* gdbint.texinfo (Target Conditionals): Remove NO_TYPEDEFS,

removed from the code by Kingdon.
This commit is contained in:
John Gilmore 1993-07-06 19:43:06 +00:00
parent defcfb5570
commit 238ffce0bf
2 changed files with 29 additions and 16 deletions

View File

@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
Tue Jul 6 12:41:28 1993 John Gilmore (gnu@cygnus.com)
* gdbint.texinfo (Target Conditionals): Remove NO_TYPEDEFS,
removed from the code by Kingdon.
Tue Jul 6 12:24:34 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
* gdb.texinfo (Break Commands): Remove stuff about flushing terminal

View File

@ -1785,7 +1785,9 @@ remote-adapt.c
cplus-dem.c
@item LONGEST
defs.h
@item LONG_LONG
@item CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
defs.h
@item PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG
defs.h
@item LONG_MAX
defs.h
@ -2386,7 +2388,9 @@ remote-adapt.c
cplus-dem.c
@item LONGEST
defs.h
@item LONG_LONG
@item CC_HAS_LONG_LONG
defs.h
@item PRINTF_HAS_LONG_LONG
defs.h
@item LONG_MAX
defs.h
@ -2432,9 +2436,6 @@ remote-mm.c
remote-adapt.c
@item NO_SINGLE_STEP
infptrace.c
@item NO_TYPEDEFS
xcoffread.c--This causes types not to be read, to save memory and speed
things up.
@item NPC_REGNUM
infcmd.c
@item NS32K_SVC_IMMED_OPERANDS
@ -2569,6 +2570,21 @@ defs.h
defs.h
@item TARGET_PTR_BIT
defs.h
@item TARGET_READ_PC
@item TARGET_WRITE_PC
@item TARGET_READ_SP
@item TARGET_WRITE_SP
@item TARGET_READ_FP
@item TARGET_WRITE_FP
These change the behavior of @code{read_pc}, @code{write_pc},
@code{read_sp}, @code{write_sp}, @code{read_fp} and @code{write_fp}.
For most targets, these may be left undefined. GDB will call the
read and write register functions with the relevant @code{_REGNUM} argument.
These macros are useful when a target keeps one of these registers in a
hard to get at place; for example, part in a segment register and part
in an ordinary register.
@item TARGET_SHORT_BIT
defs.h
@item TDESC
@ -2726,17 +2742,9 @@ is so old that it has never been converted to use BFD. Now that's old!
The IBM RS/6000 running AIX uses an object file format called xcoff.
The COFF sections, symbols, and line numbers are used, but debugging
symbols are dbx-style stabs whose strings are located in the
@samp{.debug} section (rather than the string table). Files are
indicated with a @samp{C_FILE} symbol (.file) which is analogous to
@samp{N_SO}; include files are delimited with @samp{C_BINCL} (.bi) and
@samp{C_EINCL} (.ei) which correspond to @samp{N_SOL} rather than Sun's
@samp{N_BINCL} (that is, they don't nest and there is no equivalent to
N_EXCL). The values of the @samp{C_BINCL} and @samp{C_EINCL} symbols
are offsets into the executable file which point to the beginning and
the end of the portion of the linetable which correspond to this include
file (warning: C_EINCL is inclusive not exclusive like most end of
something pointers). Other differences from standard stabs include the
use of negative type numbers for builtin types.
@samp{.debug} section (rather than the string table). For more
information, @xref{Top,,,stabs,The Stabs Debugging Format}, and search
for XCOFF.
The shared library scheme has a nice clean interface for figuring out
what shared libraries are in use, but the catch is that everything which