Previously we would always write a hash of the binary into the
PE file, for reproducible builds. This breaks AppCompat, which
is a feature of Windows that relies on the timestamp in the PE
header being set to a real value (or at the very least, a value
that satisfies certain properties).
To address this, we put the old behavior of writing the hash
behind the /Brepro flag, which mimics MSVC linker behavior. We
also match MSVC default behavior, which is to write an actual
timestamp to the PE header. Finally, we add the /TIMESTAMP
option (an lld extension) so that the user can specify the exact
value to be used in case he/she manually constructs a value which
is both reproducible and satisfies AppCompat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46966
llvm-svn: 332613
We discovered (crbug.com/838449#c24) that string tail merging can
negatively affect compressed binary size, so provide a flag to turn
it off for users who care more about compressed size than uncompressed
size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46780
llvm-svn: 332149
I needed to revert r330223 because we were embedding an absolute PDB
path in the .rdata section, which ended up being laid out before the
.idata section and affecting its RVAs. This flag will let us control
the embedded path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45747
llvm-svn: 330232
This was reverted several times due to what ultimately turned out
to be incompatibilities in our serialized hash table format.
Several changes went in prior to this to fix those issues since
they were more fundamental and independent of supporting injected
sources, so now that those are fixed this change should hopefully
pass.
llvm-svn: 328363
This is still failing on a different bot this time due to some
issue related to hashing absolute paths. Reverting until I can
figure it out.
llvm-svn: 328014
The issue causing this to fail in certain configurations
should be fixed.
It was due to the fact that DIA apparently expects there to be
a null string at ID 1 in the string table. I'm not sure why this
is important but it seems to make a difference, so set it.
llvm-svn: 328002
Natvis is a debug language supported by Visual Studio for
specifying custom visualizers. The /NATVIS option is an
undocumented link.exe flag which will take a .natvis file
and "inject" it into the PDB. This way, you can ship the
debug visualizers for a program along with the PDB, which
is very useful for postmortem debugging.
This is implemented by adding a new "named stream" to the
PDB with a special name of /src/files/<natvis file name>
and simply copying the contents of the xml into this file.
Additionally, we need to emit a single stream named
/src/headerblock which contains a hash table of embedded
files to records describing them.
This patch adds this functionality, including the /NATVIS
option to lld-link.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44328
llvm-svn: 327895
GNU ld has got a number of different flags for adjusting how to
behave around stdcall functions. The --kill-at flag strips the
trailing sdcall suffix from exported functions (which otherwise
is included by default in MinGW setups).
This also strips it from the corresponding import library though.
That makes it hard to link to such an import library from code
that calls the functions - but this matches what GNU ld does with
this flag. Therefore, this flag is probably not sensibly used
together with import libraries, but probably mostly when creating
some sort of plugin, or if creating the import library separately
with dlltool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44292
llvm-svn: 327561
Summary:
This protects calls to longjmp from transferring control to arbitrary
program points. Instead, longjmp calls are limited to the set of
registered setjmp return addresses.
This also implements /guard:nolongjmp to allow users to link in object
files that call setjmp that weren't compiled with /guard:cf. In this
case, the linker will approximate the set of address taken functions,
but it will leave longjmp unprotected.
I used the following program to test, compiling it with different -guard
flags:
$ cl -c t.c -guard:cf
$ lld-link t.obj -guard:cf
#include <setjmp.h>
#include <stdio.h>
jmp_buf buf;
void g() {
printf("before longjmp\n");
fflush(stdout);
longjmp(buf, 1);
}
void f() {
if (setjmp(buf)) {
printf("setjmp returned non-zero\n");
return;
}
g();
}
int main() {
f();
printf("hello world\n");
}
In particular, the program aborts when the code is compiled *without*
-guard:cf and linked with -guard:cf. That indicates that longjmps are
protected.
Reviewers: ruiu, inglorion, amccarth
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43217
llvm-svn: 325047
Summary:
This patch adds some initial support for Windows control flow guard. At
the end of the day, the linker needs to synthesize a table of RVAs very
similar to the structured exception handler table (/safeseh).
Both /safeseh and /guard:cf take sections of symbol table indices
(.sxdata and .gfids$y) and turn them into RVA tables referenced by the
load config struct in the CRT through special symbols.
Reviewers: ruiu, amccarth
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42592
llvm-svn: 324306
Summary:
r323164 made lld-link not overwrite import libraries when their
contents haven't changed. MSVC's link.exe does this only when
performing incremental linking. This change makes lld-link's import
library overwriting similarly dependent on whether or not incremental
linking is being performed. This is controlled by the /incremental or
/incremental:no options. In addition, /opt:icf, /opt:ref, and /order
turn off /incremental and issue a warning if /incremental was
specified on the command line.
Reviewers: rnk, ruiu, zturner
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42716
llvm-svn: 323930
With the /order option, you can give an order file. An order file
contains symbol names, one per line, and the linker places comdat
sections in that given order. The option is used often to optimize
an output binary for (in particular, startup) speed by improving
locality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42598
llvm-svn: 323579
The classes used to print and update time information are in
common, so other linkers could use this as well if desired.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41915
llvm-svn: 322736
It was being set but never used, and its value is only ever needed
locally in lld::coff::link.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41814
llvm-svn: 322026
Summary:
lld-link accepts link.exe's /ignore option, but used to ignore
it. This can lead to semantic differences when warnings are treated as
fatal errors. One such case is when we resolve an __imp_ symbol to a
local definition. We emit a warning in that case, which /wx turns into
a fatal. This change makes lld-link accept /ignore:4217 to suppress
that warning, so that code that links with link.exe /wx /ignore:4217
links with lld-link, too.
Fixes PR35762.
Reviewers: rnk, ruiu
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41606
llvm-svn: 321512
This adds the /DEBUG:GHASH option to LLD which will look for
the existence of .debug$H sections in linker inputs and use them
to accelerate type merging. The clang-cl side has already been
added, so this completes the work necessary to begin experimenting
with this feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40980
llvm-svn: 320719
This effectively reverts r318548 and r318635 while keeping the
functionality behind the flag and preserving the bug fix from r318548.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40264
llvm-svn: 318721
For GC roots, add a bit to SymbolBody to ensure that we don't add the
same root twice, and switch to a vector. In addition to being faster,
this may also fix some latent non-determinism. We iterate the GCRoot
list later and it the order should be deterministic.
For fixupExports, we can just use DenseMap. This is a simple string
uniquing task, and we don't iterate the map.
Reviewers: ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39609
llvm-svn: 318072
Now that we have only SymbolBody as the symbol class. So, "SymbolBody"
is a bit strange name now. This is a mechanical change generated by
perl -i -pe s/SymbolBody/Symbol/g $(git grep -l SymbolBody lld/ELF lld/COFF)
nd clang-format-diff.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39459
llvm-svn: 317370
Summary:
The COFF linker and the ELF linker have long had similar but separate
Error.h and Error.cpp files to implement error handling. This change
introduces new error handling code in Common/ErrorHandler.h, changes the
COFF and ELF linkers to use it, and removes the old, separate
implementations.
Reviewers: ruiu
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: smeenai, jyknight, emaste, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, mgorny, javed.absar, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39259
llvm-svn: 316624
link.exe supports this option to convert warnings into errors, and it's
useful to support in LLD as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39148
llvm-svn: 316502
Previously, the COFF driver would call exit(0) when called
as a library. Now it takes `ExitEarly` option, and if it
is false, it doesn't exit. So it is now more library-friendly.
Furthermore, link() calls freeArena() before returning, to
clean up resources.
Based on an Andrew Kelley's patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39202
llvm-svn: 316370
r303378 was submitted because r303374 (Merge IAT and ILT) made lld's
output incompatible with the Binding feature. Now that r303374 was
reverted, we do not need to keep this change.
Pointed out by pcc.
llvm-svn: 313414
In MinGW configurations (GCC, or clang with a *-windows-gnu target),
the -export directives in the object file contains the undecorated
symbol name, while it is decorated in MSVC configurations. (On the
command line, link.exe takes an undecorated symbol name for the
-export argument though.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37772
llvm-svn: 313174
These are emitted for comm symbols in object files, when targeting
a GNU environment.
Alternatively, just ignore them since we already align CommonChunk
to the natural size of the content (up to 32 bytes). That would only
trade away the possibility to overalign small symbols, which doesn't
sound like something that might not need to be handled?
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36304
llvm-svn: 310871
Also emit an error if /manifestinput: is used without /manifest:embed.
Increases compatibility with link.exe
https://reviews.llvm.org/D35842
llvm-svn: 308998
Improve the link conformance for the import name embedded into the
import library. This requires the associated change to the LLVM portion
for the DEF file parser. The import file generation embeds a different
name based on whether the driver is invoked as "link" or "lib".
Furthermore, the LIBRARY keyword in the DEF file influences the import
name. The behaviour can be summarised according to the following table:
| LIBRARY w/ ext | LIBRARY w/o ext | no LIBRARY
-----+----------------+---------------------+------------------
LINK | {value} | {value}.{.dll/.exe} | {output name}
LIB | {value} | {value}.dll | {output name}.dll
llvm-svn: 308407
A plain empty entry point function that returns 0 seems to produce
a binary that loads and runs fine in wine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34833
llvm-svn: 306963
Our output is not compatible with the Binding feature, so make it
explicit that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33336
llvm-svn: 303378
When /DEBUG is not specified, /PDB should be ignored. When
/DEBUG is specified, a PDB should be output regardless of
whether or not /PDB is specified. /PDB just overrides the
default name.
This patch implements this behavior, and adds some tests, while
also removing a dead option /DEBUGPDB which was unused in any
code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33302
llvm-svn: 303352
The CONSTANT export type is marked as obsolete, but link still supports
this. Furthermore, WinObjC uses this for certain exports. Add support
for this export type.
llvm-svn: 301013
Summary:
lld-link allows the number of parallel ThinLTO jobs to be specified
using /opt:lldltojobs=N. If left unspecified, the implementation
conservatively defaults to 1. This leads to very long link times. This
change makes it so that the default is to automatically set the
parallelism, as we do in the ELF linker.
Reviewers: ruiu, hans
Reviewed By: ruiu, hans
Subscribers: pcc, mehdi_amini, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31986
llvm-svn: 300089
The /appcontainer flag indicates that the module may only be used inside
an application container (for isolation). This has been supported by
link.exe since Windows 8.0. It sets an additional bit in the PE DLL
Characteristics flag to indicate the behavioural change.
llvm-svn: 299728
Summary: This adds an option to save temporary files generated during link-time optimization. This can be useful for debugging.
Reviewers: ruiu, pcc
Reviewed By: ruiu, pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29518
llvm-svn: 294498
Summary: The COFF linker previously implemented link-time optimization using an API which has now been marked as legacy. This change refactors the COFF linker to use the new LTO API, which is also used by the ELF linker.
Reviewers: pcc, ruiu
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29059
llvm-svn: 293967
Summary: This copies over some functionality we have in ELF/Error.{cpp,h} and makes it available in COFF/Error.{cpp,h}
Reviewers: pcc, rafael, ruiu
Subscribers:
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28692
llvm-svn: 292240
This ports the ELF linker's symbol table design, introduced in r268178,
to the COFF linker.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21166
llvm-svn: 289280
Previously, we discarded .debug$ sections. This patch adds them to
files so that PDB.cpp can access them.
This patch also adds a debug option, /dumppdb, to dump debug info
fed to createPDB so that we can verify that valid data has been passed.
llvm-svn: 287555
The IMAGE_FILE_HEADER structure contains a (RVA, size) to an array of
COFF_DEBUG_DIRECTORY records. Each one of these records contains an RVA to a OMF
Debug Directory. These OMF debug directories are derived into newer types such
as PDB70, PDB20, etc. This constructs a PDB70 structure which will allow us to
associate a GUID with a build to actually tie debug information.
llvm-svn: 280012
Add the support infrastructure for the /debugtype option which takes a comma
delimited list of debug info to generate. The defaults are based on other
options potentially (/driver or /profile). This sets up the infrastructure to
allow us to emit RSDS records to get "build id" equivalents on COFF (similar to
binutils).
llvm-svn: 278056
Manifest file is a separate or embedded XML file having metadata
of an executable. As it is XML, it can contain various types of
information. Probably the most popular one is to request escalated
priviledges.
Usually the linker creates an XML file and embed that file into
an executable. However, there's a way to supply an XML file from
command line. /manifestniput is it.
Apparently it is over-designed here, but if you supply two or more
manifest files, then the linker needs to merge the files into a
single XML file. A good news is that we don't need to do that ourselves.
MT.exe command can do that, so we call the command from the linker
in this patch.
llvm-svn: 266704
DLL export tables usually contain dllexport'ed symbol RVAs so that
applications which use the DLLs can find symbols from the DLLs.
However, there's a minor feature to "forward" DLL symbols to other
DLLs.
If you set an RVA to a string whose form is "<dllname>.<symbolname>"
(e.g. "KERNEL32.ExitProcess") instead of symbol RVA to the export
table, the loader interprets that as a forwarder symbol, and resolve
that symbol from the specified DLL.
This patch implements that feature.
llvm-svn: 257243
This is an LLD extension to MSVC link.exe command line. MSVC linker
does not write symbol tables for executables. We do unless no /debug
option is given.
There's a situation that we want to enable debug info but don't want
to emit the symbol table. One example is when we are comparing output
file size. With this patch, you can tell the linker to not create
a symbol table by just specifying /nosymtab.
llvm-svn: 248225
This patch fixes a subtle incompatibility with MSVC linker.
MSVC linker preserves the original spelling of a DLL in the
import descriptor table. LLD previously converted all
characters to lowercase. Usually this difference is benign,
but if a program explicitly checks for DLL file names, the
program could fail.
llvm-svn: 246620
The rules for dllexported symbols are overly complicated due to
x86 name decoration, fuzzy symbol resolution, and the fact that
one symbol can be resolved by so many different names. The rules
are probably intended to be "intuitive", so that users don't have
to understand the name mangling schemes, but it seems that it can
lead to unintended symbol exports.
To make it clear what I'm trying to do with this patch, let me
write how the export rules are subtle and complicated.
- x86 name decoration: If machine type is i386 and export name
is given by a command line option, like /export:foo, the
real symbol name the linker has to search for is _foo because
all symbols are decorated with "_" prefixes. This doesn't happen
on non-x86 machines. This automatic name decoration happens only
when the name is not C++ mangled.
However, the symbol name exported from DLLs are ones without "_"
on all platforms.
Moreover, if the option is given via .drectve section, no
symbol decoration is done (the reason being that the .drectve
section is created by a compiler and the compiler should always
know the exact name of the symbol, I guess).
- Fuzzy symbol resolution: In addition to x86 name decoration,
the linker has to look for cdecl or C++ mangled symbols
for a given /export. For example, it searches for not only
_foo but also _foo@<number> or ??foo@... for /export:foo.
Previous implementation didn't get it right. I'm trying to make
it as compatible with MSVC linker as possible with this patch
however the rules are. The new code looks a bit messy to me, but
I don't think it can be simpler due to the ad-hoc-ness of the rules.
llvm-svn: 246424
This is exposed via a new flag /opt:lldltojobs=N, where N is the number of
code generation threads.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12309
llvm-svn: 246342
There are some DLLs whose initializers depends on other DLLs'
initializers. The initialization order matters for them.
MSVC linker uses the order of the libraries from the command line.
LLD used ASCII-betical order. So they were incompatible.
This patch makes LLD compatible with MSVC.
llvm-svn: 245201
I don't fully understand the rationale behind the name mangling
scheme used for the DLL export table and the import library.
Why only leading "_" is dropped for the import library while
both "_" and "@" are dropped from DLL symbol table? But this seems
to be what MSVC linker does.
llvm-svn: 243490
In many places we assumed that is64() means AMD64 and i386 otherwise.
This assumption is not sound because Windows also supports ARM.
The linker doesn't support ARM yet, but this is a first step.
llvm-svn: 243188
An object file compatible with Safe SEH contains a .sxdata section.
The section contains a list of symbol table indices, each of which
is an exception handler function. A safe SEH-enabled executable
contains a list of exception handler RVAs. So, what the linker has
to do to support Safe SEH is basically to read the .sxdata section,
interpret the contents as a list of symbol indices, unique-fy and
sort their RVAs, and then emit that list to .rdata. This patch
implements that feature.
llvm-svn: 243182
If /delayload option is given, we have to resolve __delayLoadHelper2
since the function is the dynamic loader to delay-load DLLs.
The function name is mangled in x86 as ___delayLoadHelper2@8.
llvm-svn: 242078
Previously, __ImageBase symbol got a different value than the one
specified by /base:<number> because the symbol was created in the
SymbolTable's constructor. When the constructor is called,
no command line options are processed yet, so the symbol was
created always with the initial value. This caused wrong relocations
and thus caused mysterious crashes of some executables linked by LLD.
llvm-svn: 241313
I think Undefined symbols are a bit more convenient than StringRefs
since SymbolBodies are handles for symbols. You can get resolved
symbols for undefined symbols just by calling getReplacmenet without
looking up the symbol table.
llvm-svn: 241214
Occasionally we have to resolve an undefined symbol to its
mangled symbol. Previously, we did that on calling side of
findMangle by explicitly updating SymbolBody.
In this patch, mangled symbols are handled as weak aliases
for undefined symbols.
llvm-svn: 241213
Usually dllexported symbols are defined with 'extern "C"',
so identifying them is easy. We can just do hash table lookup
to look up exported symbols.
However, C++ non-member functions are also allowed to be exported,
and they can be specified with unmangled name. So, if /export:foo
is given, we need to look up not only "foo" but also its all
mangled names. In MSVC mangling scheme, that means that we need to
look up any symbol which starts with "?foo@@Y".
In this patch, we scan the entire symbol table to search for
a mangled symbol. The symbol table is a DenseMap, and that doesn't
support table lookup by string prefix. This is of course very
inefficient. But that should be probably OK because the user
should always add 'extern "C"' to dllexported symbols.
llvm-svn: 240919
This option is to ignore remaining undefined symbols and force
the linker to create an output file anyways.
The existing code assumes that there's no undefined symbol after
reportRemainingUndefines(). That assumption is legitimate.
I also don't want to mess up the existing code for this minor feature.
In order to keep it as is, remaining undefined symbols are replaced
with dummy defined symbols.
llvm-svn: 240913
We were resolving entry symbols and /include'd symbols after all other
symbols are resolved. But looks like it's too late. I found that it
causes some program to fail to link.
Let's say we have an object file A which defines symbols X and Y in an
archive. We also have another file B after A which defines X, Y and
_DLLMainCRTStartup in another archive. They conflict each other, so
either A or B can be linked.
If we have _DLLMainCRTStartup as an undefined symbol, file B is always
chosen. If not, there's a chance that A is chosen. If the linker
find it needs _DllMainCRTStartup after that, it's too late.
This patch adds undefined symbols to the symbol table as soon as
possible to fix the issue.
llvm-svn: 240757
Identical COMDAT Folding (ICF) is an optimization to reduce binary
size by merging COMDAT sections that contain the same metadata,
actual data and relocations. MSVC link.exe and many other linkers
have this feature. LLD achieves on per with MSVC in terms produced
binary size with this patch.
This technique is pretty effective. For example, LLD's size is
reduced from 64MB to 54MB by enaling this optimization.
The algorithm implemented in this patch is extremely inefficient.
It puts all COMDAT sections into a set to identify duplicates.
Time to self-link with/without ICF are 3.3 and 320 seconds,
respectively. So this option roughly makes LLD 100x slower.
But it's okay as I wanted to achieve correctness first.
LLD is still able to link itself with this optimization.
I'm going to make it more efficient in followup patches.
Note that this optimization is *not* entirely safe. C/C++ require
different functions have different addresses. If your program
relies on that property, your program wouldn't work with ICF.
However, it's not going to be an issue on Windows because MSVC
link.exe turns ICF on by default. As long as your program works
with default settings (or not passing /opt:noicf), your program
would work with LLD too.
llvm-svn: 240519
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
We don't want to insert a new symbol to the symbol table while reading
a .drectve section because it's going to be too complicated.
That we are reading a directive section means that we are currently
reading some object file. Adding a new undefined symbol to the symbol
table can trigger a library file to read a new file, so it would make
the call stack too deep.
In this patch, I add new symbol names to a list to resolve them later.
llvm-svn: 240076
Alternatename option is in the form of /alternatename:<from>=<to>.
It is an error if there are two options having the same <from> but
different <to>. It is *not* an error if both are the same.
llvm-svn: 240075
The linker has to create an XML file for each executable.
This patch supports that feature.
You can optionally embed an XML file to an executable as .rsrc
section. If you choose to do that (by passing /manifest:embed
option), the linker has to create a textual resource file
containing an XML file, compile that using rc.exe to a binary
resource file, conver that resource file to a COFF file using
cvtres.exe, and then link that COFF file. This patch implements
that feature too.
llvm-svn: 239978
DLL files are in the same format as executables but they have export tables.
The format of the export table is described in PE/COFF spec section 5.3.
A new class, EdataContents, takes care of creating chunks for export tables.
What we need to do is to parse command line flags for dllexports, and then
instantiate the class to create chunks. For the writer, export table chunks
are opaque data -- it just add chunks to .edata section.
llvm-svn: 239869
PE/COFF executables/DLLs usually contain data which is called
base relocations. Base relocations are a list of addresses that
need to be fixed by the loader if load-time relocation is needed.
Base relocations are in .reloc section.
We emit one base relocation entry for each IMAGE_REL_AMD64_ADDR64
relocation.
In order to save disk space, base relocations are grouped by page.
Each group is called a block. A block starts with a 32-bit page
address followed by 16-bit offsets in the page. That is more
efficient representation of addresses than just an array of 32-bit
addresses.
llvm-svn: 239710
Not only entry point symbol but also symbols specified by /include
option must be preserved, as they will never be dead-stripped.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10220
llvm-svn: 239005