| /* addrmap.h --- interface to address map data structure. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2007-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| This file is part of GDB. |
| |
| This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or |
| (at your option) any later version. |
| |
| This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| GNU General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| |
| #ifndef ADDRMAP_H |
| #define ADDRMAP_H |
| |
| #include "gdbsupport/function-view.h" |
| |
| /* An address map is essentially a table mapping CORE_ADDRs onto GDB |
| data structures, like blocks, symtabs, partial symtabs, and so on. |
| An address map uses memory proportional to the number of |
| transitions in the map, where a CORE_ADDR N is mapped to one |
| object, and N+1 is mapped to a different object. |
| |
| Address maps come in two flavors: fixed, and mutable. Mutable |
| address maps consume more memory, but can be changed and extended. |
| A fixed address map, once constructed (from a mutable address map), |
| can't be edited. Both kinds of map are allocated in obstacks. */ |
| |
| /* The opaque type representing address maps. */ |
| struct addrmap; |
| |
| /* Create a mutable address map which maps every address to NULL. |
| Allocate entries in OBSTACK. */ |
| struct addrmap *addrmap_create_mutable (struct obstack *obstack); |
| |
| /* In the mutable address map MAP, associate the addresses from START |
| to END_INCLUSIVE that are currently associated with NULL with OBJ |
| instead. Addresses mapped to an object other than NULL are left |
| unchanged. |
| |
| As the name suggests, END_INCLUSIVE is also mapped to OBJ. This |
| convention is unusual, but it allows callers to accurately specify |
| ranges that abut the top of the address space, and ranges that |
| cover the entire address space. |
| |
| This operation seems a bit complicated for a primitive: if it's |
| needed, why not just have a simpler primitive operation that sets a |
| range to a value, wiping out whatever was there before, and then |
| let the caller construct more complicated operations from that, |
| along with some others for traversal? |
| |
| It turns out this is the mutation operation we want to use all the |
| time, at least for now. Our immediate use for address maps is to |
| represent lexical blocks whose address ranges are not contiguous. |
| We walk the tree of lexical blocks present in the debug info, and |
| only create 'struct block' objects after we've traversed all a |
| block's children. If a lexical block declares no local variables |
| (and isn't the lexical block for a function's body), we omit it |
| from GDB's data structures entirely. |
| |
| However, this means that we don't decide to create a block (and |
| thus record it in the address map) until after we've traversed its |
| children. If we do decide to create the block, we do so at a time |
| when all its children have already been recorded in the map. So |
| this operation --- change only those addresses left unset --- is |
| actually the operation we want to use every time. |
| |
| It seems simpler to let the code which operates on the |
| representation directly deal with the hair of implementing these |
| semantics than to provide an interface which allows it to be |
| implemented efficiently, but doesn't reveal too much of the |
| representation. */ |
| void addrmap_set_empty (struct addrmap *map, |
| CORE_ADDR start, CORE_ADDR end_inclusive, |
| void *obj); |
| |
| /* Return the object associated with ADDR in MAP. */ |
| void *addrmap_find (struct addrmap *map, CORE_ADDR addr); |
| |
| /* Create a fixed address map which is a copy of the mutable address |
| map ORIGINAL. Allocate entries in OBSTACK. */ |
| struct addrmap *addrmap_create_fixed (struct addrmap *original, |
| struct obstack *obstack); |
| |
| /* Relocate all the addresses in MAP by OFFSET. (This can be applied |
| to either mutable or immutable maps.) */ |
| void addrmap_relocate (struct addrmap *map, CORE_ADDR offset); |
| |
| /* The type of a function used to iterate over the map. |
| OBJ is NULL for unmapped regions. */ |
| typedef gdb::function_view<int (CORE_ADDR start_addr, void *obj)> |
| addrmap_foreach_fn; |
| |
| /* Call FN for every address in MAP, following an in-order traversal. |
| If FN ever returns a non-zero value, the iteration ceases |
| immediately, and the value is returned. Otherwise, this function |
| returns 0. */ |
| int addrmap_foreach (struct addrmap *map, addrmap_foreach_fn fn); |
| |
| /* Dump the addrmap to OUTFILE. If PAYLOAD is non-NULL, only dump any |
| components that map to PAYLOAD. (If PAYLOAD is NULL, the entire |
| map is dumped.) */ |
| void addrmap_dump (struct addrmap *map, struct ui_file *outfile, |
| void *payload); |
| |
| #endif /* ADDRMAP_H */ |