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-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/ChangeLog1772
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/Makefile.in305
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/config.in7
-rwxr-xr-xcontrib/gdb/opcodes/configure1538
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure.in216
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/dis-buf.c70
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/disassemble.c166
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c2031
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/sysdep.h38
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/opcodes/z8k-dis.c571
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/ChangeLog12
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/Makefile.in94
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/configure.in8
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hist.texinfo106
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hstech.texinfo311
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hsuser.texinfo153
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/inc-hist.texi159
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rlman.texinfo103
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rltech.texinfo1012
-rw-r--r--contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rluser.texinfo566
20 files changed, 0 insertions, 9238 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/ChangeLog b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/ChangeLog
deleted file mode 100644
index 589c1a2..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/ChangeLog
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1772 +0,0 @@
-Sun Apr 7 15:06:17 1996 Fred Fish <fnf@cygnus.com>
-
- From: Miles Bader <miles@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
- * configure.in: Use AC_CHECK_TOOL to find AR & RANLIB.
- * configure: Regenerate with autoconf.
-
-Sat Mar 16 13:04:07 1996 Fred Fish <fnf@cygnus.com>
-
- * z8kgen.c (internal, gas): Call xmalloc rather than unchecked
- malloc.
-
-Tue Mar 12 12:14:10 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure: Rebuild with autoconf 2.8.
-
-Thu Mar 7 15:11:10 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): Handle 'O' operand char like 'r'.
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcodes): Use 'O' operand char for `neg reg'.
-
-Tue Mar 5 15:51:57 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Don't set SHLIB or SHLINK to an empty string,
- since they appear as targets in Makefile.in.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
-Mon Feb 26 13:03:40 1996 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- * mpw-make.sed: Edit out shared library support bits.
-
-Tue Feb 20 20:48:28 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-opc.c (v8,v6notv9): Add MASK_SPARCLET.
- (sparc_opcode_archs): Add MASK_V8 to sparclet entry.
- (sparc_opcodes): Add sparclet insns.
- (sparclet_cpreg_table): New static local.
- (sparc_{encode,decode}_sparclet_cpreg): New functions.
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): Handle sparclet cpregs.
-
-Tue Feb 20 11:02:44 1996 Alan Modra <alan@mullet.Levels.UniSA.Edu.Au>
-
- * i386-dis.c (index16): New static variable.
- (putop): Print jecxz for 32 bit case, jcxz for 16 bit, not the
- other way around.
- (OP_indirE): Return result of OP_E.
- (OP_E): Check for 16 bit addressing mode, and disassemble
- correctly. Optimised 32 bit case a little. Don't print
- "(base,index,scale)" when sib specifies only an offset.
-
-Mon Feb 19 12:32:17 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Set and substitute SHLIB_DEP.
- * configure: Rebuild.
- * Makefile.in (SHLIB_DEP): New variable.
- (LIBIBERTY_LISTS, BFD_LIST): New variables.
- (stamp-piclist): Depend upon LIBIBERTY_LISTS and BFD_LIST. If
- COMMON_SHLIB, add them to piclist with appropriate modifications.
- ($(SHLIB)): Depend upon $(SHLIB_DEP). Don't check COMMON_SHLIB
- here: just use piclist.
-
-Mon Feb 19 02:03:50 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (MASK_V9,V9_ONLY_P,V9_P): Define.
- (print_insn_sparc): Rewrite v9/not-v9 tests.
- (compare_opcodes): Likewise.
- * sparc-opc.c (MASK_<ARCH>): Define.
- (v6,v7,v8,sparclite,v9,v9a): Redefine.
- (sparclet,v6notv9): Define.
- (sparc_opcode_archs): Delete member `conflicts'. Add `supported'.
- (sparc_opcodes): Delete F_NOTV9, use v6notv9 instead.
-
-Thu Feb 15 14:45:05 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Call AC_PROG_CC before configure.host.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
- * Makefile.in (SONAME): Remove leading ../bfd/ from $(SHLIB).
-
-Wed Feb 14 19:01:27 1996 Alan Modra <alan@spri.levels.unisa.edu.au>
-
- * i386-dis.c (onebyte_has_modrm): New static array.
- (twobyte_has_modrm): New static array.
- (print_insn_i386): Only fetch the mod/reg/rm byte if it is needed.
-
-Tue Feb 13 15:15:01 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in ($(SHLINK)): Check ts against $(SHLIB), not
- $(SHLINK).
-
-Mon Feb 12 16:26:06 1996 Michael Meissner <meissner@tiktok.cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c (PPC): Undef, so default defination on Windows NT
- doesn't conflict.
-
-Wed Feb 7 13:59:54 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c (m68k_opcodes): The bkpt instruction is supported on
- m68010up, not just m68020up | cpu32.
-
- * Makefile.in (SONAME): New variable.
- ($(SHLINK)): Make a link to the transformed name, as well.
- (stamp-tshlink): New target.
- (install): Skip stamp-tshlink during install.
-
-Tue Feb 6 12:28:54 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Call AC_ARG_PROGRAM.
- * configure: Rebuild.
- * Makefile.in (program_transform_name): New variable.
- (install): Transform library name before installing it.
-
-Mon Feb 5 16:14:42 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * i960-dis.c (mem): Add HX dcinva instruction.
-
- Support for building as a shared library, based on patches from
- Alan Modra <alan@spri.levels.unisa.edu.au>:
- * configure.in: Add AC_ARG_ENABLE for shared and commonbfdlib.
- New substitutions: ALLLIBS, PICFLAG, SHLIB, SHLIB_CC,
- SHLIB_CFLAGS, COMMON_SHLIB, SHLINK.
- * configure: Rebuild.
- * Makefile.in (ALLLIBS): New variable.
- (PICFLAG, SHLIB, SHLIB_CC, SHLIB_CFLAGS): New variables.
- (COMMON_SHLIB, SHLINK): New variables.
- (.c.o): If PICFLAG is set, compile twice, once PIC, once normal.
- (STAGESTUFF): Remove variable.
- (all): Depend upon $(ALLLIBS) rather than $(TARGETLIB).
- (stamp-piclist, piclist): New targets.
- ($(SHLIB), $(SHLINK)): New targets.
- ($(OFILES)): Depend upon stamp-picdir.
- (disassemble.o): Build twice if PICFLAG is set.
- (MOSTLYCLEAN): Add pic/*.o.
- (clean): Remove $(SHLIB), $(SHLINK), piclist, and stamp-piclist.
- (distclean): Remove pic and stamp-picdir.
- (install): Install shared libraries.
- (stamp-picdir): New target.
-
-Fri Feb 2 17:15:25 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): Delete DISASM_RAW_INSN support.
- Print unknown instruction as "unknown", rather than in hex.
-
-Tue Jan 30 14:06:08 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * dis-buf.c: Include "sysdep.h" before "dis-asm.h".
-
-Thu Jan 25 20:24:07 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcode_archs): Mark v8/sparclite as conflicting.
-
-Thu Jan 25 11:56:49 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * i386-dis.c (print_insn_i386): Only fetch the mod/reg/rm byte
- when necessary. From Ulrich Drepper
- <drepper@myware.rz.uni-karlsruhe.de>.
-
-Thu Jan 25 03:39:10 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): NUMOPCODES replaced with
- sparc_num_opcodes. Update architecture enum values.
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcode_archs): Replaces architecture_pname.
- (sparc_opcode_lookup_arch): New function.
- (sparc_num_opcodes): Renamed from bfd_sparc_num_opcodes.
- (sparc_opcodes): Add v9a shutdown insn.
-
-Mon Jan 22 08:29:59 1996 Doug Evans <dje@charmed.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): Renamed from print_insn.
- If DISASM_RAW_INSN, print insn in hex. Handle v9a as opcode
- architecture.
- (print_insn_sparc64): Deleted.
- * disassemble.c (disassembler, case bfd_arch_sparc): Always use
- print_insn_sparc.
-
- * sparc-opc.c (architecture_pname): Add v9a.
-
-Fri Jan 12 14:35:58 1996 David Mosberger-Tang <davidm@AZStarNet.com>
-
- * alpha-opc.h (alpha_insn_set): VAX floating point opcode was
- incorrectly defined as 0x16 when it should be 0x15.
- (FLOAT_FORMAT_MASK): function code is 11 bits, not just 7 bits!
- (alpha_insn_set): added cvtst and cvttq float ops. Also added
- excb (exception barrier) which is defined in the Alpha
- Architecture Handbook version 2.
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): Fixed special-case decoding for
- OPERATE_FORMAT_CODE type instructions. The bug caused mulq to be
- disassembled as or, for example.
-
-Wed Jan 10 12:37:22 1996 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Print cases 'i' and 'u' in hex.
- (_print_insn_mips): Change i from int to unsigned int.
-
-Thu Jan 4 17:21:10 1996 David Edelsohn <edelsohn@mhpcc.edu>
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): tlbi POWER opcode form different
- from tlbie PowerPC opcode. Add PPC603 tlbld and tlbli.
-
-Thu Dec 28 13:29:19 1995 John Hassey <hassey@rtp.dg.com>
-
- * i386-dis.c: Added Pentium Pro instructions.
-
-Tue Dec 19 22:56:35 1995 Michael Meissner <meissner@tiktok.cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c (fsqrt{,.}): Duplicate for PowerPC in addition to
- being for Power2.
-
-Fri Dec 15 14:14:15 1995 J.T. Conklin <jtc@rtl.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (sh_nibble_type): Added REG_B.
- (sh_arg_type): Added A_REG_B.
- (sh_table): Added pref and bank reg versions of ldc, ldc.l, stc
- and stc.l opcodes.
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): Added cases for REG_B and A_REG_B.
-
-Fri Dec 15 16:44:31 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * disassemble.c (disassembler): Use new bfd_big_endian macro.
-
-Tue Dec 12 12:22:24 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (distclean): Remove stamp-h. From Ronald
- F. Guilmette <rfg@monkeys.com>.
-
-Tue Dec 5 13:42:44 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- From David Mosberger-Tang <davidm@azstarnet.com>:
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): fixed decoding of cpys
- instruction.
-
-Mon Dec 4 12:29:05 1995 J.T. Conklin <jtc@rtl.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (sh_arg_type): Added A_SSR and A_SPC.
- (sh_table): Added many SH3 opcodes.
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): Added cases for A_SSR and A_SPC.
-
-Fri Dec 1 07:42:18 1995 Michael Meissner <meissner@tiktok.cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c (subfc., subfco): Mark this PPCCOM, not PPC.
- (subco,subco.): Mark this PPC, not PPCCOM.
-
-Mon Nov 27 13:09:52 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure: Rebuild with autoconf 2.7.
-
-Tue Nov 21 18:28:06 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure: Rebuild with autoconf 2.6.
-
-Wed Nov 15 19:02:53 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Sort list of architectures. Accept but do nothing
- for alliant, convex, pyramid, romp, and tahoe.
-
-Wed Nov 8 20:18:59 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * a29k-dis.c (print_special): Change num to unsigned int.
-
-Wed Nov 8 20:10:35 1995 Eric Freudenthal <freudenthal@nyu.edu>
-
- * a29k-dis.c (print_insn): Cast insn24 to unsigned long when
- shifting it.
-
-Tue Nov 7 15:21:06 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Call AC_CHECK_PROG to find and cache AR.
- * configure: Rebuilt.
-
-Mon Nov 6 17:39:47 1995 Harry Dolan <dolan@ssd.intel.com>
-
- * configure.in: Add case for bfd_i860_arch.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
-Fri Nov 3 12:45:31 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c (m68k_opcodes): Correct fmoveml operands.
- * m68k-dis.c (NEXTSINGLE): Change i to unsigned int.
- (NEXTDOUBLE): Likewise.
- (print_insn_m68k): Don't match fmoveml if there is more than one
- register in the list.
- (print_insn_arg): Handle a place of '8' for a type of 'L'.
-
-Thu Nov 2 23:06:33 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c: Use #W rather than #w.
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Handle new 'W' place.
-
-Wed Nov 1 13:30:24 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c (m68k_opcode_aliases): Add dbfw as an alias for dbf,
- and likewise for all the dbxx opcodes.
-
-Mon Oct 30 20:50:40 1995 Fred Fish <fnf@cygnus.com>
-
- * arc-dis.c: Include elf-bfd.h rather than libelf.h.
-
-Mon Oct 23 11:11:34 1995 James G. Smith <jsmith@pasanda.cygnus.co.uk>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Added shorthand (V1) for INSN_4100 manifest. Added
- the VR4100 specific instructions to the mips_opcodes structure.
-
-Thu Oct 19 11:05:23 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- * mpw-config.in, mpw-make.sed: Remove ugly workaround for
- ugly Metrowerks bug in CW6, is fixed in CW7.
-
-Mon Oct 16 12:59:01 1995 Michael Meissner <meissner@tiktok.cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c (whole file): Add flags for common/any support.
-
-Tue Oct 10 11:06:07 1995 Fred Fish <fnf@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (BISON): Remove macro.
- (FLAGS_TO_PASS): Remove BISON.
-
-Fri Oct 6 16:26:45 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cygnus.com>
-
- Mon Sep 25 22:49:32 1995 Andreas Schwab <schwab@issan.informatik.uni-dortmund.de>
-
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_m68k): Recognize all two-word
- instructions that take no args by looking at the match mask.
- (print_insn_arg): Always print "%" before register names.
- [case 'c']: Use "nc" for the no-cache case, as recognized by gas.
- [case '_']: Don't print "@#" before address.
- [case 'J']: Use "%s" as format string, not register name.
- [case 'B']: Treat place == 'C' like 'l' and 'L'.
-
-Thu Oct 5 22:16:20 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cygnus.com>
-
- * i386-dis.c: Describe cmpxchg8b operand, and spell the opcode
- name correctly.
-
-Tue Oct 3 08:30:20 1995 steve chamberlain <sac@slash.cygnus.com>
-
- From David Mosberger-Tang <davidm@azstarnet.com>
-
- * alpha-opc.h (MEMORY_FUNCTION_FORMAT_MASK): added.
- (alpha_insn_set): added definitions for VAX floating point
- instructions (Unix compilers don't generate these, but handcoded
- assembly might still use them).
-
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): added support for disassembling
- the miscellaneous instructions in the Alpha instruction set.
-
-Tue Sep 26 18:47:20 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- * mpw-config.in: Add m68k-opc.c.o to BFD_MACHINES for m68k,
- no longer create sysdep.h, sed ppc-opc.c to work around a
- serious Metrowerks C bug.
- * mpw-make.in: Remove.
- * mpw-make.sed: New file, used by mpw-configure to edit
- Makefile.in into an MPW makefile.
-
-Wed Sep 20 12:55:28 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (maintainer-clean): New synonym for realclean.
-
-Tue Sep 19 15:28:36 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c: Split pmove patterns which use 'P' into patterns
- which use '0', '1', and '2' instead. Specify the proper size for
- a pmove immediate operand. Correct the pmovefd patterns to be
- moves to a register, not from a register.
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Replace 'P' with '0', '1', '2'.
-
-Thu Sep 14 11:58:22 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcodes): Mark all insns that reference
- %psr, %wim, %tbr as F_NOTV9.
-
-Fri Sep 8 01:07:38 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (Makefile): Just rebuild Makefile when running
- config.status.
- (config.h, stamp-h): New targets.
- * configure.in: Call AC_CONFIG_HEADER and AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM
- earlier. Don't bother to call AC_ARG_PROGRAM. Touch stamp-h when
- rebuilding config.h.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
- * mips-opc.c: Change unaligned loads and stores with "t,A"
- operands to use "t,A(b)".
-
-Thu Sep 7 19:02:46 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): Add F_FR0 support.
-
-Thu Sep 7 19:02:46 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): Change loop over op->arg[n] to iterate
- until 3 instead of until 2.
-
-Wed Sep 6 21:21:33 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (ALL_CFLAGS): Define.
- (.c.o, disassemble.o): Use $(ALL_CFLAGS).
- (MOSTLYCLEAN): Add config.log.
- (distclean): Don't remove config.log.
- * configure.in: Substitute HDEFINES.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
-Wed Sep 6 15:08:09 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (sh_arg_type): Add F_FR0.
- (sh_table, case fmac): Add F_FR0 as first argument.
-
-Wed Sep 6 15:08:09 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (sh_opcode_info): Increase arg array size to 4.
-
-Tue Sep 5 18:28:10 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c: Remove all references to NO_V9.
-
-Tue Sep 5 20:03:26 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * aclocal.m4: Just include ../bfd/aclocal.m4.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
-Tue Sep 5 16:09:59 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (X_DISP19): Define.
- (print_insn, case 'G'): Use it.
- (print_insn, case 'L'): Sign extend displacement.
-
-Mon Sep 4 14:28:46 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Run ../bfd/configure.host before AC_PROG_CC.
- Subsitute CFLAGS and AR. Call AC_PROG_INSTALL. Don't substitute
- host_makefile_frag or frags.
- * aclocal.m4: New file.
- * configure: Rebuild.
- * Makefile.in (INSTALL): Set to @INSTALL@.
- (INSTALL_PROGRAM): Set to @INSTALL_PROGRAM@.
- (INSTALL_DATA): Set to @INSTALL_DATA@.
- (AR): Set to @AR@.
- (AR_FLAGS): Set to rc rather than qc.
- (CC): Define as @CC@.
- (CFLAGS): Set to @CFLAGS@.
- (@host_makefile_frag@): Remove.
- (config.status): Remove dependency upon @frags@.
-
- * configure.in: ../bfd/config.bfd now just sets shell variables.
- Use them rather than looking through target Makefile fragments.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
-Thu Aug 31 12:35:32 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (ftrc): Change FPUL_N to FPUL_M.
-
-Wed Aug 30 13:52:28 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcodes): Delete duplicate wr %y insn.
- Add clrx, iprefetch, signx, clruw, cas, casl, casx, casxl synthetic
- sparc64 insns.
-
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcodes): Fix prefetcha insn.
- (lookup_{name,value}): New functions.
- (prefetch_table): New static local.
- (sparc_{encode,decode}_prefetch): New functions.
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn): Handle '*' arg (prefetch function).
-
-Wed Aug 30 11:11:58 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h: Add blank lines to improve readabililty of sh3e
- instructions.
-
-Wed Aug 30 11:09:38 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-dis.c: Correct comment on first line of file.
-
-Tue Aug 29 15:37:18 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * disassemble.c (disassembler): Handle bfd_mach_sparc64.
-
- * sparc-opc.c (asi, membar): New static locals.
- (sparc_{encode,decode}_{asi,membar}): New functions.
- (sparc_opcodes, membar insn): Fix.
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn): Call sparc_decode_asi.
- Support decoding of membar masks.
- (X_MEMBAR): Define.
-
-Sat Aug 26 21:22:48 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c (m68k_opcode_aliases): Add br, brs, brb, brw, brl.
-
-Mon Aug 21 17:33:36 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c (m68k_opcode_aliases): Add bhib as an alias for bhis,
- and likewise for the other branches. Add bhs as an alias for bcc,
- and likewise for the size variants. Add dbhs as an alias for
- dbcc.
-
-Fri Aug 11 13:40:24 1995 Jeff Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * sh-opc.h (FP sts instructions): Update to match reality.
-
-Mon Aug 7 16:12:58 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-dis.c: (fpcr_names): Add % before all register names.
- (reg_names): Likewise.
- (print_insn_arg): Don't explicitly print % before register names.
- Add % before register names in static array names. In case 'r',
- print data registers as `@(Dn)', not `Dn@'. When printing a
- memory address, don't print @# before it.
- (print_indexed): Change base_disp and outer_disp from int to
- bfd_vma. Print using MIT syntax, not mutant invalid Motorola
- syntax. Sign extend 8 byte displacement correctly.
- (print_base): Print using MIT syntax. Print zpc when appropriate.
- Change parameter disp from int to bfd_vma.
-
- * m68k-opc.c (m68k_opcode_aliases): Add jsrl and jsrs as aliases
- for jsr.
-
-Mon Aug 7 02:21:40 1995 Jeff Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): Handle new operand types F_REG_N,
- F_REG_M, FPSCR_M, FPSCR_N, FPUL_M and FPUL_N.
- * sh-opc.h (sh_arg_type): Add new operand types.
- (sh_table): Add new opcodes from SH3E Floating Point ISA.
-
-Sat Aug 5 16:50:14 1995 Fred Fish <fnf@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (distclean): Remove generated file config.h.
-
-Sat Aug 5 16:50:14 1995 Fred Fish <fnf@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (distclean): Remove generated file config.h.
-
-Wed Aug 2 18:33:40 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-opc.c: New file, holding tables from include/opcode/m68k.h.
- Clean up tables.
- * m68k-dis.c: Remove BREAK_UP_BIG_DECL stuff.
- (opcode): Remove.
- (print_insn_m68k): Change d to be const. Use m68k_numopcodes
- rather than numopcodes. Use m68k_opcodes rather than removed
- opcode function. Don't check F_ALIAS.
- (print_insn_arg): Change first parameter to be const char *.
- * Makefile.in (ALL_MACHINES): Add m68k-opc.o.
- (m68k-opc.o): New target.
- * configure.in: Build m68k-opc.o for bfd_m68k_arch.
- * configure: Rebuild.
-
-Wed Aug 2 08:23:38 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c (HASH_SIZE, HASH_INSN): Define.
- (opcode_bits, opcode_hash_table): New variables.
- (opcodes_initialized): Renamed from opcodes_sorted.
- (build_hash_table): New function.
- (is_delayed_branch): Use hash table.
- (print_insn): Renamed from print_insn_sparc, made static.
- Build and use hash table. If !sparc64, ignore sparc64 insns,
- and vice-versa if sparc64.
- (print_insn_sparc, print_insn_sparc64): New functions.
- (compare_opcodes): Move sparc64 opcodes to end.
- Print commutative insns with constant second.
- * sparc-opc.c (all non-v9 insns): Use flag F_NOTV9 instead of F_ALIAS.
-
-Tue Aug 1 00:12:49 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): Remove unused local dslot. Use
- print_address_func for A_BDISP12 and A_BDISP8. Correct test which
- avoids printing a delay slot in a delay slot.
- * sh-opc.h (sh_table): Fully bracket last entry.
-
-Mon Jul 31 12:04:47 1995 Doug Evans <dje@canuck.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-opc.c (sllx, srax, srlx): Fix disassembly.
-
-Wed Jul 12 00:59:34 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@kr-pc.cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Get host_makefile_frag from ${srcdir}.
-
- * configure.in: Autoconfiscated. Check for string[s].h. Create
- config.h from config.in. Don't set up sysdep.h link.
- * sysdep.h: New file.
- * configure, config.in: New files, generated from configure.in.
- * Makefile.in: Updated to be processed autoconf-style.
- (distclean): Keep sysdep.h. Remove config.log and config.cache.
- (Makefile): Depend on config.status.
- (config.status): New rule.
- * configure.bat: Update Makefile substitutions.
-
-Tue Jul 11 14:23:37 1995 Jeff Spiegel <jeffs@lsil.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c (L1): Define.
- (mips_opcodes): Add R4010 instructions: flushi, flushd, flushid,
- addciu, madd, maddu, ffc, ffs, msub, msubu, selsi, selsr, waiti,
- and wb.
-
-Tue Jul 11 11:49:49 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c (mips_opcodes): For the move pseudo-op, prefer daddu
- if ISA 3 and addu otherwise, replacing or, since some MIPS chips
- have multiple add units but only a single logical unit.
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_operands): Change CR to use a bitsize of 3,
- shifted by 18, without any insertion or extraction function.
- (insert_cr, extract_cr): Remove.
-
-Wed Jun 21 20:05:39 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_arg, print_indexed): Print "%" before
- register names.
-
-Thu Jun 15 17:23:31 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- * mpw-config.in: Add sh and i386 configs, remove sparc config.
- * sh-opc.h: Add copyright.
-
-Mon Jun 5 03:30:43 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@kr-laptop.cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (crunch-m68k): Delete extra target accidentally
- checked in a while ago.
-
-Wed May 24 16:22:13 1995 Jim Wilson <wilson@chestnut.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (sh_table): Add SH3 support.
-
-Wed May 24 14:16:08 1995 Steve Chamberlain <sac@slash.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h: Added bsrf and braf.
-
-Wed May 10 14:28:16 1995 Richard Earnshaw (rearnsha@armltd.co.uk)
-
- * arm-opc.h (arm_opcodes): Add 64-bit multiply patterns. Delete
- bogus [ls]fm{ea,fd} patterns.
-
- * arm-opc.h (arm_opcodes): Correct typos in stm, ldm, std, and ldc.
- * arm-dis.c (print_insn_arm): Make GIVEN a parameter, don't try and
- initialize it from memory. Make function static.
- (print_insn_{big,little}_arm): New functions.
- * disassemble.c (disassembler, case bfd_arch_arm): Disassemble for
- the correct endianness.
-
-
-Mon Apr 24 14:18:05 1995 Jason Molenda (crash@phydeaux.cygnus.com>
-
- * sh-opc.h (sh_nibble_type, sh_arg_type): remove trailing , from
- enum list.
-
-Wed Apr 19 14:07:03 1995 Michael Meissner <meissner@tiktok.cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-dis.c (opcode): Finish change made by Kung Hsu on April
- 17th, so that it builds again using GCC as the compiler.
-
-Tue Apr 18 12:14:51 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_little_mips): Cast return value from
- bfd_getl32 from bfd_vma to unsigned long, because _print_insn_mips
- expects an unsigned long, and that might be fewer words of
- argument storage (e.g., if bfd_vma is long long on a 32-bit
- machine).
- (print_insn_big_mips): Likewise with bfd_getb32 value.
- (_print_insn_mips): Now static.
-
-Mon Apr 17 12:23:28 1995 Kung Hsu <kung@rtl.cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-dis.c: Take out #define BREAK_UP_BIG_DECL kludge, because
- gcc memory hog problem with initializer is fixed.
-
-
-Mon Apr 10 15:55:01 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- Merge in support for Mac MPW as a host.
- (Old change descriptions retained for informational value.)
-
- * mpw-config.in (archname): Compute from the config.
- (BFD_MACHINES, ARCHDEFS): Put into mk.tmp.
-
- * mpw-config.in (target_arch): Compute from canonical target.
- (m68k, mips, powerpc, sparc): Add architectures.
- * mpw-make.in (disassemble.c.o): Add.
- (ALL_CFLAGS): Remove special flags (-mc68020 -mc68881 -model far).
-
- * mpw-config.in (BFD_MACHINES): Set to a default value.
- * mpw-make.in (BFD_MACHINES): Remove wired-in value.
-
- * mpw-make.in (CSEARCH): Add extra-include to search path.
-
- * mpw-config.in (varargs.h): Don't create.
- (sysdep.h): Create using forward-include.
- * mpw-make.in (CSEARCH): Add include/mpw to search path.
-
- * mpw-config.in: New file, MPW version of configure.in.
- * mpw-make.in: New file, MPW version of Makefile.in.
-
-
-Fri Mar 31 14:23:38 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com>
-
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): Put empty statement after
- default label.
-
-Tue Mar 21 10:51:40 1995 Jeff Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (sign_extend): Delete, redundant with libhppa.h version.
- (low_sign_extend): Likewise.
- (get_field): Delete unused function.
- (set_field, deposit_14, deposit_21): Likewise.
-
-Fri Mar 17 15:55:53 1995 J.T. Conklin <jtc@rtl.cygnus.com>
-
- * i386-dis.c: Support for more pentium opcodes. From Guy Harris
- (guy@netapp.com).
-
-Tue Mar 14 00:52:57 1995 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@kr-pc.cygnus.com)
-
- Sat Feb 11 17:22:41 1995 Klaus Kaempf (kkaempf@didymus.rmi.de)
-
- * alpha-opc.h (OSF_ASMCODE): define
- print pal-code names as defined in App C of the
- Alpha Architecture Reference Manual
-
- * alpha-dis.c: cleaned up output
- print stylized code forms as defined in App A.4.3 of the
- Alpha Architecture Reference Manual
-
-Wed Mar 8 15:21:14 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Add new mips4 instructions. Don't set INSN_RFE for
- `rfe'.
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Handle new argument types 'h', 'R',
- 'N', and 'M'.
-
-Wed Mar 8 02:54:05 1995 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com>
-
- * m68k-dis.c (opcode): New function. Returns address of opcode
- table entry given index, even if the opcode table was split to
- work around gcc bugs.
- (print_insn_m68k): Call opcode instead of referencing m68k_opcodes
- directly.
- (BREAK_UP_BIG_DECL): Make secondary array static and const.
- (reg_names): Now const.
- (print_insn_arg): Arrays cacheFieldName and names now const.
- (print_indexed): Array scales now const.
-
-
-Tue Mar 7 16:41:21 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c: Sort recently added instructions by minor opcode
- number within major opcode number.
-
-Mon Mar 6 10:04:36 1995 Jeff Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c: Include libhppa.h.
-
-Fri Feb 24 19:15:36 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Change dli to use M_DLI, and add dla.
-
-Mon Feb 20 23:54:38 1995 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * Makefile.in (ALL_MACHINES): Add w65-dis.o.
-
-
-Thu Feb 16 17:34:41 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Add r4650 mul instruction.
-
-Wed Feb 15 15:45:20 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Add uld and usd macros for unaligned double load and
- store.
-
-Tue Feb 14 13:17:37 1995 Michael Meissner <meissner@tiktok.cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): Add 403GA opcodes rfci, dccci,
- mfdcr, mtdcr, icbt, iccci.
-
-
-Thu Feb 9 12:28:13 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- * i960-dis.c (struct tabent, struct sparse_tabent): Change the
- signed char fields to shorts, more portable.
-
-Wed Feb 8 17:29:29 1995 Stan Shebs <shebs@andros.cygnus.com>
-
- * i960-dis.c (struct tabent, struct sparse_tabent): Declare the
- char fields as signed chars, since they may have negative values.
-
-Mon Feb 6 10:52:06 1995 J.T. Conklin <jtc@rtl.cygnus.com>
-
- * i386-dis.c (dis386_twobyte): Add cpuid, From Charles Hannum
- (mycroft@netbsd.org).
-
-Mon Jan 30 12:38:00 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- From "Logg, Ed" <elogg@ea.com>:
- * ppc-opc.c (extract_bdm): Correct parenthezisation.
- * ppc-dis.c (print_insn_powerpc): Print .long before unrecognized
- value.
-
-Thu Jan 26 18:32:08 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * ppc-opc.c: Changes based on patch from David Edelsohn
- <edelsohn@mhpcc.edu>.
- (powerpc_operands): Add operands SPRBAT and SPRG. Split TBR out of
- SPR.
- (FXM_MASK): Define.
- (insert_tbr): New static function.
- (extract_tbr): New static function.
- (XFXFXM_MASK, XFXM): Define.
- (XSPRBAT_MASK, XSPRG_MASK): Define.
- (powerpc_opcodes): Add instructions to access special registers by
- name. Add mtcr and mftbu.
-
-Tue Jan 17 10:56:43 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c (P3): Define.
- (mips_opcodes): Add mad and madu.
-
-Sun Jan 15 16:32:59 1995 Steve Chamberlain <sac@splat>
-
- * configure.in: Add W65 support.
- * disassemble.c: Likewise.
- * w65-opc.h, w65-dis.c: New files.
-
-Wed Dec 28 22:15:33 1994 Steve Chamberlain (sac@jonny.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8300-dis.c (bfd_h8_disassemble): Add support for 2 bit
- immediates.
-
-
-Tue Dec 20 11:25:12 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Add dli as a synonym for li.
-
-
-Thu Dec 8 18:23:31 1994 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com>
-
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): Handle call_pal instruction, and
- print something for reserved opcode values, even if it won't
- assemble again.
-
- * mips-dis.c (_print_insn_mips): When initializing, shift right
- and mask, to avoid sign extension problems on the Alpha.
-
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_arg, case 'J'): Handle buscr and pcr
- control registers.
-
-
-Wed Nov 23 22:34:51 1994 Steve Chamberlain (sac@jonny.cygnus.com)
-
- * sh-opc.h (mov.l gbr): Get direction right.
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_shx): New function.
- (print_insn_shl, print_insn_sh): Call print_insn_shx to
- print opcodes with right byte order.
-
-Thu Nov 3 19:32:22 1994 Ken Raeburn <raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com>
-
- * ns32k-dis.c (struct ns32k_option): Renamed from struct option,
- to avoid conflicts with getopt.
-
-Mon Oct 31 18:48:10 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Read the instruction using
- bfd_getb32, so that it works on a little endian or 64 bit host.
- Remove unused local variable op.
-
-Tue Oct 25 17:07:57 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * mips-opc.c: Use or instead of addu for pseudo-op move, since
- addu does not work correctly if -mips3.
-
-Wed Oct 19 13:40:16 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * a29k-dis.c (print_special): Add special register names defined
- on 29030, 29040 and 29050.
- (print_insn): Handle new operand type 'I'.
-
-Wed Oct 12 11:59:55 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (INSTALL): Use top level install.sh script.
-
-Wed Oct 5 19:16:29 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * sparc-dis.c: Rewrite to use bitfields, rather than a union, so
- that it works on a little endian host.
-
-Tue Oct 4 12:14:21 1994 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@sanguine.cygnus.com>
-
- * configure.in: Use ${config_shell} when running config.bfd.
-
-Wed Sep 21 18:49:12 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@sanguine.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c (mips_opcodes): "dabs" is only available with -mips3.
-
-Thu Sep 15 16:30:22 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@sanguine.cygnus.com)
-
- * a29k-dis.c (print_insn): Print the opcode.
-
-Wed Sep 14 17:52:14 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@sanguine.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c (mips_opcodes): Set WR_t for sc and scd.
-
-Sun Sep 11 22:32:17 1994 Jeff Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (reg_names): Use r26-r23 for arg0-arg3.
-
-Tue Sep 6 11:37:12 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@sanguine.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Set INSN_STORE_MEMORY flag for all instructions
- which store a value into memory.
-
-Sun Sep 04 17:58:10 1994 Richard Earnshaw (rwe@pegasus.esprit.ec.org)
-
- * configure.in, Makefile.in, disassemble.c: Add support for the ARM.
- * arm-dis.c, arm-opc.h: New files.
-
-Fri Aug 5 14:00:05 1994 Stan Shebs (shebs@andros.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (ns32k-dis.o): Add dependency.
- * ns32k-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Declare initialized local as
- string, not as array of chars.
-
-Thu Jul 28 18:14:16 1994 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): Handle new operand type 'x'.
-
- * sparc-opc.c: Added sparclite extended FP operations, and
- versions of v9 impdep* instructions permitting specification of
- the OPF field.
-
-Tue Jul 26 16:36:03 1994 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com)
-
- * i960-dis.c (reg_names): Now const.
- (struct sparse_tabent): New type, copied from array type in mem
- function.
- (ctrl): Local static array ctrl_tab now const.
- (cobr): Local static array cobr_tab now const.
- (mem): Local variables reg1, reg2, reg3 now point to const. Local
- static variable mem_tab no longer explicitly initialized. Changed
- mem_init to const array of struct sparse_tabent.
- (reg): Local static variable reg_tab no longer explicitly
- initialized. Changed reg_init to const array of struct
- sparse_tabent.
- (ea): Local static array scale_tab now const.
-
- * i960-dis.c (reg): Added i960JX instructions to reg_init table.
- (REG_MAX): Updated.
-
-Tue Jul 19 21:00:00 1994 DJ Delorie (dj@ctron.com)
-
- * configure.bat: the disassember needs to be enabled for
- "objdump -d" to work in djgpp.
-
-Wed Jul 13 18:01:58 1994 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com)
-
- * ns32k-dis.c: Deleted all code in "#ifdef GDB".
- (invalid_float): Enabled general version, doesn't require running
- on ns32k host. Changed to take char* argument, and test for
- explicitly specified sizes, instead of using sizeof() on host CPU
- types.
- (INVALID_FLOAT): Cast first argument.
- (opt_u, opt_U, opt_O, opt_C, opt_S, list_P532, list_M532,
- list_P032, list_M032): Now const.
- (optlist, list_search): Made appropriate arguments now point to
- const.
- (print_insn_arg): Changed static array of one-character-string
- pointers into a static const array of characters; fixed sprintf
- statement accordingly.
-
-Sun Jul 10 00:27:47 1994 Ian Dall (dall@hfrd.dsto.gov.au)
-
- * opcodes/ns32k-dis.c: Semi-new file. Had apparently been dropped
- from distribution. A ns32k-dis.c from a previous distribution has
- been brought up to date and supports the new interface.
-
- * disassemble.c: define ARCH_ns32k and add case bfd_arch_ns32k.
-
- * configure.in: add bfd_ns32k_arch target support.
-
- * Makefile.in: add ns32k-dis.o to ALL_MACHINES.
- Add ns32k-dis.c to CFILES. Add dependencies for ns32k-dis.o.
-
-Wed Jun 29 22:10:37 1994 Steve Chamberlain (sac@cygnus.com)
-
- * h8300-dis.c (bfd_h8_disassemble): Get 16bit branch
- disassembly right.
-
-Tue Jun 28 13:22:06 1994 Stan Shebs (shebs@andros.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8300-dis.c, mips-dis.c: Don't use true and false.
-
-Thu Jun 23 12:53:19 1994 David J. Mackenzie (djm@rtl.cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: Change --with-targets to --enable-targets.
-
-Wed Jun 22 13:38:32 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@sanguine.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c (_print_insn_mips): Build a static hash table mapping
- opcodes to the first instruction with that opcode, to speed
- disassembly of large files. From ralphc@pyramid.com (Ralph
- Campbell).
-
-Tue Jun 7 12:49:44 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (mostlyclean): Fix typo (was mostyclean).
-
-Wed May 11 22:32:00 1994 DJ Delorie (dj@ctron.com)
-
- * configure.bat: update to latest makefile.in
-
-Sat May 7 17:13:21 1994 Steve Chamberlain (sac@cygnus.com)
-
- * a29k-dis.c (print_insn): Print 'x' type operand in hex.
- * h8300-dis.c (bfd_h8_disassemble): Print 16bit rels correctly.
- * sh-dis.c (print_insn_sh): Don't recur endlessly if delay
- slot insn is in a delay slot.
- * z8k-opc.h: (resflg): Fix patterns.
- * h8500-opc.h Fix CR insn patterns.
-
-Fri May 6 14:34:46 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): Put PowerPC versions of "cmp" and
- "cmpl" before POWER versions, so that gas -many uses them.
-
-Thu Apr 28 18:32:36 1994 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cujo.cygnus.com)
-
- * disassemble.c: New file.
- * Makefile.in (OFILES): Add disassemble.o.
- (disassemble.o): Provide dependencies; compile with $(ARCHDEFS).
- * configure.in: Define ARCHDEFS in Makefile. Code taken from
- binutils/configure.in.
-
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_m68k): If F_ALIAS flag is set, skip the
- opcode being examined.
-
-Thu Apr 21 17:08:40 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_operands): Added RAL, RAM and RAS.
- (insert_ral, insert_ram, insert_ras): New functions.
- (powerpc_opcodes): Use RAL for load with update, RAM for lmw, and
- RAS for store with update.
-
-Sat Apr 16 23:41:44 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): Correct fcir. From David Edelsohn
- (edelsohn@npac.syr.edu).
-
-Wed Apr 6 17:11:45 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c (mips_opcodes): Correct operands of "nor" with an
- immediate argument.
-
-Mon Apr 4 16:30:46 1994 Doug Evans (dje@canuck.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-opc.c (sparc_opcodes): Fix "rd %fprs,%l0".
-
-Mon Apr 4 13:22:00 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_operands): The signedp field has been
- removed, so don't initialize it. Set the PPC_OPERAND_SIGNED flag
- instead. Add new operand SISIGNOPT.
- (powerpc_opcodes): For lis, liu, addis, and cau use SISIGNOPT.
- Based on patch from David Edelsohn (edelsohn@npac.syr.edu).
- * ppc-dis.c (print_insn_powerpc): Check PPC_OPERAND_SIGNED rather
- than signedp field.
-
-Wed Mar 30 00:31:49 1994 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * i386-dis.c (struct private): Renamed to dis_private. `private'
- is a reserved word for dynix cc.
-
-Mon Mar 28 13:00:15 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: Change error message to refer to bfd/config.bfd
- rather than bfd/configure.in.
-
-Mon Mar 28 12:28:30 1994 David Edelsohn (edelsohn@npac.syr.edu)
-
- * ppc-opc.c: Define POWER2 as short alias flag.
- (powerpc_opcodes): Add POWER/2 opcodes lfq*, stfq*, fcir[z], and
- fsqrt.
-
-Wed Mar 23 12:23:05 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * i960-dis.c (print_insn_i960): Don't read a second word for
- opcodes 0, 1, 2 and 3.
-
-Wed Mar 16 15:37:58 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: Don't build m68881-ext.o for bfd_m68k_arch.
-
-Mon Mar 14 14:53:50 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * m68881-ext.c: Removed; no longer used.
- * Makefile.in: Changed accordingly.
-
- * m68k-dis.c (ext_format_68881): Don't declare.
- (print_insn_m68k): If an instruction uses place 'i', it uses at
- least four fixed bytes.
- (print_insn_arg): Don't bump p by 2 for case 'I', place 'i'. For
- extended float, convert to double using floatformat_to_double, not
- ieee_extended_to_double, and fetch the data before converting it.
-
-Tue Mar 8 18:12:25 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: It's sqrt.s, not sqrt.w. From
- davidj@ICSI.Berkeley.EDU (David Johnson).
-
-Tue Feb 8 16:55:27 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): The POWER uses bdn[l][a] where the
- PowerPC uses bdnz[l][a].
-
-Tue Feb 8 00:32:28 1994 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * dis-buf.c, i386-dis.c: Include sysdep.h.
-
-Mon Feb 7 19:22:23 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in (bfd_powerpc_arch): Use ppc-dis.o and ppc-opc.o.
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_opcodes): Mark POWER instructions supported
- by Motorola PowerPC 601 with PPC_OPCODE_601.
- * ppc-dis.c (print_insn_big_powerpc, print_insn_little_powerpc):
- Disassemble Motorola PowerPC 601 instructions as well as normal
- PowerPC instructions.
-
-Sun Feb 6 07:45:17 1994 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * i960-dis.c (reg, mem): Just use a static array instead of
- calling xmalloc.
-
-Sat Feb 5 00:04:02 1994 Jeffrey A. Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): For '?' and '@' only adjust the
- condition name index if this is for a negated condition.
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): No space before 'H' operand.
- Floating point format for 'H' operand is backwards from normal
- case (0 == double, 1 == single). For '4', '6', '7', '9', and '8'
- operands (fmpyadd and fmpysub), handle bizarre register
- translation correctly for single precision format.
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Do not emit a space after 'F'
- or 'I' operands if the next format specifier is 'M' (fcmp
- condition completer).
-
-Feb 4 23:38:03 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c (powerpc_operands): New operand type MBE to handle a
- single number giving a bitmask for the MB and ME fields of an M
- form instruction. Change NB to accept 32, and turn it into 0;
- also turn 0 into 32 when disassembling. Seperated SH from NB.
- (insert_mbe, extract_mbe): New functions.
- (insert_nb, extract_nb): New functions.
- (SC_MASK): Mask out SA and LK bits.
- (powerpc_opcodes): Change "cal" to use RT, D, RA rather than RT,
- RA, SI. Change "liu" and "cau" to use UI rather than SI. Mark
- "bctr" and "bctrl" as accepted by POWER. Change "rlwimi",
- "rlimi", "rlwimi.", "rlimi.", "rlwinm", "rlinm", "rlwinm.",
- "rlinm.", "rlmi", "rlmi.", "rlwnm", "rlnm", "rlwnm.", "rlnm." to
- use MBE rather than MB. Add "mfmq" and "mtmq" POWER instructions.
- (powerpc_macros): Define table of macro definitions.
- (powerpc_num_macros): Define.
-
- * ppc-dis.c (print_insn_powerpc): Don't skip optional operands
- if PPC_OPERAND_NEXT is set.
-
-Sat Jan 22 23:10:07 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * i960-dis.c (print_insn_i960): Make buffer bfd_byte instead of
- char. Retrieve contents using bfd_getl32 instead of shifting.
-
-Fri Jan 21 19:01:39 1994 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * ppc-opc.c: New file. Opcode table for PowerPC, including
- opcodes for POWER (RS/6000).
- * ppc-dis.c: New file. PowerPC and Power (RS/6000) disassembler.
- * Makefile.in (ALL_MACHINES): Add ppc-dis.o and ppc-opc.o.
- (CFILES): Add ppc-dis.c.
- (ppc-dis.o, ppc-opc.o): New targets.
- * configure.in: Build ppc-dis.o and ppc-opc.o for bfd_rs6000_arch.
-
-Mon Jan 17 20:05:49 1994 Jeffrey A. Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Handle 'N' in assembler template.
- No space before 'u', 'f', or 'N'.
-
-Sun Jan 16 14:20:16 1994 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@deneb.cygnus.com)
-
- * i386-dis.c (print_insn_i386): Add FIXME comment regarding reading
- farther than we should.
-
- * i386-dis.c (dis386): Use Yb and Yv for scasb and scasS.
-
-Thu Jan 6 12:38:05 1994 David J. Mackenzie (djm@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-dis.c m68k-dis.c alpha-dis.c a29k-dis.c: Fix comments.
-
-Wed Jan 5 11:56:21 1994 David J. Mackenzie (djm@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * i960-dis.c (print_insn_i960): Only read word2 if the instruction
- needs it, to prevent reading past the end of a section.
-
-Wed Nov 17 17:20:12 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.h: Use macro for j instruction, to support SVR4 PIC.
- Removed t,A case for la; always use t,A(b) case.
-
-Mon Nov 8 12:37:36 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- From Ted Lemen <mellon@pepper.ncd.com>
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Handle 'k'.
- * mips-opc.c: Make cache use k, not t.
-
-Sun Nov 7 23:52:34 1993 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * alpha-opc.h, alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): Add
- FLOAT_MEMORY_FORMAT_CODE, FLOAT_BRANCH_FORMAT_CODE, correct
- FLOAT_FORMAT_CODE to put out floating point register names.
-
-Mon Nov 1 18:17:51 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Use macros for jal variants, to support SVR4 PIC.
-
-Thu Oct 28 17:42:23 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * a29k-dis.c (print_insn): Use 0x%08x, not 0x%8x.
-
-Wed Oct 27 11:48:01 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c (dsll, dsra, dsrl): Added '>' cases for shift counts
- larger than 32. Moved dsxx32 variants first for disassembler.
-
-Mon Oct 25 11:33:14 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@phydeaux.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8kgen.c, z8k-opc.h: Add full lda information.
-
-Tue Oct 19 12:39:25 1993 Jeffrey A Law (law@cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Do not emit a space after
- movb instructions. Any necessary space will be emitted by
- the code to handle nullification completers.
-
-Wed Oct 13 16:19:07 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Moved l.d down so that it disassembles as ldc1.
-
-Fri Oct 8 02:34:21 1993 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * alpha-opc.h: Add ldl_l, fix typo for ldq_u.
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): Add code for PAL_FORMAT_CODE.
-
-Tue Oct 5 17:47:53 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Correct lwu opcode value (book had it wrong).
-
-Thu Sep 30 11:26:18 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@phydeaux.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c (FETCH_DATA): get just the right amount of data.
- (unpack_instr): Cope with ARG_IMM4M1 type instructions.
-
-Wed Sep 29 16:24:49 1993 K. Richard Pixley (rich@sendai.cygnus.com)
-
- * m88k-dis.c (m88kdis): comment change. Remove space after
- printing mnemonic.
- (printop): handle new arg types DEC and XREG for m88110.
-
-Tue Sep 28 19:20:16 1993 Jeffrey A Law (law@snake.cs.utah.edu)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Handle 'z' operand
- type for absolute branch addresses. Delete special
- "ble" and "be" code in 'W' operand code.
-
-Fri Sep 24 14:08:33 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Set hazard information correctly for branch
- likely instructions.
-
-Fri Sep 17 04:41:17 1993 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha), alpha-opc.h: Fix bugs, use
- info->fprintf_func for printing and info->print_address_func for
- address output.
-
-Wed Sep 15 12:12:07 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Set INSN_TRAP for tXX instructions.
-
-Thu Sep 9 10:11:27 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: From davidj@ICSI.Berkeley.EDU (David Johnson):
- Corrected second case of "b" for disassembler.
-
-Tue Sep 7 14:25:15 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c, m88k-dis.c: Don't include libbfd.h. Changed calls
- to BFD swapping routines to correspond to BFD name changes.
-
-Thu Sep 2 10:35:25 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Change div machine instruction to be z,s,t rather
- than s,t. Change div macro to be d,v,t rather than d,s,t.
- Likewise for divu, ddiv, ddivu. Added z,s,t case for drem, dremu,
- rem and remu which generates only the corresponding div
- instruction. This is for compatibility with the MIPS assembler,
- which only generates the simple machine instruction when an
- explicit destination of $0 is used.
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Handle 'z' (always register zero).
-
-Thu Aug 26 17:41:44 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: From davidj@ICSI.Berkeley.EDU (David Johnson): Set
- WR_31 hazard for bal, bgezal, bltzal.
-
-Thu Aug 26 17:20:02 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Use print function
- from within the disassemble_info, not fprintf_filtered.
-
-Wed Aug 25 13:51:40 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Handle '|' like '>'. (From Jeff
- Law, law@cs.utah.edu.)
-
-Mon Aug 23 12:44:05 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c ("absu"): Removed.
- ("dabs"): Added.
-
-Fri Aug 20 10:52:52 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Added r6000 and r4000 instructions and macros.
- Changed hazard information to distinguish between memory load
- delays and coprocessor load delays.
-
-Wed Aug 18 15:39:23 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: li.d uses "T,L", not "S,F". Added li.s.
-
-Tue Aug 17 09:44:42 1993 David J. Mackenzie (djm@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: Don't pass cpu to config.bfd.
-
-Tue Aug 17 12:23:52 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * m88k-dis.c (m88kdis): Make class unsigned.
-
-Thu Aug 12 15:08:18 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@cygnus.com)
-
- * alpha-dis.c (print_insn_alpha): One branch format case was
- missing the instruction name.
-
-Wed Aug 11 19:29:39 1993 David J. Mackenzie (djm@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (ALL_MACHINES): Renamed from DIS_LIBS.
- Add the arch-specific auxiliary files.
- (OFILES): Remove the arch-specific auxiliary files
- and use BFD_MACHINES instead of DIS_LIBS.
- * configure.in: Set BFD_MACHINES based on --with-targets option.
-
-Thu Aug 12 12:04:53 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: Added lwc1 E,A(b) to go with lwc1 T,A(b). Similarly
- for swc1.
-
-Sun Aug 8 15:09:30 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-opc.c: Change CONST to const to deal with gcc
- -Dconst=__const -traditional.
-
-Fri Aug 6 10:58:55 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: From davidj@ICSI.Berkeley.EDU (David Johnson): Took
- coprocessor instructions out of #if 0, and made them use new
- argument type "C".
-
-Thu Aug 5 17:11:06 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-dis.c: Include ansidecl.h before opcodes/sparc.h.
-
-Fri Jul 30 18:48:15 1993 John Gilmore (gnu@cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-opc.c: Add F_JSR, F_UNBR, or F_CONDBR flags to each branch
- instruction, for use by the disassembler.
-
- * sparc-dis.c (SEX): Add sign extension macro. Replace many
- hand-coded sign extensions that depended on 32-bit host ints.
- FIXME, we still depend on big-endian host bitfield ordering.
- (sparc_print_insn): Set the insn_info_valid field, and the
- other fields that describe the instruction being printed.
-
-Tue Jul 27 17:04:58 1993 Jim Wilson (wilson@sphagnum.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-opc.c (call): Accept all 6 addressing modes valid for
- `jmp' instead of just one of them.
-
-Wed Jul 21 11:43:32 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@deneb.cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c: Move floating registers from reg_names to fp_reg_names.
- (fput_fp_reg_r): Renamed from fput_reg_r.
- (fput_fp_reg): New function.
- (print_insn_hppa): Use fput_fp_reg{,_r} where appropriate.
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa, cases 'a', 'd'): Print space afterwards.
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa, case 'd'): Use GET_COND not GET_FIELD.
-
-Mon Jul 19 13:52:21 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@deneb.cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Use extract_5r_store for 'r'.
-
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa, case '>'): If next character is 'n',
- don't output a space.
-
- * hppa-dis.c (float_format_names): 10 is undefined, and 11 is quad.
-
-Sun Jul 18 16:30:02 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@rtl.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-opc.c: New file, containing opcode table from
- ../include/opcode/mips.h.
- * Makefile.in: Add it.
-
-Thu Jul 15 12:37:05 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * m88k-dis.c: New file, moved in from gdb and changed to use the
- new dis-asm.h disassembler interface.
- * Makefile.in (DIS_LIBS): Added m88k-dis.o.
- (m88k-dis.o): New target.
-
-Tue Jul 13 10:04:16 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg, _print_insn_mips): Made pointer to
- argument string const char * to correspond to opcode/mips.h.
-
-Tue Jul 6 15:18:37 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c: Updated to account for name changes in new version
- of opcode/mips.h.
- * Makefile.in: Added header file dependencies.
-
-Sat Jul 3 23:47:56 1993 Doug Evans (dje@canuck.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8300-dis.c (bfd_h8_disassemble): Correct fetching of instruction.
-
-Thu Jul 1 12:23:38 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * m68k-dis.c (NEXTWORD, NEXTLONG): Use ((x) ^ 0x8000) - 0x8000 to sign
- extend, rather than shifts.
-
-Sun Jun 20 20:56:56 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@poseidon.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: Undo 15 June change.
-
-Fri Jun 18 14:15:15 1993 Per Bothner (bothner@deneb.cygnus.com)
-
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Change return value to byte count
- or error code.
- * m68k-dis.c: Re-write to detect invalid operands before
- printing anything, so we can handle this the same way we
- handle invalid opcodes.
-
-Thu Jun 17 15:01:36 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@phydeaux.cygnus.com)
-
- * sh-dis.c, sh-opc.h: Understand some more opcodes.
-
-Wed Jun 16 13:48:05 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c: Include <ansidecl.h> and sysdep.h before other
- header files.
-
-Tue Jun 15 21:45:26 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-dis.c: Don't declare qsort, since sysdep.h might.
-
- * configure.in: Do make sysdep.h link.
- * Makefile.in: Search ../include. Don't search ../bfd.
-
-Tue Jun 15 13:36:10 1993 Stu Grossman (grossman@cygnus.com)
-
- Changes from Jeff Law, law@cs.utah.edu:
- * hppa-dis.c: Fix typo. 'a' and 'd' were reversed.
- Do not print a space before the completers specified by
- 'a' and 'd'.
-
-Fri Jun 11 18:40:21 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c: No longer need to bomb out if HOST_64_BIT is
- defined, since gdb has been fixed.
-
- Changes from Jeff Law, law@cs.utah.edu:
- * hppa-dis.c (print_insn_hppa): Last argument to fput_reg,
- fput_reg_r, fput_creg, fput_const, and fputs_filtered should
- be a *disassemble_info, not a *FILE.
- * hppa-dis.c: Support 'd', '!', and 'a'.
- * hppa-dis.c: Support 's' to extract a 2 bit space register.
- * hppa-dis.c: Delete cases which are no longer needed.
-
-Fri Jun 11 07:53:48 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@cygnus.com)
-
- * m68k-dis.c (print_insn_{m68k,arg}): Add MMU codes.
-
-Tue Jun 8 12:25:01 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@phydeaux.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8300-dis.c: New file, removed from bfd/cpu-h8300.c, with
- H8/300-H opcodes.
-
-Mon Jun 7 12:58:49 1993 Per Bothner (bothner@rtl.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (CSEARCH): Add -I../bfd for sysdep.h and bfd.h.
- * configure.in: No longer need to configure to get sysdep.h.
-
-Thu Jun 3 15:56:49 1993 Stu Grossman (grossman@cygnus.com)
-
- * Patches from Jeffrey Law <law@cs.utah.edu>.
- * hppa-dis.c: Support 'I', 'J', and 'K' in output
- templates for 1.1 FP computational instructions.
-
-Tue May 25 13:05:48 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8500-dis.c (print_insn_h8500): Address argument is type
- bfd_vma.
- * z8k-dis.c (print_insn_z8k, print_insn_z8001, print_insn_z8002):
- Ditto.
-
- * h8500-opc.h (addr_class_type): No comma at end of enumerator.
- * sh-opc.h (sh_nibble_type, sh_arg_type): Ditto.
-
- * sparc-dis.c (compare_opcodes): Move static declaration to
- top-level.
-
-Fri May 21 14:17:37 1993 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * sparc-dis.c (print_insn_sparc): Implement 'n' argument for unimp
- instruction, remove unimp hack from 'l' argument.
-
-Wed May 19 15:35:54 1993 Stu Grossman (grossman@cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c (fetch_data): Use unsigned char to make ancient gcc's
- happy.
-
-Fri May 14 15:22:46 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@cygnus.com)
-
- * Based on patches from davidj@ICSI.Berkeley.EDU (David Johnson):
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Handle 'C' for general coprocessor
- instructions.
-
-Fri May 14 00:09:14 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c: Include dis-asm.h before sysdep.h. Changed some
- arrays of string pointers to 2-d arrays of chars, to save
- space.
-
-Thu May 6 20:51:17 1993 Fred Fish (fnf@cygnus.com)
-
- * a29k-dis.c, alpha-dis.c, i960-dis.c, sparc-dis.c, z8k-dis.c:
- Cast second arg to read_memory_func to "bfd_byte *", as necessary.
-
-Tue May 4 20:31:10 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * hppa-dis.c: New file from Utah, adapted to new disassembler
- calling interface.
- * Makefile.in: Include it.
-
-Mon Apr 26 18:17:42 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * sh-dis.c, sh-opc.h: New files.
-
-Fri Apr 23 18:51:22 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * alpha-dis.c, alpha-opc.h: New files.
-
-Tue Apr 6 12:54:08 1993 Peter Schauer (pes@regent.e-technik.tu-muenchen.de)
-
- * mips-dis.c: Sign extend 'j' and 'b' arguments, delta is a signed
- value.
-
-Mon Apr 5 17:37:37 1993 John Gilmore (gnu@cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-dis.c: Make "ta" the default trap instruction, "t" the alias.
-
-Fri Apr 2 07:24:27 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@cygnus.com)
-
- * a29k-dis.c, sparc-dis.c, sparc-opc.c: Use CONST rather than
- const.
-
-Thu Apr 1 11:20:43 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@cygnus.com)
-
- * sparc-dis.c: Use fprintf_func a few places where I forgot,
- and double percent signs a few places.
-
- * a29k-dis.c, i960-dis.c: New, merged from gdb and binutils.
-
- * i386-dis.c, m68k-dis.c, mips-dis.c, sparc-dis.c:
- Use info->print_address_func not print_address.
-
- * dis-buf.c (generic_print_address): New function.
-
-Wed Mar 31 10:07:04 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: Add sparc-dis.c.
- sparc-dis.c: New file, merges binutils and gdb versions as follows:
- From GDB:
- Add `add' instruction to the set that get checked
- for a preceding `sethi' in order to print an absolute address.
- * (print_insn): Disassembly prefers real instructions.
- (is_delayed_branch): Speed up.
- * sparc-opcode.h: Add ALIAS bit to aliases. Fix up opcode tables.
- Still missing some float ops, and needs testing.
- * sparc-pinsn.c (print_insn): Eliminate 'set' test, subsumed by
- F_ALIAS. Use printf, not fprintf, when not passing a file
- pointer...
- (compare_opcodes): Check that identical instructions have
- identical opcodes, complain otherwise.
- From binutils:
- * New 'm' arg.
- * Include reg_names.
- From neither:
- Use dis-asm.h/read_memory_func interface.
-
-Wed Mar 31 20:49:06 1993 K. Richard Pixley (rich@rtl.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8500-dis.c, i386-dis.c, m68k-dis.c, z8k-dis.c (fetch_data):
- deliberately return non-zero to setjmp from longjmp. Otherwise
- this code fails to compile.
-
-Wed Mar 31 17:04:31 1993 Stu Grossman (grossman@cygnus.com)
-
- * m68k-dis.c: Fix prototype for fetch_arg().
-
-Wed Mar 31 10:07:04 1993 Jim Kingdon (kingdon@lioth.cygnus.com)
-
- * dis-buf.c: New file, for new read_memory_func interface.
- Makefile.in (OFILES): Include it.
- m68k-dis.c, i386-dis.c, h8500-dis.c, mips-dis.c, z8k-dis.c:
- Use new read_memory_func interface.
-
-Mon Mar 29 14:02:17 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8500-dis.c (print_insn_h8500): Get sign of fp offsets right.
- * h8500-opc.h: Fix couple of opcodes.
-
-Wed Mar 24 02:03:36 1993 david d `zoo' zuhn (zoo at poseidon.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: add dvi & installcheck targets
-
-Mon Mar 22 18:55:04 1993 John Gilmore (gnu@cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: Update for h8500-dis.c.
-
-Fri Mar 19 14:27:17 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * h8500-dis.c, h8500-opc.h: New files
-
-Thu Mar 18 14:12:37 1993 Per Bothner (bothner@rtl.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c, z8k-dis.c: Converted to use interface defined in
- ../include/dis-asm.h.
- * m68k-dis.c: New file (merge of ../binutils/m68k-pinsn.c
- and ../gdb/m68k-pinsn.c).
- * i386-dis.c: New file (merge of ../binutils/i386-pinsn.c
- and ../gdb/i386-pinsn.c).
- * m68881-ext.c: New file. Moved definition of
- ext_format ext_format_68881 from ../gdb/m68k-tdep.c.
- * Makefile.in: Adjust for new files.
- * i386-dis.c: Patches from John Hassey (hassey@dg-rtp.dg.com).
- * m68k-dis.c: Recognize '9' placement code, so (say) pflush
- can be dis-assembled.
-
-Wed Feb 17 09:19:47 1993 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c (print_insn_arg): Now returns void.
-
-Mon Jan 11 16:09:16 1993 Fred Fish (fnf@cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c (ansidecl.h): Include for benefit of sysdep.h
- files that use the macros.
-
-Thu Jan 7 13:15:17 1993 Ian Lance Taylor (ian@tweedledumb.cygnus.com)
-
- * mips-dis.c: New file, from gdb/mips-pinsn.c.
- * Makefile.in (DIS_LIBS): Added mips-dis.o.
- (CFILES): Added mips-dis.c.
-
-Thu Jan 7 07:36:33 1993 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c (print_insn_z8001, print_insn_z8002): new routines
- * z8kgen.c, z8k-opc.h: fix sizes of some shifts.
-
-Tue Dec 22 15:42:44 1992 Per Bothner (bothner@rtl.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: Improve *clean rules.
- * configure.in: Allow a default host.
-
-Tue Nov 17 19:53:54 1992 david d `zoo' zuhn (zoo at cirdan.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: also use -I$(srcdir)/../bfd, since some sysdep
- files include other sysdep files
-
-Thu Nov 12 16:10:37 1992 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c z8k-opc.h z8kgen.c: checkpoint
-
-Fri Oct 9 04:56:05 1992 John Gilmore (gnu@cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: For host support, use ../bfd/configure.host
- so it stays in sync with the ../bfd/hosts database.
-
-Thu Oct 1 23:38:54 1992 david d `zoo' zuhn (zoo at cirdan.cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: use cpu-vendor-os triple instead of nested cases
-
-Wed Sep 30 16:09:20 1992 Michael Werner (mtw@cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c (unparse_instr): fix bug where opcode returned was
- *always* the wrong one.
-
-Wed Sep 30 07:42:17 1992 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8kgen.c: added copyright info
-
-Tue Sep 29 12:20:21 1992 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c (unparse_instr): prettier tabs
- * z8kgen.c -> z8k-opc.h: bug fixes in tables
-
-Fri Sep 25 12:50:32 1992 Stu Grossman (grossman at cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in: Add ncr* configuration.
- * z8k-dis.c (struct instr_data_s): Make instr_asmsrc char to make
- picayune ANSI compilers happy.
-
-Sep 20 08:50:55 1992 Fred Fish (fnf@cygnus.com)
-
- * configure.in (i386): Make i386 and i486 synonymous for now.
- * configure.in (i[34]86-*-sysv4): Add my_host definition.
-
-Fri Sep 18 17:01:23 1992 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (install): Fix typo.
-
-Fri Sep 18 02:04:24 1992 John Gilmore (gnu@cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (make): Remove obsolete crud.
- (sparc-opc.o): Avoid Sun Make VPATH bug.
-
-Tue Sep 8 17:29:27 1992 K. Richard Pixley (rich@sendai.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: since there are no SUBDIRS, remove rule and
- references of subdir_do.
-
-Tue Sep 8 17:02:58 1992 Ken Raeburn (raeburn@cambridge.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in (install): Get the library name right here too.
- Don't install bfd.h, since it's unrelated to this library. No
- subdirs to recurse into, either.
- (CFILES): The source file has a .c suffix, not .o.
-
- * sparc-opc.c: New file, moved from BFD.
- * Makefile.in (OFILES): Build it.
-
-Thu Sep 3 16:59:20 1992 Michael Werner (mtw@cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c: fixed forward refferences of some declarations.
-
-Mon Aug 31 16:09:45 1992 Michael Werner (mtw@cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: get the name of the library right
-
-Mon Aug 31 13:47:35 1992 Steve Chamberlain (sac@thepub.cygnus.com)
-
- * z8k-dis.c: knows how to disassemble z8k stuff
- * z8k-opc.h: new file full of z8000 opcodes
-
-
-Local Variables:
-version-control: never
-End:
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/Makefile.in b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/Makefile.in
deleted file mode 100644
index c274cb1..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/Makefile.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,305 +0,0 @@
-# Makefile template for Configure for the opcodes library.
-# Copyright (C) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-# Written by Cygnus Support.
-#
-# 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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
-
-VPATH = @srcdir@
-srcdir = @srcdir@
-
-prefix = @prefix@
-
-program_transform_name = @program_transform_name@
-exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@
-bindir = $(exec_prefix)/bin
-libdir = $(exec_prefix)/lib
-
-datadir = $(prefix)/lib
-mandir = $(prefix)/man
-man1dir = $(mandir)/man1
-man2dir = $(mandir)/man2
-man3dir = $(mandir)/man3
-man4dir = $(mandir)/man4
-man5dir = $(mandir)/man5
-man6dir = $(mandir)/man6
-man7dir = $(mandir)/man7
-man8dir = $(mandir)/man8
-man9dir = $(mandir)/man9
-infodir = $(prefix)/info
-includedir = $(prefix)/include
-oldincludedir =
-docdir = $(srcdir)/doc
-
-SHELL = /bin/sh
-
-INSTALL = @INSTALL@
-INSTALL_PROGRAM = @INSTALL_PROGRAM@
-INSTALL_DATA = @INSTALL_DATA@
-
-AR = @AR@
-AR_FLAGS = rc
-CC = @CC@
-CFLAGS = @CFLAGS@
-MAKEINFO = makeinfo
-RANLIB = @RANLIB@
-
-ALLLIBS = @ALLLIBS@
-
-PICFLAG = @PICFLAG@
-SHLIB = @SHLIB@
-SHLIB_CC = @SHLIB_CC@
-SHLIB_CFLAGS = @SHLIB_CFLAGS@
-COMMON_SHLIB = @COMMON_SHLIB@
-SHLIB_DEP = @SHLIB_DEP@
-SHLINK = @SHLINK@
-
-SONAME = lib`echo $(SHLIB) | sed -e 's,^\.\./bfd/,,' -e 's/^lib//' | sed '$(program_transform_name)'`
-
-INCDIR = $(srcdir)/../include
-BFDDIR = $(srcdir)/../bfd
-CSEARCH = -I. -I$(srcdir) -I../bfd -I$(INCDIR) -I$(BFDDIR)
-DEP = mkdep
-
-TARGETLIB = libopcodes.a
-
-# To circumvent a Sun make VPATH bug, each file listed here
-# should also have a foo.o: foo.c line further along in this file.
-
-ALL_MACHINES = a29k-dis.o alpha-dis.o h8300-dis.o h8500-dis.o \
- hppa-dis.o i386-dis.o i960-dis.o m68k-dis.o m68k-opc.o \
- m88k-dis.o mips-dis.o mips-opc.o sh-dis.o sparc-dis.o \
- sparc-opc.o z8k-dis.o ns32k-dis.o ppc-dis.o ppc-opc.o \
- arm-dis.o w65-dis.o
-
-OFILES = @BFD_MACHINES@ dis-buf.o disassemble.o
-
-FLAGS_TO_PASS = \
- "against=$(against)" \
- "AR=$(AR)" \
- "AR_FLAGS=$(AR_FLAGS)" \
- "CC=$(CC)" \
- "CFLAGS=$(CFLAGS)" \
- "RANLIB=$(RANLIB)" \
- "MAKEINFO=$(MAKEINFO)" \
- "INSTALL=$(INSTALL)" \
- "INSTALL_DATA=$(INSTALL_DATA)" \
- "INSTALL_PROGRAM=$(INSTALL_PROGRAM)"
-
-ALL_CFLAGS = $(CSEARCH) @HDEFINES@ $(CFLAGS)
-
-.c.o:
- if [ -n "$(PICFLAG)" ]; then \
- $(CC) -c $(PICFLAG) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $< -o pic/$@; \
- else true; fi
- $(CC) -c $(ALL_CFLAGS) $<
-
-# C source files that correspond to .o's.
-CFILES = i386-dis.c z8k-dis.c m68k-dis.c mips-dis.c ns32k-dis.c ppc-dis.c
-
-all: $(ALLLIBS)
-
-.NOEXPORT:
-
-installcheck check:
-
-info:
-clean-info:
-install-info:
-dvi:
-
-# HDEPFILES comes from the host config; TDEPFILES from the target config.
-
-
-$(TARGETLIB): $(OFILES)
- rm -f $(TARGETLIB)
- $(AR) $(AR_FLAGS) $(TARGETLIB) $(OFILES)
- $(RANLIB) $(TARGETLIB)
-
-LIBIBERTY_LISTS = ../libiberty/required-list ../libiberty/needed-list
-BFD_LIST = ../bfd/piclist
-
-stamp-piclist: Makefile $(LIBIBERTY_LISTS) $(BFD_LIST)
- rm -f tpiclist
- if [ -n "$(PICFLAG)" ]; then \
- echo $(OFILES) | sed -e 's,\([^ ][^ ]*\),pic/\1,g' > tpiclist; \
- else \
- echo $(OFILES) > tpiclist; \
- fi
- if [ "$(COMMON_SHLIB)" = "yes" ]; then \
- lobjs=`cat $(LIBIBERTY_LISTS)`; \
- if [ -n "$(PICFLAG)" ]; then \
- lobjs=`echo $$lobjs | sed -e 's,\([^ ][^ ]*\),pic/\1,g'`; \
- fi; \
- lobjs=`echo $$lobjs | sed -e 's,\([^ ][^ ]*\),../libiberty/\1,g'`; \
- echo $$lobjs >> tpiclist; \
- sed -e 's,\([^ ][^ ]*\),../bfd/\1,g' $(BFD_LIST) >> tpiclist; \
- else true; fi
- $(srcdir)/../move-if-change tpiclist piclist
- touch stamp-piclist
-
-piclist: stamp-piclist ; @true
-
-$(SHLIB): stamp-picdir $(OFILES) piclist $(SHLIB_DEP)
- rm -f $(SHLIB)
- $(SHLIB_CC) $(SHLIB_CFLAGS) -o $(SHLIB) `cat piclist`
-
-$(SHLINK): $(SHLIB)
- ts=lib`echo $(SHLIB) | sed -e 's,^\.\./bfd/,,' -e 's/^lib//' | sed -e '$(program_transform_name)'`; \
- if [ "$(COMMON_SHLIB)" = "yes" ]; then \
- ts=../bfd/$$ts; \
- fi; \
- if [ "$$ts" != "$(SHLIB)" ]; then \
- rm -f $$ts; \
- ln -sf `echo $(SHLIB) | sed -e 's,^\.\./bfd/,,'` $$ts; \
- else true; fi
- rm -f $(SHLINK)
- ln -sf `echo $(SHLIB) | sed -e 's,^\.\./bfd/,,'` $(SHLINK)
-
-# This target creates libTARGET-opcodes.so.VERSION as a symlink to
-# libopcodes.so.VERSION. It is used on SunOS, which does not have SONAME.
-stamp-tshlink: $(SHLIB)
- tf=lib`echo $(SHLIB) | sed -e 's,\.\./bfd/,,' -e 's/^lib//' | sed '$(program_transform_name)'`; \
- if [ "$(COMMON_SHLIB)" = "yes" ]; then \
- tf=../bfd/$$tf; \
- fi; \
- if [ "$$tf" != "$(SHLIB)" ]; then \
- rm -f $$tf; \
- ln -sf $(SHLIB) $$tf; \
- else true; fi
- if [ "$(COMMON_SHLIB)" = "yes" ]; then \
- tf=lib`echo $(TARGETLIB) | sed -e 's/^lib//' | sed '$(program_transform_name)'`; \
- if [ "$$tf" != "$(TARGETLIB)" ]; then \
- rm -f $$tf; \
- ln -sf $(TARGETLIB) $$tf; \
- else true; fi; \
- else true; fi
- touch stamp-tshlink
-
-$(OFILES): stamp-picdir
-
-disassemble.o: disassemble.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
- if [ -n "$(PICFLAG)" ]; then \
- $(CC) -c @archdefs@ $(PICFLAG) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $(srcdir)/disassemble.c -o pic/disassemble.o; \
- else true; fi
- $(CC) -c @archdefs@ $(ALL_CFLAGS) $(srcdir)/disassemble.c
-
-a29k-dis.o: a29k-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/a29k.h
-dis-buf.o: dis-buf.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-h8500-dis.o: h8500-dis.c h8500-opc.h $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-h8300-dis.o: h8300-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/h8300.h
-i386-dis.o: i386-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-i960-dis.o: i960-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-w65-dis.o: w65-dis.c
-m68k-dis.o: m68k-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/floatformat.h \
- $(INCDIR)/opcode/m68k.h
-m68k-opc.o: m68k-opc.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/m68k.h
-mips-dis.o: mips-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/mips.h
-mips-opc.o: mips-opc.c $(INCDIR)/opcode/mips.h
-ppc-dis.o: ppc-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/ppc.h
-ppc-opc.o: ppc-opc.c $(INCDIR)/opcode/ppc.h
-sparc-dis.o: sparc-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/sparc.h
-sparc-opc.o: sparc-opc.c $(INCDIR)/opcode/sparc.h
-z8k-dis.o: z8k-dis.c z8k-opc.h $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-ns32k-dis.o: ns32k-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/ns32k.h
-sh-dis.o: sh-dis.c sh-opc.h $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-alpha-dis.o: alpha-dis.c alpha-opc.h $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-hppa-dis.o: hppa-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/hppa.h
-m88k-dis.o: m88k-dis.c $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h $(INCDIR)/opcode/m88k.h
-arm-dis.o: arm-dis.c arm-opc.h $(INCDIR)/dis-asm.h
-
-tags etags: TAGS
-
-TAGS: force
- etags $(INCDIR)/*.h $(srcdir)/*.h $(srcdir)/*.c
-
-MOSTLYCLEAN = *.o core *.E *.p *.ip config.log pic/*.o
-mostlyclean:
- rm -rf $(MOSTLYCLEAN)
-clean:
- rm -f *.a $(MOSTLYCLEAN) $(SHLIB) $(SHLINK) piclist stamp-piclist
-distclean: clean
- rm -rf Makefile config.status TAGS config.cache config.h stamp-h \
- pic stamp-picdir
-clobber realclean maintainer-clean: distclean
-
-# Mark everything as depending on config.status, since the timestamp on
-# sysdep.h might actually move backwards if we reconfig and relink it
-# to a different hosts/h-xxx.h file. This will force a recompile anyway.
-RECONFIG = config.status
-
-
-
-# This target should be invoked before building a new release.
-# 'VERSION' file must be present and contain a string of the form "x.y"
-#
-roll:
- @V=`cat VERSION` ; \
- MAJ=`sed 's/\..*//' VERSION` ; \
- MIN=`sed 's/.*\.//' VERSION` ; \
- V=$$MAJ.`expr $$MIN + 1` ; \
- rm -f VERSION ; \
- echo $$V >VERSION ; \
- echo Version $$V
-
-# Dummy target to force execution of dependent targets.
-#
-force:
-
-install: $(ALLLIBS)
- for f in $(ALLLIBS); do \
- if [ "$$f" = "stamp-tshlink" ]; then \
- continue; \
- fi; \
- tf=lib`echo $$f | sed -e 's,^\.\./bfd/,,' -e 's/^lib//' | sed '$(program_transform_name)'`; \
- rm -f $(libdir)/$$tf; \
- if [ "$$f" = "$(SHLINK)" ]; then \
- ts=lib`echo $(SHLIB) | sed -e 's,^\.\./bfd/,,' -e 's/^lib//' | sed '$(program_transform_name)'`; \
- ln -sf $$ts $(libdir)/$$tf; \
- elif [ "$$f" = "$(SHLIB)" ]; then \
- $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $$f $(libdir)/$$tf; \
- else \
- $(INSTALL_DATA) $$f $(libdir)/$$tf; \
- $(RANLIB) $(libdir)/$$tf; \
- chmod a-x $(libdir)/$$tf; \
- fi; \
- done
-
-Makefile: Makefile.in config.status
- CONFIG_FILES=Makefile CONFIG_HEADERS= $(SHELL) ./config.status
-
-config.h: stamp-h ; @true
-stamp-h: config.in config.status
- CONFIG_FILES= CONFIG_HEADERS=config.h:config.in $(SHELL) ./config.status
-
-config.status : configure $(srcdir)/../bfd/configure.host $(srcdir)/../bfd/config.bfd
- $(SHELL) config.status --recheck
-
-dep: $(CFILES)
- mkdep $(CFLAGS) $?
-
-stamp-picdir:
- if [ -n "$(PICFLAG)" ] && [ ! -d pic ]; then \
- mkdir pic; \
- else true; fi
- touch stamp-picdir
-
-# What appears below is generated by a hacked mkdep using gcc -MM.
-
-# DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE -- mkdep uses it.
-# DO NOT PUT ANYTHING AFTER THIS LINE, IT WILL GO AWAY.
-
-
-# IF YOU PUT ANYTHING HERE IT WILL GO AWAY
-
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/config.in b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/config.in
deleted file mode 100644
index ea534ec..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/config.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
-/* config.in. Generated automatically from configure.in by autoheader. */
-
-/* Define if you have the <string.h> header file. */
-#undef HAVE_STRING_H
-
-/* Define if you have the <strings.h> header file. */
-#undef HAVE_STRINGS_H
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure
deleted file mode 100755
index 5f19335..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1538 +0,0 @@
-#! /bin/sh
-
-# Guess values for system-dependent variables and create Makefiles.
-# Generated automatically using autoconf version 2.8
-# Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-#
-# This configure script is free software; the Free Software Foundation
-# gives unlimited permission to copy, distribute and modify it.
-
-# Defaults:
-ac_help=
-ac_default_prefix=/usr/local
-# Any additions from configure.in:
-ac_help="$ac_help
- --enable-targets alternative target configurations"
-ac_help="$ac_help
- --enable-shared build shared opcodes library"
-ac_help="$ac_help
- --enable-commonbfdlib build shared BFD/opcodes/libiberty library"
-
-# Initialize some variables set by options.
-# The variables have the same names as the options, with
-# dashes changed to underlines.
-build=NONE
-cache_file=./config.cache
-exec_prefix=NONE
-host=NONE
-no_create=
-nonopt=NONE
-no_recursion=
-prefix=NONE
-program_prefix=NONE
-program_suffix=NONE
-program_transform_name=s,x,x,
-silent=
-site=
-srcdir=
-target=NONE
-verbose=
-x_includes=NONE
-x_libraries=NONE
-bindir='${exec_prefix}/bin'
-sbindir='${exec_prefix}/sbin'
-libexecdir='${exec_prefix}/libexec'
-datadir='${prefix}/share'
-sysconfdir='${prefix}/etc'
-sharedstatedir='${prefix}/com'
-localstatedir='${prefix}/var'
-libdir='${exec_prefix}/lib'
-includedir='${prefix}/include'
-oldincludedir='/usr/include'
-infodir='${prefix}/info'
-mandir='${prefix}/man'
-
-# Initialize some other variables.
-subdirs=
-MFLAGS= MAKEFLAGS=
-
-ac_prev=
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-# as determined by config.guess.
-# 4. Target and build default to nonopt.
-# 5. If nonopt is not specified, then target and build default to host.
-
-# The aliases save the names the user supplied, while $host etc.
-# will get canonicalized.
-case $host---$target---$nonopt in
-NONE---*---* | *---NONE---* | *---*---NONE) ;;
-*) { echo "configure: error: can only configure for one host and one target at a time" 1>&2; exit 1; } ;;
-esac
-
-
-# Make sure we can run config.sub.
-if $ac_config_sub sun4 >/dev/null 2>&1; then :
-else { echo "configure: error: can not run $ac_config_sub" 1>&2; exit 1; }
-fi
-
-echo $ac_n "checking host system type""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-
-host_alias=$host
-case "$host_alias" in
-NONE)
- case $nonopt in
- NONE)
- if host_alias=`$ac_config_guess`; then :
- else { echo "configure: error: can not guess host type; you must specify one" 1>&2; exit 1; }
- fi ;;
- *) host_alias=$nonopt ;;
- esac ;;
-esac
-
-host=`$ac_config_sub $host_alias`
-host_cpu=`echo $host | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
-host_vendor=`echo $host | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\2/'`
-host_os=`echo $host | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\3/'`
-echo "$ac_t""$host" 1>&6
-
-echo $ac_n "checking target system type""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-
-target_alias=$target
-case "$target_alias" in
-NONE)
- case $nonopt in
- NONE) target_alias=$host_alias ;;
- *) target_alias=$nonopt ;;
- esac ;;
-esac
-
-target=`$ac_config_sub $target_alias`
-target_cpu=`echo $target | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
-target_vendor=`echo $target | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\2/'`
-target_os=`echo $target | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\3/'`
-echo "$ac_t""$target" 1>&6
-
-echo $ac_n "checking build system type""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-
-build_alias=$build
-case "$build_alias" in
-NONE)
- case $nonopt in
- NONE) build_alias=$host_alias ;;
- *) build_alias=$nonopt ;;
- esac ;;
-esac
-
-build=`$ac_config_sub $build_alias`
-build_cpu=`echo $build | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
-build_vendor=`echo $build | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\2/'`
-build_os=`echo $build | sed 's/^\(.*\)-\(.*\)-\(.*\)$/\3/'`
-echo "$ac_t""$build" 1>&6
-
-test "$host_alias" != "$target_alias" &&
- test "$program_prefix$program_suffix$program_transform_name" = \
- NONENONEs,x,x, &&
- program_prefix=${target_alias}-
-
-if test -z "$target" ; then
- { echo "configure: error: Unrecognized target system type; please check config.sub." 1>&2; exit 1; }
-fi
-if test "$program_transform_name" = s,x,x,; then
- program_transform_name=
-else
- # Double any \ or $. echo might interpret backslashes.
- cat <<\EOF_SED > conftestsed
-s,\\,\\\\,g; s,\$,$$,g
-EOF_SED
- program_transform_name="`echo $program_transform_name|sed -f conftestsed`"
- rm -f conftestsed
-fi
-test "$program_prefix" != NONE &&
- program_transform_name="s,^,${program_prefix},; $program_transform_name"
-# Use a double $ so make ignores it.
-test "$program_suffix" != NONE &&
- program_transform_name="s,\$\$,${program_suffix},; $program_transform_name"
-
-# sed with no file args requires a program.
-test "$program_transform_name" = "" && program_transform_name="s,x,x,"
-
-
-# host-specific stuff:
-
-ALLLIBS='$(TARGETLIB)'
-PICFLAG=
-SHLIB=unused-shlib
-SHLINK=unused-shlink
-if test "${shared}" = "true"; then
- ALLLIBS='$(TARGETLIB) $(SHLIB) $(SHLINK)'
- PICFLAG=-fpic
- if test "${commonbfdlib}" = "true"; then
- SHLIB=../bfd/libbfd.so.`sed -e 's/[^0-9]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' ${srcdir}/../bfd/VERSION`
- SHLINK=../bfd/libbfd.so
- else
- SHLIB=libopcodes.so.`sed -e 's/[^0-9]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' ${srcdir}/../bfd/VERSION`
- SHLINK=libopcodes.so
- fi
-fi
-
-# Extract the first word of "gcc", so it can be a program name with args.
-set dummy gcc; ac_word=$2
-echo $ac_n "checking for $ac_word""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_CC'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- if test -n "$CC"; then
- ac_cv_prog_CC="$CC" # Let the user override the test.
-else
- IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}:"
- for ac_dir in $PATH; do
- test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
- if test -f $ac_dir/$ac_word; then
- ac_cv_prog_CC="gcc"
- break
- fi
- done
- IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
-fi
-fi
-CC="$ac_cv_prog_CC"
-if test -n "$CC"; then
- echo "$ac_t""$CC" 1>&6
-else
- echo "$ac_t""no" 1>&6
-fi
-
-if test -z "$CC"; then
- # Extract the first word of "cc", so it can be a program name with args.
-set dummy cc; ac_word=$2
-echo $ac_n "checking for $ac_word""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_CC'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- if test -n "$CC"; then
- ac_cv_prog_CC="$CC" # Let the user override the test.
-else
- IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}:"
- ac_prog_rejected=no
- for ac_dir in $PATH; do
- test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
- if test -f $ac_dir/$ac_word; then
- if test "$ac_dir/$ac_word" = "/usr/ucb/cc"; then
- ac_prog_rejected=yes
- continue
- fi
- ac_cv_prog_CC="cc"
- break
- fi
- done
- IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
-if test $ac_prog_rejected = yes; then
- # We found a bogon in the path, so make sure we never use it.
- set dummy $ac_cv_prog_CC
- shift
- if test $# -gt 0; then
- # We chose a different compiler from the bogus one.
- # However, it has the same basename, so the bogon will be chosen
- # first if we set CC to just the basename; use the full file name.
- shift
- set dummy "$ac_dir/$ac_word" "$@"
- shift
- ac_cv_prog_CC="$@"
- fi
-fi
-fi
-fi
-CC="$ac_cv_prog_CC"
-if test -n "$CC"; then
- echo "$ac_t""$CC" 1>&6
-else
- echo "$ac_t""no" 1>&6
-fi
-
- test -z "$CC" && { echo "configure: error: no acceptable cc found in \$PATH" 1>&2; exit 1; }
-fi
-
-echo $ac_n "checking whether we are using GNU C""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_gcc'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- cat > conftest.c <<EOF
-#ifdef __GNUC__
- yes;
-#endif
-EOF
-if { ac_try='${CC-cc} -E conftest.c'; { (eval echo configure:803: \"$ac_try\") 1>&5; (eval $ac_try) 2>&5; }; } | egrep yes >/dev/null 2>&1; then
- ac_cv_prog_gcc=yes
-else
- ac_cv_prog_gcc=no
-fi
-fi
-
-echo "$ac_t""$ac_cv_prog_gcc" 1>&6
-if test $ac_cv_prog_gcc = yes; then
- GCC=yes
- if test "${CFLAGS+set}" != set; then
- echo $ac_n "checking whether ${CC-cc} accepts -g""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_gcc_g'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- echo 'void f(){}' > conftest.c
-if test -z "`${CC-cc} -g -c conftest.c 2>&1`"; then
- ac_cv_prog_gcc_g=yes
-else
- ac_cv_prog_gcc_g=no
-fi
-rm -f conftest*
-
-fi
-
-echo "$ac_t""$ac_cv_prog_gcc_g" 1>&6
- if test $ac_cv_prog_gcc_g = yes; then
- CFLAGS="-g -O"
- else
- CFLAGS="-O"
- fi
- fi
-else
- GCC=
- test "${CFLAGS+set}" = set || CFLAGS="-g"
-fi
-
-
-. ${srcdir}/../bfd/configure.host
-
-
-if test $host != $build; then
- ac_tool_prefix=${host_alias}-
-else
- ac_tool_prefix=
-fi
-
-# Extract the first word of "${ac_tool_prefix}ar", so it can be a program name with args.
-set dummy ${ac_tool_prefix}ar; ac_word=$2
-echo $ac_n "checking for $ac_word""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_AR'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- if test -n "$AR"; then
- ac_cv_prog_AR="$AR" # Let the user override the test.
-else
- IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}:"
- for ac_dir in $PATH; do
- test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
- if test -f $ac_dir/$ac_word; then
- ac_cv_prog_AR="${ac_tool_prefix}ar"
- break
- fi
- done
- IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
- test -z "$ac_cv_prog_AR" && ac_cv_prog_AR="ar"
-fi
-fi
-AR="$ac_cv_prog_AR"
-if test -n "$AR"; then
- echo "$ac_t""$AR" 1>&6
-else
- echo "$ac_t""no" 1>&6
-fi
-
-
-
-# Extract the first word of "${ac_tool_prefix}ranlib", so it can be a program name with args.
-set dummy ${ac_tool_prefix}ranlib; ac_word=$2
-echo $ac_n "checking for $ac_word""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_RANLIB'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- if test -n "$RANLIB"; then
- ac_cv_prog_RANLIB="$RANLIB" # Let the user override the test.
-else
- IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}:"
- for ac_dir in $PATH; do
- test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
- if test -f $ac_dir/$ac_word; then
- ac_cv_prog_RANLIB="${ac_tool_prefix}ranlib"
- break
- fi
- done
- IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
-fi
-fi
-RANLIB="$ac_cv_prog_RANLIB"
-if test -n "$RANLIB"; then
- echo "$ac_t""$RANLIB" 1>&6
-else
- echo "$ac_t""no" 1>&6
-fi
-
-
-if test -z "$ac_cv_prog_RANLIB"; then
-if test -n "$ac_tool_prefix"; then
- # Extract the first word of "ranlib", so it can be a program name with args.
-set dummy ranlib; ac_word=$2
-echo $ac_n "checking for $ac_word""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_RANLIB'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- if test -n "$RANLIB"; then
- ac_cv_prog_RANLIB="$RANLIB" # Let the user override the test.
-else
- IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}:"
- for ac_dir in $PATH; do
- test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
- if test -f $ac_dir/$ac_word; then
- ac_cv_prog_RANLIB="ranlib"
- break
- fi
- done
- IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
- test -z "$ac_cv_prog_RANLIB" && ac_cv_prog_RANLIB=":"
-fi
-fi
-RANLIB="$ac_cv_prog_RANLIB"
-if test -n "$RANLIB"; then
- echo "$ac_t""$RANLIB" 1>&6
-else
- echo "$ac_t""no" 1>&6
-fi
-
-else
- RANLIB=":"
-fi
-fi
-
-# Find a good install program. We prefer a C program (faster),
-# so one script is as good as another. But avoid the broken or
-# incompatible versions:
-# SysV /etc/install, /usr/sbin/install
-# SunOS /usr/etc/install
-# IRIX /sbin/install
-# AIX /bin/install
-# AFS /usr/afsws/bin/install, which mishandles nonexistent args
-# SVR4 /usr/ucb/install, which tries to use the nonexistent group "staff"
-# ./install, which can be erroneously created by make from ./install.sh.
-echo $ac_n "checking for a BSD compatible install""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if test -z "$INSTALL"; then
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_path_install'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}:"
- for ac_dir in $PATH; do
- # Account for people who put trailing slashes in PATH elements.
- case "$ac_dir/" in
- /|./|.//|/etc/*|/usr/sbin/*|/usr/etc/*|/sbin/*|/usr/afsws/bin/*|/usr/ucb/*) ;;
- *)
- # OSF1 and SCO ODT 3.0 have their own names for install.
- for ac_prog in ginstall installbsd scoinst install; do
- if test -f $ac_dir/$ac_prog; then
- if test $ac_prog = install &&
- grep dspmsg $ac_dir/$ac_prog >/dev/null 2>&1; then
- # AIX install. It has an incompatible calling convention.
- # OSF/1 installbsd also uses dspmsg, but is usable.
- :
- else
- ac_cv_path_install="$ac_dir/$ac_prog -c"
- break 2
- fi
- fi
- done
- ;;
- esac
- done
- IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
-
-fi
- if test "${ac_cv_path_install+set}" = set; then
- INSTALL="$ac_cv_path_install"
- else
- # As a last resort, use the slow shell script. We don't cache a
- # path for INSTALL within a source directory, because that will
- # break other packages using the cache if that directory is
- # removed, or if the path is relative.
- INSTALL="$ac_install_sh"
- fi
-fi
-echo "$ac_t""$INSTALL" 1>&6
-
-# Use test -z because SunOS4 sh mishandles braces in ${var-val}.
-# It thinks the first close brace ends the variable substitution.
-test -z "$INSTALL_PROGRAM" && INSTALL_PROGRAM='${INSTALL}'
-
-test -z "$INSTALL_DATA" && INSTALL_DATA='${INSTALL} -m 644'
-
-
-if test "${shared}" = "true"; then
- if test "${GCC}" != "yes" && test "${shared_non_gcc}" != "yes"; then
- echo "configure: warning: opcodes --enable-shared only supported when using gcc" 1>&2
- shared=false
- ALLLIBS='$(TARGETLIB)'
- PICFLAG=
- SHLIB=unused-shlib
- fi
-fi
-
-
-
-
-
-
-if test "${commonbfdlib}" = "true"; then
- COMMON_SHLIB=yes
- # Rebuild the shared library if libiberty or libbfd changes.
- SHLIB_DEP="../libiberty/libiberty.a ../bfd/libbfd.a"
-else
- COMMON_SHLIB=
- SHLIB_DEP=
-fi
-
-
-
-
-echo $ac_n "checking how to run the C preprocessor""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-# On Suns, sometimes $CPP names a directory.
-if test -n "$CPP" && test -d "$CPP"; then
- CPP=
-fi
-if test -z "$CPP"; then
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_prog_CPP'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- # This must be in double quotes, not single quotes, because CPP may get
- # substituted into the Makefile and "${CC-cc}" will confuse make.
- CPP="${CC-cc} -E"
- # On the NeXT, cc -E runs the code through the compiler's parser,
- # not just through cpp.
- cat > conftest.$ac_ext <<EOF
-#line 1045 "configure"
-#include "confdefs.h"
-#include <assert.h>
-Syntax Error
-EOF
-ac_try="$ac_cpp conftest.$ac_ext >/dev/null 2>conftest.out"
-{ (eval echo configure:1051: \"$ac_try\") 1>&5; (eval $ac_try) 2>&5; }
-ac_err=`grep -v '^ *+' conftest.out`
-if test -z "$ac_err"; then
- :
-else
- echo "$ac_err" >&5
- rm -rf conftest*
- CPP="${CC-cc} -E -traditional-cpp"
- cat > conftest.$ac_ext <<EOF
-#line 1060 "configure"
-#include "confdefs.h"
-#include <assert.h>
-Syntax Error
-EOF
-ac_try="$ac_cpp conftest.$ac_ext >/dev/null 2>conftest.out"
-{ (eval echo configure:1066: \"$ac_try\") 1>&5; (eval $ac_try) 2>&5; }
-ac_err=`grep -v '^ *+' conftest.out`
-if test -z "$ac_err"; then
- :
-else
- echo "$ac_err" >&5
- rm -rf conftest*
- CPP=/lib/cpp
-fi
-rm -f conftest*
-fi
-rm -f conftest*
- ac_cv_prog_CPP="$CPP"
-fi
- CPP="$ac_cv_prog_CPP"
-else
- ac_cv_prog_CPP="$CPP"
-fi
-echo "$ac_t""$CPP" 1>&6
-
-for ac_hdr in string.h strings.h
-do
-ac_safe=`echo "$ac_hdr" | tr './\055' '___'`
-echo $ac_n "checking for $ac_hdr""... $ac_c" 1>&6
-if eval "test \"`echo '$''{'ac_cv_header_$ac_safe'+set}'`\" = set"; then
- echo $ac_n "(cached) $ac_c" 1>&6
-else
- cat > conftest.$ac_ext <<EOF
-#line 1094 "configure"
-#include "confdefs.h"
-#include <$ac_hdr>
-EOF
-ac_try="$ac_cpp conftest.$ac_ext >/dev/null 2>conftest.out"
-{ (eval echo configure:1099: \"$ac_try\") 1>&5; (eval $ac_try) 2>&5; }
-ac_err=`grep -v '^ *+' conftest.out`
-if test -z "$ac_err"; then
- rm -rf conftest*
- eval "ac_cv_header_$ac_safe=yes"
-else
- echo "$ac_err" >&5
- rm -rf conftest*
- eval "ac_cv_header_$ac_safe=no"
-fi
-rm -f conftest*
-fi
-if eval "test \"`echo '$ac_cv_header_'$ac_safe`\" = yes"; then
- echo "$ac_t""yes" 1>&6
- ac_tr_hdr=HAVE_`echo $ac_hdr | tr 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./\055' 'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___'`
- cat >> confdefs.h <<EOF
-#define $ac_tr_hdr 1
-EOF
-
-else
- echo "$ac_t""no" 1>&6
-fi
-done
-
-
-# target-specific stuff:
-
-# Canonicalize the secondary target names.
-if test -n "$enable_targets" ; then
- for targ in `echo $enable_targets | sed 's/,/ /g'`
- do
- result=`$ac_config_sub $targ 2>/dev/null`
- if test -n "$result" ; then
- canon_targets="$canon_targets $result"
- else
- # Allow targets that config.sub doesn't recognize, like "all".
- canon_targets="$canon_targets $targ"
- fi
- done
-fi
-
-all_targets=false
-selarchs=
-for targ in $target $canon_targets
-do
- if test "x$targ" = "xall" ; then
- all_targets=true
- else
- . $srcdir/../bfd/config.bfd
- selarchs="$selarchs $targ_archs"
- fi
-done
-
-# We don't do any links based on the target system, just makefile config.
-
-if test x${all_targets} = xfalse ; then
-
- # Target architecture .o files.
- ta=
-
- for arch in $selarchs
- do
- ad=`echo $arch | sed -e s/bfd_//g -e s/_arch//g`
- archdefs="$archdefs -DARCH_$ad"
- case "$arch" in
- bfd_a29k_arch) ta="$ta a29k-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_alliant_arch) ;;
- bfd_alpha_arch) ta="$ta alpha-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_arm_arch) ta="$ta arm-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_convex_arch) ;;
- bfd_h8300_arch) ta="$ta h8300-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_h8500_arch) ta="$ta h8500-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_hppa_arch) ta="$ta hppa-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_i386_arch) ta="$ta i386-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_i860_arch) ;;
- bfd_i960_arch) ta="$ta i960-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_m68k_arch) ta="$ta m68k-dis.o m68k-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_m88k_arch) ta="$ta m88k-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_mips_arch) ta="$ta mips-dis.o mips-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_ns32k_arch) ta="$ta ns32k-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_powerpc_arch) ta="$ta ppc-dis.o ppc-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_pyramid_arch) ;;
- bfd_romp_arch) ;;
- bfd_rs6000_arch) ta="$ta ppc-dis.o ppc-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_sh_arch) ta="$ta sh-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_sparc_arch) ta="$ta sparc-dis.o sparc-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_tahoe_arch) ;;
- bfd_vax_arch) ;;
- bfd_w65_arch) ta="$ta w65-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_we32k_arch) ;;
- bfd_z8k_arch) ta="$ta z8k-dis.o" ;;
-
- "") ;;
- *) { echo "configure: error: *** unknown target architecture $arch" 1>&2; exit 1; } ;;
- esac
- done
-
- # Weed out duplicate .o files.
- f=""
- for i in $ta ; do
- case " $f " in
- *" $i "*) ;;
- *) f="$f $i" ;;
- esac
- done
- ta="$f"
-
- # And duplicate -D flags.
- f=""
- for i in $archdefs ; do
- case " $f " in
- *" $i "*) ;;
- *) f="$f $i" ;;
- esac
- done
- archdefs="$f"
-
- BFD_MACHINES="$ta"
-
-else # all_targets is true
- archdefs=-DARCH_all
- BFD_MACHINES='$(ALL_MACHINES)'
-fi
-
-
-
-
-trap '' 1 2 15
-cat > confcache <<\EOF
-# This file is a shell script that caches the results of configure
-# tests run on this system so they can be shared between configure
-# scripts and configure runs. It is not useful on other systems.
-# If it contains results you don't want to keep, you may remove or edit it.
-#
-# By default, configure uses ./config.cache as the cache file,
-# creating it if it does not exist already. You can give configure
-# the --cache-file=FILE option to use a different cache file; that is
-# what configure does when it calls configure scripts in
-# subdirectories, so they share the cache.
-# Giving --cache-file=/dev/null disables caching, for debugging configure.
-# config.status only pays attention to the cache file if you give it the
-# --recheck option to rerun configure.
-#
-EOF
-# Ultrix sh set writes to stderr and can't be redirected directly,
-# and sets the high bit in the cache file unless we assign to the vars.
-(set) 2>&1 |
- sed -n "s/^\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*_cv_[a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)=\(.*\)/\1=\${\1='\2'}/p" \
- >> confcache
-if cmp -s $cache_file confcache; then
- :
-else
- if test -w $cache_file; then
- echo "updating cache $cache_file"
- cat confcache > $cache_file
- else
- echo "not updating unwritable cache $cache_file"
- fi
-fi
-rm -f confcache
-
-trap 'rm -fr conftest* confdefs* core core.* *.core $ac_clean_files; exit 1' 1 2 15
-
-test "x$prefix" = xNONE && prefix=$ac_default_prefix
-# Let make expand exec_prefix.
-test "x$exec_prefix" = xNONE && exec_prefix='${prefix}'
-
-# Any assignment to VPATH causes Sun make to only execute
-# the first set of double-colon rules, so remove it if not needed.
-# If there is a colon in the path, we need to keep it.
-if test "x$srcdir" = x.; then
- ac_vpsub='/^[ ]*VPATH[ ]*=[^:]*$/d'
-fi
-
-trap 'rm -f $CONFIG_STATUS conftest*; exit 1' 1 2 15
-
-DEFS=-DHAVE_CONFIG_H
-
-# Without the "./", some shells look in PATH for config.status.
-: ${CONFIG_STATUS=./config.status}
-
-echo creating $CONFIG_STATUS
-rm -f $CONFIG_STATUS
-cat > $CONFIG_STATUS <<EOF
-#! /bin/sh
-# Generated automatically by configure.
-# Run this file to recreate the current configuration.
-# This directory was configured as follows,
-# on host `(hostname || uname -n) 2>/dev/null | sed 1q`:
-#
-# $0 $ac_configure_args
-#
-# Compiler output produced by configure, useful for debugging
-# configure, is in ./config.log if it exists.
-
-ac_cs_usage="Usage: $CONFIG_STATUS [--recheck] [--version] [--help]"
-for ac_option
-do
- case "\$ac_option" in
- -recheck | --recheck | --rechec | --reche | --rech | --rec | --re | --r)
- echo "running \${CONFIG_SHELL-/bin/sh} $0 $ac_configure_args --no-create --no-recursion"
- exec \${CONFIG_SHELL-/bin/sh} $0 $ac_configure_args --no-create --no-recursion ;;
- -version | --version | --versio | --versi | --vers | --ver | --ve | --v)
- echo "$CONFIG_STATUS generated by autoconf version 2.8"
- exit 0 ;;
- -help | --help | --hel | --he | --h)
- echo "\$ac_cs_usage"; exit 0 ;;
- *) echo "\$ac_cs_usage"; exit 1 ;;
- esac
-done
-
-ac_given_srcdir=$srcdir
-ac_given_INSTALL="$INSTALL"
-
-trap 'rm -fr `echo "Makefile config.h:config.in" | sed "s/:[^ ]*//g"` conftest*; exit 1' 1 2 15
-EOF
-cat >> $CONFIG_STATUS <<EOF
-
-# Protect against being on the right side of a sed subst in config.status.
-sed 's/%@/@@/; s/@%/@@/; s/%g\$/@g/; /@g\$/s/[\\\\&%]/\\\\&/g;
- s/@@/%@/; s/@@/@%/; s/@g\$/%g/' > conftest.subs <<\\CEOF
-$ac_vpsub
-$extrasub
-s%@CFLAGS@%$CFLAGS%g
-s%@CPPFLAGS@%$CPPFLAGS%g
-s%@CXXFLAGS@%$CXXFLAGS%g
-s%@DEFS@%$DEFS%g
-s%@LDFLAGS@%$LDFLAGS%g
-s%@LIBS@%$LIBS%g
-s%@exec_prefix@%$exec_prefix%g
-s%@prefix@%$prefix%g
-s%@program_transform_name@%$program_transform_name%g
-s%@bindir@%$bindir%g
-s%@sbindir@%$sbindir%g
-s%@libexecdir@%$libexecdir%g
-s%@datadir@%$datadir%g
-s%@sysconfdir@%$sysconfdir%g
-s%@sharedstatedir@%$sharedstatedir%g
-s%@localstatedir@%$localstatedir%g
-s%@libdir@%$libdir%g
-s%@includedir@%$includedir%g
-s%@oldincludedir@%$oldincludedir%g
-s%@infodir@%$infodir%g
-s%@mandir@%$mandir%g
-s%@host@%$host%g
-s%@host_alias@%$host_alias%g
-s%@host_cpu@%$host_cpu%g
-s%@host_vendor@%$host_vendor%g
-s%@host_os@%$host_os%g
-s%@target@%$target%g
-s%@target_alias@%$target_alias%g
-s%@target_cpu@%$target_cpu%g
-s%@target_vendor@%$target_vendor%g
-s%@target_os@%$target_os%g
-s%@build@%$build%g
-s%@build_alias@%$build_alias%g
-s%@build_cpu@%$build_cpu%g
-s%@build_vendor@%$build_vendor%g
-s%@build_os@%$build_os%g
-s%@CC@%$CC%g
-s%@HDEFINES@%$HDEFINES%g
-s%@AR@%$AR%g
-s%@RANLIB@%$RANLIB%g
-s%@INSTALL_PROGRAM@%$INSTALL_PROGRAM%g
-s%@INSTALL_DATA@%$INSTALL_DATA%g
-s%@ALLLIBS@%$ALLLIBS%g
-s%@PICFLAG@%$PICFLAG%g
-s%@SHLIB@%$SHLIB%g
-s%@SHLIB_CC@%$SHLIB_CC%g
-s%@SHLIB_CFLAGS@%$SHLIB_CFLAGS%g
-s%@COMMON_SHLIB@%$COMMON_SHLIB%g
-s%@SHLIB_DEP@%$SHLIB_DEP%g
-s%@SHLINK@%$SHLINK%g
-s%@CPP@%$CPP%g
-s%@archdefs@%$archdefs%g
-s%@BFD_MACHINES@%$BFD_MACHINES%g
-
-CEOF
-EOF
-cat >> $CONFIG_STATUS <<EOF
-
-CONFIG_FILES=\${CONFIG_FILES-"Makefile"}
-EOF
-cat >> $CONFIG_STATUS <<\EOF
-for ac_file in .. $CONFIG_FILES; do if test "x$ac_file" != x..; then
- # Support "outfile[:infile]", defaulting infile="outfile.in".
- case "$ac_file" in
- *:*) ac_file_in=`echo "$ac_file"|sed 's%.*:%%'`
- ac_file=`echo "$ac_file"|sed 's%:.*%%'` ;;
- *) ac_file_in="${ac_file}.in" ;;
- esac
-
- # Adjust relative srcdir, etc. for subdirectories.
-
- # Remove last slash and all that follows it. Not all systems have dirname.
- ac_dir=`echo $ac_file|sed 's%/[^/][^/]*$%%'`
- if test "$ac_dir" != "$ac_file" && test "$ac_dir" != .; then
- # The file is in a subdirectory.
- test ! -d "$ac_dir" && mkdir "$ac_dir"
- ac_dir_suffix="/`echo $ac_dir|sed 's%^\./%%'`"
- # A "../" for each directory in $ac_dir_suffix.
- ac_dots=`echo $ac_dir_suffix|sed 's%/[^/]*%../%g'`
- else
- ac_dir_suffix= ac_dots=
- fi
-
- case "$ac_given_srcdir" in
- .) srcdir=.
- if test -z "$ac_dots"; then top_srcdir=.
- else top_srcdir=`echo $ac_dots|sed 's%/$%%'`; fi ;;
- /*) srcdir="$ac_given_srcdir$ac_dir_suffix"; top_srcdir="$ac_given_srcdir" ;;
- *) # Relative path.
- srcdir="$ac_dots$ac_given_srcdir$ac_dir_suffix"
- top_srcdir="$ac_dots$ac_given_srcdir" ;;
- esac
-
- case "$ac_given_INSTALL" in
- [/$]*) INSTALL="$ac_given_INSTALL" ;;
- *) INSTALL="$ac_dots$ac_given_INSTALL" ;;
- esac
- echo creating "$ac_file"
- rm -f "$ac_file"
- configure_input="Generated automatically from `echo $ac_file_in|sed 's%.*/%%'` by configure."
- case "$ac_file" in
- *Makefile*) ac_comsub="1i\\
-# $configure_input" ;;
- *) ac_comsub= ;;
- esac
- sed -e "$ac_comsub
-s%@configure_input@%$configure_input%g
-s%@srcdir@%$srcdir%g
-s%@top_srcdir@%$top_srcdir%g
-s%@INSTALL@%$INSTALL%g
-" -f conftest.subs $ac_given_srcdir/$ac_file_in > $ac_file
-fi; done
-rm -f conftest.subs
-
-# These sed commands are passed to sed as "A NAME B NAME C VALUE D", where
-# NAME is the cpp macro being defined and VALUE is the value it is being given.
-#
-# ac_d sets the value in "#define NAME VALUE" lines.
-ac_dA='s%^\([ ]*\)#\([ ]*define[ ][ ]*\)'
-ac_dB='\([ ][ ]*\)[^ ]*%\1#\2'
-ac_dC='\3'
-ac_dD='%g'
-# ac_u turns "#undef NAME" with trailing blanks into "#define NAME VALUE".
-ac_uA='s%^\([ ]*\)#\([ ]*\)undef\([ ][ ]*\)'
-ac_uB='\([ ]\)%\1#\2define\3'
-ac_uC=' '
-ac_uD='\4%g'
-# ac_e turns "#undef NAME" without trailing blanks into "#define NAME VALUE".
-ac_eA='s%^\([ ]*\)#\([ ]*\)undef\([ ][ ]*\)'
-ac_eB='$%\1#\2define\3'
-ac_eC=' '
-ac_eD='%g'
-
-CONFIG_HEADERS=${CONFIG_HEADERS-"config.h:config.in"}
-for ac_file in .. $CONFIG_HEADERS; do if test "x$ac_file" != x..; then
- # Support "outfile[:infile]", defaulting infile="outfile.in".
- case "$ac_file" in
- *:*) ac_file_in=`echo "$ac_file"|sed 's%.*:%%'`
- ac_file=`echo "$ac_file"|sed 's%:.*%%'` ;;
- *) ac_file_in="${ac_file}.in" ;;
- esac
-
- echo creating $ac_file
-
- rm -f conftest.frag conftest.in conftest.out
- cp $ac_given_srcdir/$ac_file_in conftest.in
-
-EOF
-
-# Transform confdefs.h into a sed script conftest.vals that substitutes
-# the proper values into config.h.in to produce config.h. And first:
-# Protect against being on the right side of a sed subst in config.status.
-# Protect against being in an unquoted here document in config.status.
-rm -f conftest.vals
-cat > conftest.hdr <<\EOF
-s/[\\&%]/\\&/g
-s%[\\$`]%\\&%g
-s%#define \([A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*\) \(.*\)%${ac_dA}\1${ac_dB}\1${ac_dC}\2${ac_dD}%gp
-s%ac_d%ac_u%gp
-s%ac_u%ac_e%gp
-EOF
-sed -n -f conftest.hdr confdefs.h > conftest.vals
-rm -f conftest.hdr
-
-# This sed command replaces #undef with comments. This is necessary, for
-# example, in the case of _POSIX_SOURCE, which is predefined and required
-# on some systems where configure will not decide to define it.
-cat >> conftest.vals <<\EOF
-s%^[ ]*#[ ]*undef[ ][ ]*[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*%/* & */%
-EOF
-
-# Break up conftest.vals because some shells have a limit on
-# the size of here documents, and old seds have small limits too.
-# Maximum number of lines to put in a single here document.
-ac_max_here_lines=12
-
-rm -f conftest.tail
-while :
-do
- ac_lines=`grep -c . conftest.vals`
- # grep -c gives empty output for an empty file on some AIX systems.
- if test -z "$ac_lines" || test "$ac_lines" -eq 0; then break; fi
- # Write a limited-size here document to conftest.frag.
- echo ' cat > conftest.frag <<CEOF' >> $CONFIG_STATUS
- sed ${ac_max_here_lines}q conftest.vals >> $CONFIG_STATUS
- echo 'CEOF
- sed -f conftest.frag conftest.in > conftest.out
- rm -f conftest.in
- mv conftest.out conftest.in
-' >> $CONFIG_STATUS
- sed 1,${ac_max_here_lines}d conftest.vals > conftest.tail
- rm -f conftest.vals
- mv conftest.tail conftest.vals
-done
-rm -f conftest.vals
-
-cat >> $CONFIG_STATUS <<\EOF
- rm -f conftest.frag conftest.h
- echo "/* $ac_file. Generated automatically by configure. */" > conftest.h
- cat conftest.in >> conftest.h
- rm -f conftest.in
- if cmp -s $ac_file conftest.h 2>/dev/null; then
- echo "$ac_file is unchanged"
- rm -f conftest.h
- else
- rm -f $ac_file
- mv conftest.h $ac_file
- fi
-fi; done
-
-
-case x$CONFIG_HEADERS in xconfig.h:config.in) echo > stamp-h ;; esac
-exit 0
-EOF
-chmod +x $CONFIG_STATUS
-rm -fr confdefs* $ac_clean_files
-test "$no_create" = yes || ${CONFIG_SHELL-/bin/sh} $CONFIG_STATUS || exit 1
-
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure.in b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure.in
deleted file mode 100644
index e0c4f58..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/configure.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,216 +0,0 @@
-AC_PREREQ(2.0)
-AC_INIT(z8k-dis.c)
-# configure.in script for the opcodes library.
-# Copyright (C) 1995, 1996 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-# Written by Cygnus Support.
-#
-# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
-# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
-# (at your option) any later version.
-#
-# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
-# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
-# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
-# GNU General Public License for more details.
-#
-# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
-# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
-# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
-
-AC_ARG_ENABLE(targets,
-[ --enable-targets alternative target configurations],
-[case "${enableval}" in
- yes | "") AC_ERROR(enable-targets option must specify target names or 'all')
- ;;
- no) enable_targets= ;;
- *) enable_targets=$enableval ;;
-esac])dnl
-AC_ARG_ENABLE(shared,
-[ --enable-shared build shared opcodes library],
-[case "${enableval}" in
- yes) shared=true ;;
- no) shared=false ;;
- *) AC_MSG_ERROR([bad value ${enableval} for opcodes shared option]) ;;
-esac])dnl
-AC_ARG_ENABLE(commonbfdlib,
-[ --enable-commonbfdlib build shared BFD/opcodes/libiberty library],
-[case "${enableval}" in
- yes) commonbfdlib=true ;;
- no) commonbfdlib=false ;;
- *) AC_MSG_ERROR([bad value ${enableval} for opcodes commonbfdlib option]) ;;
-esac])dnl
-
-AC_CONFIG_HEADER(config.h:config.in)
-
-AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR(`cd $srcdir/..;pwd`)
-AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM
-if test -z "$target" ; then
- AC_MSG_ERROR(Unrecognized target system type; please check config.sub.)
-fi
-AC_ARG_PROGRAM
-
-# host-specific stuff:
-
-ALLLIBS='$(TARGETLIB)'
-PICFLAG=
-SHLIB=unused-shlib
-SHLINK=unused-shlink
-if test "${shared}" = "true"; then
- ALLLIBS='$(TARGETLIB) $(SHLIB) $(SHLINK)'
- PICFLAG=-fpic
- if test "${commonbfdlib}" = "true"; then
-changequote(,)dnl
- SHLIB=../bfd/libbfd.so.`sed -e 's/[^0-9]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' ${srcdir}/../bfd/VERSION`
-changequote([,])dnl
- SHLINK=../bfd/libbfd.so
- else
-changequote(,)dnl
- SHLIB=libopcodes.so.`sed -e 's/[^0-9]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' ${srcdir}/../bfd/VERSION`
-changequote([,])dnl
- SHLINK=libopcodes.so
- fi
-fi
-
-AC_PROG_CC
-
-. ${srcdir}/../bfd/configure.host
-
-AC_SUBST(HDEFINES)
-AC_CHECK_TOOL(AR, ar)
-AC_CHECK_TOOL(RANLIB, ranlib, :)
-AC_PROG_INSTALL
-
-if test "${shared}" = "true"; then
- if test "${GCC}" != "yes" && test "${shared_non_gcc}" != "yes"; then
- AC_MSG_WARN([opcodes --enable-shared only supported when using gcc])
- shared=false
- ALLLIBS='$(TARGETLIB)'
- PICFLAG=
- SHLIB=unused-shlib
- fi
-fi
-
-AC_SUBST(ALLLIBS)
-AC_SUBST(PICFLAG)
-AC_SUBST(SHLIB)
-AC_SUBST(SHLIB_CC)
-AC_SUBST(SHLIB_CFLAGS)
-if test "${commonbfdlib}" = "true"; then
- COMMON_SHLIB=yes
- # Rebuild the shared library if libiberty or libbfd changes.
- SHLIB_DEP="../libiberty/libiberty.a ../bfd/libbfd.a"
-else
- COMMON_SHLIB=
- SHLIB_DEP=
-fi
-AC_SUBST(COMMON_SHLIB)
-AC_SUBST(SHLIB_DEP)
-AC_SUBST(SHLINK)
-
-AC_CHECK_HEADERS(string.h strings.h)
-
-# target-specific stuff:
-
-# Canonicalize the secondary target names.
-if test -n "$enable_targets" ; then
- for targ in `echo $enable_targets | sed 's/,/ /g'`
- do
- result=`$ac_config_sub $targ 2>/dev/null`
- if test -n "$result" ; then
- canon_targets="$canon_targets $result"
- else
- # Allow targets that config.sub doesn't recognize, like "all".
- canon_targets="$canon_targets $targ"
- fi
- done
-fi
-
-all_targets=false
-selarchs=
-for targ in $target $canon_targets
-do
- if test "x$targ" = "xall" ; then
- all_targets=true
- else
- . $srcdir/../bfd/config.bfd
- selarchs="$selarchs $targ_archs"
- fi
-done
-
-# We don't do any links based on the target system, just makefile config.
-
-if test x${all_targets} = xfalse ; then
-
- # Target architecture .o files.
- ta=
-
- for arch in $selarchs
- do
- ad=`echo $arch | sed -e s/bfd_//g -e s/_arch//g`
- archdefs="$archdefs -DARCH_$ad"
- case "$arch" in
- bfd_a29k_arch) ta="$ta a29k-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_alliant_arch) ;;
- bfd_alpha_arch) ta="$ta alpha-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_arm_arch) ta="$ta arm-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_convex_arch) ;;
- bfd_h8300_arch) ta="$ta h8300-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_h8500_arch) ta="$ta h8500-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_hppa_arch) ta="$ta hppa-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_i386_arch) ta="$ta i386-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_i860_arch) ;;
- bfd_i960_arch) ta="$ta i960-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_m68k_arch) ta="$ta m68k-dis.o m68k-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_m88k_arch) ta="$ta m88k-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_mips_arch) ta="$ta mips-dis.o mips-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_ns32k_arch) ta="$ta ns32k-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_powerpc_arch) ta="$ta ppc-dis.o ppc-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_pyramid_arch) ;;
- bfd_romp_arch) ;;
- bfd_rs6000_arch) ta="$ta ppc-dis.o ppc-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_sh_arch) ta="$ta sh-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_sparc_arch) ta="$ta sparc-dis.o sparc-opc.o" ;;
- bfd_tahoe_arch) ;;
- bfd_vax_arch) ;;
- bfd_w65_arch) ta="$ta w65-dis.o" ;;
- bfd_we32k_arch) ;;
- bfd_z8k_arch) ta="$ta z8k-dis.o" ;;
-
- "") ;;
- *) AC_MSG_ERROR(*** unknown target architecture $arch) ;;
- esac
- done
-
- # Weed out duplicate .o files.
- f=""
- for i in $ta ; do
- case " $f " in
- *" $i "*) ;;
- *) f="$f $i" ;;
- esac
- done
- ta="$f"
-
- # And duplicate -D flags.
- f=""
- for i in $archdefs ; do
- case " $f " in
- *" $i "*) ;;
- *) f="$f $i" ;;
- esac
- done
- archdefs="$f"
-
- BFD_MACHINES="$ta"
-
-else # all_targets is true
- archdefs=-DARCH_all
- BFD_MACHINES='$(ALL_MACHINES)'
-fi
-
-AC_SUBST(archdefs)
-AC_SUBST(BFD_MACHINES)
-
-AC_OUTPUT(Makefile,
-[case x$CONFIG_HEADERS in xconfig.h:config.in) echo > stamp-h ;; esac])
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/dis-buf.c b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/dis-buf.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 47a2e33..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/dis-buf.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
-/* Disassemble from a buffer, for GNU.
- Copyright (C) 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
-
-#include "sysdep.h"
-#include "dis-asm.h"
-#include <errno.h>
-
-/* Get LENGTH bytes from info's buffer, at target address memaddr.
- Transfer them to myaddr. */
-int
-buffer_read_memory (memaddr, myaddr, length, info)
- bfd_vma memaddr;
- bfd_byte *myaddr;
- int length;
- struct disassemble_info *info;
-{
- if (memaddr < info->buffer_vma
- || memaddr + length > info->buffer_vma + info->buffer_length)
- /* Out of bounds. Use EIO because GDB uses it. */
- return EIO;
- memcpy (myaddr, info->buffer + (memaddr - info->buffer_vma), length);
- return 0;
-}
-
-/* Print an error message. We can assume that this is in response to
- an error return from buffer_read_memory. */
-void
-perror_memory (status, memaddr, info)
- int status;
- bfd_vma memaddr;
- struct disassemble_info *info;
-{
- if (status != EIO)
- /* Can't happen. */
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "Unknown error %d\n", status);
- else
- /* Actually, address between memaddr and memaddr + len was
- out of bounds. */
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream,
- "Address 0x%x is out of bounds.\n", memaddr);
-}
-
-/* This could be in a separate file, to save miniscule amounts of space
- in statically linked executables. */
-
-/* Just print the address is hex. This is included for completeness even
- though both GDB and objdump provide their own (to print symbolic
- addresses). */
-
-void
-generic_print_address (addr, info)
- bfd_vma addr;
- struct disassemble_info *info;
-{
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "0x%x", addr);
-}
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/disassemble.c b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/disassemble.c
deleted file mode 100644
index b5d37ae..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/disassemble.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,166 +0,0 @@
-/* Select disassembly routine for specified architecture.
- Copyright (C) 1994, 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
-
-#include "ansidecl.h"
-#include "dis-asm.h"
-
-#ifdef ARCH_all
-#define ARCH_a29k
-#define ARCH_alpha
-#define ARCH_arm
-#define ARCH_h8300
-#define ARCH_h8500
-#define ARCH_hppa
-#define ARCH_i386
-#define ARCH_i960
-#define ARCH_m68k
-#define ARCH_m88k
-#define ARCH_mips
-#define ARCH_ns32k
-#define ARCH_powerpc
-#define ARCH_rs6000
-#define ARCH_sh
-#define ARCH_sparc
-#define ARCH_w65
-#define ARCH_z8k
-#endif
-
-disassembler_ftype
-disassembler (abfd)
- bfd *abfd;
-{
- enum bfd_architecture a = bfd_get_arch (abfd);
- disassembler_ftype disassemble;
-
- switch (a)
- {
- /* If you add a case to this table, also add it to the
- ARCH_all definition right above this function. */
-#ifdef ARCH_a29k
- case bfd_arch_a29k:
- /* As far as I know we only handle big-endian 29k objects. */
- disassemble = print_insn_big_a29k;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_alpha
- case bfd_arch_alpha:
- disassemble = print_insn_alpha;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_arm
- case bfd_arch_arm:
- if (bfd_big_endian (abfd))
- disassemble = print_insn_big_arm;
- else
- disassemble = print_insn_little_arm;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_h8300
- case bfd_arch_h8300:
- if (bfd_get_mach(abfd) == bfd_mach_h8300h)
- disassemble = print_insn_h8300h;
- else
- disassemble = print_insn_h8300;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_h8500
- case bfd_arch_h8500:
- disassemble = print_insn_h8500;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_hppa
- case bfd_arch_hppa:
- disassemble = print_insn_hppa;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_i386
- case bfd_arch_i386:
- disassemble = print_insn_i386;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_i960
- case bfd_arch_i960:
- disassemble = print_insn_i960;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_m68k
- case bfd_arch_m68k:
- disassemble = print_insn_m68k;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_m88k
- case bfd_arch_m88k:
- disassemble = print_insn_m88k;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_ns32k
- case bfd_arch_ns32k:
- disassemble = print_insn_ns32k;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_mips
- case bfd_arch_mips:
- if (bfd_big_endian (abfd))
- disassemble = print_insn_big_mips;
- else
- disassemble = print_insn_little_mips;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_powerpc
- case bfd_arch_powerpc:
- if (bfd_big_endian (abfd))
- disassemble = print_insn_big_powerpc;
- else
- disassemble = print_insn_little_powerpc;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_rs6000
- case bfd_arch_rs6000:
- disassemble = print_insn_rs6000;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_sh
- case bfd_arch_sh:
- if (bfd_big_endian (abfd))
- disassemble = print_insn_sh;
- else
- disassemble = print_insn_shl;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_sparc
- case bfd_arch_sparc:
- disassemble = print_insn_sparc;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_w65
- case bfd_arch_w65:
- disassemble = print_insn_w65;
- break;
-#endif
-#ifdef ARCH_z8k
- case bfd_arch_z8k:
- if (bfd_get_mach(abfd) == bfd_mach_z8001)
- disassemble = print_insn_z8001;
- else
- disassemble = print_insn_z8002;
- break;
-#endif
- default:
- return 0;
- }
- return disassemble;
-}
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c
deleted file mode 100644
index b781edc..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/i386-dis.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2031 +0,0 @@
-/* Print i386 instructions for GDB, the GNU debugger.
- Copyright (C) 1988, 89, 91, 93, 94, 95, 1996 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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
-
-/*
- * 80386 instruction printer by Pace Willisson (pace@prep.ai.mit.edu)
- * July 1988
- * modified by John Hassey (hassey@dg-rtp.dg.com)
- */
-
-/*
- * The main tables describing the instructions is essentially a copy
- * of the "Opcode Map" chapter (Appendix A) of the Intel 80386
- * Programmers Manual. Usually, there is a capital letter, followed
- * by a small letter. The capital letter tell the addressing mode,
- * and the small letter tells about the operand size. Refer to
- * the Intel manual for details.
- */
-
-#include "dis-asm.h"
-#include "sysdep.h"
-
-#define MAXLEN 20
-
-#include <setjmp.h>
-
-struct dis_private
-{
- /* Points to first byte not fetched. */
- bfd_byte *max_fetched;
- bfd_byte the_buffer[MAXLEN];
- bfd_vma insn_start;
- jmp_buf bailout;
-};
-
-/* Make sure that bytes from INFO->PRIVATE_DATA->BUFFER (inclusive)
- to ADDR (exclusive) are valid. Returns 1 for success, longjmps
- on error. */
-#define FETCH_DATA(info, addr) \
- ((addr) <= ((struct dis_private *)(info->private_data))->max_fetched \
- ? 1 : fetch_data ((info), (addr)))
-
-static int
-fetch_data (info, addr)
- struct disassemble_info *info;
- bfd_byte *addr;
-{
- int status;
- struct dis_private *priv = (struct dis_private *)info->private_data;
- bfd_vma start = priv->insn_start + (priv->max_fetched - priv->the_buffer);
-
- status = (*info->read_memory_func) (start,
- priv->max_fetched,
- addr - priv->max_fetched,
- info);
- if (status != 0)
- {
- (*info->memory_error_func) (status, start, info);
- longjmp (priv->bailout, 1);
- }
- else
- priv->max_fetched = addr;
- return 1;
-}
-
-#define Eb OP_E, b_mode
-#define indirEb OP_indirE, b_mode
-#define Gb OP_G, b_mode
-#define Ev OP_E, v_mode
-#define indirEv OP_indirE, v_mode
-#define Ew OP_E, w_mode
-#define Ma OP_E, v_mode
-#define M OP_E, 0
-#define Mp OP_E, 0 /* ? */
-#define Gv OP_G, v_mode
-#define Gw OP_G, w_mode
-#define Rw OP_rm, w_mode
-#define Rd OP_rm, d_mode
-#define Ib OP_I, b_mode
-#define sIb OP_sI, b_mode /* sign extened byte */
-#define Iv OP_I, v_mode
-#define Iw OP_I, w_mode
-#define Jb OP_J, b_mode
-#define Jv OP_J, v_mode
-#define ONE OP_ONE, 0
-#define Cd OP_C, d_mode
-#define Dd OP_D, d_mode
-#define Td OP_T, d_mode
-
-#define eAX OP_REG, eAX_reg
-#define eBX OP_REG, eBX_reg
-#define eCX OP_REG, eCX_reg
-#define eDX OP_REG, eDX_reg
-#define eSP OP_REG, eSP_reg
-#define eBP OP_REG, eBP_reg
-#define eSI OP_REG, eSI_reg
-#define eDI OP_REG, eDI_reg
-#define AL OP_REG, al_reg
-#define CL OP_REG, cl_reg
-#define DL OP_REG, dl_reg
-#define BL OP_REG, bl_reg
-#define AH OP_REG, ah_reg
-#define CH OP_REG, ch_reg
-#define DH OP_REG, dh_reg
-#define BH OP_REG, bh_reg
-#define AX OP_REG, ax_reg
-#define DX OP_REG, dx_reg
-#define indirDX OP_REG, indir_dx_reg
-
-#define Sw OP_SEG, w_mode
-#define Ap OP_DIR, lptr
-#define Av OP_DIR, v_mode
-#define Ob OP_OFF, b_mode
-#define Ov OP_OFF, v_mode
-#define Xb OP_DSSI, b_mode
-#define Xv OP_DSSI, v_mode
-#define Yb OP_ESDI, b_mode
-#define Yv OP_ESDI, v_mode
-
-#define es OP_REG, es_reg
-#define ss OP_REG, ss_reg
-#define cs OP_REG, cs_reg
-#define ds OP_REG, ds_reg
-#define fs OP_REG, fs_reg
-#define gs OP_REG, gs_reg
-
-int OP_E(), OP_indirE(), OP_G(), OP_I(), OP_sI(), OP_REG();
-int OP_J(), OP_SEG();
-int OP_DIR(), OP_OFF(), OP_DSSI(), OP_ESDI(), OP_ONE(), OP_C();
-int OP_D(), OP_T(), OP_rm();
-
-static void dofloat (), putop (), append_prefix (), set_op ();
-static int get16 (), get32 ();
-
-#define b_mode 1
-#define v_mode 2
-#define w_mode 3
-#define d_mode 4
-
-#define es_reg 100
-#define cs_reg 101
-#define ss_reg 102
-#define ds_reg 103
-#define fs_reg 104
-#define gs_reg 105
-#define eAX_reg 107
-#define eCX_reg 108
-#define eDX_reg 109
-#define eBX_reg 110
-#define eSP_reg 111
-#define eBP_reg 112
-#define eSI_reg 113
-#define eDI_reg 114
-
-#define lptr 115
-
-#define al_reg 116
-#define cl_reg 117
-#define dl_reg 118
-#define bl_reg 119
-#define ah_reg 120
-#define ch_reg 121
-#define dh_reg 122
-#define bh_reg 123
-
-#define ax_reg 124
-#define cx_reg 125
-#define dx_reg 126
-#define bx_reg 127
-#define sp_reg 128
-#define bp_reg 129
-#define si_reg 130
-#define di_reg 131
-
-#define indir_dx_reg 150
-
-#define GRP1b NULL, NULL, 0
-#define GRP1S NULL, NULL, 1
-#define GRP1Ss NULL, NULL, 2
-#define GRP2b NULL, NULL, 3
-#define GRP2S NULL, NULL, 4
-#define GRP2b_one NULL, NULL, 5
-#define GRP2S_one NULL, NULL, 6
-#define GRP2b_cl NULL, NULL, 7
-#define GRP2S_cl NULL, NULL, 8
-#define GRP3b NULL, NULL, 9
-#define GRP3S NULL, NULL, 10
-#define GRP4 NULL, NULL, 11
-#define GRP5 NULL, NULL, 12
-#define GRP6 NULL, NULL, 13
-#define GRP7 NULL, NULL, 14
-#define GRP8 NULL, NULL, 15
-#define GRP9 NULL, NULL, 16
-
-#define FLOATCODE 50
-#define FLOAT NULL, NULL, FLOATCODE
-
-struct dis386 {
- char *name;
- int (*op1)();
- int bytemode1;
- int (*op2)();
- int bytemode2;
- int (*op3)();
- int bytemode3;
-};
-
-struct dis386 dis386[] = {
- /* 00 */
- { "addb", Eb, Gb },
- { "addS", Ev, Gv },
- { "addb", Gb, Eb },
- { "addS", Gv, Ev },
- { "addb", AL, Ib },
- { "addS", eAX, Iv },
- { "pushl", es },
- { "popl", es },
- /* 08 */
- { "orb", Eb, Gb },
- { "orS", Ev, Gv },
- { "orb", Gb, Eb },
- { "orS", Gv, Ev },
- { "orb", AL, Ib },
- { "orS", eAX, Iv },
- { "pushl", cs },
- { "(bad)" }, /* 0x0f extended opcode escape */
- /* 10 */
- { "adcb", Eb, Gb },
- { "adcS", Ev, Gv },
- { "adcb", Gb, Eb },
- { "adcS", Gv, Ev },
- { "adcb", AL, Ib },
- { "adcS", eAX, Iv },
- { "pushl", ss },
- { "popl", ss },
- /* 18 */
- { "sbbb", Eb, Gb },
- { "sbbS", Ev, Gv },
- { "sbbb", Gb, Eb },
- { "sbbS", Gv, Ev },
- { "sbbb", AL, Ib },
- { "sbbS", eAX, Iv },
- { "pushl", ds },
- { "popl", ds },
- /* 20 */
- { "andb", Eb, Gb },
- { "andS", Ev, Gv },
- { "andb", Gb, Eb },
- { "andS", Gv, Ev },
- { "andb", AL, Ib },
- { "andS", eAX, Iv },
- { "(bad)" }, /* SEG ES prefix */
- { "daa" },
- /* 28 */
- { "subb", Eb, Gb },
- { "subS", Ev, Gv },
- { "subb", Gb, Eb },
- { "subS", Gv, Ev },
- { "subb", AL, Ib },
- { "subS", eAX, Iv },
- { "(bad)" }, /* SEG CS prefix */
- { "das" },
- /* 30 */
- { "xorb", Eb, Gb },
- { "xorS", Ev, Gv },
- { "xorb", Gb, Eb },
- { "xorS", Gv, Ev },
- { "xorb", AL, Ib },
- { "xorS", eAX, Iv },
- { "(bad)" }, /* SEG SS prefix */
- { "aaa" },
- /* 38 */
- { "cmpb", Eb, Gb },
- { "cmpS", Ev, Gv },
- { "cmpb", Gb, Eb },
- { "cmpS", Gv, Ev },
- { "cmpb", AL, Ib },
- { "cmpS", eAX, Iv },
- { "(bad)" }, /* SEG DS prefix */
- { "aas" },
- /* 40 */
- { "incS", eAX },
- { "incS", eCX },
- { "incS", eDX },
- { "incS", eBX },
- { "incS", eSP },
- { "incS", eBP },
- { "incS", eSI },
- { "incS", eDI },
- /* 48 */
- { "decS", eAX },
- { "decS", eCX },
- { "decS", eDX },
- { "decS", eBX },
- { "decS", eSP },
- { "decS", eBP },
- { "decS", eSI },
- { "decS", eDI },
- /* 50 */
- { "pushS", eAX },
- { "pushS", eCX },
- { "pushS", eDX },
- { "pushS", eBX },
- { "pushS", eSP },
- { "pushS", eBP },
- { "pushS", eSI },
- { "pushS", eDI },
- /* 58 */
- { "popS", eAX },
- { "popS", eCX },
- { "popS", eDX },
- { "popS", eBX },
- { "popS", eSP },
- { "popS", eBP },
- { "popS", eSI },
- { "popS", eDI },
- /* 60 */
- { "pusha" },
- { "popa" },
- { "boundS", Gv, Ma },
- { "arpl", Ew, Gw },
- { "(bad)" }, /* seg fs */
- { "(bad)" }, /* seg gs */
- { "(bad)" }, /* op size prefix */
- { "(bad)" }, /* adr size prefix */
- /* 68 */
- { "pushS", Iv }, /* 386 book wrong */
- { "imulS", Gv, Ev, Iv },
- { "pushl", sIb }, /* push of byte really pushes 4 bytes */
- { "imulS", Gv, Ev, Ib },
- { "insb", Yb, indirDX },
- { "insS", Yv, indirDX },
- { "outsb", indirDX, Xb },
- { "outsS", indirDX, Xv },
- /* 70 */
- { "jo", Jb },
- { "jno", Jb },
- { "jb", Jb },
- { "jae", Jb },
- { "je", Jb },
- { "jne", Jb },
- { "jbe", Jb },
- { "ja", Jb },
- /* 78 */
- { "js", Jb },
- { "jns", Jb },
- { "jp", Jb },
- { "jnp", Jb },
- { "jl", Jb },
- { "jnl", Jb },
- { "jle", Jb },
- { "jg", Jb },
- /* 80 */
- { GRP1b },
- { GRP1S },
- { "(bad)" },
- { GRP1Ss },
- { "testb", Eb, Gb },
- { "testS", Ev, Gv },
- { "xchgb", Eb, Gb },
- { "xchgS", Ev, Gv },
- /* 88 */
- { "movb", Eb, Gb },
- { "movS", Ev, Gv },
- { "movb", Gb, Eb },
- { "movS", Gv, Ev },
- { "movw", Ew, Sw },
- { "leaS", Gv, M },
- { "movw", Sw, Ew },
- { "popS", Ev },
- /* 90 */
- { "nop" },
- { "xchgS", eCX, eAX },
- { "xchgS", eDX, eAX },
- { "xchgS", eBX, eAX },
- { "xchgS", eSP, eAX },
- { "xchgS", eBP, eAX },
- { "xchgS", eSI, eAX },
- { "xchgS", eDI, eAX },
- /* 98 */
- { "cwtl" },
- { "cltd" },
- { "lcall", Ap },
- { "(bad)" }, /* fwait */
- { "pushf" },
- { "popf" },
- { "sahf" },
- { "lahf" },
- /* a0 */
- { "movb", AL, Ob },
- { "movS", eAX, Ov },
- { "movb", Ob, AL },
- { "movS", Ov, eAX },
- { "movsb", Yb, Xb },
- { "movsS", Yv, Xv },
- { "cmpsb", Yb, Xb },
- { "cmpsS", Yv, Xv },
- /* a8 */
- { "testb", AL, Ib },
- { "testS", eAX, Iv },
- { "stosb", Yb, AL },
- { "stosS", Yv, eAX },
- { "lodsb", AL, Xb },
- { "lodsS", eAX, Xv },
- { "scasb", AL, Yb },
- { "scasS", eAX, Yv },
- /* b0 */
- { "movb", AL, Ib },
- { "movb", CL, Ib },
- { "movb", DL, Ib },
- { "movb", BL, Ib },
- { "movb", AH, Ib },
- { "movb", CH, Ib },
- { "movb", DH, Ib },
- { "movb", BH, Ib },
- /* b8 */
- { "movS", eAX, Iv },
- { "movS", eCX, Iv },
- { "movS", eDX, Iv },
- { "movS", eBX, Iv },
- { "movS", eSP, Iv },
- { "movS", eBP, Iv },
- { "movS", eSI, Iv },
- { "movS", eDI, Iv },
- /* c0 */
- { GRP2b },
- { GRP2S },
- { "ret", Iw },
- { "ret" },
- { "lesS", Gv, Mp },
- { "ldsS", Gv, Mp },
- { "movb", Eb, Ib },
- { "movS", Ev, Iv },
- /* c8 */
- { "enter", Iw, Ib },
- { "leave" },
- { "lret", Iw },
- { "lret" },
- { "int3" },
- { "int", Ib },
- { "into" },
- { "iret" },
- /* d0 */
- { GRP2b_one },
- { GRP2S_one },
- { GRP2b_cl },
- { GRP2S_cl },
- { "aam", Ib },
- { "aad", Ib },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "xlat" },
- /* d8 */
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- { FLOAT },
- /* e0 */
- { "loopne", Jb },
- { "loope", Jb },
- { "loop", Jb },
- { "jCcxz", Jb },
- { "inb", AL, Ib },
- { "inS", eAX, Ib },
- { "outb", Ib, AL },
- { "outS", Ib, eAX },
- /* e8 */
- { "call", Av },
- { "jmp", Jv },
- { "ljmp", Ap },
- { "jmp", Jb },
- { "inb", AL, indirDX },
- { "inS", eAX, indirDX },
- { "outb", indirDX, AL },
- { "outS", indirDX, eAX },
- /* f0 */
- { "(bad)" }, /* lock prefix */
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, /* repne */
- { "(bad)" }, /* repz */
- { "hlt" },
- { "cmc" },
- { GRP3b },
- { GRP3S },
- /* f8 */
- { "clc" },
- { "stc" },
- { "cli" },
- { "sti" },
- { "cld" },
- { "std" },
- { GRP4 },
- { GRP5 },
-};
-
-struct dis386 dis386_twobyte[] = {
- /* 00 */
- { GRP6 },
- { GRP7 },
- { "larS", Gv, Ew },
- { "lslS", Gv, Ew },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "clts" },
- { "(bad)" },
- /* 08 */
- { "invd" },
- { "wbinvd" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "ud2a" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 10 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 18 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 20 */
- /* these are all backward in appendix A of the intel book */
- { "movl", Rd, Cd },
- { "movl", Rd, Dd },
- { "movl", Cd, Rd },
- { "movl", Dd, Rd },
- { "movl", Rd, Td },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "movl", Td, Rd },
- { "(bad)" },
- /* 28 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 30 */
- { "wrmsr" }, { "rdtsc" }, { "rdmsr" }, { "rdpmc" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 38 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 40 */
- { "cmovo", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovno", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovb", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovae", Gv,Ev },
- { "cmove", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovne", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovbe", Gv,Ev }, { "cmova", Gv,Ev },
- /* 48 */
- { "cmovs", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovns", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovp", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovnp", Gv,Ev },
- { "cmovl", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovge", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovle", Gv,Ev }, { "cmovg", Gv,Ev },
- /* 50 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 58 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 60 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 68 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 70 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 78 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* 80 */
- { "jo", Jv },
- { "jno", Jv },
- { "jb", Jv },
- { "jae", Jv },
- { "je", Jv },
- { "jne", Jv },
- { "jbe", Jv },
- { "ja", Jv },
- /* 88 */
- { "js", Jv },
- { "jns", Jv },
- { "jp", Jv },
- { "jnp", Jv },
- { "jl", Jv },
- { "jge", Jv },
- { "jle", Jv },
- { "jg", Jv },
- /* 90 */
- { "seto", Eb },
- { "setno", Eb },
- { "setb", Eb },
- { "setae", Eb },
- { "sete", Eb },
- { "setne", Eb },
- { "setbe", Eb },
- { "seta", Eb },
- /* 98 */
- { "sets", Eb },
- { "setns", Eb },
- { "setp", Eb },
- { "setnp", Eb },
- { "setl", Eb },
- { "setge", Eb },
- { "setle", Eb },
- { "setg", Eb },
- /* a0 */
- { "pushl", fs },
- { "popl", fs },
- { "cpuid" },
- { "btS", Ev, Gv },
- { "shldS", Ev, Gv, Ib },
- { "shldS", Ev, Gv, CL },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- /* a8 */
- { "pushl", gs },
- { "popl", gs },
- { "rsm" },
- { "btsS", Ev, Gv },
- { "shrdS", Ev, Gv, Ib },
- { "shrdS", Ev, Gv, CL },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "imulS", Gv, Ev },
- /* b0 */
- { "cmpxchgb", Eb, Gb },
- { "cmpxchgS", Ev, Gv },
- { "lssS", Gv, Mp }, /* 386 lists only Mp */
- { "btrS", Ev, Gv },
- { "lfsS", Gv, Mp }, /* 386 lists only Mp */
- { "lgsS", Gv, Mp }, /* 386 lists only Mp */
- { "movzbS", Gv, Eb },
- { "movzwS", Gv, Ew },
- /* b8 */
- { "ud2b" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { GRP8 },
- { "btcS", Ev, Gv },
- { "bsfS", Gv, Ev },
- { "bsrS", Gv, Ev },
- { "movsbS", Gv, Eb },
- { "movswS", Gv, Ew },
- /* c0 */
- { "xaddb", Eb, Gb },
- { "xaddS", Ev, Gv },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { GRP9 },
- /* c8 */
- { "bswap", eAX },
- { "bswap", eCX },
- { "bswap", eDX },
- { "bswap", eBX },
- { "bswap", eSP },
- { "bswap", eBP },
- { "bswap", eSI },
- { "bswap", eDI },
- /* d0 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* d8 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* e0 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* e8 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* f0 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- /* f8 */
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" }, { "(bad)" },
-};
-
-static const unsigned char onebyte_has_modrm[256] = {
- 1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,1,0,1,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,0,0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1
-};
-
-static const unsigned char twobyte_has_modrm[256] = {
- 1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,
- 0,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,
- 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,0,0,1,1,1,1,1,1,
- 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
- 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0
-};
-
-static char obuf[100];
-static char *obufp;
-static char scratchbuf[100];
-static unsigned char *start_codep;
-static unsigned char *codep;
-static disassemble_info *the_info;
-static int mod;
-static int rm;
-static int reg;
-static void oappend ();
-
-static char *names32[]={
- "%eax","%ecx","%edx","%ebx", "%esp","%ebp","%esi","%edi",
-};
-static char *names16[] = {
- "%ax","%cx","%dx","%bx","%sp","%bp","%si","%di",
-};
-static char *names8[] = {
- "%al","%cl","%dl","%bl","%ah","%ch","%dh","%bh",
-};
-static char *names_seg[] = {
- "%es","%cs","%ss","%ds","%fs","%gs","%?","%?",
-};
-static char *index16[] = {
- "bx+si","bx+di","bp+si","bp+di","si","di","bp","bx"
-};
-
-struct dis386 grps[][8] = {
- /* GRP1b */
- {
- { "addb", Eb, Ib },
- { "orb", Eb, Ib },
- { "adcb", Eb, Ib },
- { "sbbb", Eb, Ib },
- { "andb", Eb, Ib },
- { "subb", Eb, Ib },
- { "xorb", Eb, Ib },
- { "cmpb", Eb, Ib }
- },
- /* GRP1S */
- {
- { "addS", Ev, Iv },
- { "orS", Ev, Iv },
- { "adcS", Ev, Iv },
- { "sbbS", Ev, Iv },
- { "andS", Ev, Iv },
- { "subS", Ev, Iv },
- { "xorS", Ev, Iv },
- { "cmpS", Ev, Iv }
- },
- /* GRP1Ss */
- {
- { "addS", Ev, sIb },
- { "orS", Ev, sIb },
- { "adcS", Ev, sIb },
- { "sbbS", Ev, sIb },
- { "andS", Ev, sIb },
- { "subS", Ev, sIb },
- { "xorS", Ev, sIb },
- { "cmpS", Ev, sIb }
- },
- /* GRP2b */
- {
- { "rolb", Eb, Ib },
- { "rorb", Eb, Ib },
- { "rclb", Eb, Ib },
- { "rcrb", Eb, Ib },
- { "shlb", Eb, Ib },
- { "shrb", Eb, Ib },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "sarb", Eb, Ib },
- },
- /* GRP2S */
- {
- { "rolS", Ev, Ib },
- { "rorS", Ev, Ib },
- { "rclS", Ev, Ib },
- { "rcrS", Ev, Ib },
- { "shlS", Ev, Ib },
- { "shrS", Ev, Ib },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "sarS", Ev, Ib },
- },
- /* GRP2b_one */
- {
- { "rolb", Eb },
- { "rorb", Eb },
- { "rclb", Eb },
- { "rcrb", Eb },
- { "shlb", Eb },
- { "shrb", Eb },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "sarb", Eb },
- },
- /* GRP2S_one */
- {
- { "rolS", Ev },
- { "rorS", Ev },
- { "rclS", Ev },
- { "rcrS", Ev },
- { "shlS", Ev },
- { "shrS", Ev },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "sarS", Ev },
- },
- /* GRP2b_cl */
- {
- { "rolb", Eb, CL },
- { "rorb", Eb, CL },
- { "rclb", Eb, CL },
- { "rcrb", Eb, CL },
- { "shlb", Eb, CL },
- { "shrb", Eb, CL },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "sarb", Eb, CL },
- },
- /* GRP2S_cl */
- {
- { "rolS", Ev, CL },
- { "rorS", Ev, CL },
- { "rclS", Ev, CL },
- { "rcrS", Ev, CL },
- { "shlS", Ev, CL },
- { "shrS", Ev, CL },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "sarS", Ev, CL }
- },
- /* GRP3b */
- {
- { "testb", Eb, Ib },
- { "(bad)", Eb },
- { "notb", Eb },
- { "negb", Eb },
- { "mulb", AL, Eb },
- { "imulb", AL, Eb },
- { "divb", AL, Eb },
- { "idivb", AL, Eb }
- },
- /* GRP3S */
- {
- { "testS", Ev, Iv },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "notS", Ev },
- { "negS", Ev },
- { "mulS", eAX, Ev },
- { "imulS", eAX, Ev },
- { "divS", eAX, Ev },
- { "idivS", eAX, Ev },
- },
- /* GRP4 */
- {
- { "incb", Eb },
- { "decb", Eb },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- },
- /* GRP5 */
- {
- { "incS", Ev },
- { "decS", Ev },
- { "call", indirEv },
- { "lcall", indirEv },
- { "jmp", indirEv },
- { "ljmp", indirEv },
- { "pushS", Ev },
- { "(bad)" },
- },
- /* GRP6 */
- {
- { "sldt", Ew },
- { "str", Ew },
- { "lldt", Ew },
- { "ltr", Ew },
- { "verr", Ew },
- { "verw", Ew },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" }
- },
- /* GRP7 */
- {
- { "sgdt", Ew },
- { "sidt", Ew },
- { "lgdt", Ew },
- { "lidt", Ew },
- { "smsw", Ew },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "lmsw", Ew },
- { "invlpg", Ew },
- },
- /* GRP8 */
- {
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "btS", Ev, Ib },
- { "btsS", Ev, Ib },
- { "btrS", Ev, Ib },
- { "btcS", Ev, Ib },
- },
- /* GRP9 */
- {
- { "(bad)" },
- { "cmpxchg8b", Ev },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- }
-};
-
-#define PREFIX_REPZ 1
-#define PREFIX_REPNZ 2
-#define PREFIX_LOCK 4
-#define PREFIX_CS 8
-#define PREFIX_SS 0x10
-#define PREFIX_DS 0x20
-#define PREFIX_ES 0x40
-#define PREFIX_FS 0x80
-#define PREFIX_GS 0x100
-#define PREFIX_DATA 0x200
-#define PREFIX_ADR 0x400
-#define PREFIX_FWAIT 0x800
-
-static int prefixes;
-
-static void
-ckprefix ()
-{
- prefixes = 0;
- while (1)
- {
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- switch (*codep)
- {
- case 0xf3:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_REPZ;
- break;
- case 0xf2:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_REPNZ;
- break;
- case 0xf0:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_LOCK;
- break;
- case 0x2e:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_CS;
- break;
- case 0x36:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_SS;
- break;
- case 0x3e:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_DS;
- break;
- case 0x26:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_ES;
- break;
- case 0x64:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_FS;
- break;
- case 0x65:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_GS;
- break;
- case 0x66:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_DATA;
- break;
- case 0x67:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_ADR;
- break;
- case 0x9b:
- prefixes |= PREFIX_FWAIT;
- break;
- default:
- return;
- }
- codep++;
- }
-}
-
-static int dflag;
-static int aflag;
-
-static char op1out[100], op2out[100], op3out[100];
-static int op_address[3], op_ad, op_index[3];
-static int start_pc;
-
-
-/*
- * On the 386's of 1988, the maximum length of an instruction is 15 bytes.
- * (see topic "Redundant prefixes" in the "Differences from 8086"
- * section of the "Virtual 8086 Mode" chapter.)
- * 'pc' should be the address of this instruction, it will
- * be used to print the target address if this is a relative jump or call
- * The function returns the length of this instruction in bytes.
- */
-
-int
-print_insn_i386 (pc, info)
- bfd_vma pc;
- disassemble_info *info;
-{
- struct dis386 *dp;
- int i;
- int enter_instruction;
- char *first, *second, *third;
- int needcomma;
- unsigned char need_modrm;
-
- struct dis_private priv;
- bfd_byte *inbuf = priv.the_buffer;
-
- info->private_data = (PTR) &priv;
- priv.max_fetched = priv.the_buffer;
- priv.insn_start = pc;
- if (setjmp (priv.bailout) != 0)
- /* Error return. */
- return -1;
-
- obuf[0] = 0;
- op1out[0] = 0;
- op2out[0] = 0;
- op3out[0] = 0;
-
- op_index[0] = op_index[1] = op_index[2] = -1;
-
- the_info = info;
- start_pc = pc;
- start_codep = inbuf;
- codep = inbuf;
-
- ckprefix ();
-
- FETCH_DATA (info, codep + 1);
- if (*codep == 0xc8)
- enter_instruction = 1;
- else
- enter_instruction = 0;
-
- obufp = obuf;
-
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_REPZ)
- oappend ("repz ");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_REPNZ)
- oappend ("repnz ");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_LOCK)
- oappend ("lock ");
-
- if ((prefixes & PREFIX_FWAIT)
- && ((*codep < 0xd8) || (*codep > 0xdf)))
- {
- /* fwait not followed by floating point instruction */
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "fwait");
- return (1);
- }
-
- /* these would be initialized to 0 if disassembling for 8086 or 286 */
- dflag = 1;
- aflag = 1;
-
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_DATA)
- dflag ^= 1;
-
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_ADR)
- {
- aflag ^= 1;
- oappend ("addr16 ");
- }
-
- if (*codep == 0x0f)
- {
- FETCH_DATA (info, codep + 2);
- dp = &dis386_twobyte[*++codep];
- need_modrm = twobyte_has_modrm[*codep];
- }
- else
- {
- dp = &dis386[*codep];
- need_modrm = onebyte_has_modrm[*codep];
- }
- codep++;
-
- if (need_modrm)
- {
- FETCH_DATA (info, codep + 1);
- mod = (*codep >> 6) & 3;
- reg = (*codep >> 3) & 7;
- rm = *codep & 7;
- }
-
- if (dp->name == NULL && dp->bytemode1 == FLOATCODE)
- {
- dofloat ();
- }
- else
- {
- if (dp->name == NULL)
- dp = &grps[dp->bytemode1][reg];
-
- putop (dp->name);
-
- obufp = op1out;
- op_ad = 2;
- if (dp->op1)
- (*dp->op1)(dp->bytemode1);
-
- obufp = op2out;
- op_ad = 1;
- if (dp->op2)
- (*dp->op2)(dp->bytemode2);
-
- obufp = op3out;
- op_ad = 0;
- if (dp->op3)
- (*dp->op3)(dp->bytemode3);
- }
-
- obufp = obuf + strlen (obuf);
- for (i = strlen (obuf); i < 6; i++)
- oappend (" ");
- oappend (" ");
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "%s", obuf);
-
- /* enter instruction is printed with operands in the
- * same order as the intel book; everything else
- * is printed in reverse order
- */
- if (enter_instruction)
- {
- first = op1out;
- second = op2out;
- third = op3out;
- op_ad = op_index[0];
- op_index[0] = op_index[2];
- op_index[2] = op_ad;
- }
- else
- {
- first = op3out;
- second = op2out;
- third = op1out;
- }
- needcomma = 0;
- if (*first)
- {
- if (op_index[0] != -1)
- (*info->print_address_func) (op_address[op_index[0]], info);
- else
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "%s", first);
- needcomma = 1;
- }
- if (*second)
- {
- if (needcomma)
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, ",");
- if (op_index[1] != -1)
- (*info->print_address_func) (op_address[op_index[1]], info);
- else
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "%s", second);
- needcomma = 1;
- }
- if (*third)
- {
- if (needcomma)
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, ",");
- if (op_index[2] != -1)
- (*info->print_address_func) (op_address[op_index[2]], info);
- else
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "%s", third);
- }
- return (codep - inbuf);
-}
-
-char *float_mem[] = {
- /* d8 */
- "fadds",
- "fmuls",
- "fcoms",
- "fcomps",
- "fsubs",
- "fsubrs",
- "fdivs",
- "fdivrs",
- /* d9 */
- "flds",
- "(bad)",
- "fsts",
- "fstps",
- "fldenv",
- "fldcw",
- "fNstenv",
- "fNstcw",
- /* da */
- "fiaddl",
- "fimull",
- "ficoml",
- "ficompl",
- "fisubl",
- "fisubrl",
- "fidivl",
- "fidivrl",
- /* db */
- "fildl",
- "(bad)",
- "fistl",
- "fistpl",
- "(bad)",
- "fldt",
- "(bad)",
- "fstpt",
- /* dc */
- "faddl",
- "fmull",
- "fcoml",
- "fcompl",
- "fsubl",
- "fsubrl",
- "fdivl",
- "fdivrl",
- /* dd */
- "fldl",
- "(bad)",
- "fstl",
- "fstpl",
- "frstor",
- "(bad)",
- "fNsave",
- "fNstsw",
- /* de */
- "fiadd",
- "fimul",
- "ficom",
- "ficomp",
- "fisub",
- "fisubr",
- "fidiv",
- "fidivr",
- /* df */
- "fild",
- "(bad)",
- "fist",
- "fistp",
- "fbld",
- "fildll",
- "fbstp",
- "fistpll",
-};
-
-#define ST OP_ST, 0
-#define STi OP_STi, 0
-int OP_ST(), OP_STi();
-
-#define FGRPd9_2 NULL, NULL, 0
-#define FGRPd9_4 NULL, NULL, 1
-#define FGRPd9_5 NULL, NULL, 2
-#define FGRPd9_6 NULL, NULL, 3
-#define FGRPd9_7 NULL, NULL, 4
-#define FGRPda_5 NULL, NULL, 5
-#define FGRPdb_4 NULL, NULL, 6
-#define FGRPde_3 NULL, NULL, 7
-#define FGRPdf_4 NULL, NULL, 8
-
-struct dis386 float_reg[][8] = {
- /* d8 */
- {
- { "fadd", ST, STi },
- { "fmul", ST, STi },
- { "fcom", STi },
- { "fcomp", STi },
- { "fsub", ST, STi },
- { "fsubr", ST, STi },
- { "fdiv", ST, STi },
- { "fdivr", ST, STi },
- },
- /* d9 */
- {
- { "fld", STi },
- { "fxch", STi },
- { FGRPd9_2 },
- { "(bad)" },
- { FGRPd9_4 },
- { FGRPd9_5 },
- { FGRPd9_6 },
- { FGRPd9_7 },
- },
- /* da */
- {
- { "fcmovb", ST, STi },
- { "fcmove", ST, STi },
- { "fcmovbe",ST, STi },
- { "fcmovu", ST, STi },
- { "(bad)" },
- { FGRPda_5 },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- },
- /* db */
- {
- { "fcmovnb",ST, STi },
- { "fcmovne",ST, STi },
- { "fcmovnbe",ST, STi },
- { "fcmovnu",ST, STi },
- { FGRPdb_4 },
- { "fucomi", ST, STi },
- { "fcomi", ST, STi },
- { "(bad)" },
- },
- /* dc */
- {
- { "fadd", STi, ST },
- { "fmul", STi, ST },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "fsub", STi, ST },
- { "fsubr", STi, ST },
- { "fdiv", STi, ST },
- { "fdivr", STi, ST },
- },
- /* dd */
- {
- { "ffree", STi },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "fst", STi },
- { "fstp", STi },
- { "fucom", STi },
- { "fucomp", STi },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- },
- /* de */
- {
- { "faddp", STi, ST },
- { "fmulp", STi, ST },
- { "(bad)" },
- { FGRPde_3 },
- { "fsubp", STi, ST },
- { "fsubrp", STi, ST },
- { "fdivp", STi, ST },
- { "fdivrp", STi, ST },
- },
- /* df */
- {
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { "(bad)" },
- { FGRPdf_4 },
- { "fucomip",ST, STi },
- { "fcomip", ST, STi },
- { "(bad)" },
- },
-};
-
-
-char *fgrps[][8] = {
- /* d9_2 0 */
- {
- "fnop","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)",
- },
-
- /* d9_4 1 */
- {
- "fchs","fabs","(bad)","(bad)","ftst","fxam","(bad)","(bad)",
- },
-
- /* d9_5 2 */
- {
- "fld1","fldl2t","fldl2e","fldpi","fldlg2","fldln2","fldz","(bad)",
- },
-
- /* d9_6 3 */
- {
- "f2xm1","fyl2x","fptan","fpatan","fxtract","fprem1","fdecstp","fincstp",
- },
-
- /* d9_7 4 */
- {
- "fprem","fyl2xp1","fsqrt","fsincos","frndint","fscale","fsin","fcos",
- },
-
- /* da_5 5 */
- {
- "(bad)","fucompp","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)",
- },
-
- /* db_4 6 */
- {
- "feni(287 only)","fdisi(287 only)","fNclex","fNinit",
- "fNsetpm(287 only)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)",
- },
-
- /* de_3 7 */
- {
- "(bad)","fcompp","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)",
- },
-
- /* df_4 8 */
- {
- "fNstsw","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)","(bad)",
- },
-};
-
-static void
-dofloat ()
-{
- struct dis386 *dp;
- unsigned char floatop;
-
- floatop = codep[-1];
-
- if (mod != 3)
- {
- putop (float_mem[(floatop - 0xd8) * 8 + reg]);
- obufp = op1out;
- OP_E (v_mode);
- return;
- }
- codep++;
-
- dp = &float_reg[floatop - 0xd8][reg];
- if (dp->name == NULL)
- {
- putop (fgrps[dp->bytemode1][rm]);
- /* instruction fnstsw is only one with strange arg */
- if (floatop == 0xdf
- && FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1)
- && *codep == 0xe0)
- strcpy (op1out, "%eax");
- }
- else
- {
- putop (dp->name);
- obufp = op1out;
- if (dp->op1)
- (*dp->op1)(dp->bytemode1);
- obufp = op2out;
- if (dp->op2)
- (*dp->op2)(dp->bytemode2);
- }
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_ST (ignore)
- int ignore;
-{
- oappend ("%st");
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_STi (ignore)
- int ignore;
-{
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "%%st(%d)", rm);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-
-/* capital letters in template are macros */
-static void
-putop (template)
- char *template;
-{
- char *p;
-
- for (p = template; *p; p++)
- {
- switch (*p)
- {
- default:
- *obufp++ = *p;
- break;
- case 'C': /* For jcxz/jecxz */
- if (aflag)
- *obufp++ = 'e';
- break;
- case 'N':
- if ((prefixes & PREFIX_FWAIT) == 0)
- *obufp++ = 'n';
- break;
- case 'S':
- /* operand size flag */
- if (dflag)
- *obufp++ = 'l';
- else
- *obufp++ = 'w';
- break;
- }
- }
- *obufp = 0;
-}
-
-static void
-oappend (s)
- char *s;
-{
- strcpy (obufp, s);
- obufp += strlen (s);
- *obufp = 0;
-}
-
-static void
-append_prefix ()
-{
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_CS)
- oappend ("%cs:");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_DS)
- oappend ("%ds:");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_SS)
- oappend ("%ss:");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_ES)
- oappend ("%es:");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_FS)
- oappend ("%fs:");
- if (prefixes & PREFIX_GS)
- oappend ("%gs:");
-}
-
-int
-OP_indirE (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- oappend ("*");
- return OP_E (bytemode);
-}
-
-int
-OP_E (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- int disp;
-
- /* skip mod/rm byte */
- codep++;
-
- if (mod == 3)
- {
- switch (bytemode)
- {
- case b_mode:
- oappend (names8[rm]);
- break;
- case w_mode:
- oappend (names16[rm]);
- break;
- case v_mode:
- if (dflag)
- oappend (names32[rm]);
- else
- oappend (names16[rm]);
- break;
- default:
- oappend ("<bad dis table>");
- break;
- }
- return 0;
- }
-
- disp = 0;
- append_prefix ();
-
- if (aflag) /* 32 bit address mode */
- {
- int havesib;
- int havebase;
- int base;
- int index;
- int scale;
-
- havesib = 0;
- havebase = 1;
- base = rm;
-
- if (base == 4)
- {
- havesib = 1;
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- scale = (*codep >> 6) & 3;
- index = (*codep >> 3) & 7;
- base = *codep & 7;
- codep++;
- }
-
- switch (mod)
- {
- case 0:
- if (base == 5)
- {
- havebase = 0;
- disp = get32 ();
- }
- break;
- case 1:
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- disp = *(char *)codep++;
- break;
- case 2:
- disp = get32 ();
- break;
- }
-
- if (mod != 0 || base == 5)
- {
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "0x%x", disp);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- }
-
- if (havebase || (havesib && (index != 4 || scale != 0)))
- {
- oappend ("(");
- if (havebase)
- oappend (names32[base]);
- if (havesib)
- {
- if (index != 4)
- {
- sprintf (scratchbuf, ",%s", names32[index]);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- }
- sprintf (scratchbuf, ",%d", 1 << scale);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- }
- oappend (")");
- }
- }
- else
- { /* 16 bit address mode */
- switch (mod)
- {
- case 0:
- if (rm == 6)
- disp = (short) get16 ();
- break;
- case 1:
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- disp = *(char *)codep++;
- break;
- case 2:
- disp = (short) get16 ();
- break;
- }
-
- if (mod != 0 || rm == 6)
- {
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "0x%x", disp);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- }
-
- if (mod != 0 || rm != 6)
- {
- oappend ("(");
- oappend (index16[rm]);
- oappend (")");
- }
- }
- return 0;
-}
-
-int
-OP_G (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- switch (bytemode)
- {
- case b_mode:
- oappend (names8[reg]);
- break;
- case w_mode:
- oappend (names16[reg]);
- break;
- case d_mode:
- oappend (names32[reg]);
- break;
- case v_mode:
- if (dflag)
- oappend (names32[reg]);
- else
- oappend (names16[reg]);
- break;
- default:
- oappend ("<internal disassembler error>");
- break;
- }
- return (0);
-}
-
-static int
-get32 ()
-{
- int x = 0;
-
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 4);
- x = *codep++ & 0xff;
- x |= (*codep++ & 0xff) << 8;
- x |= (*codep++ & 0xff) << 16;
- x |= (*codep++ & 0xff) << 24;
- return (x);
-}
-
-static int
-get16 ()
-{
- int x = 0;
-
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 2);
- x = *codep++ & 0xff;
- x |= (*codep++ & 0xff) << 8;
- return (x);
-}
-
-static void
-set_op (op)
- int op;
-{
- op_index[op_ad] = op_ad;
- op_address[op_ad] = op;
-}
-
-int
-OP_REG (code)
- int code;
-{
- char *s;
-
- switch (code)
- {
- case indir_dx_reg: s = "(%dx)"; break;
- case ax_reg: case cx_reg: case dx_reg: case bx_reg:
- case sp_reg: case bp_reg: case si_reg: case di_reg:
- s = names16[code - ax_reg];
- break;
- case es_reg: case ss_reg: case cs_reg:
- case ds_reg: case fs_reg: case gs_reg:
- s = names_seg[code - es_reg];
- break;
- case al_reg: case ah_reg: case cl_reg: case ch_reg:
- case dl_reg: case dh_reg: case bl_reg: case bh_reg:
- s = names8[code - al_reg];
- break;
- case eAX_reg: case eCX_reg: case eDX_reg: case eBX_reg:
- case eSP_reg: case eBP_reg: case eSI_reg: case eDI_reg:
- if (dflag)
- s = names32[code - eAX_reg];
- else
- s = names16[code - eAX_reg];
- break;
- default:
- s = "<internal disassembler error>";
- break;
- }
- oappend (s);
- return (0);
-}
-
-int
-OP_I (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- int op;
-
- switch (bytemode)
- {
- case b_mode:
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- op = *codep++ & 0xff;
- break;
- case v_mode:
- if (dflag)
- op = get32 ();
- else
- op = get16 ();
- break;
- case w_mode:
- op = get16 ();
- break;
- default:
- oappend ("<internal disassembler error>");
- return (0);
- }
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "$0x%x", op);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-int
-OP_sI (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- int op;
-
- switch (bytemode)
- {
- case b_mode:
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- op = *(char *)codep++;
- break;
- case v_mode:
- if (dflag)
- op = get32 ();
- else
- op = (short)get16();
- break;
- case w_mode:
- op = (short)get16 ();
- break;
- default:
- oappend ("<internal disassembler error>");
- return (0);
- }
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "$0x%x", op);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-int
-OP_J (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- int disp;
- int mask = -1;
-
- switch (bytemode)
- {
- case b_mode:
- FETCH_DATA (the_info, codep + 1);
- disp = *(char *)codep++;
- break;
- case v_mode:
- if (dflag)
- disp = get32 ();
- else
- {
- disp = (short)get16 ();
- /* for some reason, a data16 prefix on a jump instruction
- means that the pc is masked to 16 bits after the
- displacement is added! */
- mask = 0xffff;
- }
- break;
- default:
- oappend ("<internal disassembler error>");
- return (0);
- }
- disp = (start_pc + codep - start_codep + disp) & mask;
- set_op (disp);
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "0x%x", disp);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_SEG (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- static char *sreg[] = {
- "%es","%cs","%ss","%ds","%fs","%gs","%?","%?",
- };
-
- oappend (sreg[reg]);
- return (0);
-}
-
-int
-OP_DIR (size)
- int size;
-{
- int seg, offset;
-
- switch (size)
- {
- case lptr:
- if (aflag)
- {
- offset = get32 ();
- seg = get16 ();
- }
- else
- {
- offset = get16 ();
- seg = get16 ();
- }
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "0x%x,0x%x", seg, offset);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- break;
- case v_mode:
- if (aflag)
- offset = get32 ();
- else
- offset = (short)get16 ();
-
- offset = start_pc + codep - start_codep + offset;
- set_op (offset);
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "0x%x", offset);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- break;
- default:
- oappend ("<internal disassembler error>");
- break;
- }
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_OFF (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- int off;
-
- if (aflag)
- off = get32 ();
- else
- off = get16 ();
-
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "0x%x", off);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_ESDI (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- oappend ("%es:(");
- oappend (aflag ? "%edi" : "%di");
- oappend (")");
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_DSSI (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- oappend ("%ds:(");
- oappend (aflag ? "%esi" : "%si");
- oappend (")");
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_ONE (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- oappend ("1");
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_C (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- codep++; /* skip mod/rm */
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "%%cr%d", reg);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_D (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- codep++; /* skip mod/rm */
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "%%db%d", reg);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-/* ARGSUSED */
-int
-OP_T (dummy)
- int dummy;
-{
- codep++; /* skip mod/rm */
- sprintf (scratchbuf, "%%tr%d", reg);
- oappend (scratchbuf);
- return (0);
-}
-
-int
-OP_rm (bytemode)
- int bytemode;
-{
- switch (bytemode)
- {
- case d_mode:
- oappend (names32[rm]);
- break;
- case w_mode:
- oappend (names16[rm]);
- break;
- }
- return (0);
-}
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/sysdep.h b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/sysdep.h
deleted file mode 100644
index f1556da..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/sysdep.h
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
-/* Random host-dependent support code.
- Copyright (C) 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- Written by Ken Raeburn.
-
-This file is part of libopcodes, the opcodes library.
-
-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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
-
-/* Do system-dependent stuff, mainly driven by autoconf-detected info.
-
- Well, some generic common stuff is done here too, like including
- ansidecl.h. That's because the .h files in bfd/hosts files I'm
- trying to replace often did that. If it can be dropped from this
- file (check in a non-ANSI environment!), it should be. */
-
-#include "config.h"
-
-#include <ansidecl.h>
-
-#ifdef HAVE_STRING_H
-#include <string.h>
-#else
-#ifdef HAVE_STRINGS_H
-#include <strings.h>
-#endif
-#endif
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/z8k-dis.c b/contrib/gdb/opcodes/z8k-dis.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 8890e12..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/opcodes/z8k-dis.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,571 +0,0 @@
-/*
-This file is part of GNU Binutils.
-
-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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
-
-#include <ansidecl.h>
-#include "sysdep.h"
-#include "dis-asm.h"
-
-#define DEFINE_TABLE
-#include "z8k-opc.h"
-
-
-#include <setjmp.h>
-
-
-typedef struct
-{
- /* These are all indexed by nibble number (i.e only every other entry
- of bytes is used, and every 4th entry of words). */
- unsigned char nibbles[24];
- unsigned char bytes[24];
- unsigned short words[24];
-
- /* Nibble number of first word not yet fetched. */
- int max_fetched;
- bfd_vma insn_start;
- jmp_buf bailout;
-
- long tabl_index;
- char instr_asmsrc[80];
- unsigned long arg_reg[0x0f];
- unsigned long immediate;
- unsigned long displacement;
- unsigned long address;
- unsigned long cond_code;
- unsigned long ctrl_code;
- unsigned long flags;
- unsigned long interrupts;
-}
-instr_data_s;
-
-/* Make sure that bytes from INFO->PRIVATE_DATA->BUFFER (inclusive)
- to ADDR (exclusive) are valid. Returns 1 for success, longjmps
- on error. */
-#define FETCH_DATA(info, nibble) \
- ((nibble) < ((instr_data_s *)(info->private_data))->max_fetched \
- ? 1 : fetch_data ((info), (nibble)))
-
-static int
-fetch_data (info, nibble)
- struct disassemble_info *info;
- int nibble;
-{
- unsigned char mybuf[20];
- int status;
- instr_data_s *priv = (instr_data_s *)info->private_data;
- bfd_vma start;
-
- if ((nibble % 4) != 0)
- abort ();
-
- status = (*info->read_memory_func) (priv->insn_start,
- (bfd_byte *) mybuf,
- nibble / 2,
- info);
- if (status != 0)
- {
- (*info->memory_error_func) (status, priv->insn_start, info);
- longjmp (priv->bailout, 1);
- }
-
- {
- int i;
- unsigned char *p = mybuf ;
-
- for (i = 0; i < nibble;)
- {
- priv->words[i] = (p[0] << 8) | p[1];
-
- priv->bytes[i] = *p;
- priv->nibbles[i++] = *p >> 4;
- priv->nibbles[i++] = *p &0xf;
-
- ++p;
- priv->bytes[i] = *p;
- priv->nibbles[i++] = *p >> 4;
- priv->nibbles[i++] = *p & 0xf;
-
- ++p;
- }
- }
- priv->max_fetched = nibble;
- return 1;
-}
-
-static char *codes[16] =
-{
- "f",
- "lt",
- "le",
- "ule",
- "ov/pe",
- "mi",
- "eq",
- "c/ult",
- "t",
- "ge",
- "gt",
- "ugt",
- "nov/po",
- "pl",
- "ne",
- "nc/uge"
-};
-
-int z8k_lookup_instr PARAMS ((unsigned char*, disassemble_info *));
-static void output_instr
- PARAMS ((instr_data_s *, unsigned long, disassemble_info *));
-static void unpack_instr PARAMS ((instr_data_s *, int, disassemble_info *));
-static void unparse_instr PARAMS ((instr_data_s *));
-
-static int
-print_insn_z8k (addr, info, is_segmented)
- bfd_vma addr;
- disassemble_info *info;
- int is_segmented;
-{
- instr_data_s instr_data;
-
- info->private_data = (PTR) &instr_data;
- instr_data.max_fetched = 0;
- instr_data.insn_start = addr;
- if (setjmp (instr_data.bailout) != 0)
- /* Error return. */
- return -1;
-
- instr_data.tabl_index = z8k_lookup_instr (instr_data.nibbles, info);
- if (instr_data.tabl_index > 0)
- {
- unpack_instr (&instr_data, is_segmented, info);
- unparse_instr (&instr_data);
- output_instr (&instr_data, addr, info);
- return z8k_table[instr_data.tabl_index].length;
- }
- else
- {
- FETCH_DATA (info, 4);
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, ".word %02x%02x",
- instr_data.bytes[0], instr_data.bytes[2]);
- return 2;
- }
-}
-
-print_insn_z8001 (addr, info)
- bfd_vma addr;
- disassemble_info *info;
-{
- return print_insn_z8k (addr, info, 1);
-}
-
-print_insn_z8002 (addr, info)
- bfd_vma addr;
- disassemble_info *info;
-{
- return print_insn_z8k (addr, info, 0);
-}
-
-int
-z8k_lookup_instr (nibbles, info)
- unsigned char *nibbles;
- disassemble_info *info;
-{
-
- int nibl_index, tabl_index;
- int nibl_matched;
- unsigned short instr_nibl;
- unsigned short tabl_datum, datum_class, datum_value;
-
- nibl_matched = 0;
- tabl_index = 0;
- while (!nibl_matched && z8k_table[tabl_index].name)
- {
- nibl_matched = 1;
- for (nibl_index = 0; nibl_index < z8k_table[tabl_index].length * 2 && nibl_matched; nibl_index++)
- {
- if ((nibl_index % 4) == 0)
- /* Fetch one word at a time. */
- FETCH_DATA (info, nibl_index + 4);
- instr_nibl = nibbles[nibl_index];
-
- tabl_datum = z8k_table[tabl_index].byte_info[nibl_index];
- datum_class = tabl_datum & CLASS_MASK;
- datum_value = ~CLASS_MASK & tabl_datum;
-
- switch (datum_class)
- {
- case CLASS_BIT:
- if (datum_value != instr_nibl)
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- case CLASS_00II:
- if (!((~instr_nibl) & 0x4))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- case CLASS_01II:
- if (!(instr_nibl & 0x4))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- case CLASS_0CCC:
- if (!((~instr_nibl) & 0x8))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- case CLASS_1CCC:
- if (!(instr_nibl & 0x8))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- case CLASS_0DISP7:
- if (!((~instr_nibl) & 0x8))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- nibl_index += 1;
- break;
- case CLASS_1DISP7:
- if (!(instr_nibl & 0x8))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- nibl_index += 1;
- break;
- case CLASS_REGN0:
- if (instr_nibl == 0)
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- case CLASS_BIT_1OR2:
- if ((instr_nibl | 0x2) != (datum_value | 0x2))
- nibl_matched = 0;
- break;
- default:
- break;
- }
- }
- if (nibl_matched)
- {
- return tabl_index;
- }
-
- tabl_index++;
- }
- return -1;
-
-}
-
-static void
-output_instr (instr_data, addr, info)
- instr_data_s *instr_data;
- unsigned long addr;
- disassemble_info *info;
-{
- int loop, loop_limit;
- char tmp_str[20];
- char out_str[100];
-
- strcpy (out_str, "\t");
-
- loop_limit = z8k_table[instr_data->tabl_index].length * 2;
- FETCH_DATA (info, loop_limit);
- for (loop = 0; loop < loop_limit; loop++)
- {
- sprintf (tmp_str, "%x", instr_data->nibbles[loop]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- }
-
- while (loop++ < 8)
- {
- strcat (out_str, " ");
- }
-
- strcat (out_str, instr_data->instr_asmsrc);
-
- (*info->fprintf_func) (info->stream, "%s", out_str);
-}
-
-static void
-unpack_instr (instr_data, is_segmented, info)
- instr_data_s *instr_data;
- int is_segmented;
- disassemble_info *info;
-{
- int nibl_count, loop;
- unsigned short instr_nibl, instr_byte, instr_word;
- long instr_long;
- unsigned short tabl_datum, datum_class, datum_value;
-
- nibl_count = 0;
- loop = 0;
- while (z8k_table[instr_data->tabl_index].byte_info[loop] != 0)
- {
- FETCH_DATA (info, nibl_count + 4 - (nibl_count % 4));
- instr_nibl = instr_data->nibbles[nibl_count];
- instr_byte = instr_data->bytes[nibl_count];
- instr_word = instr_data->words[nibl_count];
-
- tabl_datum = z8k_table[instr_data->tabl_index].byte_info[loop];
- datum_class = tabl_datum & CLASS_MASK;
- datum_value = tabl_datum & ~CLASS_MASK;
-
- switch (datum_class)
- {
- case CLASS_X:
- instr_data->address = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_BA:
- instr_data->displacement = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_BX:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_DISP:
- switch (datum_value)
- {
- case ARG_DISP16:
- instr_data->displacement = instr_word;
- nibl_count += 3;
- break;
- case ARG_DISP12:
- instr_data->displacement = instr_word & 0x0fff;
- nibl_count += 2;
- break;
- default:
- break;
- }
- break;
- case CLASS_IMM:
- switch (datum_value)
- {
- case ARG_IMM4:
- instr_data->immediate = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case ARG_NIM8:
- instr_data->immediate = (-instr_byte);
- nibl_count += 1;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM8:
- instr_data->immediate = instr_byte;
- nibl_count += 1;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM16:
- instr_data->immediate = instr_word;
- nibl_count += 3;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM32:
- FETCH_DATA (info, nibl_count + 8);
- instr_long = (instr_data->words[nibl_count] << 16)
- | (instr_data->words[nibl_count + 4]);
- instr_data->immediate = instr_long;
- nibl_count += 7;
- break;
- case ARG_IMMN:
- instr_data->immediate = instr_nibl - 1;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM4M1:
- instr_data->immediate = instr_nibl + 1;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM_1:
- instr_data->immediate = 1;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM_2:
- instr_data->immediate = 2;
- break;
- case ARG_IMM2:
- instr_data->immediate = instr_nibl & 0x3;
- break;
- default:
- break;
- }
- break;
- case CLASS_CC:
- instr_data->cond_code = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_CTRL:
- instr_data->ctrl_code = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_DA:
- case CLASS_ADDRESS:
- if (is_segmented)
- {
- if (instr_nibl & 0x8)
- {
- FETCH_DATA (info, nibl_count + 8);
- instr_long = (instr_data->words[nibl_count] << 16)
- | (instr_data->words[nibl_count + 4]);
- instr_data->address = ((instr_word & 0x7f00) << 8) +
- (instr_long & 0xffff);
- nibl_count += 7;
- }
- else
- {
- instr_data->address = ((instr_word & 0x7f00) << 8) +
- (instr_word & 0x00ff);
- nibl_count += 3;
- }
- }
- else
- {
- instr_data->address = instr_word;
- nibl_count += 3;
- }
- break;
- case CLASS_0CCC:
- instr_data->cond_code = instr_nibl & 0x7;
- break;
- case CLASS_1CCC:
- instr_data->cond_code = instr_nibl & 0x7;
- break;
- case CLASS_0DISP7:
- instr_data->displacement = instr_byte & 0x7f;
- nibl_count += 1;
- break;
- case CLASS_1DISP7:
- instr_data->displacement = instr_byte & 0x7f;
- nibl_count += 1;
- break;
- case CLASS_01II:
- instr_data->interrupts = instr_nibl & 0x3;
- break;
- case CLASS_00II:
- instr_data->interrupts = instr_nibl & 0x3;
- break;
- case CLASS_BIT:
- /* do nothing */
- break;
- case CLASS_IR:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_FLAGS:
- instr_data->flags = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_REG:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_BYTE:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_WORD:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_QUAD:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_LONG:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- case CLASS_REGN0:
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] = instr_nibl;
- break;
- default:
- break;
- }
-
- loop += 1;
- nibl_count += 1;
- }
-}
-
-static void
-unparse_instr (instr_data)
- instr_data_s *instr_data;
-{
- unsigned short tabl_datum, datum_class, datum_value;
- int loop, loop_limit;
- char out_str[80], tmp_str[25];
-
- sprintf (out_str, "\t%s\t", z8k_table[instr_data->tabl_index].name);
-
- loop_limit = z8k_table[instr_data->tabl_index].noperands;
- for (loop = 0; loop < loop_limit; loop++)
- {
- if (loop)
- strcat (out_str, ",");
-
- tabl_datum = z8k_table[instr_data->tabl_index].arg_info[loop];
- datum_class = tabl_datum & CLASS_MASK;
- datum_value = tabl_datum & ~CLASS_MASK;
-
- switch (datum_class)
- {
- case CLASS_X:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "0x%0x(R%d)", instr_data->address,
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_BA:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "r%d(#%x)", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value],
- instr_data->immediate);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_BX:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "r%d(R%d)", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value],
- instr_data->arg_reg[ARG_RX]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_DISP:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "#0x%0x", instr_data->displacement);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_IMM:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "#0x%0x", instr_data->immediate);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_CC:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "%s", codes[instr_data->cond_code]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_CTRL:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "0x%0x", instr_data->ctrl_code);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_DA:
- case CLASS_ADDRESS:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "#0x%0x", instr_data->address);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_IR:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "@R%d", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_FLAGS:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "0x%0x", instr_data->flags);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_BYTE:
- if (instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] >= 0x8)
- {
- sprintf (tmp_str, "rl%d",
- instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value] - 0x8);
- }
- else
- {
- sprintf (tmp_str, "rh%d", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value]);
- }
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_WORD:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "r%d", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_QUAD:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "rq%d", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- case CLASS_REG_LONG:
- sprintf (tmp_str, "rr%d", instr_data->arg_reg[datum_value]);
- strcat (out_str, tmp_str);
- break;
- default:
- break;
- }
- }
-
- strcpy (instr_data->instr_asmsrc, out_str);
-}
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/ChangeLog b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/ChangeLog
deleted file mode 100644
index 2520a85..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/ChangeLog
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12 +0,0 @@
-Wed Sep 20 12:57:29 1995 Ian Lance Taylor <ian@cygnus.com>
-
- * Makefile.in (maintainer-clean): New synonym for realclean.
-
-Tue Feb 2 11:40:04 1993 Roland H. Pesch (pesch@fowanton.cygnus.com)
-
- * Makefile.in: configurable (and useable) Makefile template
- * Makefile: removed, replaced with configurable Makefile.in
- * texindex.c texinfo.tex: remove, replacing w/refs to tools
- elsewhere in distribution tree
- * configure.in: pro forma configure stub
- * ChangeLog: new file
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/Makefile.in b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/Makefile.in
deleted file mode 100644
index 451b9fe..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/Makefile.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,94 +0,0 @@
-## Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-# Makefile for Readline documentation.
-
-# 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 2 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, write to the Free Software
-# Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
-
-srcdir = .
-
-prefix = /usr/local
-
-infodir = $(prefix)/info
-
-SHELL = /bin/sh
-
-INSTALL = install -c
-INSTALL_DATA = $(INSTALL)
-
-# where to find texinfo
-TEXIDIR=$(srcdir)/../../texinfo
-
-# where to find makeinfo, preferably one designed for texinfo-2
-MAKEINFO=makeinfo
-
-# auxiliary program for sorting Texinfo indices
-TEXINDEX=texindex
-
-# Don Knuth's TeX formatter
-TEX=tex
-
-#### Host, target, and site specific Makefile fragments come in here.
-###
-
-all: info dvi
-
-install: install-info
-
-info: history.info readline.info
-
-dvi: history.dvi readline.dvi
-
-install-info: info
- -parent=`echo $(infodir)|sed -e 's@/[^/]*$$@@'`; \
- if [ -d $$parent ] ; then true ; else mkdir $$parent ; fi
- -if [ -d $(infodir) ] ; then true ; else mkdir $(infodir) ; fi
- for i in *.info* ; do \
- $(INSTALL_DATA) $$i $(infodir)/$$i ; \
- done
-
-history.info: hist.texinfo hsuser.texinfo hstech.texinfo
- $(MAKEINFO) -I $(srcdir) -o ./history.info $(srcdir)/hist.texinfo
-
-history.dvi: hist.texinfo hsuser.texinfo hstech.texinfo $(TEXIDIR)/texinfo.tex
- TEXINPUTS=${TEXIDIR}:$(srcdir):$$TEXINPUTS $(TEX) hist.texinfo
- $(TEXINDEX) hist.??
- TEXINPUTS=${TEXIDIR}:$(srcdir):$$TEXINPUTS $(TEX) hist.texinfo
-
-readline.info: rlman.texinfo rluser.texinfo rltech.texinfo
- $(MAKEINFO) -I $(srcdir) -o ./readline.info $(srcdir)/rlman.texinfo
-
-readline.dvi: rlman.texinfo rluser.texinfo rltech.texinfo
- TEXINPUTS=${TEXIDIR}:$(srcdir):$$TEXINPUTS $(TEX) rlman.texinfo
- $(TEXINDEX) rlman.??
- TEXINPUTS=${TEXIDIR}:$(srcdir):$$TEXINPUTS $(TEX) rlman.texinfo
-
-distclean: clean
- rm -f Makefile config.status
-
-mostlyclean: clean
-
-realclean maintainer-clean: distclean
-
-clean: clean-info clean-dvi
-
-clean-info:
- rm -f history.info* readline.info*
-
-clean-dvi:
- rm -f hist.?? hist.???
- rm -f rlman.?? rlman.???
-
-Makefile: $(srcdir)/Makefile.in $(host_makefile_frag) $(target_makefile_frag)
- $(SHELL) ./config.status
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/configure.in b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/configure.in
deleted file mode 100644
index c082c56..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/configure.in
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
-srcname="READLINE doc"
-srctrigger=rlman.texinfo
-# per-host:
-
-# per-target:
-
-files=""
-links=""
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hist.texinfo b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hist.texinfo
deleted file mode 100644
index 6292738..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hist.texinfo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,106 +0,0 @@
-\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
-@comment %**start of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
-@setfilename history.info
-@settitle GNU Readline Library
-@comment %**end of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
-@synindex vr fn
-@setchapternewpage odd
-
-@ifinfo
-This document describes the GNU History library, a programming tool that
-provides a consistent user interface for recalling lines of previously
-typed input.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
-this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
-pare preserved on all copies.
-
-@ignore
-Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
-notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
-(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-@end ignore
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
-resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
-notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
-except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
-by the Foundation.
-@end ifinfo
-
-@titlepage
-@sp 10
-@center @titlefont{GNU History Library}
-@center Brian Fox
-@center Free Software Foundation
-@center Version 1.1
-@center April 1991
-
-@c Include the Distribution inside the titlepage environment so
-@c that headings are turned off.
-
-@page
-
-This document describes the GNU History library, a programming tool that
-provides a consistent user interface for recalling lines of previously
-typed input.
-
-Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
-675 Massachusetts Avenue, @*
-Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
-this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
-are preserved on all copies.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
-resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
-notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
-except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
-by the Foundation.
-
-@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
-Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-@end titlepage
-
-@ifinfo
-@node Top
-@top GNU History Library
-
-This document describes the GNU History library, a programming tool that
-provides a consistent user interface for recalling lines of previously
-typed input.
-
-@menu
-* Using History Interactively:: GNU History User's Manual.
-* Programming with GNU History:: GNU History Programmer's Manual.
-* Concept Index:: Index of concepts described in this manual.
-* Function and Variable Index:: Index of externally visible functions
- and variables.
-@end menu
-@end ifinfo
-
-@include hsuser.texinfo
-@include hstech.texinfo
-
-@node Concept Index
-@appendix Concept Index
-@printindex cp
-
-@node Function and Variable Index
-@appendix Function and Variable Index
-@printindex vr
-@contents
-
-@bye
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hstech.texinfo b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hstech.texinfo
deleted file mode 100644
index c3fe3f6..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hstech.texinfo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,311 +0,0 @@
-@ignore
-This file documents the user interface to the GNU History library.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-Authored by Brian Fox.
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual
-provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on
-all copies.
-
-Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
-identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
-paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
-GNU Copyright statement is available to the distributee, and provided that
-the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
-permission notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
-@end ignore
-
-@node Programming with GNU History
-@chapter Programming with GNU History
-
-This chapter describes how to interface the GNU History Library with
-programs that you write. It should be considered a technical guide.
-For information on the interactive use of GNU History, @pxref{Using
-History Interactively}.
-
-@menu
-* Introduction to History:: What is the GNU History library for?
-* History Storage:: How information is stored.
-* History Functions:: Functions that you can use.
-* History Variables:: Variables that control behaviour.
-* History Programming Example:: Example of using the GNU History Library.
-@end menu
-
-@node Introduction to History
-@section Introduction to History
-
-Many programs read input from the user a line at a time. The GNU history
-library is able to keep track of those lines, associate arbitrary data with
-each line, and utilize information from previous lines in making up new
-ones.
-
-The programmer using the History library has available to him functions
-for remembering lines on a history stack, associating arbitrary data
-with a line, removing lines from the stack, searching through the stack
-for a line containing an arbitrary text string, and referencing any line
-on the stack directly. In addition, a history @dfn{expansion} function
-is available which provides for a consistent user interface across many
-different programs.
-
-The end-user using programs written with the History library has the
-benifit of a consistent user interface, with a set of well-known
-commands for manipulating the text of previous lines and using that text
-in new commands. The basic history manipulation commands are similar to
-the history substitution used by @code{Csh}.
-
-If the programmer desires, he can use the Readline library, which
-includes some history manipulation by default, and has the added
-advantage of Emacs style command line editing.
-
-@node History Storage
-@section History Storage
-
-@example
-typedef struct _hist_entry @{
- char *line;
- char *data;
-@} HIST_ENTRY;
-@end example
-
-@node History Functions
-@section History Functions
-
-This section describes the calling sequence for the various functions
-present in GNU History.
-
-@defun {void using_history} ()
-Begin a session in which the history functions might be used. This
-just initializes the interactive variables.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {void add_history} (char *string)
-Place @var{string} at the end of the history list. The associated data
-field (if any) is set to @code{NULL}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int where_history} ()
-Returns the number which says what history element we are now looking
-at.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int history_set_pos} (int pos)
-Set the position in the history list to @var{pos}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int history_search_pos} (char *string, int direction, int pos)
-Search for @var{string} in the history list, starting at @var{pos}, an
-absolute index into the list. @var{direction}, if negative, says to search
-backwards from @var{pos}, else forwards. Returns the absolute index of
-the history element where @var{string} was found, or -1 otherwise.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {HIST_ENTRY *remove_history} ();
-Remove history element @var{which} from the history. The removed
-element is returned to you so you can free the line, data,
-and containing structure.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {void stifle_history} (int max)
-Stifle the history list, remembering only @var{max} number of entries.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int unstifle_history} ();
-Stop stifling the history. This returns the previous amount the
-history was stifled by. The value is positive if the history was
-stifled, negative if it wasn't.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int read_history} (char *filename)
-Add the contents of @var{filename} to the history list, a line at a
-time. If @var{filename} is @code{NULL}, then read from
-@file{~/.history}. Returns 0 if successful, or errno if not.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int read_history_range} (char *filename, int from, int to)
-Read a range of lines from @var{filename}, adding them to the history list.
-Start reading at the @var{from}'th line and end at the @var{to}'th. If
-@var{from} is zero, start at the beginning. If @var{to} is less than
-@var{from}, then read until the end of the file. If @var{filename} is
-@code{NULL}, then read from @file{~/.history}. Returns 0 if successful,
-or @code{errno} if not.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int write_history} (char *filename)
-Append the current history to @var{filename}. If @var{filename} is
-@code{NULL}, then append the history list to @file{~/.history}. Values
-returned are as in @code{read_history ()}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int append_history} (int nelements, char *filename)
-Append @var{nelement} entries to @var{filename}. The entries appended
-are from the end of the list minus @var{nelements} up to the end of the
-list.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {HIST_ENTRY *replace_history_entry} ()
-Make the history entry at @var{which} have @var{line} and @var{data}.
-This returns the old entry so you can dispose of the data. In the case
-of an invalid @var{which}, a @code{NULL} pointer is returned.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {HIST_ENTRY *current_history} ()
-Return the history entry at the current position, as determined by
-@code{history_offset}. If there is no entry there, return a @code{NULL}
-pointer.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {HIST_ENTRY *previous_history} ()
-Back up @var{history_offset} to the previous history entry, and return a
-pointer to that entry. If there is no previous entry, return a
-@code{NULL} pointer.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {HIST_ENTRY *next_history} ()
-Move @code{history_offset} forward to the next history entry, and return
-the a pointer to that entry. If there is no next entry, return a
-@code{NULL} pointer.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {HIST_ENTRY **history_list} ()
-Return a @code{NULL} terminated array of @code{HIST_ENTRY} which is the
-current input history. Element 0 of this list is the beginning of time.
-If there is no history, return @code{NULL}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int history_search} (char *string, int direction)
-Search the history for @var{string}, starting at @code{history_offset}.
-If @var{direction} < 0, then the search is through previous entries,
-else through subsequent. If @var{string} is found, then
-@code{current_history ()} is the history entry, and the value of this
-function is the offset in the line of that history entry that the
-@var{string} was found in. Otherwise, nothing is changed, and a -1 is
-returned.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int history_expand} (char *string, char **output)
-Expand @var{string}, placing the result into @var{output}, a pointer
-to a string. Returns:
-@table @code
-@item 0
-If no expansions took place (or, if the only change in
-the text was the de-slashifying of the history expansion
-character),
-@item 1
-if expansions did take place, or
-@item -1
-if there was an error in expansion.
-@end table
-
-If an error ocurred in expansion, then @var{output} contains a descriptive
-error message.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {char *history_arg_extract} (int first, int last, char *string)
-Extract a string segment consisting of the @var{first} through @var{last}
-arguments present in @var{string}. Arguments are broken up as in
-the GNU Bash shell.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int history_total_bytes} ();
-Return the number of bytes that the primary history entries are using.
-This just adds up the lengths of @code{the_history->lines}.
-@end defun
-
-@node History Variables
-@section History Variables
-
-This section describes the variables in GNU History that are externally
-visible.
-
-@defvar {int history_base}
-For convenience only. You set this when interpreting history commands.
-It is the logical offset of the first history element.
-@end defvar
-
-@node History Programming Example
-@section History Programming Example
-
-The following snippet of code demonstrates simple use of the GNU History
-Library.
-
-@smallexample
-main ()
-@{
- char line[1024], *t;
- int done = 0;
-
- line[0] = 0;
-
- while (!done)
- @{
- fprintf (stdout, "history%% ");
- t = gets (line);
-
- if (!t)
- strcpy (line, "quit");
-
- if (line[0])
- @{
- char *expansion;
- int result;
-
- using_history ();
-
- result = history_expand (line, &expansion);
- strcpy (line, expansion);
- free (expansion);
- if (result)
- fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", line);
-
- if (result < 0)
- continue;
-
- add_history (line);
- @}
-
- if (strcmp (line, "quit") == 0) done = 1;
- if (strcmp (line, "save") == 0) write_history (0);
- if (strcmp (line, "read") == 0) read_history (0);
- if (strcmp (line, "list") == 0)
- @{
- register HIST_ENTRY **the_list = history_list ();
- register int i;
-
- if (the_list)
- for (i = 0; the_list[i]; i++)
- fprintf (stdout, "%d: %s\n",
- i + history_base, the_list[i]->line);
- @}
- if (strncmp (line, "delete", strlen ("delete")) == 0)
- @{
- int which;
- if ((sscanf (line + strlen ("delete"), "%d", &which)) == 1)
- @{
- HIST_ENTRY *entry = remove_history (which);
- if (!entry)
- fprintf (stderr, "No such entry %d\n", which);
- else
- @{
- free (entry->line);
- free (entry);
- @}
- @}
- else
- @{
- fprintf (stderr, "non-numeric arg given to `delete'\n");
- @}
- @}
- @}
-@}
-@end smallexample
-
-
-
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hsuser.texinfo b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hsuser.texinfo
deleted file mode 100644
index cda0a68..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/hsuser.texinfo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,153 +0,0 @@
-@ignore
-This file documents the user interface to the GNU History library.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-Authored by Brian Fox.
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual
-provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on
-all copies.
-
-Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
-identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
-paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
-GNU Copyright statement is available to the distributee, and provided that
-the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
-permission notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
-@end ignore
-
-@node Using History Interactively
-@chapter Using History Interactively
-
-This chapter describes how to use the GNU History Library interactively,
-from a user's standpoint. It should be considered a user's guide. For
-information on using the GNU History Library in your own programs,
-@pxref{Programming with GNU History}.
-
-@menu
-* History Interaction:: What it feels like using History as a user.
-@end menu
-
-@node History Interaction
-@section History Interaction
-@cindex expansion
-
-The History library provides a history expansion feature that is similar
-to the history expansion in Csh. The following text describes the sytax
-that you use to manipulate the history information.
-
-History expansion takes place in two parts. The first is to determine
-which line from the previous history should be used during substitution.
-The second is to select portions of that line for inclusion into the
-current one. The line selected from the previous history is called the
-@dfn{event}, and the portions of that line that are acted upon are
-called @dfn{words}. The line is broken into words in the same fashion
-that the Bash shell does, so that several English (or Unix) words
-surrounded by quotes are considered as one word.
-
-@menu
-* Event Designators:: How to specify which history line to use.
-* Word Designators:: Specifying which words are of interest.
-* Modifiers:: Modifying the results of susbstitution.
-@end menu
-
-@node Event Designators
-@subsection Event Designators
-@cindex event designators
-
-An event designator is a reference to a command line entry in the
-history list.
-
-@table @asis
-
-@item @code{!}
-Start a history subsititution, except when followed by a space, tab, or
-the end of the line... @key{=} or @key{(}.
-
-@item @code{!!}
-Refer to the previous command. This is a synonym for @code{!-1}.
-
-@item @code{!n}
-Refer to command line @var{n}.
-
-@item @code{!-n}
-Refer to the command line @var{n} lines back.
-
-@item @code{!string}
-Refer to the most recent command starting with @var{string}.
-
-@item @code{!?string}[@code{?}]
-Refer to the most recent command containing @var{string}.
-
-@end table
-
-@node Word Designators
-@subsection Word Designators
-
-A @key{:} separates the event specification from the word designator. It
-can be omitted if the word designator begins with a @key{^}, @key{$},
-@key{*} or @key{%}. Words are numbered from the beginning of the line,
-with the first word being denoted by a 0 (zero).
-
-@table @code
-
-@item 0 (zero)
-The zero'th word. For many applications, this is the command word.
-
-@item n
-The @var{n}'th word.
-
-@item ^
-The first argument. that is, word 1.
-
-@item $
-The last argument.
-
-@item %
-The word matched by the most recent @code{?string?} search.
-
-@item x-y
-A range of words; @code{-@var{y}} Abbreviates @code{0-@var{y}}.
-
-@item *
-All of the words, excepting the zero'th. This is a synonym for @code{1-$}.
-It is not an error to use @key{*} if there is just one word in the event.
-The empty string is returned in that case.
-
-@end table
-
-@node Modifiers
-@subsection Modifiers
-
-After the optional word designator, you can add a sequence of one or more
-of the following modifiers, each preceded by a @key{:}.
-
-@table @code
-
-@item #
-The entire command line typed so far. This means the current command,
-not the previous command, so it really isn't a word designator, and doesn't
-belong in this section.
-
-@item h
-Remove a trailing pathname component, leaving only the head.
-
-@item r
-Remove a trailing suffix of the form @samp{.}@var{suffix}, leaving the basename.
-
-@item e
-Remove all but the suffix.
-
-@item t
-Remove all leading pathname components, leaving the tail.
-
-@item p
-Print the new command but do not execute it.
-@end table
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/inc-hist.texi b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/inc-hist.texi
deleted file mode 100644
index 9cdde40..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/inc-hist.texi
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,159 +0,0 @@
-@ignore
-This file is completely identical to hsuser.texinfo, except that it has the
-reference to the programming manual removed. There are definately better ways
-to do this!
-
-This file documents the user interface to the GNU History library.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-Authored by Brian Fox.
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual
-provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on
-all copies.
-
-Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
-identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
-paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
-GNU Copyright statement is available to the distributee, and provided that
-the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
-permission notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
-@end ignore
-
-@node Using History Interactively
-@appendix Using History Interactively
-
-This chapter describes how to use the GNU History Library interactively,
-from a user's standpoint.
-
-@menu
-* History Interaction:: What it feels like using History as a user.
-@end menu
-
-@node History Interaction
-@section History Interaction
-@cindex expansion
-
-The History library provides a history expansion feature similar
-to the history expansion in @code{csh}. The following text describes the
-syntax you use to manipulate history information.
-
-History expansion takes two parts. In the first part, determine
-which line from the previous history will be used for substitution.
-This line is called the @dfn{event}.
-In the second part, select portions of that line for inclusion into the
-current line. These portions are called @dfn{words}.
-@value{GDBN} breaks the line into words in the same
-way that the Bash shell does, so that several English (or Unix) words
-surrounded by quotes are considered one word.
-
-@menu
-* Event Designators:: How to specify which history line to use.
-* Word Designators:: Specifying which words are of interest.
-* Modifiers:: Modifying the results of susbstitution.
-@end menu
-
-@node Event Designators
-@subsection Event Designators
-@cindex event designators
-
-An @dfn{event designator} is a reference to a command line entry in the
-history list.
-
-@table @asis
-
-@item @code{!}
-Start a history subsititution, except when followed by a space, tab, or
-the end of the line... @key{=} or @key{(}.
-
-@item @code{!!}
-Refer to the previous command. This is a synonym for @code{!-1}.
-
-@item @code{!n}
-Refer to command line @var{n}.
-
-@item @code{!-n}
-Refer to the command line @var{n} lines back.
-
-@item @code{!string}
-Refer to the most recent command starting with @var{string}.
-
-@item @code{!?string}[@code{?}]
-Refer to the most recent command containing @var{string}.
-
-@end table
-
-@node Word Designators
-@subsection Word Designators
-
-A @key{:} separates the event designator from the @dfn{word designator}.
-It can be omitted if the word designator begins with a @key{^}, @key{$},
-@key{*} or @key{%}. Words are numbered from the beginning of the line,
-with the first word being denoted by a 0 (zero).
-
-@table @code
-
-@item 0 (zero)
-The zero'th word. For many applications, this is the command word.
-
-@item n
-The @var{n}'th word.
-
-@item ^
-The first argument. that is, word 1.
-
-@item $
-The last argument.
-
-@item %
-The word matched by the most recent @code{?string?} search.
-
-@item x-y
-A range of words; @code{-@var{y}} Abbreviates @code{0-@var{y}}.
-
-@item *
-All of the words, excepting the zero'th. This is a synonym for @code{1-$}.
-It is not an error to use @key{*} if there is just one word in the event.
-The empty string is returned in that case.
-
-@end table
-
-@node Modifiers
-@subsection Modifiers
-
-After the optional word designator, you can add a sequence of one or more
-of the following @dfn{modifiers}, each preceded by a @key{:}.
-
-@table @code
-
-@item #
-The entire command line typed so far. This means the current command,
-not the previous command.
-@c
-@c FIXME: If it doesn't belong here, let's put it where it does.
-@c
-@c so it technically isn't a word designator and doesn't belong in
-@c this section.
-
-@item h
-Remove a trailing pathname component, leaving only the head.
-
-@item r
-Remove a trailing suffix of the form @samp{.}@var{suffix}, leaving the basename.
-
-@item e
-Remove all but the suffix.
-
-@item t
-Remove all leading pathname components, leaving the tail.
-
-@item p
-Print the new command but do not execute it.
-@end table
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rlman.texinfo b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rlman.texinfo
deleted file mode 100644
index f2e7fb6..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rlman.texinfo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,103 +0,0 @@
-\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
-@comment %**start of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
-@setfilename readline.info
-@settitle GNU Readline Library
-@comment %**end of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
-@synindex vr fn
-@setchapternewpage odd
-
-@ifinfo
-This document describes the GNU Readline Library, a utility which aids
-in the consistency of user interface across discrete programs that need
-to provide a command line interface.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
-this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
-pare preserved on all copies.
-
-@ignore
-Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
-notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
-(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-@end ignore
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
-resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
-notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
-except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
-by the Foundation.
-@end ifinfo
-
-@titlepage
-@sp 10
-@center @titlefont{GNU Readline Library}
-@center Brian Fox
-@center Free Software Foundation
-@center Version 1.1
-@center April 1991
-
-@page
-This document describes the GNU Readline Library, a utility which aids
-in the consistency of user interface across discrete programs that need
-to provide a command line interface.
-
-Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
-675 Massachusetts Avenue, @*
-Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
-this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
-are preserved on all copies.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
-resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
-notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
-except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
-by the Foundation.
-
-@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
-Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-@end titlepage
-
-@ifinfo
-@node Top
-@top GNU Readline Library
-
-This document describes the GNU Readline Library, a utility which aids
-in the consistency of user interface across discrete programs that need
-to provide a command line interface.
-
-@menu
-* Command Line Editing:: GNU Readline User's Manual.
-* Programming with GNU Readline:: GNU Readline Programmer's Manual.
-* Concept Index:: Index of concepts described in this manual.
-* Function and Variable Index:: Index of externally visible functions
- and variables.
-@end menu
-@end ifinfo
-
-@include rluser.texinfo
-@include rltech.texinfo
-
-@node Concept Index
-@unnumbered Concept Index
-@printindex cp
-
-@node Function and Variable Index
-@unnumbered Function and Variable Index
-@printindex fn
-
-@contents
-@bye
-
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rltech.texinfo b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rltech.texinfo
deleted file mode 100644
index 2048b7c..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rltech.texinfo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1012 +0,0 @@
-@comment %**start of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
-@setfilename rltech.info
-@comment %**end of header (This is for running Texinfo on a region.)
-@setchapternewpage odd
-
-@ifinfo
-This document describes the GNU Readline Library, a utility for aiding
-in the consitency of user interface across discrete programs that need
-to provide a command line interface.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
-this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
-pare preserved on all copies.
-
-@ignore
-Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
-notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
-(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-@end ignore
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
-resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
-notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
-except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
-by the Foundation.
-@end ifinfo
-
-@node Programming with GNU Readline
-@chapter Programming with GNU Readline
-
-This manual describes the interface between the GNU Readline Library and
-user programs. If you are a programmer, and you wish to include the
-features found in GNU Readline in your own programs, such as completion,
-line editing, and interactive history manipulation, this documentation
-is for you.
-
-@menu
-* Default Behaviour:: Using the default behaviour of Readline.
-* Custom Functions:: Adding your own functions to Readline.
-* Custom Completers:: Supplanting or supplementing Readline's
- completion functions.
-@end menu
-
-@node Default Behaviour
-@section Default Behaviour
-
-Many programs provide a command line interface, such as @code{mail},
-@code{ftp}, and @code{sh}. For such programs, the default behaviour of
-Readline is sufficient. This section describes how to use Readline in
-the simplest way possible, perhaps to replace calls in your code to
-@code{gets ()}.
-
-@findex readline ()
-@cindex readline, function
-The function @code{readline} prints a prompt and then reads and returns
-a single line of text from the user. The line which @code{readline ()}
-returns is allocated with @code{malloc ()}; you should @code{free ()}
-the line when you are done with it. The declaration for @code{readline}
-in ANSI C is
-
-@example
-@code{char *readline (char *@var{prompt});}
-@end example
-
-So, one might say
-@example
-@code{char *line = readline ("Enter a line: ");}
-@end example
-in order to read a line of text from the user.
-
-The line which is returned has the final newline removed, so only the
-text of the line remains.
-
-If readline encounters an @code{EOF} while reading the line, and the
-line is empty at that point, then @code{(char *)NULL} is returned.
-Otherwise, the line is ended just as if a newline was typed.
-
-If you want the user to be able to get at the line later, (with
-@key{C-p} for example), you must call @code{add_history ()} to save the
-line away in a @dfn{history} list of such lines.
-
-@example
-@code{add_history (line)};
-@end example
-
-For full details on the GNU History Library, see the associated manual.
-
-It is polite to avoid saving empty lines on the history list, since it
-is rare than someone has a burning need to reuse a blank line. Here is
-a function which usefully replaces the standard @code{gets ()} library
-function:
-
-@example
-/* A static variable for holding the line. */
-static char *line_read = (char *)NULL;
-
-/* Read a string, and return a pointer to it. Returns NULL on EOF. */
-char *
-do_gets ()
-@{
- /* If the buffer has already been allocated, return the memory
- to the free pool. */
- if (line_read != (char *)NULL)
- @{
- free (line_read);
- line_read = (char *)NULL;
- @}
-
- /* Get a line from the user. */
- line_read = readline ("");
-
- /* If the line has any text in it, save it on the history. */
- if (line_read && *line_read)
- add_history (line_read);
-
- return (line_read);
-@}
-@end example
-
-The above code gives the user the default behaviour of @key{TAB}
-completion: completion on file names. If you do not want readline to
-complete on filenames, you can change the binding of the @key{TAB} key
-with @code{rl_bind_key ()}.
-
-@findex rl_bind_key ()
-@example
-@code{int rl_bind_key (int @var{key}, int (*@var{function})());}
-@end example
-
-@code{rl_bind_key ()} takes 2 arguments; @var{key} is the character that
-you want to bind, and @var{function} is the address of the function to
-run when @var{key} is pressed. Binding @key{TAB} to @code{rl_insert ()}
-makes @key{TAB} just insert itself.
-
-@code{rl_bind_key ()} returns non-zero if @var{key} is not a valid
-ASCII character code (between 0 and 255).
-
-@example
-@code{rl_bind_key ('\t', rl_insert);}
-@end example
-
-This code should be executed once at the start of your program; you
-might write a function called @code{initialize_readline ()} which
-performs this and other desired initializations, such as installing
-custom completers, etc.
-
-@node Custom Functions
-@section Custom Functions
-
-Readline provides a great many functions for manipulating the text of
-the line. But it isn't possible to anticipate the needs of all
-programs. This section describes the various functions and variables
-defined in within the Readline library which allow a user program to add
-customized functionality to Readline.
-
-@menu
-* The Function Type:: C declarations to make code readable.
-* Function Naming:: How to give a function you write a name.
-* Keymaps:: Making keymaps.
-* Binding Keys:: Changing Keymaps.
-* Function Writing:: Variables and calling conventions.
-* Allowing Undoing:: How to make your functions undoable.
-@end menu
-
-@node The Function Type
-@subsection The Function Type
-
-For the sake of readabilty, we declare a new type of object, called
-@dfn{Function}. A @code{Function} is a C language function which
-returns an @code{int}. The type declaration for @code{Function} is:
-
-@noindent
-@code{typedef int Function ();}
-
-The reason for declaring this new type is to make it easier to write
-code describing pointers to C functions. Let us say we had a variable
-called @var{func} which was a pointer to a function. Instead of the
-classic C declaration
-
-@code{int (*)()func;}
-
-we have
-
-@code{Function *func;}
-
-@node Function Naming
-@subsection Naming a Function
-
-The user can dynamically change the bindings of keys while using
-Readline. This is done by representing the function with a descriptive
-name. The user is able to type the descriptive name when referring to
-the function. Thus, in an init file, one might find
-
-@example
-Meta-Rubout: backward-kill-word
-@end example
-
-This binds the keystroke @key{Meta-Rubout} to the function
-@emph{descriptively} named @code{backward-kill-word}. You, as the
-programmer, should bind the functions you write to descriptive names as
-well. Readline provides a function for doing that:
-
-@defun rl_add_defun (char *name, Function *function, int key)
-Add @var{name} to the list of named functions. Make @var{function} be
-the function that gets called. If @var{key} is not -1, then bind it to
-@var{function} using @code{rl_bind_key ()}.
-@end defun
-
-Using this function alone is sufficient for most applications. It is
-the recommended way to add a few functions to the default functions that
-Readline has built in already. If you need to do more or different
-things than adding a function to Readline, you may need to use the
-underlying functions described below.
-
-@node Keymaps
-@subsection Selecting a Keymap
-
-Key bindings take place on a @dfn{keymap}. The keymap is the
-association between the keys that the user types and the functions that
-get run. You can make your own keymaps, copy existing keymaps, and tell
-Readline which keymap to use.
-
-@defun {Keymap rl_make_bare_keymap} ()
-Returns a new, empty keymap. The space for the keymap is allocated with
-@code{malloc ()}; you should @code{free ()} it when you are done.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {Keymap rl_copy_keymap} (Keymap map)
-Return a new keymap which is a copy of @var{map}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {Keymap rl_make_keymap} ()
-Return a new keymap with the printing characters bound to rl_insert,
-the lowercase Meta characters bound to run their equivalents, and
-the Meta digits bound to produce numeric arguments.
-@end defun
-
-@node Binding Keys
-@subsection Binding Keys
-
-You associate keys with functions through the keymap. Here are
-functions for doing that.
-
-@defun {int rl_bind_key} (int key, Function *function)
-Binds @var{key} to @var{function} in the currently selected keymap.
-Returns non-zero in the case of an invalid @var{key}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int rl_bind_key_in_map} (int key, Function *function, Keymap map)
-Bind @var{key} to @var{function} in @var{map}. Returns non-zero in the case
-of an invalid @var{key}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int rl_unbind_key} (int key)
-Make @var{key} do nothing in the currently selected keymap.
-Returns non-zero in case of error.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {int rl_unbind_key_in_map} (int key, Keymap map)
-Make @var{key} be bound to the null function in @var{map}.
-Returns non-zero in case of error.
-@end defun
-
-@defun rl_generic_bind (int type, char *keyseq, char *data, Keymap map)
-Bind the key sequence represented by the string @var{keyseq} to the arbitrary
-pointer @var{data}. @var{type} says what kind of data is pointed to by
-@var{data}; right now this can be a function (@code{ISFUNC}), a macro
-(@code{ISMACR}), or a keymap (@code{ISKMAP}). This makes new keymaps as
-necessary. The initial place to do bindings is in @var{map}.
-@end defun
-
-@node Function Writing
-@subsection Writing a New Function
-
-In order to write new functions for Readline, you need to know the
-calling conventions for keyboard invoked functions, and the names of the
-variables that describe the current state of the line gathered so far.
-
-@defvar {char *rl_line_buffer}
-This is the line gathered so far. You are welcome to modify the
-contents of this, but see Undoing, below.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {int rl_point}
-The offset of the current cursor position in @var{rl_line_buffer}.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {int rl_end}
-The number of characters present in @code{rl_line_buffer}. When
-@code{rl_point} is at the end of the line, then @code{rl_point} and
-@code{rl_end} are equal.
-@end defvar
-
-The calling sequence for a command @code{foo} looks like
-
-@example
-@code{foo (int count, int key)}
-@end example
-
-where @var{count} is the numeric argument (or 1 if defaulted) and
-@var{key} is the key that invoked this function.
-
-It is completely up to the function as to what should be done with the
-numeric argument; some functions use it as a repeat count, other
-functions as a flag, and some choose to ignore it. In general, if a
-function uses the numeric argument as a repeat count, it should be able
-to do something useful with a negative argument as well as a positive
-argument. At the very least, it should be aware that it can be passed a
-negative argument.
-
-@node Allowing Undoing
-@subsection Allowing Undoing
-
-Supporting the undo command is a painless thing to do, and makes your
-functions much more useful to the end user. It is certainly easy to try
-something if you know you can undo it. I could use an undo function for
-the stock market.
-
-If your function simply inserts text once, or deletes text once, and it
-calls @code{rl_insert_text ()} or @code{rl_delete_text ()} to do it, then
-undoing is already done for you automatically, and you can safely skip
-this section.
-
-If you do multiple insertions or multiple deletions, or any combination
-of these operations, you should group them together into one operation.
-This can be done with @code{rl_begin_undo_group ()} and
-@code{rl_end_undo_group ()}.
-
-@defun rl_begin_undo_group ()
-Begins saving undo information in a group construct. The undo
-information usually comes from calls to @code{rl_insert_text ()} and
-@code{rl_delete_text ()}, but they could be direct calls to
-@code{rl_add_undo ()}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun rl_end_undo_group ()
-Closes the current undo group started with @code{rl_begin_undo_group
-()}. There should be exactly one call to @code{rl_end_undo_group ()}
-for every call to @code{rl_begin_undo_group ()}.
-@end defun
-
-Finally, if you neither insert nor delete text, but directly modify the
-existing text (e.g. change its case), you call @code{rl_modifying ()}
-once, just before you modify the text. You must supply the indices of
-the text range that you are going to modify.
-
-@defun rl_modifying (int start, int end)
-Tell Readline to save the text between @var{start} and @var{end} as a
-single undo unit. It is assumed that subsequent to this call you will
-modify that range of text in some way.
-@end defun
-
-@subsection An Example
-
-Here is a function which changes lowercase characters to the uppercase
-equivalents, and uppercase characters to the lowercase equivalents. If
-this function was bound to @samp{M-c}, then typing @samp{M-c} would
-change the case of the character under point. Typing @samp{10 M-c}
-would change the case of the following 10 characters, leaving the cursor on
-the last character changed.
-
-@example
-/* Invert the case of the COUNT following characters. */
-invert_case_line (count, key)
- int count, key;
-@{
- register int start, end;
-
- start = rl_point;
-
- if (count < 0)
- @{
- direction = -1;
- count = -count;
- @}
- else
- direction = 1;
-
- /* Find the end of the range to modify. */
- end = start + (count * direction);
-
- /* Force it to be within range. */
- if (end > rl_end)
- end = rl_end;
- else if (end < 0)
- end = -1;
-
- if (start > end)
- @{
- int temp = start;
- start = end;
- end = temp;
- @}
-
- if (start == end)
- return;
-
- /* Tell readline that we are modifying the line, so save the undo
- information. */
- rl_modifying (start, end);
-
- for (; start != end; start += direction)
- @{
- if (uppercase_p (rl_line_buffer[start]))
- rl_line_buffer[start] = to_lower (rl_line_buffer[start]);
- else if (lowercase_p (rl_line_buffer[start]))
- rl_line_buffer[start] = to_upper (rl_line_buffer[start]);
- @}
- /* Move point to on top of the last character changed. */
- rl_point = end - direction;
-@}
-@end example
-
-@node Custom Completers
-@section Custom Completers
-
-Typically, a program that reads commands from the user has a way of
-disambiguating commands and data. If your program is one of these, then
-it can provide completion for either commands, or data, or both commands
-and data. The following sections describe how your program and Readline
-cooperate to provide this service to end users.
-
-@menu
-* How Completing Works:: The logic used to do completion.
-* Completion Functions:: Functions provided by Readline.
-* Completion Variables:: Variables which control completion.
-* A Short Completion Example:: An example of writing completer subroutines.
-@end menu
-
-@node How Completing Works
-@subsection How Completing Works
-
-In order to complete some text, the full list of possible completions
-must be available. That is to say, it is not possible to accurately
-expand a partial word without knowing what all of the possible words
-that make sense in that context are. The GNU Readline library provides
-the user interface to completion, and additionally, two of the most common
-completion functions; filename and username. For completing other types
-of text, you must write your own completion function. This section
-describes exactly what those functions must do, and provides an example
-function.
-
-There are three major functions used to perform completion:
-
-@enumerate
-@item
-The user-interface function @code{rl_complete ()}. This function is
-called interactively with the same calling conventions as other
-functions in readline intended for interactive use; i.e. @var{count},
-and @var{invoking-key}. It isolates the word to be completed and calls
-@code{completion_matches ()} to generate a list of possible completions.
-It then either lists the possible completions or actually performs the
-completion, depending on which behaviour is desired.
-
-@item
-The internal function @code{completion_matches ()} uses your
-@dfn{generator} function to generate the list of possible matches, and
-then returns the array of these matches. You should place the address
-of your generator function in @code{rl_completion_entry_function}.
-
-@item
-The generator function is called repeatedly from
-@code{completion_matches ()}, returning a string each time. The
-arguments to the generator function are @var{text} and @var{state}.
-@var{text} is the partial word to be completed. @var{state} is zero the
-first time the function is called, and a positive non-zero integer for
-each subsequent call. When the generator function returns @code{(char
-*)NULL} this signals @code{completion_matches ()} that there are no more
-possibilities left.
-
-@end enumerate
-
-@defun rl_complete (int ignore, int invoking_key)
-Complete the word at or before point. You have supplied the function
-that does the initial simple matching selection algorithm (see
-@code{completion_matches ()}). The default is to do filename completion.
-@end defun
-
-Note that @code{rl_complete ()} has the identical calling conventions as
-any other key-invokable function; this is because by default it is bound
-to the @samp{TAB} key.
-
-@defvar {Function *rl_completion_entry_function}
-This is a pointer to the generator function for @code{completion_matches
-()}. If the value of @code{rl_completion_entry_function} is
-@code{(Function *)NULL} then the default filename generator function is
-used, namely @code{filename_entry_function ()}.
-@end defvar
-
-@node Completion Functions
-@subsection Completion Functions
-
-Here is the complete list of callable completion functions present in
-Readline.
-
-@defun rl_complete_internal (int what_to_do)
-Complete the word at or before point. @var{what_to_do} says what to do
-with the completion. A value of @samp{?} means list the possible
-completions. @samp{TAB} means do standard completion. @samp{*} means
-insert all of the possible completions.
-@end defun
-
-@defun rl_complete (int ignore, int invoking_key)
-Complete the word at or before point. You have supplied the function
-that does the initial simple matching selection algorithm (see
-@code{completion_matches ()}). The default is to do filename
-completion. This just calls @code{rl_complete_internal ()} with an
-argument of @samp{TAB}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun rl_possible_completions ()
-List the possible completions. See description of @code{rl_complete
-()}. This just calls @code{rl_complete_internal ()} with an argument of
-@samp{?}.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {char **completion_matches} (char *text, char *(*entry_function) ())
-Returns an array of @code{(char *)} which is a list of completions for
-@var{text}. If there are no completions, returns @code{(char **)NULL}.
-The first entry in the returned array is the substitution for @var{text}.
-The remaining entries are the possible completions. The array is
-terminated with a @code{NULL} pointer.
-
-@var{entry_function} is a function of two args, and returns a
-@code{(char *)}. The first argument is @var{text}. The second is a
-state argument; it is zero on the first call, and non-zero on subsequent
-calls. It returns a @code{NULL} pointer to the caller when there are
-no more matches.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {char *filename_completion_function} (char *text, int state)
-A generator function for filename completion in the general case. Note
-that completion in the Bash shell is a little different because of all
-the pathnames that must be followed when looking up the completion for a
-command.
-@end defun
-
-@defun {char *username_completion_function} (char *text, int state)
-A completion generator for usernames. @var{text} contains a partial
-username preceded by a random character (usually @samp{~}).
-@end defun
-
-@node Completion Variables
-@subsection Completion Variables
-
-@defvar {Function *rl_completion_entry_function}
-A pointer to the generator function for @code{completion_matches ()}.
-@code{NULL} means to use @code{filename_entry_function ()}, the default
-filename completer.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {Function *rl_attempted_completion_function}
-A pointer to an alternative function to create matches.
-The function is called with @var{text}, @var{start}, and @var{end}.
-@var{start} and @var{end} are indices in @code{rl_line_buffer} saying
-what the boundaries of @var{text} are. If this function exists and
-returns @code{NULL} then @code{rl_complete ()} will call the value of
-@code{rl_completion_entry_function} to generate matches, otherwise the
-array of strings returned will be used.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {int rl_completion_query_items}
-Up to this many items will be displayed in response to a
-possible-completions call. After that, we ask the user if she is sure
-she wants to see them all. The default value is 100.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {char *rl_basic_word_break_characters}
-The basic list of characters that signal a break between words for the
-completer routine. The contents of this variable is what breaks words
-in the Bash shell, i.e. " \t\n\"\\'`@@$><=;|&@{(".
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {char *rl_completer_word_break_characters}
-The list of characters that signal a break between words for
-@code{rl_complete_internal ()}. The default list is the contents of
-@code{rl_basic_word_break_characters}.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {char *rl_special_prefixes}
-The list of characters that are word break characters, but should be
-left in @var{text} when it is passed to the completion function.
-Programs can use this to help determine what kind of completing to do.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {int rl_ignore_completion_duplicates}
-If non-zero, then disallow duplicates in the matches. Default is 1.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {int rl_filename_completion_desired}
-Non-zero means that the results of the matches are to be treated as
-filenames. This is @emph{always} zero on entry, and can only be changed
-within a completion entry generator function.
-@end defvar
-
-@defvar {Function *rl_ignore_some_completions_function}
-This function, if defined, is called by the completer when real filename
-completion is done, after all the matching names have been generated.
-It is passed a @code{NULL} terminated array of @code{(char *)} known as
-@var{matches} in the code. The 1st element (@code{matches[0]}) is the
-maximal substring that is common to all matches. This function can
-re-arrange the list of matches as required, but each deleted element of
-the array must be @code{free()}'d.
-@end defvar
-
-@node A Short Completion Example
-@subsection A Short Completion Example
-
-Here is a small application demonstrating the use of the GNU Readline
-library. It is called @code{fileman}, and the source code resides in
-@file{readline/examples/fileman.c}. This sample application provides
-completion of command names, line editing features, and access to the
-history list.
-
-@page
-@smallexample
-/* fileman.c -- A tiny application which demonstrates how to use the
- GNU Readline library. This application interactively allows users
- to manipulate files and their modes. */
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <readline/readline.h>
-#include <readline/history.h>
-#include <sys/types.h>
-#include <sys/file.h>
-#include <sys/stat.h>
-#include <sys/errno.h>
-
-/* The names of functions that actually do the manipulation. */
-int com_list (), com_view (), com_rename (), com_stat (), com_pwd ();
-int com_delete (), com_help (), com_cd (), com_quit ();
-
-/* A structure which contains information on the commands this program
- can understand. */
-
-typedef struct @{
- char *name; /* User printable name of the function. */
- Function *func; /* Function to call to do the job. */
- char *doc; /* Documentation for this function. */
-@} COMMAND;
-
-COMMAND commands[] = @{
- @{ "cd", com_cd, "Change to directory DIR" @},
- @{ "delete", com_delete, "Delete FILE" @},
- @{ "help", com_help, "Display this text" @},
- @{ "?", com_help, "Synonym for `help'" @},
- @{ "list", com_list, "List files in DIR" @},
- @{ "ls", com_list, "Synonym for `list'" @},
- @{ "pwd", com_pwd, "Print the current working directory" @},
- @{ "quit", com_quit, "Quit using Fileman" @},
- @{ "rename", com_rename, "Rename FILE to NEWNAME" @},
- @{ "stat", com_stat, "Print out statistics on FILE" @},
- @{ "view", com_view, "View the contents of FILE" @},
- @{ (char *)NULL, (Function *)NULL, (char *)NULL @}
-@};
-
-/* The name of this program, as taken from argv[0]. */
-char *progname;
-
-/* When non-zero, this global means the user is done using this program. */
-int done = 0;
-@page
-main (argc, argv)
- int argc;
- char **argv;
-@{
- progname = argv[0];
-
- initialize_readline (); /* Bind our completer. */
-
- /* Loop reading and executing lines until the user quits. */
- while (!done)
- @{
- char *line;
-
- line = readline ("FileMan: ");
-
- if (!line)
- @{
- done = 1; /* Encountered EOF at top level. */
- @}
- else
- @{
- /* Remove leading and trailing whitespace from the line.
- Then, if there is anything left, add it to the history list
- and execute it. */
- stripwhite (line);
-
- if (*line)
- @{
- add_history (line);
- execute_line (line);
- @}
- @}
-
- if (line)
- free (line);
- @}
- exit (0);
-@}
-
-/* Execute a command line. */
-execute_line (line)
- char *line;
-@{
- register int i;
- COMMAND *find_command (), *command;
- char *word;
-
- /* Isolate the command word. */
- i = 0;
- while (line[i] && !whitespace (line[i]))
- i++;
-
- word = line;
-
- if (line[i])
- line[i++] = '\0';
-
- command = find_command (word);
-
- if (!command)
- @{
- fprintf (stderr, "%s: No such command for FileMan.\n", word);
- return;
- @}
-
- /* Get argument to command, if any. */
- while (whitespace (line[i]))
- i++;
-
- word = line + i;
-
- /* Call the function. */
- (*(command->func)) (word);
-@}
-
-/* Look up NAME as the name of a command, and return a pointer to that
- command. Return a NULL pointer if NAME isn't a command name. */
-COMMAND *
-find_command (name)
- char *name;
-@{
- register int i;
-
- for (i = 0; commands[i].name; i++)
- if (strcmp (name, commands[i].name) == 0)
- return (&commands[i]);
-
- return ((COMMAND *)NULL);
-@}
-
-/* Strip whitespace from the start and end of STRING. */
-stripwhite (string)
- char *string;
-@{
- register int i = 0;
-
- while (whitespace (string[i]))
- i++;
-
- if (i)
- strcpy (string, string + i);
-
- i = strlen (string) - 1;
-
- while (i > 0 && whitespace (string[i]))
- i--;
-
- string[++i] = '\0';
-@}
-@page
-/* **************************************************************** */
-/* */
-/* Interface to Readline Completion */
-/* */
-/* **************************************************************** */
-
-/* Tell the GNU Readline library how to complete. We want to try to complete
- on command names if this is the first word in the line, or on filenames
- if not. */
-initialize_readline ()
-@{
- char **fileman_completion ();
-
- /* Allow conditional parsing of the ~/.inputrc file. */
- rl_readline_name = "FileMan";
-
- /* Tell the completer that we want a crack first. */
- rl_attempted_completion_function = (Function *)fileman_completion;
-@}
-
-/* Attempt to complete on the contents of TEXT. START and END show the
- region of TEXT that contains the word to complete. We can use the
- entire line in case we want to do some simple parsing. Return the
- array of matches, or NULL if there aren't any. */
-char **
-fileman_completion (text, start, end)
- char *text;
- int start, end;
-@{
- char **matches;
- char *command_generator ();
-
- matches = (char **)NULL;
-
- /* If this word is at the start of the line, then it is a command
- to complete. Otherwise it is the name of a file in the current
- directory. */
- if (start == 0)
- matches = completion_matches (text, command_generator);
-
- return (matches);
-@}
-
-/* Generator function for command completion. STATE lets us know whether
- to start from scratch; without any state (i.e. STATE == 0), then we
- start at the top of the list. */
-char *
-command_generator (text, state)
- char *text;
- int state;
-@{
- static int list_index, len;
- char *name;
-
- /* If this is a new word to complete, initialize now. This includes
- saving the length of TEXT for efficiency, and initializing the index
- variable to 0. */
- if (!state)
- @{
- list_index = 0;
- len = strlen (text);
- @}
-
- /* Return the next name which partially matches from the command list. */
- while (name = commands[list_index].name)
- @{
- list_index++;
-
- if (strncmp (name, text, len) == 0)
- return (name);
- @}
-
- /* If no names matched, then return NULL. */
- return ((char *)NULL);
-@}
-@page
-/* **************************************************************** */
-/* */
-/* FileMan Commands */
-/* */
-/* **************************************************************** */
-
-/* String to pass to system (). This is for the LIST, VIEW and RENAME
- commands. */
-static char syscom[1024];
-
-/* List the file(s) named in arg. */
-com_list (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- if (!arg)
- arg = "*";
-
- sprintf (syscom, "ls -FClg %s", arg);
- system (syscom);
-@}
-
-com_view (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- if (!valid_argument ("view", arg))
- return;
-
- sprintf (syscom, "cat %s | more", arg);
- system (syscom);
-@}
-
-com_rename (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- too_dangerous ("rename");
-@}
-
-com_stat (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- struct stat finfo;
-
- if (!valid_argument ("stat", arg))
- return;
-
- if (stat (arg, &finfo) == -1)
- @{
- perror (arg);
- return;
- @}
-
- printf ("Statistics for `%s':\n", arg);
-
- printf ("%s has %d link%s, and is %d bytes in length.\n", arg,
- finfo.st_nlink, (finfo.st_nlink == 1) ? "" : "s", finfo.st_size);
- printf (" Created on: %s", ctime (&finfo.st_ctime));
- printf (" Last access at: %s", ctime (&finfo.st_atime));
- printf ("Last modified at: %s", ctime (&finfo.st_mtime));
-@}
-
-com_delete (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- too_dangerous ("delete");
-@}
-
-/* Print out help for ARG, or for all of the commands if ARG is
- not present. */
-com_help (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- register int i;
- int printed = 0;
-
- for (i = 0; commands[i].name; i++)
- @{
- if (!*arg || (strcmp (arg, commands[i].name) == 0))
- @{
- printf ("%s\t\t%s.\n", commands[i].name, commands[i].doc);
- printed++;
- @}
- @}
-
- if (!printed)
- @{
- printf ("No commands match `%s'. Possibilties are:\n", arg);
-
- for (i = 0; commands[i].name; i++)
- @{
- /* Print in six columns. */
- if (printed == 6)
- @{
- printed = 0;
- printf ("\n");
- @}
-
- printf ("%s\t", commands[i].name);
- printed++;
- @}
-
- if (printed)
- printf ("\n");
- @}
-@}
-
-/* Change to the directory ARG. */
-com_cd (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- if (chdir (arg) == -1)
- perror (arg);
-
- com_pwd ("");
-@}
-
-/* Print out the current working directory. */
-com_pwd (ignore)
- char *ignore;
-@{
- char dir[1024];
-
- (void) getwd (dir);
-
- printf ("Current directory is %s\n", dir);
-@}
-
-/* The user wishes to quit using this program. Just set DONE non-zero. */
-com_quit (arg)
- char *arg;
-@{
- done = 1;
-@}
-
-/* Function which tells you that you can't do this. */
-too_dangerous (caller)
- char *caller;
-@{
- fprintf (stderr,
- "%s: Too dangerous for me to distribute. Write it yourself.\n",
- caller);
-@}
-
-/* Return non-zero if ARG is a valid argument for CALLER, else print
- an error message and return zero. */
-int
-valid_argument (caller, arg)
- char *caller, *arg;
-@{
- if (!arg || !*arg)
- @{
- fprintf (stderr, "%s: Argument required.\n", caller);
- return (0);
- @}
-
- return (1);
-@}
-@end smallexample
diff --git a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rluser.texinfo b/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rluser.texinfo
deleted file mode 100644
index da11111..0000000
--- a/contrib/gdb/readline/doc/rluser.texinfo
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,566 +0,0 @@
-@ignore
-This file documents the end user interface to the GNU command line
-editing feautres. It is to be an appendix to manuals for programs which
-use these features. There is a document entitled "readline.texinfo"
-which contains both end-user and programmer documentation for the GNU
-Readline Library.
-
-Copyright (C) 1988 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
-Authored by Brian Fox.
-
-Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
-results, provided the printed document carries copying permission notice
-identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this
-paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
-
-Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual
-provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on
-all copies.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
-manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
-GNU Copyright statement is available to the distributee, and provided that
-the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
-permission notice identical to this one.
-
-Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
-into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
-@end ignore
-
-@node Command Line Editing
-@appendix Command Line Editing
-
-This text describes GNU's command line editing interface.
-
-@menu
-* Introduction and Notation:: Notation used in this text.
-* Readline Interaction:: The minimum set of commands for editing a line.
-* Readline Init File:: Customizing Readline from a user's view.
-@end menu
-
-@node Introduction and Notation
-@section Introduction to Line Editing
-
-The following paragraphs describe the notation we use to represent
-keystrokes.
-
-The text @key{C-k} is read as `Control-K' and describes the character
-produced when the Control key is depressed and the @key{k} key is struck.
-
-The text @key{M-k} is read as `Meta-K' and describes the character
-produced when the meta key (if you have one) is depressed, and the @key{k}
-key is struck. If you do not have a meta key, the identical keystroke
-can be generated by typing @key{ESC} @i{first}, and then typing @key{k}.
-Either process is known as @dfn{metafying} the @key{k} key.
-
-The text @key{M-C-k} is read as `Meta-Control-k' and describes the
-character produced by @dfn{metafying} @key{C-k}.
-
-In addition, several keys have their own names. Specifically,
-@key{DEL}, @key{ESC}, @key{LFD}, @key{SPC}, @key{RET}, and @key{TAB} all
-stand for themselves when seen in this text, or in an init file
-(@pxref{Readline Init File}, for more info).
-
-@node Readline Interaction
-@section Readline Interaction
-@cindex interaction, readline
-
-Often during an interactive session you type in a long line of text,
-only to notice that the first word on the line is misspelled. The
-Readline library gives you a set of commands for manipulating the text
-as you type it in, allowing you to just fix your typo, and not forcing
-you to retype the majority of the line. Using these editing commands,
-you move the cursor to the place that needs correction, and delete or
-insert the text of the corrections. Then, when you are satisfied with
-the line, you simply press @key{RET}. You do not have to be at the
-end of the line to press @key{RET}; the entire line is accepted
-regardless of the location of the cursor within the line.
-
-@menu
-* Readline Bare Essentials:: The least you need to know about Readline.
-* Readline Movement Commands:: Moving about the input line.
-* Readline Killing Commands:: How to delete text, and how to get it back!
-* Readline Arguments:: Giving numeric arguments to commands.
-@end menu
-
-@node Readline Bare Essentials
-@subsection Readline Bare Essentials
-
-In order to enter characters into the line, simply type them. The typed
-character appears where the cursor was, and then the cursor moves one
-space to the right. If you mistype a character, you can use @key{DEL} to
-back up, and delete the mistyped character.
-
-Sometimes you may miss typing a character that you wanted to type, and
-not notice your error until you have typed several other characters. In
-that case, you can type @key{C-b} to move the cursor to the left, and then
-correct your mistake. Aftwerwards, you can move the cursor to the right
-with @key{C-f}.
-
-When you add text in the middle of a line, you will notice that characters
-to the right of the cursor get `pushed over' to make room for the text
-that you have inserted. Likewise, when you delete text behind the cursor,
-characters to the right of the cursor get `pulled back' to fill in the
-blank space created by the removal of the text. A list of the basic bare
-essentials for editing the text of an input line follows.
-
-@table @asis
-@item @key{C-b}
-Move back one character.
-@item @key{C-f}
-Move forward one character.
-@item @key{DEL}
-Delete the character to the left of the cursor.
-@item @key{C-d}
-Delete the character underneath the cursor.
-@item @w{Printing characters}
-Insert itself into the line at the cursor.
-@item @key{C-_}
-Undo the last thing that you did. You can undo all the way back to an
-empty line.
-@end table
-
-@node Readline Movement Commands
-@subsection Readline Movement Commands
-
-The above table describes the most basic possible keystrokes that you need
-in order to do editing of the input line. For your convenience, many
-other commands have been added in addition to @key{C-b}, @key{C-f},
-@key{C-d}, and @key{DEL}. Here are some commands for moving more rapidly
-about the line.
-
-@table @key
-@item C-a
-Move to the start of the line.
-@item C-e
-Move to the end of the line.
-@item M-f
-Move forward a word.
-@item M-b
-Move backward a word.
-@item C-l
-Clear the screen, reprinting the current line at the top.
-@end table
-
-Notice how @key{C-f} moves forward a character, while @key{M-f} moves
-forward a word. It is a loose convention that control keystrokes
-operate on characters while meta keystrokes operate on words.
-
-@node Readline Killing Commands
-@subsection Readline Killing Commands
-
-@dfn{Killing} text means to delete the text from the line, but to save
-it away for later use, usually by @dfn{yanking} it back into the line.
-If the description for a command says that it `kills' text, then you can
-be sure that you can get the text back in a different (or the same)
-place later.
-
-Here is the list of commands for killing text.
-
-@table @key
-@item C-k
-Kill the text from the current cursor position to the end of the line.
-
-@item M-d
-Kill from the cursor to the end of the current word, or if between
-words, to the end of the next word.
-
-@item M-DEL
-Kill from the cursor to the start of the previous word, or if between
-words, to the start of the previous word.
-
-@item C-w
-Kill from the cursor to the previous whitespace. This is different than
-@key{M-DEL} because the word boundaries differ.
-
-@end table
-
-And, here is how to @dfn{yank} the text back into the line.
-
-@table @key
-@item C-y
-Yank the most recently killed text back into the buffer at the cursor.
-
-@item M-y
-Rotate the kill-ring, and yank the new top. You can only do this if
-the prior command is @key{C-y} or @key{M-y}.
-@end table
-
-When you use a kill command, the text is saved in a @dfn{kill-ring}.
-Any number of consecutive kills save all of the killed text together, so
-that when you yank it back, you get it in one clean sweep. The kill
-ring is not line specific; the text that you killed on a previously
-typed line is available to be yanked back later, when you are typing
-another line.
-
-@node Readline Arguments
-@subsection Readline Arguments
-
-You can pass numeric arguments to Readline commands. Sometimes the
-argument acts as a repeat count, other times it is the @i{sign} of the
-argument that is significant. If you pass a negative argument to a
-command which normally acts in a forward direction, that command will
-act in a backward direction. For example, to kill text back to the
-start of the line, you might type @key{M--} @key{C-k}.
-
-The general way to pass numeric arguments to a command is to type meta
-digits before the command. If the first `digit' you type is a minus
-sign (@key{-}), then the sign of the argument will be negative. Once
-you have typed one meta digit to get the argument started, you can type
-the remainder of the digits, and then the command. For example, to give
-the @key{C-d} command an argument of 10, you could type @key{M-1 0 C-d}.
-
-
-@node Readline Init File
-@section Readline Init File
-
-Although the Readline library comes with a set of @sc{gnu} Emacs-like
-keybindings, it is possible that you would like to use a different set
-of keybindings. You can customize programs that use Readline by putting
-commands in an @dfn{init} file in your home directory. The name of this
-file is @file{~/.inputrc}.
-
-When a program which uses the Readline library starts up, the
-@file{~/.inputrc} file is read, and the keybindings are set.
-
-In addition, the @key{C-x C-r} command re-reads this init file, thus
-incorporating any changes that you might have made to it.
-
-@menu
-* Readline Init Syntax:: Syntax for the commands in @file{~/.inputrc}.
-* Readline vi Mode:: Switching to @code{vi} mode in Readline.
-@end menu
-
-@node Readline Init Syntax
-@subsection Readline Init Syntax
-
-There are only four constructs allowed in the @file{~/.inputrc}
-file:
-
-@table @asis
-@item Variable Settings
-You can change the state of a few variables in Readline. You do this by
-using the @code{set} command within the init file. Here is how you
-would specify that you wish to use @code{vi} line editing commands:
-
-@example
-set editing-mode vi
-@end example
-
-Right now, there are only a few variables which can be set; so few in
-fact, that we just iterate them here:
-
-@table @code
-
-@item editing-mode
-@vindex editing-mode
-The @code{editing-mode} variable controls which editing mode you are
-using. By default, @sc{gnu} Readline starts up in Emacs editing mode, where
-the keystrokes are most similar to Emacs. This variable can either be
-set to @code{emacs} or @code{vi}.
-
-@item horizontal-scroll-mode
-@vindex horizontal-scroll-mode
-This variable can either be set to @code{On} or @code{Off}. Setting it
-to @code{On} means that the text of the lines that you edit will scroll
-horizontally on a single screen line when they are larger than the width
-of the screen, instead of wrapping onto a new screen line. By default,
-this variable is set to @code{Off}.
-
-@item mark-modified-lines
-@vindex mark-modified-lines
-This variable when set to @code{On}, says to display an asterisk
-(@samp{*}) at the starts of history lines which have been modified.
-This variable is off by default.
-
-@item prefer-visible-bell
-@vindex prefer-visible-bell
-If this variable is set to @code{On} it means to use a visible bell if
-one is available, rather than simply ringing the terminal bell. By
-default, the value is @code{Off}.
-@end table
-
-@item Key Bindings
-The syntax for controlling keybindings in the @file{~/.inputrc} file is
-simple. First you have to know the @i{name} of the command that you
-want to change. The following pages contain tables of the command name,
-the default keybinding, and a short description of what the command
-does.
-
-Once you know the name of the command, simply place the name of the key
-you wish to bind the command to, a colon, and then the name of the
-command on a line in the @file{~/.inputrc} file. The name of the key
-can be expressed in different ways, depending on which is most
-comfortable for you.
-
-@table @asis
-@item @w{@var{keyname}: @var{function-name} or @var{macro}}
-@var{keyname} is the name of a key spelled out in English. For example:
-@example
-Control-u: universal-argument
-Meta-Rubout: backward-kill-word
-Control-o: ">&output"
-@end example
-
-In the above example, @key{C-u} is bound to the function
-@code{universal-argument}, and @key{C-o} is bound to run the macro
-expressed on the right hand side (that is, to insert the text
-@samp{>&output} into the line).
-
-@item @w{"@var{keyseq}": @var{function-name} or @var{macro}}
-@var{keyseq} differs from @var{keyname} above in that strings denoting
-an entire key sequence can be specified. Simply place the key sequence
-in double quotes. @sc{gnu} Emacs style key escapes can be used, as in the
-following example:
-
-@example
-"\C-u": universal-argument
-"\C-x\C-r": re-read-init-file
-"\e[11~": "Function Key 1"
-@end example
-
-In the above example, @key{C-u} is bound to the function
-@code{universal-argument} (just as it was in the first example),
-@key{C-x C-r} is bound to the function @code{re-read-init-file}, and
-@key{ESC [ 1 1 ~} is bound to insert the text @samp{Function Key 1}.
-
-@end table
-@end table
-
-@menu
-* Commands For Moving:: Moving about the line.
-* Commands For History:: Getting at previous lines.
-* Commands For Text:: Commands for changing text.
-* Commands For Killing:: Commands for killing and yanking.
-* Numeric Arguments:: Specifying numeric arguments, repeat counts.
-* Commands For Completion:: Getting Readline to do the typing for you.
-* Miscellaneous Commands:: Other miscillaneous commands.
-@end menu
-
-@need 2000
-@node Commands For Moving
-@subsubsection Commands For Moving
-
-@ftable @code
-@item beginning-of-line (@key{C-a})
-Move to the start of the current line.
-
-@item end-of-line (@key{C-e})
-Move to the end of the line.
-
-@item forward-char (@key{C-f})
-Move forward a character.
-
-@item backward-char (@key{C-b})
-Move back a character.
-
-@item forward-word (@key{M-f})
-Move forward to the end of the next word.
-
-@item backward-word (@key{M-b})
-Move back to the start of this, or the previous, word.
-
-@item clear-screen (@key{C-l})
-Clear the screen leaving the current line at the top of the screen.
-
-@end ftable
-
-@need 2000
-@node Commands For History
-@subsubsection Commands For Manipulating The History
-
-@ftable @code
-@item accept-line (Newline, Return)
-Accept the line regardless of where the cursor is. If this line is
-non-empty, add it to the history list. If this line was a history
-line, then restore the history line to its original state.
-
-@item previous-history (@key{C-p})
-Move `up' through the history list.
-
-@item next-history (@key{C-n})
-Move `down' through the history list.
-
-@item beginning-of-history (@key{M-<})
-Move to the first line in the history.
-
-@item end-of-history (@key{M->})
-Move to the end of the input history, i.e., the line you are entering.
-
-@item reverse-search-history (@key{C-r})
-Search backward starting at the current line and moving `up' through
-the history as necessary. This is an incremental search.
-
-@item forward-search-history (@key{C-s})
-Search forward starting at the current line and moving `down' through
-the the history as necessary.
-
-@end ftable
-
-@need 2000
-@node Commands For Text
-@subsubsection Commands For Changing Text
-
-@ftable @code
-@item delete-char (@key{C-d})
-Delete the character under the cursor. If the cursor is at the
-beginning of the line, and there are no characters in the line, and
-the last character typed was not @key{C-d}, then return EOF.
-
-@item backward-delete-char (Rubout)
-Delete the character behind the cursor. A numeric argument says to kill
-the characters instead of deleting them.
-
-@item quoted-insert (@key{C-q}, @key{C-v})
-Add the next character that you type to the line verbatim. This is
-how to insert things like @key{C-q} for example.
-
-@item tab-insert (@key{M-TAB})
-Insert a tab character.
-
-@item self-insert (a, b, A, 1, !, ...)
-Insert yourself.
-
-@item transpose-chars (@key{C-t})
-Drag the character before point forward over the character at point.
-Point moves forward as well. If point is at the end of the line, then
-transpose the two characters before point. Negative arguments don't work.
-
-@item transpose-words (@key{M-t})
-Drag the word behind the cursor past the word in front of the cursor
-moving the cursor over that word as well.
-
-@item upcase-word (@key{M-u})
-Uppercase all letters in the current (or following) word. With a
-negative argument, do the previous word, but do not move point.
-
-@item downcase-word (@key{M-l})
-Lowercase all letters in the current (or following) word. With a
-negative argument, do the previous word, but do not move point.
-
-@item capitalize-word (@key{M-c})
-Uppercase the first letter in the current (or following) word. With a
-negative argument, do the previous word, but do not move point.
-
-@end ftable
-
-@need 2000
-@node Commands For Killing
-@subsubsection Killing And Yanking
-
-@ftable @code
-@item kill-line (@key{C-k})
-Kill the text from the current cursor position to the end of the line.
-
-@item backward-kill-line ()
-Kill backward to the beginning of the line. This is normally unbound.
-
-@item kill-word (@key{M-d})
-Kill from the cursor to the end of the current word, or if between
-words, to the end of the next word.
-
-@item backward-kill-word (@key{M-DEL})
-Kill the word behind the cursor.
-
-@item unix-line-discard (@key{C-u})
-Kill the whole line the way @key{C-u} used to in Unix line input.
-The killed text is saved on the kill-ring.
-
-@item unix-word-rubout (@key{C-w})
-Kill the word the way @key{C-w} used to in Unix line input.
-The killed text is saved on the kill-ring. This is different than
-backward-kill-word because the word boundaries differ.
-
-@item yank (@key{C-y})
-Yank the top of the kill ring into the buffer at point.
-
-@item yank-pop (@key{M-y})
-Rotate the kill-ring, and yank the new top. You can only do this if
-the prior command is yank or yank-pop.
-@end ftable
-
-@need 2000
-@node Numeric Arguments
-@subsubsection Specifying Numeric Arguments
-
-@ftable @code
-
-@item digit-argument (@key{M-0}, @key{M-1}, ... @key{M--})
-Add this digit to the argument already accumulating, or start a new
-argument. @key{M--} starts a negative argument.
-
-@item universal-argument ()
-Do what @key{C-u} does in @sc{gnu} Emacs. By default, this is not bound.
-@end ftable
-
-
-@need 2000
-@node Commands For Completion
-@subsubsection Letting Readline Type For You
-
-@ftable @code
-@item complete (TAB)
-Attempt to do completion on the text before point. This is
-implementation defined. Generally, if you are typing a filename
-argument, you can do filename completion; if you are typing a command,
-you can do command completion, if you are typing in a symbol to GDB, you
-can do symbol name completion, if you are typing in a variable to Bash,
-you can do variable name completion.
-
-@item possible-completions (M-?)
-List the possible completions of the text before point.
-@end ftable
-
-@need 2000
-@node Miscellaneous Commands
-@subsubsection Some Miscellaneous Commands
-
-@ftable @code
-
-@item re-read-init-file (@key{C-x} @key{C-r})
-Read in the contents of your @file{~/.inputrc} file, and incorporate
-any bindings found there.
-
-@item abort (@key{C-g})
-Stop running the current editing command.
-
-@ignore
-@c I have no idea what this means, and can't figure it out by
-@c experiment, and can't find it in the readline source.
-@c doc@cygnus.com, 20may1993.
-@item do-uppercase-version (@key{M-a}, @key{M-b}, ...)
-Run the command that is bound to your uppercase brother.
-@end ignore
-
-@item prefix-meta (ESC)
-Make the next character that you type be metafied. This is for people
-without a meta key. Typing @key{ESC f} is equivalent to typing
-@key{M-f}.
-
-@item undo (@key{C-_})
-Incremental undo, separately remembered for each line.
-
-@item revert-line (@key{M-r})
-Undo all changes made to this line. This is like typing the `undo'
-command enough times to get back to the beginning.
-@end ftable
-
-@need 2000
-@node Readline vi Mode
-@subsection Readline @code{vi} Mode
-
-@cindex @code{vi} style command editing
-@kindex toggle-editing-mode
-While the Readline library does not have a full set of @code{vi} editing
-functions, it does contain enough to allow simple editing of the line.
-
-In order to switch interactively between @sc{gnu} Emacs and @code{vi}
-editing modes, use the command @key{M-C-j} (toggle-editing-mode).
-
-When you enter a line in @code{vi} mode, you are already placed in `insertion'
-mode, as if you had typed an `i'. Pressing @key{ESC} switches you into
-`edit' mode, where you can edit the text of the line with the standard
-@code{vi} movement keys, move to previous history lines with `k', and following
-lines with `j', and so forth.
-
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