Commit Graph

286 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fangrui Song 353fe72ca3 [ELF] Hint -z nostart-stop-gc for __start_ undefined references
Make users aware what to do with ld.lld 13.0.0 / GNU ld<2015-10 --gc-sections
behavior.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114830
2021-12-02 11:58:25 -08:00
Fangrui Song 1ce51a5f35 [ELF] --cref: If -Map is specified, print to the map file
PR48282: This behavior matches GNU ld and gold.

Reviewed By: markj

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114663
2021-11-29 14:14:53 -08:00
Fangrui Song 3b4dd68de5 [ELF][PPC64] Make --power10-stubs/--no-power10-stubs proper aliases for --power10-stubs={auto,no}
This allows --power10-stubs= and --[no-]power10-stubs to override each other
(they are position dependent in GNU ld).

Also improve --help messages and the manpage.

Note: GNU ld's default "auto" mode uses heuristics to decide whether Power10
instructions are used. Arguably it is a design mistake of R_PPC64_REL24_NOTOC
(acked by the relevant folks on a libc-alpha discussion). We don't implement
"auto", so the default --power10-stubs is the same as "yes".
2021-11-26 11:51:45 -08:00
Fangrui Song 38ed1db7e8 [ELF] Support non-RAX/non-adjacent R_X86_64_GOTPC32_TLSDESC/R_X86_64_TLSDESC_CALL
The current TLSDESC optimization code assumes:
```
leaq x@tlsdesc(%rip), %rax
call *x@tlscall(%rax)       # adjacent
```

From https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/issues/5665 , it seems that the
two instructions may not be adjacent in GCC 10's output:
```
leaq x@tlsdesc(%rip), %rax
something else
call *x@tlscall(%rax)
```

This patch supports the case. While here, support non-RAX registers for
R_X86_64_GOTPC32_TLSDESC, in case the compiler generates inefficient:

```
leaq x@tlsdesc(%rip), %rcx  # or %rdx, %rbx, %rdi, ...
movq %rcx, %rax
call *x@tlscall(%rax)       # GNU ld/gold error for non-RAX
```

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114416
2021-11-23 10:30:11 -08:00
Shao-Ce SUN 0c660256eb [NFC] Trim trailing whitespace in *.rst 2021-11-15 09:17:08 +08:00
Fangrui Song a05384dc89 [ELF] Make --no-relax disable R_X86_64_GOTPCRELX and R_X86_64_REX_GOTPCRELX GOT optimization
This brings back the original version of D81359.
I have found several use cases now.

* Unlike GNU ld, LLD's relocation processing is one pass. If we decide to
  optimize(relax) R_X86_64_{,REX_}GOTPCRELX, we will suppress GOT generation and
  cannot undo the decision later. Optimizing R_X86_64_REX_GOTPCRELX can usually
  make it easy to hit `relocation R_X86_64_REX_GOTPCRELX out of range` because
  the distance to GOT is usually shorter. Without --no-relax, the user has to
  recompile with `-Wa,-mrelax-relocations=no`.
* The option would help during my investigationg of the root cause of https://git.kernel.org/linus/09e43968db40c33a73e9ddbfd937f46d5c334924
* There is need for relaxation for AArch64 & RISC-V. Implementing this for
  x86-64 improves consistency with little target-specific cost (two-line
  X86_64.cpp change).

Reviewed By: alexander-shaposhnikov

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113615
2021-11-12 09:47:31 -08:00
Fangrui Song 43bb5f0185 [docs] Remove outdated documentation for the legacy Atom-based LLD
The outdated documentation diverges a lot from the current state of
COFF/Mach-O/ELF/wasm ports and may just confuse users. It is better rewriting
some if useful.

Tested with `ninja docs-lld-html`

Reviewed By: #lld-macho, lhames, Jez Ng

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113432
2021-11-08 15:20:16 -08:00
Quinn Pham c71fbdd87b [NFC] Inclusive language: Remove instances of master in URLs
[NFC] This patch fixes URLs containing "master". Old URLs were either broken or
redirecting to the new URL.

Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, mehdi_amini

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113186
2021-11-05 08:48:41 -05:00
Fangrui Song 6e04ec801b [docs] Fix docs-lld-html 2021-10-28 18:44:44 -07:00
Fangrui Song e39c138f45 [ELF] Implement TLSDESC for x86-32
`-z rela` is also supported.

Tested with:

```
cat > ./a.c <<eof
#include <assert.h>
int foo();
int bar();
int main() {
  assert(foo() == 2);
  assert(foo() == 4);
  assert(bar() == 2);
  assert(bar() == 4);
}
eof

cat > ./b.c <<eof
#include <stdio.h>
__thread int tls0;
extern __thread int tls1;
int foo() { return ++tls0 + ++tls1; }
static __thread int tls2, tls3;
int bar() { return ++tls2 + ++tls3; }
eof

echo '__thread int tls1;' > ./c.c

sed 's/        /\t/' > ./Makefile <<'eof'
.MAKE.MODE = meta curDirOk=true

CC := gcc -m32 -g -fpic -mtls-dialect=gnu2
LDFLAGS := -m32 -Wl,-rpath=.

all: a0 a1 a2

run: all
        ./a0 && ./a1 && ./a2

c.so: c.o; ${LINK.c} -shared $> -o $@
bc.so: b.o c.o; ${LINK.c} -shared $> -o $@
b.so: b.o c.so; ${LINK.c} -shared $> -o $@

a0: a.o b.o c.o; ${LINK.c} $> -o $@
a1: a.o b.so; ${LINK.c} $> -o $@
a2: a.o bc.so; ${LINK.c} $> -o $@
eof
```
and glibc `elf/tst-gnu2-tls1`.

`/usr/local/bin/ld` points to the freshly built `lld`.

`bmake run && bmake CFLAGS=-O1 run` => ok.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112582
2021-10-28 17:52:03 -07:00
Fangrui Song a954bb18b1 [ELF] Add --why-extract= to query why archive members/lazy object files are extracted
Similar to D69607 but for archive member extraction unrelated to GC. This patch adds --why-extract=.

Prior art:

GNU ld -M prints
```
Archive member included to satisfy reference by file (symbol)

a.a(a.o)                      main.o (a)
b.a(b.o)                      (b())
```

-M is mainly for input section/symbol assignment <-> output section mapping
(often huge output) and the information may appear ad-hoc.

Apple ld64
```
__Z1bv forced load of b.a(b.o)
_a forced load of a.a(a.o)
```

It doesn't say the reference file.

Arm's proprietary linker
```
Selecting member vsnprintf.o(c_wfu.l) to define vsnprintf.
...
Loading member vsnprintf.o from c_wfu.l.
              definition:  vsnprintf
              reference :  _printf_a
```

---

--why-extract= gives the user the full data (which is much shorter than GNU ld
-Map). It is easy to track a chain of references to one archive member with a
one-liner, e.g.

```
% ld.lld main.o a_b.a b_c.a c.a -o /dev/null --why-extract=- | tee stdout
reference       extracted       symbol
main.o  a_b.a(a_b.o)    a
a_b.a(a_b.o)    b_c.a(b_c.o)    b()
b_c.a(b_c.o)    c.a(c.o)        c()

% ruby -ane 'BEGIN{p={}}; p[$F[1]]=[$F[0],$F[2]] if $.>1; END{x="c.a(c.o)"; while y=p[x]; puts "#{y[0]} extracts #{x} to resolve #{y[1]}"; x=y[0] end}' stdout
b_c.a(b_c.o) extracts c.a(c.o) to resolve c()
a_b.a(a_b.o) extracts b_c.a(b_c.o) to resolve b()
main.o extracts a_b.a(a_b.o) to resolve a
```

Archive member extraction happens before --gc-sections, so this may not be a live path
under --gc-sections, but I think it is a good approximation in practice.

* Specifying a file avoids output interleaving with --verbose.
* Required `=` prevents accidental overwrite of an input if the user forgets `=`. (Most of compiler drivers' long options accept `=` but not ` `)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109572
2021-09-20 09:52:30 -07:00
Fangrui Song d001ab82e4 [ELF] Don't fall back to .text for e_entry
We have the rule to simulate
(https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/ld/Entry-Point.html),
but the behavior is questionable
(https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2021-September/117929.html).

gold doesn't fall back to .text.
The behavior is unlikely relied by projects (there is even a warning for
executable links), so let's just delete this fallback path.

Reviewed By: jhenderson, peter.smith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110014
2021-09-20 09:35:12 -07:00
Fangrui Song 44361e5b90 [ELF] Add --export-dynamic-symbol-list
This is available in GNU ld 2.35 and can be seen as a shortcut for multiple
--export-dynamic-symbol, or a --dynamic-list variant without the symbolic intention.

In the long term, this option probably should be preferred over --dynamic-list.

Reviewed By: peter.smith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107317
2021-08-03 09:01:03 -07:00
Fangrui Song b06426da76 [ELF] Add -Bsymbolic-non-weak-functions
This option is a subset of -Bsymbolic-functions. It applies to STB_GLOBAL
STT_FUNC definitions.

The address of a vague linkage function (STB_WEAK STT_FUNC, e.g. an inline
function, a template instantiation) seen by a -Bsymbolic-functions linked
shared object may be different from the address seen from outside the shared
object. Such cases are uncommon. (ELF/Mach-O programs may use
`-fvisibility-inlines-hidden` to break such pointer equality.  On Windows,
correct dllexport and dllimport are needed to make pointer equality work.
Windows link.exe enables /OPT:ICF by default so different inline functions may
have the same address.)

```
// a.cc -> a.o -> a.so (-Bsymbolic-functions)
inline void f() {}
void *g() { return (void *)&f; }

// b.cc -> b.o -> exe
// The address is different!
inline void f() {}
```

-Bsymbolic-non-weak-functions is a safer (C++ conforming) subset of
-Bsymbolic-functions, which can make such programs work.

Implementations usually emit a vague linkage definition in a COMDAT group.  We
could detect the group (with more code) but I feel that we should just check
STB_WEAK for simplicity. A weak definition will thus serve as an escape hatch
for rare cases when users want interposition on definitions.

GNU ld feature request: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27871

Longer write-up: https://maskray.me/blog/2021-05-16-elf-interposition-and-bsymbolic

If Linux distributions migrate to protected non-vague-linkage external linkage
functions by default, the linker option can still be handy because it allows
rapid experiment without recompilation. Protected function addresses currently
have deep issues in GNU ld.

Reviewed By: peter.smith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102570
2021-07-29 14:46:53 -07:00
Tom Stellard 08c766a731 Bump the trunk major version to 14
and clear the release notes.
2021-07-27 21:58:25 -07:00
Sam Clegg 758633f922 [lld][WebAssembly] Add new `--import-undefined` option
This change revisits https://reviews.llvm.org/D79248 which originally
added support for the --unresolved-symbols flag.

At the time I thought it would make sense to add a third option to this
flag called `import-functions` but it turns out (as was suspects by on
the reviewers IIRC) that this option can be authoganal.

Instead I've added a new option called `--import-undefined` that only
operates on symbols that can be imported (for example, function symbols
can always be imported as opposed to data symbols we can only be
imported when compiling with PIC).

This option gives us the full expresivitiy that emscripten needs to be
able allow reporting of undefined data symbols as well as the option to
disable that.

This change does remove the `--unresolved-symbols=import-functions`
option, which is been in the codebase now for about a year but I would
be extremely surprised if anyone was using it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103290
2021-06-17 11:44:21 -07:00
Fangrui Song 899fdf548e [ELF] Add OVERWRITE_SECTIONS command
This implements https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26404

An `OVERWRITE_SECTIONS` command is a `SECTIONS` variant which contains several
output section descriptions. The output sections do not have specify an order.
Similar to `INSERT [BEFORE|AFTER]`, `LinkerScript::hasSectionsCommand` is not
set, so the built-in rules (see `docs/ELF/linker_script.rst`) still apply.
`OVERWRITE_SECTIONS` can be more convenient than `INSERT` because it does not
need an anchor section.

The initial syntax is intentionally narrow to facilitate backward compatible
extensions in the future. Symbol assignments cannot be used.

This feature is versatile. To list a few usage:

* Use `section : { KEEP(...) }` to retain input sections under GC
* Define encapsulation symbols (start/end) for an output section
* Use `section : ALIGN(...) : { ... }` to overalign an output section (similar to ld64 `-sectalign`)

When an output section is specified by both `OVERWRITE_SECTIONS` and
`INSERT`, `INSERT` is processed after overwrite sections. To make this work,
this patch changes `InsertCommand` to use name based matching instead of pointer
based matching. (This may cause a difference when `INSERT` moves one output
section more than once. Such duplicate commands should not be used in practice
(seems that in GNU ld the output sections may just disappear).)

A linker script can be used without -T/--script. The traditional `SECTIONS`
commands are concatenated, so a wrong rule can be more noticeable from the
section order. This feature if misused can be less noticeable, just like
`INSERT`.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103303
2021-06-13 12:41:11 -07:00
Fangrui Song 7f0acc4e4f [docs] ld.lld.1: Mention -z nostart-stop-gc 2021-05-21 19:57:51 -07:00
Fangrui Song 4adf7a7604 [ELF] Add -Bno-symbolic
This option will be available in GNU ld 2.27 (https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27834).
This option can cancel previously specified -Bsymbolic and
-Bsymbolic-functions.  This is useful for excluding some links when the
default uses -Bsymbolic-functions.

Reviewed By: jhenderson, peter.smith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102383
2021-05-14 09:40:32 -07:00
Ben Dunbobbin 5dd9f44c17 [LLD] Improve --strip-all help text
This is a slight improvement to the help text, as I was slightly
surprised when strip-all did more than remove the symbol table.

Currently, we match gold's help text for strip-all and strip-debug.
I think that the GNU documentation for these options is not particularly
clear. However, I have opted to make only a minor change here and keep
the help text similar to gold's as these are mature options that are
well understood.

ld.bfd (https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/ld/Options.html) has a
similar implication although it defines strip-debug as a subset of
strip-all. However, felt that noting that strip-all implies strip-debug
is better; because, with the ld.bfd approach you have to read both the
--strip-debug and the --strip-all help text to understand the behaviour
of --strip-all (and the --strip-all help text doesn't indicate that he
--strip-debug help text is related).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101890
2021-05-06 12:34:06 +01:00
Sam Clegg a6f406480a [lld][WebAssembly] Add `--export-if-defined`
Unlike the existing `--export` option this will not causes errors
or warnings if the specified symbol is not defined.

See: https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/issues/13736

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99887
2021-04-29 10:58:45 -07:00
Yang Fan 0db28c0f3b
[ELF][docs] Add line breaks 2021-03-22 16:08:47 +08:00
Fangrui Song 16c30c3c23 [ELF] Change --shuffle-sections=<seed> to --shuffle-sections=<section-glob>=<seed>
`--shuffle-sections=<seed>` applies to all sections.  The new
`--shuffle-sections=<section-glob>=<seed>` makes shuffling selective.  To the
best of my knowledge, the option is only used as debugging, so just drop the
original form.

`--shuffle-sections '.init_array*=-1'` `--shuffle-sections '.fini_array*=-1'`.
reverses static constructors/destructors of the same priority.
Useful to detect some static initialization order fiasco.

`--shuffle-sections '.data*=-1'`
reverses `.data*` sections. Useful to detect unfunded pointer comparison results
of two unrelated objects.

If certain sections have an intrinsic order, the old form cannot be used.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98679
2021-03-18 10:18:19 -07:00
Fangrui Song 423cb321df [ELF] Special case --shuffle-sections=-1 to reverse input sections
If the number of sections changes, which is common for re-links after
incremental updates, the section order may change drastically.

Special case -1 to reverse input sections. This is a stable transform.
The section order is more resilient to incremental updates.  Usually the
code issue (e.g. Static Initialization Order Fiasco, assuming pointer
comparison result of two unrelated objects) is due to the relative order
between two problematic input files A and B.  Checking the regular order
and the reversed order is sufficient.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98445
2021-03-17 09:32:44 -07:00
Fangrui Song 4bbcd63eea [ELF] Add -z start-stop-gc to let __start_/__stop_ not retain C identifier name sections
For one metadata section usage, each text section references a metadata section.
The metadata sections have a C identifier name to allow the runtime to collect them via `__start_/__stop_` symbols.

Since `__start_`/`__stop_` references are always present from live sections, the
C identifier name sections appear like GC roots, which means they cannot be
discarded by `ld --gc-sections`.

To make such sections GCable, either SHF_LINK_ORDER or a section group is needed.

SHF_LINK_ORDER is not suitable for the references can be inlined into other functions
(See D97430:
Function A (in the section .text.A) references its `__sancov_guard` section.
Function B inlines A (so now .text.B references `__sancov_guard` - this is invalid with the semantics of SHF_LINK_ORDER).

In the linking stage,
if `.text.A` gets discarded, and `__sancov_guard` is retained via the reference from `.text.B`,
the output will be invalid because `__sancov_guard` references the discarded `.text.A`.
LLD errors "sh_link points to discarded section".
)

A section group have size overhead, and is cumbersome when there is just one metadata section.

Add `-z start-stop-gc` to drop the "__start_/__stop_ references retain
non-SHF_LINK_ORDER non-SHF_GROUP C identifier name sections" rule.
We reserve the rights to switch the default in the future.

Reviewed By: phosek, jrtc27

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96914
2021-02-25 15:46:37 -08:00
Fangrui Song eea34aae2e [ELF] Inspect -EL & -EB for OUTPUT_FORMAT(default, big, little)
Choose big if -EB is specified, little if -EL is specified, or default if neither is specified.
The new behavior matches GNU ld.

Fixes: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1025

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96214
2021-02-08 10:34:57 -08:00
Tom Stellard 5369517d20 Bump the trunk major version to 13
and clear the release notes.
2021-01-26 19:37:55 -08:00
Fangrui Song d24b94f070 [ELF] --wrap: retain __wrap_foo if foo is defined in an object/bitcode file
If foo is referenced in any object file, bitcode file or shared object,
`__wrap_foo` should be retained as the redirection target of sym
(f96ff3c0f8).

If the object file defining foo has foo references, we cannot easily distinguish
the case from cases where foo is not referenced (we haven't scanned
relocations). Retain `__wrap_foo` because we choose to wrap sym references
regardless of whether sym is defined to keep non-LTO/LTO/relocatable links' behaviors similar
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=26358 .

If foo is defined in a shared object, `__wrap_foo` can still be omitted
(`wrap-dynamic-undef.s`).

Reviewed By: andrewng

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95152
2021-01-22 09:20:29 -08:00
Sean Fertile 8f91f38148 [LLD] Search archives for symbol defs to override COMMON symbols.
This patch changes the archive handling to enable the semantics needed
for legacy FORTRAN common blocks and block data. When we have a COMMON
definition of a symbol and are including an archive, LLD will now
search the members for global/weak defintions to override the COMMON
symbol. The previous LLD behavior (where a member would only be included
if it satisifed some other needed symbol definition) can be re-enabled with the
option '-no-fortran-common'.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86142
2020-12-07 10:09:19 -05:00
Sam Clegg 206884bf90 [lld][WebAssembly] Implement --unresolved-symbols
This is a more full featured version of ``--allow-undefined``.
The semantics of the different methods are as follows:

report-all:

   Report all unresolved symbols.  This is the default.  Normally the
   linker will generate an error message for each reported unresolved
   symbol but the option ``--warn-unresolved-symbols`` can change this
   to a warning.

ignore-all:

   Resolve all undefined symbols to zero.  For data and function
   addresses this is trivial.  For direct function calls, the linker
   will generate a trapping stub function in place of the undefined
   function.

import-functions:

   Generate WebAssembly imports for any undefined functions.  Undefined
   data symbols are resolved to zero as in `ignore-all`.  This
   corresponds to the legacy ``--allow-undefined`` flag.

The plan is to followup with a new mode called `import-dynamic` which
allows for statically linked binaries to refer to both data and
functions symbols from the embedder.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79248
2020-11-17 16:27:06 -08:00
serge-sans-paille 1e70ec10eb [lld] Provide a hook to customize undefined symbols error handling
This is a follow up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D87758, implementing the missing
symbol part, as done by binutils.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89687
2020-11-09 13:28:48 +01:00
serge-sans-paille 3bdeb2ac2e [lld] missing doc entry for error handling script
Fix http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/69/builds/67
2020-11-03 11:16:02 +01:00
serge-sans-paille cfc32267e2 Provide a hook to customize missing library error handling
Make it possible for lld users to provide a custom script that would help to
find missing libraries. A possible scenario could be:

    % clang /tmp/a.c -fuse-ld=lld -loauth -Wl,--error-handling-script=/tmp/addLibrary.py
    unable to find library -loauth
    looking for relevant packages to provides that library

        liboauth-0.9.7-4.el7.i686
        liboauth-devel-0.9.7-4.el7.i686
        liboauth-0.9.7-4.el7.x86_64
        liboauth-devel-0.9.7-4.el7.x86_64
        pix-1.6.1-3.el7.x86_64

Where addLibrary would be called with the missing library name as first argument
(in that case addLibrary.py oauth)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87758
2020-11-03 11:01:29 +01:00
Sam Clegg 3c45a06f26 [lld][WebAssembly] Allow exporting of mutable globals
In particular allow explict exporting of `__stack_pointer` but
exclud this from `--export-all` to avoid requiring the mutable
globals feature whenenve `--export-all` is used.

This uncovered a bug in populateTargetFeatures regarding checking
if the mutable-globals feature is allowed.

See: https://github.com/WebAssembly/binaryen/issues/2934

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88506
2020-09-30 17:53:27 -07:00
Fangrui Song f6f34024e9 [ELF] Add documentation for --warn-backrefs: a GNU ld compatibility checking tool (and lesser of layering detection)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86762
2020-09-14 12:31:22 -07:00
Fangrui Song 9670029b6b [ELF] Keep st_type for symbol assignment
PR46970: for `alias = aliasee`, the alias can be used in relocation processing
and on ARM st_type does affect Thumb interworking. It is thus desirable for the
alias to get the same st_type.

Note that the st_size field should not be inherited because some tools use
st_size=0 as a heuristic to detect aliases. Retaining st_size can thwart such
heuristics and cause aliases to be preferred over the original symbols.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86263
2020-08-20 16:05:27 -07:00
Hans Wennborg 7f00938975 lld docs config: Use a list key in html_sidebars
Otherwise the docs-lld-html target fails to build using recent Sphinx
with the following not very helpful error message:

An error happened in rendering the page index.
Reason: TemplateNotFound()

It turns out the values in the html_sidebars dictionary always need to be lists
now. See https://github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx/issues/6186
2020-08-20 16:48:06 +02:00
Hans Wennborg 7ab7b979d2 Bump the trunk major version to 12
and clear the release notes.
2020-07-15 12:05:05 +02:00
Fangrui Song 4ce56b8122 [ELF] Add -z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc=<section_glob>=<value>
... to customize the tombstone value we use for an absolute relocation
referencing a discarded symbol. This can be used as a workaround when
some debug processing tool has trouble with current -1 tombstone value
(https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1102223#c11 )

For example, to get the current built-in rules (not considering the .debug_line special case for ICF):

```
-z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc='.debug_*=0xffffffffffffffff'
-z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc=.debug_loc=0xfffffffffffffffe
-z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc=.debug_ranges=0xfffffffffffffffe
```

To get GNU ld (as of binutils 2.35)'s behavior:

```
-z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc='*=0'
-z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc=.debug_ranges=1
```

This option has other use cases. For example, if we want to check
whether a non-SHF_ALLOC section has dead relocations.
With this patch, we can run a regular LLD and run another with a special
-z dead-reloc-in-nonalloc=, then compare their output.

Reviewed By: thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83264
2020-07-08 10:15:16 -07:00
Fangrui Song 09b81a72ac [ELF] Ignore --no-relax for RISC-V
In GNU ld, --no-relax can disable x86-64 GOTPCRELX relaxation.
It is not useful, so we don't implement it.

For RISC-V, --no-relax disables linker relaxations which have larger
impact.
Linux kernel specifies --no-relax when CONFIG_DYNAMIC_FTRACE is specified
(since http://git.kernel.org/linus/a1d2a6b4cee858a2f27eebce731fbf1dfd72cb4e ).
LLD has not implemented the relaxations, so this option is a no-op.

Reviewed By: grimar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81359
2020-07-07 09:48:13 -07:00
Fangrui Song 8ffb2097cc [ELF] Refine LMA offset propagation rule in D76995
If neither AT(lma) nor AT>lma_region is specified,
D76995 keeps `lmaOffset` (LMA - VMA) if the previous section is in the
default LMA region.

This patch additionally checks that the two sections are in the same
memory region.

Add a test case derived from https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45313

  .mdata : AT(0xfb01000) { *(.data); } > TCM
  // It is odd to make .bss inherit lmaOffset, because the two sections
  // are in different memory regions.
  .bss : { *(.bss) } > DDR

With this patch, section VMA/LMA match GNU ld. Note, GNU ld supports
out-of-order (w.r.t sh_offset) sections and places .text and .bss in the
same PT_LOAD. We don't have that behavior.

Reviewed By: grimar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81986
2020-06-19 09:11:33 -07:00
Fangrui Song 751f18e7d4 [ELF] Refine --export-dynamic-symbol semantics to be compatible GNU ld 2.35
GNU ld from binutils 2.35 onwards will likely support
--export-dynamic-symbol but with different semantics.
https://sourceware.org/pipermail/binutils/2020-May/111302.html

Differences:

1. -export-dynamic-symbol is not supported
2. --export-dynamic-symbol takes a glob argument
3. --export-dynamic-symbol can suppress binding the references to the definition within the shared object if (-Bsymbolic or -Bsymbolic-functions)
4. --export-dynamic-symbol does not imply -u

I don't think the first three points can affect any user.
For the fourth point, Not implying -u can lead to some archive members unfetched.
Add -u foo to restore the previous behavior.

Exact semantics:

* -no-pie or -pie: matched non-local defined symbols will be added to the dynamic symbol table.
* -shared: matched non-local STV_DEFAULT symbols will not be bound to definitions within the shared object
  even if they would otherwise be due to -Bsymbolic, -Bsymbolic-functions, or --dynamic-list.

Reviewed By: psmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80487
2020-06-01 11:30:03 -07:00
Fangrui Song ce1fadca60 [ELF][docs] Update supported targets
PowerPC, PowerPC64 and x86-32 have production quality.
Mention Hexagon, RISC-V and SPARC V9.
2020-05-30 19:33:50 -07:00
Fangrui Song 881c5eef98 [ELF] Add -z rel and -z rela
LLD supports both REL and RELA for static relocations, but emits either
of REL and RELA for dynamic relocations. The relocation entry format is
specified by each psABI.

musl ld.so supports both REL and RELA. For such ld.so implementations,
REL (.rel.dyn .rel.plt) has size benefits even if the psABI chooses RELA:
sizeof(Elf64_Rel)=16 < sizeof(Elf64_Rela)=24.

* COPY, GLOB_DAT and J[U]MP_SLOT always have 0 addend. A ld.so
  implementation does not need to read the implicit addend.
  REL is strictly better.
* A RELATIVE has a non-zero addend. Such relocations can be packed
  compactly with the RELR relocation entry format, which is out of scope
  of this patch.
* For other dynamic relocation types (e.g. symbolic relocation R_X86_64_64),
  a ld.so implementation needs to read the implicit addend. REL may have
  minor performance impact, because reading implicit addends forces
  random access reads instead of being able to blast out a bunch of
  writes while chasing the relocation array.

This patch adds -z rel and -z rela to change the relocation entry format
for dynamic relocations. I have tested that a -z rel produced x86-64
executable works with musl ld.so

-z rela may be useful for debugging purposes on processors whose psABIs
specify REL as the canonical format: addends can be easily read by a tool.

Reviewed By: grimar, mcgrathr

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80496
2020-05-29 14:22:03 -07:00
Russell Gallop 85bb9b71b7 [ELF] Update release notes and man page for LLD time-trace
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79780
2020-05-15 08:35:58 +01:00
Fangrui Song e20a215992 [ELF] Add convenience TableGen classes to enforce two dashes for options not supported by GNU ld
Announced on https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-May/141416.html

For many options, we have to support either one or two dash to be
compatible with GNU ld. For newer and lld specific options, we can enforce strict double dashes.

Affected options:

* --thinlto-*
* --lto-*
* --shuffle-sections=

This patch does not change `-plugin-opt=*` because clang driver passes
`-plugin-opt=*` and I don't intend to cause churn.

In 2000, GNU ld tried something similar with --omagic
https://sourceware.org/git/?p=binutils-gdb.git;a=commit;h=e4897a3288f37d5f69e8acd256a6e83e607fe8d8

Reviewed By: tejohnson, psmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79371
2020-05-08 07:37:06 -07:00
Fangrui Song b912b887d8 [ELF] Add --print-archive-stats=
gold has an option --print-symbol-counts= which prints:

  // For each archive
  archive $archive $members $fetched_members
  // For each object file
  symbols $object $defined_symbols $used_defined_symbols

In most cases, `$defined_symbols = $used_defined_symbols` unless weak
symbols are present. Strangely `$used_defined_symbols` includes symbols defined relative to --gc-sections discarded sections.
The `symbols` lines do not appear to be useful.

`archive` lines are useful: `$fetched_members=0` lines correspond to
unused archives. The information can be used to trim dependencies.

This patch implements --print-archive-stats= which prints the number of
members and the number of fetched members for each archive.

Reviewed By: grimar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78983
2020-04-29 18:04:37 -07:00
Fangrui Song 232578804a [ELF] Add --warn-backrefs-exclude=<glob>
D77522 changed --warn-backrefs to not warn for linking sandwich
problems (-ldef1 -lref -ldef2). This removed lots of false positives.

However, glibc still has some problems. libc.a defines some symbols
which are normally in libm.a and libpthread.a, e.g. __isnanl/raise.

For a linking order `-lm -lpthread -lc`, I have seen:

```
// different resolutions: GNU ld/gold select libc.a(s_isnan.o) as the definition
backward reference detected: __isnanl in libc.a(printf_fp.o) refers to libm.a(m_isnanl.o)

// different resolutions: GNU ld/gold select libc.a(raise.o) as the definition
backward reference detected: raise in libc.a(abort.o) refers to libpthread.a(pt-raise.o)
```

To facilitate deployment of --warn-backrefs, add --warn-backrefs-exclude= so that
certain known issues (which may be impractical to fix) can be whitelisted.

Deliberate choices:

* Not a comma-separated list (`--warn-backrefs-exclude=liba.a,libb.a`).
  -Wl, splits the argument at commas, so we cannot use commas.
  --export-dynamic-symbol is similar.
* Not in the style of `--warn-backrefs='*' --warn-backrefs=-liba.a`.
  We just need exclusion, not inclusion. For easier build system
  integration, we should avoid order dependency. With the current
  scheme, we enable --warn-backrefs, and indivial libraries can add
  --warn-backrefs-exclude=<glob> to their LDFLAGS.

Reviewed By: psmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77512
2020-04-20 07:52:15 -07:00
Fangrui Song bb4a36ea28 [ELF] Propagate LMA offset to sections with neither AT() nor AT>
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45313
Also fixes linkerscript/{at4.s,overlay.test} LMA address issues exposed by
011b785505.
Related: D74297

This patch improves emulation of GNU ld's heuristics on the difference
between the LMA and the VMA:
https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/ld/Output-Section-LMA.html#Output-Section-LMA

New test linkerscript/lma-offset.s (based on at4.s) demonstrates some behaviors.

Reviewed By: psmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76995
2020-04-01 08:19:06 -07:00
Fangrui Song eb4663d8c6 [lld][COFF][ELF][WebAssembly] Replace --[no-]threads /threads[:no] with --threads={1,2,...} /threads:{1,2,...}
--no-threads is a name copied from gold.
gold has --no-thread, --thread-count and several other --thread-count-*.

There are needs to customize the number of threads (running several lld
processes concurrently or customizing the number of LTO threads).
Having a single --threads=N is a straightforward replacement of gold's
--no-threads + --thread-count.

--no-threads is used rarely. So just delete --no-threads instead of
keeping it for compatibility for a while.

If --threads= is specified (ELF,wasm; COFF /threads: is similar),
--thinlto-jobs= defaults to --threads=,
otherwise all available hardware threads are used.

There is currently no way to override a --threads={1,2,...}. It is still
a debate whether we should use --threads=all.

Reviewed By: rnk, aganea

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76885
2020-03-31 08:46:12 -07:00