From 1bc5aee63eb72b341f506ad058502cd0361f0d10 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ben Cheng Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2014 22:37:19 -0700 Subject: Initial checkin of GCC 4.9.0 from trunk (r208799). Change-Id: I48a3c08bb98542aa215912a75f03c0890e497dba --- gcc-4.9/libobjc/objc/objc.h | 151 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 151 insertions(+) create mode 100644 gcc-4.9/libobjc/objc/objc.h (limited to 'gcc-4.9/libobjc/objc/objc.h') diff --git a/gcc-4.9/libobjc/objc/objc.h b/gcc-4.9/libobjc/objc/objc.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f9a1c3142 --- /dev/null +++ b/gcc-4.9/libobjc/objc/objc.h @@ -0,0 +1,151 @@ +/* Basic data types for Objective C. + Copyright (C) 1993-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +This file is part of GCC. + +GCC 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 3, or (at your option) +any later version. + +GCC 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. + +Under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted additional +permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, version +3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and +a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program; +see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see +. */ + +#ifndef __objc_INCLUDE_GNU +#define __objc_INCLUDE_GNU + +/* This file contains the definition of the basic types used by the + Objective-C language. It needs to be included to do almost + anything with Objective-C. */ + +#ifdef __cplusplus +extern "C" { +#endif + +#include + +/* The current version of the GNU Objective-C Runtime library in + compressed ISO date format. This should be updated any time a new + version is released with changes to the public API (there is no + need to update it if there were no API changes since the previous + release). This macro is only defined starting with the GNU + Objective-C Runtime shipped with GCC 4.6.0. If it is not defined, + it is either an older version of the runtime, or another runtime. */ +#define __GNU_LIBOBJC__ 20110608 + +/* Definition of the boolean type. + + Compatibility note: the Apple/NeXT runtime defines a BOOL as a + 'signed char'. The GNU runtime uses an 'unsigned char'. + + Important: this could change and we could switch to 'typedef bool + BOOL' in the future. Do not depend on the type of BOOL. */ +#undef BOOL +typedef unsigned char BOOL; + +#define YES (BOOL)1 +#define NO (BOOL)0 + +/* The basic Objective-C types (SEL, Class, id) are defined as pointer + to opaque structures. The details of the structures are private to + the runtime and may potentially change from one version to the + other. */ + +/* A SEL (selector) represents an abstract method (in the + object-oriented sense) and includes all the details of how to + invoke the method (which means its name, arguments and return + types) but provides no implementation of its own. You can check + whether a class implements a selector or not, and if you have a + selector and know that the class implements it, you can use it to + call the method for an object in the class. */ +typedef const struct objc_selector *SEL; + +/* A Class is a class (in the object-oriented sense). In Objective-C + there is the complication that each Class is an object itself, and + so belongs to a class too. This class that a class belongs to is + called its 'meta class'. */ +typedef struct objc_class *Class; + +/* An 'id' is an object of an unknown class. The way the object data + is stored inside the object is private and what you see here is + only the beginning of the actual struct. The first field is always + a pointer to the Class that the object belongs to. */ +typedef struct objc_object +{ + /* 'class_pointer' is the Class that the object belongs to. In case + of a Class object, this pointer points to the meta class. + + Compatibility Note: The Apple/NeXT runtime calls this field + 'isa'. To access this field, use object_getClass() from + runtime.h, which is an inline function so does not add any + overhead and is also portable to other runtimes. */ + Class class_pointer; +} *id; + +/* 'IMP' is a C function that implements a method. When retrieving + the implementation of a method from the runtime, this is the type + of the pointer returned. The idea of the definition of IMP is to + represent a 'pointer to a general function taking an id, a SEL, + followed by other unspecified arguments'. You must always cast an + IMP to a pointer to a function taking the appropriate, specific + types for that function, before calling it - to make sure the + appropriate arguments are passed to it. The code generated by the + compiler to perform method calls automatically does this cast + inside method calls. */ +typedef id (*IMP)(id, SEL, ...); + +/* 'nil' is the null object. Messages to nil do nothing and always + return 0. */ +#define nil (id)0 + +/* 'Nil' is the null class. Since classes are objects too, this is + actually the same object as 'nil' (and behaves in the same way), + but it has a type of Class, so it is good to use it instead of + 'nil' if you are comparing a Class object to nil as it enables the + compiler to do some type-checking. */ +#define Nil (Class)0 + +/* TODO: Move the 'Protocol' declaration into objc/runtime.h. A + Protocol is simply an object, not a basic Objective-C type. The + Apple runtime defines Protocol in objc/runtime.h too, so it's good + to move it there for API compatibility. */ + +/* A 'Protocol' is a formally defined list of selectors (normally + created using the @protocol Objective-C syntax). It is mostly used + at compile-time to check that classes implement all the methods + that they are supposed to. Protocols are also available in the + runtime system as Protocol objects. */ +#ifndef __OBJC__ + /* Once we stop including the deprecated struct_objc_protocol.h + there is no reason to even define a 'struct objc_protocol'. As + all the structure details will be hidden, a Protocol basically is + simply an object (as it should be). */ + typedef struct objc_object Protocol; +#else /* __OBJC__ */ + @class Protocol; +#endif + +/* Compatibility note: the Apple/NeXT runtime defines sel_getName(), + sel_registerName(), object_getClassName(), object_getIndexedIvars() + in this file while the GNU runtime defines them in runtime.h. + + The reason the GNU runtime does not define them here is that they + are not basic Objective-C types (defined in this file), but are + part of the runtime API (defined in runtime.h). */ + +#ifdef __cplusplus +} +#endif + +#endif /* not __objc_INCLUDE_GNU */ -- cgit v1.2.3