Retro68/binutils/include/aout/ranlib.h
Wolfgang Thaller f485e125c4 binutils 2.39
2022-10-27 20:45:45 +02:00

64 lines
2.5 KiB
C

/* ranlib.h -- archive library index member definition for GNU.
Copyright (C) 1990-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston,
MA 02110-1301, USA. */
/* The Symdef member of an archive contains two things:
a table that maps symbol-string offsets to file offsets,
and a symbol-string table. All the symbol names are
run together (each with trailing null) in the symbol-string
table. There is a single longword bytecount on the front
of each of these tables. Thus if we have two symbols,
"foo" and "_bar", that are in archive members at offsets
200 and 900, it would look like this:
16 ; byte count of index table
0 ; offset of "foo" in string table
200 ; offset of foo-module in file
4 ; offset of "bar" in string table
900 ; offset of bar-module in file
9 ; byte count of string table
"foo\0_bar\0" ; string table */
#define RANLIBMAG "__.SYMDEF" /* Archive file name containing index */
#define RANLIBSKEW 3 /* Creation time offset */
/* Format of __.SYMDEF:
First, a longword containing the size of the 'symdef' data that follows.
Second, zero or more 'symdef' structures.
Third, a longword containing the length of symbol name strings.
Fourth, zero or more symbol name strings (each followed by a null). */
struct symdef
{
union
{
unsigned long string_offset; /* In the file */
char *name; /* In memory, sometimes */
} s;
/* this points to the front of the file header (AKA member header --
a struct ar_hdr), not to the front of the file or into the file).
in other words it only tells you which file to read */
unsigned long file_offset;
};
/* Compatability with BSD code */
#define ranlib symdef
#define ran_un s
#define ran_strx string_offset
#define ran_name name
#define ran_off file_offset