binutils-gdb/gdb/tramp-frame.h
Simon Marchi 5a5319833d gdb: remove struct trad_frame forward declaration
I found this forward declaration for a struct that doesn't exist, remove
it.

Change-Id: Ib9473435a949452160598035e5e0fe19fcdc4d20
2023-01-20 12:35:01 -05:00

84 lines
3.0 KiB
C++

/* Signal trampoline unwinder.
Copyright (C) 2004-2023 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 TRAMP_FRAME_H
#define TRAMP_FRAME_H
#include "frame.h" /* For "enum frame_type". */
class frame_info_ptr;
struct trad_frame_cache;
/* A trampoline consists of a small sequence of instructions placed at
an unspecified location in the inferior's address space. The only
identifying attribute of the trampoline's address is that it does
not fall inside an object file's section.
The only way to identify a trampoline is to perform a brute force
examination of the instructions at and around the PC.
This module provides a convenient interface for performing that
operation. */
/* A trampoline descriptor. */
/* Magic instruction that to mark the end of the signal trampoline
instruction sequence. */
#define TRAMP_SENTINEL_INSN ULONGEST_MAX
struct tramp_frame
{
/* The trampoline's type, some a signal trampolines, some are normal
call-frame trampolines (aka thunks). */
enum frame_type frame_type;
/* The trampoline's entire instruction sequence. It consists of a
bytes/mask pair. Search for this in the inferior at or around
the frame's PC. It is assumed that the PC is INSN_SIZE aligned,
and that each element of TRAMP contains one INSN_SIZE
instruction. It is also assumed that INSN[0] contains the first
instruction of the trampoline and hence the address of the
instruction matching INSN[0] is the trampoline's "func" address.
The instruction sequence is terminated by
TRAMP_SENTINEL_INSN. */
int insn_size;
struct
{
ULONGEST bytes;
ULONGEST mask;
} insn[48];
/* Initialize a trad-frame cache corresponding to the tramp-frame.
FUNC is the address of the instruction TRAMP[0] in memory. */
void (*init) (const struct tramp_frame *self,
frame_info_ptr this_frame,
struct trad_frame_cache *this_cache,
CORE_ADDR func);
/* Return non-zero if the tramp-frame is valid for the PC requested.
Adjust the PC to point to the address to check the instruction
sequence against if required. If this is NULL, then the tramp-frame
is valid for any PC. */
int (*validate) (const struct tramp_frame *self,
frame_info_ptr this_frame,
CORE_ADDR *pc);
};
void tramp_frame_prepend_unwinder (struct gdbarch *gdbarch,
const struct tramp_frame *tramp);
#endif