- As before, there is a minor semantic change here (evidenced by the test
change) for Darwin triples that have no version component. I debated changing
the default behavior of isOSVersionLT, but decided it made more sense for
triples to be explicit.
llvm-svn: 129805
Add handling for tracking the relocations on symbols and resolving them.
Keep track of the relocations even after they are resolved so that if
the RuntimeDyld client moves the object, it can update the address and any
relocations to that object will be updated.
For our trival object file load/run test harness (llvm-rtdyld), this enables
relocations between functions located in the same object module. It should
be trivially extendable to load multiple objects with mutual references.
As a simple example, the following now works (running on x86_64 Darwin 10.6):
$ cat t.c
int bar() {
return 65;
}
int main() {
return bar();
}
$ clang t.c -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -o t.o -c
$ otool -vt t.o
t.o:
(__TEXT,__text) section
_bar:
0000000000000000 pushq %rbp
0000000000000001 movq %rsp,%rbp
0000000000000004 movl $0x00000041,%eax
0000000000000009 popq %rbp
000000000000000a ret
000000000000000b nopl 0x00(%rax,%rax)
_main:
0000000000000010 pushq %rbp
0000000000000011 movq %rsp,%rbp
0000000000000014 subq $0x10,%rsp
0000000000000018 movl $0x00000000,0xfc(%rbp)
000000000000001f callq 0x00000024
0000000000000024 addq $0x10,%rsp
0000000000000028 popq %rbp
0000000000000029 ret
$ llvm-rtdyld t.o -debug-only=dyld ; echo $?
Function sym: '_bar' @ 0
Function sym: '_main' @ 16
Extracting function: _bar from [0, 15]
allocated to 0x100153000
Extracting function: _main from [16, 41]
allocated to 0x100154000
Relocation at '_main' + 16 from '_bar(Word1: 0x2d000000)
Resolving relocation at '_main' + 16 (0x100154010) from '_bar (0x100153000)(pcrel, type: 2, Size: 4).
loaded '_main' at: 0x100154000
65
$
llvm-svn: 129388
Teach 32-bit section loading to use the Memory Manager interface, just like
the 64-bit loading does. Tidy up a few other things here and there.
llvm-svn: 129138
Start teaching the runtime Dyld interface to use the memory manager API
for allocating space. Rather than mapping directly into the MachO object,
we extract the payload for each object and copy it into a dedicated buffer
allocated via the memory manager. For now, just do Segment64, so this works
on x86_64, but not yet on ARM.
llvm-svn: 128973
developers can see if their driver changed any cl::Option's. The
current implementation isn't perfect but handles most kinds of
options. This is nice to have when decomposing the stages of
compilation and moving between different drivers. It's also a good
sanity check when comparing results produced by different command line
invocations that are expected to produce the comparable results.
Note: This is not an attempt to prolong the life of cl::Option. On the
contrary, it's a placeholder for a feature that must exist when
cl::Option is replaced by a more appropriate framework. A new
framework needs: a central option registry, dynamic name lookup,
non-global containers of option values (e.g. per-module,
per-function), *and* the ability to print options values and their defaults at
any point during compilation.
llvm-svn: 128910
The JITMemory manager references LLVM IR constructs directly, while the
runtime Dyld works at a lower level and can handle objects which may not
originate from LLVM IR. Introduce a new layer for the memory manager to
handle the interface between them. For the MCJIT, this layer will be almost
entirely simply a call-through w/ translation between the IR objects and
symbol names.
llvm-svn: 128851
with the contents of CMAKE_C(XX)_FLAGS too, else `llvm-config
--c(xx)flags' doesn't tell the absolute truth.
This comes from PR9603 and is based on a patch by Ryuta Suzuki!
llvm-svn: 128727
Now we can remove RuntimeDyld from the LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS of
tools/lli. CMakeLists.txt LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS shall not differ from
its companion Makefile LINK_COMPONENTS.
llvm-svn: 128069
Move the dynamic linking functionality of the llvm-rtdyld program into an
ExecutionEngine support library. Update llvm-rtdyld to just load an object
file into memory, use the library to process it, then run the _main()
function, if one is found.
llvm-svn: 128031
the alias of an InstAlias instead of the thing being aliased. Because we need to
know the features that are valid for an InstAlias.
This is part of a work-in-progress.
llvm-svn: 127986
Proof-of-concept code that code-gens a module to an in-memory MachO object.
This will be hooked up to a run-time dynamic linker library (see: llvm-rtdyld
for similarly conceptual work for that part) which will take the compiled
object and link it together with the rest of the system, providing back to the
JIT a table of available symbols which will be used to respond to the
getPointerTo*() queries.
llvm-svn: 127916
Factor out the 64-bit specific bits into a helper function and add an
equivalent that loads the 32-bit sections. This allows using llvm-rtdyld on ARM.
llvm-svn: 127892
Add a bone-simple utility to load a MachO object into memory, look for
a function (main) in it, and run that function directly. This will be used
as a test and development platform for MC-JIT work regarding symbol resolution,
dynamic lookup, etc..
Code by Daniel Dunbar.
llvm-svn: 127885
functions and initializers, just report the declarations present in
the module.
The motivation is to open the way for using the lazy module parsing,
which should speed up clients that just want a symbol list (nm, ar).
This is slightly less precise, but since both -strip-dead-prototypes
and -globaldce are part of the standard pipeline, this shouldn't
change the result for clang/dragonegg produced binaries.
Any decl in an IL file was also put there because a FE expected it
to be necessary, so this should not be a problem for "-O0 -emit-llvm".
As a sanity check, I have bootstrapped clang on linux and built
firefox on both linux and darwin. A clang bootstrap on darwin
with LTO fails with or without this patch because, ironically,
the linker doesn't like the combination of dead_strip and LTO
when building libLTO.so :-)
llvm-svn: 127870
uses.
The result produced by the streamer is used to give the linker more accurate
information and to add to llvm.compiler.used. The second improvement removes
the need for the user to add __attribute__((used)) to functions only used in
inline asm. The first one lets us build firefox with LTO on Darwin :-)
llvm-svn: 126830
parallel with the rest of the tools directory as it depends on Clang.
This patch was first applied in r125956 and subsequently reverted in
r125964 as it broke in-tree builds. Makefile.rules was fixed up in
r126070 to handle missing optional directories for the in-tree case,
so it should be safe now to bring this patch back in.
llvm-svn: 126071
I've been using this mode to narrow down llc unit tests. Example
custom compile script:
llc "$@"
not pygrep.py 'mul\s+r([0-9]), r\1,' < bugpoint-test-program.s
llvm-svn: 125096
llvm-config --cflags --cxxflags --cppflags
We shouldn't impose those flags on people who use llvm-config for
building their own projects.
llvm-svn: 124399