This makes gprof work with non-standard text sections.

* syms.c (decode_section_type): New.
	(bfd_decode_symclass): Call decode_section_type.
This commit is contained in:
Jim Wilson 2002-07-05 20:29:38 +00:00
parent 79d5b63a45
commit b3212001ca
2 changed files with 46 additions and 1 deletions

View file

@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
2002-07-05 Jim Wilson <wilson@redhat.com>
* syms.c (decode_section_type): New.
(bfd_decode_symclass): Call decode_section_type.
2002-07-04 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
* merge.c (_bfd_merged_section_offset): Avoid accessing byte before

View file

@ -315,6 +315,7 @@ CODE_FRAGMENT
#include "aout/stab_gnu.h"
static char coff_section_type PARAMS ((const char *));
static char decode_section_type PARAMS ((const struct sec *));
static int cmpindexentry PARAMS ((const PTR, const PTR));
/*
@ -589,6 +590,41 @@ coff_section_type (s)
return '?';
}
/* Return the single-character symbol type corresponding to section
SECTION, or '?' for an unknown section. This uses section flags to
identify sections.
FIXME These types are unhandled: c, i, e, p. If we handled these also,
we could perhaps obsolete coff_section_type. */
static char
decode_section_type (section)
const struct sec *section;
{
if (section->flags & SEC_CODE)
return 't';
if (section->flags & SEC_DATA)
{
if (section->flags & SEC_READONLY)
return 'r';
else if (section->flags & SEC_SMALL_DATA)
return 'g';
else
return 'd';
}
if ((section->flags & SEC_HAS_CONTENTS) == 0)
{
if (section->flags & SEC_SMALL_DATA)
return 's';
else
return 'b';
}
if (section->flags & SEC_DEBUGGING)
return 'N';
return '?';
}
/*
FUNCTION
bfd_decode_symclass
@ -639,7 +675,11 @@ bfd_decode_symclass (symbol)
if (bfd_is_abs_section (symbol->section))
c = 'a';
else if (symbol->section)
{
c = coff_section_type (symbol->section->name);
if (c == '?')
c = decode_section_type (symbol->section);
}
else
return '?';
if (symbol->flags & BSF_GLOBAL)