Next: Ada Mode for Glide, Previous: The gnatpsta Utility Program, Up: Other Utility Programs
In order to interpret the output from GNAT, when using tools that are originally intended for use with other languages, it is useful to understand the conventions used to generate link names from the Ada entity names.
All link names are in all lowercase letters. With the exception of library procedure names, the mechanism used is simply to use the full expanded Ada name with dots replaced by double underscores. For example, suppose we have the following package spec:
package QRS is MN : Integer; end QRS; |
The variable MN
has a full expanded Ada name of QRS.MN
, so
the corresponding link name is qrs__mn
.
Of course if a pragma Export
is used this may be overridden:
package Exports is Var1 : Integer; pragma Export (Var1, C, External_Name => "var1_name"); Var2 : Integer; pragma Export (Var2, C, Link_Name => "var2_link_name"); end Exports; |
In this case, the link name for Var1 is whatever link name the C compiler would assign for the C function var1_name. This typically would be either var1_name or _var1_name, depending on operating system conventions, but other possibilities exist. The link name for Var2 is var2_link_name, and this is not operating system dependent.
One exception occurs for library level procedures. A potential ambiguity
arises between the required name _main
for the C main program,
and the name we would otherwise assign to an Ada library level procedure
called Main
(which might well not be the main program).
To avoid this ambiguity, we attach the prefix _ada_
to such
names. So if we have a library level procedure such as
procedure Hello (S : String); |
the external name of this procedure will be _ada_hello.