To give a type a name, use the `t
' symbol descriptor. The type
is specified by the type information (see String Field) for the stab.
For example,
.stabs "s_typedef:t16",128,0,0,0 # 128 is N_LSYM
specifies that s_typedef
refers to type number 16. Such stabs
have symbol type N_LSYM
(or C_DECL
for XCOFF). (The Sun
documentation mentions using N_GSYM
in some cases).
If you are specifying the tag name for a structure, union, or
enumeration, use the `T
' symbol descriptor instead. I believe C is
the only language with this feature.
If the type is an opaque type (I believe this is a Modula-2 feature),
AIX provides a type descriptor to specify it. The type descriptor is
`o
' and is followed by a name. I don't know what the name
means---is it always the same as the name of the type, or is this type
descriptor used with a nameless stab (see String Field)? There
optionally follows a comma followed by type information which defines
the type of this type. If omitted, a semicolon is used in place of the
comma and the type information, and the type is much like a generic
pointer type---it has a known size but little else about it is
specified.
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