DLLs can export symbols only by ordinal, and DLLs are also able to be
delay-loaded. The combination of the two is valid. I didn't expect
that combination. This patch implements that feature.
With this patch, LLD is now able to link a working executable of Chrome
for 64-bit debug build. The browser seemed to be working fine. Chrome is
good for testing because of its variety and size. It contains various
open-source libraries written by various people. The largest file in
Chrome is chrome.dll whose size is 496MB. LLD can link it in 24 seconds.
MSVC linker takes 48 seconds. So it is exactly 2x faster. (I measured
that with debug info and ICF being turned off.)
With this achievement, I think I can say that the new COFF linker is
now mostly feature complete for x86-64 Windows. I believe there are
still many lingering bugs, though.
llvm-svn: 241318
There were a few issues with the previous delay-import tables.
- "Attribute" field should have been 1 instead of 0.
(I don't know the meaning of this field, though.)
- LEA and CALL operands had wrong addresses.
- Address tables are in .didat (which is read-only).
They should have been in .data.
llvm-svn: 240837
DLLs are usually resolved at process startup, but you can
delay-load them by passing /delayload option to the linker.
If a /delayload is specified, the linker has to create data
which is similar to regular import table.
One notable difference is that the pointers in a delay-load
import table are originally pointing to thunks that resolves
themselves. Each thunk loads a DLL, resolve its name, and then
overwrites the pointer with the result so that subsequent
function calls directly call a desired function. The linker
has to emit thunks.
llvm-svn: 240250