Searched hist:38357 (Results 1 - 7 of 7) sorted by relevance
/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/sys/ | ||
H A D | elf_generic.h | 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
H A D | elf32.h | diff 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
H A D | elf64.h | diff 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
H A D | elf_common.h | 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/i386/include/ | ||
H A D | elf.h | diff 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/amd64/include/ | ||
H A D | elf.h | diff 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
/freebsd-11.0-release/sys/x86/include/ | ||
H A D | elf.h | diff 38357 Sun Aug 16 03:03:38 MDT 1998 jdp Revamp the ELF include files to better support architecture-independent applications. Here's how it works. The kernel should include <machine/elf.h> to get the definitions for the native architecture. It can reference the various ELF structures with generic names like Elf_Sym, Elf_Shdr, etc. A define __ELF_WORD_SIZE is also available with the value 32 or 64 as appropriate for the native architecture. Generic applications should include <elf.h>, which is just a wrapper for <machine/elf.h>. Applications such as object file dumpers that need to deal with foreign ELF files can include <sys/elf32.h> and/or <sys/elf64.h>. Both can be included from the same source file if desired. The structure names must be referenced using wordsize-specific names like Elf32_Sym, Elf64_Shdr, etc. I haven't change the alpha stuff, but I haven't broken it either. |
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