PL/I has the concept of a "string", which can be a fixed-length (possibly not known at compile time), or a fixed size with a 4-byte or 2-byte runtime length prefix, or, depending on the consituents, a NULL (zero-byte) terminated string.
For "character-like" strings, the constituents can be 1-byte, 2-byte, 4-byte strings, or UTF-8 values. (e.g. strings of characters, or strings of UTF-8 values, or strings of 4-byte unicode values.) All of these seem to be straightforwardly handled by DWARF-5. However, PL/I also has a "BIT string", which is a left-adjusted string of bits, either of a fixed length (# of bits) or of a fixed size with a either a 2-byte or 4-byte length prefix. Of course, there isn't a NULL-terminated variant of this string, because a zero-bit is part of the data. The sizes may not be known at compile time. I've gone thru the DWARF-5 standard a few times, but can't seem to envision a straight-forward way to represent this. Furthermore, an un-prefixed bit-string doesn't necessarily begin on a byte boundary, and, depending on the environment, needs to be represented as a bit-offset which may be composed (even at runtime) of (byte-location + bit-offset-in-byte). Any suggestions on how to represent this in DWARF (5 or later) would be appreciated! Perhaps it's just something obvious I'm overlooking?? - Many Thanks! - - Dave Rivers -- riv...@dignus.com -- Dwarf-discuss mailing list Dwarf-discuss@lists.dwarfstd.org https://lists.dwarfstd.org/mailman/listinfo/dwarf-discuss