 1534 1535The object format @file{.h} file must include @file{targ-cpu.h}. 1536 1537This section will only define the @code{BFD_ASSEMBLER} version of GAS. It is 1538impossible to support a new object file format using any other version anyhow, 1539as the original GAS version only supports a.out, and the @code{MANY_SEGMENTS} 1540GAS version only supports COFF. 1541 1542@table @code 1543@item OBJ_@var{format} 1544@cindex OBJ_@var{format} 1545By convention, you should define this macro in the @file{.h} file. For 1546example, @file{obj-elf.h} defines @code{OBJ_ELF}. You might have to use this 1547if it is necessary to add object file format specific code to the CPU file. 1548 1549@item obj_begin 1550If you define this macro, GAS will call it at the start of the assembly, after 1551the command line arguments have been parsed and all the machine independent 1552initializations have been completed. 1553 1554@item obj_app_file 1555@cindex obj_app_file 1556If you define this macro, GAS will invoke it when it sees a @code{.file} 1557pseudo-op or a @samp{#} line as used by the C preprocessor. 1558 1559@item OBJ_COPY_SYMBOL_ATTRIBUTES 1560@cindex OBJ_COPY_SYMBOL_ATTRIBUTES 1561You should define this macro to copy object format specific information from 1562one symbol to another. GAS will call it when one symbol is equated to 1563another. 1564 1565@item obj_sec_sym_ok_for_reloc 1566@cindex obj_sec_sym_ok_for_reloc 1567You may define this macro to indicate that it is OK to use a section symbol in 1568a relocation entry. If it is not, GAS will define a new symbol at the start 1569of a section. 1570 1571@item EMIT_SECTION_SYMBOLS 1572@cindex EMIT_SECTION_SYMBOLS 1573You should define this macro with a zero value if you do not want to include 1574section symbols in the output symbol table. The default value for this macro 1575is one. 1576 1577@item obj_adjust_symtab 1578@cindex obj_adjust_symtab 1579If you define this macro, GAS will invoke it just before setting the symbol 1580table of the output BFD. For example, the COFF support uses this macro to 1581generate a @code{.file} symbol if none was generated previously. 1582 1583@item SEPARATE_STAB_SECTIONS 1584@cindex SEPARATE_STAB_SECTIONS 1585You may define this macro to a nonzero value to indicate that stabs should be 1586placed in separate sections, as in ELF. 1587 1588@item INIT_STAB_SECTION 1589@cindex INIT_STAB_SECTION 1590You may define this macro to initialize the stabs section in the output file. 1591 1592@item OBJ_PROCESS_STAB 1593@cindex OBJ_PROCESS_STAB 1594You may define this macro to do specific processing on a stabs entry. 1595 1596@item obj_frob_section 1597@cindex obj_frob_section 1598If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each section at the end of the 1599assembly. 1600 1601@item obj_frob_file_before_adjust 1602@cindex obj_frob_file_before_adjust 1603If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol values are 1604resolved, but before the fixups have been changed from local symbols to section 1605symbols. 1606 1607@item obj_frob_symbol 1608@cindex obj_frob_symbol 1609If you define this macro, GAS will call it for each symbol. You can indicate 1610that the symbol should not be included in the object file by defining this 1611macro to set its second argument to a non-zero value. 1612 1613@item obj_frob_file 1614@cindex obj_frob_file 1615If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the symbol table has been 1616completed, but before the relocations have been generated. 1617 1618@item obj_frob_file_after_relocs 1619If you define this macro, GAS will call it after the relocs have been 1620generated. 1621 1622@item SET_SECTION_RELOCS (@var{sec}, @var{relocs}, @var{n}) 1623@cindex SET_SECTION_RELOCS 1624If you define this, it will be called after the relocations have been set for 1625the section @var{sec}. The list of relocations is in @var{relocs}, and the 1626number of relocations is in @var{n}. This is only used with 1627@code{BFD_ASSEMBLER}. 1628@end table 1629 1630@node Emulations 1631@subsection Writing emulation files 1632 1633Normally you do not have to write an emulation file. You can just use 1634@file{te-generic.h}. 1635 1636If you do write your own emulation file, it must include @file{obj-format.h}. 1637 1638An emulation file will often define @code{TE_@var{EM}}; this may then be used 1639in other files to change the output. 1640 1641@node Relaxation 1642@section Relaxation 1643@cindex relaxation 1644 1645@dfn{Relaxation} is a generic term used when the size of some instruction or 1646data depends upon the value of some symbol or other data. 1647 1648GAS knows to relax a particular type of PC relative relocation using a table. 1649You can also define arbitrarily complex forms of relaxation yourself. 1650 1651@menu 1652* Relaxing with a table:: Relaxing with a table 1653* General relaxing:: General relaxing 1654@end menu 1655 1656@node Relaxing with a table 1657@subsection Relaxing with a table 1658 1659If you do not define @code{md_relax_frag}, and you do define 1660@code{TC_GENERIC_RELAX_TABLE}, GAS will relax @code{rs_machine_dependent} frags 1661based on the frag subtype and the displacement to some specified target 1662address. The basic idea is that several machines have different addressing 1663modes for instructions that can specify different ranges of values, with 1664successive modes able to access wider ranges, including the entirety of the 1665previous range. Smaller ranges are assumed to be more desirable (perhaps the 1666instruction requires one word instead of two or three); if this is not the 1667case, don't describe the smaller-range, inferior mode. 1668 1669The @code{fr_subtype} field of a frag is an index into a CPU-specific 1670relaxation table. That table entry indicates the range of values that can be 1671stored, the number of bytes that will have to be added to the frag to 1672accommodate the addressing mode, and the index of the next entry to examine if 1673the value to be stored is outside the range accessible by the current 1674addressing mode. The @code{fr_symbol} field of the frag indicates what symbol 1675is to be accessed; the @code{fr_offset} field is added in. 1676 1677If the @code{TC_PCREL_ADJUST} macro is defined, which currently should only happen 1678for the NS32k family, the @code{TC_PCREL_ADJUST} macro is called on the frag to 1679compute an adjustment to be made to the displacement. 1680 1681The value fitted by the relaxation code is always assumed to be a displacement 1682from the current frag. (More specifically, from @code{fr_fix} bytes into the 1683frag.) 1684@ignore 1685This seems kinda silly. What about fitting small absolute values? I suppose 1686@code{md_assemble} is supposed to take care of that, but if the operand is a 1687difference between symbols, it might not be able to, if the difference was not 1688computable yet. 1689@end ignore 1690 1691The end of the relaxation sequence is indicated by a ``next'' value of 0. This 1692means that the first entry in the table can't be used. 1693 1694For some configurations, the linker can do relaxing within a section of an 1695object file. If call instructions of various sizes exist, the linker can 1696determine which should be used in each instance, when a symbol's value is 1697resolved. In order for the linker to avoid wasting space and having to insert 1698no-op instructions, it must be able to expand or shrink the section contents 1699while still preserving intra-section references and meeting alignment 1700requirements. 1701 1702For the i960 using b.out format, no expansion is done; instead, each 1703@samp{.align} directive causes extra space to be allocated, enough that when 1704the linker is relaxing a section and removing unneeded space, it can discard 1705some or all of this extra padding and cause the following data to be correctly 1706aligned. 1707 1708For the H8/300, I think the linker expands calls that can't reach, and doesn't 1709worry about alignment issues; the cpu probably never needs any significant 1710alignment beyond the instruction size. 1711 1712The relaxation table type contains these fields: 1713 1714@table @code 1715@item long rlx_forward 1716Forward reach, must be non-negative. 1717@item long rlx_backward 1718Backward reach, must be zero or negative. 1719@item rlx_length 1720Length in bytes of this addressing mode. 1721@item rlx_more 1722Index of the next-longer relax state, or zero if there is no next relax state. 1723@end table 1724 1725The relaxation is done in @code{relax_segment} in @file{write.c}. The 1726difference in the length fields between the original mode and the one finally 1727chosen by the relaxing code is taken as the size by which the current frag will 1728be increased in size. For example, if the initial relaxing mode has a length 1729of 2 bytes, and because of the size of the displacement, it gets upgraded to a 1730mode with a size of 6 bytes, it is assumed that the frag will grow by 4 bytes. 1731(The initial two bytes should have been part of the fixed portion of the frag, 1732since it is already known that they will be output.) This growth must be 1733effected by @code{md_convert_frag}; it should increase the @code{fr_fix} field 1734by the appropriate size, and fill in the appropriate bytes of the frag. 1735(Enough space for the maximum growth should have been allocated in the call to 1736frag_var as the second argument.) 1737 1738If relocation records are needed, they should be emitted by 1739@code{md_estimate_size_before_relax}. This function should examine the target 1740symbol of the supplied frag and correct the @code{fr_subtype} of the frag if 1741needed. When this function is called, if the symbol has not yet been defined, 1742it will not become defined later; however, its value may still change if the 1743section it is in gets relaxed. 1744 1745Usually, if the symbol is in the same section as the frag (given by the 1746@var{sec} argument), the narrowest likely relaxation mode is stored in 1747@code{fr_subtype}, and that's that. 1748 1749If the symbol is undefined, or in a different section (and therefore movable 1750to an arbitrarily large distance), the largest available relaxation mode is 1751specified, @code{fix_new} is called to produce the relocation record, 1752@code{fr_fix} is increased to include the relocated field (remember, this 1753storage was allocated when @code{frag_var} was called), and @code{frag_wane} is 1754called to convert the frag to an @code{rs_fill} frag with no variant part. 1755Sometimes changing addressing modes may also require rewriting the instruction. 1756It can be accessed via @code{fr_opcode} or @code{fr_fix}. 1757 1758If you generate frags separately for the basic insn opcode and any relaxable 1759operands, do not call @code{fix_new} thinking you can emit fixups for the 1760opcode field from the relaxable frag. It is not guaranteed to be the same frag. 1761If you need to emit fixups for the opcode field from inspection of the 1762relaxable frag, then you need to generate a common frag for both the basic 1763opcode and relaxable fields, or you need to provide the frag for the opcode to 1764pass to @code{fix_new}. The latter can be done for example by defining 1765@code{TC_FRAG_TYPE} to include a pointer to it and defining @code{TC_FRAG_INIT} 1766to set the pointer. 1767 1768Sometimes @code{fr_var} is increased instead, and @code{frag_wane} is not 1769called. I'm not sure, but I think this is to keep @code{fr_fix} referring to 1770an earlier byte, and @code{fr_subtype} set to @code{rs_machine_dependent} so 1771that @code{md_convert_frag} will get called. 1772 1773@node General relaxing 1774@subsection General relaxing 1775 1776If using a simple table is not suitable, you may implement arbitrarily complex 1777relaxation semantics yourself. For example, the MIPS backend uses this to emit 1778different instruction sequences depending upon the size of the symbol being 1779accessed. 1780 1781When you assemble an instruction that may need relaxation, you should allocate 1782a frag using @code{frag_var} or @code{frag_variant} with a type of 1783@code{rs_machine_dependent}. You should store some sort of information in the 1784@code{fr_subtype} field so that you can figure out what to do with the frag 1785later. 1786 1787When GAS reaches the end of the input file, it will look through the frags and 1788work out their final sizes. 1789 1790GAS will first call @code{md_estimate_size_before_relax} on each 1791@code{rs_machine_dependent} frag. This function must return an estimated size 1792for the frag. 1793 1794GAS will then loop over the frags, calling @code{md_relax_frag} on each 1795@code{rs_machine_dependent} frag. This function should return the change in 1796size of the frag. GAS will keep looping over the frags until none of the frags 1797changes size. 1798 1799@node Broken words 1800@section Broken words 1801@cindex internals, broken words 1802@cindex broken words 1803 1804Some compilers, including GCC, will sometimes emit switch tables specifying 180516-bit @code{.word} displacements to branch targets, and branch instructions 1806that load entries from that table to compute the target address. If this is 1807done on a 32-bit machine, there is a chance (at least with really large 1808functions) that the displacement will not fit in 16 bits. The assembler 1809handles this using a concept called @dfn{broken words}. This idea is well 1810named, since there is an implied promise that the 16-bit field will in fact 1811hold the specified displacement. 1812 1813If broken word processing is enabled, and a situation like this is encountered, 1814the assembler will insert a jump instruction into the instruction stream, close 1815enough to be reached with the 16-bit displacement. This jump instruction will 1816transfer to the real desired target address. Thus, as long as the @code{.word} 1817value really is used as a displacement to compute an address to jump to, the 1818net effect will be correct (minus a very small efficiency cost). If 1819@code{.word} directives with label differences for values are used for other 1820purposes, however, things may not work properly. For targets which use broken 1821words, the @samp{-K} option will warn when a broken word is discovered. 1822 1823The broken word code is turned off by the @code{WORKING_DOT_WORD} macro. It 1824isn't needed if @code{.word} emits a value large enough to contain an address 1825(or, more correctly, any possible difference between two addresses). 1826 1827@node Internal functions 1828@section Internal functions 1829 1830This section describes basic internal functions used by GAS. 1831 1832@menu 1833* Warning and error messages:: Warning and error messages 1834* Hash tables:: Hash tables 1835@end menu 1836 1837@node Warning and error messages 1838@subsection Warning and error messages 1839 1840@deftypefun @{@} int had_warnings (void) 1841@deftypefunx @{@} int had_errors (void) 1842Returns non-zero if any warnings or errors, respectively, have been printed 1843during this invocation. 1844@end deftypefun 1845 1846@deftypefun @{@} void as_perror (const char *@var{gripe}, const char *@var{filename}) 1847Displays a BFD or system error, then clears the error status. 1848@end deftypefun 1849 1850@deftypefun @{@} void as_tsktsk (const char *@var{format}, ...) 1851@deftypefunx @{@} void as_warn (const char *@var{format}, ...) 1852@deftypefunx @{@} void as_bad (const char *@var{format}, ...) 1853@deftypefunx @{@} void as_fatal (const char *@var{format}, ...) 1854These functions display messages about something amiss with the input file, or 1855internal problems in the assembler itself. The current file name and line 1856number are printed, followed by the supplied message, formatted using 1857@code{vfprintf}, and a final newline. 1858 1859An error indicated by @code{as_bad} will result in a non-zero exit status when 1860the assembler has finished. Calling @code{as_fatal} will result in immediate 1861termination of the assembler process. 1862@end deftypefun 1863 1864@deftypefun @{@} void as_warn_where (char *@var{file}, unsigned int @var{line}, const char *@var{format}, ...) 1865@deftypefunx @{@} void as_bad_where (char *@var{file}, unsigned int @var{line}, const char *@var{format}, ...) 1866These variants permit specification of the file name and line number, and are 1867used when problems are detected when reprocessing information saved away when 1868processing some earlier part of the file. For example, fixups are processed 1869after all input has been read, but messages about fixups should refer to the 1870original filename and line number that they are applicable to. 1871@end deftypefun 1872 1873@deftypefun @{@} void fprint_value (FILE *@var{file}, valueT @var{val}) 1874@deftypefunx @{@} void sprint_value (char *@var{buf}, valueT @var{val}) 1875These functions are helpful for converting a @code{valueT} value into printable 1876format, in case it's wider than modes that @code{*printf} can handle. If the 1877type is narrow enough, a decimal number will be produced; otherwise, it will be 1878in hexadecimal. The value itself is not examined to make this determination. 1879@end deftypefun 1880 1881@node Hash tables 1882@subsection Hash tables 1883@cindex hash tables 1884 1885@deftypefun @{@} @{struct hash_control *@} hash_new (void) 1886Creates the hash table control structure. 1887@end deftypefun 1888 1889@deftypefun @{@} void hash_die (struct hash_control *) 1890Destroy a hash table. 1891@end deftypefun 1892 1893@deftypefun @{@} PTR hash_delete (struct hash_control *, const char *) 1894Deletes entry from the hash table, returns the value it had. 1895@end deftypefun 1896 1897@deftypefun @{@} PTR hash_replace (struct hash_control *, const char *, PTR) 1898Updates the value for an entry already in the table, returning the old value. 1899If no entry was found, just returns NULL. 1900@end deftypefun 1901 1902@deftypefun @{@} @{const char *@} hash_insert (struct hash_control *, const char *, PTR) 1903Inserting a value already in the table is an error. 1904Returns an error message or NULL. 1905@end deftypefun 1906 1907@deftypefun @{@} @{const char *@} hash_jam (struct hash_control *, const char *, PTR) 1908Inserts if the value isn't already present, updates it if it is. 1909@end deftypefun 1910 1911@node Test suite 1912@section Test suite 1913@cindex test suite 1914 1915The test suite is kind of lame for most processors. Often it only checks to 1916see if a couple of files can be assembled without the assembler reporting any 1917errors. For more complete testing, write a test which either examines the 1918assembler listing, or runs @code{objdump} and examines its output. For the 1919latter, the TCL procedure @code{run_dump_test} may come in handy. It takes the 1920base name of a file, and looks for @file{@var{file}.d}. This file should 1921contain as its initial lines a set of variable settings in @samp{#} comments, 1922in the form: 1923 1924@example 1925 #@var{varname}: @var{value} 1926@end example 1927 1928The @var{varname} may be @code{objdump}, @code{nm}, or @code{as}, in which case 1929it specifies the options to be passed to the specified programs. Exactly one 1930of @code{objdump} or @code{nm} must be specified, as that also specifies which 1931program to run after the assembler has finished. If @var{varname} is 1932@code{source}, it specifies the name of the source file; otherwise, 1933@file{@var{file}.s} is used. If @var{varname} is @code{name}, it specifies the 1934name of the test to be used in the @code{pass} or @code{fail} messages. 1935 1936The non-commented parts of the file are interpreted as regular expressions, one 1937per line. Blank lines in the @code{objdump} or @code{nm} output are skipped, 1938as are blank lines in the @code{.d} file; the other lines are tested to see if 1939the regular expression matches the program output. If it does not, the test 1940fails. 1941 1942Note that this means the tests must be modified if the @code{objdump} output 1943style is changed. 1944 1945@bye 1946@c Local Variables: 1947@c fill-column: 79 1948@c End: 1949