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- .TH A.OUT 6
- .SH NAME
- a.out \- object file format
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B #include <a.out.h>
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- An executable Plan 9 binary file has up to six sections:
- a header, the program text, the data,
- a symbol table, a PC/SP offset table (MC68020 only),
- and finally a PC/line number table.
- The header, given by a structure in
- .BR <a.out.h> ,
- contains 4-byte integers in big-endian order:
- .PP
- .EX
- .ta \w'#define 'u +\w'_MAGIC(b) 'u +\w'_MAGIC(10) 'u +4n +4n +4n +4n
- typedef struct Exec {
- long magic; /* magic number */
- long text; /* size of text segment */
- long data; /* size of initialized data */
- long bss; /* size of uninitialized data */
- long syms; /* size of symbol table */
- long entry; /* entry point */
- long spsz; /* size of pc/sp offset table */
- long pcsz; /* size of pc/line number table */
- } Exec;
- #define _MAGIC(b) ((((4*b)+0)*b)+7)
- #define A_MAGIC _MAGIC(8) /* 68020 */
- #define I_MAGIC _MAGIC(11) /* intel 386 */
- #define J_MAGIC _MAGIC(12) /* intel 960 */
- #define K_MAGIC _MAGIC(13) /* sparc */
- #define V_MAGIC _MAGIC(16) /* mips 3000 */
- #define X_MAGIC _MAGIC(17) /* att dsp 3210 */
- #define M_MAGIC _MAGIC(18) /* mips 4000 */
- #define D_MAGIC _MAGIC(19) /* amd 29000 */
- #define E_MAGIC _MAGIC(20) /* arm 7-something */
- #define Q_MAGIC _MAGIC(21) /* powerpc */
- #define N_MAGIC _MAGIC(22) /* mips 4000 LE */
- #define L_MAGIC _MAGIC(23) /* dec alpha */
- .EE
- .DT
- .PP
- Sizes are expressed in bytes.
- The size of the header is not included in any of the other sizes.
- .PP
- When a Plan 9 binary file is executed,
- a memory image of three segments is
- set up: the text segment, the data segment, and the stack.
- The text segment begins at a virtual address which is
- a multiple of the machine-dependent page size.
- The text segment consists of the header and the first
- .B text
- bytes of the binary file.
- The
- .B entry
- field gives the virtual address of the entry point of the program.
- The data segment starts at the first page-rounded virtual address
- after the text segment.
- It consists of the next
- .B data
- bytes of the binary file, followed by
- .B bss
- bytes initialized to zero.
- The stack occupies the highest possible locations
- in the core image, automatically growing downwards.
- The bss segment may be extended by
- .IR brk (2).
- .PP
- The next
- .B syms
- (possibly zero)
- bytes of the file contain symbol table
- entries, each laid out as:
- .IP
- .EX
- uchar value[4];
- char type;
- char name[\f2n\fP]; /* NUL-terminated */
- .EE
- .PP
- The
- .B value
- is in big-endian order and
- the size of the
- .B name
- field is not pre-defined: it is a zero-terminated array of
- variable length.
- .PP
- The
- .B type
- field is one of the following characters with the high bit set:
- .RS
- .TP
- .B T
- text segment symbol
- .PD0
- .TP
- .B t
- static text segment symbol
- .TP
- .B L
- leaf function text segment symbol
- .TP
- .B l
- static leaf function text segment symbol
- .TP
- .B D
- data segment symbol
- .TP
- .B d
- static data segment symbol
- .TP
- .B B
- bss segment symbol
- .TP
- .B b
- static bss segment symbol
- .TP
- .B a
- automatic (local) variable symbol
- .TP
- .B p
- function parameter symbol
- .RE
- .PD
- .PP
- A few others are described below.
- The symbols in the symbol table appear in the same order
- as the program components they describe.
- .PP
- The Plan 9 compilers implement a virtual stack frame pointer rather
- than dedicating a register;
- moreover, on the MC680X0 architectures
- there is a variable offset between the stack pointer and the
- frame pointer.
- Following the symbol table,
- MC680X0 executable files contain a
- .BR spsz -byte
- table encoding the offset
- of the stack frame pointer as a function of program location;
- this section is not present for other architectures.
- The PC/SP table is encoded as a byte stream.
- By setting the PC to the base of the text segment
- and the offset to zero and interpreting the stream,
- the offset can be computed for any PC.
- A byte value of 0 is followed by four bytes that hold, in big-endian order,
- a constant to be added to the offset.
- A byte value of 1 to 64 is multiplied by four and added, without sign
- extension, to the offset.
- A byte value of 65 to 128 is reduced by 64, multiplied by four, and
- subtracted from the offset.
- A byte value of 129 to 255 is reduced by 129, multiplied by the quantum
- of instruction size
- (e.g. two on the MC680X0),
- and added to the current PC without changing the offset.
- After any of these operations, the instruction quantum is added to the PC.
- .PP
- A similar table, occupying
- .BR pcsz -bytes,
- is the next section in an executable; it is present for all architectures.
- The same algorithm may be run using this table to
- recover the absolute source line number from a given program location.
- The absolute line number (starting from zero) counts the newlines
- in the C-preprocessed source seen by the compiler.
- Three symbol types in the main symbol table facilitate conversion of the absolute
- number to source file and line number:
- .RS
- .TP
- .B f
- source file name components
- .TP
- .B z
- source file name
- .TP
- .B Z
- source file line offset
- .RE
- .PP
- The
- .B f
- symbol associates an integer (the
- .B value
- field of the `symbol') with
- a unique file path name component (the
- .B name
- of the `symbol').
- These path components are used by the
- .B z
- symbol to represent a file name: the
- first byte of the name field is always 0; the remaining
- bytes hold a zero-terminated array of 16-bit values (in big-endian order)
- that represent file name components from
- .B f
- symbols.
- These components, when separated by slashes, form a file name.
- The initial slash of a file name is recorded in the symbol table by an
- .B f
- symbol; when forming file names from
- .B z
- symbols an initial slash is not to be assumed.
- The
- .B z
- symbols are clustered, one set for each object file in the program,
- before any text symbols from that object file.
- The set of
- .B z
- symbols for an object file form a
- .I history stack
- of the included source files from which the object file was compiled.
- The value associated with each
- .B z
- symbol is the absolute line number at which that file was included in the source;
- if the name associated with the
- .B z
- symbol is null, the symbol represents the end of an included file, that is,
- a pop of the history stack.
- If the value of the
- .B z
- symbol is 1 (one),
- it represents the start of a new history stack.
- To recover the source file and line number for a program location,
- find the text symbol containing the location
- and then the first history stack preceding the text symbol in the symbol table.
- Next, interpret the PC/line offset table to discover the absolute line number
- for the program location.
- Using the line number, scan the history stack to find the set of source
- files open at that location.
- The line number within the file can be found using the line numbers
- in the history stack.
- The
- .B Z
- symbols correspond to
- .B #line
- directives in the source; they specify an adjustment to the line number
- to be printed by the above algorithm. The offset is associated with the
- first previous
- .B z
- symbol in the symbol table.
- .SH "SEE ALSO"
- .IR db (1),
- .IR acid (1),
- .IR 2a (1),
- .IR 2l (1),
- .IR nm (1),
- .IR strip (1),
- .IR mach (2),
- .IR symbol (2)
- .SH BUGS
- There is no type information in the symbol table; however, the
- .B -a
- flags on the compilers will produce symbols for
- .IR acid (1).
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