llvm-project/lld/ELF/SymbolTable.h

147 lines
5.7 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

//===- SymbolTable.h --------------------------------------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// The LLVM Linker
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLD_ELF_SYMBOL_TABLE_H
#define LLD_ELF_SYMBOL_TABLE_H
#include "InputFiles.h"
#include "LTO.h"
#include "Strings.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/CachedHashString.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/DenseMap.h"
namespace lld {
2016-02-28 08:25:54 +08:00
namespace elf {
class Lazy;
struct Symbol;
// SymbolTable is a bucket of all known symbols, including defined,
// undefined, or lazy symbols (the last one is symbols in archive
// files whose archive members are not yet loaded).
//
// We put all symbols of all files to a SymbolTable, and the
// SymbolTable selects the "best" symbols if there are name
// conflicts. For example, obviously, a defined symbol is better than
// an undefined symbol. Or, if there's a conflict between a lazy and a
// undefined, it'll read an archive member to read a real definition
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
// to replace the lazy symbol. The logic is implemented in the
// add*() functions, which are called by input files as they are parsed. There
// is one add* function per symbol type.
template <class ELFT> class SymbolTable {
typedef typename ELFT::Sym Elf_Sym;
public:
void addFile(InputFile *File);
void addCombinedLTOObject();
ArrayRef<Symbol *> getSymbols() const { return SymVector; }
ArrayRef<ObjectFile<ELFT> *> getObjectFiles() const { return ObjectFiles; }
ArrayRef<BinaryFile *> getBinaryFiles() const { return BinaryFiles; }
ArrayRef<SharedFile<ELFT> *> getSharedFiles() const { return SharedFiles; }
DefinedRegular *addAbsolute(StringRef Name,
uint8_t Visibility = llvm::ELF::STV_HIDDEN,
uint8_t Binding = llvm::ELF::STB_GLOBAL);
DefinedRegular *addIgnored(StringRef Name,
uint8_t Visibility = llvm::ELF::STV_HIDDEN);
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
Symbol *addUndefined(StringRef Name);
Symbol *addUndefined(StringRef Name, bool IsLocal, uint8_t Binding,
uint8_t StOther, uint8_t Type, bool CanOmitFromDynSym,
InputFile *File);
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
Symbol *addRegular(StringRef Name, uint8_t StOther, uint8_t Type,
uint64_t Value, uint64_t Size, uint8_t Binding,
SectionBase *Section, InputFile *File);
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
void addShared(SharedFile<ELFT> *F, StringRef Name, const Elf_Sym &Sym,
const typename ELFT::Verdef *Verdef);
void addLazyArchive(ArchiveFile *F, const llvm::object::Archive::Symbol S);
void addLazyObject(StringRef Name, LazyObjectFile &Obj);
Symbol *addBitcode(StringRef Name, uint8_t Binding, uint8_t StOther,
uint8_t Type, bool CanOmitFromDynSym, BitcodeFile *File);
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
Symbol *addCommon(StringRef N, uint64_t Size, uint32_t Alignment,
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
uint8_t Binding, uint8_t StOther, uint8_t Type,
InputFile *File);
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
std::pair<Symbol *, bool> insert(StringRef Name);
std::pair<Symbol *, bool> insert(StringRef Name, uint8_t Type,
uint8_t Visibility, bool CanOmitFromDynSym,
InputFile *File);
void scanUndefinedFlags();
void scanShlibUndefined();
void scanVersionScript();
SymbolBody *find(StringRef Name);
SymbolBody *findInCurrentDSO(StringRef Name);
void trace(StringRef Name);
void wrap(StringRef Name);
void alias(StringRef Alias, StringRef Name);
private:
std::vector<SymbolBody *> findByVersion(SymbolVersion Ver);
std::vector<SymbolBody *> findAllByVersion(SymbolVersion Ver);
llvm::StringMap<std::vector<SymbolBody *>> &getDemangledSyms();
void handleAnonymousVersion();
void assignExactVersion(SymbolVersion Ver, uint16_t VersionId,
StringRef VersionName);
void assignWildcardVersion(SymbolVersion Ver, uint16_t VersionId);
struct SymIndex {
SymIndex(int Idx, bool Traced) : Idx(Idx), Traced(Traced) {}
int Idx : 31;
unsigned Traced : 1;
};
// The order the global symbols are in is not defined. We can use an arbitrary
// order, but it has to be reproducible. That is true even when cross linking.
// The default hashing of StringRef produces different results on 32 and 64
// bit systems so we use a map to a vector. That is arbitrary, deterministic
// but a bit inefficient.
// FIXME: Experiment with passing in a custom hashing or sorting the symbols
// once symbol resolution is finished.
llvm::DenseMap<llvm::CachedHashStringRef, SymIndex> Symtab;
std::vector<Symbol *> SymVector;
2016-01-09 06:14:15 +08:00
// Comdat groups define "link once" sections. If two comdat groups have the
// same name, only one of them is linked, and the other is ignored. This set
// is used to uniquify them.
llvm::DenseSet<StringRef> ComdatGroups;
std::vector<ObjectFile<ELFT> *> ObjectFiles;
std::vector<SharedFile<ELFT> *> SharedFiles;
std::vector<BitcodeFile *> BitcodeFiles;
std::vector<BinaryFile *> BinaryFiles;
2016-01-09 06:14:15 +08:00
// Set of .so files to not link the same shared object file more than once.
llvm::DenseSet<StringRef> SoNames;
// A map from demangled symbol names to their symbol objects.
// This mapping is 1:N because two symbols with different versions
// can have the same name. We use this map to handle "extern C++ {}"
// directive in version scripts.
llvm::Optional<llvm::StringMap<std::vector<SymbolBody *>>> DemangledSyms;
// For LTO.
std::unique_ptr<BitcodeCompiler> LTO;
};
ELF: New symbol table design. This patch implements a new design for the symbol table that stores SymbolBodies within a memory region of the Symbol object. Symbols are mutated by constructing SymbolBodies in place over existing SymbolBodies, rather than by mutating pointers. As mentioned in the initial proposal [1], this memory layout helps reduce the cache miss rate by improving memory locality. Performance numbers: old(s) new(s) Without debug info: chrome 7.178 6.432 (-11.5%) LLVMgold.so 0.505 0.502 (-0.5%) clang 0.954 0.827 (-15.4%) llvm-as 0.052 0.045 (-15.5%) With debug info: scylla 5.695 5.613 (-1.5%) clang 14.396 14.143 (-1.8%) Performance counter results show that the fewer required indirections is indeed the cause of the improved performance. For example, when linking chrome, stalled cycles decreases from 14,556,444,002 to 12,959,238,310, and instructions per cycle increases from 0.78 to 0.83. We are also executing many fewer instructions (15,516,401,933 down to 15,002,434,310), probably because we spend less time allocating SymbolBodies. The new mechanism by which symbols are added to the symbol table is by calling add* functions on the SymbolTable. In this patch, I handle local symbols by storing them inside "unparented" SymbolBodies. This is suboptimal, but if we do want to try to avoid allocating these SymbolBodies, we can probably do that separately. I also removed a few members from the SymbolBody class that were only being used to pass information from the input file to the symbol table. This patch implements the new design for the ELF linker only. I intend to prepare a similar patch for the COFF linker. [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098832.html Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19752 llvm-svn: 268178
2016-05-01 12:55:03 +08:00
template <class ELFT> struct Symtab { static SymbolTable<ELFT> *X; };
template <class ELFT> SymbolTable<ELFT> *Symtab<ELFT>::X;
2016-02-28 08:25:54 +08:00
} // namespace elf
} // namespace lld
#endif