libc/sysvipc: Fix some style issues (no functional change).
[dragonfly.git] / contrib / binutils-2.27 / include / demangle.h
blob3e1d95cc5a3be1505750c675137dfb237d1af1e1
1 /* Defs for interface to demanglers.
2 Copyright (C) 1992-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
5 modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License
6 as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or
7 (at your option) any later version.
9 In addition to the permissions in the GNU Library General Public
10 License, the Free Software Foundation gives you unlimited
11 permission to link the compiled version of this file into
12 combinations with other programs, and to distribute those
13 combinations without any restriction coming from the use of this
14 file. (The Library Public License restrictions do apply in other
15 respects; for example, they cover modification of the file, and
16 distribution when not linked into a combined executable.)
18 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
19 WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
20 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
21 Library General Public License for more details.
23 You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
24 License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
25 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street - Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
26 02110-1301, USA. */
29 #if !defined (DEMANGLE_H)
30 #define DEMANGLE_H
32 #include "libiberty.h"
34 #ifdef __cplusplus
35 extern "C" {
36 #endif /* __cplusplus */
38 /* Options passed to cplus_demangle (in 2nd parameter). */
40 #define DMGL_NO_OPTS 0 /* For readability... */
41 #define DMGL_PARAMS (1 << 0) /* Include function args */
42 #define DMGL_ANSI (1 << 1) /* Include const, volatile, etc */
43 #define DMGL_JAVA (1 << 2) /* Demangle as Java rather than C++. */
44 #define DMGL_VERBOSE (1 << 3) /* Include implementation details. */
45 #define DMGL_TYPES (1 << 4) /* Also try to demangle type encodings. */
46 #define DMGL_RET_POSTFIX (1 << 5) /* Print function return types (when
47 present) after function signature.
48 It applies only to the toplevel
49 function type. */
50 #define DMGL_RET_DROP (1 << 6) /* Suppress printing function return
51 types, even if present. It applies
52 only to the toplevel function type.
55 #define DMGL_AUTO (1 << 8)
56 #define DMGL_GNU (1 << 9)
57 #define DMGL_LUCID (1 << 10)
58 #define DMGL_ARM (1 << 11)
59 #define DMGL_HP (1 << 12) /* For the HP aCC compiler;
60 same as ARM except for
61 template arguments, etc. */
62 #define DMGL_EDG (1 << 13)
63 #define DMGL_GNU_V3 (1 << 14)
64 #define DMGL_GNAT (1 << 15)
65 #define DMGL_DLANG (1 << 16)
67 /* If none of these are set, use 'current_demangling_style' as the default. */
68 #define DMGL_STYLE_MASK (DMGL_AUTO|DMGL_GNU|DMGL_LUCID|DMGL_ARM|DMGL_HP|DMGL_EDG|DMGL_GNU_V3|DMGL_JAVA|DMGL_GNAT|DMGL_DLANG)
70 /* Enumeration of possible demangling styles.
72 Lucid and ARM styles are still kept logically distinct, even though
73 they now both behave identically. The resulting style is actual the
74 union of both. I.E. either style recognizes both "__pt__" and "__rf__"
75 for operator "->", even though the first is lucid style and the second
76 is ARM style. (FIXME?) */
78 extern enum demangling_styles
80 no_demangling = -1,
81 unknown_demangling = 0,
82 auto_demangling = DMGL_AUTO,
83 gnu_demangling = DMGL_GNU,
84 lucid_demangling = DMGL_LUCID,
85 arm_demangling = DMGL_ARM,
86 hp_demangling = DMGL_HP,
87 edg_demangling = DMGL_EDG,
88 gnu_v3_demangling = DMGL_GNU_V3,
89 java_demangling = DMGL_JAVA,
90 gnat_demangling = DMGL_GNAT,
91 dlang_demangling = DMGL_DLANG
92 } current_demangling_style;
94 /* Define string names for the various demangling styles. */
96 #define NO_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "none"
97 #define AUTO_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "auto"
98 #define GNU_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "gnu"
99 #define LUCID_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "lucid"
100 #define ARM_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "arm"
101 #define HP_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "hp"
102 #define EDG_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "edg"
103 #define GNU_V3_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "gnu-v3"
104 #define JAVA_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "java"
105 #define GNAT_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "gnat"
106 #define DLANG_DEMANGLING_STYLE_STRING "dlang"
108 /* Some macros to test what demangling style is active. */
110 #define CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE current_demangling_style
111 #define AUTO_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_AUTO)
112 #define GNU_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_GNU)
113 #define LUCID_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_LUCID)
114 #define ARM_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_ARM)
115 #define HP_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_HP)
116 #define EDG_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_EDG)
117 #define GNU_V3_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_GNU_V3)
118 #define JAVA_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_JAVA)
119 #define GNAT_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_GNAT)
120 #define DLANG_DEMANGLING (((int) CURRENT_DEMANGLING_STYLE) & DMGL_DLANG)
122 /* Provide information about the available demangle styles. This code is
123 pulled from gdb into libiberty because it is useful to binutils also. */
125 extern const struct demangler_engine
127 const char *const demangling_style_name;
128 const enum demangling_styles demangling_style;
129 const char *const demangling_style_doc;
130 } libiberty_demanglers[];
132 extern char *
133 cplus_demangle (const char *mangled, int options);
135 extern int
136 cplus_demangle_opname (const char *opname, char *result, int options);
138 extern const char *
139 cplus_mangle_opname (const char *opname, int options);
141 /* Note: This sets global state. FIXME if you care about multi-threading. */
143 extern void
144 set_cplus_marker_for_demangling (int ch);
146 extern enum demangling_styles
147 cplus_demangle_set_style (enum demangling_styles style);
149 extern enum demangling_styles
150 cplus_demangle_name_to_style (const char *name);
152 /* Callback typedef for allocation-less demangler interfaces. */
153 typedef void (*demangle_callbackref) (const char *, size_t, void *);
155 /* V3 ABI demangling entry points, defined in cp-demangle.c. Callback
156 variants return non-zero on success, zero on error. char* variants
157 return a string allocated by malloc on success, NULL on error. */
158 extern int
159 cplus_demangle_v3_callback (const char *mangled, int options,
160 demangle_callbackref callback, void *opaque);
162 extern char*
163 cplus_demangle_v3 (const char *mangled, int options);
165 extern int
166 java_demangle_v3_callback (const char *mangled,
167 demangle_callbackref callback, void *opaque);
169 extern char*
170 java_demangle_v3 (const char *mangled);
172 char *
173 ada_demangle (const char *mangled, int options);
175 extern char *
176 dlang_demangle (const char *mangled, int options);
178 enum gnu_v3_ctor_kinds {
179 gnu_v3_complete_object_ctor = 1,
180 gnu_v3_base_object_ctor,
181 gnu_v3_complete_object_allocating_ctor,
182 /* These are not part of the V3 ABI. Unified constructors are generated
183 as a speed-for-space optimization when the -fdeclone-ctor-dtor option
184 is used, and are always internal symbols. */
185 gnu_v3_unified_ctor,
186 gnu_v3_object_ctor_group
189 /* Return non-zero iff NAME is the mangled form of a constructor name
190 in the G++ V3 ABI demangling style. Specifically, return an `enum
191 gnu_v3_ctor_kinds' value indicating what kind of constructor
192 it is. */
193 extern enum gnu_v3_ctor_kinds
194 is_gnu_v3_mangled_ctor (const char *name);
197 enum gnu_v3_dtor_kinds {
198 gnu_v3_deleting_dtor = 1,
199 gnu_v3_complete_object_dtor,
200 gnu_v3_base_object_dtor,
201 /* These are not part of the V3 ABI. Unified destructors are generated
202 as a speed-for-space optimization when the -fdeclone-ctor-dtor option
203 is used, and are always internal symbols. */
204 gnu_v3_unified_dtor,
205 gnu_v3_object_dtor_group
208 /* Return non-zero iff NAME is the mangled form of a destructor name
209 in the G++ V3 ABI demangling style. Specifically, return an `enum
210 gnu_v3_dtor_kinds' value, indicating what kind of destructor
211 it is. */
212 extern enum gnu_v3_dtor_kinds
213 is_gnu_v3_mangled_dtor (const char *name);
215 /* The V3 demangler works in two passes. The first pass builds a tree
216 representation of the mangled name, and the second pass turns the
217 tree representation into a demangled string. Here we define an
218 interface to permit a caller to build their own tree
219 representation, which they can pass to the demangler to get a
220 demangled string. This can be used to canonicalize user input into
221 something which the demangler might output. It could also be used
222 by other demanglers in the future. */
224 /* These are the component types which may be found in the tree. Many
225 component types have one or two subtrees, referred to as left and
226 right (a component type with only one subtree puts it in the left
227 subtree). */
229 enum demangle_component_type
231 /* A name, with a length and a pointer to a string. */
232 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NAME,
233 /* A qualified name. The left subtree is a class or namespace or
234 some such thing, and the right subtree is a name qualified by
235 that class. */
236 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_QUAL_NAME,
237 /* A local name. The left subtree describes a function, and the
238 right subtree is a name which is local to that function. */
239 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_LOCAL_NAME,
240 /* A typed name. The left subtree is a name, and the right subtree
241 describes that name as a function. */
242 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TYPED_NAME,
243 /* A template. The left subtree is a template name, and the right
244 subtree is a template argument list. */
245 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TEMPLATE,
246 /* A template parameter. This holds a number, which is the template
247 parameter index. */
248 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TEMPLATE_PARAM,
249 /* A function parameter. This holds a number, which is the index. */
250 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_FUNCTION_PARAM,
251 /* A constructor. This holds a name and the kind of
252 constructor. */
253 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CTOR,
254 /* A destructor. This holds a name and the kind of destructor. */
255 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_DTOR,
256 /* A vtable. This has one subtree, the type for which this is a
257 vtable. */
258 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VTABLE,
259 /* A VTT structure. This has one subtree, the type for which this
260 is a VTT. */
261 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VTT,
262 /* A construction vtable. The left subtree is the type for which
263 this is a vtable, and the right subtree is the derived type for
264 which this vtable is built. */
265 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CONSTRUCTION_VTABLE,
266 /* A typeinfo structure. This has one subtree, the type for which
267 this is the tpeinfo structure. */
268 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TYPEINFO,
269 /* A typeinfo name. This has one subtree, the type for which this
270 is the typeinfo name. */
271 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TYPEINFO_NAME,
272 /* A typeinfo function. This has one subtree, the type for which
273 this is the tpyeinfo function. */
274 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TYPEINFO_FN,
275 /* A thunk. This has one subtree, the name for which this is a
276 thunk. */
277 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_THUNK,
278 /* A virtual thunk. This has one subtree, the name for which this
279 is a virtual thunk. */
280 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VIRTUAL_THUNK,
281 /* A covariant thunk. This has one subtree, the name for which this
282 is a covariant thunk. */
283 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_COVARIANT_THUNK,
284 /* A Java class. This has one subtree, the type. */
285 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_JAVA_CLASS,
286 /* A guard variable. This has one subtree, the name for which this
287 is a guard variable. */
288 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_GUARD,
289 /* The init and wrapper functions for C++11 thread_local variables. */
290 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TLS_INIT,
291 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TLS_WRAPPER,
292 /* A reference temporary. This has one subtree, the name for which
293 this is a temporary. */
294 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_REFTEMP,
295 /* A hidden alias. This has one subtree, the encoding for which it
296 is providing alternative linkage. */
297 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_HIDDEN_ALIAS,
298 /* A standard substitution. This holds the name of the
299 substitution. */
300 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_SUB_STD,
301 /* The restrict qualifier. The one subtree is the type which is
302 being qualified. */
303 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_RESTRICT,
304 /* The volatile qualifier. The one subtree is the type which is
305 being qualified. */
306 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VOLATILE,
307 /* The const qualifier. The one subtree is the type which is being
308 qualified. */
309 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CONST,
310 /* The restrict qualifier modifying a member function. The one
311 subtree is the type which is being qualified. */
312 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_RESTRICT_THIS,
313 /* The volatile qualifier modifying a member function. The one
314 subtree is the type which is being qualified. */
315 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VOLATILE_THIS,
316 /* The const qualifier modifying a member function. The one subtree
317 is the type which is being qualified. */
318 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CONST_THIS,
319 /* C++11 A reference modifying a member function. The one subtree is the
320 type which is being referenced. */
321 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_REFERENCE_THIS,
322 /* C++11: An rvalue reference modifying a member function. The one
323 subtree is the type which is being referenced. */
324 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_RVALUE_REFERENCE_THIS,
325 /* A vendor qualifier. The left subtree is the type which is being
326 qualified, and the right subtree is the name of the
327 qualifier. */
328 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VENDOR_TYPE_QUAL,
329 /* A pointer. The one subtree is the type which is being pointed
330 to. */
331 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_POINTER,
332 /* A reference. The one subtree is the type which is being
333 referenced. */
334 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_REFERENCE,
335 /* C++0x: An rvalue reference. The one subtree is the type which is
336 being referenced. */
337 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_RVALUE_REFERENCE,
338 /* A complex type. The one subtree is the base type. */
339 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_COMPLEX,
340 /* An imaginary type. The one subtree is the base type. */
341 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_IMAGINARY,
342 /* A builtin type. This holds the builtin type information. */
343 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_BUILTIN_TYPE,
344 /* A vendor's builtin type. This holds the name of the type. */
345 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VENDOR_TYPE,
346 /* A function type. The left subtree is the return type. The right
347 subtree is a list of ARGLIST nodes. Either or both may be
348 NULL. */
349 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_FUNCTION_TYPE,
350 /* An array type. The left subtree is the dimension, which may be
351 NULL, or a string (represented as DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NAME), or an
352 expression. The right subtree is the element type. */
353 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_ARRAY_TYPE,
354 /* A pointer to member type. The left subtree is the class type,
355 and the right subtree is the member type. CV-qualifiers appear
356 on the latter. */
357 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_PTRMEM_TYPE,
358 /* A fixed-point type. */
359 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_FIXED_TYPE,
360 /* A vector type. The left subtree is the number of elements,
361 the right subtree is the element type. */
362 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_VECTOR_TYPE,
363 /* An argument list. The left subtree is the current argument, and
364 the right subtree is either NULL or another ARGLIST node. */
365 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_ARGLIST,
366 /* A template argument list. The left subtree is the current
367 template argument, and the right subtree is either NULL or
368 another TEMPLATE_ARGLIST node. */
369 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TEMPLATE_ARGLIST,
370 /* An initializer list. The left subtree is either an explicit type or
371 NULL, and the right subtree is a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_ARGLIST. */
372 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_INITIALIZER_LIST,
373 /* An operator. This holds information about a standard
374 operator. */
375 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_OPERATOR,
376 /* An extended operator. This holds the number of arguments, and
377 the name of the extended operator. */
378 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_EXTENDED_OPERATOR,
379 /* A typecast, represented as a unary operator. The one subtree is
380 the type to which the argument should be cast. */
381 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CAST,
382 /* A conversion operator, represented as a unary operator. The one
383 subtree is the type to which the argument should be converted
384 to. */
385 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CONVERSION,
386 /* A nullary expression. The left subtree is the operator. */
387 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NULLARY,
388 /* A unary expression. The left subtree is the operator, and the
389 right subtree is the single argument. */
390 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_UNARY,
391 /* A binary expression. The left subtree is the operator, and the
392 right subtree is a BINARY_ARGS. */
393 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_BINARY,
394 /* Arguments to a binary expression. The left subtree is the first
395 argument, and the right subtree is the second argument. */
396 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_BINARY_ARGS,
397 /* A trinary expression. The left subtree is the operator, and the
398 right subtree is a TRINARY_ARG1. */
399 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TRINARY,
400 /* Arguments to a trinary expression. The left subtree is the first
401 argument, and the right subtree is a TRINARY_ARG2. */
402 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TRINARY_ARG1,
403 /* More arguments to a trinary expression. The left subtree is the
404 second argument, and the right subtree is the third argument. */
405 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TRINARY_ARG2,
406 /* A literal. The left subtree is the type, and the right subtree
407 is the value, represented as a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NAME. */
408 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_LITERAL,
409 /* A negative literal. Like LITERAL, but the value is negated.
410 This is a minor hack: the NAME used for LITERAL points directly
411 to the mangled string, but since negative numbers are mangled
412 using 'n' instead of '-', we want a way to indicate a negative
413 number which involves neither modifying the mangled string nor
414 allocating a new copy of the literal in memory. */
415 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_LITERAL_NEG,
416 /* A libgcj compiled resource. The left subtree is the name of the
417 resource. */
418 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_JAVA_RESOURCE,
419 /* A name formed by the concatenation of two parts. The left
420 subtree is the first part and the right subtree the second. */
421 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_COMPOUND_NAME,
422 /* A name formed by a single character. */
423 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CHARACTER,
424 /* A number. */
425 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NUMBER,
426 /* A decltype type. */
427 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_DECLTYPE,
428 /* Global constructors keyed to name. */
429 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_GLOBAL_CONSTRUCTORS,
430 /* Global destructors keyed to name. */
431 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_GLOBAL_DESTRUCTORS,
432 /* A lambda closure type. */
433 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_LAMBDA,
434 /* A default argument scope. */
435 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_DEFAULT_ARG,
436 /* An unnamed type. */
437 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_UNNAMED_TYPE,
438 /* A transactional clone. This has one subtree, the encoding for
439 which it is providing alternative linkage. */
440 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TRANSACTION_CLONE,
441 /* A non-transactional clone entry point. In the i386/x86_64 abi,
442 the unmangled symbol of a tm_callable becomes a thunk and the
443 non-transactional function version is mangled thus. */
444 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NONTRANSACTION_CLONE,
445 /* A pack expansion. */
446 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_PACK_EXPANSION,
447 /* A name with an ABI tag. */
448 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TAGGED_NAME,
449 /* A transaction-safe function type. */
450 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_TRANSACTION_SAFE,
451 /* A cloned function. */
452 DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CLONE
455 /* Types which are only used internally. */
457 struct demangle_operator_info;
458 struct demangle_builtin_type_info;
460 /* A node in the tree representation is an instance of a struct
461 demangle_component. Note that the field names of the struct are
462 not well protected against macros defined by the file including
463 this one. We can fix this if it ever becomes a problem. */
465 struct demangle_component
467 /* The type of this component. */
468 enum demangle_component_type type;
470 union
472 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NAME. */
473 struct
475 /* A pointer to the name (which need not NULL terminated) and
476 its length. */
477 const char *s;
478 int len;
479 } s_name;
481 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_OPERATOR. */
482 struct
484 /* Operator. */
485 const struct demangle_operator_info *op;
486 } s_operator;
488 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_EXTENDED_OPERATOR. */
489 struct
491 /* Number of arguments. */
492 int args;
493 /* Name. */
494 struct demangle_component *name;
495 } s_extended_operator;
497 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_FIXED_TYPE. */
498 struct
500 /* The length, indicated by a C integer type name. */
501 struct demangle_component *length;
502 /* _Accum or _Fract? */
503 short accum;
504 /* Saturating or not? */
505 short sat;
506 } s_fixed;
508 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CTOR. */
509 struct
511 /* Kind of constructor. */
512 enum gnu_v3_ctor_kinds kind;
513 /* Name. */
514 struct demangle_component *name;
515 } s_ctor;
517 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_DTOR. */
518 struct
520 /* Kind of destructor. */
521 enum gnu_v3_dtor_kinds kind;
522 /* Name. */
523 struct demangle_component *name;
524 } s_dtor;
526 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_BUILTIN_TYPE. */
527 struct
529 /* Builtin type. */
530 const struct demangle_builtin_type_info *type;
531 } s_builtin;
533 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_SUB_STD. */
534 struct
536 /* Standard substitution string. */
537 const char* string;
538 /* Length of string. */
539 int len;
540 } s_string;
542 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_*_PARAM. */
543 struct
545 /* Parameter index. */
546 long number;
547 } s_number;
549 /* For DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CHARACTER. */
550 struct
552 int character;
553 } s_character;
555 /* For other types. */
556 struct
558 /* Left (or only) subtree. */
559 struct demangle_component *left;
560 /* Right subtree. */
561 struct demangle_component *right;
562 } s_binary;
564 struct
566 /* subtree, same place as d_left. */
567 struct demangle_component *sub;
568 /* integer. */
569 int num;
570 } s_unary_num;
572 } u;
575 /* People building mangled trees are expected to allocate instances of
576 struct demangle_component themselves. They can then call one of
577 the following functions to fill them in. */
579 /* Fill in most component types with a left subtree and a right
580 subtree. Returns non-zero on success, zero on failure, such as an
581 unrecognized or inappropriate component type. */
583 extern int
584 cplus_demangle_fill_component (struct demangle_component *fill,
585 enum demangle_component_type,
586 struct demangle_component *left,
587 struct demangle_component *right);
589 /* Fill in a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_NAME. Returns non-zero on success,
590 zero for bad arguments. */
592 extern int
593 cplus_demangle_fill_name (struct demangle_component *fill,
594 const char *, int);
596 /* Fill in a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_BUILTIN_TYPE, using the name of the
597 builtin type (e.g., "int", etc.). Returns non-zero on success,
598 zero if the type is not recognized. */
600 extern int
601 cplus_demangle_fill_builtin_type (struct demangle_component *fill,
602 const char *type_name);
604 /* Fill in a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_OPERATOR, using the name of the
605 operator and the number of arguments which it takes (the latter is
606 used to disambiguate operators which can be both binary and unary,
607 such as '-'). Returns non-zero on success, zero if the operator is
608 not recognized. */
610 extern int
611 cplus_demangle_fill_operator (struct demangle_component *fill,
612 const char *opname, int args);
614 /* Fill in a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_EXTENDED_OPERATOR, providing the
615 number of arguments and the name. Returns non-zero on success,
616 zero for bad arguments. */
618 extern int
619 cplus_demangle_fill_extended_operator (struct demangle_component *fill,
620 int numargs,
621 struct demangle_component *nm);
623 /* Fill in a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_CTOR. Returns non-zero on success,
624 zero for bad arguments. */
626 extern int
627 cplus_demangle_fill_ctor (struct demangle_component *fill,
628 enum gnu_v3_ctor_kinds kind,
629 struct demangle_component *name);
631 /* Fill in a DEMANGLE_COMPONENT_DTOR. Returns non-zero on success,
632 zero for bad arguments. */
634 extern int
635 cplus_demangle_fill_dtor (struct demangle_component *fill,
636 enum gnu_v3_dtor_kinds kind,
637 struct demangle_component *name);
639 /* This function translates a mangled name into a struct
640 demangle_component tree. The first argument is the mangled name.
641 The second argument is DMGL_* options. This returns a pointer to a
642 tree on success, or NULL on failure. On success, the third
643 argument is set to a block of memory allocated by malloc. This
644 block should be passed to free when the tree is no longer
645 needed. */
647 extern struct demangle_component *
648 cplus_demangle_v3_components (const char *mangled, int options, void **mem);
650 /* This function takes a struct demangle_component tree and returns
651 the corresponding demangled string. The first argument is DMGL_*
652 options. The second is the tree to demangle. The third is a guess
653 at the length of the demangled string, used to initially allocate
654 the return buffer. The fourth is a pointer to a size_t. On
655 success, this function returns a buffer allocated by malloc(), and
656 sets the size_t pointed to by the fourth argument to the size of
657 the allocated buffer (not the length of the returned string). On
658 failure, this function returns NULL, and sets the size_t pointed to
659 by the fourth argument to 0 for an invalid tree, or to 1 for a
660 memory allocation error. */
662 extern char *
663 cplus_demangle_print (int options,
664 const struct demangle_component *tree,
665 int estimated_length,
666 size_t *p_allocated_size);
668 /* This function takes a struct demangle_component tree and passes back
669 a demangled string in one or more calls to a callback function.
670 The first argument is DMGL_* options. The second is the tree to
671 demangle. The third is a pointer to a callback function; on each call
672 this receives an element of the demangled string, its length, and an
673 opaque value. The fourth is the opaque value passed to the callback.
674 The callback is called once or more to return the full demangled
675 string. The demangled element string is always nul-terminated, though
676 its length is also provided for convenience. In contrast to
677 cplus_demangle_print(), this function does not allocate heap memory
678 to grow output strings (except perhaps where alloca() is implemented
679 by malloc()), and so is normally safe for use where the heap has been
680 corrupted. On success, this function returns 1; on failure, 0. */
682 extern int
683 cplus_demangle_print_callback (int options,
684 const struct demangle_component *tree,
685 demangle_callbackref callback, void *opaque);
687 #ifdef __cplusplus
689 #endif /* __cplusplus */
691 #endif /* DEMANGLE_H */