[lld][ELF][test] Add additional test coverage for LTO

These are all inspired by existing test coverage we have in an internal
testsuite.

Reviewed by: grimar, MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89775
This commit is contained in:
James Henderson 2020-10-20 10:07:27 +01:00
parent 86a480e9ce
commit 342040bf00
6 changed files with 145 additions and 23 deletions

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.comm a,8,4

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.data
.global a
a:
.long 9

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; REQUIRES: x86
;; The LLVM bitcode format allows for an optional wrapper header. This test
;; shows that LLD can handle bitcode wrapped in this way, and also that an
;; invalid offset in the wrapper header is handled cleanly.
; RUN: rm -rf %t
; RUN: split-file %s %t
; RUN: llvm-as %t/ir.ll -o %t.bc
;; Basic case:
; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t.o 0 0x14
; RUN: ld.lld %t.o -o %t.elf
; RUN: llvm-readelf -s %t.elf | FileCheck %s
;; Padding between wrapper header and body:
; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t.o 0x10 0x24
; RUN: ld.lld %t.o -o %t.elf
; RUN: llvm-readelf -s %t.elf | FileCheck %s
; CHECK: _start
;; Invalid offset past end of file:
; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t2.o 0x10 0xffffffff
; RUN: not ld.lld %t2.o -o %t2.elf 2>&1 | FileCheck %s --check-prefix=ERR1 -DFILE=%t2.o
; ERR1: error: [[FILE]]: Invalid bitcode wrapper header
;; Invalid offset within file:
; RUN: %python %t/wrap_bitcode.py %t.bc %t3.o 0x10 0x14
; RUN: not ld.lld %t3.o -o %t3.elf 2>&1 | FileCheck %s --check-prefix=ERR2 -DFILE=%t3.o
; ERR2: error: [[FILE]]: file doesn't start with bitcode header
;--- ir.ll
target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
@_start = global i32 0
;--- wrap_bitcode.py
## Arguments are: input file, output file, padding size, offset value.
import struct
import sys
with open(sys.argv[1], 'rb') as input:
bitcode = input.read()
padding = int(sys.argv[3], 16) * b'\0'
offset = int(sys.argv[4], 16)
header = struct.pack('<IIIII', 0x0B17C0DE, 0, offset, len(bitcode), 0)
with open(sys.argv[2], 'wb') as output:
output.write(header)
output.write(padding)
output.write(bitcode)

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@ -1,8 +1,26 @@
; REQUIRES: x86
; RUN: llvm-as %s -o %t1.o
; RUN: llvm-mc -triple=x86_64-pc-linux %p/Inputs/common.s -o %t2.o -filetype=obj
; RUN: ld.lld %t1.o %t2.o -o %t.so -shared
; RUN: llvm-readobj -S --symbols %t.so | FileCheck %s
;; Show that common symbols defined in both native objects and bitcode files are
;; properly resolved.
; RUN: rm -rf %t.dir
; RUN: split-file %s %t.dir
; RUN: cd %t.dir
;; Case 1: bitcode file has smaller symbol but larger alignment.
; RUN: llvm-as smaller-sym.ll -o smaller-sym.bc
; RUN: llc -filetype=obj larger-sym.ll -o larger-sym.o
; RUN: ld.lld smaller-sym.bc larger-sym.o -o 1.so -shared
; RUN: llvm-readobj -S --symbols 1.so | FileCheck %s -DALIGN=8
;; Case 2: bitcode file has larger symbol but smaller alignment.
; RUN: llvm-as larger-sym.ll -o larger-sym.bc
; RUN: llc -filetype=obj smaller-sym.ll -o smaller-sym.o
; RUN: ld.lld smaller-sym.o larger-sym.bc -o 2.so -shared
;; FIXME: This alignment should be 8, but LLD is ignoring the alignment of a
;; symbol in a native object file when the larger symbol is in a bitcode file.
;; See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47819.
; RUN: llvm-readobj -S --symbols 2.so | FileCheck %s -DALIGN=4
; CHECK: Name: .bss
; CHECK-NEXT: Type: SHT_NOBITS
@ -12,20 +30,27 @@
; CHECK-NEXT: ]
; CHECK-NEXT: Address:
; CHECK-NEXT: Offset:
; CHECK-NEXT: Size: 8
; CHECK-NEXT: Size: 2
; CHECK-NEXT: Link: 0
; CHECK-NEXT: Info: 0
; CHECK-NEXT: AddressAlignment: 8
; CHECK-NEXT: AddressAlignment: [[ALIGN]]
; CHECK: Name: a
; CHECK-NEXT: Value:
; CHECK-NEXT: Size: 8
; CHECK-NEXT: Size: 2
; CHECK-NEXT: Binding: Global
; CHECK-NEXT: Type: Object
; CHECK-NEXT: Other: 0
; CHECK-NEXT: Section: .bss
;--- smaller-sym.ll
target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
@a = common global i32 0, align 8
@a = common global i8 0, align 8
;--- larger-sym.ll
target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
@a = common global i16 0, align 4

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; REQUIRES: x86
;; Show that both regular LTO and ThinLTO work correctly when an input file uses
;; a non-ascii filename.
;; Regular LTO.
; RUN: llvm-as %s -o %t£.o
; RUN: ld.lld %t£.o -o %t
; RUN: llvm-readelf -s %t | FileCheck %s
;; Thin LTO.
; RUN: opt -module-summary %s -o %t-thin£.o
; RUN: ld.lld %t-thin£.o -o %t-thin
; RUN: llvm-readelf -s %t-thin | FileCheck %s
; CHECK: _start
target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
@_start = global i32 0

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@ -1,8 +1,16 @@
; REQUIRES: x86
; RUN: llvm-as %s -o %t1.o
; RUN: llvm-mc -triple=x86_64-pc-linux %p/Inputs/resolution.s -o %t2.o -filetype=obj
;; Show that resolution of weak + global symbols works correctly when one is
;; defined in native object and the other in a bitcode file.
;; The global symbol in both cases should be kept. LTO should throw away the
;; data for the discarded weak symbol defined in bitcode. The data for the
;; weak symbol in a native object will be kept, but will be unlabelled.
; RUN: rm -rf %t.dir
; RUN: split-file %s %t.dir
; RUN: llvm-as %t.dir/1.ll -o %t1.o
; RUN: llvm-mc -triple=x86_64-pc-linux %t.dir/2.s -o %t2.o -filetype=obj
; RUN: ld.lld %t1.o %t2.o -o %t.so -shared
; RUN: llvm-readobj -S --section-data %t.so | FileCheck %s
; RUN: llvm-readobj --symbols -S --section-data %t.so | FileCheck %s
; CHECK: Name: .data
; CHECK-NEXT: Type: SHT_PROGBITS
@ -10,18 +18,36 @@
; CHECK-NEXT: SHF_ALLOC
; CHECK-NEXT: SHF_WRITE
; CHECK-NEXT: ]
; CHECK-NEXT: Address:
; CHECK-NEXT: Address: 0x[[#%x,ADDR:]]
; CHECK-NEXT: Offset:
; CHECK-NEXT: Size: 4
; CHECK-NEXT: Link: 0
; CHECK-NEXT: Info: 0
; CHECK-NEXT: AddressAlignment: 1
; CHECK-NEXT: EntrySize: 0
; CHECK-NEXT: Size: 12
; CHECK-NEXT: Link:
; CHECK-NEXT: Info:
; CHECK-NEXT: AddressAlignment:
; CHECK-NEXT: EntrySize:
; CHECK-NEXT: SectionData (
; CHECK-NEXT: 0000: 09000000 |{{.*}}|
; CHECK-NEXT: 0000: 09000000 05000000 04000000 |{{.*}}|
; CHECK-NEXT: )
; CHECK: Name: a{{ }}
; CHECK-NEXT: Value: 0x[[#%x,ADDR]]
; CHECK: Name: b{{ }}
; CHECK-NEXT: Value: 0x[[#%x,ADDR+8]]
;--- 1.ll
target datalayout = "e-m:e-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu"
@a = weak global i32 8
@b = global i32 4
;--- 2.s
.data
.global a
a:
.long 9
.weak b
b:
.long 5