Move all variables at file-scope or function-static-scope into a hosting structure (lld::CommonLinkerContext) that lives at lldMain()-scope. Drivers will inherit from this structure and add their own global state, in the same way as for the existing COFFLinkerContext.
See discussion in https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-June/151184.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108850
Similar to ELF 3a5fb57393.
* previously when a LazyObjFile was extracted, a new ObjFile/BitcodeFile was created; now the file is reused, just with `lazy` cleared
* avoid the confusing transfer of `symbols` from LazyObjFile to the new file
* simpler code, smaller executable (5200+ bytes smaller on x86-64)
* make eager parsing feasible (for parallel section/symbol table initialization)
Reviewed By: aganea, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116434
lld only needs DIContext.h which it gets through Symbolize.h -> SymbolizableModule.h -> DIContext.h. This replaces it with a direct include of DIContext.h to avoid any confusion and pulling in unnecessary headers.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115659
Original commit description:
[LLD] Remove global state in lld/COFF
This patch removes globals from the lldCOFF library, by moving globals
into a context class (COFFLinkingContext) and passing it around wherever
it's needed.
See https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-June/151184.html for
context about removing globals from LLD.
I also haven't moved the `driver` or `config` variables yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109634
This reverts commit a2fd05ada9.
Original commits were b4fa71eed3
and e03c7e367a.
This patch removes globals from the lldCOFF library, by moving globals
into a context class (COFFLinkingContext) and passing it around wherever
it's needed.
See https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-June/151184.html for
context about removing globals from LLD.
I also haven't moved the `driver` or `config` variables yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109634
If linking directly against a DLL without an import library, the
DLL export symbols might not contain stdcall decorations.
If we have an undefined symbol with decoration, and we happen to have
a matching undecorated symbol (which either is lazy and can be loaded,
or already defined), then alias it against that instead.
This matches what's done in reverse, when we have a def file
declaring to export a symbol without decoration, but we only have
a defined decorated symbol. In that case we do a fuzzy match
(SymbolTable::findMangle). This case is more straightforward; if we
have a decorated undefined symbol, just strip the decoration and look
for the corresponding undecorated symbol name.
Add warnings and options for either silencing the warning or disabling
the whole feature, corresponding to how ld.bfd does it.
(This feature works for any symbol decoration mismatch, not only when
linking against a DLL directly; ld.bfd also tolerates it anywhere,
and also fixes up mismatches in the other direction, like
SymbolTable::findMangle, for any symbol, not only exports. But in
practice, at least for lld, it would primarily end up used for linking
against DLLs.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104532
GNU ld.bfd supports linking directly against DLLs without using an
import library, and some projects have picked up on this habit.
(There's no one single unsurmountable issue with using import
libraries, but this is a regularly surfacing missing feature.)
As long as one is linking by name (instead of by ordinal), the DLL
export table contains most of the information needed. (One can
inspect what section a symbol points at, to see if it's a function
or data symbol. The practical implementation of this loops over all
sections for each symbol, but as long as they're not very many, that
should hopefully be tolerable performance wise.)
One exception where the information in the DLL isn't entirely enough
is on i386 with stdcall functions; depending on how they're done,
the exported function name can be a plain undecorated name, while
the import library would contain the full decorated symbol name. This
issue is addressed separately in a different patch.
This is implemented mimicing the structure of a regular import library,
with one InputFile corresponding to the static archive that just adds
lazy symbols, which then are fetched when they are needed. When such
a symbol is fetched, we synthesize a coff_import_header structure
in memory and create a regular ImportFile out of it.
The implementation could be even smaller by just creating ImportFiles
for every symbol available immediately, but that would have the
drawback of actually ending up importing all symbols unless running
with GC enabled (and mingw mode defaults to having it disabled for
historical reasons).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104530
Add a simple forwarding option in the MinGW frontend, and implement
the private -wrap option in the COFF linker.
The feature in lld-link isn't gated by the -lldmingw option, but
the option is left as a private, undocumented option primarily
used by the MinGW driver.
The implementation is significantly based on the support for --wrap
in the ELF linker, but many small nuance details are different
between the ELF and COFF linkers, ending up with more than a few
implementation differences.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47384.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89004
Reapplied with the bitfield member canInline fixed so it doesn't break
builds targeting windows.
This reverts commit a012c704b5.
Breaks Windows builds.
C:\src\llvm-mint\lld\COFF\Symbols.cpp(26,1): error: static_assert failed due to requirement 'sizeof(lld::coff::SymbolUnion) <= 48' "symbols should be optimized for memory usage"
static_assert(sizeof(SymbolUnion) <= 48,
Add a simple forwarding option in the MinGW frontend, and implement
the private -wrap option in the COFF linker.
The feature in lld-link isn't gated by the -lldmingw option, but
the option is left as a private, undocumented option primarily
used by the MinGW driver.
The implementation is significantly based on the support for --wrap
in the ELF linker, but many small nuance details are different
between the ELF and COFF linkers, ending up with more than a few
implementation differences.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47384.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89004
This should fix cases when e.g. auto import is enabled without
mingw mode in total being enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89006
The "undefined symbol" error message from lld-link displays up to 3 references to that symbol, and the number of extra references not shown.
This patch removes the computation of the strings for those extra references.
It fixes a freeze of lld-link we accidentally encountered when activating asan on a large project, without linking with the asan library.
In that case, __asan_report_load8 was referenced more than 2 million times, causing the computation of that many display strings, of which only 3 were used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83510
Allow disabling either the full auto import feature, or just
forbidding the cases that require runtime fixups.
As long as all auto imported variables are referenced from separate
.refptr$<name> sections, we can alias them on top of the IAT entries
and don't actually need any runtime fixups via pseudo relocations.
LLVM generates references to variables in .refptr stubs, if it
isn't known that the variable for sure is defined in the same object
module. Runtime pseudo relocs are needed if the addresses of auto
imported variables are used in constant initializers though.
Fixing up runtime pseudo relocations requires the use of
VirtualProtect (which is disallowed in WinStore/UWP apps) or
VirtualProtectFromApp. To allow any risk of ambiguity, allow
rejecting cases that would require this at the linker stage.
This adds support for the --disable-runtime-pseudo-reloc and
--disable-auto-import options in the MinGW driver (matching GNU ld.bfd)
with corresponding lld private options in the COFF driver.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78923
Use the unique filenames that are used when /lldsavetemps is passed.
After this change, module names for LTO blobs in PDBs will be unique.
Visual Studio and probably other debuggers expect module names to be
unique.
Revert some changes from 1e0b158db (2017) that are no longer necessary
after removing MSVC LTO support.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78221
As of a while ago, lld groups all undefined references to a single
symbol in a single diagnostic. Back then, I made it so that we
print up to 10 references to each undefined symbol.
Having used this for a while, I never wished there were more
references, but I sometimes found that this can print a lot of
output. lld prints up to 10 diagnostics by default, and if
each has 10 references (which I've seen in practice), and each
undefined symbol produces 2 (possibly very long) lines of output,
that's over 200 lines of error output.
Let's try it with just 3 references for a while and see how
that feels in practice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77017
Both MS link.exe and GNU ld.bfd handle it this way; one can have
multiple object files defining the same absolute symbols, as long
as it defines it to the same value. But if there are multiple absolute
symbols with differing values, it is treated as an error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71981
Previously this caused crashes in the reportDuplicate method.
A DefinedAbsolute doesn't have any InputFile attached to it, so we
can't report the file for the original symbol.
We could add an InputFile argument to SymbolTable::addAbsolute
only for the sake of error reporting, but even then it'd be assymetrical,
only pointing out the file containing the new conflicting definition,
not the original one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71679
This broke in 51dcb292cc, "[lld-link] diagnose undefined symbols
before LTO when possible" (very soon after the 9.0 branch, so
luckily the 9.0 release is unaffected).
The code for loading objects we believe might be needed for autoimport
(loadMinGWAutomaticImports()) does run before the new
reportUnresolvable() function, but it had a condition to only operate
on symbols from regular object files. This condition came from
resolveRemainingUndefines(), but as loadMinGWAutomaticImports() now
has to operate before the LTO, it has to operate on undefineds from
LTO objects as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70166
As we now have code that parses the dwarf info for variable locations,
we can use that instead of relying on the higher level Symbolizer library,
reducing the previous two different dwarf codepaths into one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69198
llvm-svn: 375391
This fixes the second part of PR42407.
For files with dwarf debug info, it manually loads and iterates
.debug_info to find the declared location of variables, to allow
reporting them. (This matches the corresponding code in the ELF
linker.)
For functions, it uses the existing getFileLineDwarf which uses
LLVMSymbolizer for translating addresses to file lines.
In object files with codeview debug info, only the source location
of duplicate functions is printed. (And even there, only for the
first input file. The getFileLineCodeView function requires the
object file to be fully loaded and initialized to properly resolve
source locations, but duplicate symbols are reported at a stage when
the second object file isn't fully loaded yet.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68975
llvm-svn: 375218
This makes use of it slightly clearer, and makes it match the
same construct in the lld ELF linker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68935
llvm-svn: 374869
Summary:
This is a re-land of r370487 with a fix for the use-after-free bug
that rev contained.
This implements -start-lib and -end-lib flags for lld-link, analogous
to the similarly named options in ld.lld. Object files after
-start-lib are included in the link only when needed to resolve
undefined symbols. The -end-lib flag goes back to the normal behavior
of always including object files in the link. This mimics the
semantics of static libraries, but without needing to actually create
the archive file.
Reviewers: ruiu, smeenai, MaskRay
Reviewed By: ruiu, MaskRay
Subscribers: akhuang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66848
llvm-svn: 370816
Summary:
This implements -start-lib and -end-lib flags for lld-link, analogous
to the similarly named options in ld.lld. Object files after
-start-lib are included in the link only when needed to resolve
undefined symbols. The -end-lib flag goes back to the normal behavior
of always including object files in the link. This mimics the
semantics of static libraries, but without needing to actually create
the archive file.
Reviewers: ruiu, smeenai, MaskRay
Reviewed By: ruiu, MaskRay
Subscribers: akhuang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66848
llvm-svn: 370487
This avoids a spurious and confusing log message in cases where
both e.g. "alias" and "__imp_alias" exist.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65598
llvm-svn: 367673
Summary:
This allows reporting undefined symbols before LTO codegen is
run. Since LTO codegen can take a long time, this improves user
experience by avoiding that time spend if the link is going to
fail with undefined symbols anyway.
Fixes PR32400.
Reviewers: ruiu
Reviewed By: ruiu
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, steven_wu, dexonsmith, mstorsjo, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62434
llvm-svn: 367136
Also add test coverage for thin archives (which are the only way I could
come up with to test at least some of the diagnostic changes).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64927
llvm-svn: 366573
This reverts r365990 (git commit 1a6053ebc6)
The test no longer depends on the Visual C++ libraries. I confirmed that
the crash still reproduces with the new test case if I remove the null
check.
llvm-svn: 366095
This patch does the same thing as r365595 to other subdirectories,
which completes the naming style change for the entire lld directory.
With this, the naming style conversion is complete for lld.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64473
llvm-svn: 365730
lld/coff already deduplicated undefined symbols on a TU level: It would
group all references to a symbol from a single TU. This makes it so that
references from all TUs to a single symbol are grouped together.
Since lld/coff almost did what I thought it did already, the patch is
much smaller than the elf version. The only not local change is that
getSymbolLocations() now returns a vector<string> instead of a string,
so that the undefined symbol reporting code can know how many references
to a symbol exist in a given TU.
Fixes PR42260 for lld/coff.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63646
llvm-svn: 364285
r363016 let lld-link and llvm-lib share the /machine: parsing code.
This lets llvm-cvtres share it as well.
Making llvm-cvtres depend on llvm-lib seemed a bit strange (it doesn't
need llvm-lib's dependencies on BinaryFormat and BitReader) and I
couldn't find a good place to put this code. Since it's just a few
lines, put it in lib/Object for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63120
llvm-svn: 363144
And share some code with lld-link.
While here, also add a FIXME about PR42180 and merge r360150 to llvm-lib.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63021
llvm-svn: 363016
Summary:
When handling exports from the command line or from .def files, the
linker does a "fuzzy" string lookup to allow finding mangled symbols.
However, when the symbol is re-exported under a new name, the linker has
to transfer the decorations from the exported symbol over to the new
name. This is implemented by taking the mangled symbol that was found in
the object and replacing the original symbol name with the export name.
Before this patch, LLD implemented the fuzzy search by adding an
undefined symbol with the unmangled name, and then during symbol
resolution, checking if similar mangled symbols had been added after the
last round of symbol resolution. If so, LLD makes the original symbol a
weak alias of the mangled symbol. Later, to get the original symbol
name, LLD would look through the weak alias and forward it on to the
import library writer, which copies the symbol decorations. This
approach doesn't work when bar is itself a weak alias, as is the case in
asan. It's especially bad when the aliasee of bar contains the string
"bar", consider "bar_default". In this case, we would end up exporting
the symbol "foo_default" when we should've exported just "foo".
To fix this, don't look through weak aliases to find the mangled name.
Save the mangled name earlier during fuzzy symbol lookup.
Fixes PR42074
Reviewers: mstorsjo, ruiu
Subscribers: thakis, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62984
llvm-svn: 362849