Commit Graph

233 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jez Ng dc9ee39251 [lld-macho] Downgrade "cannot export hidden symbol" to warning
This matches ld64's behavior, and makes it easier to fit LLD
into existing build systems.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, smeenai

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107011
2021-07-28 18:46:26 -04:00
Leonard Grey 5acc6d4572 [lld-macho] Disambiguate bitcode files with the same name by archive name/offset in archive
Ported from COFF/ELF; test is adapted from
test/COFF/thinlto-archivecollision.ll

LTO expects every bitcode file to have a unique name. If given multiple bitcode
files with the same name, it errors with "Expected at most one ThinLTO module
per bitcode file".

This change incorporates the archive name, to disambiguate members with the
same name in different archives and the offset in archive to disambiguate
members with the same name in the same archive.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106179
2021-07-22 22:50:25 -04:00
Nico Weber 2d6fb62ef2 [lld/mac] Handle symbols from -U in treatUndefinedSymbol()
In ld64, `-U section$start$FOO$bar` handles `section$start$FOO$bar`
as a regular `section$start` symbol, that is section$start processing
happens before -U processing.

Likely, nobody uses that in practice so it doesn't seem very important
to be compatible with this, but it also moves the -U handling code next
to the `-undefined dynamic_lookup` handling code, which is nice because
they do the same thing. And, in fact, this did identify a bug in a corner
case in the intersection of `-undefined dynamic_lookup` and dead-stripping
(fix for that in D106565).

Vaguely related to PR50760.

No interesting behavior change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106566
2021-07-22 19:43:57 -04:00
Nico Weber 9d43c000e1 [lld/mac] Move handling of special undefineds later
treatUndefinedSymbol() was previously called before gatherInputSections()
and markLive() for these special symbols, but after them for normal
undefineds.

For PR50760, treatUndefinedSymbol() will have to potentially create
sections, so it's good to move treatUndefinedSymbol() for special
undefineds later, so that it can assume that gatherInputSections()
and markLive() has already been called always.

No intended behavior change, but part of PR50760 (and covered in
tests in the patch for the full feature).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106552
2021-07-22 11:43:49 -04:00
Jez Ng 428a7c1b38 [lld-macho] Have ICF operate on all sections at once
ICF previously operated only within a given OutputSection. We would
merge all CFStrings first, then merge all regular code sections in a
second phase. This worked fine since CFStrings would never reference
regular `__text` sections. However, I would like to expand ICF to merge
functions that reference unwind info. Unwind info references the LSDA
section, which can in turn reference the `__text` section, so we cannot
perform ICF in phases.

In order to have ICF operate on InputSections spanning multiple
OutputSections, we need a way to distinguish InputSections that are
destined for different OutputSections, so that we don't fold across
section boundaries. We achieve this by creating OutputSections early,
and setting `InputSection::parent` to point to them. This is what
LLD-ELF does. (This change should also make it easier to implement the
`section$start$` symbols.)

This diff also folds InputSections w/o checking their flags, which I
think is the right behavior -- if they are destined for the same
OutputSection, they will have the same flags in the output (even if
their input flags differ). I.e. the `parent` pointer check subsumes the
`flags` check. In practice this has nearly no effect (ICF did not become
any more effective on chromium_framework).

I've also updated ICF.cpp's block comment to better reflect its current
status.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, smeenai

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105641
2021-07-17 13:42:51 -04:00
Vincent Lee d695d0d6f6 [lld-macho] Optimize bind opcodes with multiple passes
In D105866, we used an intermediate container to store a list of opcodes. Here,
we use that data structure to help us perform optimization passes that would allow
a more efficient encoding of bind opcodes. Currently, the functionality mirrors the
optimization pass {1,2} done in ld64 for bind opcodes under optimization gate
to prevent slight regressions.

Reviewed By: int3, #lld-macho

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105867
2021-07-15 20:52:46 -07:00
Leonard Grey c931ff72bd [lld-macho] Add LTO cache support
This adds support for the lld-only `--thinlto-cache-policy` option, as well as
implementations for ld64's `-cache_path_lto`, `-prune_interval_lto`,
`-prune_after_lto`, and `-max_relative_cache_size_lto`.

Test is adapted from lld/test/ELF/lto/cache.ll

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105922
2021-07-15 12:56:13 -04:00
Alexander Shaposhnikov d21772fa21 [lld][MachO] Code cleanup
Make use of ArgList::getLastArgValue. NFC.

Test plan: make check-lld-macho

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105452
2021-07-14 04:33:09 -07:00
Nico Weber f21801dab2 [lld/mac] Implement -application_extension
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105818
2021-07-12 13:42:16 -04:00
Jez Ng 11a0d23650 [lld-macho][nfc] clang-format 2021-07-11 18:36:59 -04:00
Jez Ng 28a2102ee3 [lld-macho][nfc] Remove unnecessary llvm:: namespace prefixes 2021-07-11 18:36:53 -04:00
Jez Ng f6e84a84f9 [lld-macho][nfc] Avoid using std::map for PlatformKinds
The mappings we were using had a small number of keys, so a vector is
probably better. This allows us to remove the last usage of std::map in
our codebase.

I also used `removeSimulator` to simplify the code a bit further.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105786
2021-07-11 18:24:53 -04:00
Nico Weber 6e05c1cd5f [lld/mac] Always reference dyld_stub_binder when linked with libSystem
lld currently only references dyld_stub_binder when it's needed.
ld64 always references it when libSystem is linked.
Match ld64.

The (somewhat lame) motivation is that `nm` on a binary without any
export writes a "no symbols" warning to stderr, and this change makes
it so that every binary in practice has at least a reference to
dyld_stub_binder, which suppresses that.

Every "real" output file will reference dyld_stub_binder, so most
of the time this shouldn't make much of a difference. And if you
really don't want to have this reference for whatever reason, you
can stop passing -lSystem, like you have to for ld64 anyways.

(After linking any dylib, we dump the exported list of symbols to
a txt file with `nm` and only relink downstream deps if that txt
file changes. A nicer fix is to make lld optionally write .tbd files
with the public interface of a linked dylib and use that instead,
but for now the txt files are what we do.)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105782
2021-07-11 13:37:48 -04:00
Mikael Holmen 21fd875952 [lld/mac] Fix warning about unused variable [NFC]
Change "dyn_cast" to "isa" to get rid of the unused
variable "bitcodeFile".

gcc warned with

lld/MachO/Driver.cpp:531:17: warning: unused variable 'bitcodeFile' [-Wunused-variable]
531 |       if (auto *bitcodeFile = dyn_cast<BitcodeFile>(file)) {
    |                 ^~~~~~~~~~~
2021-07-08 09:46:30 +02:00
Nico Weber 3eb2fc4b50 [lld/mac] Partially implement -export_dynamic
This implements the part of -export_dynamic that adds external
symbols as dead strip roots even for executables.

It does not yet implement the effect -export_dynamic has for LTO.
I tried just replacing `config->outputType != MH_EXECUTE` with
`(config->outputType != MH_EXECUTE || config->exportDynamic)` in
LTO.cpp, but then local symbols make it into the symbol table too,
which is too much (and also doesn't match ld64). So punt on this
for now until I understand it better.
(D91583 may or may not be related too).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105482
2021-07-06 11:22:18 -04:00
Nico Weber 64be5b7d87 [lld/mac] Implement -arch_multiple
This is the other flag clang passes when calling clang with two -arch
flags (which means with this, `clang -arch x86_64 -arch arm64 -fuse-ld=lld ...`
now no longer prints any warnings \o/). Since clang calls the linker several
times in that setup, it's not clear to the user from which invocation the
errors are. The flag's help text is

    Specifies that the linker should augment error and warning messages
    with the architecture name.

In ld64, the only effect of the flag is that undefined symbols are prefaced
with

    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:

instead of the usual "Undefined symbols:". So for now, let's add this
only to undefined symbol errors too. That's probably the most common
linker diagnostic.

Another idea would be to prefix errors and warnings with "ld64.lld(x86_64):"
instead of the usual "ld64.lld:", but I'm not sure if people would
misunderstand that as a comment about the arch of ld itself.
But open to suggestions on what effect this flag should have :) And we
don't have to get it perfect now, we can iterate on it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105450
2021-07-06 00:25:18 -04:00
Nico Weber 2c25f39fcc [lld/mac] Implement -final_output
This is one of two flags clang passes to the linker when giving calling
clang with multiple -arch flags.

I think it'd make sense to also use finalOutput instead of outputFile
in CodeSignatureSection() and when replacing @executable_path, but
ld64 doesn't do that, so I'll at least put those in separate commits.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105449
2021-07-05 20:06:26 -04:00
Nico Weber db64306d99 [lld/mac] Implement -umbrella
I think this is an old way for doing what is done with
-reexport_library these days, but it's e.g. still used in libunwind's
build (the opensource.apple.com one, not the llvm one).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105448
2021-07-05 20:06:25 -04:00
Jez Ng f6b6e72143 [lld-macho] Factor out common InputSection members
We have been creating many ConcatInputSections with identical values due
to .subsections_via_symbols. This diff factors out the identical values
into a Shared struct, to reduce memory consumption and make copying
cheaper.

I also changed `callSiteCount` from a uint32_t to a 31-bit field to save an
extra word.

All in all, this takes InputSection from 120 to 72 bytes (and
ConcatInputSection from 160 to 112 bytes), i.e. 30% size reduction in
ConcatInputSection.

Numbers for linking chromium_framework on my 3.2 GHz 16-Core Intel Xeon W:

      N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
  x  20          4.14          4.24          4.18         4.183   0.027548999
  +  20          4.04          4.11         4.075        4.0775   0.018027756
  Difference at 95.0% confidence
          -0.1055 +/- 0.0149005
          -2.52211% +/- 0.356215%
          (Student's t, pooled s = 0.0232803)

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105305
2021-07-01 21:22:39 -04:00
Jez Ng 3a11528d97 [lld-macho] Move ICF earlier to avoid emitting redundant binds
This is a pretty big refactoring diff, so here are the motivations:

Previously, ICF ran after scanRelocations(), where we emitting
bind/rebase opcodes etc. So we had a bunch of redundant leftovers after
ICF. Having ICF run before Writer seems like a better design, and is
what LLD-ELF does, so this diff refactors it accordingly.

However, ICF had two dependencies on things occurring in Writer: 1) it
needs literals to be deduplicated beforehand and 2) it needs to know
which functions have unwind info, which was being handled by
`UnwindInfoSection::prepareRelocations()`.

In order to do literal deduplication earlier, we need to add literal
input sections to their corresponding output sections. So instead of
putting all input sections into the big `inputSections` vector, and then
filtering them by type later on, I've changed things so that literal
sections get added directly to their output sections during the 'gather'
phase. Likewise for compact unwind sections -- they get added directly
to the UnwindInfoSection now. This latter change is not strictly
necessary, but makes it easier for ICF to determine which functions have
unwind info.

Adding literal sections directly to their output sections means that we
can no longer determine `inputOrder` from iterating over
`inputSections`. Instead, we store that order explicitly on
InputSection. Bloating the size of InputSection for this purpose would
be unfortunate -- but LLD-ELF has already solved this problem: it reuses
`outSecOff` to store this order value.

One downside of this refactor is that we now make an additional pass
over the unwind info relocations to figure out which functions have
unwind info, since want to know that before `processRelocations()`. I've
made sure to run that extra loop only if ICF is enabled, so there should
be no overhead in non-optimizing runs of the linker.

The upside of all this is that the `inputSections` vector now contains
only ConcatInputSections that are destined for ConcatOutputSections, so
we can clean up a bunch of code that just existed to filter out other
elements from that vector.

I will test for the lack of redundant binds/rebases in the upcoming
cfstring deduplication diff. While binds/rebases can also happen in the
regular `.text` section, they're more common in `.data` sections, so it
seems more natural to test it that way.

This change is perf-neutral when linking chromium_framework.

Reviewed By: oontvoo

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105044
2021-07-01 21:22:38 -04:00
Leonard Grey fe08e9c487 [lld-macho] Add support for LTO optimization level
Everything (including test) modified from ELF/COFF. Using the same syntax
(--lto-O3, etc) as ELF.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105223
2021-07-01 15:01:59 -04:00
Jez Ng b41b4148e7 [lld-macho] Only enable `__DATA_CONST` for newer platforms
Matches ld64.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, alexander-shaposhnikov

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105080
2021-06-30 18:55:48 -04:00
Jez Ng 557e1fa02f [lld-macho] Extend ICF to literal sections
Literal sections can be deduplicated before running ICF. That makes it
easy to compare them during ICF: we can tell if two literals are
constant-equal by comparing their offsets in their OutputSection.

LLD-ELF takes a similar approach.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, gkm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104671
2021-06-28 14:49:39 -04:00
Nico Weber 3a6a60f6c9 [lld/mac] Make a variable more local; no behavior change
The variable used to need the wider scope, but doesn't after the
reland. See LC_LINKER_OPTIONS-related discussion on
https://reviews.llvm.org/D104353 for background.
2021-06-20 21:59:15 -04:00
Jez Ng f79e7a5a48 [lld-macho] Have inputOrder default to less than INT_MAX
We make it less than INT_MAX in order not to conflict with the ordering
of zerofill sections, which must always be placed at the end of their
segment.

This is the more structural fix for the issue addressed in {D104596}.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104607
2021-06-20 19:49:27 -04:00
Jez Ng 4507f64165 [re-land][lld-macho] Avoid force-loading the same archive twice
This reverts commit c9b241efd6, which was
a backout diff to fix the buildbots.

The real culprit of the crash is
1d31fb8d12,
which is being reverted.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104353
2021-06-18 22:43:50 -04:00
Jez Ng a79c018325 Revert "[lld-macho] Have path-related functions return std::string, not StringRef"
This reverts commit 1d31fb8d12.

Making `rerootPath` return a temporary std::string caused a
use-after-free:

https://ci.chromium.org/ui/p/chromium/builders/try/win_upload_clang/1608/overview
2021-06-18 22:43:49 -04:00
Nico Weber c9b241efd6 Revert "[lld-macho] Avoid force-loading the same archive twice"
This reverts commit 24706cd73c.
Test seems to fail flakily. See comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D104353
for a hypothesis for why.
2021-06-18 20:25:27 -04:00
Jez Ng 1d31fb8d12 [lld-macho] Have path-related functions return std::string, not StringRef
findLibrary() returned a StringRef while findFramework & other helper
functions returned std::strings. Standardize on std::string.

(I initially tried making the helper functions all return StringRefs,
but I realized we shouldn't return input StringRefs since their
lifetimes would not be obvious from the calling code.)
2021-06-18 16:36:14 -04:00
Nico Weber f7366890c2 [lld/mac] Support -data_in_code_info, -function_starts flags
These are on by default, but there's also an explicit flag for them.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104543
2021-06-18 13:01:42 -04:00
Greg McGary 8120c9e379 Rename option -icf MODE to --icf=MODE
The `icf` command-line option is not present in ld64, so it should use the LLD option syntax, which begins with double dashes and separates primary option from any suboption with the equal sign.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104548
2021-06-18 09:52:15 -07:00
Greg McGary f27e4548fc [lld-macho] Implement ICF
ICF = Identical C(ode|OMDAT) Folding

This is the LLD ELF/COFF algorithm, adapted for MachO. So far, only `-icf all` is supported. In order to support `-icf safe`, we will need to port address-significance tables (`.addrsig` directives) to MachO, which will come in later diffs.

`check-{llvm,clang,lld}` have 0 regressions for `lld -icf all` vs. baseline ld64.

We only run ICF on `__TEXT,__text` for reasons explained in the block comment in `ConcatOutputSection.cpp`.

Here is the perf impact for linking `chromium_framekwork` on a Mac Pro (16-core Xeon W) for the non-ICF case vs. pre-ICF:
```
    N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
x  20          4.27          4.44          4.34         4.349   0.043029977
+  20          4.37          4.46         4.405        4.4115   0.025188761
Difference at 95.0% confidence
        0.0625 +/- 0.0225658
        1.43711% +/- 0.518873%
        (Student's t, pooled s = 0.0352566)
```

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, int3

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103292
2021-06-17 10:07:44 -07:00
Jez Ng 24706cd73c [lld-macho] Avoid force-loading the same archive twice
We need to dedup archive loads (similar to what we do for dylib
loads).

I noticed this issue after building some Swift stuff that used
`-force_load_swift_libs`, as it caused some Swift archives to be loaded
many times.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis, MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104353
2021-06-17 11:13:54 -04:00
Nico Weber b579938d40 [lld/mac] Add support for -no_data_in_code_info flag
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104345
2021-06-16 06:40:42 -04:00
Jez Ng 681cfeb591 [lld-macho][nfc] Have InputSection ctors take some parameters
This is motivated by an upcoming diff in which the
WordLiteralInputSection ctor sets itself up based on the value of its
section flags. As such, it needs to be passed the `flags` value as part
of its ctor parameters, instead of having them assigned after the fact
in `parseSection()`. While refactoring code to make that possible, I
figured it would make sense for the other InputSections to also take
their initial values as ctor parameters.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103978
2021-06-11 19:50:09 -04:00
Jez Ng 7f2ba39b16 [lld-macho][nfc] Move liveness-tracking fields into ConcatInputSection
These fields currently live in the parent InputSection class,
but they should be specific to ConcatInputSection, since the other
InputSection classes (that contain literals) aren't atomically live or
dead -- rather their component string/int literals should have
individual liveness states. (An upcoming diff will add liveness bits for
StringPieces and fixed-sized literals.)

I also factored out some asserts for isCoalescedWeak() in MarkLive.cpp.
We now avoid putting coalesced sections in the `inputSections` vector,
so we don't have to check/assert against it everywhere.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103977
2021-06-11 19:50:08 -04:00
Nico Weber e87c095af3 [lld/mac] Print dylib search details with --print-dylib-search or RC_TRACE_DYLIB_SEARCHING
For debugging dylib loading, it's useful to have some insight into what
the linker is doing.

ld64 has the undocumented RC_TRACE_DYLIB_SEARCHING env var
for this printing dylib search candidates.

This adds a flag --print-dylib-search to make lld print the seame information.
It's useful for users, but also for writing tests. The output is formatted
slightly differently than ld64, but we still support RC_TRACE_DYLIB_SEARCHING
to offer at least a compatible way to trigger this.

ld64 has both `-print_statistics` and `-trace_symbol_output` to enable
diagnostics output. I went with "print" since that seems like a more
straightforward name.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103985
2021-06-09 22:08:20 -04:00
Jez Ng 447dfbe005 [lld-macho] Implement -force_load_swift_libs
It causes libraries whose names start with "swift" to be force-loaded.
Note that unlike the more general `-force_load`, this flag only applies
to libraries specified via LC_LINKER_OPTIONS, and not those passed on
the command-line. This is what ld64 does.

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103709
2021-06-07 23:48:35 -04:00
Jez Ng 04259cde15 [lld-macho] Implement cstring deduplication
Our implementation draws heavily from LLD-ELF's, which in turn delegates
its string deduplication to llvm-mc's StringTableBuilder. The messiness of
this diff is largely due to the fact that we've previously assumed that
all InputSections get concatenated together to form the output. This is
no longer true with CStringInputSections, which split their contents into
StringPieces. StringPieces are much more lightweight than InputSections,
which is important as we create a lot of them. They may also overlap in
the output, which makes it possible for strings to be tail-merged. In
fact, the initial version of this diff implemented tail merging, but
I've dropped it for reasons I'll explain later.

**Alignment Issues**

Mergeable cstring literals are found under the `__TEXT,__cstring`
section. In contrast to ELF, which puts strings that need different
alignments into different sections, clang's Mach-O backend puts them all
in one section. Strings that need to be aligned have the `.p2align`
directive emitted before them, which simply translates into zero padding
in the object file.

I *think* ld64 extracts the desired per-string alignment from this data
by preserving each string's offset from the last section-aligned
address. I'm not entirely certain since it doesn't seem consistent about
doing this; but perhaps this can be chalked up to cases where ld64 has
to deduplicate strings with different offset/alignment combos -- it
seems to pick one of their alignments to preserve. This doesn't seem
correct in general; we can in fact can induce ld64 to produce a crashing
binary just by linking in an additional object file that only contains
cstrings and no code. See PR50563 for details.

Moreover, this scheme seems rather inefficient: since unaligned and
aligned strings are all put in the same section, which has a single
alignment value, it doesn't seem possible to tell whether a given string
doesn't have any alignment requirements. Preserving offset+alignments
for strings that don't need it is wasteful.

In practice, the crashes seen so far seem to stem from x86_64 SIMD
operations on cstrings. X86_64 requires SIMD accesses to be
16-byte-aligned. So for now, I'm thinking of just aligning all strings
to 16 bytes on x86_64. This is indeed wasteful, but implementation-wise
it's simpler than preserving per-string alignment+offsets. It also
avoids the aforementioned crash after deduplication of
differently-aligned strings. Finally, the overhead is not huge: using
16-byte alignment (vs no alignment) is only a 0.5% size overhead when
linking chromium_framework.

With these alignment requirements, it doesn't make sense to attempt tail
merging -- most strings will not be eligible since their overlaps aren't
likely to start at a 16-byte boundary. Tail-merging (with alignment) for
chromium_framework only improves size by 0.3%.

It's worth noting that LLD-ELF only does tail merging at `-O2`. By
default (at `-O1`), it just deduplicates w/o tail merging. @thakis has
also mentioned that they saw it regress compressed size in some cases
and therefore turned it off. `ld64` does not seem to do tail merging at
all.

**Performance Numbers**

CString deduplication reduces chromium_framework from 250MB to 242MB, or
about a 3.2% reduction.

Numbers for linking chromium_framework on my 3.2 GHz 16-Core Intel Xeon W:

      N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
  x  20          3.91          4.03         3.935          3.95   0.034641016
  +  20          3.99          4.14         4.015        4.0365     0.0492336
  Difference at 95.0% confidence
          0.0865 +/- 0.027245
          2.18987% +/- 0.689746%
          (Student's t, pooled s = 0.0425673)

As expected, cstring merging incurs some non-trivial overhead.

When passing `--no-literal-merge`, it seems that performance is the
same, i.e. the refactoring in this diff didn't cost us.

      N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
  x  20          3.91          4.03         3.935          3.95   0.034641016
  +  20          3.89          4.02         3.935        3.9435   0.043197831
  No difference proven at 95.0% confidence

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, gkm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102964
2021-06-07 23:48:35 -04:00
Nico Weber 17c43c4045 [lld/mac] Add reexports after reexporter to inputFiles
When a library "host"'s reexports change their installName with
`$ld$os10.11$install_name$host`, we used to write a load command for "host" but
write the version numbers of the reexport instead of "host". This fixes that.

I first thought that the rule is to take the version numbers from the library
that originally had that install name (implemented in D103819), but that's not
what ld64 seems to be doing: It takes the version number from the first dylib
with that install name it loads, and it loads the reexporting library before
the reexports. We already did most of that, we just added reexports before the
reexporter. After this change, we add the reexporter before the reexports.

Addresses https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49800#c11 part 1.

(ld64 seems to add reexports after processing _all_ files on the command line,
while we add them right after the reexporter. For the common case of reexport +
$ld$ symbol changing back to the exporter name, this doesn't make a difference,
but you can construct a case where it does. I expect this to not make a
difference in practice though.)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103821
2021-06-07 17:04:03 -04:00
Nico Weber a5645513db [lld/mac] Implement -dead_strip
Also adds support for live_support sections, no_dead_strip sections,
.no_dead_strip symbols.

Chromium Framework 345MB unstripped -> 250MB stripped
(vs 290MB unstripped -> 236M stripped with ld64).

Doing dead stripping is a bit faster than not, because so much less
data needs to be processed:

    % ministat lld_*
    x lld_nostrip.txt
    + lld_strip.txt
        N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
    x  10      3.929414       4.07692     4.0269079     4.0089678   0.044214794
    +  10     3.8129408     3.9025559     3.8670411     3.8642573   0.024779651
    Difference at 95.0% confidence
            -0.144711 +/- 0.0336749
            -3.60967% +/- 0.839989%
            (Student's t, pooled s = 0.0358398)

This interacts with many parts of the linker. I tried to add test coverage
for all added `isLive()` checks, so that some test will fail if any of them
is removed. I checked that the test expectations for the most part match
ld64's behavior (except for live-support-iterations.s, see the comment
in the test). Interacts with:
- debug info
- export tries
- import opcodes
- flags like -exported_symbol(s_list)
- -U / dynamic_lookup
- mod_init_funcs, mod_term_funcs
- weak symbol handling
- unwind info
- stubs
- map files
- -sectcreate
- undefined, dylib, common, defined (both absolute and normal) symbols

It's possible it interacts with more features I didn't think of,
of course.

I also did some manual testing:
- check-llvm check-clang check-lld work with lld with this patch
  as host linker and -dead_strip enabled
- Chromium still starts
- Chromium's base_unittests still pass, including unwind tests

Implemenation-wise, this is InputSection-based, so it'll work for
object files with .subsections_via_symbols (which includes all
object files generated by clang). I first based this on the COFF
implementation, but later realized that things are more similar to ELF.
I think it'd be good to refactor MarkLive.cpp to look more like the ELF
part at some point, but I'd like to get a working state checked in first.

Mechanical parts:
- Rename canOmitFromOutput to wasCoalesced (no behavior change)
  since it really is for weak coalesced symbols
- Add noDeadStrip to Defined, corresponding to N_NO_DEAD_STRIP
  (`.no_dead_strip` in asm)

Fixes PR49276.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103324
2021-06-02 11:09:26 -04:00
Nico Weber 66a1ecd2cf [lld/mac] Implement -needed_framework, -needed_library, -needed-l
These allow overriding dead_strip_dylibs.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103499
2021-06-02 11:06:42 -04:00
Nico Weber e14fd7d879 [lld/mac] Don't strip explicit dylib also mentioned in LC_LINKER_OPTION
Noticed by Jez in D103499.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103521
2021-06-02 10:59:56 -04:00
Nico Weber 78ce89bb1e [lld/mac] Implement -reexport_framework, -reexport_library, -reexport-l
These are slightly easier-to-use versions of -sub_library and -sub_umbrella.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103497
2021-06-02 06:37:34 -04:00
Nico Weber 222a88a243 [lld/mac] Make -t work correctly with -flat_namespace
We used to not print dylibs referenced by other dylibs in `-t` mode. This
affected reexports, and with `-flat_namespace` also just dylibs loaded by
dylibs. Now we print them.

Fixes PR49514.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103428
2021-06-01 19:23:39 -04:00
Vy Nguyen 8f89c054af [lld-macho][nfc] Remove unnecessary use of Optional<T*>
In all of these cases, the functions could simply return a nullptr instead of {}.
There is no case where Optional<nullptr> has a special meaning.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103489
2021-06-01 18:35:31 -04:00
Nico Weber 2c1903412b [lld/mac] Implement removal of unused dylibs
This omits load commands for unreferenced dylibs if:
- the dylib was loaded implicitly,
- it is marked MH_DEAD_STRIPPABLE_DYLIB
- or -dead_strip_dylibs is passed

This matches ld64.

Currently, the "is dylib referenced" state is computed before dead code
stripping and is not updated after dead code stripping. This too matches ld64.
We should do better here.

With this, clang-format linked with lld (like with ld64) no longer has
libobjc.A.dylib in `otool -L` output. (It was implicitly loaded as a reexport
of CoreFoundation.framework, but it's not needed.)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103430
2021-06-01 16:06:30 -04:00
Nico Weber 0b39f055d8 [lld/mac] Don't write mtimes to N_OSO entries if ZERO_AR_DATE is set.
This is important for build determinism. This matches ld64.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103446
2021-06-01 15:29:38 -04:00
Mariusz Ceier 9383e9c1e6 Fix lld macho standalone build by including llvm/Config/llvm-config.h instead of llvm/Config/config.h
lld/MachO/Driver.cpp and lld/MachO/SyntheticSections.cpp include
llvm/Config/config.h which doesn't exist when building standalone lld.

This patch replaces llvm/Config/config.h include with llvm/Config/llvm-config.h
just like it is in lld/ELF/Driver.cpp and HAVE_LIBXAR with LLVM_HAVE_LIXAR and
moves LLVM_HAVE_LIBXAR from config.h to llvm-config.h

Also it adds LLVM_HAVE_LIBXAR to LLVMConfig.cmake and links liblldMachO2.so
with XAR_LIB if LLVM_HAVE_LIBXAR is set.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102084
2021-05-19 11:15:07 -04:00
Nico Weber 095c520fb4 [lld/mac] Propagate -(un)exported_symbol(s_list) to privateExtern in Driver
That way, it's done only once instead of every time shouldExportSymbol() is
called.

Possibly a bit faster:

    % ministat at_main at_symtodo
    x at_main
    + at_symtodo
        N           Min           Max        Median           Avg        Stddev
    x  30     3.9732189      4.114846      4.024621     4.0304692   0.037022865
    +  30       3.93766     4.0510042     3.9973931      3.991469   0.028472565
    Difference at 95.0% confidence
            -0.0390002 +/- 0.0170714
            -0.967635% +/- 0.423559%
            (Student's t, pooled s = 0.0330256)

In other runs with n=30 it makes no perf difference, so maybe it's just noise.
But being able to quickly and conveniently answer "is this symbol exported?"
is useful for fixing PR50373 and for implementing -dead_strip, so this seems
like a good change regardless.

No behavior change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102661
2021-05-18 07:42:58 -04:00