Subversion Repositories Kolibri OS

Rev

Rev 5191 | Go to most recent revision | Blame | Compare with Previous | Last modification | View Log | RSS feed

  1. /* `a.out' object-file definitions, including extensions to 64-bit fields
  2.  
  3.    Copyright (C) 1999-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  4.  
  5.    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
  6.    it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  7.    the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
  8.    (at your option) any later version.
  9.    
  10.    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  11.    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  12.    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
  13.    GNU General Public License for more details.
  14.    
  15.    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  16.    along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
  17.    Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston,
  18.    MA 02110-1301, USA.  */
  19.  
  20. #ifndef __A_OUT_64_H__
  21. #define __A_OUT_64_H__
  22.  
  23. #ifndef BYTES_IN_WORD
  24. #define BYTES_IN_WORD 4
  25. #endif
  26.  
  27. /* This is the layout on disk of the 32-bit or 64-bit exec header.  */
  28.  
  29. #ifndef external_exec
  30. struct external_exec
  31. {
  32.   bfd_byte e_info[4];               /* Magic number and stuff.  */
  33.   bfd_byte e_text[BYTES_IN_WORD];   /* Length of text section in bytes.  */
  34.   bfd_byte e_data[BYTES_IN_WORD];   /* Length of data section in bytes.  */
  35.   bfd_byte e_bss[BYTES_IN_WORD];    /* Length of bss area in bytes.  */
  36.   bfd_byte e_syms[BYTES_IN_WORD];   /* Length of symbol table in bytes.  */
  37.   bfd_byte e_entry[BYTES_IN_WORD];  /* Start address.  */
  38.   bfd_byte e_trsize[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of text relocation info.  */
  39.   bfd_byte e_drsize[BYTES_IN_WORD]; /* Length of data relocation info.  */
  40. };
  41.  
  42. #define EXEC_BYTES_SIZE (4 + BYTES_IN_WORD * 7)
  43.  
  44. /* Magic numbers for a.out files.  */
  45.  
  46. #if ARCH_SIZE==64
  47. #define OMAGIC 0x1001           /* Code indicating object file.  */
  48. #define ZMAGIC 0x1002           /* Code indicating demand-paged executable.  */
  49. #define NMAGIC 0x1003           /* Code indicating pure executable.  */
  50.  
  51. /* There is no 64-bit QMAGIC as far as I know.  */
  52.  
  53. #define N_BADMAG(x)       (N_MAGIC(x) != OMAGIC         \
  54.                         && N_MAGIC(x) != NMAGIC         \
  55.                         && N_MAGIC(x) != ZMAGIC)
  56. #else
  57. #define OMAGIC 0407             /* Object file or impure executable.  */
  58. #define NMAGIC 0410             /* Code indicating pure executable.  */
  59. #define ZMAGIC 0413             /* Code indicating demand-paged executable.  */
  60. #define BMAGIC 0415             /* Used by a b.out object.  */
  61.  
  62. /* This indicates a demand-paged executable with the header in the text.
  63.    It is used by 386BSD (and variants) and Linux, at least.  */
  64. #ifndef QMAGIC
  65. #define QMAGIC 0314
  66. #endif
  67. # ifndef N_BADMAG
  68. #  define N_BADMAG(x)     (N_MAGIC(x) != OMAGIC         \
  69.                         && N_MAGIC(x) != NMAGIC         \
  70.                         && N_MAGIC(x) != ZMAGIC \
  71.                         && N_MAGIC(x) != QMAGIC)
  72. # endif /* N_BADMAG */
  73. #endif
  74.  
  75. #endif
  76.  
  77. #ifdef QMAGIC
  78. #define N_IS_QMAGIC(x) (N_MAGIC (x) == QMAGIC)
  79. #else
  80. #define N_IS_QMAGIC(x) (0)
  81. #endif
  82.  
  83. /* The difference between TARGET_PAGE_SIZE and N_SEGSIZE is that TARGET_PAGE_SIZE is
  84.    the finest granularity at which you can page something, thus it
  85.    controls the padding (if any) before the text segment of a ZMAGIC
  86.    file.  N_SEGSIZE is the resolution at which things can be marked as
  87.    read-only versus read/write, so it controls the padding between the
  88.    text segment and the data segment (in memory; on disk the padding
  89.    between them is TARGET_PAGE_SIZE).  TARGET_PAGE_SIZE and N_SEGSIZE are the same
  90.    for most machines, but different for sun3.  */
  91.  
  92. /* By default, segment size is constant.  But some machines override this
  93.    to be a function of the a.out header (e.g. machine type).  */
  94.  
  95. #ifndef N_SEGSIZE
  96. #define N_SEGSIZE(x)    SEGMENT_SIZE
  97. #endif
  98. /* Virtual memory address of the text section.
  99.    This is getting very complicated.  A good reason to discard a.out format
  100.    for something that specifies these fields explicitly.  But til then...
  101.  
  102.    * OMAGIC and NMAGIC files:
  103.        (object files: text for "relocatable addr 0" right after the header)
  104.        start at 0, offset is EXEC_BYTES_SIZE, size as stated.
  105.    * The text address, offset, and size of ZMAGIC files depend
  106.      on the entry point of the file:
  107.      * entry point below TEXT_START_ADDR:
  108.        (hack for SunOS shared libraries)
  109.        start at 0, offset is 0, size as stated.
  110.      * If N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) is true (which defaults to being the
  111.        case when the entry point is EXEC_BYTES_SIZE or further into a page):
  112.        no padding is needed; text can start after exec header.  Sun
  113.        considers the text segment of such files to include the exec header;
  114.        for BFD's purposes, we don't, which makes more work for us.
  115.        start at TEXT_START_ADDR + EXEC_BYTES_SIZE, offset is EXEC_BYTES_SIZE,
  116.        size as stated minus EXEC_BYTES_SIZE.
  117.      * If N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) is false (which defaults to being the case when
  118.        the entry point is less than EXEC_BYTES_SIZE into a page (e.g. page
  119.        aligned)): (padding is needed so that text can start at a page boundary)
  120.        start at TEXT_START_ADDR, offset TARGET_PAGE_SIZE, size as stated.
  121.  
  122.     Specific configurations may want to hardwire N_HEADER_IN_TEXT,
  123.     for efficiency or to allow people to play games with the entry point.
  124.     In that case, you would #define N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) as 1 for sunos,
  125.     and as 0 for most other hosts (Sony News, Vax Ultrix, etc).
  126.     (Do this in the appropriate bfd target file.)
  127.     (The default is a heuristic that will break if people try changing
  128.     the entry point, perhaps with the ld -e flag.)
  129.  
  130.     * QMAGIC is always like a ZMAGIC for which N_HEADER_IN_TEXT is true,
  131.     and for which the starting address is TARGET_PAGE_SIZE (or should this be
  132.     SEGMENT_SIZE?) (TEXT_START_ADDR only applies to ZMAGIC, not to QMAGIC).  */
  133.  
  134. /* This macro is only relevant for ZMAGIC files; QMAGIC always has the header
  135.    in the text.  */
  136. #ifndef N_HEADER_IN_TEXT
  137. #define N_HEADER_IN_TEXT(x) \
  138.   (((x).a_entry & (TARGET_PAGE_SIZE-1)) >= EXEC_BYTES_SIZE)
  139. #endif
  140.  
  141. /* Sun shared libraries, not linux.  This macro is only relevant for ZMAGIC
  142.    files.  */
  143. #ifndef N_SHARED_LIB
  144. #define N_SHARED_LIB(x) (0)
  145. #endif
  146.  
  147. /* Returning 0 not TEXT_START_ADDR for OMAGIC and NMAGIC is based on
  148.    the assumption that we are dealing with a .o file, not an
  149.    executable.  This is necessary for OMAGIC (but means we don't work
  150.    right on the output from ld -N); more questionable for NMAGIC.  */
  151.  
  152. #ifndef N_TXTADDR
  153. #define N_TXTADDR(x) \
  154.     (/* The address of a QMAGIC file is always one page in,             \
  155.         with the header in the text.  */                                \
  156.      N_IS_QMAGIC (x)                                                    \
  157.      ? (bfd_vma) TARGET_PAGE_SIZE + EXEC_BYTES_SIZE                     \
  158.      : (N_MAGIC (x) != ZMAGIC                                           \
  159.         ? (bfd_vma) 0   /* Object file or NMAGIC.  */                   \
  160.         : (N_SHARED_LIB (x)                                             \
  161.            ? (bfd_vma) 0                                                \
  162.            : (N_HEADER_IN_TEXT (x)                                      \
  163.               ? (bfd_vma) TEXT_START_ADDR + EXEC_BYTES_SIZE             \
  164.               : (bfd_vma) TEXT_START_ADDR))))
  165. #endif
  166.  
  167. /* If N_HEADER_IN_TEXT is not true for ZMAGIC, there is some padding
  168.    to make the text segment start at a certain boundary.  For most
  169.    systems, this boundary is TARGET_PAGE_SIZE.  But for Linux, in the
  170.    time-honored tradition of crazy ZMAGIC hacks, it is 1024 which is
  171.    not what TARGET_PAGE_SIZE needs to be for QMAGIC.  */
  172.  
  173. #ifndef ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE
  174. #define ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE TARGET_PAGE_SIZE
  175. #endif
  176.  
  177. #define N_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE(x) \
  178.   (N_MAGIC(x) == ZMAGIC ? ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE : TARGET_PAGE_SIZE)
  179.  
  180. /* Offset in an a.out of the start of the text section. */
  181. #ifndef N_TXTOFF
  182. #define N_TXTOFF(x)                                                     \
  183.     (/* For {O,N,Q}MAGIC, no padding.  */                               \
  184.      N_MAGIC (x) != ZMAGIC                                              \
  185.      ? EXEC_BYTES_SIZE                                                  \
  186.      : (N_SHARED_LIB (x)                                                \
  187.         ? 0                                                             \
  188.         : (N_HEADER_IN_TEXT (x)                                         \
  189.            ? EXEC_BYTES_SIZE            /* No padding.  */              \
  190.            : ZMAGIC_DISK_BLOCK_SIZE     /* A page of padding.  */)))
  191. #endif
  192. /* Size of the text section.  It's always as stated, except that we
  193.    offset it to `undo' the adjustment to N_TXTADDR and N_TXTOFF
  194.    for ZMAGIC files that nominally include the exec header
  195.    as part of the first page of text.  (BFD doesn't consider the
  196.    exec header to be part of the text segment.)  */
  197. #ifndef N_TXTSIZE
  198. #define N_TXTSIZE(x) \
  199.   (/* For QMAGIC, we don't consider the header part of the text section.  */\
  200.    N_IS_QMAGIC (x)                                                      \
  201.    ? (x).a_text - EXEC_BYTES_SIZE                                       \
  202.    : ((N_MAGIC (x) != ZMAGIC || N_SHARED_LIB (x))                       \
  203.       ? (x).a_text                                                      \
  204.       : (N_HEADER_IN_TEXT (x)                                           \
  205.          ? (x).a_text - EXEC_BYTES_SIZE /* No padding.  */              \
  206.          : (x).a_text                   /* A page of padding.  */ )))
  207. #endif
  208. /* The address of the data segment in virtual memory.
  209.    It is the text segment address, plus text segment size, rounded
  210.    up to a N_SEGSIZE boundary for pure or pageable files.  */
  211. #ifndef N_DATADDR
  212. #define N_DATADDR(x) \
  213.   (N_MAGIC (x) == OMAGIC                                                \
  214.    ? (N_TXTADDR (x) + N_TXTSIZE (x))                                    \
  215.    : (N_SEGSIZE (x) + ((N_TXTADDR (x) + N_TXTSIZE (x) - 1)              \
  216.                        & ~ (bfd_vma) (N_SEGSIZE (x) - 1))))
  217. #endif
  218. /* The address of the BSS segment -- immediately after the data segment.  */
  219.  
  220. #define N_BSSADDR(x)    (N_DATADDR (x) + (x).a_data)
  221.  
  222. /* Offsets of the various portions of the file after the text segment.  */
  223.  
  224. /* For {Q,Z}MAGIC, there is padding to make the data segment start on
  225.    a page boundary.  Most of the time the a_text field (and thus
  226.    N_TXTSIZE) already contains this padding.  It is possible that for
  227.    BSDI and/or 386BSD it sometimes doesn't contain the padding, and
  228.    perhaps we should be adding it here.  But this seems kind of
  229.    questionable and probably should be BSDI/386BSD-specific if we do
  230.    do it.
  231.  
  232.    For NMAGIC (at least for hp300 BSD, probably others), there is
  233.    padding in memory only, not on disk, so we must *not* ever pad here
  234.    for NMAGIC.  */
  235.  
  236. #ifndef N_DATOFF
  237. #define N_DATOFF(x)     (N_TXTOFF (x) + N_TXTSIZE (x))
  238. #endif
  239. #ifndef N_TRELOFF
  240. #define N_TRELOFF(x)    (N_DATOFF (x) + (x).a_data)
  241. #endif
  242. #ifndef N_DRELOFF
  243. #define N_DRELOFF(x)    (N_TRELOFF (x) + (x).a_trsize)
  244. #endif
  245. #ifndef N_SYMOFF
  246. #define N_SYMOFF(x)     (N_DRELOFF (x) + (x).a_drsize)
  247. #endif
  248. #ifndef N_STROFF
  249. #define N_STROFF(x)     (N_SYMOFF (x) + (x).a_syms)
  250. #endif
  251. /* Symbols */
  252. #ifndef external_nlist
  253. struct external_nlist
  254. {
  255.   bfd_byte e_strx[BYTES_IN_WORD];       /* Index into string table of name.  */
  256.   bfd_byte e_type[1];                   /* Type of symbol.  */
  257.   bfd_byte e_other[1];                  /* Misc info (usually empty).  */
  258.   bfd_byte e_desc[2];                   /* Description field.  */
  259.   bfd_byte e_value[BYTES_IN_WORD];      /* Value of symbol.  */
  260. };
  261. #define EXTERNAL_NLIST_SIZE (BYTES_IN_WORD+4+BYTES_IN_WORD)
  262. #endif
  263.  
  264. struct internal_nlist
  265. {
  266.   unsigned long n_strx;                 /* Index into string table of name.  */
  267.   unsigned char n_type;                 /* Type of symbol.  */
  268.   unsigned char n_other;                /* Misc info (usually empty).  */
  269.   unsigned short n_desc;                /* Description field.  */
  270.   bfd_vma n_value;                      /* Value of symbol.  */
  271. };
  272.  
  273. /* The n_type field is the symbol type, containing:  */
  274.  
  275. #define N_UNDF  0       /* Undefined symbol.  */
  276. #define N_ABS   2       /* Absolute symbol -- defined at particular addr.  */
  277. #define N_TEXT  4       /* Text sym -- defined at offset in text seg.  */
  278. #define N_DATA  6       /* Data sym -- defined at offset in data seg.  */
  279. #define N_BSS   8       /* BSS  sym -- defined at offset in zero'd seg.  */
  280. #define N_COMM  0x12    /* Common symbol (visible after shared lib dynlink).  */
  281. #define N_FN    0x1f    /* File name of .o file.  */
  282. #define N_FN_SEQ 0x0C   /* N_FN from Sequent compilers (sigh).  */
  283. /* Note: N_EXT can only be usefully OR-ed with N_UNDF, N_ABS, N_TEXT,
  284.    N_DATA, or N_BSS.  When the low-order bit of other types is set,
  285.    (e.g. N_WARNING versus N_FN), they are two different types.  */
  286. #define N_EXT   1       /* External symbol (as opposed to local-to-this-file).  */
  287. #define N_TYPE  0x1e
  288. #define N_STAB  0xe0    /* If any of these bits are on, it's a debug symbol.  */
  289.  
  290. #define N_INDR 0x0a
  291.  
  292. /* The following symbols refer to set elements.
  293.    All the N_SET[ATDB] symbols with the same name form one set.
  294.    Space is allocated for the set in the text section, and each set
  295.    elements value is stored into one word of the space.
  296.    The first word of the space is the length of the set (number of elements).
  297.  
  298.    The address of the set is made into an N_SETV symbol
  299.    whose name is the same as the name of the set.
  300.    This symbol acts like a N_DATA global symbol
  301.    in that it can satisfy undefined external references.  */
  302.  
  303. /* These appear as input to LD, in a .o file.  */
  304. #define N_SETA  0x14            /* Absolute set element symbol.  */
  305. #define N_SETT  0x16            /* Text set element symbol.  */
  306. #define N_SETD  0x18            /* Data set element symbol.  */
  307. #define N_SETB  0x1A            /* Bss set element symbol.  */
  308.  
  309. /* This is output from LD.  */
  310. #define N_SETV  0x1C            /* Pointer to set vector in data area.  */
  311.  
  312. /* Warning symbol. The text gives a warning message, the next symbol
  313.    in the table will be undefined. When the symbol is referenced, the
  314.    message is printed.  */
  315.  
  316. #define N_WARNING 0x1e
  317.  
  318. /* Weak symbols.  These are a GNU extension to the a.out format.  The
  319.    semantics are those of ELF weak symbols.  Weak symbols are always
  320.    externally visible.  The N_WEAK? values are squeezed into the
  321.    available slots.  The value of a N_WEAKU symbol is 0.  The values
  322.    of the other types are the definitions.  */
  323. #define N_WEAKU 0x0d            /* Weak undefined symbol.  */
  324. #define N_WEAKA 0x0e            /* Weak absolute symbol.  */
  325. #define N_WEAKT 0x0f            /* Weak text symbol.  */
  326. #define N_WEAKD 0x10            /* Weak data symbol.  */
  327. #define N_WEAKB 0x11            /* Weak bss symbol.  */
  328.  
  329. /* Relocations
  330.  
  331.   There are two types of relocation flavours for a.out systems,
  332.   standard and extended. The standard form is used on systems where the
  333.   instruction has room for all the bits of an offset to the operand, whilst
  334.   the extended form is used when an address operand has to be split over n
  335.   instructions. Eg, on the 68k, each move instruction can reference
  336.   the target with a displacement of 16 or 32 bits. On the sparc, move
  337.   instructions use an offset of 14 bits, so the offset is stored in
  338.   the reloc field, and the data in the section is ignored.  */
  339.  
  340. /* This structure describes a single relocation to be performed.
  341.    The text-relocation section of the file is a vector of these structures,
  342.    all of which apply to the text section.
  343.    Likewise, the data-relocation section applies to the data section.  */
  344.  
  345. struct reloc_std_external
  346. {
  347.   bfd_byte r_address[BYTES_IN_WORD];    /* Offset of of data to relocate.  */
  348.   bfd_byte r_index[3];                  /* Symbol table index of symbol.  */
  349.   bfd_byte r_type[1];                   /* Relocation type.  */
  350. };
  351.  
  352. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_PCREL_BIG        ((unsigned int) 0x80)
  353. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_PCREL_LITTLE     ((unsigned int) 0x01)
  354.  
  355. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_BIG       ((unsigned int) 0x60)
  356. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_SH_BIG    5
  357. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_LITTLE    ((unsigned int) 0x06)
  358. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_LENGTH_SH_LITTLE 1
  359.  
  360. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_EXTERN_BIG       ((unsigned int) 0x10)
  361. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_EXTERN_LITTLE    ((unsigned int) 0x08)
  362.  
  363. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_BASEREL_BIG      ((unsigned int) 0x08)
  364. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_BASEREL_LITTLE   ((unsigned int) 0x10)
  365.  
  366. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_JMPTABLE_BIG     ((unsigned int) 0x04)
  367. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_JMPTABLE_LITTLE  ((unsigned int) 0x20)
  368.  
  369. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_RELATIVE_BIG     ((unsigned int) 0x02)
  370. #define RELOC_STD_BITS_RELATIVE_LITTLE  ((unsigned int) 0x40)
  371.  
  372. #define RELOC_STD_SIZE  (BYTES_IN_WORD + 3 + 1)         /* Bytes per relocation entry.  */
  373.  
  374. struct reloc_std_internal
  375. {
  376.   bfd_vma r_address;            /* Address (within segment) to be relocated.  */
  377.   /* The meaning of r_symbolnum depends on r_extern.  */
  378.   unsigned int r_symbolnum:24;
  379.   /* Nonzero means value is a pc-relative offset
  380.      and it should be relocated for changes in its own address
  381.      as well as for changes in the symbol or section specified.  */
  382.   unsigned int r_pcrel:1;
  383.   /* Length (as exponent of 2) of the field to be relocated.
  384.      Thus, a value of 2 indicates 1<<2 bytes.  */
  385.   unsigned int r_length:2;
  386.   /* 1 => relocate with value of symbol.
  387.      r_symbolnum is the index of the symbol
  388.      in files the symbol table.
  389.      0 => relocate with the address of a segment.
  390.      r_symbolnum is N_TEXT, N_DATA, N_BSS or N_ABS
  391.      (the N_EXT bit may be set also, but signifies nothing).  */
  392.   unsigned int r_extern:1;
  393.   /* The next three bits are for SunOS shared libraries, and seem to
  394.      be undocumented.  */
  395.   unsigned int r_baserel:1;     /* Linkage table relative.  */
  396.   unsigned int r_jmptable:1;    /* pc-relative to jump table.  */
  397.   unsigned int r_relative:1;    /* "relative relocation".  */
  398.   /* unused */
  399.   unsigned int r_pad:1;         /* Padding -- set to zero.  */
  400. };
  401.  
  402.  
  403. /* EXTENDED RELOCS.   */
  404.  
  405. struct reloc_ext_external
  406. {
  407.   bfd_byte r_address[BYTES_IN_WORD];    /* Offset of of data to relocate.  */
  408.   bfd_byte r_index[3];                  /* Symbol table index of symbol.  */
  409.   bfd_byte r_type[1];                   /* Relocation type.  */
  410.   bfd_byte r_addend[BYTES_IN_WORD];     /* Datum addend.  */
  411. };
  412.  
  413. #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_BIG
  414. #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_BIG       ((unsigned int) 0x80)
  415. #endif
  416.  
  417. #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_LITTLE
  418. #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_EXTERN_LITTLE    ((unsigned int) 0x01)
  419. #endif
  420.  
  421. #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_BIG
  422. #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_BIG         ((unsigned int) 0x1F)
  423. #endif
  424.  
  425. #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_BIG
  426. #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_BIG      0
  427. #endif
  428.  
  429. #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_LITTLE
  430. #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_LITTLE      ((unsigned int) 0xF8)
  431. #endif
  432.  
  433. #ifndef RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_LITTLE
  434. #define RELOC_EXT_BITS_TYPE_SH_LITTLE   3
  435. #endif
  436.  
  437. /* Bytes per relocation entry.  */
  438. #define RELOC_EXT_SIZE  (BYTES_IN_WORD + 3 + 1 + BYTES_IN_WORD)
  439.  
  440. enum reloc_type
  441. {
  442.   /* Simple relocations.  */
  443.   RELOC_8,                      /* data[0:7] = addend + sv              */
  444.   RELOC_16,                     /* data[0:15] = addend + sv             */
  445.   RELOC_32,                     /* data[0:31] = addend + sv             */
  446.   /* PC-rel displacement.  */
  447.   RELOC_DISP8,                  /* data[0:7] = addend - pc + sv         */
  448.   RELOC_DISP16,                 /* data[0:15] = addend - pc + sv        */
  449.   RELOC_DISP32,                 /* data[0:31] = addend - pc + sv        */
  450.   /* Special.  */
  451.   RELOC_WDISP30,                /* data[0:29] = (addend + sv - pc)>>2   */
  452.   RELOC_WDISP22,                /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv - pc)>>2   */
  453.   RELOC_HI22,                   /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv)>>10       */
  454.   RELOC_22,                     /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv)           */
  455.   RELOC_13,                     /* data[0:12] = (addend + sv)           */
  456.   RELOC_LO10,                   /* data[0:9] = (addend + sv)            */
  457.   RELOC_SFA_BASE,              
  458.   RELOC_SFA_OFF13,
  459.   /* P.I.C. (base-relative).  */
  460.   RELOC_BASE10,                 /* Not sure - maybe we can do this the */
  461.   RELOC_BASE13,                 /* right way now */
  462.   RELOC_BASE22,
  463.   /* For some sort of pc-rel P.I.C. (?)  */
  464.   RELOC_PC10,
  465.   RELOC_PC22,
  466.   /* P.I.C. jump table.  */
  467.   RELOC_JMP_TBL,
  468.   /* Reputedly for shared libraries somehow.  */
  469.   RELOC_SEGOFF16,
  470.   RELOC_GLOB_DAT,
  471.   RELOC_JMP_SLOT,
  472.   RELOC_RELATIVE,
  473.  
  474.   RELOC_11,    
  475.   RELOC_WDISP2_14,
  476.   RELOC_WDISP19,
  477.   RELOC_HHI22,                  /* data[0:21] = (addend + sv) >> 42     */
  478.   RELOC_HLO10,                  /* data[0:9] = (addend + sv) >> 32      */
  479.  
  480.   /* 29K relocation types.  */
  481.   RELOC_JUMPTARG,
  482.   RELOC_CONST,
  483.   RELOC_CONSTH,
  484.  
  485.   /* All the new ones I can think of, for sparc v9.  */
  486.   RELOC_64,                     /* data[0:63] = addend + sv             */
  487.   RELOC_DISP64,                 /* data[0:63] = addend - pc + sv        */
  488.   RELOC_WDISP21,                /* data[0:20] = (addend + sv - pc)>>2   */
  489.   RELOC_DISP21,                 /* data[0:20] = addend - pc + sv        */
  490.   RELOC_DISP14,                 /* data[0:13] = addend - pc + sv        */
  491.   /* Q .
  492.      What are the other ones,
  493.      Since this is a clean slate, can we throw away the ones we dont
  494.      understand ? Should we sort the values ? What about using a
  495.      microcode format like the 68k ?  */
  496.   NO_RELOC
  497.   };
  498.  
  499.  
  500. struct reloc_internal
  501. {
  502.   bfd_vma r_address;            /* Offset of of data to relocate.  */
  503.   long  r_index;                /* Symbol table index of symbol.  */
  504.   enum reloc_type r_type;       /* Relocation type.  */
  505.   bfd_vma r_addend;             /* Datum addend.  */
  506. };
  507.  
  508. /* Q.
  509.    Should the length of the string table be 4 bytes or 8 bytes ?
  510.  
  511.    Q.
  512.    What about archive indexes ?  */
  513.  
  514. #endif                          /* __A_OUT_64_H__ */
  515.