These macros affect all debugging formats.
A C expression that returns the DBX register number for the compiler register number regno. In the default macro provided, the value of this expression will be regno itself. But sometimes there are some registers that the compiler knows about and DBX does not, or vice versa. In such cases, some register may need to have one number in the compiler and another for DBX.
If two registers have consecutive numbers inside GCC, and they can be
used as a pair to hold a multiword value, then they must have
consecutive numbers after renumbering with DBX_REGISTER_NUMBER
.
Otherwise, debuggers will be unable to access such a pair, because they
expect register pairs to be consecutive in their own numbering scheme.
If you find yourself defining DBX_REGISTER_NUMBER
in way that
does not preserve register pairs, then what you must do instead is
redefine the actual register numbering scheme.
A C expression that returns the integer offset value for an automatic variable having address x (an RTL expression). The default computation assumes that x is based on the frame-pointer and gives the offset from the frame-pointer. This is required for targets that produce debugging output for DBX and allow the frame-pointer to be eliminated when the -g option is used.
A C expression that returns the integer offset value for an argument having address x (an RTL expression). The nominal offset is offset.
A C expression that returns the type of debugging output GCC should
produce when the user specifies just -g. Define
this if you have arranged for GCC to support more than one format of
debugging output. Currently, the allowable values are DBX_DEBUG
,
DWARF2_DEBUG
, XCOFF_DEBUG
, VMS_DEBUG
,
and VMS_AND_DWARF2_DEBUG
.
When the user specifies -ggdb, GCC normally also uses the
value of this macro to select the debugging output format, but with two
exceptions. If DWARF2_DEBUGGING_INFO
is defined, GCC uses the
value DWARF2_DEBUG
. Otherwise, if DBX_DEBUGGING_INFO
is
defined, GCC uses DBX_DEBUG
.
The value of this macro only affects the default debugging output; the user can always get a specific type of output by using -gstabs, -gdwarf-2, -gxcoff, or -gvms.