old-cross-binutils/bfd/format.c
David MacKenzie d6d4e4c3d0 * format.c (bfd_check_format_matches): Put the new entry in the
correct element of matching_vector.
1994-01-26 21:53:55 +00:00

311 lines
8.2 KiB
C

/* Generic BFD support for file formats.
Copyright (C) 1990, 91, 92, 93, 94 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Written by Cygnus Support.
This file is part of BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library.
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 2 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, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
/*
SECTION
File formats
A format is a BFD concept of high level file contents type. The
formats supported by BFD are:
o <<bfd_object>>
The BFD may contain data, symbols, relocations and debug info.
o <<bfd_archive>>
The BFD contains other BFDs and an optional index.
o <<bfd_core>>
The BFD contains the result of an executable core dump.
*/
#include "bfd.h"
#include "sysdep.h"
#include "libbfd.h"
/* IMPORT from targets.c. */
extern CONST size_t _bfd_target_vector_entries;
/*
FUNCTION
bfd_check_format
SYNOPSIS
boolean bfd_check_format(bfd *abfd, bfd_format format);
DESCRIPTION
Verify if the file attached to the BFD @var{abfd} is compatible
with the format @var{format} (i.e., one of <<bfd_object>>,
<<bfd_archive>> or <<bfd_core>>).
If the BFD has been set to a specific target before the
call, only the named target and format combination is
checked. If the target has not been set, or has been set to
<<default>>, then all the known target backends is
interrogated to determine a match. If the default target
matches, it is used. If not, exactly one target must recognize
the file, or an error results.
The function returns <<true>> on success, otherwise <<false>>
with one of the following error codes:
o <<invalid_operation>> -
if <<format>> is not one of <<bfd_object>>, <<bfd_archive>> or
<<bfd_core>>.
o <<system_call_error>> -
if an error occured during a read - even some file mismatches
can cause system_call_errors.
o <<file_not_recognised>> -
none of the backends recognised the file format.
o <<file_ambiguously_recognized>> -
more than one backend recognised the file format.
*/
boolean
bfd_check_format (abfd, format)
bfd *abfd;
bfd_format format;
{
return bfd_check_format_matches (abfd, format, NULL);
}
/*
FUNCTION
bfd_check_format_matches
SYNOPSIS
boolean bfd_check_format_matches(bfd *abfd, bfd_format format, char ***matching);
DESCRIPTION
Like <<bfd_check_format>>, except when it returns false with
<<bfd_errno>> set to <<file_ambiguously_recognized>>. In that
case, if @var{matching} is not NULL, it will be filled in with
a NULL-terminated list of the names of the formats that matched,
allocated with <<malloc>>.
Then the user may choose a format and try again.
When done with the list that @var{matching} points to, the caller
should free it.
*/
boolean
bfd_check_format_matches (abfd, format, matching)
bfd *abfd;
bfd_format format;
char ***matching;
{
bfd_target **target, *save_targ, *right_targ;
char **matching_vector;
int match_count;
if (!bfd_read_p (abfd) ||
((int)(abfd->format) < (int)bfd_unknown) ||
((int)(abfd->format) >= (int)bfd_type_end)) {
bfd_error = invalid_operation;
return false;
}
if (abfd->format != bfd_unknown)
return (abfd->format == format)? true: false;
/* Since the target type was defaulted, check them
all in the hope that one will be uniquely recognized. */
save_targ = abfd->xvec;
match_count = 0;
if (matching)
{
*matching = matching_vector =
(char **) bfd_xmalloc_by_size_t (sizeof (char *) *
(_bfd_target_vector_entries + 1));
matching_vector[0] = NULL;
}
right_targ = 0;
/* presume the answer is yes */
abfd->format = format;
/* If the target type was explicitly specified, just check that target. */
if (!abfd->target_defaulted) {
bfd_seek (abfd, (file_ptr)0, SEEK_SET); /* rewind! */
right_targ = BFD_SEND_FMT (abfd, _bfd_check_format, (abfd));
if (right_targ) {
abfd->xvec = right_targ; /* Set the target as returned */
if (matching)
free (matching_vector);
return true; /* File position has moved, BTW */
}
}
for (target = bfd_target_vector; *target != NULL; target++) {
bfd_target *temp;
abfd->xvec = *target; /* Change BFD's target temporarily */
bfd_seek (abfd, (file_ptr)0, SEEK_SET);
/* If _bfd_check_format neglects to set bfd_error, assume wrong_format.
We didn't used to even pay any attention to bfd_error, so I suspect
that some _bfd_check_format might have this problem. */
bfd_error = wrong_format;
temp = BFD_SEND_FMT (abfd, _bfd_check_format, (abfd));
if (temp) { /* This format checks out as ok! */
right_targ = temp;
if (matching)
{
matching_vector[match_count] = temp->name;
matching_vector[match_count + 1] = NULL;
}
match_count++;
/* If this is the default target, accept it, even if other targets
might match. People who want those other targets have to set
the GNUTARGET variable. */
if (temp == bfd_default_vector[0])
{
if (matching)
{
matching_vector[0] = temp->name;
matching_vector[1] = NULL;
}
match_count = 1;
break;
}
#ifdef GNU960
/* Big- and little-endian b.out archives look the same, but it doesn't
* matter: there is no difference in their headers, and member file byte
* orders will (I hope) be handled appropriately by bfd. Ditto for big
* and little coff archives. And the 4 coff/b.out object formats are
* unambiguous. So accept the first match we find.
*/
break;
#endif
} else if (bfd_error != wrong_format) {
abfd->xvec = save_targ;
abfd->format = bfd_unknown;
if (matching && bfd_error != file_ambiguously_recognized)
free (matching_vector);
return false;
}
}
if (match_count == 1) {
abfd->xvec = right_targ; /* Change BFD's target permanently */
if (matching)
free (matching_vector);
return true; /* File position has moved, BTW */
}
abfd->xvec = save_targ; /* Restore original target type */
abfd->format = bfd_unknown; /* Restore original format */
if (match_count == 0)
{
bfd_error = file_not_recognized;
if (matching)
free (matching_vector);
}
else
bfd_error = file_ambiguously_recognized;
return false;
}
/*
FUNCTION
bfd_set_format
SYNOPSIS
boolean bfd_set_format(bfd *abfd, bfd_format format);
DESCRIPTION
This function sets the file format of the BFD @var{abfd} to the
format @var{format}. If the target set in the BFD does not
support the format requested, the format is invalid, or the BFD
is not open for writing, then an error occurs.
*/
boolean
bfd_set_format (abfd, format)
bfd *abfd;
bfd_format format;
{
if (bfd_read_p (abfd) ||
((int)abfd->format < (int)bfd_unknown) ||
((int)abfd->format >= (int)bfd_type_end)) {
bfd_error = invalid_operation;
return false;
}
if (abfd->format != bfd_unknown)
return (abfd->format == format) ? true:false;
/* presume the answer is yes */
abfd->format = format;
if (!BFD_SEND_FMT (abfd, _bfd_set_format, (abfd))) {
abfd->format = bfd_unknown;
return false;
}
return true;
}
/*
FUNCTION
bfd_format_string
SYNOPSIS
CONST char *bfd_format_string(bfd_format format);
DESCRIPTION
Return a pointer to a const string
<<invalid>>, <<object>>, <<archive>>, <<core>>, or <<unknown>>,
depending upon the value of @var{format}.
*/
CONST char *
bfd_format_string (format)
bfd_format format;
{
if (((int)format <(int) bfd_unknown)
|| ((int)format >=(int) bfd_type_end))
return "invalid";
switch (format) {
case bfd_object:
return "object"; /* linker/assember/compiler output */
case bfd_archive:
return "archive"; /* object archive file */
case bfd_core:
return "core"; /* core dump */
default:
return "unknown";
}
}