Provided by: abigail-doc_2.0-1_all bug

NAME

       libabigail - Library to analyze and compare ELF ABIs

OVERVIEW OF THE ABIGAIL FRAMEWORK

       ABIGAIL  stands  for the Application Binary Interface Generic Analysis and Instrumentation
       Library.

       It’s a framework which aims at helping developers and software distributors to  spot  some
       ABI-related  issues like interface incompatibility in ELF shared libraries by performing a
       static analysis of the ELF binaries at hand.

       The type of interface incompatibilities that Abigail focuses on is related to  changes  on
       the  exported  ELF  functions and variables symbols, as well as layout and size changes of
       data types of the functions and variables exported by shared libraries.

       In other words, if the return type of a function exported by a shared library  changes  in
       an incompatible way from one version of a given shared library to another, we want Abigail
       to help people catch that.

       In more concrete terms, the Abigail framwork provides a shared  library  named  libabigail
       which  exposes  an  API  to  parse  a  shared  library in ELF format (accompanied with its
       associated debug information in DWARF format) build an internal representation of all  the
       functions  and  variables  it  exports, along with their types.  Libabigail also builds an
       internal representation of the  ELF  symbols  of  these  functions  and  variables.   That
       information  about  these  exported functions and variables is roughly what we consider as
       being the ABI of the shared library, at least, in the scope of Libabigail.

       Aside of this internal representation, libabigail  provides  facilities  to  perform  deep
       comparisons  of  two  ABIs.  That is, it can compare the types of two sets of functions or
       variables and represents the result in a way that allows it to emit textual reports  about
       the differences.

       This  allows  us  to  write  tools  like  abidiff  that  can compare the ABI of two shared
       libraries and represent the result in  a  meaningful  enough  way  to  help  us  spot  ABI
       incompatibilities.   There  are  several  other  tools  that  are  built using the Abigail
       framwork.

TOOLS

   Overview
       The upstream code repository of  Libabigail  contains  several  tools  written  using  the
       library.   They are maintained and released as part of the project.  All tools come with a
       bash-completion script.

   Tools manuals
   abidiff
       abidiff compares the Application Binary Interfaces (ABI) of two shared  libraries  in  ELF
       format.  It emits a meaningful report describing the differences between the two ABIs.

       This  tool can also compare the textual representations of the ABI of two ELF binaries (as
       emitted by abidw) or an ELF binary against a textual representation of another ELF binary.

       For a comprehensive ABI change report that includes changes about  function  and  variable
       sub-types, the two input shared libraries must be accompanied with their debug information
       in DWARF format.  Otherwise, only ELF symbols that were added or removed are reported.

   Invocation
          abidiff [options] <first-shared-library> <second-shared-library>

   Environment
       abidiff loads two default suppression specifications files, merges their content  and  use
       it to filter out ABI change reports that might be considered as false positives to users.

       • Default system-wide suppression specification file

         It’s        located        by        the       optional       environment       variable
         LIBABIGAIL_DEFAULT_SYSTEM_SUPPRESSION_FILE.  If that environment variable  is  not  set,
         then       abidiff       tries       to       load       the       suppression      file
         $libdir/libabigail/libabigail-default.abignore.  If that file is not  present,  then  no
         default system-wide suppression specification file is loaded.

       • Default user suppression specification file.

         It’s  located  by the optional environment LIBABIGAIL_DEFAULT_USER_SUPPRESSION_FILE.  If
         that environment variable is not set, then abidiff tries to load  the  suppression  file
         $HOME/.abignore.   If  that  file  is  not  present,  then  no  default user suppression
         specification is loaded.

   Options--help | -h

            Display a short help about the command and exit.

          • --debug

            In this mode, error messages are emitted for types which fail type canonicalization.

            This is an optional ebugging and sanity check option.  To enable  it  the  libabigail
            package needs to be configured with the –enable-debug-self-comparison option.

          • --version | -v

            Display the version of the program and exit.

          • --debug-info-dir1 | --d1 <di-path1>

            For  cases  where  the debug information for first-shared-library is split out into a
            separate file, tells abidiff where to find that separate debug information file.

            Note that di-path must point to the root directory under which the debug  information
            is  arranged  in  a tree-like manner.  Under Red Hat based systems, that directory is
            usually <root>/usr/lib/debug.

            This option can be provided several times with different root directories.   In  that
            case, abidiff will potentially look into all those root directories to find the split
            debug info for first-shared-library.

            Note also that this option is not mandatory for split debug information installed  by
            your system’s package manager because then abidiff knows where to find it.

          • --debug-info-dir2 | --d2 <di-path2>

            Like  --debug-info-dir1,  this  options  tells  abidiff where to find the split debug
            information for the second-shared-library file.

            This option can be provided several times with different root directories.   In  that
            case, abidiff will potentially look into all those root directories to find the split
            debug info for second-shared-library.

          • --headers-dir1 | --hd1 <headers-directory-path-1>

            Specifies where to find the public headers of the first shared library (or binary  in
            general) that the tool has to consider.  The tool will thus filter out ABI changes on
            types that are not defined in public headers.

            Note that several public header directories can be specified  for  the  first  shared
            library.   In  that case the --headers-dir1 option should be present several times on
            the command line, like in the following example:

                $ abidiff --headers-dir1 /some/path       \
                          --headers-dir1 /some/other/path \
                          binary-version-1 binary-version-2

          • --header-file1 | --hf1 <header-file-path-1>

            Specifies where to find one public header of the first shared library that  the  tool
            has  to  consider.   The  tool will thus filter out ABI changes on types that are not
            defined in public headers.

          • --headers-dir2 | --hd2 <headers-directory-path-1>

            Specifies where to find the public headers of the second shared library that the tool
            has  to  consider.   The  tool will thus filter out ABI changes on types that are not
            defined in public headers.

            Note that several public header directories can be specified for  the  second  shared
            library.  In that case the --headers-dir2 option should be present several times like
            in the following example:

                $ abidiff --headers-dir2 /some/path       \
                          --headers-dir2 /some/other/path \
                          binary-version-1 binary-version-2

          • --header-file2 | --hf2 <header-file-path-2>

            Specifies where to find one public header of the second shared library that the  tool
            has  to  consider.   The  tool will thus filter out ABI changes on types that are not
            defined in public headers.

          • --no-linux-kernel-mode

            Without this option, if abidiff detects that the binaries it is looking at are  Linux
            Kernel  binaries  (either  vmlinux  or  modules) then it only considers functions and
            variables which ELF symbols are listed in the __ksymtab and __ksymtab_gpl sections.

            With this option, abidiff considers the binary as a non-special ELF binary.  It  thus
            considers functions and variables which are defined and exported in the ELF sense.

          • --kmi-whitelist | -kaw <path-to-whitelist>

            When  analyzing  a Linux kernel binary, this option points to the white list of names
            of ELF symbols of functions and variables which ABI must be considered.   That  white
            list  is  called  a  “Kernel  Module  Interface white list”.  This is because for the
            Kernel, we don’t talk about ABI; we rather  talk  about  the  interface  between  the
            Kernel and its module. Hence the term KMI rather than ABI.

            Any  other  function  or variable which ELF symbol are not present in that white list
            will not be considered by this tool.

            If this option is not provided – thus if no white list is provided – then the  entire
            KMI,  that  is,  the  set  of  all publicly defined and exported functions and global
            variables by the Linux Kernel binaries, is considered.

          • --drop-private-types

            This option is to be used with the  --headers-dir1,  header-file1,  header-file2  and
            --headers-dir2  options.  With this option, types that are NOT defined in the headers
            are entirely  dropped  from  the  internal  representation  build  by  Libabigail  to
            represent the ABI.  They thus don’t have to be filtered out from the final ABI change
            report because they are not even present in Libabigail’s representation.

            Without  this  option  however,  those  private  types  are  kept  in  the   internal
            representation and later filtered out from the report.

            This options thus potentially makes Libabigail consume less memory.  It’s meant to be
            mainly used to optimize the memory consumption of the tool on binaries with a lot  of
            publicly defined and exported types.

          • --stat

            Rather  than displaying the detailed ABI differences between first-shared-library and
            second-shared-library, just display some summary statistics about these differences.

          • --symtabs

            Only display the symbol tables of the first-shared-library and second-shared-library.

          • --deleted-fns

            In the resulting  report  about  the  differences  between  first-shared-library  and
            second-shared-library,  only  display the globally defined functions that got deleted
            from first-shared-library.

          • --changed-fns

            In the resulting  report  about  the  differences  between  first-shared-library  and
            second-shared-library,  only display the changes in sub-types of the global functions
            defined in first-shared-library.

          • --added-fns

            In the resulting  report  about  the  differences  between  first-shared-library  and
            second-shared-library, only display the globally defined functions that were added to
            second-shared-library.

          • --deleted-vars

            In the resulting  report  about  the  differences  between  first-shared-library  and
            second-shared-library,  only display the globally defined variables that were deleted
            from first-shared-library.

          • --changed-vars

            In the resulting  report  about  the  differences  between  first-shared-library  and
            second-shared-library,  only  display  the  changes  in  the  sub-types of the global
            variables defined in first-shared-library--added-vars

            In the resulting  report  about  the  differences  between  first-shared-library  and
            second-shared-library, only display the global variables that were added (defined) to
            second-shared-library.

          • --non-reachable-types|-t

            Analyze and emit change reports for all the types of the binary, including those that
            are not reachable from global functions and variables.

            This  option  might incur some serious performance degradation as the number of types
            analyzed can  be  huge.   However,  if  paired  with  the  --headers-dir{1,2}  and/or
            header-file{1,2}  options, the additional non-reachable types analyzed are restricted
            to those defined in public headers files, thus hopefully making the  performance  hit
            acceptable.

            Also,  using  this  option  alongside  suppression  specifications (by also using the
            --suppressions option) might  help  keep  the  number  of  analyzed  types  (and  the
            potential performance degradation) in control.

            Note  that  without  this option, only types that are reachable from global functions
            and variables are analyzed,  so  the  tool  detects  and  reports  changes  on  these
            reachable types only.

          • --no-added-syms

            In  the  resulting  report  about  the  differences  between first-shared-library and
            second-shared-library, do not display added functions or variables.  Do  not  display
            added  functions  or  variables  ELF  symbols either.  All other kinds of changes are
            displayed unless they are explicitely forbidden by other options on the command line.

          • --no-linkage-name

            In the resulting report, do not display the linkage names of the added,  removed,  or
            changed functions or variables.

          • --no-show-locs
              Do  not  show  information  about where in the second shared library the respective
              type was changed.

          • --show-bytes

            Show sizes and offsets in bytes, not bits.  By default, sizes and offsets  are  shown
            in bits.

          • --show-bits

            Show sizes and offsets in bits, not bytes.  This option is activated by default.

          • --show-hex

            Show sizes and offsets in hexadecimal base.

          • --show-dec

            Show sizes and offsets in decimal base.  This option is activated by default.

          • --no-show-relative-offset-changes

            Without  this option, when the offset of a data member changes, the change report not
            only mentions the older and newer offset, but it also mentions by how many  bits  the
            data member changes.  With this option, the latter is not shown.

          • --no-unreferenced-symbols

            In  the  resulting  report,  do  not  display  change  information about function and
            variable symbols that are not referenced by any debug  information.   Note  that  for
            these  symbols  not  referenced  by  any  debug  information,  the change information
            displayed is either added or removed symbols.

          • --no-default-suppression

            Do not load the default suppression specification files.

          • --suppressions | --suppr <path-to-suppressions>

            Use a suppression specification file located at path-to-suppressions.  Note that this
            option  can  appear  multiple  times  on  the command line.  In that case, all of the
            provided suppression specification files are taken into account.

            Please note that, by default, if this  option  is  not  provided,  then  the  default
            suppression specification files are loaded .

          • --drop <regex>

            When reading the first-shared-library and second-shared-library ELF input files, drop
            the globally defined functions and variables which name match the regular  expression
            regex.  As a result, no change involving these functions or variables will be emitted
            in the diff report.

          • --drop-fn <regex>

            When reading the first-shared-library and second-shared-library ELF input files, drop
            the  globally  defined functions which name match the regular expression regex.  As a
            result, no change involving these functions will be emitted in the diff report.

          • --drop-var <regex>

            When reading the first-shared-library and second-shared-library ELF input files, drop
            the globally defined variables matching a the regular expression regex.

          • --keep <regex>

            When reading the first-shared-library and second-shared-library ELF input files, keep
            the globally defined functions and variables which names match the regular expression
            regex.   All other functions and variables are dropped on the floor and will thus not
            appear in the resulting diff report.

          • --keep-fn <regex>

            When reading the first-shared-library and second-shared-library ELF input files, keep
            the  globally  defined  functions which name match the regular expression regex.  All
            other functions are dropped on the floor and will thus not appear  in  the  resulting
            diff report.

          • --keep-var <regex>

            When reading the first-shared-library and second-shared-library ELF input files, keep
            the globally defined which names match  the  regular  expression  regex.   All  other
            variables  are  dropped  on  the floor and will thus not appear in the resulting diff
            report.

          • --harmless

            In the diff report, display only the harmless  changes.   By  default,  the  harmless
            changes  are filtered out of the diff report keep the clutter to a minimum and have a
            greater chance to spot real ABI issues.

          • --no-harmful

            In the diff report, do not display the harmful changes.  By default, only the harmful
            changes are displayed in diff report.

          • --redundant

            In  the  diff  report,  do display redundant changes.  A redundant change is a change
            that has been displayed elsewhere in the report.

          • --no-redundant

            In the diff report, do NOT display redundant changes.  A redundant change is a change
            that  has  been  displayed  elsewhere  in  the report.  This option is switched on by
            default.

          • --no-architecture

            Do not take architecture in account when comparing ABIs.

          • --no-corpus-path

            Do not emit the path attribute for the ABI corpus.

          • --fail-no-debug-info

            If no debug info was found, then this option makes the program to  fail.   Otherwise,
            without  this  option, the program will attempt to compare properties of the binaries
            that are not related to debug info, like pure ELF properties.

          • --leaf-changes-only|-l only show leaf changes, so don’t show impact analysis  report.
            This option implies --redundant.

            The typical output of abidiff when comparing two binaries looks like this

                $ abidiff libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
                Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                  [C]'function void fn(C&)' at test-v1.cc:13:1 has some indirect sub-type changes:
                    parameter 1 of type 'C&' has sub-type changes:
                      in referenced type 'struct C' at test-v1.cc:7:1:
                        type size hasn't changed
                        1 data member change:
                         type of 'leaf* C::m0' changed:
                           in pointed to type 'struct leaf' at test-v1.cc:1:1:
                             type size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                             1 data member insertion:
                               'char leaf::m1', at offset 32 (in bits) at test-v1.cc:4:1

                $

            So  in  that example the report emits information about how the data member insertion
            change of “struct leaf” is reachable from function “void fn(C&)”.   In  other  words,
            the  report not only shows the data member change on “struct leaf”, but it also shows
            the impact of that change on the function “void fn(C&)”.

            In abidiff parlance, the change on “struct leaf” is called a  leaf  change.   So  the
            --leaf-changes-only  --impacted-interfaces  options show, well, only the leaf change.
            And it goes like this:

                $ abidiff -l libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                'struct leaf' changed:
                  type size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                  1 data member insertion:
                    'char leaf::m1', at offset 32 (in bits) at test-v1.cc:4:1

                  one impacted interface:
                    function void fn(C&)
                $

            Note how the report ends by showing the list  of  interfaces  impacted  by  the  leaf
            change.

            Now  if  you  don’t  want  to see that list of impacted interfaces, then you can just
            avoid using the --impacted-interface option.  You can learn about that option  below,
            in any case.

          • --impacted-interfaces

            When showing leaf changes, this option instructs abidiff to show the list of impacted
            interfaces.  This option is thus to  be  used  in  addition  the  --leaf-changes-only
            option, otherwise, it’s ignored.

          • --dump-diff-tree
              After the diff report, emit a textual representation of the diff nodes tree used by
              the comparison engine to represent  the  changed  functions  and  variables.   That
              representation  is  emitted  to the error output for debugging purposes.  Note that
              this diff tree is relevant only to functions and variables that have some  sub-type
              changes.   Added or removed functions and variables do not have any diff nodes tree
              associated to them.

          • --stats

            Emit statistics about various internal things.

          • --verbose

            Emit verbose logs about the progress of miscellaneous internal things.

   Return values
       The exit code of the abidiff command is either 0 if the ABI of the binaries being compared
       are equal, or non-zero if they differ or if the tool encountered an error.

       In  the  later  case,  the  exit  code  is a 8-bits-wide bit field in which each bit has a
       specific meaning.

       The first bit, of value 1, named ABIDIFF_ERROR means there was an error.

       The second bit, of value 2, named ABIDIFF_USAGE_ERROR means there was an error in the  way
       the  user  invoked  the tool.  It might be set, for instance, if the user invoked the tool
       with an unknown command line switch, with a wrong number or argument, etc.  If this bit is
       set, then the ABIDIFF_ERROR bit must be set as well.

       The  third  bit,  of value 4, named ABIDIFF_ABI_CHANGE means the ABI of the binaries being
       compared are different.

       The fourth bit, of value 8, named ABIDIFF_ABI_INCOMPATIBLE_CHANGE means  the  ABI  of  the
       binaries  compared  are  different  in  an incompatible way.  If this bit is set, then the
       ABIDIFF_ABI_CHANGE bit must be set as well.  If the  ABIDIFF_ABI_CHANGE  is  set  and  the
       ABIDIFF_INCOMPATIBLE_CHANGE  is  NOT set, then it means that the ABIs being compared might
       or might not be compatible.  In that case, a human being needs to review the  ABI  changes
       to decide if they are compatible or not.

       Note  that,  at the moment, there are only a few kinds of ABI changes that would result in
       setting the flag ABIDIFF_ABI_INCOMPATIBLE_CHANGE.  Those ABI changes are either:

          • the removal of the symbol of a  function  or  variable  that  has  been  defined  and
            exported.

          • the  modification  of  the  index  of  a  member of a virtual function table (for C++
            programs and libraries).

       With time, when more ABI change patterns are found to always constitute  incompatible  ABI
       changes,   we   will   adapt   the   code   to   recognize   those   cases   and  set  the
       ABIDIFF_ABI_INCOMPATIBLE_CHANGE accordingly.  So, if you find such patterns, please let us
       know.

       The remaining bits are not used for the moment.

   Usage examples
          1. Detecting a change in a sub-type of a function:

                 $ cat -n test-v0.cc
                          1      // Compile this with:
                          2      //   g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v0.so test-v0.cc
                          3
                          4      struct S0
                          5      {
                          6        int m0;
                          7      };
                          8
                          9      void
                         10      foo(S0* /*parameter_name*/)
                         11      {
                         12        // do something with parameter_name.
                         13      }
                 $
                 $ cat -n test-v1.cc
                          1      // Compile this with:
                          2      //   g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v1.so test-v1.cc
                          3
                          4      struct type_base
                          5      {
                          6        int inserted;
                          7      };
                          8
                          9      struct S0 : public type_base
                         10      {
                         11        int m0;
                         12      };
                         13
                         14      void
                         15      foo(S0* /*parameter_name*/)
                         16      {
                         17        // do something with parameter_name.
                         18      }
                 $
                 $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v0.so test-v0.cc
                 $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v1.so test-v1.cc
                 $
                 $ ../build/tools/abidiff libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                 Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
                 Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                 1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                   [C]'function void foo(S0*)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
                         parameter 0 of type 'S0*' has sub-type changes:
                           in pointed to type 'struct S0':
                             size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                             1 base class insertion:
                               struct type_base
                             1 data member change:
                              'int S0::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32
                 $

          2. Detecting another change in a sub-type of a function:

                 $ cat -n test-v0.cc
                          1      // Compile this with:
                          2      //   g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v0.so test-v0.cc
                          3
                          4      struct S0
                          5      {
                          6        int m0;
                          7      };
                          8
                          9      void
                         10      foo(S0& /*parameter_name*/)
                         11      {
                         12        // do something with parameter_name.
                         13      }
                 $
                 $ cat -n test-v1.cc
                          1      // Compile this with:
                          2      //   g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v1.so test-v1.cc
                          3
                          4      struct S0
                          5      {
                          6        char inserted_member;
                          7        int m0;
                          8      };
                          9
                         10      void
                         11      foo(S0& /*parameter_name*/)
                         12      {
                         13        // do something with parameter_name.
                         14      }
                 $
                 $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v0.so test-v0.cc
                 $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v1.so test-v1.cc
                 $
                 $ ../build/tools/abidiff libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                 Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
                 Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                 1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                   [C]'function void foo(S0&)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
                         parameter 0 of type 'S0&' has sub-type changes:
                           in referenced type 'struct S0':
                             size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                             1 data member insertion:
                               'char S0::inserted_member', at offset 0 (in bits)
                             1 data member change:
                              'int S0::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32

                 $

          3. Detecting that functions got removed or added to a library:

                 $ cat -n test-v0.cc
                          1      // Compile this with:
                          2      //   g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v0.so test-v0.cc
                          3
                          4      struct S0
                          5      {
                          6        int m0;
                          7      };
                          8
                          9      void
                         10      foo(S0& /*parameter_name*/)
                         11      {
                         12        // do something with parameter_name.
                         13      }
                 $
                 $ cat -n test-v1.cc
                          1      // Compile this with:
                          2      //   g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v1.so test-v1.cc
                          3
                          4      struct S0
                          5      {
                          6        char inserted_member;
                          7        int m0;
                          8      };
                          9
                         10      void
                         11      bar(S0& /*parameter_name*/)
                         12      {
                         13        // do something with parameter_name.
                         14      }
                 $
                 $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v0.so test-v0.cc
                 $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-v1.so test-v1.cc
                 $
                 $ ../build/tools/abidiff libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                 Functions changes summary: 1 Removed, 0 Changed, 1 Added functions
                 Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                 1 Removed function:
                   'function void foo(S0&)'    {_Z3fooR2S0}

                 1 Added function:
                   'function void bar(S0&)'    {_Z3barR2S0}

                 $

   abipkgdiff
       abipkgdiff  compares the Application Binary Interfaces (ABI) of the ELF binaries contained
       in two software packages.  The software package formats currently supported are Deb,  RPM,
       tar archives (either compressed or not) and plain directories that contain binaries.

       For  a  comprehensive  ABI change report that includes changes about function and variable
       sub-types, the two input  packages  must  be  accompanied  with  their  debug  information
       packages that contain debug information in DWARF format.

   Invocation
          abipkgdiff [option] <package1> <package2>

       package1 and package2 are the packages that contain the binaries to be compared.

   Environment
       abipkgdiff  loads  two  default suppression specifications files, merges their content and
       use it to filter out ABI change reports that might be considered  as  false  positives  to
       users.

       • Default system-wide suppression specification file

         It’s        located        by        the       optional       environment       variable
         LIBABIGAIL_DEFAULT_SYSTEM_SUPPRESSION_FILE.  If that environment variable  is  not  set,
         then       abipkgdiff       tries       to      load      the      suppression      file
         $libdir/libabigail/libabigail-default.abignore.  If that file is not  present,  then  no
         default system-wide suppression specification file is loaded.

       • Default user suppression specification file.

         It’s  located  by the optional environment LIBABIGAIL_DEFAULT_USER_SUPPRESSION_FILE.  If
         that environment variable is not set, then abipkgdiff tries to load the suppression file
         $HOME/.abignore.   If  that  file  is  not  present,  then  no  default user suppression
         specification is loaded.

       In addition to those default suppression specification files, abipkgdiff  will  also  look
       inside  the  packages  being  compared  and if it sees a file that ends with the extension
       .abignore, then it will consider it as a suppression specification and it will combine  it
       to the default suppression specification that might be already loaded.

       The user might as well use the --suppressions option (that is documented further below) to
       provide a suppression specification.

   Options--help | -h

            Display a short help about the command and exit.

          • –version | -v

            Display the version of the program and exit.

          • --debug-info-pkg1 | --d1 <path>

            For cases where the debug information for package1 is split out into a separate file,
            tells abipkgdiff where to find that separate debug information package.

            Note  that  the  debug  info  for package1 can have been split into several different
            debug info packages.  In  that  case,  several  instances  of  this  options  can  be
            provided, along with those several different debug info packages.

          • --debug-info-pkg2 | --d2 <path>

            For cases where the debug information for package2 is split out into a separate file,
            tells abipkgdiff where to find that separate debug information package.

            Note that the debug info for package2 can have  been  split  into  several  different
            debug  info  packages.   In  that  case,  several  instances  of  this options can be
            provided, along with those several different debug info packages.

          • --devel-pkg1 | --devel1 <path>

            Specifies where to find the Development Package associated with the first package  to
            be  compared.   That Development Package at path should at least contain header files
            in which public types exposed by the libraries (of the first package to be  compared)
            are  defined.   When  this option is provided, the tool filters out reports about ABI
            changes to types that are NOT defined in these header files.

          • --devel-pkg2 | --devel2 <path>

            Specifies where to find the Development Package associated with the second package to
            be  compared.  That Development Package at path should at least contains header files
            in which public types exposed by the libraries (of the second package to be compared)
            are  defined.   When  this option is provided, the tool filters out reports about ABI
            changes to types that are NOT defined in these header files.

          • --drop-private-types

            This option is to be used with the --devel-pkg1 and --devel-pkg2 options.  With  this
            option,  types  that  are  NOT  defined  in the headers are entirely dropped from the
            internal representation build by Libabigail to represent the ABI.   They  thus  don’t
            have  to  be  filtered out from the final ABI change report because they are not even
            present in Libabigail’s representation.

            Without  this  option  however,  those  private  types  are  kept  in  the   internal
            representation and later filtered out from the report.

            This options thus potentially makes Libabigail consume less memory.  It’s meant to be
            mainly used to optimize the memory consumption of the tool on binaries with a lot  of
            publicly defined and exported types.

          • --dso-only

            Compare  ELF files that are shared libraries, only.  Do not compare executable files,
            for instance.

          • --private-dso

            By default, abipkgdiff does not compare DSOs that are private to the RPM package.   A
            private DSO is a DSO which SONAME is NOT advertised in the “provides” property of the
            RPM.

            This option instructs abipkgdiff to also compare DSOs that are NOT advertised in  the
            “provides” property of the RPM.

            Please note that the fact that (by default) abipkgdiff skips private DSO is a feature
            that is available only for RPMs, at the moment.   We  would  happily  accept  patches
            adding that feature for other package formats.

          • --leaf-changes-only|-l  only show leaf changes, so don’t show impact analysis report.
            This option implies --redundant

            The typical output of abipkgdiff and abidiff when comparing  two  binaries,  that  we
            shall call full impact report, looks like this

                $ abidiff libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
                Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                  [C]'function void fn(C&)' at test-v1.cc:13:1 has some indirect sub-type changes:
                    parameter 1 of type 'C&' has sub-type changes:
                      in referenced type 'struct C' at test-v1.cc:7:1:
                        type size hasn't changed
                        1 data member change:
                         type of 'leaf* C::m0' changed:
                           in pointed to type 'struct leaf' at test-v1.cc:1:1:
                             type size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                             1 data member insertion:
                               'char leaf::m1', at offset 32 (in bits) at test-v1.cc:4:1

                $

            So  in  that example the report emits information about how the data member insertion
            change of “struct leaf” is reachable from function “void fn(C&)”.   In  other  words,
            the  report not only shows the data member change on “struct leaf”, but it also shows
            the impact of that change on the function “void fn(C&)”.

            In abidiff (and abipkgdiff) parlance, the change on “struct leaf” is  called  a  leaf
            change.   So  the  --leaf-changes-only --impacted-interfaces options show, well, only
            the leaf change.  And it goes like this:

                $ abidiff -l libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                'struct leaf' changed:
                  type size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                  1 data member insertion:
                    'char leaf::m1', at offset 32 (in bits) at test-v1.cc:4:1

                  one impacted interface:
                    function void fn(C&)
                $

            Note how the report ends up by showing the list of interfaces impacted  by  the  leaf
            change.  That’s the effect of the additional --impacted-interfaces option.

            Now  if  you  don’t  want  to see that list of impacted interfaces, then you can just
            avoid using the --impacted-interface option.  You can learn about that option  below,
            in any case.

            Please  note  that  when  comparing two Linux Kernel packages, it’s this leaf changes
            report that is emitted, by default.  The normal so-called full impact report  can  be
            emitted with the option --full-impact which is documented later below.

          • --impacted-interfaces

            When  showing  leaf  changes,  this  option  instructs abipkgdiff to show the list of
            impacted  interfaces.   This  option  is  thus  to  be  used  in  addition   to   the
            --leaf-changes-only option, or, when comparing two Linux Kernel packages.  Otherwise,
            it’s simply ignored.

          • --full-impact|-f

            When comparing two Linux Kernel packages, this function instructs abipkgdiff to  emit
            the  so-called  full  impact  report, which is the default report kind emitted by the
            abidiff tool:

                $ abidiff libtest-v0.so libtest-v1.so
                Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
                Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                  [C]'function void fn(C&)' at test-v1.cc:13:1 has some indirect sub-type changes:
                    parameter 1 of type 'C&' has sub-type changes:
                      in referenced type 'struct C' at test-v1.cc:7:1:
                        type size hasn't changed
                        1 data member change:
                         type of 'leaf* C::m0' changed:
                           in pointed to type 'struct leaf' at test-v1.cc:1:1:
                             type size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                             1 data member insertion:
                               'char leaf::m1', at offset 32 (in bits) at test-v1.cc:4:1

                $

          • --non-reachable-types|-t

            Analyze and emit change reports for all the types of the binary, including those that
            are not reachable from global functions and variables.

            This  option  might incur some serious performance degradation as the number of types
            analyzed can be huge.  However, if paired  with  the  --devel-pkg{1,2}  options,  the
            additional non-reachable types analyzed are restricted to those defined in the public
            headers files carried by the referenced development packages, thus  hopefully  making
            the performance hit acceptable.

            Also,  using  this  option  alongside  suppression  specifications (by also using the
            --suppressions option) might  help  keep  the  number  of  analyzed  types  (and  the
            potential performance degradation) in control.

            Note  that  without  this option, only types that are reachable from global functions
            and variables are analyzed,  so  the  tool  detects  and  reports  changes  on  these
            reachable types only.

          • --redundant
              In  the diff reports, do display redundant changes.  A redundant change is a change
              that has been displayed elsewhere in a given report.

          • --harmless

            In the diff report, display only the harmless  changes.   By  default,  the  harmless
            changes  are filtered out of the diff report keep the clutter to a minimum and have a
            greater chance to spot real ABI issues.

          • --no-linkage-name

            In the resulting report, do not display the linkage names of the added,  removed,  or
            changed functions or variables.

          • --no-added-syms

            Do not show the list of functions, variables, or any symbol that was added.

          • --no-added-binaries

            Do not show the list of binaries that got added to the second package.

            Please  note  that  the presence of such added binaries is not considered like an ABI
            change by this tool; as such, it doesn’t have any impact on  the  exit  code  of  the
            tool.   It  does  only  have  an informational value.  Removed binaries are, however,
            considered as an ABI change.

          • --no-abignore

            Do not search the package for the presence of suppression files.

          • --no-parallel

            By default, abipkgdiff will use all  the  processors  it  has  available  to  execute
            concurrently.   This  option  tells  it not to extract packages or run comparisons in
            parallel.

          • --no-default-suppression

            Do not load the default suppression specification files.

          • --suppressions | --suppr <path-to-suppressions>

            Use a suppression specification file located at path-to-suppressions.  Note that this
            option  can  appear  multiple  times  on  the command line.  In that case, all of the
            suppression specification files are taken into account.

            Please note that, by default, if this  option  is  not  provided,  then  the  default
            suppression specification files are loaded .

          • --linux-kernel-abi-whitelist | -w <path-to-whitelist>

            When comparing two Linux kernel RPM packages, this option points to the white list of
            names of ELF symbols of functions  and  variables  that  must  be  compared  for  ABI
            changes.  That white list is called a “Linux kernel ABI white list”.

            Any  other  function  or variable which ELF symbol are not present in that white list
            will not be considered by the ABI comparison process.

            If this option is not provided – thus if no white list is provided – then the ABI  of
            all  publicly defined and exported functions and global variables by the Linux Kernel
            binaries are compared.

            Please note that if a white list package is given in parameter, this  option  handles
            it just fine, like if the –wp option was used.

          • --wp <path-to-whitelist-package>

            When  comparing  two  Linux  kernel  RPM  packages, this option points an RPM package
            containining several white lists of names of ELF symbols of functions  and  variables
            that  must  be  compared for ABI changes.  Those white lists are called “Linux kernel
            ABI white lists”.

            From the  content  of  that  white  list  package,  this  program  then  chooses  the
            appropriate  Linux  kernel ABI white list to consider when comparing the ABI of Linux
            kernel binaries contained in the Linux kernel packages provided on the command line.

            That choosen Linux kernel ABI white list contains the list of names of ELF symbols of
            functions and variables that must be compared for ABI changes.

            Any  other  function  or variable which ELF symbol are not present in that white list
            will not be considered by the ABI comparison process.

            Note that this option can be provided twice (not  mor  than  twice),  specifying  one
            white  list  package  for  each  Linux Kernel package that is provided on the command
            line.

            If this option is not provided – thus if no white list is provided – then the ABI  of
            all  publicly defined and exported functions and global variables by the Linux Kernel
            binaries are compared.

          • --no-unreferenced-symbols

            In the resulting report,  do  not  display  change  information  about  function  and
            variable  symbols  that  are  not referenced by any debug information.  Note that for
            these symbols not  referenced  by  any  debug  information,  the  change  information
            displayed is either added or removed symbols.

          • --no-show-locs
              Do  not  show  information  about where in the second shared library the respective
              type was changed.

          • --show-bytes

            Show sizes and offsets in bytes, not bits.  By default, sizes and offsets  are  shown
            in bits.

          • --show-bits

            Show sizes and offsets in bits, not bytes.  This option is activated by default.

          • --show-hex

            Show sizes and offsets in hexadecimal base.

          • --show-dec

            Show sizes and offsets in decimal base.  This option is activated by default.

          • --no-show-relative-offset-changes

            Without  this option, when the offset of a data member changes, the change report not
            only mentions the older and newer offset, but it also mentions by how many  bits  the
            data member changes.  With this option, the latter is not shown.

          • --show-identical-binaries
              Show  the  names  of  the  all  binaries compared, including the binaries whose ABI
              compare equal.  By default, when this option is not provided,  only  binaries  with
              ABI changes are mentionned in the output.

          • --fail-no-dbg

            Make  the  program  fail  and return a non-zero exit code if couldn’t read any of the
            debug information that comes from the debug info packages  that  were  given  on  the
            command  line.   If no debug info package were provided on the command line then this
            option is not active.

            Note that the non-zero exit code returned by the program as a result of  this  option
            is  the constant ABIDIFF_ERROR.  To know the numerical value of that constant, please
            refer to the exit code documentation.

          • --keep-tmp-files

            Do not erase the temporary directory files that are created during the  execution  of
            the tool.

          • --verbose

            Emit verbose progress messages.

          • self-check

            This  is  used  to test the underlying Libabigail library.  When in used, the command
            expects only on input package, along with its associated debug  info  packages.   The
            command  then  compares  each  binary  inside  the  package  against  its  own ABIXML
            representation. The result of the comparison should yield the empty set if Libabigail
            behaves  correctly.   Otherwise,  it  means there is an issue that ought to be fixed.
            This option is used by people interested in  Libabigail  development  for  regression
            testing purposes.  Here is an example of the use of this option:

                $ abipkgdiff --self-check --d1 mesa-libGLU-debuginfo-9.0.1-3.fc33.x86_64.rpm  mesa-libGLU-9.0.1-3.fc33.x86_64.rpm
                 ==== SELF CHECK SUCCEEDED for 'libGLU.so.1.3.1' ====
                $

   Return value
       The  exit  code  of the abipkgdiff command is either 0 if the ABI of the binaries compared
       are equal, or non-zero if they differ or if the tool encountered an error.

       In the later case, the value of the exit code is the same as for the abidiff tool.

   kmidiff
       kmidiff compares the binary Kernel Module Interfaces  of  two  Linux  Kernel  trees.   The
       binary  KMI  is  the interface that the Linux Kernel exposes to its modules.  The trees we
       are interested in here are the result of the build of the Linux Kernel source tree.

   General approach
       And example of how to build your kernel if you want to compare it  to  another  one  using
       kmidiff is:

          git clone -b v4.5 git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git linux/v4.5
          cd linux/v4.5
          make allyesconfig all

       Then  install  the modules into a directory, for instance, the build/modules sub-directory
       of the your kernel source tree:

          mkdir build/modules
          make modules_install INSTALL_MOD_DIR=build/modules

       Then construct a list of interfaces exported by the kernel, that you want to compare:

          cat > kmi-whitelist << EOF
          [kernel_4.5_kmi_whitelist]
           init_task
           schedule
           dev_queue_xmit
           __kmalloc
           printk
          EOF

       Suppose you’ve done something similar for the v4.6 branch of the  Linux  kernel,  you  now
       have  these  two  directories: linux/v4.5 and linux/v4.6.  Their modules are present under
       the directories linux/v4.5/build/modules and linux/v4.6/build/modules.

       To Comparing their KMI kmidiff needs to know where to find the vmlinux binaries and  their
       associated modules.  Here would be what the command line looks like:

          kmidiff                                     \
            --kmi-whitelist  linux/v4.6/kmi-whitelist \
            --vmlinux1       linux/v4.5/vmlinux       \
            --vmlinux2       linux/v4.6/vmlinux       \
                             linux/v4.5/build/modules \
                             linux/v4.6/build/modules

   Invocation
       More generally, kmidiff is invoked under the form:

          kmidiff [options] <first-modules-dir> <second-modules-dir>

   Environment
       By default, kmidiff compares all the interfaces (exported functions and variables) between
       the Kernel and its modules.  In practice, though, users want to compare a  subset  of  the
       those interfaces.

       Users can then define a “white list” of the interfaces to compare.  Such a white list is a
       just a file in the “INI” format that looks like:

          [kernel_version_x86_64_whitelist]
            function1_name
            function2_name
            global_variable1_name
            ....

       Note that the name of the section (the name that is between the two brackets) of that  INI
       file  just  has  to end with the string “whitelist”.  So you can define the name you want,
       for instance [kernel_46_x86_64_whitelist].

       Then each line of that whitelist file is the name of an  exported  function  or  variable.
       Only those interfaces along with the types reachable from their signatures are going to be
       compared by kmidiff recursively.

       Note that kmidiff compares the interfaces exported by the vmlinux binary and by the all of
       the compiled modules.

   Options--help | -h

            Display a short help about the command and exit.

          • --version | -v

            Display the version of the program and exit.

          • --verbose

            Display some verbose messages while executing.

          • --debug-info-dir1 | --d1 <di-path1>

            For  cases  where the debug information for the binaries of the first Linux kernel is
            split out into separate files, tells kmidiff  where  to  find  those  separate  debug
            information files.

            Note  that di-path must point to the root directory under which the debug information
            is arranged in a tree-like manner.  Under Red Hat based systems,  that  directory  is
            usually <root>/usr/lib/debug.

          • --debug-info-dir2 | --d2 <di-path2>

            Like  --debug-info-dir1,  this  options  tells  kmidiff where to find the split debug
            information for the binaries of the second Linux kernel.

          • --vmlinux1 | --l1 <path-to-first-vmlinux>

            Sets the path to  the  first  vmlinux  binary  to  consider.   This  has  to  be  the
            uncompressed vmlinux binary compiled with debug info.

          • --vmlinux2 | --l2 <path-to-first-vmlinux>

            Sets  the  path  to  the  second  vmlinux  binary  to  consider.   This has to be the
            uncompressed vmlinux binary compiled with debug info.

          • --kmi-whitelist | -w <path-to-interface-whitelist>

            Set the path to the white list of interfaces to compare while  comparing  the  Kernel
            Module Interface of the first kernel against the one of the second kernel.

            If  this  option  is not provided, all the exported interfaces of the two kernels are
            compared.  That takes a lot of times and is not necessarily meaningful  because  many
            interface are probably meant to see their reachable types change.

            So  please, make sure you always use this option unless you really know what you  are
            doing.

          • --suppressions | --suppr <path-to-suppressions>

            Use a suppression specification file located at path-to-suppressions.  Note that this
            option  can  appear  multiple  times  on  the command line.  In that case, all of the
            provided suppression specification files are taken into account.

            Please note that, by default, if this  option  is  not  provided,  then  the  default
            suppression specification files are loaded .

          • --impacted-interfaces | -i

            Tell what interfaces got impacted by each individual ABI change.

          • --full-impact | -f

            Emit  a  change  report  that  shows  the  full  impact  of  each  change on exported
            interfaces.  This is the default kind of report emitted  by  tools  like  abidiff  or
            abipkgdiff.

          • --show-bytes

            Show sizes and offsets in bytes, not bits.  This option is activated by default.

          • --show-bits

            Show  sizes  and offsets in bits, not bytes.  By default, sizes and offsets are shown
            in bytes.

          • --show-hex

            Show sizes and offsets in hexadecimal base.  This option is activated by default.

          • --show-dec

            Show sizes and offsets in decimal base.

   abidw
       abidw reads a shared library in ELF format and emits an XML representation of its  ABI  to
       standard  output.   The emitted representation includes all the globally defined functions
       and variables, along with a complete representation of their types.  It  also  includes  a
       representation  of the globally defined ELF symbols of the file.  The input shared library
       must contain associated debug information in DWARF format.

       When given the --linux-tree option, this program can also  handle  a  Linux  kernel  tree.
       That  is, a directory tree that contains both the vmlinux binary and Linux kernel modules.
       It analyses those Linux kernel binaries and emits an XML representation of  the  interface
       between  the kernel and its module, to standard output.  In this case, we don’t call it an
       ABI, but a KMI (Kernel Module Interface).  The  emitted  KMI  includes  all  the  globally
       defined functions and variables, along with a complete representation of their types.  The
       input binaries must contain associated debug information in DWARF format.

   Invocation
          abidw [options] [<path-to-elf-file>]

   Options--help | -h

            Display a short help about the command and exit.

          • –version | -v

            Display the version of the program and exit.

          • --debug-info-dir | -d <dir-path>

            In cases where the debug info for path-to-elf-file is in  a  separate  file  that  is
            located  in  a non-standard place, this tells abidw where to look for that debug info
            file.

            Note that dir-path must point to the root directory under which the debug information
            is  arranged  in  a tree-like manner.  Under Red Hat based systems, that directory is
            usually <root>/usr/lib/debug.

            This option can be provided several times with different root directories.   In  that
            case,  abidw  will potentially look into all those root directories to find the split
            debug info for the elf file.

            Note that this option is not mandatory for split debug information installed by  your
            system’s package manager because then abidw knows where to find it.

          • --out-file <file-path>

            This  option  instructs abidw to emit the XML representation of path-to-elf-file into
            the file file-path, rather than emitting it to its standard output.

          • --noout

            This option instructs abidw to not emit the XML representation of  the  ABI.   So  it
            only  reads  the ELF and debug information, builds the internal representation of the
            ABI and exits.  This option is usually useful for debugging purposes.

          • --no-corpus-path

            Do not emit the path attribute for the ABI corpus.

          • --suppressions | suppr <path-to-suppression-specifications-file>

            Use       a       suppression       specification       file        located        at
            path-to-suppression-specifications-file.   Note  that this option can appear multiple
            times  on  the  command  line.   In  that  case,  all  of  the  provided  suppression
            specification files are taken into account.  ABI artifacts matched by the suppression
            specifications are suppressed from the output of this tool.

          • --kmi-whitelist | -kaw <path-to-whitelist>

            When analyzing a Linux kernel binary, this option points to the white list  of  names
            of  ELF symbols of functions and variables which ABI must be written out.  That white
            list is called a ” Kernel Module Interface white list”.   This  is  because  for  the
            Kernel,  we  don’t talk about the ABI; we rather talk about the interface between the
            Kernel and its module. Hence the term KMI rather than ABI

            Any other function or variable which ELF symbol are not present in  that  white  list
            will not be considered by the KMI writing process.

            If  this option is not provided – thus if no white list is provided – then the entire
            KMI, that is, all publicly defined and exported functions and global variables by the
            Linux Kernel binaries is emitted.

          • --linux-tree | --lt

            Make abidw to consider the input path as a path to a directory containing the vmlinux
            binary as several kernel modules binaries.  In that  case,  this  program  emits  the
            representation of the Kernel Module Interface (KMI) on the standard output.

            Below is an example of usage of abidw on a Linux Kernel tree.

            First,  checkout  a  Linux  kernel source tree and build it.  Then install the kernel
            modules in a directory somewhere.  Copy the vmlinux binary into that  directory  too.
            And then serialize the KMI of that kernel to disk, using abidw:

                $ git clone git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git
                $ cd linux && git checkout v4.5
                $ make allyesconfig all
                $ mkdir build-output
                $ make INSTALL_MOD_PATH=./build-output modules_install
                $ cp vmlinux build-output/modules/4.5.0
                $ abidw --linux-tree build-output/modules/4.5.0 > build-output/linux-4.5.0.kmi

          • --headers-dir | --hd <headers-directory-path-1>

            Specifies  where  to  find  the  public  headers  of  the binary that the tool has to
            consider.  The tool will thus filter  out  types  that  are  not  defined  in  public
            headers.

            Note  that  several  public  header  directories  can  be specified for the binary to
            consider.  In that case the --header-dir option should be present  several  times  on
            the command line, like in the following example:

                $ abidw --header-dir /some/path       \
                        --header-dir /some/other/path \
                        binary > binary.abi

          • --header-file | --hf <header-file-path>

            Specifies  where  to find one of the public headers of the abi file that the tool has
            to consider.  The tool will thus filter out types that  are  not  defined  in  public
            headers.

          • --drop-private-types

            This  option  is  to be used with the --headers-dir and/or header-file options.  With
            this option, types that are NOT defined in the headers are entirely dropped from  the
            internal  representation build by Libabigail to represent the ABI and will not end up
            in the abi XML file.

          • --no-elf-needed

            Do not include the list of DT_NEEDED dependency names in the corpus.

          • --drop-undefined-syms

            With this option functions or variables  for  which  the  (exported)  ELF  symbol  is
            undefined  are  dropped  from  the  internal  representation  build  by Libabigail to
            represent the ABI and will not end up in the abi XML file.

          • --no-linux-kernel-mode

            Without this option, if abipkgiff detects that the binaries  it  is  looking  at  are
            Linux  Kernel  binaries  (either vmlinux or modules) then it only considers functions
            and variables which ELF  symbols  are  listed  in  the  __ksymtab  and  __ksymtab_gpl
            sections.

            With  this  option,  abipkgdiff considers the binary as a non-special ELF binary.  It
            thus considers functions and variables which are defined  and  exported  in  the  ELF
            sense.

          • --check-alternate-debug-info <elf-path>

            If  the  debug  info for the file elf-path contains a reference to an alternate debug
            info file, abidw checks that it can find that alternate debug  info  file.   In  that
            case, it emits a meaningful success message mentioning the full path to the alternate
            debug info file found.  Otherwise, it emits an error code.

          • --no-show-locs
              In the emitted ABI representation, do not show  file,  line  or  column  where  ABI
              artifacts are defined.

          • --no-parameter-names

            In the emitted ABI representation, do not show names of function parameters, just the
            types.

          • --no-write-default-sizes

            In the XML ABI representation,  do  not  write  the  size-in-bits  for  pointer  type
            definitions,  reference  type  definitions,  function declarations and function types
            when they are equal to the default address size of the translation unit.   Note  that
            libabigail  before 1.8 will not set the default size and will interpret types without
            a size-in-bits attribute as zero sized.

          • --type-id-style <sequence``|``hash>

            This option controls how types are idenfied in the generated XML files.  The  default
            sequence style just numbers (with type-id- as prefix) the types in the order they are
            encountered.  The hash style uses a (stable, portable) hash of libabigail’s  internal
            type names and is intended to make the XML files easier to diff.

          • --check-alternate-debug-info-base-name <elf-path>

            Like  --check-alternate-debug-info, but in the success message, only mention the base
            name of the debug info file; not its full path.

          • --load-all-types

            By default, libabigail (and thus abidw) only loads  types  that  are  reachable  from
            functions  and  variables  declarations that are publicly defined and exported by the
            binary.  So only those types are present in the output of abidw.  This option however
            makes  abidw  load  all  the  types  defined in the binaries, even those that are not
            reachable from public declarations.

          • --abidiff
              Load the ABI of the ELF binary given in  argument,  save  it  in  libabigail’s  XML
              format  in  a  temporary file; read the ABI from the temporary XML file and compare
              the ABI that has been read back  against  the  ABI  of  the  ELF  binary  given  in
              argument.   The  ABIs  should  compare  equal.   If they don’t, the program emits a
              diagnostic and exits with a non-zero code.

              This is a debugging and sanity check option.

              • --debug-abidiff

              Same as --abidiff but in debug mode.  In this mode, error messages are emitted  for
              types which fail type canonicalization.

              This is an optional debugging and sanity check option.  To enable it the libabigail
              package needs to be configured with the –enable-debug-self-comparison option.

          • --annotate
              Annotate the ABIXML output with comments above most  elements.   The  comments  are
              made  of  the  pretty-printed  form  types,  declaration  or even ELF symbols.  The
              purpose is  to  make  the  ABIXML  output  more  human-readable  for  debugging  or
              documenting purposes.

          • --stats

            Emit statistics about various internal things.

          • --verbose

            Emit verbose logs about the progress of miscellaneous internal things.

   Notes
   Alternate debug info files
       As  of  the  version  4  of  the DWARF specification, Alternate debug information is a GNU
       extension to the DWARF specification.  It has however been proposed for inclusion into the
       upcoming  version  5 of the DWARF standard.  You can read more about the GNU extensions to
       the DWARF standard here.

   abicompat
       abicompat checks that an application that links against a given shared  library  is  still
       ABI  compatible  with  a  subsequent  version  of that library.  If the new version of the
       library introduces an ABI incompatibility, then abicompat hints the user at  what  exactly
       that incompatibility is.

   Invocation
          abicompat [options] [<application> <shared-library-first-version> <shared-library-second-version>]

   Options--help

            Display a short help about the command and exit.

          • –version | -v

            Display the version of the program and exit.

          • --list-undefined-symbols | -u

            Display the list of undefined symbols of the application and exit.

          • --show-base-names | -b

            In  the  resulting  report emitted by the tool, this option makes the application and
            libraries be referred to by their base names only; not by a full absolute name.  This
            can  be  useful for use in scripts that wants to compare names of the application and
            libraries independently of what their directory names are.

          • --app-debug-info-dir | --appd <path-to-app-debug-info-directory>

            Set the path to the directory under which the debug information of the application is
            supposed to be laid out.  This is useful for application binaries for which the debug
            info is in a separate set of files.

          • --lib-debug-info-dir1 | --libd1 <path-to-lib1-debug-info>

            Set the path to the directory under which the debug information of the first  version
            of  the shared library is supposed to be laid out.  This is useful for shared library
            binaries for which the debug info is in a separate set of files.

          • --lib-debug-info-dir2 | --libd2 <path-to-lib1-debug-info>

            Set the path to the directory under which the debug information of the second version
            of  the shared library is supposed to be laid out.  This is useful for shared library
            binaries for which the debug info is in a separate set of files.

          • --suppressions | --suppr <path-to-suppressions>

            Use a suppression specification file located at path-to-suppressions.  Note that this
            option   can  appear  multiple  times  on  the  command  line;  all  the  suppression
            specification files are then taken into account.

          • --no-show-locs
              Do not show information about where in the second  shared  library  the  respective
              type was changed.

          • --weak-mode

            This  triggers  the  weak  mode  of abicompat.  In this mode, only one version of the
            library is required.  That is, abicompat is invoked like this:

                abicompat --weak-mode <the-application> <the-library>

            Note that the --weak-mode option can even be omitted  if  only  one  version  of  the
            library  is  given, along with the application; in that case, abicompat automatically
            switches to operate in weak mode:

                abicompat <the-application> <the-library>

            In this weak mode, the types of functions and variables exported by the  library  and
            consumed  by the application (as in, the symbols of the these functions and variables
            are undefined in the application and are defined and exported  by  the  library)  are
            compared  to the version of these types as expected by the application.  And if these
            two versions of types are different, abicompat tells the user  what  the  differences
            are.

            In  other  words,  in this mode, abicompat checks that the types of the functions and
            variables exported by the library  mean  the  same  thing  as  what  the  application
            expects, as far as the ABI is concerned.

            Note  that  in  this  mode,  abicompat doesn’t detect exported functions or variables
            (symbols) that are expected by the application but that are removed from the library.
            That is why it is called weak mode.

   Return values
       The  exit  code  of  the  abicompat  command  is either 0 if the ABI of the binaries being
       compared are equal, or non-zero if they differ or if the tool encountered an error.

       In the later case, the exit code is a 8-bits-wide bit  field  in  which  each  bit  has  a
       specific meaning.

       The first bit, of value 1, named ABIDIFF_ERROR means there was an error.

       The  second bit, of value 2, named ABIDIFF_USAGE_ERROR means there was an error in the way
       the user invoked the tool.  It might be set, for instance, if the user  invoked  the  tool
       with an unknown command line switch, with a wrong number or argument, etc.  If this bit is
       set, then the ABIDIFF_ERROR bit must be set as well.

       The third bit, of value 4, named ABIDIFF_ABI_CHANGE means the ABI of  the  binaries  being
       compared are different.

       The  fourth  bit,  of  value 8, named ABIDIFF_ABI_INCOMPATIBLE_CHANGE means the ABI of the
       binaries compared are different in an incompatible way.  If this  bit  is  set,  then  the
       ABIDIFF_ABI_CHANGE  bit  must  be  set  as well.  If the ABIDIFF_ABI_CHANGE is set and the
       ABIDIFF_INCOMPATIBLE_CHANGE is NOT set, then it means that the ABIs being  compared  might
       or  might  not be compatible.  In that case, a human being needs to review the ABI changes
       to decide if they are compatible or not.

       The remaining bits are not used for the moment.

   Usage examples
          • Detecting a possible ABI incompatibility in a new shared library version:

                $ cat -n test0.h
                     1  struct foo
                     2  {
                     3    int m0;
                     4
                     5    foo()
                     6      : m0()
                     7    {}
                     8  };
                     9
                    10  foo*
                    11  first_func();
                    12
                    13  void
                    14  second_func(foo&);
                    15
                    16  void
                    17  third_func();
                $

                $ cat -n test-app.cc
                     1  // Compile with:
                     2  //  g++ -g -Wall -o test-app -L. -ltest-0 test-app.cc
                     3
                     4  #include "test0.h"
                     5
                     6  int
                     7  main()
                     8  {
                     9    foo* f = first_func();
                    10    second_func(*f);
                    11    return 0;
                    12  }
                $

                $ cat -n test0.cc
                     1  // Compile this with:
                     2  //  g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-0.so test0.cc
                     3
                     4  #include "test0.h"
                     5
                     6  foo*
                     7  first_func()
                     8  {
                     9    foo* f = new foo();
                    10    return f;
                    11  }
                    12
                    13  void
                    14  second_func(foo&)
                    15  {
                    16  }
                    17
                    18  void
                    19  third_func()
                    20  {
                    21  }
                $

                $ cat -n test1.h
                     1  struct foo
                     2  {
                     3    int  m0;
                     4    char m1; /* <-- a new member got added here! */
                     5
                     6    foo()
                     7    : m0(),
                     8      m1()
                     9    {}
                    10  };
                    11
                    12  foo*
                    13  first_func();
                    14
                    15  void
                    16  second_func(foo&);
                    17
                    18  void
                    19  third_func();
                $

                $ cat -n test1.cc
                     1  // Compile this with:
                     2  //  g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-1.so test1.cc
                     3
                     4  #include "test1.h"
                     5
                     6  foo*
                     7  first_func()
                     8  {
                     9    foo* f = new foo();
                    10    return f;
                    11  }
                    12
                    13  void
                    14  second_func(foo&)
                    15  {
                    16  }
                    17
                    18  /* Let's comment out the definition of third_func()
                    19     void
                    20     third_func()
                    21     {
                    22     }
                    23  */
                $

            • Compile  the  first  and  second  versions  of  the  libraries:  libtest-0.so   and
              libtest-1.so:

                  $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-0.so test0.cc
                  $ g++ -g -Wall -shared -o libtest-1.so test1.cc

            • Compile  the  application  and  link  it  against the first version of the library,
              creating the test-app binary:

                  $ g++ -g -Wall -o test-app -L. -ltest-0.so test-app.cc

            • Now, use abicompat to see if libtest-1.so is ABI compatible with app, with  respect
              to the ABI of libtest-0.so:

                  $ abicompat test-app libtest-0.so libtest-1.so
                  ELF file 'test-app' might not be ABI compatible with 'libtest-1.so' due to differences with 'libtest-0.so' below:
                  Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 2 Changed, 0 Added functions
                  Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

                  2 functions with some indirect sub-type change:

                    [C]'function foo* first_func()' has some indirect sub-type changes:
                      return type changed:
                        in pointed to type 'struct foo':
                          size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                          1 data member insertion:
                            'char foo::m1', at offset 32 (in bits)
                    [C]'function void second_func(foo&)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
                      parameter 0 of type 'foo&' has sub-type changes:
                        referenced type 'struct foo' changed, as reported earlier

                  $

            • Now use the weak mode of abicompat, that is, providing just the application and the
              new version of the library:

                  $ abicompat --weak-mode test-app libtest-1.so
                  functions defined in library
                      'libtest-1.so'
                  have sub-types that are different from what application
                      'test-app'
                  expects:

                    function foo* first_func():
                      return type changed:
                        in pointed to type 'struct foo':
                          size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                          1 data member insertion:
                            'char foo::m1', at offset 32 (in bits)

                  $

   abilint
       abilint parses the native XML representation of an ABI as emitted by abidw.  Once  it  has
       parsed  the XML representation of the ABI, abilint builds and in-memory model from it.  It
       then tries to save it back to an  XML  form,  to  standard  output.   If  that  read-write
       operation succeeds chances are the input XML ABI representation is meaningful.

       Note  that  the  main  intent  of  this  tool  to  help debugging issues in the underlying
       Libabigail library.

       Note also that abilint can also read an ELF input file, build the in-memory model for  its
       ABI,  and  serialize  that  model back into XML to standard output.  In that case, the ELF
       input file must be accompanied with its debug information in the DWARF format.

   Invocation
          abilint [options] [<abi-file1>]

   Options--help

            Display a short help message and exits.

          • –version | -v

            Display the version of the program and exit.

          • --debug-info-dir <path>

            When reading an ELF input file which debug information is split out into  a  separate
            file, this options tells abilint where to find that separate debug information file.

            Note  that path must point to the root directory under which the debug information is
            arranged in a tree-like manner.  Under Red  Hat  based  systems,  that  directory  is
            usually <root>/usr/lib/debug.

            Note  also that this option is not mandatory for split debug information installed by
            your system’s package manager because then abidiff knows where to find it.

          • --diff

            For XML inputs, perform a text diff between the input and the memory model saved back
            to  disk.   This  can  help  to  spot issues in the handling of the XML format by the
            underlying Libabigail library.

          • --noout

            Do not display anything on standard output.  The return code of the  command  is  the
            only way to know if the command succeeded.

          • --suppressions | suppr <path-to-suppression-specifications-file>

            Use        a        suppression       specification       file       located       at
            path-to-suppression-specifications-file.  Note that this option can  appear  multiple
            times  on  the  command  line.   In  that  case,  all  of  the  provided  suppression
            specification files are taken into account.  ABI artifacts matched by the suppression
            specifications are suppressed from the output of this tool.

          • --headers-dir | --hd <headers-directory-path-1>

            Specifies  where to find the public headers of the first shared library that the tool
            has to consider.  The tool will thus filter out types that are not defined in  public
            headers.

          • --header-file | --hf <header-file-path>

            Specifies  where  to find one of the public headers of the abi file that the tool has
            to consider.  The tool will thus filter out types that  are  not  defined  in  public
            headers.

          • --stdin | --

            Read the input content from standard input.

          • --tu

            Expect the input XML to represent a single translation unit.

   fedabipkgdiff
       fedabipkgdiff  compares the ABI of shared libraries in Fedora packages.  It’s a convenient
       way to do so without having to manually download packages from the Fedora Build System.

       fedabipkgdiff knows how to talk with the Fedora Build System to find  the  right  packages
       versions,  their  associated  debug  information  and development packages, download them,
       compare their ABI locally, and report about the possible ABI changes.

       Note that by default, this tool reports ABI changes about types that are defined in public
       header  files  found  in  the  development  packages  associated  with  the packages being
       compared.  It also reports ABI changes about functions and global variables whose  symbols
       are defined and exported in the ELF binaries found in the packages being compared.

   Invocation
          fedabipkgdiff [option] <NVR> ...

   Environment
       fedabipkgdiff loads two default suppression specifications files, merges their content and
       use it to filter out ABI change reports that might be considered  as  false  positives  to
       users.

       • Default system-wide suppression specification file

         It’s        located        by        the       optional       environment       variable
         LIBABIGAIL_DEFAULT_SYSTEM_SUPPRESSION_FILE.  If that environment variable  is  not  set,
         then      fedabipkgdiff      tries      to      load      the      suppression      file
         $libdir/libabigail/libabigail-default.abignore.  If that file is not  present,  then  no
         default system-wide suppression specification file is loaded.

       • Default user suppression specification file.

         It’s  located  by the optional environment LIBABIGAIL_DEFAULT_USER_SUPPRESSION_FILE.  If
         that environment variable is not set, then fedabipkgdiff tries to load  the  suppression
         file  $HOME/.abignore.   If  that  file is not present, then no default user suppression
         specification is loaded.

   Options--help | -h

            Display a short help about the command and exit.

          • --dry-run

            Don’t actually perform the ABI comparison.  Details about what is going  to  be  done
            are emitted on standard output.

          • --debug

            Emit  debugging  messages  about  the  execution  of the program.  Details about each
            method invocation, including input parameters and returned values, are emitted.

          • --traceback

            Show traceback when an exception raised. This is useful for developers  of  the  tool
            itself to know more exceptional errors.

          • --server <URL>

            Specifies the URL of the Koji XMLRPC service the tool talks to.  The default value of
            this option is http://koji.fedoraproject.org/kojihub.

          • --topurl <URL>

            Specifies the URL of the package store the tool downloads  RPMs  from.   The  default
            value of this option is https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org.

          • --from <distro>

            Specifies  the  name  of  the baseline Fedora distribution in which to find the first
            build that is used for comparison. The distro value can be any valid value of the RPM
            macro %{?dist} for Fedora, for example, fc4, fc23, fc25.

          • --to <distro>

            Specifies  the  name  of  the  Fedora distribution in which to find the build that is
            compared against the baseline specified by option --from.  The distro value could  be
            any valid value of the RPM macro %{?dist} for Fedora, for example, fc4, fc23.

          • --all-subpackages

            Instructs the tool to also compare the ABI of the binaries in the sub-packages of the
            packages specified.

          • --dso-only

            Compares the ABI of shared libraries only.  If this option is not provided, the  tool
            compares the ABI of all ELF binaries found in the packages.

          • --suppressions <path-to-suppresions>

            Use a suppression specification file located at path-to-suppressions.

          • --no-default-suppression

            Do not load the default suppression specification files.

          • --no-devel-pkg

            Do  not  take  associated  development  packages into account when performing the ABI
            comparison.  This makes the  tool  report  ABI  changes  about  all  types  that  are
            reachable  from functions and global variables which symbols are defined and publicly
            exported in the binaries being compared, even if  those  types  are  not  defined  in
            public header files available from the packages being compared.

          • --show-identical-binaries
              Show  the  names  of  the  all  binaries compared, including the binaries whose ABI
              compare equal.  By default, when this option is not provided,  only  binaries  with
              ABI changes are mentionned in the output.

          • --abipkgdiff <path/to/abipkgdiff>

            Specify an alternative abipkgdiff instead of the one installed in system.

          • --clean-cache-before

            Clean cache before ABI comparison.

          • --clean-cache-after

            Clean cache after ABI comparison.

          • --clean-cache

            If you want to clean cache both before and after ABI comparison, --clean-cache is the
            convenient way for you to save typing of two options at same time.

       Note that a build is a specific version and release of an RPM package.  It’s specified  by
       its  the  package  name,  version  and  release.  These are specified by the Fedora Naming
       Guidelines

   Return value
       The exit code of the abipkgdiff command is either 0 if the ABI of  the  binaries  compared
       are equivalent, or non-zero if they differ or if the tool encountered an error.

       In the later case, the value of the exit code is the same as for the abidiff tool.

   Use cases
       Below are some usage examples currently supported by fedabipkgdiff.

          1. Compare  the ABI of binaries in a local package against the ABI of the latest stable
             package in Fedora 23.

             Suppose you have built just built the httpd package and you want to compare the  ABI
             of the binaries in this locally built package against the ABI of the binaries in the
             latest http build from Fedora 23.  The command line invocation would be:

                 $ fedabipkgdiff --from fc23 ./httpd-2.4.18-2.fc24.x86_64.rpm

          2. Compare the ABI of binaries in two local packages.

             Suppose you have built two versions of package httpd, and you want to see  what  ABI
             differences  between  these  two  versions of RPM files. The command line invocation
             would be:

                 $ fedabipkgdiff path/to/httpd-2.4.23-3.fc23.x86_64.rpm another/path/to/httpd-2.4.23-4.fc24.x86_64.rpm

             All what fedabipkgdiff does happens on local machine without the need of querying or
             downloading RPMs from Koji.

          3. Compare  the  ABI  of binaries in the latest build of the httpd package in Fedora 23
             against the ABI of the binaries in the latest build of the same package in 24.

             In this case, note that neither of the two packages are available locally.  The tool
             is  going  to  talk  with  the  Fedora Build System, determine what the versions and
             releases of the latest packages  are,  download  them  and  perform  the  comparison
             locally.  The command line invocation would be:

                 $ fedabipkgdiff --from fc23 --to fc24 httpd

          4. Compare  the  ABI  of  binaries of two builds of the httpd package, designated their
             versions and releases.

             If we want to do perform the ABI comparison  for  all  the  processor  architectures
             supported by Fedora the command line invocation would be:

                 $ fedabipkgdiff httpd-2.8.14.fc23 httpd-2.8.14.fc24

             But  if  we  want  to  perform  the ABI comparison for a specific architecture, say,
             x86_64, then the command line invocation would be:

                 $ fedabipkgdiff httpd-2.8.14.fc23.x86_64 httpd-2.8.14.fc24.x86_64

          5. If the use wants to also compare the sub-packages of a given package,  she  can  use
             the  –all-subpackages  option.  The first command of the previous example would thus
             look like:

                 $ fedabipkgdiff --all-subpackages httpd-2.8.14.fc23 httpd-2.8.14.fc24

CONCEPTS

   ABI artifacts
       An ABI artifact is a relevant part of the ABI of a shared library or program.  Examples of
       ABI  artifacts  are  exported  types,  variables,  functions, or ELF symbols exported by a
       shared library.

       The set of ABI artifact for a binary is called an ABI Corpus.

   Harmful changes
       A change in the diff report is considered harmful if  it  might  cause  ABI  compatibility
       issues.   That  is,  it  might  prevent  an application dynamically linked against a given
       version of a library to keep working with the changed  subsequent  versions  of  the  same
       library.

   Harmless changes
       A  change  in  the  diff  report  is  considered  harmless  if  it  will not cause any ABI
       compatibility issue.  That is, it will  not  prevent  an  application  dynamically  linked
       against given version of a library to keep working with the changed subsequent versions of
       the same library.

       By default, abidiff filters harmless changes from the diff report.

   Suppression specifications
   Definition
       A suppression specification file is a way for a user to instruct  abidiff,  abipkgdiff  or
       any other relevant libabigail tool to avoid emitting reports for changes involving certain
       ABI artifacts.

       It contains directives (or specifications) that describe the set of ABI artifacts to avoid
       emitting change reports about.

   Introductory examples
       Its syntax is based on a simplified and customized form of Ini File Syntax.  For instance,
       to specify that change reports on a type named FooPrivateType should  be  suppressed,  one
       could write this suppression specification:

          [suppress_type]
            name = FooPrivateType

       If we want to ensure that only change reports about structures named FooPrivateType should
       be suppressed, we could write:

          [suppress_type]
            type_kind = struct
            name = FooPrivateType

       But we could also want to suppress change reports avoid typedefs named FooPrivateType.  In
       that case we would write:

          [suppress_type]
            type_kind = typedef
            name = FooPrivateType

       Or,  we  could  want  to suppress change reports about all struct which names end with the
       string “PrivateType”:

          [suppress_type]
            type_kind = struct
            name_regexp = ^.*PrivateType

       Let’s now look at the generic syntax of suppression specification files.

   Syntax
   Properties
       More generally, the format of  suppression  lists  is  organized  around  the  concept  of
       property.  Every property has a name and a value, delimited by the = sign.  E.g:

          name = value

       Leading and trailing white spaces are ignored around property names and values.

   Regular expressions
       The  value  of  some  properties  might  be a regular expression.  In that case, they must
       comply with the syntax of extended POSIX regular expressions.  Note that  Libabigail  uses
       the regular expression engine of the GNU C Library.

   Escaping a character in a regular expression
       When  trying to match a string that contains a * character, like in the pointer type int*,
       one must be careful to notice that the character * is a special character in the  extended
       POSIX  regular  expression  syntax.   And  that  character must be escaped for the regular
       expression engine.  Thus the regular expression that would match  the  string  int*  in  a
       suppression file should be

          int\\*

       Wait;  but  then  why  the  two  \ characters?  Well, because the \ character is a special
       character in the Ini File Syntax used for specifying suppressions.  So it must be  escaped
       as  well,  so that the Ini File parser leaves a \ character intact in the data stream that
       is handed to the regular expression engine.  Hence the \\ targeted at the Ini File parser.

       So, in short, to escape a character in a regular expression, always prefix  the  character
       with the \\ sequence.

   Modus operandi
       Suppression  specifications  can  be  applied  at  two  different points of the processing
       pipeline of libabigail.

       In the default operating mode called “late suppression mode”,  suppression  specifications
       are applied to the result of comparing the in-memory internal representations of two ABIs.
       In this mode, if an ABI artifact matches a suppression specification, its changes are  not
       mentioned  in  the  ABI  change  report.   The internal representation of the “suppressed”
       changed ABI artifact is still present in memory; it is  just  not  mentioned  in  the  ABI
       change report.  The change report can still mention statistics about the number of changed
       ABI artifacts that were suppressed.

       There is another operating mode called the  “early  suppression  mode”  where  suppression
       specifications   are   applied   during   the   construction  of  the  in-memory  internal
       representation of a given ABI.  In that mode, if an ABI  artifact  matches  a  suppression
       specification,  no  in-memory  internal  representation  is built for it.  As a result, no
       change about the matched ABI artifact is going to be mentioned in the  ABI  change  report
       and  no  statistic  about the number of suppressed ABI changes is available.  Also, please
       note that because suppressed  ABI  artifacts  are  removed  from  the  in-memory  internal
       representation  in  this  mode,  the  amount memory used by the internal representation is
       potentially smaller than the memory consumption in the late suppression mode.

   Sections
       Properties are then grouped into arbitrarily named sections that shall not be nested.  The
       name of the section is on a line by itself and is surrounded by square brackets, i.e:

          [section_name]
          property1_name = property1_value
          property2_name = property2_value

       A section might or might not have properties.  Sections that expect to have properties and
       which are found nonetheless empty are just ignored.  Properties that are not recognized by
       the reader are ignored as well.

   Section names
       Each  different  section  can  be  thought  of as being a directive to suppress ABI change
       reports for a particular kind of ABI artifact.

   [suppress_file]
       This directive prevents a given tool from loading a file (binary or abixml  file)  if  its
       file  name  or  other  properties match certain properties.  Thus, if the tool is meant to
       compare the ABIs of two files, and if the directive prevents it from loading either one of
       the files, then no comparison is performed.

       Note  that  for  the  [suppress_file]  directive  to  work,  at least one of the following
       properties must be provided:
          file_name_regexp, file_name_not_regexp, soname_regexp, soname_not_regexp.

       If none of the above properties are provided, then the [suppress_file] directive is simply
       ignored.

       The potential properties of this sections are listed below:

       • file_name_regexp

         Usage:
            file_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Prevents  the  system  from  loading  the file which name matches the regular expression
         specified as value of this property.

       • file_name_not_regexp

         Usage:
            file_name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Prevents the system from loading  the  file  which  name  does  not  match  the  regular
         expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Prevents  the system from loading the file which contains a SONAME property that matches
         the regular expression of this property.  Note that  this  property  also  works  on  an
         abixml file if it contains a SONAME property.

       • soname_not_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Prevents the system from loading the file which contains a SONAME property that does NOT
         match the regular expression of this property.  Note that this property also works on an
         abixml file if it contains a SONAME property.

       • label
          Usage:
              label = <some-value>

          Define  a  label  for the section.  A label is just an informative string that might be
          used by the tool to refer to a type suppression in error messages.

   [suppress_type]
       This directive suppresses report messages about a type change.

       Note that for the [suppress_type] directive  to  work,  at  least  one  of  the  following
       properties must be provided:
          file_name_regexp,   file_name_not_regexp,   soname_regexp,   soname_not_regexp,   name,
          name_regexp,        name_not_regexp,         type_kind,         source_location_not_in,
          source_location_not_regexp.

       If none of the above properties are provided, then the [suppress_type] directive is simply
       ignored.

       The potential properties of this sections are listed below:

       • file_name_regexp

         Usage:
            file_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a  binary  file  which
         name matches the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • file_name_not_regexp

         Usage:
            file_name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses  change  reports  about ABI artifacts that are defined in a binary file which
         name does not match the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a shared library which
         SONAME property matches the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_not_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a shared library which
         SONAME property does not match  the  regular  expression  specified  as  value  of  this
         property.

       • name_regexp
          Usage:
              name_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses  change  reports  involving  types whose name matches the regular expression
          specified as value of this property.

       • name_not_regexp
          Usage:
              name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving  types  whose  name  does  NOT  match  the  regular
          expression  specified  as  value  of  this  property.   Said  otherwise,  this property
          specifies which types to keep, rather than types to suppress from reports.

       • name
          Usage:
              name = <a-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving types whose name equals the value of this property.

       • type_kind
          Usage:

              type_kind = class | struct | union | enum |
                     array | typedef | builtin

          Suppresses change reports involving a certain kind  of  type.   The  kind  of  type  to
          suppress change reports for is specified by the possible values listed above:

              •

                class: suppress change reports for class types. Note that
                       even  if  class  types  don’t  exist  for C, this value still triggers the
                       suppression of change reports for struct types, in C.  In C++ however,  it
                       should do what it suggests.

              •

                struct: suppress change reports for struct types in C or C++.
                       Note that the value class above is a super-set of this one.

              • union: suppress change reports for union types.

              • enum: suppress change reports for enum types.

              • array: suppress change reports for array types.

              • typedef: suppress change reports for typedef types.

              • builtin:  suppress  change  reports  for  built-in (or native) types.  Example of
                built-in types are char, int, unsigned int, etc.

       • source_location_not_in
          Usage:
              source_location_not_in = <list-of-file-paths>

          Suppresses change reports involving a type which is defined in a file which path is NOT
          listed  in the value list-of-file-paths.  Note that the value is a comma-separated list
          of file paths e.g, this property

              source_location_not_in = libabigail/abg-ir.h, libabigail/abg-dwarf-reader.h

          suppresses change reports about all the types that are  NOT  defined  in  header  files
          whose     path     end     up     with     the     strings    libabigail/abg-ir.h    or
          libabigail/abg-dwarf-reader.h.

       • source_location_not_regexp
          Usage:
              source_location_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving a type which is defined in a file which  path  does
          NOT match the regular expression provided as value of the property. E.g, this property

              source_location_not_regexp = libabigail/abg-.*\\.h

          suppresses  change reports involving all the types that are NOT defined in header files
          whose path match the regular expression provided a value of the property.

       • has_data_member_inserted_at
          Usage:
              has_data_member_inserted_at = <offset-in-bit>

          Suppresses change reports involving a type which has at least one data member  inserted
          at an offset specified by the property value offset-in-bit.  The value offset-in-bit is
          either:

                 • an integer value, expressed in bits, which denotes the offset of the insertion
                   point  of  the  data  member,  starting  from  the  beginning  of the relevant
                   structure or class.

                 • the keyword end which is a named constant which value equals the offset of the
                   end of the of the structure or class.

                 • the     function    call    expression    offset_of(data-member-name)    where
                   data-member-name is the name of a given data member of the relevant  structure
                   or  class.   The  value  of  this  function call expression is an integer that
                   represents the offset of the data member denoted by data-member-name.

                 • the   function   call    expression    offset_after(data-member-name)    where
                   data-member-name  is the name of a given data member of the relevant structure
                   or class.  The value of this function  call  expression  is  an  integer  that
                   represents  the offset of the point that comes right after the region occupied
                   by the data member denoted by data-member-name.

       • has_data_member_inserted_between
          Usage:
              has_data_member_inserted_between = {<range-begin>, <range-end>}

          Suppresses change reports involving a type which has at least one data mber inserted at
          an  offset  that is comprised in the range between range-begin`` and range-end.  Please
          note that each of the values range-begin and range-end can be of the same form  as  the
          has_data_member_inserted_at property above.

          Usage examples of this properties are:

              has_data_member_inserted_between = {8, 64}

          or:

              has_data_member_inserted_between = {16, end}

          or:

              has_data_member_inserted_between = {offset_after(member1), end}

       • has_data_members_inserted_between
          Usage:
              has_data_members_inserted_between = {<sequence-of-ranges>}

          Suppresses  change  reports involving a type which has multiple data member inserted in
          various offset ranges.  A usage example of this property is, for instance:

              has_data_members_inserted_between = {{8, 31}, {72, 95}}

          This usage example suppresses change reports involving a type which  has  data  members
          inserted in bit offset ranges [8 31] and [72 95].  The length of the sequence of ranges
          or this has_data_members_inserted_between is not bounded; it can  be  as  long  as  the
          system  can cope with.  The values of the boundaries of the ranges are of the same kind
          as for the has_data_member_inserted_at property above.

          Another usage example of this property is thus:

              has_data_members_inserted_between =
                {
                     {offset_after(member0), offset_of(member1)},
                     {72, end}
                }

       • accessed_through
          Usage:
              accessed_through = <some-predefined-values>

          Suppress change reports involving a type  which  is  referred  to  either  directly  or
          through  a  pointer  or  a  reference.   The  potential values of this property are the
          predefined keywords below:

              • direct

                So if the [suppress_type] contains the property description:

                   accessed_through = direct

                then changes about a type that  is  referred-to  directly  (i.e,  not  through  a
                pointer or a reference) are going to be suppressed.

              • pointer

                If the accessed_through property is set to the value pointer then changes about a
                type that is referred-to through a pointer are going to be suppressed.

              • reference

                If the accessed_through property is set to the value reference then changes about
                a type that is referred-to through a reference are going to be suppressed.

              • reference-or-pointer

                If  the  accessed_through  property is set to the value reference-or-pointer then
                changes about a type that is referred-to through either a reference or a  pointer
                are going to be suppressed.

          For  an  extensive  example  of  how to use this property, please check out the example
          below about suppressing change reports about types accessed either directly or  through
          pointers.

       • drop
          Usage:
              drop = yes | no

          If  a type is matched by a suppression specification which contains the “drop” property
          set to “yes” (or to “true”) then the type is not even going to be  represented  in  the
          internal  representation  of the ABI being analyzed.  This property makes its enclosing
          suppression specification to be applied in the early  suppression  specification  mode.
          The  net  effect  is  that  it potentially reduces the memory used to represent the ABI
          being analyzed.

          Please note  that  for  this  property  to  be  effective,  the  enclosing  suppression
          specification   must   have  at  least  one  of  the  following  properties  specified:
          name_regexp, name, name_regexp, source_location_not_in or source_location_not_regexp.

       • label
          Usage:
              label = <some-value>

          Define a label for the section.  A label is just an informative string  that  might  be
          used by a tool to refer to a type suppression in error messages.

       • changed_enumerators

         Usage:
            changed_enumerators = <list-of-enumerators>

         Suppresses  change reports involving changes in the value of enumerators of a given enum
         type.  This property is applied if the type_kind property is set to the value  enum,  at
         least.   The  value  of  the  changed_enumerators  is  a  comma-separated  list  of  the
         enumerators that the user expects to change.  For instance:

            changed_enumerators = LAST_ENUMERATORS0, LAST_ENUMERATOR1

   [suppress_function]
       This directive suppresses report messages about changes on a set of functions.

       Note that for the [suppress_function] directive to work, at least  one  of  the  following
       properties must be provided:
          label,  file_name_regexp, file_name_not_regexp, soname_regexp, soname_not_regexp, name,
          name_regexp,   name_not_regexp,   parameter,   return_type_name,    return_type_regexp,
          symbol_name,      symbol_name_regexp,      symbol_name_not_regexp,      symbol_version,
          symbol_version_regexp.

       If none of the above properties are provided, then the  [suppress_function]  directive  is
       simply ignored.

       The potential properties of this sections are:

       • label
          Usage:
              label = <some-value>

          This property is the same as the label property defined above.

       • file_name_regexp

         Usage:

         file_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses  change  reports  about ABI artifacts that are defined in a binary file which
         name matches the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • file_name_not_regexp

         Usage:
            file_name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a  binary  file  which
         name does not match the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a shared library which
         SONAME property matches the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_not_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a shared library which
         SONAME  property  does  not  match  the  regular  expression  specified as value of this
         property.

       • name
          Usage:
              name = <some-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions whose  name  equals  the  value  of  this
          property.

       • name_regexp
          Usage:
              name_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions whose name matches the regular expression
          specified as value of this property.

          Let’s consider the case of functions that have several symbol names.  This happens when
          the  underlying  symbol for the function has aliases.  Each symbol name is actually one
          alias name.

          In this case, if the regular expression matches the name of at least one of the aliases
          names,  then  it  must  match  the  names of all of the aliases of the function for the
          directive to actually suppress the diff reports for said function.

       • name_not_regexp
          Usage:
              name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions  whose  names  don’t  match  the  regular
          expression specified as value of this property.

          The  rules  for  functions that have several symbol names are the same rules as for the
          name_regexp property above.

       • change_kind
          Usage:
              change_kind = <predefined-possible-values>

          Specifies the kind of changes this suppression  specification  should  apply  to.   The
          possible values of this property as well as their meaning are listed below:

              • function-subtype-change

                This  suppression specification applies to functions that which have at least one
                sub-type that has changed.

              • added-function

                This suppression specification applies to functions that have been added  to  the
                binary.

              • deleted-function

                This  suppression  specification applies to functions that have been removed from
                the binary.

              • all

                This suppression specification applies to functions that have all of the  changes
                above.   Note that not providing the change_kind property at all is equivalent to
                setting it to the value all.

       • parameter
          Usage:
              parameter = <function-parameter-specification>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions  whose  parameters  match  the  parameter
          specification indicated as value of this property.

          The format of the function parameter specification is:

          ' <parameter-index> <space> <type-name-or-regular-expression>

          That  is,  an  apostrophe  followed  by  a  number  that is the index of the parameter,
          followed by one of several spaces, followed by either the  name  of  the  type  of  the
          parameter, or a regular expression describing a family of parameter type names.

          If  the  parameter  type  name is designated by a regular expression, then said regular
          expression must be enclosed between two slashes; like /some-regular-expression/.

          The index of the first parameter of  the  function  is  zero.   Note  that  for  member
          functions  (methods  of  classes), the this is the first parameter that comes after the
          implicit “this” pointer parameter.

          Examples of function parameter specifications are:

              '0 int

          Which means, the parameter at index 0, whose type name is int.

              '4 unsigned char*

          Which means, the parameter at index 4, whose type name is unsigned char*.

              '2 /^foo.*&/

          Which means, the parameter at index 2, whose type name starts with the string “foo” and
          ends  with an ‘&’.  In other words, this is the third parameter and it’s a reference on
          a type that starts with the string “foo”.

       • return_type_name
          Usage:
              return_type_name = <some-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions whose return type name equals  the  value
          of this property.

       • return_type_regexp
          Usage:
              return_type_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses  change  reports  involving  functions  whose  return  type name matches the
          regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • symbol_name
          Usage:
              symbol_name = <some-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions whose symbol name  equals  the  value  of
          this property.

       • symbol_name_regexp
          Usage:
              symbol_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses  change  reports  involving  functions whose symbol name matches the regular
          expression specified as value of this property.

          Let’s consider the case of functions that have several symbol names.  This happens when
          the  underlying  symbol for the function has aliases.  Each symbol name is actually one
          alias name.

          In this case, the regular expression must match the names of all of the aliases of  the
          function for the directive to actually suppress the diff reports for said function.

       • symbol_name_not_regexp
          Usage:
              symbol_name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses  change  reports  involving  functions  whose symbol name does not match the
          regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • symbol_version
          Usage:
              symbol_version = <some-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving functions whose symbol version equals the value  of
          this property.

       • symbol_version_regexp
          Usage:
              symbol_version_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses  change reports involving functions whose symbol version matches the regular
          expression specified as value of this property.

       • drop
          Usage:
              drop = yes | no

          If a function is matched by a  suppression  specification  which  contains  the  “drop”
          property  set  to  “yes”  (or  to  “true”)  then  the  function is not even going to be
          represented in the internal representation of the ABI being  analyzed.   This  property
          makes  its  enclosing  suppression specification to be applied in the early suppression
          specification mode.  The net effect is that it potentially reduces the memory  used  to
          represent the ABI being analyzed.

          Please  note  that  for  this  property  to  be  effective,  the  enclosing suppression
          specification  must  have  at  least  one  of  the  following   properties   specified:
          name_regexp, name, name_regexp, source_location_not_in or source_location_not_regexp.

   [suppress_variable]
       This directive suppresses report messages about changes on a set of variables.

       Note  that  for  the  [suppress_variable] directive to work, at least one of the following
       properties must be provided:
          label, file_name_regexp, file_name_not_regexp, soname_regexp, soname_not_regexp,  name,
          name_regexp,  name_not_regexp, symbol_name, symbol_name_regexp, symbol_name_not_regexp,
          symbol_version, symbol_version_regexp, type_name, type_name_regexp.

       If none of the above properties are provided, then the  [suppress_variable]  directive  is
       simply ignored.

       The potential properties of this sections are:

       • label
          Usage:
              label = <some-value>

          This property is the same as the label property defined above.

       • file_name_regexp

         Usage:

         file_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses  change  reports  about ABI artifacts that are defined in a binary file which
         name matches the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • file_name_not_regexp

         Usage:
            file_name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a  binary  file  which
         name does not match the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a shared library which
         SONAME property matches the regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • soname_not_regexp

         Usage:
            soname_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

         Suppresses change reports about ABI artifacts that are defined in a shared library which
         SONAME  property  does  not  match  the  regular  expression  specified as value of this
         property.

       • name
          Usage:
              name = <some-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving variables whose  name  equals  the  value  of  this
          property.

       • name_regexp
          Usage:
              name_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving variables whose name matches the regular expression
          specified as value of this property.

       • change_kind
          Usage:
              change_kind = <predefined-possible-values>

          Specifies the kind of changes this suppression  specification  should  apply  to.   The
          possible  values  of  this  property as well as their meaning are the same as when it’s
          used in the [suppress_function] section.

       • symbol_name
          Usage:
              symbol_name = <some-value>

          Suppresses change reports involving variables whose symbol name  equals  the  value  of
          this property.

       • symbol_name_regexp
          Usage:
              symbol_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses  change  reports  involving  variables whose symbol name matches the regular
          expression specified as value of this property.

       • symbol_name_not_regexp
          Usage:
              symbol_name_not_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving variables whose symbol  name  does  not  match  the
          regular expression specified as value of this property.

       • symbol_version
          Usage:
              symbol_version = <some-value>

          Suppresses  change reports involving variables whose symbol version equals the value of
          this property.

       • symbol_version_regexp
          Usage:
              symbol_version_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving variables whose symbol version matches the  regular
          expression specified as value of this property.

       • type_name
          Usage:
              type_name = <some-value>

          Suppresses  change reports involving variables whose type name equals the value of this
          property.

       • type_name_regexp
          Usage:
              type_name_regexp = <regular-expression>

          Suppresses change reports involving variables  whose  type  name  matches  the  regular
          expression specified as value of this property.

   Comments
       ;  or # ASCII character at the beginning of a line indicates a comment.  Comment lines are
       ignored.

   Code examples
       1. Suppressing change reports about types.

          Suppose we have a library named libtest1-v0.so which contains this very useful code:

             $ cat -n test1-v0.cc
                  1  // A forward declaration for a type considered to be opaque to
                  2  // function foo() below.
                  3  struct opaque_type;
                  4
                  5  // This function cannot touch any member of opaque_type.  Hence,
                  6  // changes to members of opaque_type should not impact foo, as far as
                  7  // ABI is concerned.
                  8  void
                  9  foo(opaque_type*)
                 10  {
                 11  }
                 12
                 13  struct opaque_type
                 14  {
                 15    int member0;
                 16    char member1;
                 17  };
             $

       Let’s change the layout of struct opaque_type by inserting a data member around  line  15,
       leading to a new version of the library, that we shall name libtest1-v1.so:

          $ cat -n test1-v1.cc
               1  // A forward declaration for a type considered to be opaque to
               2  // function foo() below.
               3  struct opaque_type;
               4
               5  // This function cannot touch any member of opaque_type;  Hence,
               6  // changes to members of opaque_type should not impact foo, as far as
               7  // ABI is concerned.
               8  void
               9  foo(opaque_type*)
              10  {
              11  }
              12
              13  struct opaque_type
              14  {
              15    char added_member; // <-- a new member got added here now.
              16    int member0;
              17    char member1;
              18  };
          $

       Let’s  compile  both examples.  We shall not forget to compile them with debug information
       generation turned on:

          $ g++ -shared -g -Wall -o libtest1-v0.so test1-v0.cc
          $ g++ -shared -g -Wall -o libtest1-v1.so test1-v1.cc

       Let’s ask abidiff which ABI differences it sees between libtest1-v0.so and libtest1-v1.so:

          $ abidiff libtest1-v0.so libtest1-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

            [C]'function void foo(opaque_type*)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
              parameter 0 of type 'opaque_type*' has sub-type changes:
                in pointed to type 'struct opaque_type':
                  size changed from 64 to 96 bits
                  1 data member insertion:
                    'char opaque_type::added_member', at offset 0 (in bits)
                  2 data member changes:
                   'int opaque_type::member0' offset changed from 0 to 32
                   'char opaque_type::member1' offset changed from 32 to 64

       So abidiff reports that the opaque_type’s layout has changed in a significant way, as  far
       as  ABI implications are concerned, in theory.  After all, a sub-type (struct opaque_type)
       of an exported function  (foo())  has  seen  its  layout  change.   This  might  have  non
       negligible  ABI  implications.   But in practice here, the programmer of the litest1-v1.so
       library knows that the “soft” contract between the function  foo()  and  the  type  struct
       opaque_type  is  to  stay  away  from  the data members of the type.  So layout changes of
       struct opaque_type should not impact foo().

       Now to teach abidiff about this soft contract and have it avoid emitting what  amounts  to
       false positives in this case, we write the suppression specification file below:

          $ cat test1.suppr
          [suppress_type]
            type_kind = struct
            name = opaque_type

       Translated  in  plain  English,  this  suppression  specification would read: “Do not emit
       change reports about a struct which name is opaque_type”.

       Let’s now invoke abidiff on the two versions of the library again, but this time with  the
       suppression specification:

          $ abidiff --suppressions test1.suppr libtest1-v0.so libtest1-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed (1 filtered out), 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

       As  you  can  see,  abidiff  does  not  report the change anymore; it tells us that it was
       filtered out instead.

       Suppressing change reports about types with data member insertions

       Suppose the first version of a library named libtest3-v0.so has this source code:

          /* Compile this with:
               gcc -g -Wall -shared -o libtest3-v0.so test3-v0.c
           */

          struct S
          {
            char member0;
            int member1; /*
                            between member1 and member2, there is some padding,
                            at least on some popular platforms.  On
                            these platforms, adding a small enough data
                            member into that padding shouldn't change
                            the offset of member1.  Right?
                          */
          };

          int
          foo(struct S* s)
          {
            return s->member0 + s->member1;
          }

       Now, suppose the second version of the library named libtest3-v1.so has this  source  code
       in  which  a  data member has been added in the padding space of struct S and another data
       member has been added at its end:

          /* Compile this with:
               gcc -g -Wall -shared -o libtest3-v1.so test3-v1.c
           */

          struct S
          {
            char member0;
            char inserted1; /* <---- A data member has been added here...  */
            int member1;
            char inserted2; /* <---- ... and another one has been added here.  */
          };

          int
          foo(struct S* s)
          {
            return s->member0 + s->member1;
          }

       In  libtest3-v1.so,  adding  char  data  members  S::inserted1  and  S::inserted2  can  be
       considered harmless (from an ABI compatibility perspective), at least on the x86 platform,
       because that doesn’t change the offsets of the data  members  S::member0  and  S::member1.
       But then running abidiff on these two versions of library yields:

          $ abidiff libtest3-v0.so libtest3-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed, 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

            [C]'function int foo(S*)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
              parameter 0 of type 'S*' has sub-type changes:
                in pointed to type 'struct S':
                  type size changed from 64 to 96 bits
                  2 data member insertions:
                    'char S::inserted1', at offset 8 (in bits)
                    'char S::inserted2', at offset 64 (in bits)
          $

       That  is,  abidiff  shows  us the two changes, even though we (the developers of that very
       involved library) know that these changes are harmless in this particular context.

       Luckily, we can devise a suppression  specification  that  essentially  tells  abidiff  to
       filter  out  change  reports about adding a data member between S::member0 and S::member1,
       and adding a data member at the end of struct S.   We  have  written  such  a  suppression
       specification in a file called test3-1.suppr and it unsurprisingly looks like:

          [suppress_type]
            name = S
            has_data_member_inserted_between = {offset_after(member0), offset_of(member1)}
            has_data_member_inserted_at = end

       Now running abidiff with this suppression specification yields:

          $ ../build/tools/abidiff --suppressions test3-1.suppr libtest3-v0.so libtest3-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed (1 filtered out), 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          $

       Hooora! \o/ (I guess)

       Suppressing change reports about types accessed either directly or through pointers

       Suppose  we  have  a  first  version  of  an  object  file  which  source code is the file
       widget-v0.cc below:

          // Compile with: g++ -g -c widget-v0.cc

          struct widget
          {
            int x;
            int y;

            widget()
              :x(), y()
            {}
          };

          void
          fun0(widget*)
          {
            // .. do stuff here.
          }

          void
          fun1(widget&)
          {
            // .. do stuff here ..
          }

          void
          fun2(widget w)
          {
            // ... do other stuff here ...
          }

       Now suppose in the second version of that file, named widget-v1.cc,  we  have  added  some
       data  members  at the end of the type struct widget; here is what the content of that file
       would look like:

          // Compile with: g++ -g -c widget-v1.cc

          struct widget
          {
            int x;
            int y;
            int w; // We have added these two new data members here ..
            int h; // ... and here.

            widget()
              : x(), y(), w(), h()
            {}
          };

          void
          fun0(widget*)
          {
            // .. do stuff here.
          }

          void
          fun1(widget&)
          {
            // .. do stuff here ..
          }

          void
          fun2(widget w)
          {
            // ... do other stuff here ...
          }

       When we invoke abidiff on the object files resulting from the compilation of the two  file
       above, here is what we get:

           $ abidiff widget-v0.o widget-v1.o
           Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 2 Changed (1 filtered out), 0 Added functions
           Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

           2 functions with some indirect sub-type change:

             [C]'function void fun0(widget*)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
               parameter 1 of type 'widget*' has sub-type changes:
                 in pointed to type 'struct widget':
                   type size changed from 64 to 128 bits
                   2 data member insertions:
                     'int widget::w', at offset 64 (in bits)
                     'int widget::h', at offset 96 (in bits)

             [C]'function void fun2(widget)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
               parameter 1 of type 'struct widget' has sub-type changes:
                 details were reported earlier
          $

       I  guess a little bit of explaining is due here.  abidiff detects that two data member got
       added at the end of struct widget.  it also tells us that  the  type  change  impacts  the
       exported  function  fun0()  which  uses  the  type struct widget through a pointer, in its
       signature.

       Careful readers will notice that the change to struct widget  also  impacts  the  exported
       function  fun1(),  that  uses  type  struct  widget through a reference.  But then abidiff
       doesn’t tell us about the impact on that function fun1() because  it  has  evaluated  that
       change  as being redundant with the change it reported on fun0().  It has thus filtered it
       out, to avoid cluttering the output with noise.

       Redundancy detection and filtering is fine and helpful  to  avoid  burying  the  important
       information  in  a  sea  of  noise.   However,  it  must  be treated with care, by fear of
       mistakenly filtering out relevant and important information.

       That is why abidiff tells us about the impact that the change  to  struct  widget  has  on
       function fun2().  In this case, that function uses the type struct widget directly (in its
       signature).  It does not use it via a pointer or a reference.  In this  case,  the  direct
       use  of this type causes fun2() to be exposed to a potentially harmful ABI change.  Hence,
       the report about fun2() is not filtered out, even though it’s about that  same  change  on
       struct widget.

       To  go  further  in  suppressing  reports about changes that are harmless and keeping only
       those that we know are harmful, we would like to go tell abidiff to suppress reports about
       this  particular  struct  widget  change  when  it impacts uses of struct widget through a
       pointer or reference.  In other words,  suppress  the  change  reports  about  fun0()  and
       fun1().  We would then write this suppression specification, in file widget.suppr:

          [suppress_type]
            name = widget
            type_kind = struct
            has_data_member_inserted_at = end
            accessed_through = reference-or-pointer

            # So this suppression specification says to suppress reports about
            # the type 'struct widget', if this type was added some data member
            # at its end, and if the change impacts uses of the type through a
            # reference or a pointer.

       Invoking  abidiff  on  widget-v0.o  and  widget-v1.o  with  this suppression specification
       yields:

          $ abidiff --suppressions widget.suppr widget-v0.o widget-v1.o
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed (2 filtered out), 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

            [C]'function void fun2(widget)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
              parameter 1 of type 'struct widget' has sub-type changes:
                type size changed from 64 to 128 bits
                2 data member insertions:
                  'int widget::w', at offset 64 (in bits)
                  'int widget::h', at offset 96 (in bits)
          $

       As expected, I guess.

       Suppressing change reports about functions.

       Suppose we have a first version a library named libtest2-v0.so whose source code is:

           $ cat -n test2-v0.cc

            1     struct S1
            2     {
            3       int m0;
            4
            5       S1()
            6         : m0()
            7       {}
            8     };
            9
           10     struct S2
           11     {
           12       int m0;
           13
           14       S2()
           15         : m0()
           16       {}
           17     };
           18
           19     struct S3
           20     {
           21       int m0;
           22
           23       S3()
           24         : m0()
           25       {}
           26     };
           27
           28     int
           29     func(S1&)
           30     {
           31       // suppose the code does something with the argument.
           32       return 0;
           33
           34     }
           35
           36     char
           37     func(S2*)
           38     {
           39       // suppose the code does something with the argument.
           40       return 0;
           41     }
           42
           43     unsigned
           44     func(S3)
           45     {
           46       // suppose the code does something with the argument.
           47       return 0;
           48     }
          $

       And then we come up with a second version libtest2-v1.so of that library; the source  code
       is modified by making the structures S1, S2, S3 inherit another struct:

          $ cat -n test2-v1.cc
                1 struct base_type
                2 {
                3   int m_inserted;
                4 };
                5
                6 struct S1 : public base_type // <--- S1 now has base_type as its base
                7                              // type.
                8 {
                9   int m0;
               10
               11   S1()
               12     : m0()
               13   {}
               14 };
               15
               16 struct S2 : public base_type // <--- S2 now has base_type as its base
               17                              // type.
               18 {
               19   int m0;
               20
               21   S2()
               22     : m0()
               23   {}
               24 };
               25
               26 struct S3 : public base_type // <--- S3 now has base_type as its base
               27                              // type.
               28 {
               29   int m0;
               30
               31   S3()
               32     : m0()
               33   {}
               34 };
               35
               36 int
               37 func(S1&)
               38 {
               39   // suppose the code does something with the argument.
               40   return 0;
               41
               42 }
               43
               44 char
               45 func(S2*)
               46 {
               47   // suppose the code does something with the argument.
               48   return 0;
               49 }
               50
               51 unsigned
               52 func(S3)
               53 {
               54   // suppose the code does something with the argument.
               55   return 0;
               56 }
           $

       Now let’s build the two libraries:

          g++ -Wall -g -shared -o libtest2-v0.so test2-v0.cc
          g++ -Wall -g -shared -o libtest2-v0.so test2-v0.cc

       Let’s look at the output of abidiff:

          $ abidiff libtest2-v0.so libtest2-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 3 Changed, 0 Added functions
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          3 functions with some indirect sub-type change:

            [C]'function unsigned int func(S3)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
              parameter 0 of type 'struct S3' has sub-type changes:
                size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                1 base class insertion:
                  struct base_type
                1 data member change:
                 'int S3::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32

            [C]'function char func(S2*)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
              parameter 0 of type 'S2*' has sub-type changes:
                in pointed to type 'struct S2':
                  size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                  1 base class insertion:
                    struct base_type
                  1 data member change:
                   'int S2::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32

            [C]'function int func(S1&)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
              parameter 0 of type 'S1&' has sub-type changes:
                in referenced type 'struct S1':
                  size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                  1 base class insertion:
                    struct base_type
                  1 data member change:
                   'int S1::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32
          $

       Let’s tell abidiff to avoid showing us the differences on the overloads of func that takes
       either  a  pointer  or  a  reference.   For  that,  we  author  this  simple   suppression
       specification:

          $ cat -n libtest2.suppr
               1 [suppress_function]
               2   name = func
               3   parameter = '0 S1&
               4
               5 [suppress_function]
               6   name = func
               7   parameter = '0 S2*
          $

       And then let’s invoke abidiff with the suppression specification:

          $ ../build/tools/abidiff --suppressions libtest2.suppr libtest2-v0.so libtest2-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed (2 filtered out), 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                 [C]'function unsigned int func(S3)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
                   parameter 0 of type 'struct S3' has sub-type changes:
                     size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                     1 base class insertion:
                       struct base_type
                     1 data member change:
                      'int S3::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32

       The suppression specification could be reduced using regular expressions:

          $ cat -n libtest2-1.suppr
                    1   [suppress_function]
                    2     name = func
                    3     parameter = '0 /^S.(&|\\*)/
          $

          $ ../build/tools/abidiff --suppressions libtest2-1.suppr libtest2-v0.so libtest2-v1.so
          Functions changes summary: 0 Removed, 1 Changed (2 filtered out), 0 Added function
          Variables changes summary: 0 Removed, 0 Changed, 0 Added variable

          1 function with some indirect sub-type change:

                 [C]'function unsigned int func(S3)' has some indirect sub-type changes:
                   parameter 0 of type 'struct S3' has sub-type changes:
                     size changed from 32 to 64 bits
                     1 base class insertion:
                       struct base_type
                     1 data member change:
                      'int S3::m0' offset changed from 0 to 32

          $

AUTHOR

       Dodji Seketeli

COPYRIGHT

       2014-2021, Red Hat, Inc.

                                           Oct 11, 2021                             LIBABIGAIL(7)